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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Practical Angora Goat Raising, by C. P. Bailey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Practical Angora Goat Raising
+
+Author: C. P. Bailey
+
+Release Date: July 5, 2010 [EBook #33084]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRACTICAL ANGORA GOAT RAISING ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Verity White and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: C. P. BAILEY,
+
+One of the founders of the Angora Goat Industry in America.]
+
+
+
+
+ Practical
+ Angora Goat Raising
+
+ C. P. BAILEY & SONS COMPANY
+ SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
+ 1905.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+For several years beginners in the Angora goat industry were without
+text books, and even to-day there are very few practical treatises. From
+our forty years of experience in farming Angoras, and from the personal
+observations of our Dr. W. C. Bailey, while in the interior of Asia
+Minor, we have tried to select the essential points in the successful
+management of Angora flocks, and to present these points so that they
+may be used.
+
+We have given a brief outline of the history of the Angora goat, but we
+have devoted several pages to consideration of detail in breeding and
+kidding. It has been our aim to make this a practical text book for the
+beginner in the Angora industry, and if it proves of value to him, it
+has fulfilled its mission.
+
+ The Authors.
+
+
+
+
+ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE ANGORA GOAT.
+
+
+As to the origin and early history of the Angora goat little is known.
+It is supposed that the Angora variety descended from one of the classes
+of wild goats, and different writers have contended that different
+genera were the foundation of the Angora species. They have based these
+claims upon the characteristics of the horns, the covering of the body,
+shape and size of the animal, and various other details. Several agree
+that Capra Ęgagrus is the class of goat from which the Angora species
+has developed.
+
+
+KNOWN FACTS.
+
+Present history traces the Angora goat to the vilayet of Angora, in Asia
+Minor, and to the country immediately surrounding this vilayet. Some
+have set a date over two thousand years ago, claiming that the Angora
+goat was introduced into Asia Minor at that time, but the only authentic
+history is that given by Tournefort, a French naturalist, employed by
+his government, who explored Asia Minor about two hundred and fifty
+years ago, and who described and pictured the Angora goat about as he
+appears to-day and by Evliya Effendi, a Turk, who wrote in 1550 of the
+goats, and by a few other writers. That they have not changed more is
+due to the fact that the Turk is quite content as he is, and he has no
+ambition to breed a different goat from what he has had for at least the
+past three centuries.
+
+
+ASIA MINOR.
+
+Before we consider the migrations of the Angora goat, we will
+investigate the physical conditions of their native province. The
+interior of Asia Minor, or the Angora goat country, is from one to four
+thousand feet above the sea level. Low, rolling hills and broad plains,
+treeless and almost waterless; dry, hot and desolate in the summer, and
+covered with more or less snow in the winter, form the habitat of the
+Angora. A small fine fibered sage brush is the principal diet of the
+goat, both summer and winter, but in the spring this diet is
+supplemented with weeds and some grass, and in the summer some of the
+goats are driven to the higher mountains, where there are some scrub
+pines and other varieties of brush. There is no winter feeding. The
+goats make their own living on the tops of the sage brush, which
+protrude through the snow.
+
+The indolent Turks do make some provision for the shelter of themselves
+and the goats in the winter. If a cave can be found it is divided so
+that the goats share the quarters with the humans. Sometimes an adobe
+house is so arranged that the goats and other livestock occupy the lower
+part of the house and the natives the upper part, or if there be but one
+floor, a low fence is run across to keep the livestock out of the living
+quarters. Great greyish-white wolfish looking dogs, wearing formidable
+collars of sharpened spikes go with the shepherds during the day and
+watch the flocks during the night. They are used as a means of
+protection from thieves, and not as an aid in herding. The flocks camp
+around the cave or hut, and are not confined in corrals. Fences are
+almost unknown in the Angora country. There are probably four or five
+million Angora goats in Asia Minor. Much of the central plateau region
+of the United States is very similar to the Angora region of Turkey. A
+peculiar fact is that the mohair produced in the different sections of
+Asia Minor varies a little, and the mohair merchants of Constantinople
+readily recognize an appreciable difference in its market value. Even
+the smaller merchants in the country recognize a difference in the
+mohair grown within a few miles of their town. Some try to explain this
+by a difference in food, others by slight climatic changes, and still
+others by the soil formation. Some of the goats from the locality of
+Geredeh, in the province of Kastamouni, have fleeces which are filled
+with grease. They are as black and gummy as merino sheep. This mohair,
+however, scours white. The most marketable mohair comes from Beibazar
+and Eskischehr. That this difference in the quality of the mohair is not
+entirely due to climate or food conditions is evidenced by the fact that
+Angoras taken from Beibazar to California still retain the same
+qualities in the mohair after four years in California. However, it has
+been noticed that different parts of the United States produce different
+qualities of mohair.
+
+[Illustration: SCENE IN ASIA-MINOR.
+
+Turkish owner, his herder, holding an Angora buck kid and the
+grey-wolfish-looking dogs wearing collars of sharpened spikes. This
+picture was taken on the range and one can see the fine fibered sage
+brush on which the goats feed.
+
+Photo taken by Dr. Bailey, 1901.]
+
+
+ANGORA GOATS IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+The history of the Angora goat in the United States dates from 1849,
+when Dr. James B. Davis, of Columbia, South Carolina, was presented with
+nine choice animals by the Sultan. The Sultan had requested President
+Polk to send a man to Turkey who understood the culture of cotton. Dr.
+Davis was appointed, and upon his return to America the Sultan, as a
+courtesy, presented him with the goats. For many years after their
+arrival in the United States these goats were considered cashmeres.
+Early reports about the fleeces and the goats were erroneous, and many
+were led to believe that the fleeces from these goats were worth $8 per
+pound, and that the goats would shear from six to eight pounds per year.
+
+Dr. Davis did not do very well with the goats. He crossed his Angora
+buck onto some of the native common goats, and sold some of the
+cross-bloods and possibly some of the original importation to various
+parties, but in 1854, Col. Richard Peters, of Atlanta, Georgia, secured
+most of the Davis goats. To Col. Peters really belongs the credit of
+keeping the Angora breed in existence in the United States up to the
+early sixties. Col. Peters was very fond of his Angoras, and he
+continued to own and run them up to the time of his death. He made a
+very creditable exhibit at the New Orleans World's Fair in 1885.
+
+
+THE CHENERY IMPORTATIONS.
+
+W. W. Chenery of Belmont, near Boston, Massachusetts, is supposed to
+have made the next two importations in 1861. No one seems to know
+exactly how many goats Mr. Chenery imported or what became of these
+lots. Mr. Thompson quotes the Massachusetts Ploughman as saying, "The
+first of the two lots, consisting of thirty nine animals, was shipped
+from Constantinople on the 26th of March, 1861, and arrived at Boston on
+the 15th of May, except two animals which died on the passage. The
+second lot consisting of forty one head, left Constantinople on the 6th
+of October, 1861, and arrived at Boston on the 25th of November with the
+loss of only one on the voyage. In the whole flock, eighty in all, there
+were about a dozen males, and all the animals wintered well."
+
+It is generally supposed that Mr. Chenery made another importation in
+1866, of about twenty head.
+
+[Illustration: ANGORA GOAT.
+
+Brown and Diehl Importation, about 1868 or 1869.]
+
+
+THE BROWN AND DIEHL IMPORTATION.
+
+The next importation of practical importance, although it was claimed
+that nine head were received about 1861, by one Stiles, was made by
+Israel S. Diehl, a former U.S. consul and C. S. Brown, of Newark, New
+Jersey, about 1868. Mr. Diehl was commissioned by the United States
+government to investigate the industry in Turkey, and he secured a lot
+of Angoras, variously estimated at from one hundred to one hundred and
+sixty head. Mr. C. P. Bailey furnished the money for the transportation
+of these goats to California. He says, "Some were fairly good and some
+were only ordinary. They were of medium size, and with the exception of
+the neck, tolerably well covered with fleece, which however had a
+scattering of kemp throughout. They were conceded to be the best brought
+to California up to that time." Some of these bucks had been tampered
+with and were sterile.
+
+
+EUTICHIDES IMPORTATION.
+
+This shipment followed the Brown and Diehl importation, and consisted of
+between one hundred and fifty and two hundred animals. A. Eutichides,
+was a native of Turkey, and claimed that he had some fine goats, but he
+had an immense amount of trouble with his Angoras, and lost a good many.
+They were held in Virginia for some time, and then were sent to
+Sacramento, California, and were afterwards sold by the express
+company, at public auction, at very low prices. This was about 1873. It
+was generally believed by old California breeders that some of the goats
+offered at this sale were cross-bloods of California origin. The blood
+of this importation, however, has been widely scattered over the Pacific
+Coast.
+
+
+THE HALL AND HARRIS IMPORTATION.
+
+In 1876, John S. Harris, of Hollister, California, returned from a
+perilous journey around the world in quest of new Angoras. He found the
+Thibet goats in the Himalaya Mountains, and finally succeeded in getting
+some goats at Angora, in Asia Minor. He secured two bucks and ten does,
+and brought them safely to California. That was really the first time an
+American had entered Asia Minor to study the Angora industry, as it was
+understood Mr. Diehl had secured Turks to go into the interior for him.
+
+
+THE JENKS IMPORTATION.
+
+This was a small importation of Angoras, supposed to have been three
+animals, made by C. W. Jenks of Boston, and sold to Col. Peters of
+Georgia. They were supposed to have come from Geredeh, in the interior
+of Asia Minor, and they arrived in the United States in 1880. The mohair
+from these goats was not considered very good, and the importation was
+not regarded as very important.
+
+
+THE SHULTS IMPORTATION.
+
+This was the first importation made from South Africa to the United
+States and arrived in 1886. There were two bucks and two does, and they
+went to Fink & Company, of Texas. There was a great deal of question
+about this importation, and so far as is known it was of no value to
+American flocks.
+
+
+THE C. P. BAILEY & SONS CO. IMPORTATIONS.
+
+In 1893, the first importation of Angora goats from South Africa, which
+was of value to American flocks, arrived. The two bucks, Pasha and Dick,
+which were secured by C. P. Bailey from R. Cawood, were sired by the
+great buck Sam. Mr. Schreiner says, "Sam was born in 1888, and sheared
+as a three year old, at twelve month growth, 15 pounds 2 ounces. He was
+exhibited for many years at all chief Agricultural shows and was never
+beaten but once, a judgment reversed at a subsequent show in the same
+year. Sam was the most famous goat in South Africa; with splendid weight
+of fleece, he combined a fineness of fiber rarely seen in an old ram."
+
+Pasha developed into a great sire and his get has been distributed into
+nearly every State in the Union, Canada, Mexico and Australia. Without
+doubt Pasha's blood courses through the veins of more Angoras than any
+sire ever imported. He was acknowledged by every one to be the best
+individual ever brought to America. Mr. Landrum, who had seen most of
+the Angoras brought from Turkey and who saw Pasha at San Jose,
+California, in 1899, pronounced him the most perfect goat he had ever
+seen and a much better goat than any which had ever come to America from
+Turkey. He bought some of Pasha's get for his own flock.
+
+[Illustration: ANGORA BUCK PASHA.
+
+Bailey South Africa Importation 1893.]
+
+In 1899, the buck Capetown was imported by Mr. Bailey from South Africa
+to secure certain points. Size and a little "yolk," together with the
+covering, fineness, freeness from kemp, ringlets and evenness were
+especially desired. Capetown has been a great sire and is still in fine
+condition on the Bailey farms.
+
+
+THE ASIA MINOR GOATS.
+
+In 1901, Dr. W. C. Bailey, armed with an honorary commission from the
+United States Department of Agriculture, personally visited every
+goat-raising section of Asia Minor, and after seeing hundreds of
+thousands, and examining minutely hundreds, secured and succeeded in
+exporting two bucks and two does. The Sultan had passed an edict in
+1881, prohibiting the export of these animals, as he hoped to keep the
+industry for Asia Minor. The undertaking was a hazardous one, and the
+expedition was fought with many and almost insurmountable difficulties.
+Asia Minor is alive with bandits, and to hold a foreigner for ransom is
+a favorite pastime. Then, too, a Christian's life is not considered of
+much value by a Mohamedan. The goats were transported for miles on mule
+and camel back, carried across the Bosphorus under a boat load of hay,
+disfigured by shearing and powdered with coal dust, transported through
+the streets of Constantinople in closed carriages protected from police
+molestation by the "golden wand," and finally condemned by the Italian
+Government because no health certificate accompanied them from point of
+shipment, but eventually landed in California in 1901. The bucks
+Beibazar and Kjutiah, and the does Moholitch and Eskischehr find the
+climate of California suited to their wants. These four goats cost over
+$5,000 landed in California.
+
+[Illustration: BUCK BEIBAZAR AND DOE MOHOLITCH.
+
+Bailey Asia Minor Importation 1901. Photo taken by Dr. Bailey on the
+plains of Asia Minor, March 7, 1901, while the goats were held by a
+Turkish guide.]
+
+Beibazar impresses his qualities markedly on his offspring. His get won
+the Sweepstake prizes at the California and Oregon State Fairs in 1904,
+and the championship for two-year-old buck at the World's Fair at St.
+Louis, U. S. A., in 1904.
+
+
+THE LANDRUM IMPORTATION.
+
+In 1901, Wm. M. Landrum imported two bucks from South Africa. Their get
+has been quite widely distributed in America, and has been of
+considerable value.
+
+
+THE HOERLE IMPORTATION.
+
+In 1904, G. A. Hoerle imported about one hundred and thirty head from
+South Africa. A few of these goats were exhibited at the St. Louis
+World's Fair, and some of them have been distributed to American
+breeders. A large part of them are now in New Jersey, and just what
+their effect will be on American flocks remains to be seen.
+
+[Illustration: BEIBAZAR.
+
+Bailey Asia Minor Importation, 1901.]
+
+
+ANGORA GOATS IN SOUTH AFRICA.
+
+In 1838, Col. Henderson made the first importation of Angora goats into
+South Africa, but while the number reaching the Cape was fourteen, yet
+only two proved to be perfect animals, a doe and her kid. The twelve
+bucks seem to have been tampered with, and they would not breed. Mr.
+Schreiner says: "But for the fact that there were several million Boar
+goats, thoroughly accustomed to the country, to furnish innumerable ewes
+for grading up purposes, the industry would still have been in its
+infancy." It was years before any more Angoras were imported into South
+Africa.
+
+The second importation into Cape Colony was made by Messrs. Mosenthal in
+1856, and thirty Angoras reached their destination. Mr. Schreiner
+reports that some of these goats were sold at public auction and brought
+about $350 to $400 each.
+
+The third importation was made by Sir Titus Salt, the English
+manufacturer of mohair, and arrived in South Africa in 1857. Dr. White
+had charge of these after they reached the colony.
+
+[Illustration: CAPETOWN.
+
+Bailey South African Importation, 1899.]
+
+The fourth importation consisted of about thirty-five animals, and was
+made about 1858 by Mr. W. R. Thompson. These were considered very fine
+animals, and were quite different from any previously imported.
+
+Ten years later in 1868, another importation was made by South Africa
+and from then on to 1880 between twelve and fifteen more lots were
+secured, some of them consisting of hundreds of animals. In the twelve
+years, up to 1880, over three thousand goats were received in South
+Africa from Asia Minor. Some of them brought as high as $2,200 each.
+
+During the next fourteen years there was a lack of importations into the
+Colony. In 1894, the first lot of American Angora goats, six head, were
+secured from C. P. Bailey of San Jose, California. They were sold to the
+Cape farmers by the importers at satisfactory prices, and in June, 1895,
+another lot of twenty bucks were secured from Mr. Bailey for $1000 cash.
+These bucks had a hard trip, and shed their fleece, but they were sold
+by the importer later.
+
+In 1895, another importation of one hundred and sixty-five head were
+secured by consent of the Sultan from Asia Minor. In 1896 another
+importation of sixty-three head were landed and sold to the Cape
+farmers. The highest priced buck of this lot brought about $1,850, and
+the highest priced doe about $1,000. These goats were not considered
+extra, with the exception of a few of the tops. They were not uniform,
+the breeches were bad, bellies deficiently covered, and they carried
+considerable kemp.
+
+
+ANGORAS IN OTHER COUNTRIES.
+
+Even before the arrival of Angora goats in South Africa they had been
+tried in Holland, France and England. Australia also imported some in
+1856, but the industry has not grown to any extent in any of these
+countries. There have been some Angoras exported to Australia from
+America since 1900. Canada, Mexico, Alaska, and some of the Pacific
+Islands, have small flocks of Angora goats at the present time. The
+start has been obtained largely from California.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+MOHAIR.
+
+
+That part of the fleece of the Angora goat, which at a year's growth is
+composed of long, lustrous, elastic fibers, is called Mohair. It may be
+more or less curled, but it is readily distinguishable from that part of
+the fleece of the Angora which is composed of short, stiff fibers, known
+as kemp.
+
+The word mohair probably has its origin in modern times, as the Turkish
+word for mohair is tiftick. A theory which is advanced by Mr. George
+Gatheral of Constantinople, and which is tenable, is that the early
+Dutch traders who visited Angora, found the native clergy wearing a gown
+made of mohair. The Turks called the cloth "mahr," and it is possible
+that the traders applied this word to the raw material. If this be so,
+the English have corrupted the word into the present term mohair.
+
+The color of mohair varies in different localities and on different
+individuals. In the vilayet of Koniah, in Asia Minor, is a breed of
+goats producing a brownish colored mohair. This material is sold upon
+the market as Koniah mohair. The Koniah goat, however, has been rapidly
+disappearing, as the herdsmen found that the foreign demand was for
+white mohair, and they have been crossing the white Angora bucks on the
+brown Koniah does. There are still over one hundred thousand pounds of
+Koniah mohair produced each year. In the Angora flocks of Asia Minor one
+always finds some colored goats. Black, blue, brown or red, usually with
+an admixture of white, are the common colors. The same thing may be said
+of the American flocks of Angoras. One may have been breeding white
+Angoras for years when, without apparent cause, a colored kid is
+dropped. Then color of the soil may give the mohair a peculiar tinge,
+but this usually scours out. The kemp in Asia Minor is sometimes a
+different color from the mohair. The kemp may be red or black and the
+mohair white. White mohair is what the manufacturer wants. If he wishes
+to make colored goods, he can dye white whatever color he wishes, but a
+colored mohair can only be used for certain colored goods.
+
+
+GRADES AND GRADING OF MOHAIR.
+
+In Turkey, after the fleece is shorn, the owner packs each fleece
+separately in sacks. He picks out the tag locks, colored fleeces or
+objectionable mohair, and after washing it, or making it more fit for
+market, he packs this in a sack by itself. Every village has its buyers,
+usually Greeks or Armenians, and there are a few traveling buyers. These
+men gradually collect the mohair. Men who have more money than they
+need put that money into mohair, as mohair is always salable, and it is
+so bulky that there is not much danger of it being stolen. There are so
+many robbers in Turkey that nothing is absolutely safe. One coffee house
+keeper in a small village sent about six dollars down to a larger place,
+as he was afraid to keep so much money in his house. When the mohair is
+collected in the larger towns it is again sorted, care being taken not
+to mix lots from different sections of the country. It is then forwarded
+to Constantinople of Ismidt, which is on the Sea of Marmara, near
+Constantinople. Here expert sorters go over the lots again. They do not
+break up the fleece, but they collect fleeces which are about the same
+and from the same district--for instance, Beibazar, Kjutiah, Kastamonia,
+Eskischehr, etc. These fleeces are then packed in bags and marked
+x - xx- xxx, or lettered a, b, AA, or numbered 1, 2, 3, etc. The
+mohair is then ready for exportation. It can be readily seen that a
+manufacturer who wants a particular kind of mohair can get exactly what
+he wants, if he knows the kind of mohair which comes from the different
+districts, and the grade of mohair which is put up under a certain mark
+by a certain firm. He can order of Mr. B. one hundred bags XX Beibazar
+mohair, and he knows what he is going to find when he opens the bags.
+There is a large room in Constantinople where a gang of men are almost
+constantly at work sorting mohair. The commission men have their store
+rooms around this central room; when the sorters finish with Mr. A's lot
+they commence to sort for Mr. B. Thus the same men sort all the mohair,
+and this insures a uniformity of grade.
+
+In America the plan of handling is somewhat different. It will be easier
+to tell what should be done than what is done. Until each grower becomes
+something of an expert sorter, or until we have central depots, where
+the mohair can be properly graded, the grower should roll the fleeces
+separately; they should not be tied, and put them in a bag or bale. He
+should pick out the tag locks, mohair discolored or clotted with urine
+or fęces, the colored fleeces, burry mohair or very kempy fleeces, and
+after preparation, put them in a separate parcel. Any kind of a bur or
+seed which sticks in the mohair must be picked out by hand. If the
+manufacturer has to do this, he puts a price on the mohair which will
+leave him plenty of margin. That is, he pays the grower about one-half
+as much as the mohair would be worth if it were free from this foreign
+material. If the mohair is very burry, it has to be treated chemically,
+and this spoils the luster. Sometimes the grower can make good wages by
+having the burs picked out before the animals are shorn. One man can
+pick the burs out of from fifteen to twenty-five animals a day, if there
+are not too many burs in the mohair. If the tag locks can be cleaned
+sufficiently by washing, they are of some value; but if not, they are
+hardly worth the expense of shipping.
+
+The mohair shorn from kids should be kept in parcels by itself, as it is
+usually finer and worth top prices. That of the does, if it differs from
+that of the wethers, should be packed separately. When the mohair is
+received by the mill it is sent to the sorting room.
+
+
+SORTING BY THE MANUFACTURER.
+
+Each goat's fleece is made up of a variety of different grades of
+mohair. Before a fleece can be spun it must be separated into these
+different grades as nearly as possible, and this is done by expert
+sorters, who select from the raw material about seven different degrees
+of fineness of fiber. They also take into consideration freeness from
+kemp and color. In separating the fleece much dust is liberated, and as
+some mohair is liable to carry the bacillus of anthrax, or other
+dangerous material, this dust, if allowed to circulate in the air, would
+become a serious menace to the health of the sorters. Wool sorters'
+disease is by no means uncommon, and one of the American mill owners
+reported that his sorters had such a dread of a foreign mohair which
+came packed in a distinctive package, that he had to stop handling this
+particular lot, although it was profitable stuff to spin.
+
+[Illustration: MOHAIR TRANSPORTATION IN CONSTANTINOPLE, TURKEY.
+
+Photo taken by Dr. Bailey.]
+
+To obviate this danger as far as possible each man opens the fleeces on
+a table covered with wire screen, under which circulates a strong
+exhaust current of air which is mechanically generated. Thus small
+foreign particles and dust in the fleeces are drawn downward. When the
+fleece is opened the sorter selects that part of the fleece which is
+known to be the coarsest, _i. e._, the breech and a strip along the
+center of the back, and puts this in one lot. Next he selects a narrow
+strip along the side of the fleece, which is known to be the finest part
+of the fleece, and puts this in another lot. Now the neck and the belly
+are separated and thrown into their classes. If the whole fleece were a
+fine one, and free from kemp, it would be sorted in the same way, but
+different parts of the fleece would go into proportionately higher
+classes. The lots which these sorters make are known to spin
+comparatively definite qualities of yarn. Thus the low breech and the
+back of most fleeces will not spin over No. 20 to No. 24 yarns, and the
+sides of good fleeces are fine in fiber and will spin No. 40 to No. 60
+yarn.
+
+The quantity of mohair which one man can sort varies considerably,
+according to the class of mohair which he is given to work upon. One
+mill estimated that experts can sort between two and three hundred
+pounds of domestic mohair a day, and that it costs about a cent a pound
+to thus separate the fleece. After the fleeces are graded, the mohair
+is ready to be sent to the mill proper for scouring and spinning.
+
+
+SCOURING.
+
+To-day the process of washing or scouring the fleece is done by
+machinery. The mohair is fed into a machine in which revolve paddles,
+which thoroughly mix the fiber with the liquid in this machine. At the
+opposite end from where it was fed in, the mohair is rolled out over
+warm rollers, and it is ready to be spun. It is claimed, and with some
+justice, that American mohair loses or shrinks about 12% to 20% while
+passing through this washing machine, and that Turkish mohair only
+shrinks about 13%. This may be due to the fact that some of the Turkish
+hair had been washed before it was shipped to market, and that by
+previous sorting some of the dirt had fallen out of the mohair. Then,
+too, some of the American growers are not very careful to keep the
+fleeces clean. Straw, sticks, hats, and even stones have been found in
+some domestic stuff.
+
+
+MIXING.
+
+After the mohair is thoroughly cleaned it is ready for spinning or
+carding. In order to spin the fibers most economically, evenly and to
+the best advantage, some of the mills mix different qualities of mohair
+of about the same fineness. For instance, Turkish mohair is mixed with
+Texas and California stuff, or Oregon is mixed with Iowa material. The
+spinning qualities of mohair from different sections varies, and this
+mixing tends to give uniformity. After the fibers have been mixed to
+suit, the mohair is run through straightening machines in preparation
+for the combing process.
+
+
+FIRST OR NOBLE COMB.
+
+This comb is so arranged that about two and a half inches of the base of
+all of the mohair fibers, and any other fibers which may be mixed with
+them, are held, the ends of the fibers which are longer than two and a
+half inches, hang freely and are caught in a revolving machine and
+dragged loose from the combs which hold the base of the fiber. Thus only
+those fibers two and a half inches long, or less, are left in the first
+comb. The longer fibers, or tops as they are now called, to distinguish
+them from the noil, or short fibers, are collected and are again passed
+through a second comb.
+
+
+SECOND OR LISTER COMB.
+
+Much the same process as was gone through with in the Noble comb, is
+repeated, except that now only the Noble top is combed, and as all of
+the fibers, less than two and a half inches, have been removed from this
+mohair, the comb is set so that any fibers shorter than four or five
+inches, shall be held as noil, and only those fibers which are longer
+than four or five inches shall be included in the top. This combing
+completed, we have a collection of mohair fibers none of them less than
+about five inches in length. This top is now ready to spin. This combing
+is rendered necessary by the fact that all of the mohair contains an
+admixture of kemp, and kemp cannot be spun with the finer grades of
+mohair. In getting this kemp out of the mohair many of the short mohair
+fibers are lost, so that combing is an expensive process. It costs in
+time, labor and mohair.
+
+
+SPINNING.
+
+Many strands of this Lister top are now drawn down into a single thread.
+This thread, if the fibers comprising it are coarse, may have some
+projecting ends, which give it a rough, uneven appearance, and if so,
+these ends are burned off. The thread is passed through a gas flame at a
+given rate of speed by machinery, and the projecting ends are singed.
+This is called genapping. The yarn is now ready for manufacturing. In
+Bradford, England, there are mills which only spin the yarn. Their trade
+is with the manufacturers, both at home and abroad, and it is a known
+fact that, while France and Germany manufacture much plush and braid,
+they buy all of their yarn from Bradford.
+
+
+CARDING.
+
+Short mohair, that is, mohair less than six inches long, is not run
+through combs, as above described. It is run over a carding wheel, or a
+large metal cylinder covered with small brads, which mix all the mohair
+and kemp. After passing over a number of these wheels, which revolve in
+different directions, the material thus carded is ready to spin.
+
+
+NOIL.
+
+Some of the noil collected by the combing process is composed of a large
+percentage of short mohair. This noil has a considerable value and is
+sometimes carded. The lower grade noil is sold to carpet manufacturers
+and various users of low grade stuff. Noil usually brings from twelve to
+twenty cents a pound.
+
+
+USES OF MOHAIR.
+
+As yet mohair has been used for only a limited number of things. Its
+possibilities have not been developed. New uses for the fiber are being
+discovered, and it seems probable that there will be many things made of
+mohair in the future. The yarn has a beautiful luster and is very
+durable. When ladies' lustre goods are in fashion a large amount of
+mohair goes into these fabrics. Much mohair is used in dress goods and
+men's goods. There is a steady demand for mohair plushes and braids.
+
+There is no plush made which will give the service, present the luster
+and retain a standing pile as long as mohair. One may crush the nap of
+a mohair plush as often or as long as he pleases, but the pile
+immediately resumes its upright position upon being released. Then, too,
+the dust shakes out of a mohair plush very easily. One rarely sees a
+dusty railroad car seat, although the country through which the car is
+passing may be very dusty. The rich effect produced by a heavily
+upholstered palace car is due to the mohair plush. Nothing has been
+found which will take its place. For furniture upholstering there is
+nothing more elegant and durable than mohair plush. The amount of plush
+thus used is governed by fashion. In countries where large military
+forces are retained there is always a heavy demand for mohair braids.
+There is no braid made which has the luster, combined with the
+durability, which mohair braid possesses. Here it may be stated that a
+coarse yarn can be used in making braids, so that when there is a heavy
+demand for braids there should be a proportionately high price paid for
+coarse long mohair. Mohair braids are always in demand, and will
+continue to be used upon ladies' clothing, as well as for military
+ornamental purposes.
+
+The variety of uses to which mohair is adapted is almost innumerable. In
+the manufacture of hats it plays an important part, and recently the
+demand for long fiber for the manufacture of wigs, ladies' hair nets and
+other toilet articles has been created.
+
+
+WORLD'S SUPPLY AND CONSUMPTION.
+
+At present Asia Minor and South Africa can be regarded as the two
+leading producers of mohair. The Asia Minor exports vary considerably,
+according to the price allowed, and as no manufactured stuff is
+exported, one gets a fair idea of the amount produced. It may be broadly
+stated that the Asia Minor clip amounts to about nine million pounds
+annually. That of South Africa amounts to about ten million pounds, and
+the United States now produces about one million pounds annually. Of
+this production a very large percentage of that coming from all these
+countries may be regarded as inferior stuff. We mean by this, that the
+Angora goat raising industry is yet in its infancy, and that much of the
+mohair produced is sheared from goats which have been bred from the
+common hair variety. Many of the characteristics of the fleece of the
+common goat still persist in the mohair.
+
+From the foregoing estimate the world's supply of mohair may be stated
+as twenty million pounds annually. Australia is as yet producing only a
+very small amount.
+
+Practically eighty-five to ninety per cent. of the world's supply of
+mohair is handled in Bradford, England. Nearly all of the South African
+and Turkish stuff is shipped directly to Bradford, a small amount of the
+Constantinople export coming to America, but a large part of the
+American import comes from Liverpool, England. At Bradford the raw
+material is manufactured, some of the manufactured stuff being exported
+as yarn, but the larger part is used to produce the finished article.
+The remaining ten or fifteen per cent. is manufactured in the United
+States. At times the demand for mohair goods stimulates the demand for
+raw material, and the United States has been known to use from twenty to
+twenty-five per cent. of the world's supply. To recapitulate, the United
+States produces five per cent. of the world's annual supply of raw
+mohair, and manufactures from ten to twenty-five per cent. of the
+world's annual production.
+
+
+MOHAIR PRICES.
+
+The price of mohair has fluctuated with the caprice of fashion. Supply
+and demand are the essential factors in its valuation, but demand has
+been so influenced by the requirements of fashion in the past that one
+finds a wide range in price for the raw material. In a report issued by
+the Bradford _Observer_ we find the price ranging from fifty cents a
+pound in 1856, to eighty cents in 1866, ninety cents in 1876, and then
+down to thirty cents in 1886 and 1896. In 1903 the average price in the
+United States was about thirty-five cents a pound, and for 1904 about
+thirty cents a pound.
+
+[Illustration: READY FOR THE SHEARERS.]
+
+To-day there is a demand for mohair, regardless of fashion. During the
+past two years the price of raw material has been low, but there has
+been a margin of profit in the industry, and considering the fact that
+fashion's decree has eliminated the manufacture of luster fabrics for
+the present, the mohair producer can feel assured that there will be a
+steady market for his material. With the occasional good times when
+luster goods are in demand, the mohair grower should do well.
+
+
+SHEARING AND PACKING MOHAIR.
+
+The goat should be shorn before he commences to shed, as the mohair
+loses its weight and luster after the shedding process begins. There are
+a few goats, which, under certain kinds of food and climatic conditions,
+will not shed their fleeces, but most goats will shed, and even goats
+which have carried their fleeces over a year in one section, may shed if
+they are moved a few miles and the food is changed. A class of
+non-shedders would be very valuable, but so far a distinctive class of
+non-shedders, under any and all conditions, and which transmit this
+peculiarity, has not been identified. The Angora goat will usually
+commence to shed early in the spring, or as soon as a few warm bright
+days come.
+
+In some sections of the country it is thought advisable to shear twice a
+year. Many points in favor of this method are advocated. It is claimed
+that the price realized for the two medium length, or short stapled
+fleeces, together with the increased number of pounds shorn in the two
+clippings a year, pays much better than the one long staple fleece which
+can be shorn from the same animal for a year's growth. There are many
+reasons both for and against shearing twice a year. The mills prefer
+long mohair, or at least fiber more than six inches in length (combing
+length). They pay the best price for this class of mohair, and it must
+be left to the individual to decide whether it pays him best to shear
+once or twice a year. At present possibly one-third of the Angoras in
+the United States are shorn twice a year, and the remaining two-thirds
+only once. In Asia Minor one finds the goat shearer using a pair of long
+bladed scissors to cut the mohair. The goats are shorn in the spring,
+and only once during the year. The animal's feet are tied, and then by
+using both hands, one at either end of the scissors, the goat is shorn.
+Recently some Englishman has introduced an ordinary spring sheep shear,
+but most of the natives prefer the scissors.
+
+To-day one finds the hand shearer and the machine shearer at work in
+America. The hand shearer should use a pair of short bladed (about five
+inch blade) sheep shears. This is to prevent the point of the shear from
+cutting mohair, which is not intended to be clipped with that
+particular stroke of the shear. If, for instance, the shearer is
+clipping the mohair along the sides of the animal, and the point of the
+shear cuts some of the mohair at least three inches out from the body,
+this stubble is shorn again (double cut) when the shearer gets to this
+place, and this three-inch mohair is too short to be of much value. It
+will be combed out at the mill as noil. An expert shearer can clip about
+the same number of range goats that he can range sheep--from ninety to
+one hundred and twenty a day.
+
+The machine shear is rapidly taking the place of the hand shear. It
+clips the mohair close to the skin and almost does away with double
+cutting. It requires less skill to shear with a machine shear, and it
+does the work more uniformly. There is also less danger of cutting the
+animal. The machines do the work very rapidly.
+
+After the goat is shorn the fleece should be collected and rolled into a
+bundle, "bump," and placed in a sack or bale. It should not be tied, as
+the mill men object to the particles of string which remain in the
+mohair and disfigure the manufactured product. Any colored fleeces,
+discolored mohair, or mohair containing objectionable features, such as
+burrs, straw, etc., can be placed in separate parcels. The kid mohair
+can be kept by itself, and the wether and doe mohair can be separately
+packed. The long mohair should be kept separate from short stuff. Thus
+one grades the mohair to some extent on the farm, and he has a better
+idea of what the clip should bring.
+
+If the mohair is to be shipped a long distance, it will pay to bale the
+fleeces, as compact bales occupy much less space than sacks. The freight
+rates are usually less upon baled mohair than they are upon the sacked
+material. The cost of baling the mohair is a little less than the cost
+of sacking.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+BREEDING OF THE ANGORA GOAT.
+
+
+One can learn very little about breeding the Angora goat from the Turk.
+As we know from Tchikacheff's work, which was published over fifty years
+ago, cold winters often killed many of the Angoras in Asia Minor, and
+the Turk then imported from more favored districts common bucks or does
+to breed to the Angora. This was before the great demand for mohair,
+occasioned by the increase in manufacturing plants at Bradford, England,
+caused the Turkish mohair raisers to resort to all manner of means to
+increase the supply of raw material.
+
+To-day the Turk is treading in the paths of his forefathers. What was
+good enough for them, certainly ought to be good enough for him, so he
+reasons. He eats with his fingers, cooks on a brazier, sits on the
+floor, eats, drinks, sleeps and works all in the same room, and keeps
+his wives in seclusion.
+
+When he comes to breeding the Angora he leaves that to his servants, if
+he be wealthy enough to have any. Most of the breeders cannot read or
+write. They have never traveled. They have no ambition, and they know
+nothing of the principles of selective breeding. As a natural
+consequence the Angora goat of to-day has not improved, nor is he likely
+to improve under Turkish management. One large breeder who supplied
+bucks to some tributary country, said that he thought that it was a
+shame to castrate a buck, no matter how bad he might be. The Turk
+separates the bucks from the does at breeding season, as Asia Minor has
+cold weather late in the spring, and the danger of losing kids, if they
+come too early, is great. When the bucks are turned with the flock they
+are allowed to run until the next breeding season, and all of the bucks,
+regardless of quality or quantity, are allowed to run with the does.
+
+When the first few Angoras arrived in America the natural procedure was
+to cross them upon the common short-haired goat of this country. It was
+a new industry, and many wanted to try the Angora. Very slowly the
+Angora, or the cross-bred animals were scattered over the United States.
+Stories were told of the wonderful things for which the mohair was used,
+and some supposedly reliable authorities quoted mohair at $8.00 a pound,
+as has been stated. Companies were started, and of course the supply of
+good Angoras, that is, goats which would shear about four pounds of
+mohair (worth at that time about seventy-five cents or a dollar a
+pound), was limited. Men bought any goat which had a trace of Angora
+blood in him as a thoroughbred Angora. A few years, however,
+demonstrated the fact that a common goat, with a little admixture of
+Angora blood, did not produce either the quality or the quantity of
+fleece wanted. Only a few of the more persistent breeders continued the
+experiment and their investigations. They sent and went to the home of
+the Angora, and brought more of the original animals to America. It took
+the American breeders about thirty years to find out just what the
+Angora goat was and how he should be handled. During that thirty years
+large flocks of common goats, which had been crossed with the Angora,
+and which might be properly termed "grade flocks," had been formed. Only
+a few thoroughbred flocks, that is, flocks of the original Angora, as he
+came from Turkey, were in existence.
+
+
+CROSSING WITH THE COMMON SHORT HAIRED GOAT.
+
+By experience we have learned that the common short coarse haired goat
+can be crossed with the Angora goat, and that after sufficient crosses
+have been made, the cross-bred Angora so nearly resembles the
+thoroughbred that for all practical purposes he is an Angora. We have
+also learned that certain kinds of common goats respond rapidly to the
+infusion of Angora blood, and that others retain certain peculiarities
+of the common goat for generations. The Angora will not cross with
+sheep. For instance, a common goat with a long mane on the back, or tuft
+of long hair behind the foreleg, or on the flank or the hip, will
+continue to perpetuate this long coarse hair on the offspring for
+generations, even though the best of Angora blood be infused. The color
+of the common goat is of some importance. A brown or reddish brown goat
+retains the reddish cast at the base of the mohair much longer than one
+of a bluish or bluish black color. It is equally true that a pure white
+mother may drop a colored kid occasionally. In Constantinople the mohair
+is graded into parcels containing red kemp, black kemp, etc. There it is
+the kemp which retains the color. As has been stated, there is also a
+breed of brown Angora goats, or at least mohair-producing goats, in
+Koniah in Asia Minor. Presuming, then, that one has a suitable common
+doe and a good Angora buck as a basis, the following may be deduced as
+relative changes in the different crosses:
+
+[Illustration: PASHA V--A True Breeder.]
+
+The first cross, or half-blood Angora, will have a covering of short
+coarse common hair and a thin covering of mohair, which does not grow
+very long. If the animal were to be shorn, possibly a half pound of hair
+of a very inferior grade might be yielded. If this hair were to be
+offered to a manufacturer, he would class it as noil, and refer it to a
+carpet manufacturer, who would possibly pay ten or twelve cents a pound
+for it. The skin of the animal will be a little fluffy, and not suitable
+for fine goat skin trade. It will not take a good polish after tanning,
+and it is not desirable for shoe leather. It will be worth about half as
+much as common goat skin. The meat of the animal will be a little better
+than that of the common goat, but it will be inferior to Angora venison.
+The animal will still be as prolific as the common goat. Twins and
+triplets will be a common occurrence. The kids will also be hardy. If
+one were to stop at this stage in breeding, he would have decreased the
+value of the skin of his goat without increasing the value of the
+animal.
+
+The second cross, or the three-quarter blood Angora, will have a
+covering of short coarse common hair, especially noticeable on the back,
+belly, neck and hips. The mohair will now be fairly thickly set upon the
+sides of the animal, and of medium length, about seven inches long for a
+year's growth. If the animal were to be examined by a novice, he would
+be called an Angora from his general appearance. If shorn, he will yield
+about one, or one and a half pounds of hair, and the mohair manufacturer
+will pay about twelve or fifteen cents a pound for the material. The
+skin is valueless for rug, robe or trimming purposes, because of the
+coarse back and the scanty covering of mohair. It is fit for glove
+leather after tanning, but its value for this purpose is less than that
+of the common goat. The meat is more like Angora venison, and can be
+sold on the market as mutton. The animal is still prolific. From the
+second cross on, the grade goat rapidly assumes the characteristic of
+the Angora goat, but if for any reason poor bucks are used (an
+occasional animal without apparent reason retrogrades), the animal as
+rapidly resumes the characteristic of the common goat. Quite a
+percentage of colored kids will be dropped by does which are themselves
+white.
+
+The third cross, or seven-eighths blood Angora, will still have the
+coarse back, a partially bare belly, coarse hips, and the neck will be
+insufficiently covered. The sides will be covered with good quality,
+long staple mohair, comparatively free from the coarse, dead underhair,
+or kemp. The animal will shear about two or three pounds of fair mohair,
+which will be worth from twenty to thirty cents a pound. This mohair
+will be fit to run through the combs, and the "top," or long mohair,
+free from kemp, will be used in the manufacture of plushes, braids, etc.
+The skin will have some value for rug, robe and trimming purposes. The
+meat will be juicy, palatable and salable as mutton.
+
+The fourth cross, or fifteen-sixteenths blood Angora, will be hardly
+distinguishable from the average thoroughbred Angora. The coarse back
+will persist to some extent, and the hip will be plentifully covered
+with kemp. A good many of this grade will be poorly covered on the
+belly, and an occasional bare necked or off colored animal will be
+dropped. The animal will shear from two and a half to five pounds of
+mohair of good quality, which will be worth from twenty-five to
+thirty-five cents a pound. It will be from eight to twelve inches long
+at a year's growth, and it will be combed at the mill. It is fit for
+manufacturing into any of the goods for which mohair is used. The meat
+of the animal is rich, juicy, and free from the disagreeable qualities
+so often noticeable in mutton. If the animal be fed upon browse, the
+meat will have the flavor of venison. The tendency of the mothers to
+drop twins will be lessened, and it will be rather the exception for
+twins to be born. The kids will be rather delicate when dropped.
+
+Subsequent crosses will tend to reduce the amount of kemp upon the
+animal and to improve the back. The question will now resolve itself
+into one of breeding for points. Bucks must be selected which cover the
+points the does need most, and by careful selection the grade flock will
+soon be indistinguishable from the thoroughbreds.
+
+
+METHODS USED IN AMERICA TO-DAY.
+
+By gradual steps the original Angoras imported into America have been so
+improved, and the cross-bloods have been so highly graded that some of
+the American flocks equal the best Turkish flocks. America has many
+high-grade flocks, which, if it were not for the remaining coarse hair
+of the common goat, would be upon a par with the Turkish flocks. There
+are enough good goats in the country for a foundation stock, and a few
+years more of the careful, painstaking, selective breeding which is in
+progress throughout the United States to-day, will bring forth an Angora
+superior to the Turkish stock. Sections of the country modify the
+characteristics of the Angora. Probably climatic conditions, varieties
+of food and water, and certainly mental vigor of the owners is largely
+responsible for this. One man selects large, well formed, rapidly
+maturing goats and breeds for this type. It is surprising how soon his
+flocks assume this type. Another breeder works for fineness of fleece,
+regardless of size or shape of the animal, and he gets his points.
+
+There has been much vagueness as to what points the breeder should try
+to produce. Some have claimed that the most profitable animal to raise
+was one producing heavy ringletty fleece, regardless of the quality of
+the fleece, except of course that it should be as free from kemp as
+possible. This day has passed. We know what the mohair is used for, and
+know how it is prepared for manufacturing. The future may change these
+uses or methods, but we know what we want now, and we know how to breed
+our goats to produce the most money per head for the present at least.
+Fashions vary, and the fashions vary the demand for certain grades of
+mohair. Coarse fibered, long staple, fine luster mohair possessing a
+great amount of tensile strength and elasticity will make good braid
+yarns, but if braid yarns are not in demand, such fiber is not the best
+for plush or dress yarns. Fine fibered, long staple, pliable, lustrous,
+easily spun yarn can be used for braid stuff, or at least part of the
+fleece will be heavy enough for this purpose, and the finer parts have
+such a variety of uses that they spin yarns which are always in demand.
+Looking at the question from the manufacturing standpoint, we see that
+the most staple product is the fine-fibered mohair. But a producer might
+have animals which would shear two and a half pounds average (the
+average of the Turkish flocks) of very fine mohair, while another grower
+might have animals which would shear four or five pounds average of
+coarse mohair. And even though the value per pound of the coarse mohair
+may be considerably less than that of the fine mohair, the grower owning
+the coarse haired heavy shearing Angoras will realize more money per
+head for his clip. The value also of the carcass and skin of the Angora
+is of importance. A heavy carcass and a large skin are of more value
+than a light carcass and a small skin.
+
+If the Angora breeder would produce the animal which will yield the most
+money per head, he should aim to produce an animal which will shear the
+heaviest fleece of the most marketable mohair, regardless of fashions,
+and one which, when put upon the market, will dress the most possible
+pounds of desirable meat, and yield a readily marketable skin. There are
+not many such animals on the market to-day, but the time when there will
+be plenty is coming. We have the fineness of fiber; we have the density
+of weight of fleece; we have the covering of the animal and the size and
+stamina of the individual, and we have breeders who are endeavoring to
+unite combinations to produce the Angora of the future. But while we are
+without the ideal, one should choose that point which is hardest to
+attain, most necessary for the best paying animal, and work especially
+for that. That point is fineness of fiber, always remembering freeness
+from kemp. There are many large goats, many heavy shearing goats, but
+there are very few fine fibered comparatively free from kemp goats. One
+should not make the mistake of neglecting size and weight of fleece.
+There are few animals which will respond more rapidly to careful
+crossing than the Angora goat. A buck will usually stamp his
+individuality upon every kid, hence the necessity of carefully selecting
+breeding stock.
+
+
+GESTATION.
+
+The period of gestation varies slightly with the individual, but the
+average may be approximately stated as one hundred and forty-seven days,
+or about five months. Both the bucks and the does have a breeding
+season, but this season may be changed or varied by different elements.
+As a rule the bucks commence to rut about July or August here in
+America, and the does soon after the time the bucks commence. Some bucks
+which have been allowed to run with the does all of the time, never
+cease rutting, and the does conceive about every six months. The does
+come in heat about every fourteen days, and remain in this condition for
+about three days. If the bucks are allowed to run with the does, one
+buck should be used for about every fifty does. If the buck is only
+allowed to serve the doe once, a grown animal will serve one hundred and
+fifty does in forty days without permanent injury to himself. The does
+conceive at about the age of seven months, and the bucks breed at about
+the same age, but the wise breeder will not sacrifice the individual by
+interfering with its development. Both the buck and the doe should not
+be bred until they are at least a year old. The bucks should be fed at
+breeding season, and if one has a sufficient number of bucks, it is well
+to turn the bucks with the does in relays. It is advisable to have the
+kids start coming slowly, so that one may get new men trained to handle
+them properly. One or two bucks turned with a flock of a thousand does
+for a few days, and then removed and allowed to rest, and a new relay of
+three or more bucks turned with the does, to be removed in a few days,
+and a new relay being introduced into the flock, will do more
+satisfactory work than they would if all of the bucks were turned in at
+one time. The same principle can be applied to smaller flocks. The does
+should be protected from cold storms or rough handling when they are
+heavy with kid, else they are liable to abort. If for any unusual cause
+the doe aborts one season, there is no reason why she will not carry her
+kid until full term another time, and experience has proven that she
+will.
+
+[Illustration: PASHA V AND BISMARCK.
+
+American bred bucks, Bismarck shearing 12 pounds, was the sire of the
+grand champion buck at the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904.]
+
+
+BREEDING OF REGISTERED STOCK.
+
+The breeding of registered stock, or stock of known ancestry, requires
+much care and quite different handling. Both the does and the bucks must
+be marked with an ear tag, brand, tattoo number, or some other permanent
+individual mark, and the kids should be marked at birth. Fifty known
+does may be put in a pasture or pen and a known buck put with them. He
+should be allowed to run with them at least forty days. After this the
+does may be collected into a flock and several bucks turned with them,
+but only the kids which are dropped from a known buck are fit for
+record.
+
+A more accurate method, and one which can be used with a large flock, is
+to place the bucks in a corral adjoining the one used by the does at
+night. The does should be brought into their corral early in the
+evening, and all of those in heat will work along the fence next to the
+bucks. The doe in heat can be caught and the number taken and recorded
+in a book. She is then placed in a small pen with a buck and his number
+is recorded with hers, together with the date. If the doe does not
+conceive, she can be put with the same buck again at a later date, and
+one has approximate knowledge of when she should drop her kid. In this
+manner a buck will serve about two or three does in the evening, and one
+or two in the morning. The kid is marked at birth and the number
+recorded after that of the mother. The breeding of recorded stock is of
+value only for special reasons, and is not advisable with large flocks,
+as it is expensive.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ANGORA VENISON.
+
+
+Angora venison is the name which should be given to the flesh of the
+Angora goat. At the present time it is usually sold in the markets as
+mutton. The term goat meat should be applied to meat of the common goat,
+and the term mutton belongs to sheep. Because the Angora goat feeds
+largely upon that material which nourishes the deer, the meat of the
+Angora is flavored like venison. The fat is well distributed, and the
+healthfulness of the animal renders this an especially desirable meat.
+The Turk has long recognized Angora venison as an important element in
+his diet. Angora kid is above comparison, and it occupies the principle
+place on the menu at private as well as state affairs in the Orient. As
+one passes through the market places in Asia Minor he sees the carcasses
+of the Angora hanging in every shop. There is no mistaking the animal,
+as the skin still remains on the goat. One takes his choice, and as a
+rule more Angora venison than mutton is sold. Some of the Turks keep
+their wethers until they become coarse-haired and too old to pay to keep
+longer, eight or ten years old. This class of meat ranks with old
+mutton, and sells at a discount. Young wethers and does are in good
+demand. There has existed in America some prejudice against the flesh of
+the goat. To-day thousands of goats are being consumed annually, but
+most of them are sold as mutton. Packers and butchers still insist that
+Angora venison must be sold as mutton. They pay about one-half a cent to
+a cent a pound less for the goat than for sheep.
+
+The goat never fattens as well along the back as the sheep, and hence
+the carcass does not look so well. The fat is more evenly distributed
+throughout the animal in the goat. An expert once said that to know
+whether a goat was fat one should feel the brisket, and if there was a
+considerable layer of adipose tissue between the skin and the breast
+bone, the animal was fat.
+
+Some of the American breeders do not send their wethers to market until
+they get too old to produce valuable fleeces. The animals are then
+slaughtered when they have grown a half year's fleece, and the skins are
+reserved by the breeder. These skins are valuable, and help to bring up
+the average price of the goat.
+
+At present some of the packers recognize no difference between shorn and
+unshorn goats. The price is the same, so it pays to shear the goats
+before bringing them to market. There is absolutely no strong flavor in
+prime Angora venison, and this is where the meat differs from that of
+the common goat.
+
+The goat is a slow grower, and not until the second year do the bones
+ossify. Therefore, a two-year-old can be sold for lamb, as he has a
+"soft joint." Grown Angora wethers do not average much more than one
+hundred pounds as a rule, although there are occasional bands sold which
+average one hundred and fifteen pounds.
+
+It is safe to say that Angora venison will never supplant mutton, but it
+will have its place among the edible meats.
+
+[Illustration: ANGORA BUCK--Early Importation.]
+
+
+
+
+ANGORA GOAT SKINS.
+
+
+An Angora goat skin differs considerably from the skin of the common
+goat. In the first place the Angora skin is covered with more or less
+mohair; and in the second place, the texture of the skin itself is
+different. The skin of the common goat is firm, and the different layers
+are so closely united that they cannot be separated. The layers of the
+Angora skin are not so closely united, and the skin is slightly fluffy.
+The outer layer of this skin peels off when it is used. The Angora skin
+is valuable both with the fleece on and without it. Its principle value,
+however, is with the fleece on. After the skins have been properly
+tanned, they are used for rugs, robes, trimmings, and imitating various
+furs. When ladies' and children's Angora furs are in style, these skins
+become very valuable for this purpose. One skin has cut $17.00 worth of
+trimming at wholesale. Of course, the value of the skins depends upon
+the quality and character of the mohair with which the skins are
+covered, and their size. Large, well covered skins are always scarce and
+command good prices. They are worth from $1.00 to $2.00 each. Most of
+the Asia Minor skins are sent to Austria, and the prices paid for the
+raw skins are about the same as in America. The skins which have had the
+mohair removed are valuable for the manufacture of gloves and morocco
+leather. They do not make as fine leather as the common goat skins, but
+they are as extensively used. All skins should be carefully handled.
+
+The skin should be carefully removed from the carcass. Goats do not skin
+as easily as sheep, and the careless operator is liable to cut the inner
+layers of the skin if he is not careful. These cuts are called
+"flesh-cuts," and skins badly "flesh-cut" are comparatively valueless,
+because "flesh-cuts" can not be removed by the tanner. A sharp knife
+should be used, and the operator should avoid cutting the skin.
+
+The skin should be well salted, care being taken to see that the salt
+penetrates every portion of the raw surface. The skins can be cured in
+the shade without the use of salt, but sun-dried skins are worthless. If
+the edges of the skin are allowed to roll, so that raw surfaces come
+together, the part so affected will heat and the hair pull out. It is
+not necessary to stretch the skins while curing them.
+
+Goats should be killed when their fleece is suitable for robe and rug
+purposes. Those carrying a six month's fleece, if it is six inches long,
+have about the right kind of skins. There are some Angora skins imported
+from Turkey and South Africa.
+
+[Illustration: Prize winners at the Columbian Exposition, Chicago,
+1893.]
+
+
+
+
+BY-PRODUCTS OF ANGORA GOATS.
+
+
+The Angora goat should not be classed with milch animals. As a rule the
+does give a sufficient amount of milk to nourish the kid or kids. The
+more common blood there is in the goat the better milch animal she is.
+However, some Angoras have been milked, and the milk is as rich as that
+of the common goat. A quart of milk a day may be considered a fair
+average for a fresh milch Angora doe. It has been suggested that because
+the milk of the goat contains a heavy percentage of fat, it is a proper
+substitute for mothers' milk for babies. This is probably a mistake, as
+that part of the milk which is the hardest for the baby to digest is the
+protein, and it will be observed that in the following table of analysis
+submitted, the percentage of protein in goat's milk and in cow's milk is
+about the same, and that it is considerably larger than in mother's
+milk. A very desirable feature in goat's milk is that the fat is
+distributed throughout the milk, and that it does not readily separate
+from the milk. This would assist in the assimilation of the fat by an
+infant. Some experiments made with coffee demonstrate that it requires
+half the quantity of goat's milk to produce the same effect upon this
+beverage which cow's milk produces. This may be partially explained by
+the quantity of fat in goat's milk, and partially by the fact that the
+fat does not readily separate from the milk. The bottom of the can is as
+good as the top.
+
+
+ANALYSIS OF MILK.
+
+ MOTHER'S COW'S GOAT'S
+ AVERAGE AVERAGE AVERAGE
+
+ Fat 4.00 3.50 7.30
+ Sugar 7.00 4.30 4.10
+ Proteid 1.50 4.00 4.18
+ Salts .20 .70 1.21
+ Water 87.30 87.50 83.21
+ ------ ------ ------
+ 100.00 100.00 100.00
+
+Persons in poor health have been greatly benefitted by the use of goat's
+milk. This is probably due to the fact that the fat in the milk is so
+distributed that a large percentage of it is taken up by the digestive
+apparatus. Angora goats are docile, and it is possible that some of them
+could be developed into good milch animals.
+
+
+FERTILIZER.
+
+It is a known fact that packers of the present day utilize all of the
+carcass of most food animals, but it is not the fertilizer which the
+packer makes from the blood and offal of the goat which we shall
+consider here.
+
+Sheep's manure has been used for years on orchards and vegetable
+gardens, and in the last few years goats' manure has been in demand,
+selling at from $6 to $7.50 a ton, depending upon the purity of the
+fertilizer. It must be remembered that only a small portion of this
+manure is dropped at the night bed-ground, the balance is evenly
+distributed over the land upon which the goats are feeding. The goats
+not only rid the farm of objectionable weeds and brush, but they help to
+furnish a rich soil in which grass will grow. This fact has been so
+thoroughly demonstrated that western farmers, who have large tracts of
+wheat or barley stubble to rent during the summer, are always anxious to
+get goats upon this land.
+
+
+OTHER PRODUCTS.
+
+The horns of the goats are used to make handles for pocket knives, etc.
+The hoofs are used in the manufacture of glue.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+FOOD, CLIMATE AND PROTECTION.
+
+
+On the mountains and in the valleys of the United States the Angora has
+had a variety of food. He is a natural browser, and will live almost
+entirely on brush, if this kind of food is to be found, but he readily
+adapts himself to circumstances, and will live and do well upon an
+exclusively grass diet. The fact that the goat is a browser has been
+made use of in clearing farms of brush and objectional weeds. If a
+sufficient number of goats are confined upon a limited area for a period
+of time, they will kill most of the brush upon this land. They will eat
+almost every kind of brush, but they have their preferences and enjoy
+especially blackberry vines and those kinds of brush which contain
+tannic acid, such as scrub oak. They do not poison easily, and if there
+is a variety of food they rarely eat enough of any kind of poisonous
+plant to prove fatal. If, however, they are hungry, and have access to
+places where there are poisonous plants, they will eat enough to kill
+themselves.
+
+
+KILLING BRUSH.
+
+If one wishes to clear brush land, he should confine the goats to a
+comparatively small tract. The goats kill the shrubs by eating the
+leaves and by peeling the bark from the branches and trunks of the
+trees. The brush thus deprived of lungs, soon dies and the roots rot. As
+fast as the leaves grow they must be consumed, so it is well to allow
+the goats to eat most of the leaves off of a limited tract, and then in
+order to give the goats plenty of feed, they should be moved to another
+field. As soon as the leaves on the first tract have regrown the goats
+should be again confined to this land. In this way the leaves are
+continually destroyed. This process can be continued as fast as the
+leaves regrow. By this method it is estimated that a bunch of one
+hundred to one hundred and fifty goats will clear forty acres of thick
+brush in about two years. In countries where the grass grows as the
+brush dies, goats will eat some of this grass, but they prefer the
+browse.
+
+On some of the older goat ranches, where the Angora has been raised
+exclusively for the mohair and mutton, it has become quite a problem to
+prevent the goats from killing out the brush. The goats have done well
+where other kinds of livestock would have starved, but as soon as the
+brush is killed the land produces almost nothing, and even the goats
+cannot make a living. To prevent as far as possible their killing the
+brush the flocks are moved frequently from one range to another, so that
+the shrubs have a chance to recuperate between visits. In this way
+brush can be kept almost indefinitely for the goats. On some of the
+western ranges, where cattle and sheep have, by continual cropping,
+killed much of the grass, good browse remains. These ranges would have
+to be abandoned if it were not for the goat. Goats do not in any way
+interfere with the pasturage of cattle or other livestock. Cattle feed
+contentedly on the same range with the goats, and this fact has led many
+southern cattle men to invest in goats. The goats are herded on the
+brushy lands, and the cattle range over the same territory and eat the
+grass. Horses have a great fondness for goats.
+
+
+SALT.
+
+Goats, like other livestock, should have a small amount of salt. The
+salt should be kept where they can get it at liberty, or else it should
+be fed at regular intervals. If ground salt is given, care should be
+taken to see that individuals do not eat an oversupply of the salt.
+
+
+WATER.
+
+While Angoras do not require as much water as sheep, yet they should be
+given a quantity sufficient at least once a day. In winter goats will
+live upon snow. Men have reported that their goats have gone for a week
+at a time, and all summer long, without any more moisture than they
+could get from browse and weeds, but even if Angoras should stand this
+treatment, they will thrive better with water once daily. It is
+estimated that under normal conditions a goat will consume about
+one-ninetieth of its body weight (about a pint of water for a grown
+animal) in a day. On hot days, when the animals are on dry feed, they
+will frequently drink two quarts of water.
+
+
+SHEDS.
+
+To raise Angora goats most profitably one should really be provided with
+sheds. These sheds should be about the same as those which are provided
+for sheep in the same locality. For years southern and western breeders
+have made a success of the Angora industry, and very few of them have
+had any artificial protection for their goats. But even these breeders
+find that they can raise a larger percentage of increase, and get
+through the year with a smaller percentage of loss if they have sheds.
+Grown goats rarely need much shelter, even in the winter, if the weather
+is dry, but during cold, damp storms the fleece wets through and the
+animal chills. Just after shearing, or just before kidding season, one
+is liable to lose some grown animals, or to have many kids slunk, if the
+goats are not protected from cold storms. Young kids also require
+attention, and proper sheds more than pay for themselves by preventing
+excessive mortality. Whether the shed should be closed on all sides, or
+whether it may be left open, depends upon the locality. Do as one would
+for sheep, under the same conditions, will be a fairly safe rule to
+follow. Allow at least four or five square feet of shed room to each
+mature animal, and the danger of the goats crowding together in the
+corners and smothering the animals on the underside of the pile, should
+never be forgotten. On very cold nights large numbers, especially of the
+kids, may be killed by smothering, if they are not carefully watched.
+
+
+FENCES.
+
+The question of fencing for the Angora goat is not such a serious matter
+as the beginner would imagine. If the goats have not been raised as pets
+and taught to jump, there will be little trouble with the animals going
+over a perpendicular fence of ordinary height. They will, however, go
+through or under the fence, if it is possible. They are natural
+climbers, and if the fence offers projecting steps, upon which they can
+climb, they will soon find their way to the outside of the enclosure.
+Some of the old stone and rail fences will not hold goats. Any
+perpendicular fence, three feet high, with transverse spaces not wider
+than three or four inches for the lower two feet, and not wider than six
+inches for the upper foot, will hold goats. If the spaces in the fence
+are perpendicular, they will necessarily have to be narrower, as small
+kids will crawl through the spaces. A woven-wire fence, two feet high,
+with a perpendicular stay, at least twelve inches apart, so that the
+goats will not get their heads caught in the fence, surmounted by a
+couple of plain or barbed wires, six inches apart, will hold goats, and
+if barbed wire is used, will prevent cattle from breaking the fence. If
+plain or barbed wire is used, the first three wires nearest the ground
+should be placed not more than three inches apart, and close enough to
+the ground to prevent kids from crawling under the lowest wire. The
+space between the next wires may be increased to four, five and six
+inches, and so on to the desired height of the fence. A board fence
+composed of three boards four inches wide, with a space between the
+ground and the first board of about three inches, and a three or four
+inch space between the boards, the whole being surmounted by a barbed or
+plain wire or two makes a very satisfactory goat fence. If pickets or
+posts are used, they should be set closely enough together, say about
+two inches apart, to prevent small kids from crawling between them. An
+objection has been raised to barbed wire, on account of the mohair which
+the barbs pull out. The amount of mohair lost in this way is
+inconsiderable. As has been stated, it hurts the goat to pull the
+mohair, and the goat soon learns to avoid the barbs. Many breeders use
+barbed wire corrals and find them satisfactory. Probably woven wire is
+the best fence under ordinary conditions.
+
+
+HERDING.
+
+In mountainous countries, where it is not practical to fence the range,
+the flocks should be watched by herders. The Angora has a natural
+tendency to return home, or to a known camping ground at night, and in
+some places this tendency is relied upon to bring the flock home, and
+they are not herded. Of course, in countries where there is no danger
+from loss by depredations of wild animals, and where food is so
+plentiful that the goats must find a sufficient amount, the flock may be
+turned loose.
+
+One shepherd should tend from one to two thousand head, as goats flock
+together well. Of course, during kidding season the flocks will have to
+be more closely watched. Goats travel rapidly and cover a considerable
+amount of territory in a day. A flock may travel from ten to twelve
+miles from the time they leave camp in the morning until they return to
+camp in the evening. The herder should walk ahead of the leaders of the
+flock, so that they will not travel too fast, or he may walk upon a
+nearby elevation, so that he can see that the flock does not separate. A
+flock will sometimes string out over a mile. The goats should be given
+freedom. Too often a zealous herder overworks himself and keeps his
+flock poor by crowding them together. A good sheep herder soon learns
+the nature of the goat, and when he understands the animal he would
+rather herd goats than sheep.
+
+[Illustration: Prize winners at the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904.]
+
+
+DOGS.
+
+In some sections of the country sheep-killing dogs have proven a great
+nuisance to sheep-breeders. To say that the Angora goat will prevent
+dogs from killing sheep, and that they will drive the dogs away, would
+be a misstatement. Bucks and grown goats will protect themselves to some
+extent. If a strange dog attacks a flock in a field, the goats will
+usually huddle together and the bucks and grown animals will keep the
+dog at bay. A mother will fight bravely to protect her kid.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+KIDDING ANGORAS.
+
+
+An experience of years has taught the Turk that if he wishes to save
+many kids, he must have them come late in the season. The changeable
+weather of the Turkish spring, the frequent cold rains and the lack of
+proper shed accommodations, have more than once not only destroyed the
+increase, but also killed the grown goats. The Turkish methods of
+handling kids are of little practical value. They know how delicate the
+kids are when they are born, and they usually bring the kid and its
+mother to the house as soon as it is dropped.
+
+The Turkish Angora goat men usually range small flocks, and they also
+have a surplus of help, so that this is a comparatively easy method. The
+kids are allowed to go with the flocks as soon as they are old enough to
+travel. The principal objection to letting young kids go with the flock
+is that the kids go to sleep, and sleep so soundly that the flock feed
+away from them. When the youngsters awake they are lost. If there be
+wild animals about, the kids may be killed, or they may starve before
+they are found. The Turk, however, has so many herders with one flock
+that they usually discover the kids before the flock has strayed.
+
+In America the kidding season is the most important time of the year for
+the Angora breeder. If he would raise a large increase, he must be
+properly prepared, and he must be constantly alert. If the weather be
+fair, with bright sunshiny days and temperate nights, the kids will do
+well without much care, but if it be cold, stormy and muddy, some of the
+kids will be lost in spite of all care. After the kids are born the
+mothers should have such food as will produce the greatest amount of
+milk. Well-fed mothers make strong healthy kids. Green feed is
+desirable.
+
+The proper season, then, for the kids to come will depend upon the
+climate and range conditions. Allowing for the period of gestation,
+which is about five months, the bucks can run with the does as early or
+as late as one wishes. One can be guided somewhat by the time sheep men
+allow ewes to lamb. When the first warm weather comes the goats usually
+commence to shed their mohair, and as it is too early in the season for
+the kids to be dropped, the does must be shorn before kidding or the
+mohair lost. Care should be exercised in handling the does heavy with
+kid. For the first few days after shearing the doe should not be allowed
+to chill, as she may abort. In some countries it is possible to kid
+before shearing, but there is no practical objection to shearing before
+kidding, provided proper care be exercised.
+
+
+HANDLING OF KIDS.
+
+There are various methods in use of handling the young kids, and all of
+them are intended to save as large a percentage of increase as possible
+with the least possible expense. Almost every man who has handled goats
+has some individual idea which experience has taught him. The locality
+and surroundings of the flock make a vast difference in the way they
+should be kidded. The method which works best with fifty or one hundred
+does in a fenced brush pasture in Oregon or Iowa, would be useless with
+a flock of a thousand or fifteen hundred in the mountains of Nevada or
+New Mexico, where there is often no corral to hold the goats.
+
+With a bunch of from fifty, to two hundred and fifty, and a shed big
+enough to hold the entire lot, it is not difficult to raise a very large
+percentage of kids. If the does are kept in a ten or twenty-acre
+pasture, they should be allowed to run out and take care of themselves
+as much as possible. The doe may drop her kid wherever she may happen to
+be, and she will almost invariably take care of it and coax it to the
+shed at night. The refusal of a young doe to own her kid must be
+overcome, especially if the weather is unfavorable. The mother must be
+caught and the milk forced into the kid's mouth until he learns to
+suckle. After he has been sufficiently fed, place them together in a box
+stall and leave them for a day or two. Then, in all probability, the
+mother will take care of her kid.
+
+The box stall is about three feet square and three feet high, with a
+little door on hinges to save lifting the animal. A row along the inside
+of the shed next to the wall is a great convenience. A doe with her kid
+should be disturbed as little as possible, because, as a rule, she knows
+how to care for her kid better than a herder.
+
+When goats are handled on a larger scale, with no pasture available,
+entirely different methods should be adopted--for the mother must go out
+to feed every day and the kid cannot go.
+
+Probably the most extensively used methods are the "corral method" and
+the "staking method," either used individually or combined.
+
+
+THE CORRAL METHOD.
+
+In the corral method, two or three large corrals and numerous smaller
+ones are necessary. First, the does should be separated from the
+wethers, if they have been running together, and a "wether band" made.
+Then every morning the "doe band" must be looked over carefully for does
+that will kid during the day. Such does must be put in a corral by
+themselves and allowed to kid in this corral. They should be fed some
+hay, or if that is not possible, they should be herded near by for a few
+hours. It has been our experience that most of the kids will come
+between the hours of ten in the morning and four in the afternoon. The
+more does which one can pick out in the morning the better it is, for
+the doe, after dropping her kid, is allowed to stay with it the rest of
+the day and all night. In this way she learns to know it. If one has hay
+to feed the doe, so that she may be left with her kid for one or two
+days, it is a great advantage.
+
+After all the does have been selected which can be found, still some
+will be overlooked, and they will go out on the range with the rest. The
+best way to handle these is to have the herder make a straight drive to
+a certain point where the feed is good, and then stay around this one
+place, allowing the kids to come within as small a radius as possible
+without starving the goats. If it is necessary, quite a distance can be
+covered in this way, and yet the kids will not be scattered over a large
+section of the country.
+
+As a kid is dropped, the doe should be allowed to remain with her kid
+and take care of it until evening. The herd will gradually feed from
+them, but it should be kept as near as possible to protect the kids from
+wild animals. Towards evening one must go out and gather up the kids and
+drive the mothers to the corral. The large herd should be driven home
+in advance, keeping a little apart from the does with kids so as not to
+coax the "wet does" away with the "dry herd."
+
+When the wagon with the kids reaches the ranch, the kids should be put
+in a small corral. They should be placed a few feet apart, and the
+mothers should be allowed to select their own kids. They also should be
+allowed to remain in the corral for the night at least. In case a doe
+will not take her kid she should be placed in one of the box stalls and
+a kid which has no mother placed with her and fed.
+
+When plenty of small corrals and good hay are available, each day's kids
+should be left in a separate corral until the mothers have been with the
+kids one or two days. It will be found that the kids are always given a
+very good start in this way. When it is deemed advisable, the kids are
+put together in a large corral, and as soon as the mothers in the
+smaller corrals are thought to know their kids sufficiently well, they
+are added to this wet band in the large corral. Thus the round is
+completed from the dry band to the wet band, the small corral being
+simply an intermediate step to insure familiarity between the doe and
+her kid. The dry band rapidly diminishes while the wet band increases.
+
+The mothers are now ready to go on the range during the day to feed, but
+the kids should be kept in the corral until they are at least six weeks
+old. The does may be turned out over a "jump board" placed across the
+gate. A jump board is a two-inch plank, eighteen inches high, with a
+four-inch strip nailed on the top for the does to put their feet on as
+they jump over. The kids come to the board but cannot get over. If some
+of the larger kids bother by trying to get over, some one can stand at
+the gate to scare them back by pounding on the board with a stick. The
+does will soon learn to pay no attention to the noise.
+
+[Illustration: THOROUGHBRED ANGORA DOE.]
+
+Even now there will be a few kids which will not be mothered. Every
+morning, before the wet band is allowed to go over the jump board, one
+should walk through the herd, pick out the kids that have not been
+nourished during the night, and select does that are not suckling kids.
+These does should be held until the kids have been fed. A row of small
+stantions is a convenient thing for holding them. After a kid gets a
+good start he will steal a living from different does if necessary.
+
+To kid a band of from one thousand to fifteen hundred does by the corral
+method, will require at least three men--one man to herd the dry band,
+one the wet band, and a man to look after the kids and assist where
+needed. Often the wet band is divided, or when one wet band has reached
+the number of from five hundred to seven hundred animals, another is
+started.
+
+
+THE STAKING METHOD.
+
+The staking method is quite commonly used, and in certain localities it
+is probably the best way to handle kids. The apparatus necessary is a
+smooth piece of half-inch board, two inches wide and four inches long,
+with a hole bored in each end. Through the hole in one end a piece of
+rope eight inches long is passed, and knotted so that it cannot pull
+out. The loose end of this rope is then made fast to a stout stake which
+is to be driven into the ground. Through the hole in the other end a
+piece of rope eighteen inches long is passed and knotted as in the first
+end, in such a way that the loose end of the rope, which is to be
+fastened to the kid's leg, draws away from the stake. When the apparatus
+is in use the small stick with the holes in the ends acts as a swivel to
+keep the rope from tangling.
+
+It is important to select a proper place to tie the kid. He is to stay
+in this place for about six weeks, and he needs protection from winds
+and wild animals, and should have some sunshine and some shade. Usually
+a small tree, a bush, a fence, or a post will offer a good place to
+stake. The does which are expected to kid during the day are separated
+from the flock as in the corral method. The balance of the band are
+herded, so that the kids dropped on the range can be more easily
+handled. Just as soon as a kid is dropped, it is taken to a convenient
+place to stake, and the mother coaxed to follow. One of the kid's legs
+is securely fastened to the loose end of the rope, and the kid and its
+mother are left together. The mother is thus free to go and feed, and on
+returning will know exactly where to find her kid.
+
+Many owners allow the does which have kidded to herd themselves, as they
+usually return to their kids, often coming in several times during the
+day. Of course this necessitates having plenty of food and water within
+access of the staking ground. The wet band could be herded as in the
+corral method.
+
+In this staking method if a mother refuses to own her kid, or if she
+dies, the kid has no chance to steal milk from some other wet doe, and
+unless closely watched, quite a number of kids will starve. The rope
+should be changed from one leg to the other occasionally to allow
+symmetry of development. The preparation of ropes and stakes for a
+thousand kids is quite a task, and it keeps the energetic herder busy
+during his spare moments getting ready for kidding time.
+
+For the first few days the Angora kid is full of life and vigor as any
+animal of like age. If he be well nourished, he will frisk and play at
+all kinds of antics, until he is so tired that he must forget
+everything. The sleep which comes is so sound that any usual amount of
+noise does not disturb him. It is this characteristic which makes it
+unsafe to take kids on to the range with a flock. The kids are liable to
+hide behind some bush, go to sleep and be lost.
+
+
+CASTRATING.
+
+Before the kids are allowed to go out with the flock the males should be
+castrated. The Turk does not alter the males until they have developed
+sexuality and the male horn, _i. e._, the heavy characteristic buck
+horn. He then castrates by either removing the testicles, or by twisting
+or destroying the spermatic cord. When the latter method is used the
+testicles and cord undergo an inflammatory process which destroys the
+regenerative power of the animal. The testicles remain in the scrotum
+apparently unchanged. The animal thus treated presents to the casual
+observer the physical characteristics of a buck. The Turk claims that an
+animal treated in this manner is less liable to die than one whose
+testicles are removed. This is probably true, as the initial lesion
+produced by the operation is very small, and there is less liability of
+infection.
+
+The usual method employed in this country is to remove the testicles
+before the regenerative power of the animal is developed. This gives the
+wether a feminine appearance, and there is comparatively little danger
+of death if the operation is properly performed. It will be easiest to
+castrate the kids between the age of two and four weeks. The kids
+should be driven into a small clean corral, and after undergoing the
+operation they should be turned into a large clean enclosure.
+
+The operator stands on the outside of the small corral, and the
+assistant catches the kids and turns them belly up before the operator,
+onto a board which has been fastened to the fence. A pair of clean
+scissors, or a sharp knife, which may be kept in a five per cent.
+carbolic acid solution when not in use, serve to cut off the distal end
+of the scrotum. The testicles are then seized with the fingers and drawn
+out. The operator drops the castrated kid into the large enclosure and
+the assistant presents another kid. Two men can operate on sixty kids an
+hour. The testicles are slippery and some herders prefer to use the
+teeth instead of the fingers to extract the testicles. Under no
+circumstances should any unclean thing be put into the scrotum. Death
+usually results from infection, and infection from uncleanliness. A
+little boracic acid might be sprinkled over the cut surface as an
+additional precaution, but this is unnecessary if ordinary cleanliness
+is observed. If after a few days the kid's scrotum swells, and does not
+discharge, the scrotum should be opened with a clean instrument. Less
+than one-half of one per cent. of the kids will die from this
+operation.
+
+
+RIDGLINGS.
+
+While castrating the kids the operator will discover that some of the
+kids have but one descended testicle. When these animals are found the
+descended testicle should be removed, and they should be recognized by
+some distinctive ear mark or brand. These animals will develop like
+bucks. It is a disputed question as to whether they are able to exercise
+regenerative power, but they will cover the does, and in some cases they
+probably get kids. The undescended testicle can be removed, but as the
+testicle usually lies close to the kidney, and is hard to distinguish
+from that organ in the young animal, it is best to delay the operation
+until the ridgling is at least six months old. The instruments necessary
+for this operation are a stout rope to suspend the animal, a clean sharp
+knife, scissors to remove the mohair from the place to be incised, and
+sharp needles threaded with silk. The knife, scissors and silk should be
+immersed in a hot 5% carbolic acid solution, and they should be kept in
+this solution except when actually in use.
+
+The rope is fastened to the hind legs of the animal and he is suspended
+in midair. An assistant steadies the body of the goat. The operator
+selects a place on the loin of the goat, about two or three inches away
+from the backbone, below the ribs and above the hip bone, on the side
+opposite to that which the descended testicle occupied. He then shears
+the mohair from this part of the goat. The mohair should be removed
+from a space at least eight inches square. A lengthwise incision is then
+made through the skin and muscles, or after the skin is cut, the muscles
+can be separated with the fingers and the testicle is found. It usually
+lies close to the backbone, to the lower and inner side of the kidney.
+It is usually undeveloped and much smaller than the kidney. Its surface
+is smooth and not indented like the kidney. When it is discovered it can
+be withdrawn through the opening, and adherent tissue clipped with the
+scissors. The muscles and skin should be brought together with the silk
+thread. The needles should pierce the muscles as well as the skin, and
+the edges of the skin should approximate. No hair should be allowed to
+remain between the cut surfaces, as the wound will not heal rapidly.
+After the wound is closed some boracic acid powder may be dusted over
+the wound, and the goat allowed his freedom. After ten days or two weeks
+the silk threads should be cut and drawn out, as they will not absorb,
+and they will irritate the wound. If this operation is carefully
+performed, and strict cleanliness adhered to, less than 2% of the
+animals operated upon will die.
+
+
+GROWTH.
+
+A kid at birth is usually small and weak, possibly weighing from four to
+six pounds. For the first few days of life he grows slowly, but as the
+organs adapt themselves to the new life, the kid becomes strong and
+grows rapidly. When the kid is born he is covered with a coarse hair,
+and it is not until he is from three to five weeks old that the fine
+mohair fibers appear growing between the coarser hairs. The kid
+continues to grow gradually, and at three or four months he weighs from
+twenty to forty pounds. The mohair may now be from two to four inches
+long. At a year old the Angora goat will weigh from fifty to eighty
+pounds, and the mohair may be as long as twelve inches, or sometimes
+longer.
+
+
+WEANING.
+
+When does are bred once a year the kid should be weaned before the doe
+is rebred. This allows the doe time to recuperate before her maternal
+powers are again brought into active service. Then, too, a doe nursing a
+kid through the winter, enters the spring with a depleted system and
+produces a poor quality and small quantity of mohair. The kids should be
+weaned when they are about five months old, as this allows the mother at
+least two months rest before she is rebred.
+
+
+MARKING.
+
+There are various reasons for marking goats, and the methods employed
+vary as widely as the reasons therefor. The object in view is to put
+some mark of identification either permanent or temporary upon the
+animal. The ears may be cropped in certain ways, a brand may be placed
+upon the nose, or tags or buttons placed in the ears, or characters
+tattooed into the ears. Probably the most permanent mark is the tattoo,
+and if it be placed on the inner hairless surface of the ear, it is as
+lasting as the tattoo so often seen in a man's arm.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+DISEASES.
+
+
+Some of the older breeders supposed that the Angora was not subject to
+any disease, but as goats have been introduced into new territory, they
+have become affected by some of the same troubles which bother sheep,
+but usually to a less degree. Some of the worst sheep diseases, such as
+scab, do not bother goats, but the goat has some special complaints
+which do not affect sheep. Very few carcasses are condemned by the
+government meat inspectors at the large packing centers. Tuberculosis is
+almost unknown.
+
+
+LICE.
+
+Nearly all goats are infested with lice, a small reddish louse, a goat
+louse. Lice rarely kills the animal infested, but they do annoy the goat
+greatly. Goats will not fatten readily, and the mohair is usually dead
+(lusterless), if the animals are badly infested. It is an easy matter to
+discover the lice. The goats scratch their bodies with their horns and
+make the fleece appear a little ragged. On separating the mohair the
+lice can easily be seen with the naked eye. The best means of ridding
+the goats of this annoyance is with almost any of the sheep dips. A dip
+which does not stain the mohair should be selected. The goats should be
+dipped after shearing, as it does not take much dip then to penetrate to
+the skin. One dipping will usually kill the lice, but the albuminous
+coat covering the nits (eggs of the louse), are not easily penetrated,
+and it is usually necessary to dip again within ten days, so that the
+nits, which have hatched since the first dipping, will not have a chance
+to mature and deposit more eggs. Goats can be dipped at almost any time,
+but if in full fleece they will require a larger quantity of liquid, and
+if the weather is very cold, there is some danger.
+
+
+STOMACH WORMS.
+
+Stomach worms affect goats, and in some instances their ravages prove
+fatal. There are a variety of these worms, but the general effect on the
+animal is about the same. They are usually worse in wet years. The goats
+affected become thin and weak. They usually scour. Sometimes the worm,
+or part of the worm, can be found in the feces. These same symptoms are
+caused by starvation, so the two should not be confounded. There are
+many drenches in use for the treatment of this trouble, and some of the
+proprietary remedies have given some relief. Goats running on dry, high
+land are rarely affected.
+
+Verminous pneumonia of sheep may also occur in goats.
+
+
+FOOT ROT.
+
+Foot rot is a disease which affects both goats and sheep, if they are
+kept on low wet land. It rarely proves fatal, and can be cured if the
+cause is removed, but it sometimes causes a good deal of trouble. The
+goats' feet swell between the toes and become so sore that the animals
+are compelled to walk on their knees. It can be cured by carefully
+trimming the feet and using solutions of blue stone. Goats should not be
+put on wet land.
+
+Sometimes the glands of the neck enlarge, a condition known as goitre.
+This is sometimes fatal with kids, but usually cures itself. There is no
+known remedy for it, but it is comparatively rare.
+
+Anthrax, tuberculosis, pleuro-pneumonia and meningitis, will affect
+goats, but these diseases are very rare. Some of the southern goats have
+swollen ears, but what the cause of this trouble is no one has yet
+determined.
+
+
+POISONS.
+
+There are several plants which will poison goats, but very little is
+known about them. Some of the laurel family are responsible for the
+death of a good many goats yearly, and some milk-weeds will kill if
+taken in sufficient amount at certain times of the year. These plants
+should be avoided as much as possible. Treatment has been rather
+unsatisfactory. If the poisoned animal is treated at once, an active
+purgative may rid the system of the irritant. Epsom salts and crotin oil
+have given relief.
+
+Mr. Schreiner describes an epidemic of pleuro-pneumonia which destroyed
+many flocks of Angora goats in South Africa. The disease was effectually
+stamped out in that country, and it has never appeared in American
+flocks. Mr. Thompson has described a disease called Takosis, which was
+supposed to have caused the death of many goats in the Eastern States,
+and along the Missouri River Valley. Some claimed that this trouble was
+caused by change of climate, others thought that it was starvation or
+lack of proper care. There is very little evidence of it now in the
+United States. All in all, the Angora goat is the healthiest of domestic
+animals.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Our Own Flocks.
+
+
+In 1865, Mr. C. P. Bailey started in the Angora goat industry. There
+were then very few Angora goats in the United States, and those in
+California had originated from two thoroughbred bucks secured from Col.
+Peters of Atlanta, Georgia.
+
+In 1866, Mr. Bailey secured a pair of Angoras from W. W. Chenery of
+Boston, Mass. There were two other pairs secured at this time for other
+parties, and these three does were the _first thoroughbred does_ brought
+to California. The first two goats cost Mr. Bailey $1000. _The first
+thoroughbred Angora kid_ dropped in California was by Mr. Bailey's doe.
+
+In 1869, Mr. Bailey furnished money to bring the Brown & Diehl
+importation to California, with the understanding that he was to have
+first choice. The Angoras secured from this lot were _the best goats_
+which had been brought to California up to that time.
+
+In 1876, Mr. Bailey selected the best buck of the Hall & Harris
+importation, and paid seventy-five dollars service fee for three of his
+Brown & Diehl does. Later he purchased forty-one head from Hall &
+Harris. Some of these were the Brown & Diehl goats, and some from the
+Hall & Harris importation of 1876.
+
+Twelve years after Mr. Bailey commenced breeding Angoras, he moved his
+entire grade-flock, consisting of about 1000 animals, to Nevada, and
+maintained his thoroughbred flocks in California. By careful selection,
+rigid culling, and strict attention given his flocks, Mr. Bailey had
+brought them by 1892, to an excellence beyond any of the imported stock.
+
+In 1893, Mr. Bailey imported two fine bucks from South Africa. An
+account of the buck Pasha will be found in this book.
+
+In 1899, another direct importation from South Africa was made, and the
+great sire Capetown was secured.
+
+In 1901, Dr. W. C. Bailey secured four of the best Angoras obtainable in
+Asia Minor, by personal selection, and added them to the Bailey flocks.
+This was the first importation made in America from Asia Minor for
+twenty-five years.
+
+During all these years, since 1865, Mr. Bailey had been constantly at
+work with his Angora flocks. There were many hardships to overcome, and
+most of the original Angora breeders gave up the struggle. We honestly
+believe that if it had not been for his perseverance the Angora industry
+would not be in its present prosperous condition.
+
+
+Register.
+
+We have been keeping a register of our stock, and this register is the
+oldest in the United States, or the world. Animals registered in the
+Bailey Angora Goat Record have a universal standing.
+
+
+Manufacturers of Gloves, Robes and Trimmings.
+
+The Angora Robe and Glove Company was established in 1875, with C. P.
+Bailey as president. Later Mr. Bailey secured sole control of this
+company. We have been using goat skins and mohair in large quantities
+for the last thirty years, and to-day
+
+WE PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR GOAT SKINS AND MOHAIR.
+
+
+Buck Selections.
+
+From the above history it will be seen that we have several different
+strains of bucks to offer, and the fact that we have taken the Grand
+Prizes and highest awards at the New Orleans World's Fair, 1885, Chicago
+World's Fair, 1893, St. Louis World's Fair, 1904, and sweep stakes at
+State Fairs and National Meetings for the last thirty years, should put
+these bucks on the top. We have sold thousands in United States, and
+they have given almost universal satisfaction.
+
+
+Does.
+
+Our thoroughbred does trace their ancestry to the best stock obtainable.
+We always have a good many grade Angora does on the range, and we are
+prepared to quote prices on carloads, or small lots. We gladly furnish
+information.
+
+ C. P. BAILEY & SONS CO.,
+ San Jose, California.
+
+[Illustration: PERSIAN FAT TAIL SHEEP
+
+In 1892, we received the first importation of Persian Fat-Tailed Sheep.
+They are very hardy, rapid growers (the lambs often gaining a pound a
+day for the first one hundred days,) good rangers almost free from
+disease, and to cross onto fine wooled sheep for mutton and wool, we
+consider them of much value.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Practical Angora Goat Raising, by C. P. Bailey
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Practical Angora Goat Raising, by C. P. Bailey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Practical Angora Goat Raising
+
+Author: C. P. Bailey
+
+Release Date: July 5, 2010 [EBook #33084]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRACTICAL ANGORA GOAT RAISING ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Verity White and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id="page2">2</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
+<img src="images/image1.jpg" width="350" height="517" alt="image1" title="image1" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">C. P. BAILEY,<br />One of the founders of the Angora Goat Industry in America.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3">3</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h1>Practical Angora Goat Raising</h1>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;">
+<img src="images/image2.jpg" width="150" height="78" alt="image2" title="image2" />
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b><span style="font-size: larger">C. P. BAILEY &amp; SONS COMPANY</span><br />
+SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA<br />
+1905.</b></p>
+
+<p><a name="page4" id="page4"></a></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5">5</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>For several years beginners in the Angora goat industry
+were without text books, and even to-day there
+are very few practical treatises. From our forty years
+of experience in farming Angoras, and from the personal
+observations of our Dr. W. C. Bailey, while in
+the interior of Asia Minor, we have tried to select the
+essential points in the successful management of
+Angora flocks, and to present these points so that
+they may be used.</p>
+
+<p>We have given a brief outline of the history of the
+Angora goat, but we have devoted several pages to
+consideration of detail in breeding and kidding. It
+has been our aim to make this a practical text book
+for the beginner in the Angora industry, and if it
+proves of value to him, it has fulfilled its mission.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right" class="smcap">The Authors.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7">7</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image3.jpg" width="600" height="174" alt="ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE ANGORA GOAT" title="ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE ANGORA GOAT" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image4.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="59" width="60" title="A" alt="A" />s to the origin and early history of the
+Angora goat little is known. It is supposed
+that the Angora variety descended
+from one of the classes of wild goats,
+and different writers have contended that different
+genera were the foundation of the Angora species.
+They have based these claims upon the characteristics
+of the horns, the covering of the body, shape and size
+of the animal, and various other details. Several
+agree that Capra Ęgagrus is the class of goat from
+which the Angora species has developed.</p>
+
+
+<h3>KNOWN FACTS.</h3>
+
+<p>Present history traces the Angora goat to the
+vilayet of Angora, in Asia Minor, and to the country
+immediately surrounding this vilayet. Some have
+set a date over two thousand years ago, claiming that
+the Angora goat was introduced into Asia Minor at
+that time, but the only authentic history is that given by
+Tournefort, a French naturalist, employed by his government,
+who explored Asia Minor about two hundred
+and fifty years ago, and who described and pictured
+the Angora goat about as he appears to-day<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8">8</a></span>
+and by Evliya Effendi, a Turk, who wrote in 1550
+of the goats, and by a few other writers. That they
+have not changed more is due to the fact that the
+Turk is quite content as he is, and he has no ambition
+to breed a different goat from what he has had for at
+least the past three centuries.</p>
+
+<h3>ASIA MINOR.</h3>
+
+<p>Before we consider the migrations of the Angora
+goat, we will investigate the physical conditions
+of their native province. The interior of Asia
+Minor, or the Angora goat country, is from one to
+four thousand feet above the sea level. Low, rolling
+hills and broad plains, treeless and almost waterless;
+dry, hot and desolate in the summer, and covered
+with more or less snow in the winter, form the habitat
+of the Angora. A small fine fibered sage brush is
+the principal diet of the goat, both summer and winter,
+but in the spring this diet is supplemented with
+weeds and some grass, and in the summer some of
+the goats are driven to the higher mountains, where
+there are some scrub pines and other varieties of
+brush. There is no winter feeding. The goats make
+their own living on the tops of the sage brush, which
+protrude through the snow.</p>
+
+<p>The indolent Turks do make some provision for
+the shelter of themselves and the goats in the winter.
+If a cave can be found it is divided so that the goats
+share the quarters with the humans. Sometimes an<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9">9</a></span>
+adobe house is so arranged that the goats and other
+livestock occupy the lower part of the house and the
+natives the upper part, or if there be but one floor, a
+low fence is run across to keep the livestock out of
+the living quarters. Great greyish-white wolfish
+looking dogs, wearing formidable collars of sharpened
+spikes go with the shepherds during the day
+and watch the flocks during the night. They are
+used as a means of protection from thieves, and not
+as an aid in herding. The flocks camp around the
+cave or hut, and are not confined in corrals. Fences
+are almost unknown in the Angora country. There
+are probably four or five million Angora goats in Asia
+Minor. Much of the central plateau region of the
+United States is very similar to the Angora region of
+Turkey. A peculiar fact is that the mohair produced
+in the different sections of Asia Minor varies
+a little, and the mohair merchants of Constantinople
+readily recognize an appreciable difference in its
+market value. Even the smaller merchants in the
+country recognize a difference in the mohair grown
+within a few miles of their town. Some try to explain
+this by a difference in food, others by slight
+climatic changes, and still others by the soil formation.
+Some of the goats from the locality of Geredeh,
+in the province of Kastamouni, have fleeces
+which are filled with grease. They are as black and
+gummy as merino sheep. This mohair, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11">11</a></span>
+scours white. The most marketable mohair comes
+from Beibazar and Eskischehr. That this difference
+in the quality of the mohair is not entirely due to
+climate or food conditions is evidenced by the fact
+that Angoras taken from Beibazar to California still
+retain the same qualities in the mohair after four
+years in California. However, it has been noticed
+that different parts of the United States produce
+different qualities of mohair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10">10</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image5.jpg" width="600" height="352" alt="image5" title="image5" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">SCENE IN ASIA-MINOR.<br /><br />Turkish owner, his herder, holding an Angora buck kid and the grey-wolfish-looking
+dogs wearing collars of sharpened spikes. This picture was taken on the range and
+one can see the fine fibered sage brush on which the goats feed.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 20em">Photo taken by Dr. Bailey, 1901.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>ANGORA GOATS IN THE UNITED STATES.</h3>
+
+<p>The history of the Angora goat in the United
+States dates from 1849, when Dr. James B. Davis, of
+Columbia, South Carolina, was presented with nine
+choice animals by the Sultan. The Sultan had requested
+President Polk to send a man to Turkey who
+understood the culture of cotton. Dr. Davis was appointed,
+and upon his return to America the Sultan,
+as a courtesy, presented him with the goats. For
+many years after their arrival in the United States
+these goats were considered cashmeres. Early reports
+about the fleeces and the goats were erroneous,
+and many were led to believe that the fleeces from
+these goats were worth $8 per pound, and that the
+goats would shear from six to eight pounds per year.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Davis did not do very well with the goats. He
+crossed his Angora buck onto some of the native
+common goats, and sold some of the cross-bloods and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12">12</a></span>
+possibly some of the original importation to various
+parties, but in 1854, Col. Richard Peters, of Atlanta,
+Georgia, secured most of the Davis goats. To Col.
+Peters really belongs the credit of keeping the Angora
+breed in existence in the United States up to the
+early sixties. Col. Peters was very fond of his Angoras,
+and he continued to own and run them up to
+the time of his death. He made a very creditable
+exhibit at the New Orleans World's Fair in 1885.</p>
+
+<h3>THE CHENERY IMPORTATIONS.</h3>
+
+<p>W. W. Chenery of Belmont, near Boston, Massachusetts,
+is supposed to have made the next two
+importations in 1861. No one seems to know exactly
+how many goats Mr. Chenery imported or what became
+of these lots. Mr. Thompson quotes the Massachusetts
+Ploughman as saying, "The first of the
+two lots, consisting of thirty nine animals, was shipped
+from Constantinople on the 26th of March, 1861,
+and arrived at Boston on the 15th of May, except two
+animals which died on the passage. The second lot
+consisting of forty one head, left Constantinople on
+the 6th of October, 1861, and arrived at Boston on
+the 25th of November with the loss of only one on
+the voyage. In the whole flock, eighty in all, there
+were about a dozen males, and all the animals wintered
+well."</p>
+
+<p>It is generally supposed that Mr. Chenery made
+another importation in 1866, of about twenty head.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13">13</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image6.jpg" width="600" height="388" alt="image6" title="image6" />
+<span class="caption"> ANGORA GOAT.<br /><br />Brown and Diehl Importation, about 1868 or 1869.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14">14</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>THE BROWN AND DIEHL IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>The next importation of practical importance, although
+it was claimed that nine head were received
+about 1861, by one Stiles, was made by Israel S. Diehl,
+a former U.S. consul and C. S. Brown, of Newark,
+New Jersey, about 1868. Mr. Diehl was commissioned
+by the United States government to investigate
+the industry in Turkey, and he secured a lot of
+Angoras, variously estimated at from one hundred to
+one hundred and sixty head. Mr. C. P. Bailey furnished
+the money for the transportation of these
+goats to California. He says, "Some were fairly good
+and some were only ordinary. They were of medium
+size, and with the exception of the neck, tolerably
+well covered with fleece, which however had a scattering
+of kemp throughout. They were conceded
+to be the best brought to California up to that time."
+Some of these bucks had been tampered with and
+were sterile.</p>
+
+<h3>EUTICHIDES IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>This shipment followed the Brown and Diehl
+importation, and consisted of between one hundred
+and fifty and two hundred animals. A. Eutichides,
+was a native of Turkey, and claimed that he had some
+fine goats, but he had an immense amount of trouble
+with his Angoras, and lost a good many. They were
+held in Virginia for some time, and then were sent to
+Sacramento, California, and were afterwards sold by<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15">15</a></span>
+the express company, at public auction, at very low
+prices. This was about 1873. It was generally believed
+by old California breeders that some of the
+goats offered at this sale were cross-bloods of California
+origin. The blood of this importation, however,
+has been widely scattered over the Pacific Coast.</p>
+
+<h3>THE HALL AND HARRIS IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1876, John S. Harris, of Hollister, California,
+returned from a perilous journey around the world
+in quest of new Angoras. He found the Thibet
+goats in the Himalaya Mountains, and finally succeeded
+in getting some goats at Angora, in Asia
+Minor. He secured two bucks and ten does, and
+brought them safely to California. That was really
+the first time an American had entered Asia Minor
+to study the Angora industry, as it was understood
+Mr. Diehl had secured Turks to go into the interior
+for him.</p>
+
+<h3>THE JENKS IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>This was a small importation of Angoras, supposed
+to have been three animals, made by C. W.
+Jenks of Boston, and sold to Col. Peters of Georgia.
+They were supposed to have come from Geredeh, in
+the interior of Asia Minor, and they arrived in the
+United States in 1880. The mohair from these goats
+was not considered very good, and the importation
+was not regarded as very important.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16">16</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>THE SHULTS IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>This was the first importation made from South
+Africa to the United States and arrived in 1886. There
+were two bucks and two does, and they went to Fink
+&amp; Company, of Texas. There was a great deal of
+question about this importation, and so far as is known
+it was of no value to American flocks.</p>
+
+<h3>THE C. P. BAILEY &amp; SONS CO. IMPORTATIONS.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1893, the first importation of Angora goats
+from South Africa, which was of value to American
+flocks, arrived. The two bucks, Pasha and Dick, which
+were secured by C. P. Bailey from R. Cawood, were
+sired by the great buck Sam. Mr. Schreiner says,
+"Sam was born in 1888, and sheared as a three year
+old, at twelve month growth, 15 pounds 2 ounces. He
+was exhibited for many years at all chief Agricultural
+shows and was never beaten but once, a judgment
+reversed at a subsequent show in the same year. Sam
+was the most famous goat in South Africa; with
+splendid weight of fleece, he combined a fineness of
+fiber rarely seen in an old ram."</p>
+
+<p>Pasha developed into a great sire and his get has
+been distributed into nearly every State in the Union,
+Canada, Mexico and Australia. Without doubt Pasha's
+blood courses through the veins of more Angoras
+than any sire ever imported. He was acknowledged
+by every one to be the best individual ever brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18">18</a></span>
+to America. Mr. Landrum, who had seen most of the
+Angoras brought from Turkey and who saw Pasha at
+San Jose, California, in 1899, pronounced him the
+most perfect goat he had ever seen and a much better
+goat than any which had ever come to America from
+Turkey. He bought some of Pasha's get for his own
+flock.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17">17</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image7.jpg" width="600" height="353" alt="image7" title="image7" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">ANGORA BUCK PASHA.<br /><br />Bailey South Africa Importation 1893.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In 1899, the buck Capetown was imported by Mr.
+Bailey from South Africa to secure certain points.
+Size and a little "yolk," together with the covering,
+fineness, freeness from kemp, ringlets and evenness
+were especially desired. Capetown has been a great
+sire and is still in fine condition on the Bailey farms.</p>
+
+<h3>THE ASIA MINOR GOATS.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1901, Dr. W. C. Bailey, armed with an honorary
+commission from the United States Department
+of Agriculture, personally visited every goat-raising
+section of Asia Minor, and after seeing hundreds of
+thousands, and examining minutely hundreds, secured
+and succeeded in exporting two bucks and two does.
+The Sultan had passed an edict in 1881, prohibiting
+the export of these animals, as he hoped to keep the
+industry for Asia Minor. The undertaking was a
+hazardous one, and the expedition was fought with
+many and almost insurmountable difficulties. Asia
+Minor is alive with bandits, and to hold a foreigner
+for ransom is a favorite pastime. Then, too, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20">20</a></span>
+Christian's life is not considered of much value by a
+Mohamedan. The goats were transported for miles
+on mule and camel back, carried across the Bosphorus
+under a boat load of hay, disfigured by shearing and
+powdered with coal dust, transported through the
+streets of Constantinople in closed carriages protected
+from police molestation by the "golden wand," and
+finally condemned by the Italian Government because
+no health certificate accompanied them from point of
+shipment, but eventually landed in California in 1901.
+The bucks Beibazar and Kjutiah, and the does Moholitch
+and Eskischehr find the climate of California
+suited to their wants. These four goats cost over
+$5,000 landed in California.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19">19</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image8.jpg" width="600" height="337" alt="image8" title="image8" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">BUCK BEIBAZAR AND DOE MOHOLITCH.<br /><br />Bailey Asia Minor Importation 1901. Photo taken by Dr. Bailey on the plains of Asia
+Minor, March 7, 1901, while the goats were held by a Turkish guide.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Beibazar impresses his qualities markedly on his
+offspring. His get won the Sweepstake prizes at the
+California and Oregon State Fairs in 1904, and the
+championship for two-year-old buck at the World's
+Fair at St. Louis, U. S. A., in 1904.</p>
+
+<h3>THE LANDRUM IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1901, Wm. M. Landrum imported two bucks
+from South Africa. Their get has been quite widely
+distributed in America, and has been of considerable
+value.</p>
+
+<h3>THE HOERLE IMPORTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1904, G. A. Hoerle imported about one hundred
+and thirty head from South Africa. A few of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22">22</a></span>
+these goats were exhibited at the St. Louis World's
+Fair, and some of them have been distributed to
+American breeders. A large part of them are now
+in New Jersey, and just what their effect will be on
+American flocks remains to be seen.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21">21</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image9.jpg" width="600" height="476" alt="image9" title="image9" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">BEIBAZAR.<br /><br />Bailey Asia Minor Importation, 1901.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>ANGORA GOATS IN SOUTH AFRICA.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1838, Col. Henderson made the first importation
+of Angora goats into South Africa, but while
+the number reaching the Cape was fourteen, yet only
+two proved to be perfect animals, a doe and her kid.
+The twelve bucks seem to have been tampered with,
+and they would not breed. Mr. Schreiner says: "But
+for the fact that there were several million Boar goats,
+thoroughly accustomed to the country, to furnish innumerable
+ewes for grading up purposes, the industry
+would still have been in its infancy." It was
+years before any more Angoras were imported into
+South Africa.</p>
+
+<p>The second importation into Cape Colony was
+made by Messrs. Mosenthal in 1856, and thirty Angoras
+reached their destination. Mr. Schreiner reports
+that some of these goats were sold at public
+auction and brought about $350 to $400 each.</p>
+
+<p>The third importation was made by Sir Titus
+Salt, the English manufacturer of mohair, and arrived
+in South Africa in 1857. Dr. White had
+charge of these after they reached the colony.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23">23</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image10.jpg" width="600" height="388" alt="image10" title="image10" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">CAPETOWN.<br /><br />Bailey South African Importation, 1899.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24">24</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The fourth importation consisted of about thirty-five
+animals, and was made about 1858 by Mr. W. R.
+Thompson. These were considered very fine animals,
+and were quite different from any previously imported.</p>
+
+<p>Ten years later in 1868, another importation was
+made by South Africa and from then on to 1880 between
+twelve and fifteen more lots were secured, some
+of them consisting of hundreds of animals. In the
+twelve years, up to 1880, over three thousand goats
+were received in South Africa from Asia Minor.
+Some of them brought as high as $2,200 each.</p>
+
+<p>During the next fourteen years there was a lack
+of importations into the Colony. In 1894, the first
+lot of American Angora goats, six head, were secured
+from C. P. Bailey of San Jose, California. They were
+sold to the Cape farmers by the importers at satisfactory
+prices, and in June, 1895, another lot of
+twenty bucks were secured from Mr. Bailey for $1000
+cash. These bucks had a hard trip, and shed their
+fleece, but they were sold by the importer later.</p>
+
+<p>In 1895, another importation of one hundred and
+sixty-five head were secured by consent of the Sultan
+from Asia Minor. In 1896 another importation of
+sixty-three head were landed and sold to the Cape
+farmers. The highest priced buck of this lot
+brought about $1,850, and the highest priced doe
+about $1,000. These goats were not considered extra,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25">25</a></span>
+with the exception of a few of the tops. They
+were not uniform, the breeches were bad, bellies
+deficiently covered, and they carried considerable
+kemp.</p>
+
+<h3>ANGORAS IN OTHER COUNTRIES.</h3>
+
+<p>Even before the arrival of Angora goats in South
+Africa they had been tried in Holland, France and
+England. Australia also imported some in 1856, but
+the industry has not grown to any extent in any of
+these countries. There have been some Angoras exported
+to Australia from America since 1900. Canada,
+Mexico, Alaska, and some of the Pacific Islands,
+have small flocks of Angora goats at the present
+time. The start has been obtained largely from California.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/image11.jpg" width="100" height="56" alt="image11" title="image11" />
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image12.jpg" width="600" height="227" alt="image12" title="image12" style="border: 2px solid" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image13.jpg" width="600" height="175" alt="MOHAIR" title="MOHAIR" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image14.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="60" title="T" alt="T" />hat part of the fleece of the Angora
+goat, which at a year's growth is composed
+of long, lustrous, elastic fibers,
+is called Mohair. It may be more or
+less curled, but it is readily distinguishable
+from that part of the fleece of the Angora which
+is composed of short, stiff fibers, known as kemp.</p>
+
+<p>The word mohair probably has its origin in modern
+times, as the Turkish word for mohair is
+tiftick. A theory which is advanced by Mr. George
+Gatheral of Constantinople, and which is tenable, is
+that the early Dutch traders who visited Angora,
+found the native clergy wearing a gown made of mohair.
+The Turks called the cloth "mahr," and it is
+possible that the traders applied this word to the raw
+material. If this be so, the English have corrupted
+the word into the present term mohair.</p>
+
+<p>The color of mohair varies in different localities
+and on different individuals. In the vilayet of Koniah,
+in Asia Minor, is a breed of goats producing a
+brownish colored mohair. This material is sold upon
+the market as Koniah mohair. The Koniah goat, however,
+has been rapidly disappearing, as the herdsmen
+found that the foreign demand was for white mohair,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27">27</a></span>
+and they have been crossing the white Angora bucks
+on the brown Koniah does. There are still over one
+hundred thousand pounds of Koniah mohair produced
+each year. In the Angora flocks of Asia Minor one
+always finds some colored goats. Black, blue, brown
+or red, usually with an admixture of white, are the
+common colors. The same thing may be said of the
+American flocks of Angoras. One may have been
+breeding white Angoras for years when, without apparent
+cause, a colored kid is dropped. Then color
+of the soil may give the mohair a peculiar tinge, but
+this usually scours out. The kemp in Asia Minor
+is sometimes a different color from the mohair. The
+kemp may be red or black and the mohair white.
+White mohair is what the manufacturer wants. If
+he wishes to make colored goods, he can dye white
+whatever color he wishes, but a colored mohair can
+only be used for certain colored goods.</p>
+
+<h3>GRADES AND GRADING OF MOHAIR.</h3>
+
+<p>In Turkey, after the fleece is shorn, the owner
+packs each fleece separately in sacks. He picks out
+the tag locks, colored fleeces or objectionable mohair,
+and after washing it, or making it more fit for market,
+he packs this in a sack by itself. Every village
+has its buyers, usually Greeks or Armenians, and
+there are a few traveling buyers. These men gradually
+collect the mohair. Men who have more money<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28">28</a></span>
+than they need put that money into mohair, as mohair
+is always salable, and it is so bulky that there is
+not much danger of it being stolen. There are so
+many robbers in Turkey that nothing is absolutely
+safe. One coffee house keeper in a small village sent
+about six dollars down to a larger place, as he was
+afraid to keep so much money in his house. When
+the mohair is collected in the larger towns it is again
+sorted, care being taken not to mix lots from different
+sections of the country. It is then forwarded
+to Constantinople of Ismidt, which is on the Sea of
+Marmara, near Constantinople. Here expert sorters
+go over the lots again. They do not break up the
+fleece, but they collect fleeces which are about the
+same and from the same district&mdash;for instance, Beibazar,
+Kjutiah, Kastamonia, Eskischehr, etc. These
+fleeces are then packed in bags and marked x&nbsp;-&nbsp;xx&nbsp;-&nbsp;xxx,
+or lettered a, b, AA, or numbered 1, 2, 3, etc. The
+mohair is then ready for exportation. It can be
+readily seen that a manufacturer who wants a particular
+kind of mohair can get exactly what he wants,
+if he knows the kind of mohair which comes from
+the different districts, and the grade of mohair which
+is put up under a certain mark by a certain firm. He
+can order of Mr. B. one hundred bags XX Beibazar
+mohair, and he knows what he is going to find when
+he opens the bags. There is a large room in Constantinople
+where a gang of men are almost constantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29">29</a></span>
+at work sorting mohair. The commission
+men have their store rooms around this central room;
+when the sorters finish with Mr. A's lot they commence
+to sort for Mr. B. Thus the same men sort
+all the mohair, and this insures a uniformity of grade.</p>
+
+<p>In America the plan of handling is somewhat
+different. It will be easier to tell what should be
+done than what is done. Until each grower becomes
+something of an expert sorter, or until we have central
+depots, where the mohair can be properly graded,
+the grower should roll the fleeces separately; they
+should not be tied, and put them in a bag or bale.
+He should pick out the tag locks, mohair discolored
+or clotted with urine or fęces, the colored fleeces,
+burry mohair or very kempy fleeces, and after preparation,
+put them in a separate parcel. Any kind of a
+bur or seed which sticks in the mohair must be
+picked out by hand. If the manufacturer has to do
+this, he puts a price on the mohair which will leave
+him plenty of margin. That is, he pays the grower
+about one-half as much as the mohair would be worth
+if it were free from this foreign material. If the
+mohair is very burry, it has to be treated chemically,
+and this spoils the luster. Sometimes the grower
+can make good wages by having the burs picked out
+before the animals are shorn. One man can pick the
+burs out of from fifteen to twenty-five animals a day,
+if there are not too many burs in the mohair. If the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30">30</a></span>
+tag locks can be cleaned sufficiently by washing, they
+are of some value; but if not, they are hardly worth
+the expense of shipping.</p>
+
+<p>The mohair shorn from kids should be kept in
+parcels by itself, as it is usually finer and worth top
+prices. That of the does, if it differs from that of
+the wethers, should be packed separately. When the
+mohair is received by the mill it is sent to the sorting
+room.</p>
+
+<h3>SORTING BY THE MANUFACTURER.</h3>
+
+<p>Each goat's fleece is made up of a variety of different
+grades of mohair. Before a fleece can be spun
+it must be separated into these different grades as
+nearly as possible, and this is done by expert sorters,
+who select from the raw material about seven different
+degrees of fineness of fiber. They also take into
+consideration freeness from kemp and color. In
+separating the fleece much dust is liberated, and as
+some mohair is liable to carry the bacillus of anthrax,
+or other dangerous material, this dust, if allowed
+to circulate in the air, would become a serious
+menace to the health of the sorters. Wool sorters'
+disease is by no means uncommon, and one of the
+American mill owners reported that his sorters had
+such a dread of a foreign mohair which came packed
+in a distinctive package, that he had to stop handling
+this particular lot, although it was profitable stuff to
+spin.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31">31</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image15.jpg" width="600" height="352" alt="image15" title="image15" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">MOHAIR TRANSPORTATION IN CONSTANTINOPLE, TURKEY.<br /><br />Photo taken by Dr. Bailey.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32">32</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To obviate this danger as far as possible each
+man opens the fleeces on a table covered with wire
+screen, under which circulates a strong exhaust current
+of air which is mechanically generated. Thus
+small foreign particles and dust in the fleeces are
+drawn downward. When the fleece is opened the
+sorter selects that part of the fleece which is
+known to be the coarsest, <i>i. e.</i>, the breech and a strip
+along the center of the back, and puts this in one lot.
+Next he selects a narrow strip along the side of the
+fleece, which is known to be the finest part of the
+fleece, and puts this in another lot. Now the neck
+and the belly are separated and thrown into their
+classes. If the whole fleece were a fine one, and free
+from kemp, it would be sorted in the same way, but different
+parts of the fleece would go into proportionately
+higher classes. The lots which these sorters make
+are known to spin comparatively definite qualities
+of yarn. Thus the low breech and the back of most
+fleeces will not spin over No. 20 to No. 24 yarns, and
+the sides of good fleeces are fine in fiber and will
+spin No. 40 to No. 60 yarn.</p>
+
+<p>The quantity of mohair which one man can sort
+varies considerably, according to the class of mohair
+which he is given to work upon. One mill estimated
+that experts can sort between two and three hundred
+pounds of domestic mohair a day, and that it costs
+about a cent a pound to thus separate the fleece.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33">33</a></span>
+After the fleeces are graded, the mohair is ready to
+be sent to the mill proper for scouring and spinning.</p>
+
+<h3>SCOURING.</h3>
+
+<p>To-day the process of washing or scouring the
+fleece is done by machinery. The mohair is fed into
+a machine in which revolve paddles, which thoroughly
+mix the fiber with the liquid in this machine. At
+the opposite end from where it was fed in, the
+mohair is rolled out over warm rollers, and it is ready
+to be spun. It is claimed, and with some justice,
+that American mohair loses or shrinks about 12% to
+20% while passing through this washing machine,
+and that Turkish mohair only shrinks about 13%.
+This may be due to the fact that some of the Turkish
+hair had been washed before it was shipped to market,
+and that by previous sorting some of the dirt had
+fallen out of the mohair. Then, too, some of the
+American growers are not very careful to keep the
+fleeces clean. Straw, sticks, hats, and even stones
+have been found in some domestic stuff.</p>
+
+<h3>MIXING.</h3>
+
+<p>After the mohair is thoroughly cleaned it is
+ready for spinning or carding. In order to spin the
+fibers most economically, evenly and to the best advantage,
+some of the mills mix different qualities of
+mohair of about the same fineness. For instance,
+Turkish mohair is mixed with Texas and California<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id="page34">34</a></span>
+stuff, or Oregon is mixed with Iowa material. The
+spinning qualities of mohair from different sections
+varies, and this mixing tends to give uniformity.
+After the fibers have been mixed to suit, the mohair
+is run through straightening machines in preparation
+for the combing process.</p>
+
+<h3>FIRST OR NOBLE COMB.</h3>
+
+<p>This comb is so arranged that about two and a
+half inches of the base of all of the mohair fibers,
+and any other fibers which may be mixed with them,
+are held, the ends of the fibers which are longer than
+two and a half inches, hang freely and are caught in
+a revolving machine and dragged loose from the
+combs which hold the base of the fiber. Thus only
+those fibers two and a half inches long, or less, are
+left in the first comb. The longer fibers, or tops as
+they are now called, to distinguish them from the
+noil, or short fibers, are collected and are again
+passed through a second comb.</p>
+
+<h3>SECOND OR LISTER COMB.</h3>
+
+<p>Much the same process as was gone through with
+in the Noble comb, is repeated, except that now
+only the Noble top is combed, and as all of the fibers,
+less than two and a half inches, have been removed
+from this mohair, the comb is set so that any fibers
+shorter than four or five inches, shall be held as noil,
+and only those fibers which are longer than four or five<span class="pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35">35</a></span>
+inches shall be included in the top. This combing
+completed, we have a collection of mohair fibers
+none of them less than about five inches in length.
+This top is now ready to spin. This combing is rendered
+necessary by the fact that all of the mohair contains
+an admixture of kemp, and kemp cannot be spun
+with the finer grades of mohair. In getting this kemp
+out of the mohair many of the short mohair fibers
+are lost, so that combing is an expensive process. It
+costs in time, labor and mohair.</p>
+
+<h3>SPINNING.</h3>
+
+<p>Many strands of this Lister top are now drawn
+down into a single thread. This thread, if the fibers
+comprising it are coarse, may have some projecting
+ends, which give it a rough, uneven appearance, and if
+so, these ends are burned off. The thread is passed
+through a gas flame at a given rate of speed by machinery,
+and the projecting ends are singed. This is
+called genapping. The yarn is now ready for manufacturing.
+In Bradford, England, there are mills
+which only spin the yarn. Their trade is with the
+manufacturers, both at home and abroad, and it is
+a known fact that, while France and Germany manufacture
+much plush and braid, they buy all of their
+yarn from Bradford.</p>
+
+<h3>CARDING.</h3>
+
+<p>Short mohair, that is, mohair less than six inches
+long, is not run through combs, as above described.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36">36</a></span>
+It is run over a carding wheel, or a large metal cylinder
+covered with small brads, which mix all the mohair
+and kemp. After passing over a number of
+these wheels, which revolve in different directions,
+the material thus carded is ready to spin.</p>
+
+<h3>NOIL.</h3>
+
+<p>Some of the noil collected by the combing process
+is composed of a large percentage of short mohair.
+This noil has a considerable value and is sometimes
+carded. The lower grade noil is sold to carpet
+manufacturers and various users of low grade stuff.
+Noil usually brings from twelve to twenty cents a
+pound.</p>
+
+<h3>USES OF MOHAIR.</h3>
+
+<p>As yet mohair has been used for only a limited
+number of things. Its possibilities have not been developed.
+New uses for the fiber are being discovered,
+and it seems probable that there will be
+many things made of mohair in the future. The
+yarn has a beautiful luster and is very durable.
+When ladies' lustre goods are in fashion a large
+amount of mohair goes into these fabrics. Much
+mohair is used in dress goods and men's goods.
+There is a steady demand for mohair plushes and
+braids.</p>
+
+<p>There is no plush made which will give the service,
+present the luster and retain a standing pile as<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37">37</a></span>
+long as mohair. One may crush the nap of a mohair
+plush as often or as long as he pleases, but the pile
+immediately resumes its upright position upon being
+released. Then, too, the dust shakes out of a mohair
+plush very easily. One rarely sees a dusty railroad
+car seat, although the country through which the car
+is passing may be very dusty. The rich effect produced
+by a heavily upholstered palace car is due to
+the mohair plush. Nothing has been found which
+will take its place. For furniture upholstering there
+is nothing more elegant and durable than mohair
+plush. The amount of plush thus used is governed by
+fashion. In countries where large military forces are
+retained there is always a heavy demand for mohair
+braids. There is no braid made which has the luster,
+combined with the durability, which mohair braid possesses.
+Here it may be stated that a coarse yarn can
+be used in making braids, so that when there is a
+heavy demand for braids there should be a proportionately
+high price paid for coarse long mohair. Mohair
+braids are always in demand, and will continue
+to be used upon ladies' clothing, as well as for military
+ornamental purposes.</p>
+
+<p>The variety of uses to which mohair is adapted
+is almost innumerable. In the manufacture of hats
+it plays an important part, and recently the demand
+for long fiber for the manufacture of wigs, ladies'
+hair nets and other toilet articles has been created.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38">38</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>WORLD'S SUPPLY AND CONSUMPTION.</h3>
+
+<p>At present Asia Minor and South Africa can be
+regarded as the two leading producers of mohair.
+The Asia Minor exports vary considerably, according
+to the price allowed, and as no manufactured stuff is
+exported, one gets a fair idea of the amount produced.
+It may be broadly stated that the Asia Minor clip
+amounts to about nine million pounds annually.
+That of South Africa amounts to about ten million
+pounds, and the United States now produces about
+one million pounds annually. Of this production a
+very large percentage of that coming from all these
+countries may be regarded as inferior stuff. We
+mean by this, that the Angora goat raising industry
+is yet in its infancy, and that much of the mohair
+produced is sheared from goats which have been
+bred from the common hair variety. Many of the
+characteristics of the fleece of the common goat still
+persist in the mohair.</p>
+
+<p>From the foregoing estimate the world's supply
+of mohair may be stated as twenty million pounds
+annually. Australia is as yet producing only a very
+small amount.</p>
+
+<p>Practically eighty-five to ninety per cent. of the
+world's supply of mohair is handled in Bradford,
+England. Nearly all of the South African and
+Turkish stuff is shipped directly to Bradford, a small
+amount of the Constantinople export coming to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39">39</a></span>
+America, but a large part of the American import
+comes from Liverpool, England. At Bradford the
+raw material is manufactured, some of the manufactured
+stuff being exported as yarn, but the larger
+part is used to produce the finished article. The remaining
+ten or fifteen per cent. is manufactured in
+the United States. At times the demand for mohair
+goods stimulates the demand for raw material, and the
+United States has been known to use from twenty to
+twenty-five per cent. of the world's supply. To recapitulate,
+the United States produces five per cent.
+of the world's annual supply of raw mohair, and
+manufactures from ten to twenty-five per cent. of the
+world's annual production.</p>
+
+<h3>MOHAIR PRICES.</h3>
+
+<p>The price of mohair has fluctuated with the
+caprice of fashion. Supply and demand are the
+essential factors in its valuation, but demand has
+been so influenced by the requirements of fashion in
+the past that one finds a wide range in price for the
+raw material. In a report issued by the Bradford
+<i>Observer</i> we find the price ranging from fifty cents a
+pound in 1856, to eighty cents in 1866, ninety cents
+in 1876, and then down to thirty cents in 1886 and
+1896. In 1903 the average price in the United States
+was about thirty-five cents a pound, and for 1904
+about thirty cents a pound.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40">40</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image16.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="image16" title="image16" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">READY FOR THE SHEARERS.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41">41</a></span>To-day there is a demand for mohair, regardless
+of fashion. During the past two years the price of
+raw material has been low, but there has been a margin
+of profit in the industry, and considering the fact
+that fashion's decree has eliminated the manufacture
+of luster fabrics for the present, the mohair producer
+can feel assured that there will be a steady market
+for his material. With the occasional good times
+when luster goods are in demand, the mohair grower
+should do well.</p>
+
+<h3>SHEARING AND PACKING MOHAIR.</h3>
+
+<p>The goat should be shorn before he commences to
+shed, as the mohair loses its weight and luster after
+the shedding process begins. There are a few goats,
+which, under certain kinds of food and climatic conditions,
+will not shed their fleeces, but most goats
+will shed, and even goats which have carried their
+fleeces over a year in one section, may shed if they
+are moved a few miles and the food is changed. A class
+of non-shedders would be very valuable, but so far a
+distinctive class of non-shedders, under any and all
+conditions, and which transmit this peculiarity, has
+not been identified. The Angora goat will usually
+commence to shed early in the spring, or as soon as
+a few warm bright days come.</p>
+
+<p>In some sections of the country it is thought advisable
+to shear twice a year. Many points in favor<span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42">42</a></span>
+of this method are advocated. It is claimed that the
+price realized for the two medium length, or short
+stapled fleeces, together with the increased number
+of pounds shorn in the two clippings a year, pays
+much better than the one long staple fleece which can
+be shorn from the same animal for a year's growth.
+There are many reasons both for and against shearing
+twice a year. The mills prefer long mohair, or
+at least fiber more than six inches in length (combing
+length). They pay the best price for this class of
+mohair, and it must be left to the individual to decide
+whether it pays him best to shear once or twice a
+year. At present possibly one-third of the Angoras
+in the United States are shorn twice a year, and the
+remaining two-thirds only once. In Asia Minor one
+finds the goat shearer using a pair of long bladed
+scissors to cut the mohair. The goats are shorn in
+the spring, and only once during the year. The animal's
+feet are tied, and then by using both hands, one
+at either end of the scissors, the goat is shorn. Recently
+some Englishman has introduced an ordinary
+spring sheep shear, but most of the natives prefer the
+scissors.</p>
+
+<p>To-day one finds the hand shearer and the machine
+shearer at work in America. The hand shearer
+should use a pair of short bladed (about five inch
+blade) sheep shears. This is to prevent the point of
+the shear from cutting mohair, which is not intended<span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43">43</a></span>
+to be clipped with that particular stroke of the shear.
+If, for instance, the shearer is clipping the mohair
+along the sides of the animal, and the point of the
+shear cuts some of the mohair at least three inches
+out from the body, this stubble is shorn again (double
+cut) when the shearer gets to this place, and this
+three-inch mohair is too short to be of much value.
+It will be combed out at the mill as noil. An expert
+shearer can clip about the same number of range
+goats that he can range sheep&mdash;from ninety to one
+hundred and twenty a day.</p>
+
+<p>The machine shear is rapidly taking the place of
+the hand shear. It clips the mohair close to the
+skin and almost does away with double cutting. It
+requires less skill to shear with a machine shear, and it
+does the work more uniformly. There is also less
+danger of cutting the animal. The machines do the
+work very rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>After the goat is shorn the fleece should be collected
+and rolled into a bundle, "bump," and placed
+in a sack or bale. It should not be tied, as the mill
+men object to the particles of string which remain in
+the mohair and disfigure the manufactured product.
+Any colored fleeces, discolored mohair, or mohair containing
+objectionable features, such as burrs, straw,
+etc., can be placed in separate parcels. The kid mohair
+can be kept by itself, and the wether and doe
+mohair can be separately packed. The long mohair<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44">44</a></span>
+should be kept separate from short stuff. Thus one
+grades the mohair to some extent on the farm, and
+he has a better idea of what the clip should bring.</p>
+
+<p>If the mohair is to be shipped a long distance, it
+will pay to bale the fleeces, as compact bales occupy
+much less space than sacks. The freight rates are
+usually less upon baled mohair than they are upon
+the sacked material. The cost of baling the mohair
+is a little less than the cost of sacking.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image17.jpg" width="600" height="360" alt="image17" title="image17" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45">45</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image18.jpg" width="600" height="176" alt="BREEDING OF THE ANGORA GOAT" title="BREEDING OF THE ANGORA GOAT" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image19.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="59" title="O" alt="O" />ne can learn very little about breeding
+the Angora goat from the Turk. As
+we know from Tchikacheff's work,
+which was published over fifty years
+ago, cold winters often killed many of the Angoras
+in Asia Minor, and the Turk then imported from
+more favored districts common bucks or does to breed
+to the Angora. This was before the great demand
+for mohair, occasioned by the increase in manufacturing
+plants at Bradford, England, caused the Turkish
+mohair raisers to resort to all manner of means
+to increase the supply of raw material.</p>
+
+<p>To-day the Turk is treading in the paths of his
+forefathers. What was good enough for them, certainly
+ought to be good enough for him, so he reasons.
+He eats with his fingers, cooks on a brazier, sits on
+the floor, eats, drinks, sleeps and works all in the
+same room, and keeps his wives in seclusion.</p>
+
+<p>When he comes to breeding the Angora he leaves
+that to his servants, if he be wealthy enough to have
+any. Most of the breeders cannot read or write. They
+have never traveled. They have no ambition, and they
+know nothing of the principles of selective breeding.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46">46</a></span>
+As a natural consequence the Angora goat of to-day
+has not improved, nor is he likely to improve under
+Turkish management. One large breeder who supplied
+bucks to some tributary country, said that he thought
+that it was a shame to castrate a buck, no matter how
+bad he might be. The Turk separates the bucks
+from the does at breeding season, as Asia Minor has
+cold weather late in the spring, and the danger of losing
+kids, if they come too early, is great. When the
+bucks are turned with the flock they are allowed to
+run until the next breeding season, and all of the
+bucks, regardless of quality or quantity, are allowed
+to run with the does.</p>
+
+<p>When the first few Angoras arrived in America
+the natural procedure was to cross them upon the
+common short-haired goat of this country. It was a
+new industry, and many wanted to try the Angora.
+Very slowly the Angora, or the cross-bred animals
+were scattered over the United States. Stories were
+told of the wonderful things for which the mohair
+was used, and some supposedly reliable authorities
+quoted mohair at $8.00 a pound, as has been stated.
+Companies were started, and of course the supply of
+good Angoras, that is, goats which would shear about
+four pounds of mohair (worth at that time about seventy-five
+cents or a dollar a pound), was limited.
+Men bought any goat which had a trace of Angora
+blood in him as a thoroughbred Angora. A few<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47">47</a></span>
+years, however, demonstrated the fact that a common
+goat, with a little admixture of Angora blood, did not
+produce either the quality or the quantity of fleece
+wanted. Only a few of the more persistent breeders
+continued the experiment and their investigations.
+They sent and went to the home of the Angora, and
+brought more of the original animals to America. It
+took the American breeders about thirty years to find
+out just what the Angora goat was and how he should
+be handled. During that thirty years large flocks of
+common goats, which had been crossed with the Angora,
+and which might be properly termed "grade
+flocks," had been formed. Only a few thoroughbred
+flocks, that is, flocks of the original Angora, as he
+came from Turkey, were in existence.</p>
+
+<h3>CROSSING WITH THE
+COMMON SHORT HAIRED GOAT.</h3>
+
+<p>By experience we have learned that the common
+short coarse haired goat can be crossed with the Angora
+goat, and that after sufficient crosses have been
+made, the cross-bred Angora so nearly resembles the
+thoroughbred that for all practical purposes he is an
+Angora. We have also learned that certain kinds of
+common goats respond rapidly to the infusion of Angora
+blood, and that others retain certain peculiarities
+of the common goat for generations. The Angora
+will not cross with sheep. For instance, a common
+goat with a long mane on the back, or tuft of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49">49</a></span>
+long hair behind the foreleg, or on the flank or the
+hip, will continue to perpetuate this long coarse hair on
+the offspring for generations, even though the best of
+Angora blood be infused. The color of the common
+goat is of some importance. A brown or reddish brown
+goat retains the reddish cast at the base of the mohair
+much longer than one of a bluish or bluish
+black color. It is equally true that a pure white
+mother may drop a colored kid occasionally. In
+Constantinople the mohair is graded into parcels containing
+red kemp, black kemp, etc. There it is the
+kemp which retains the color. As has been stated,
+there is also a breed of brown Angora goats, or at
+least mohair-producing goats, in Koniah in Asia
+Minor. Presuming, then, that one has a suitable
+common doe and a good Angora buck as a basis, the
+following may be deduced as relative changes in the
+different crosses:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id="page48">48</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image20.jpg" width="600" height="479" alt="image20" title="image20" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">PASHA V&mdash;A True Breeder.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The first cross, or half-blood Angora, will have a
+covering of short coarse common hair and a thin covering
+of mohair, which does not grow very long. If
+the animal were to be shorn, possibly a half pound of
+hair of a very inferior grade might be yielded. If
+this hair were to be offered to a manufacturer, he
+would class it as noil, and refer it to a carpet manufacturer,
+who would possibly pay ten or twelve cents
+a pound for it. The skin of the animal will be a little
+fluffy, and not suitable for fine goat skin trade.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50">50</a></span>
+It will not take a good polish after tanning, and it is
+not desirable for shoe leather. It will be worth
+about half as much as common goat skin. The meat
+of the animal will be a little better than that of the
+common goat, but it will be inferior to Angora venison.
+The animal will still be as prolific as the common
+goat. Twins and triplets will be a common
+occurrence. The kids will also be hardy. If one
+were to stop at this stage in breeding, he would have
+decreased the value of the skin of his goat without
+increasing the value of the animal.</p>
+
+<p>The second cross, or the three-quarter blood
+Angora, will have a covering of short coarse common
+hair, especially noticeable on the back, belly, neck
+and hips. The mohair will now be fairly thickly set
+upon the sides of the animal, and of medium length,
+about seven inches long for a year's growth. If the
+animal were to be examined by a novice, he would be
+called an Angora from his general appearance. If
+shorn, he will yield about one, or one and a half
+pounds of hair, and the mohair manufacturer will
+pay about twelve or fifteen cents a pound for the
+material. The skin is valueless for rug, robe or trimming
+purposes, because of the coarse back and the
+scanty covering of mohair. It is fit for glove leather
+after tanning, but its value for this purpose is less
+than that of the common goat. The meat is more
+like Angora venison, and can be sold on the market<span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51">51</a></span>
+as mutton. The animal is still prolific. From the
+second cross on, the grade goat rapidly assumes
+the characteristic of the Angora goat, but if for
+any reason poor bucks are used (an occasional animal
+without apparent reason retrogrades), the animal as
+rapidly resumes the characteristic of the common
+goat. Quite a percentage of colored kids will be
+dropped by does which are themselves white.</p>
+
+<p>The third cross, or seven-eighths blood Angora,
+will still have the coarse back, a partially bare belly,
+coarse hips, and the neck will be insufficiently covered.
+The sides will be covered with good quality,
+long staple mohair, comparatively free from the
+coarse, dead underhair, or kemp. The animal will
+shear about two or three pounds of fair mohair,
+which will be worth from twenty to thirty cents a
+pound. This mohair will be fit to run through the
+combs, and the "top," or long mohair, free from
+kemp, will be used in the manufacture of plushes,
+braids, etc. The skin will have some value for rug,
+robe and trimming purposes. The meat will be
+juicy, palatable and salable as mutton.</p>
+
+<p>The fourth cross, or fifteen-sixteenths blood Angora,
+will be hardly distinguishable from the average
+thoroughbred Angora. The coarse back will persist
+to some extent, and the hip will be plentifully covered
+with kemp. A good many of this grade will be
+poorly covered on the belly, and an occasional bare<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52">52</a></span>
+necked or off colored animal will be dropped. The
+animal will shear from two and a half to five pounds
+of mohair of good quality, which will be worth from
+twenty-five to thirty-five cents a pound. It will be
+from eight to twelve inches long at a year's growth,
+and it will be combed at the mill. It is fit for manufacturing
+into any of the goods for which mohair is
+used. The meat of the animal is rich, juicy, and free
+from the disagreeable qualities so often noticeable in
+mutton. If the animal be fed upon browse, the meat
+will have the flavor of venison. The tendency of
+the mothers to drop twins will be lessened, and it
+will be rather the exception for twins to be born.
+The kids will be rather delicate when dropped.</p>
+
+<p>Subsequent crosses will tend to reduce the
+amount of kemp upon the animal and to improve the
+back. The question will now resolve itself into one
+of breeding for points. Bucks must be selected
+which cover the points the does need most, and by
+careful selection the grade flock will soon be indistinguishable
+from the thoroughbreds.</p>
+
+<h3>METHODS USED IN AMERICA TO-DAY.</h3>
+
+<p>By gradual steps the original Angoras imported
+into America have been so improved, and the cross-bloods
+have been so highly graded that some of the
+American flocks equal the best Turkish flocks.
+America has many high-grade flocks, which, if it were
+not for the remaining coarse hair of the common<span class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53">53</a></span>
+goat, would be upon a par with the Turkish flocks.
+There are enough good goats in the country for a
+foundation stock, and a few years more of the careful,
+painstaking, selective breeding which is in progress
+throughout the United States to-day, will bring forth
+an Angora superior to the Turkish stock. Sections
+of the country modify the characteristics of the Angora.
+Probably climatic conditions, varieties of food
+and water, and certainly mental vigor of the owners
+is largely responsible for this. One man selects
+large, well formed, rapidly maturing goats and breeds
+for this type. It is surprising how soon his flocks
+assume this type. Another breeder works for fineness
+of fleece, regardless of size or shape of the animal,
+and he gets his points.</p>
+
+<p>There has been much vagueness as to what points
+the breeder should try to produce. Some have
+claimed that the most profitable animal to raise was
+one producing heavy ringletty fleece, regardless of
+the quality of the fleece, except of course that it
+should be as free from kemp as possible. This day
+has passed. We know what the mohair is used for,
+and know how it is prepared for manufacturing.
+The future may change these uses or methods, but
+we know what we want now, and we know how to
+breed our goats to produce the most money per head
+for the present at least. Fashions vary, and the
+fashions vary the demand for certain grades of mohair.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54">54</a></span>
+Coarse fibered, long staple, fine luster mohair
+possessing a great amount of tensile strength and elasticity
+will make good braid yarns, but if braid yarns
+are not in demand, such fiber is not the best for plush
+or dress yarns. Fine fibered, long staple, pliable,
+lustrous, easily spun yarn can be used for braid stuff,
+or at least part of the fleece will be heavy enough for
+this purpose, and the finer parts have such a variety
+of uses that they spin yarns which are always in demand.
+Looking at the question from the manufacturing
+standpoint, we see that the most staple product
+is the fine-fibered mohair. But a producer might have
+animals which would shear two and a half pounds
+average (the average of the Turkish flocks) of very
+fine mohair, while another grower might have animals
+which would shear four or five pounds average of
+coarse mohair. And even though the value per pound
+of the coarse mohair may be considerably less than
+that of the fine mohair, the grower owning the coarse
+haired heavy shearing Angoras will realize more
+money per head for his clip. The value also of the
+carcass and skin of the Angora is of importance. A
+heavy carcass and a large skin are of more value than
+a light carcass and a small skin.</p>
+
+<p>If the Angora breeder would produce the animal
+which will yield the most money per head, he
+should aim to produce an animal which will shear
+the heaviest fleece of the most marketable mohair,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55">55</a></span>
+regardless of fashions, and one which, when put upon
+the market, will dress the most possible pounds of
+desirable meat, and yield a readily marketable skin.
+There are not many such animals on the market to-day,
+but the time when there will be plenty is
+coming. We have the fineness of fiber; we have the
+density of weight of fleece; we have the covering of
+the animal and the size and stamina of the individual,
+and we have breeders who are endeavoring to
+unite combinations to produce the Angora of the
+future. But while we are without the ideal, one
+should choose that point which is hardest to attain,
+most necessary for the best paying animal, and work
+especially for that. That point is fineness of fiber,
+always remembering freeness from kemp. There
+are many large goats, many heavy shearing goats,
+but there are very few fine fibered comparatively free
+from kemp goats. One should not make the mistake
+of neglecting size and weight of fleece. There are
+few animals which will respond more rapidly to careful
+crossing than the Angora goat. A buck will
+usually stamp his individuality upon every kid, hence
+the necessity of carefully selecting breeding stock.</p>
+
+<h3>GESTATION.</h3>
+
+<p>The period of gestation varies slightly with the
+individual, but the average may be approximately
+stated as one hundred and forty-seven days, or about
+five months. Both the bucks and the does have a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56">56</a></span>
+breeding season, but this season may be changed or
+varied by different elements. As a rule the bucks
+commence to rut about July or August here in
+America, and the does soon after the time the bucks
+commence. Some bucks which have been allowed to
+run with the does all of the time, never cease rutting,
+and the does conceive about every six months. The
+does come in heat about every fourteen days, and remain
+in this condition for about three days. If the
+bucks are allowed to run with the does, one buck should
+be used for about every fifty does. If the buck is only
+allowed to serve the doe once, a grown animal will
+serve one hundred and fifty does in forty days without
+permanent injury to himself. The does conceive at
+about the age of seven months, and the bucks breed at
+about the same age, but the wise breeder will not
+sacrifice the individual by interfering with its development.
+Both the buck and the doe should not be
+bred until they are at least a year old. The bucks
+should be fed at breeding season, and if one has
+a sufficient number of bucks, it is well to turn the
+bucks with the does in relays. It is advisable to have
+the kids start coming slowly, so that one may get
+new men trained to handle them properly. One or
+two bucks turned with a flock of a thousand does for
+a few days, and then removed and allowed to rest,
+and a new relay of three or more bucks turned with
+the does, to be removed in a few days, and a new relay
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58">58</a></span>
+being introduced into the flock, will do more satisfactory
+work than they would if all of the bucks
+were turned in at one time. The same principle can
+be applied to smaller flocks. The does should be
+protected from cold storms or rough handling when
+they are heavy with kid, else they are liable to abort.
+If for any unusual cause the doe aborts one season,
+there is no reason why she will not carry her kid until
+full term another time, and experience has proven
+that she will.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57">57</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 602px;">
+<img src="images/image21.jpg" width="602" height="397" alt="image21" title="image21" />
+<span class="caption">PASHA V AND BISMARCK.<br /><br />American bred bucks, Bismarck shearing 12 pounds, was the sire of the grand champion buck at the
+St. Louis World's Fair, 1904.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>BREEDING OF REGISTERED STOCK.</h3>
+
+<p>The breeding of registered stock, or stock of
+known ancestry, requires much care and quite different
+handling. Both the does and the bucks must be
+marked with an ear tag, brand, tattoo number, or
+some other permanent individual mark, and the kids
+should be marked at birth. Fifty known does may
+be put in a pasture or pen and a known buck put
+with them. He should be allowed to run with them
+at least forty days. After this the does may be collected
+into a flock and several bucks turned with
+them, but only the kids which are dropped from a
+known buck are fit for record.</p>
+
+<p>A more accurate method, and one which can be
+used with a large flock, is to place the bucks in a corral
+adjoining the one used by the does at night. The
+does should be brought into their corral early in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59">59</a></span>
+evening, and all of those in heat will work along the
+fence next to the bucks. The doe in heat can be
+caught and the number taken and recorded in a book.
+She is then placed in a small pen with a buck and
+his number is recorded with hers, together with the
+date. If the doe does not conceive, she can be put
+with the same buck again at a later date, and one has
+approximate knowledge of when she should drop her
+kid. In this manner a buck will serve about two or
+three does in the evening, and one or two in the morning.
+The kid is marked at birth and the number recorded
+after that of the mother. The breeding of recorded
+stock is of value only for special reasons, and
+is not advisable with large flocks, as it is expensive.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/image22.jpg" width="100" height="58" alt="image22" title="image22" />
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image23.jpg" width="600" height="423" alt="image23" title="image23" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60">60</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image24.jpg" width="600" height="176" alt="ANGORA VENISON" title="ANGORA VENISON" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image25.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="59" title="A" alt="A" />ngora venison is the name which should
+be given to the flesh of the Angora
+goat. At the present time it is usually
+sold in the markets as mutton. The
+term goat meat should be applied to
+meat of the common goat, and the term mutton belongs
+to sheep. Because the Angora goat feeds largely
+upon that material which nourishes the deer, the meat
+of the Angora is flavored like venison. The fat is
+well distributed, and the healthfulness of the animal
+renders this an especially desirable meat. The Turk
+has long recognized Angora venison as an important
+element in his diet. Angora kid is above comparison,
+and it occupies the principle place on the menu at
+private as well as state affairs in the Orient. As one
+passes through the market places in Asia Minor
+he sees the carcasses of the Angora hanging in every
+shop. There is no mistaking the animal, as the skin
+still remains on the goat. One takes his choice, and
+as a rule more Angora venison than mutton is sold.
+Some of the Turks keep their wethers until they become
+coarse-haired and too old to pay to keep longer,
+eight or ten years old. This class of meat ranks
+with old mutton, and sells at a discount. Young<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61">61</a></span>
+wethers and does are in good demand. There has
+existed in America some prejudice against the flesh
+of the goat. To-day thousands of goats are being
+consumed annually, but most of them are sold as
+mutton. Packers and butchers still insist that Angora
+venison must be sold as mutton. They pay
+about one-half a cent to a cent a pound less for the
+goat than for sheep.</p>
+
+<p>The goat never fattens as well along the back as
+the sheep, and hence the carcass does not look so
+well. The fat is more evenly distributed throughout
+the animal in the goat. An expert once said that to
+know whether a goat was fat one should feel the
+brisket, and if there was a considerable layer of adipose
+tissue between the skin and the breast bone, the
+animal was fat.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the American breeders do not send
+their wethers to market until they get too old to produce
+valuable fleeces. The animals are then slaughtered
+when they have grown a half year's fleece, and
+the skins are reserved by the breeder. These skins
+are valuable, and help to bring up the average price
+of the goat.</p>
+
+<p>At present some of the packers recognize no difference
+between shorn and unshorn goats. The
+price is the same, so it pays to shear the goats before
+bringing them to market. There is absolutely no
+strong flavor in prime Angora venison, and this is<span class="pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62">62</a></span>
+where the meat differs from that of the common
+goat.</p>
+
+<p>The goat is a slow grower, and not until the second
+year do the bones ossify. Therefore, a two-year-old
+can be sold for lamb, as he has a "soft joint."
+Grown Angora wethers do not average much more
+than one hundred pounds as a rule, although there
+are occasional bands sold which average one hundred
+and fifteen pounds.</p>
+
+<p>It is safe to say that Angora venison will never
+supplant mutton, but it will have its place among the
+edible meats.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/image26.jpg" width="100" height="54" alt="image26" title="image26" />
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/image27.jpg" width="400" height="391" alt="image27" title="image27" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">ANGORA BUCK&mdash;Early Importation.</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63">63</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image28.jpg" width="600" height="177" alt="ANGORA GOAT SKINS" title="ANGORA GOAT SKINS" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image25.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="59" title="A" alt="A" />n Angora goat skin differs considerably
+from the skin of the common goat.
+In the first place the Angora skin is
+covered with more or less mohair;
+and in the second place, the texture
+of the skin itself is different. The skin of the
+common goat is firm, and the different layers are so
+closely united that they cannot be separated. The
+layers of the Angora skin are not so closely united,
+and the skin is slightly fluffy. The outer layer of
+this skin peels off when it is used. The Angora skin
+is valuable both with the fleece on and without it.
+Its principle value, however, is with the fleece on.
+After the skins have been properly tanned, they are
+used for rugs, robes, trimmings, and imitating various
+furs. When ladies' and children's Angora furs are in
+style, these skins become very valuable for this purpose.
+One skin has cut $17.00 worth of trimming at
+wholesale. Of course, the value of the skins depends
+upon the quality and character of the mohair with
+which the skins are covered, and their size. Large,
+well covered skins are always scarce and command
+good prices. They are worth from $1.00 to $2.00 each.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64">64</a></span>
+Most of the Asia Minor skins are sent to Austria, and
+the prices paid for the raw skins are about the same
+as in America. The skins which have had the mohair
+removed are valuable for the manufacture of gloves
+and morocco leather. They do not make as fine leather
+as the common goat skins, but they are as extensively
+used. All skins should be carefully handled.</p>
+
+<p>The skin should be carefully removed from the
+carcass. Goats do not skin as easily as sheep, and
+the careless operator is liable to cut the inner layers
+of the skin if he is not careful. These cuts are called
+"flesh-cuts," and skins badly "flesh-cut" are comparatively
+valueless, because "flesh-cuts" can not be removed
+by the tanner. A sharp knife should be used,
+and the operator should avoid cutting the skin.</p>
+
+<p>The skin should be well salted, care being taken
+to see that the salt penetrates every portion of the raw
+surface. The skins can be cured in the shade without
+the use of salt, but sun-dried skins are worthless.
+If the edges of the skin are allowed to roll, so that
+raw surfaces come together, the part so affected will
+heat and the hair pull out. It is not necessary to
+stretch the skins while curing them.</p>
+
+<p>Goats should be killed when their fleece is suitable
+for robe and rug purposes. Those carrying a six
+month's fleece, if it is six inches long, have about the
+right kind of skins. There are some Angora skins
+imported from Turkey and South Africa.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65">65</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image29.jpg" width="600" height="310" alt="image29" title="image29" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">Prize winners at the Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893.</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66">66</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image30.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="BY-PRODUCTS OF ANGORA GOATS" title="BY-PRODUCTS OF ANGORA GOATS" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image31.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="63" title="T" alt="T" />he Angora goat should not be classed
+with milch animals. As a rule the does
+give a sufficient amount of milk to
+nourish the kid or kids. The more
+common blood there is in the goat the
+better milch animal she is. However, some Angoras
+have been milked, and the milk is as rich as that of
+the common goat. A quart of milk a day may be
+considered a fair average for a fresh milch Angora
+doe. It has been suggested that because the milk of
+the goat contains a heavy percentage of fat, it is a
+proper substitute for mothers' milk for babies. This
+is probably a mistake, as that part of the milk which
+is the hardest for the baby to digest is the protein, and
+it will be observed that in the following table of
+analysis submitted, the percentage of protein in
+goat's milk and in cow's milk is about the same, and
+that it is considerably larger than in mother's milk.
+A very desirable feature in goat's milk is that the fat
+is distributed throughout the milk, and that it does
+not readily separate from the milk. This would
+assist in the assimilation of the fat by an infant.
+Some experiments made with coffee demonstrate that
+it requires half the quantity of goat's milk to produce<span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67">67</a></span>
+the same effect upon this beverage which cow's milk
+produces. This may be partially explained by the
+quantity of fat in goat's milk, and partially by the
+fact that the fat does not readily separate from the
+milk. The bottom of the can is as good as the top.</p>
+
+<h3>ANALYSIS OF MILK.</h3>
+
+<table summary="analysis of milk" width="60%">
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td align="right">MOTHER'S AVERAGE</td>
+<td align="right">COW'S AVERAGE</td>
+<td align="right">GOAT'S AVERAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Fat</td>
+<td align="right">4.00</td>
+<td align="right">3.50</td>
+<td align="right">7.30</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Sugar</td>
+<td align="right">7.00</td>
+<td align="right">4.30</td>
+<td align="right">4.10</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Proteid</td>
+<td align="right">1.50</td>
+<td align="right">4.00</td>
+<td align="right">4.18</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Salts</td>
+<td align="right">.20</td>
+<td align="right">.70</td>
+<td align="right">1.21</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Water</td>
+<td align="right">87.30</td>
+<td align="right">87.50</td>
+<td align="right">83.21</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td>
+<td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td>
+<td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td align="right">100.00</td>
+<td align="right">100.00</td>
+<td align="right">100.00</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Persons in poor health have been greatly benefitted
+by the use of goat's milk. This is probably
+due to the fact that the fat in the milk is so distributed
+that a large percentage of it is taken up by the
+digestive apparatus. Angora goats are docile, and it
+is possible that some of them could be developed into
+good milch animals.</p>
+
+<h3>FERTILIZER.</h3>
+
+<p>It is a known fact that packers of the present
+day utilize all of the carcass of most food animals,
+but it is not the fertilizer which the packer makes
+from the blood and offal of the goat which we shall
+consider here.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68">68</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Sheep's manure has been used for years on orchards
+and vegetable gardens, and in the last few
+years goats' manure has been in demand, selling at
+from $6 to $7.50 a ton, depending upon the purity of
+the fertilizer. It must be remembered that only a
+small portion of this manure is dropped at the night
+bed-ground, the balance is evenly distributed over the
+land upon which the goats are feeding. The goats not
+only rid the farm of objectionable weeds and brush,
+but they help to furnish a rich soil in which grass
+will grow. This fact has been so thoroughly demonstrated
+that western farmers, who have large tracts of
+wheat or barley stubble to rent during the summer,
+are always anxious to get goats upon this land.</p>
+
+<h3>OTHER PRODUCTS.</h3>
+
+<p>The horns of the goats are used to make handles
+for pocket knives, etc. The hoofs are used in the
+manufacture of glue.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image32.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="image32" title="image32" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id="page69">69</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 605px;">
+<img src="images/image33.jpg" width="605" height="181" alt="FOOD, CLIMATE AND PROTECTION" title="FOOD, CLIMATE AND PROTECTION" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image19.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="59" title="O" alt="O" />n the mountains and in the valleys of the
+United States the Angora has had
+a variety of food. He is a natural
+browser, and will live almost entirely
+on brush, if this kind of food is
+to be found, but he readily adapts himself to circumstances,
+and will live and do well upon an exclusively
+grass diet. The fact that the goat is a browser has
+been made use of in clearing farms of brush and objectional
+weeds. If a sufficient number of goats are
+confined upon a limited area for a period of time,
+they will kill most of the brush upon this land.
+They will eat almost every kind of brush, but they
+have their preferences and enjoy especially blackberry
+vines and those kinds of brush which contain
+tannic acid, such as scrub oak. They do not poison
+easily, and if there is a variety of food they rarely
+eat enough of any kind of poisonous plant to prove
+fatal. If, however, they are hungry, and have access
+to places where there are poisonous plants, they will
+eat enough to kill themselves.</p>
+
+<h3>KILLING BRUSH.</h3>
+
+<p>If one wishes to clear brush land, he should confine
+the goats to a comparatively small tract. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70">70</a></span>
+goats kill the shrubs by eating the leaves and by
+peeling the bark from the branches and trunks of the
+trees. The brush thus deprived of lungs, soon dies
+and the roots rot. As fast as the leaves grow they
+must be consumed, so it is well to allow the goats to
+eat most of the leaves off of a limited tract, and then
+in order to give the goats plenty of feed, they should
+be moved to another field. As soon as the leaves on
+the first tract have regrown the goats should be again
+confined to this land. In this way the leaves are continually
+destroyed. This process can be continued
+as fast as the leaves regrow. By this method it is
+estimated that a bunch of one hundred to one hundred
+and fifty goats will clear forty acres of thick
+brush in about two years. In countries where the
+grass grows as the brush dies, goats will eat some of
+this grass, but they prefer the browse.</p>
+
+<p>On some of the older goat ranches, where the
+Angora has been raised exclusively for the mohair
+and mutton, it has become quite a problem to prevent
+the goats from killing out the brush. The goats
+have done well where other kinds of livestock would
+have starved, but as soon as the brush is killed the
+land produces almost nothing, and even the goats cannot
+make a living. To prevent as far as possible
+their killing the brush the flocks are moved frequently
+from one range to another, so that the shrubs
+have a chance to recuperate between visits. In this<span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71">71</a></span>
+way brush can be kept almost indefinitely for the
+goats. On some of the western ranges, where cattle
+and sheep have, by continual cropping, killed much
+of the grass, good browse remains. These ranges
+would have to be abandoned if it were not for the
+goat. Goats do not in any way interfere with the
+pasturage of cattle or other livestock. Cattle feed
+contentedly on the same range with the goats, and
+this fact has led many southern cattle men to invest
+in goats. The goats are herded on the brushy lands,
+and the cattle range over the same territory and eat
+the grass. Horses have a great fondness for goats.</p>
+
+<h3>SALT.</h3>
+
+<p>Goats, like other livestock, should have a small
+amount of salt. The salt should be kept where they
+can get it at liberty, or else it should be fed at regular
+intervals. If ground salt is given, care should be
+taken to see that individuals do not eat an oversupply
+of the salt.</p>
+
+<h3>WATER.</h3>
+
+<p>While Angoras do not require as much water as
+sheep, yet they should be given a quantity sufficient
+at least once a day. In winter goats will live upon
+snow. Men have reported that their goats have gone
+for a week at a time, and all summer long, without
+any more moisture than they could get from browse<span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72">72</a></span>
+and weeds, but even if Angoras should stand this
+treatment, they will thrive better with water once
+daily. It is estimated that under normal conditions
+a goat will consume about one-ninetieth of its
+body weight (about a pint of water for a grown animal)
+in a day. On hot days, when the animals are
+on dry feed, they will frequently drink two quarts of
+water.</p>
+
+<h3>SHEDS.</h3>
+
+<p>To raise Angora goats most profitably one should
+really be provided with sheds. These sheds should
+be about the same as those which are provided for
+sheep in the same locality. For years southern and
+western breeders have made a success of the Angora
+industry, and very few of them have had any artificial
+protection for their goats. But even these
+breeders find that they can raise a larger percentage
+of increase, and get through the year with a smaller
+percentage of loss if they have sheds. Grown goats
+rarely need much shelter, even in the winter, if the
+weather is dry, but during cold, damp storms the
+fleece wets through and the animal chills. Just after
+shearing, or just before kidding season, one is liable
+to lose some grown animals, or to have many kids
+slunk, if the goats are not protected from cold storms.
+Young kids also require attention, and proper sheds
+more than pay for themselves by preventing excessive
+mortality. Whether the shed should be closed<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73">73</a></span>
+on all sides, or whether it may be left open, depends
+upon the locality. Do as one would for sheep, under
+the same conditions, will be a fairly safe rule to follow.
+Allow at least four or five square feet of shed
+room to each mature animal, and the danger of the
+goats crowding together in the corners and smothering
+the animals on the underside of the pile, should
+never be forgotten. On very cold nights large numbers,
+especially of the kids, may be killed by smothering,
+if they are not carefully watched.</p>
+
+<h3>FENCES.</h3>
+
+<p>The question of fencing for the Angora goat is
+not such a serious matter as the beginner would imagine.
+If the goats have not been raised as pets and
+taught to jump, there will be little trouble with the
+animals going over a perpendicular fence of ordinary
+height. They will, however, go through or under
+the fence, if it is possible. They are natural
+climbers, and if the fence offers projecting steps,
+upon which they can climb, they will soon find their
+way to the outside of the enclosure. Some of the
+old stone and rail fences will not hold goats. Any
+perpendicular fence, three feet high, with transverse
+spaces not wider than three or four inches for the
+lower two feet, and not wider than six inches for the
+upper foot, will hold goats. If the spaces in the
+fence are perpendicular, they will necessarily have to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74">74</a></span>
+be narrower, as small kids will crawl through the
+spaces. A woven-wire fence, two feet high, with a
+perpendicular stay, at least twelve inches apart, so
+that the goats will not get their heads caught in the
+fence, surmounted by a couple of plain or barbed
+wires, six inches apart, will hold goats, and if barbed
+wire is used, will prevent cattle from breaking the
+fence. If plain or barbed wire is used, the first
+three wires nearest the ground should be placed not
+more than three inches apart, and close enough to
+the ground to prevent kids from crawling under the
+lowest wire. The space between the next wires may
+be increased to four, five and six inches, and so on
+to the desired height of the fence. A board fence
+composed of three boards four inches wide, with a
+space between the ground and the first board of
+about three inches, and a three or four inch space between
+the boards, the whole being surmounted by a
+barbed or plain wire or two makes a very satisfactory
+goat fence. If pickets or posts are used, they should
+be set closely enough together, say about two inches
+apart, to prevent small kids from crawling between
+them. An objection has been raised to barbed wire,
+on account of the mohair which the barbs pull out.
+The amount of mohair lost in this way is inconsiderable.
+As has been stated, it hurts the goat to pull
+the mohair, and the goat soon learns to avoid the
+barbs. Many breeders use barbed wire corrals and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75">75</a></span>
+find them satisfactory. Probably woven wire is the
+best fence under ordinary conditions.</p>
+
+<h3>HERDING.</h3>
+
+<p>In mountainous countries, where it is not practical
+to fence the range, the flocks should be watched by
+herders. The Angora has a natural tendency to return
+home, or to a known camping ground at night, and
+in some places this tendency is relied upon to bring
+the flock home, and they are not herded. Of course,
+in countries where there is no danger from loss by
+depredations of wild animals, and where food is so
+plentiful that the goats must find a sufficient amount,
+the flock may be turned loose.</p>
+
+<p>One shepherd should tend from one to two
+thousand head, as goats flock together well. Of
+course, during kidding season the flocks will have to
+be more closely watched. Goats travel rapidly and
+cover a considerable amount of territory in a day.
+A flock may travel from ten to twelve miles from the
+time they leave camp in the morning until they return
+to camp in the evening. The herder should
+walk ahead of the leaders of the flock, so that they
+will not travel too fast, or he may walk upon a nearby
+elevation, so that he can see that the flock does not
+separate. A flock will sometimes string out over a
+mile. The goats should be given freedom. Too
+often a zealous herder overworks himself and keeps
+his flock poor by crowding them together. A good<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77">77</a></span>
+sheep herder soon learns the nature of the goat, and
+when he understands the animal he would rather
+herd goats than sheep.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76">76</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image34.jpg" width="600" height="363" alt="image34" title="image34" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">Prize winners at the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>DOGS.</h3>
+
+<p>In some sections of the country sheep-killing
+dogs have proven a great nuisance to sheep-breeders.
+To say that the Angora goat will prevent dogs from
+killing sheep, and that they will drive the dogs away,
+would be a misstatement. Bucks and grown goats
+will protect themselves to some extent. If a strange
+dog attacks a flock in a field, the goats will usually
+huddle together and the bucks and grown animals
+will keep the dog at bay. A mother will fight bravely
+to protect her kid.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/image22.jpg" width="100" height="58" alt="image22" title="image22" />
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image35.jpg" width="600" height="277" alt="image35" title="image35" style="border: 2px solid" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id="page78">78</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image36.jpg" width="600" height="175" alt="KIDDING ANGORAS" title="KIDDING ANGORAS" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image25.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="59" title="O" alt="O" />n experience of years has taught the
+Turk that if he wishes to save many
+kids, he must have them come late in
+the season. The changeable weather of
+the Turkish spring, the frequent cold
+rains and the lack of proper shed accommodations,
+have more than once not only destroyed the increase,
+but also killed the grown goats. The Turkish methods
+of handling kids are of little practical value.
+They know how delicate the kids are when they
+are born, and they usually bring the kid and its
+mother to the house as soon as it is dropped.</p>
+
+<p>The Turkish Angora goat men usually range
+small flocks, and they also have a surplus of help, so
+that this is a comparatively easy method. The kids are
+allowed to go with the flocks as soon as they are old
+enough to travel. The principal objection to letting
+young kids go with the flock is that the kids go to
+sleep, and sleep so soundly that the flock feed away
+from them. When the youngsters awake they are lost.
+If there be wild animals about, the kids may be killed,
+or they may starve before they are found. The
+Turk, however, has so many herders with one flock<span class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79">79</a></span>
+that they usually discover the kids before the flock
+has strayed.</p>
+
+<p>In America the kidding season is the most important
+time of the year for the Angora breeder. If
+he would raise a large increase, he must be properly
+prepared, and he must be constantly alert. If the
+weather be fair, with bright sunshiny days and
+temperate nights, the kids will do well without much
+care, but if it be cold, stormy and muddy, some of
+the kids will be lost in spite of all care. After the
+kids are born the mothers should have such food as
+will produce the greatest amount of milk. Well-fed
+mothers make strong healthy kids. Green feed is
+desirable.</p>
+
+<p>The proper season, then, for the kids to come
+will depend upon the climate and range conditions.
+Allowing for the period of gestation, which is about
+five months, the bucks can run with the does as early
+or as late as one wishes. One can be guided somewhat
+by the time sheep men allow ewes to lamb.
+When the first warm weather comes the goats usually
+commence to shed their mohair, and as it is too early
+in the season for the kids to be dropped, the does must
+be shorn before kidding or the mohair lost. Care
+should be exercised in handling the does heavy with
+kid. For the first few days after shearing the doe
+should not be allowed to chill, as she may abort. In
+some countries it is possible to kid before shearing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80">80</a></span>
+but there is no practical objection to shearing before
+kidding, provided proper care be exercised.</p>
+
+<h3>HANDLING OF KIDS.</h3>
+
+<p>There are various methods in use of handling
+the young kids, and all of them are intended to save
+as large a percentage of increase as possible with the
+least possible expense. Almost every man who has
+handled goats has some individual idea which experience
+has taught him. The locality and surroundings
+of the flock make a vast difference in the way
+they should be kidded. The method which works
+best with fifty or one hundred does in a fenced brush
+pasture in Oregon or Iowa, would be useless with a
+flock of a thousand or fifteen hundred in the mountains
+of Nevada or New Mexico, where there is often
+no corral to hold the goats.</p>
+
+<p>With a bunch of from fifty, to two hundred and
+fifty, and a shed big enough to hold the entire lot, it
+is not difficult to raise a very large percentage of kids.
+If the does are kept in a ten or twenty-acre pasture,
+they should be allowed to run out and take care of
+themselves as much as possible. The doe may drop
+her kid wherever she may happen to be, and she will
+almost invariably take care of it and coax it to the
+shed at night. The refusal of a young doe to own
+her kid must be overcome, especially if the weather
+is unfavorable. The mother must be caught and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81">81</a></span>
+milk forced into the kid's mouth until he learns to
+suckle. After he has been sufficiently fed, place
+them together in a box stall and leave them for a
+day or two. Then, in all probability, the mother will
+take care of her kid.</p>
+
+<p>The box stall is about three feet square and three
+feet high, with a little door on hinges to save lifting
+the animal. A row along the inside of the shed next
+to the wall is a great convenience. A doe with her
+kid should be disturbed as little as possible, because,
+as a rule, she knows how to care for her kid better
+than a herder.</p>
+
+<p>When goats are handled on a larger scale, with no
+pasture available, entirely different methods should
+be adopted&mdash;for the mother must go out to feed every
+day and the kid cannot go.</p>
+
+<p>Probably the most extensively used methods are
+the "corral method" and the "staking method,"
+either used individually or combined.</p>
+
+<h3>THE CORRAL METHOD.</h3>
+
+<p>In the corral method, two or three large corrals
+and numerous smaller ones are necessary. First, the
+does should be separated from the wethers, if they have
+been running together, and a "wether band" made.
+Then every morning the "doe band" must be looked
+over carefully for does that will kid during the day.
+Such does must be put in a corral by themselves and
+allowed to kid in this corral. They should be fed some<span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82">82</a></span>
+hay, or if that is not possible, they should be herded
+near by for a few hours. It has been our experience
+that most of the kids will come between the hours of
+ten in the morning and four in the afternoon. The
+more does which one can pick out in the morning the
+better it is, for the doe, after dropping her kid, is
+allowed to stay with it the rest of the day and all
+night. In this way she learns to know it. If one has
+hay to feed the doe, so that she may be left with her
+kid for one or two days, it is a great advantage.</p>
+
+<p>After all the does have been selected which can be
+found, still some will be overlooked, and they will
+go out on the range with the rest. The best way to
+handle these is to have the herder make a straight
+drive to a certain point where the feed is good, and
+then stay around this one place, allowing the kids to
+come within as small a radius as possible without
+starving the goats. If it is necessary, quite a distance
+can be covered in this way, and yet the kids
+will not be scattered over a large section of the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>As a kid is dropped, the doe should be allowed to
+remain with her kid and take care of it until evening.
+The herd will gradually feed from them, but it should
+be kept as near as possible to protect the kids from
+wild animals. Towards evening one must go out
+and gather up the kids and drive the mothers to the
+corral. The large herd should be driven home in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83">83</a></span>
+advance, keeping a little apart from the does with
+kids so as not to coax the "wet does" away with the
+"dry herd."</p>
+
+<p>When the wagon with the kids reaches the ranch,
+the kids should be put in a small corral. They
+should be placed a few feet apart, and the mothers
+should be allowed to select their own kids. They
+also should be allowed to remain in the corral for the
+night at least. In case a doe will not take her
+kid she should be placed in one of the box stalls and
+a kid which has no mother placed with her and fed.</p>
+
+<p>When plenty of small corrals and good hay are
+available, each day's kids should be left in a separate
+corral until the mothers have been with the kids one
+or two days. It will be found that the kids are
+always given a very good start in this way. When it
+is deemed advisable, the kids are put together in a
+large corral, and as soon as the mothers in the
+smaller corrals are thought to know their kids sufficiently
+well, they are added to this wet band in
+the large corral. Thus the round is completed from
+the dry band to the wet band, the small corral being
+simply an intermediate step to insure familiarity between
+the doe and her kid. The dry band rapidly
+diminishes while the wet band increases.</p>
+
+<p>The mothers are now ready to go on the range
+during the day to feed, but the kids should be kept in
+the corral until they are at least six weeks old. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85">85</a></span>
+does may be turned out over a "jump board" placed
+across the gate. A jump board is a two-inch plank,
+eighteen inches high, with a four-inch strip nailed on
+the top for the does to put their feet on as they jump
+over. The kids come to the board but cannot get
+over. If some of the larger kids bother by trying
+to get over, some one can stand at the gate to scare
+them back by pounding on the board with a stick.
+The does will soon learn to pay no attention to the
+noise.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84">84</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image37.jpg" width="600" height="470" alt="image37" title="image37" />
+<span class="caption">THOROUGHBRED ANGORA DOE.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Even now there will be a few kids which will not
+be mothered. Every morning, before the wet band is
+allowed to go over the jump board, one should walk
+through the herd, pick out the kids that have not
+been nourished during the night, and select does that
+are not suckling kids. These does should be held
+until the kids have been fed. A row of small stantions
+is a convenient thing for holding them. After
+a kid gets a good start he will steal a living from different
+does if necessary.</p>
+
+<p>To kid a band of from one thousand to fifteen
+hundred does by the corral method, will require at
+least three men&mdash;one man to herd the dry band, one
+the wet band, and a man to look after the kids and
+assist where needed. Often the wet band is divided,
+or when one wet band has reached the number of
+from five hundred to seven hundred animals, another
+is started.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86">86</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>THE STAKING METHOD.</h3>
+
+<p>The staking method is quite commonly used,
+and in certain localities it is probably the best way to
+handle kids. The apparatus necessary is a smooth
+piece of half-inch board, two inches wide and four
+inches long, with a hole bored in each end. Through
+the hole in one end a piece of rope eight inches long
+is passed, and knotted so that it cannot pull out.
+The loose end of this rope is then made fast to a
+stout stake which is to be driven into the ground.
+Through the hole in the other end a piece of rope
+eighteen inches long is passed and knotted as in the
+first end, in such a way that the loose end of the rope,
+which is to be fastened to the kid's leg, draws
+away from the stake. When the apparatus is in use
+the small stick with the holes in the ends acts as a
+swivel to keep the rope from tangling.</p>
+
+<p>It is important to select a proper place to tie the
+kid. He is to stay in this place for about six weeks,
+and he needs protection from winds and wild animals,
+and should have some sunshine and some
+shade. Usually a small tree, a bush, a fence, or a
+post will offer a good place to stake. The does which
+are expected to kid during the day are separated
+from the flock as in the corral method. The balance
+of the band are herded, so that the kids dropped on
+the range can be more easily handled. Just as
+soon as a kid is dropped, it is taken to a convenient<span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87">87</a></span>
+place to stake, and the mother coaxed to follow.
+One of the kid's legs is securely fastened to the
+loose end of the rope, and the kid and its mother are
+left together. The mother is thus free to go and
+feed, and on returning will know exactly where to
+find her kid.</p>
+
+<p>Many owners allow the does which have kidded
+to herd themselves, as they usually return to their
+kids, often coming in several times during the day.
+Of course this necessitates having plenty of food and
+water within access of the staking ground. The
+wet band could be herded as in the corral method.</p>
+
+<p>In this staking method if a mother refuses to
+own her kid, or if she dies, the kid has no chance to
+steal milk from some other wet doe, and unless
+closely watched, quite a number of kids will starve.
+The rope should be changed from one leg to the
+other occasionally to allow symmetry of development.
+The preparation of ropes and stakes for a thousand
+kids is quite a task, and it keeps the energetic herder
+busy during his spare moments getting ready for kidding
+time.</p>
+
+<p>For the first few days the Angora kid is full of
+life and vigor as any animal of like age. If he be
+well nourished, he will frisk and play at all kinds of
+antics, until he is so tired that he must forget everything.
+The sleep which comes is so sound that any
+usual amount of noise does not disturb him. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88">88</a></span>
+this characteristic which makes it unsafe to take kids
+on to the range with a flock. The kids are liable to
+hide behind some bush, go to sleep and be lost.</p>
+
+<h3>CASTRATING.</h3>
+
+<p>Before the kids are allowed to go out with the
+flock the males should be castrated. The Turk does
+not alter the males until they have developed sexuality
+and the male horn, <i>i. e.</i>, the heavy characteristic
+buck horn. He then castrates by either removing
+the testicles, or by twisting or destroying the spermatic
+cord. When the latter method is used the testicles
+and cord undergo an inflammatory process
+which destroys the regenerative power of the animal.
+The testicles remain in the scrotum apparently unchanged.
+The animal thus treated presents to the
+casual observer the physical characteristics of a buck.
+The Turk claims that an animal treated in this manner
+is less liable to die than one whose testicles are
+removed. This is probably true, as the initial lesion
+produced by the operation is very small, and there is
+less liability of infection.</p>
+
+<p>The usual method employed in this country is to
+remove the testicles before the regenerative power of
+the animal is developed. This gives the wether a
+feminine appearance, and there is comparatively little
+danger of death if the operation is properly performed.
+It will be easiest to castrate the kids be<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89">89</a></span>tween
+the age of two and four weeks. The kids
+should be driven into a small clean corral, and after
+undergoing the operation they should be turned into
+a large clean enclosure.</p>
+
+<p>The operator stands on the outside of the small
+corral, and the assistant catches the kids and turns
+them belly up before the operator, onto a board
+which has been fastened to the fence. A pair of
+clean scissors, or a sharp knife, which may be kept
+in a five per cent. carbolic acid solution when not in
+use, serve to cut off the distal end of the scrotum.
+The testicles are then seized with the fingers and
+drawn out. The operator drops the castrated kid
+into the large enclosure and the assistant presents
+another kid. Two men can operate on sixty kids an
+hour. The testicles are slippery and some herders
+prefer to use the teeth instead of the fingers to extract
+the testicles. Under no circumstances should
+any unclean thing be put into the scrotum. Death
+usually results from infection, and infection from uncleanliness.
+A little boracic acid might be sprinkled
+over the cut surface as an additional precaution, but
+this is unnecessary if ordinary cleanliness is observed.
+If after a few days the kid's scrotum swells,
+and does not discharge, the scrotum should be
+opened with a clean instrument. Less than one-half
+of one per cent. of the kids will die from this operation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90">90</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>RIDGLINGS.</h3>
+
+<p>While castrating the kids the operator will discover
+that some of the kids have but one descended testicle.
+When these animals are found the descended
+testicle should be removed, and they should be recognized
+by some distinctive ear mark or brand. These
+animals will develop like bucks. It is a disputed question
+as to whether they are able to exercise regenerative
+power, but they will cover the does, and in some cases
+they probably get kids. The undescended testicle
+can be removed, but as the testicle usually lies close
+to the kidney, and is hard to distinguish from that
+organ in the young animal, it is best to delay the
+operation until the ridgling is at least six months old.
+The instruments necessary for this operation are a
+stout rope to suspend the animal, a clean sharp knife,
+scissors to remove the mohair from the place to be
+incised, and sharp needles threaded with silk. The
+knife, scissors and silk should be immersed in a hot
+5% carbolic acid solution, and they should be kept in
+this solution except when actually in use.</p>
+
+<p>The rope is fastened to the hind legs of the animal
+and he is suspended in midair. An assistant
+steadies the body of the goat. The operator selects a
+place on the loin of the goat, about two or three
+inches away from the backbone, below the ribs and
+above the hip bone, on the side opposite to that which
+the descended testicle occupied. He then shears the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91">91</a></span>
+mohair from this part of the goat. The mohair
+should be removed from a space at least eight inches
+square. A lengthwise incision is then made through
+the skin and muscles, or after the skin is cut, the
+muscles can be separated with the fingers and the
+testicle is found. It usually lies close to the backbone,
+to the lower and inner side of the kidney. It is
+usually undeveloped and much smaller than the kidney.
+Its surface is smooth and not indented like the
+kidney. When it is discovered it can be withdrawn
+through the opening, and adherent tissue clipped
+with the scissors. The muscles and skin should be
+brought together with the silk thread. The needles
+should pierce the muscles as well as the skin, and the
+edges of the skin should approximate. No hair
+should be allowed to remain between the cut surfaces,
+as the wound will not heal rapidly. After the
+wound is closed some boracic acid powder may be
+dusted over the wound, and the goat allowed his freedom.
+After ten days or two weeks the silk threads
+should be cut and drawn out, as they will not absorb,
+and they will irritate the wound. If this operation
+is carefully performed, and strict cleanliness adhered
+to, less than 2% of the animals operated upon will
+die.</p>
+
+<h3>GROWTH.</h3>
+
+<p>A kid at birth is usually small and weak, possibly
+weighing from four to six pounds. For the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92">92</a></span>
+few days of life he grows slowly, but as the organs
+adapt themselves to the new life, the kid becomes
+strong and grows rapidly. When the kid is born he
+is covered with a coarse hair, and it is not until he is
+from three to five weeks old that the fine mohair
+fibers appear growing between the coarser hairs. The
+kid continues to grow gradually, and at three or four
+months he weighs from twenty to forty pounds. The
+mohair may now be from two to four inches long.
+At a year old the Angora goat will weigh from fifty
+to eighty pounds, and the mohair may be as long
+as twelve inches, or sometimes longer.</p>
+
+<h3>WEANING.</h3>
+
+<p>When does are bred once a year the kid should
+be weaned before the doe is rebred. This allows the
+doe time to recuperate before her maternal powers are
+again brought into active service. Then, too, a doe
+nursing a kid through the winter, enters the spring
+with a depleted system and produces a poor quality
+and small quantity of mohair. The kids should be
+weaned when they are about five months old, as this
+allows the mother at least two months rest before she
+is rebred.</p>
+
+<h3>MARKING.</h3>
+
+<p>There are various reasons for marking goats, and
+the methods employed vary as widely as the reasons
+therefor. The object in view is to put some mark of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93">93</a></span>
+identification either permanent or temporary upon
+the animal. The ears may be cropped in certain ways,
+a brand may be placed upon the nose, or tags or buttons
+placed in the ears, or characters tattooed into the
+ears. Probably the most permanent mark is the
+tattoo, and if it be placed on the inner hairless surface
+of the ear, it is as lasting as the tattoo so often
+seen in a man's arm.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/image22.jpg" width="100" height="58" alt="image22" title="image22" />
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
+<img src="images/image38.jpg" width="350" height="453" alt="image38" title="image38" style="border: 2px solid" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94">94</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image39.jpg" width="600" height="174" alt="DISEASES" title="DISEASES" />
+</div>
+
+<p><img src="images/image40.jpg" style="text-align: left" height="60" width="65" title="S" alt="S" />ome of the older breeders supposed that
+the Angora was not subject to any disease,
+but as goats have been introduced
+into new territory, they have become
+affected by some of the same troubles
+which bother sheep, but usually to a less degree.
+Some of the worst sheep diseases, such as scab, do
+not bother goats, but the goat has some special complaints
+which do not affect sheep. Very few carcasses
+are condemned by the government meat inspectors at
+the large packing centers. Tuberculosis is almost unknown.</p>
+
+<h3>LICE.</h3>
+
+<p>Nearly all goats are infested with lice, a small
+reddish louse, a goat louse. Lice rarely kills the animal
+infested, but they do annoy the goat greatly.
+Goats will not fatten readily, and the mohair is
+usually dead (lusterless), if the animals are badly infested.
+It is an easy matter to discover the lice.
+The goats scratch their bodies with their horns and
+make the fleece appear a little ragged. On separating
+the mohair the lice can easily be seen with the
+naked eye. The best means of ridding the goats of
+this annoyance is with almost any of the sheep dips.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95">95</a></span>
+A dip which does not stain the mohair should be
+selected. The goats should be dipped after shearing,
+as it does not take much dip then to penetrate to the
+skin. One dipping will usually kill the lice, but the
+albuminous coat covering the nits (eggs of the
+louse), are not easily penetrated, and it is usually
+necessary to dip again within ten days, so that the
+nits, which have hatched since the first dipping,
+will not have a chance to mature and deposit more
+eggs. Goats can be dipped at almost any time, but if
+in full fleece they will require a larger quantity
+of liquid, and if the weather is very cold, there is
+some danger.</p>
+
+<h3>STOMACH WORMS.</h3>
+
+<p>Stomach worms affect goats, and in some instances
+their ravages prove fatal. There are a
+variety of these worms, but the general effect on the
+animal is about the same. They are usually worse in
+wet years. The goats affected become thin and weak.
+They usually scour. Sometimes the worm, or part
+of the worm, can be found in the feces. These same
+symptoms are caused by starvation, so the two should
+not be confounded. There are many drenches in use
+for the treatment of this trouble, and some of the
+proprietary remedies have given some relief. Goats
+running on dry, high land are rarely affected.</p>
+
+<p>Verminous pneumonia of sheep may also occur
+in goats.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96">96</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>FOOT ROT.</h3>
+
+<p>Foot rot is a disease which affects both goats and
+sheep, if they are kept on low wet land. It rarely
+proves fatal, and can be cured if the cause is removed,
+but it sometimes causes a good deal of trouble. The
+goats' feet swell between the toes and become so sore
+that the animals are compelled to walk on their
+knees. It can be cured by carefully trimming the
+feet and using solutions of blue stone. Goats should
+not be put on wet land.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the glands of the neck enlarge, a condition
+known as goitre. This is sometimes fatal with
+kids, but usually cures itself. There is no known
+remedy for it, but it is comparatively rare.</p>
+
+<p>Anthrax, tuberculosis, pleuro-pneumonia and
+meningitis, will affect goats, but these diseases are
+very rare. Some of the southern goats have swollen
+ears, but what the cause of this trouble is no one has
+yet determined.</p>
+
+<h3>POISONS.</h3>
+
+<p>There are several plants which will poison goats,
+but very little is known about them. Some of the
+laurel family are responsible for the death of a good
+many goats yearly, and some milk-weeds will kill if
+taken in sufficient amount at certain times of the
+year. These plants should be avoided as much as
+possible. Treatment has been rather unsatisfactory.
+If the poisoned animal is treated at once, an active<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97">97</a></span>
+purgative may rid the system of the irritant. Epsom
+salts and crotin oil have given relief.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image41.jpg" width="600" height="252" alt="image41" title="image41" style="border: 2px solid" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Schreiner describes an epidemic of pleuro-pneumonia
+which destroyed many flocks of Angora
+goats in South Africa. The disease was effectually
+stamped out in that country, and it has never appeared
+in American flocks. Mr. Thompson has described
+a disease called Takosis, which was supposed
+to have caused the death of many goats in the Eastern
+States, and along the Missouri River Valley.
+Some claimed that this trouble was caused by change
+of climate, others thought that it was starvation or
+lack of proper care. There is very little evidence of
+it now in the United States. All in all, the Angora
+goat is the healthiest of domestic animals.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98">98</a></span></p>
+
+<table summary="heading" width="40%">
+<tr>
+<td><div class="figleft" style="width: 75px;">
+<img src="images/image42.jpg" width="50" height="41" alt="image42" title="image42" />
+</div></td>
+<td><h2>Our Own Flocks.</h2></td>
+<td><div class="figright" style="width: 75px;">
+<img src="images/image42.jpg" width="50" height="41" alt="image42" title="image42" />
+</div></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>In 1865, Mr. C. P. Bailey started in the Angora
+goat industry. There were then very few Angora
+goats in the United States, and those in California
+had originated from two thoroughbred bucks secured
+from Col. Peters of Atlanta, Georgia.</p>
+
+<p>In 1866, Mr. Bailey secured a pair of Angoras
+from W. W. Chenery of Boston, Mass. There were two
+other pairs secured at this time for other parties, and
+these three does were the <i>first thoroughbred does</i>
+brought to California. The first two goats cost Mr.
+Bailey $1000. <i>The first thoroughbred Angora kid</i>
+dropped in California was by Mr. Bailey's doe.</p>
+
+<p>In 1869, Mr. Bailey furnished money to bring
+the Brown &amp; Diehl importation to California, with
+the understanding that he was to have first choice.
+The Angoras secured from this lot were <i>the best goats</i>
+which had been brought to California up to that
+time.</p>
+
+<p>In 1876, Mr. Bailey selected the best buck of the
+Hall &amp; Harris importation, and paid seventy-five dollars
+service fee for three of his Brown &amp; Diehl does.
+Later he purchased forty-one head from Hall &amp; Harris.
+Some of these were the Brown &amp; Diehl goats,
+and some from the Hall &amp; Harris importation of
+1876.</p>
+
+<p>Twelve years after Mr. Bailey commenced breeding
+Angoras, he moved his entire grade-flock, consisting
+of about 1000 animals, to Nevada, and maintained
+his thoroughbred flocks in California. By careful
+selection, rigid culling, and strict attention given<span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id="page99">99</a></span>
+his flocks, Mr. Bailey had brought them by 1892, to
+an excellence beyond any of the imported stock.</p>
+
+<p>In 1893, Mr. Bailey imported two fine bucks
+from South Africa. An account of the buck Pasha
+will be found in this book.</p>
+
+<p>In 1899, another direct importation from South
+Africa was made, and the great sire Capetown was
+secured.</p>
+
+<p>In 1901, Dr. W. C. Bailey secured four of the
+best Angoras obtainable in Asia Minor, by personal
+selection, and added them to the Bailey flocks. This
+was the first importation made in America from Asia
+Minor for twenty-five years.</p>
+
+<p>During all these years, since 1865, Mr. Bailey
+had been constantly at work with his Angora flocks.
+There were many hardships to overcome, and most of
+the original Angora breeders gave up the struggle.
+We honestly believe that if it had not been for his
+perseverance the Angora industry would not be in its
+present prosperous condition.</p>
+
+<h3>Register.</h3>
+
+<p>We have been keeping a register of our stock,
+and this register is the oldest in the United States, or
+the world. Animals registered in the Bailey Angora
+Goat Record have a universal standing.</p>
+
+<h3>Manufacturers of Gloves, Robes and Trimmings.</h3>
+
+<p>The Angora Robe and Glove Company was established
+in 1875, with C. P. Bailey as president. Later
+Mr. Bailey secured sole control of this company. We
+have been using goat skins and mohair in large quantities
+for the last thirty years, and to-day</p>
+
+<h3>WE PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR GOAT SKINS
+AND MOHAIR.</h3>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100">100</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>Buck Selections.</h3>
+
+<p>From the above history it will be seen that we
+have several different strains of bucks to offer, and
+the fact that we have taken the Grand Prizes and
+highest awards at the New Orleans World's Fair,
+1885, Chicago World's Fair, 1893, St. Louis World's
+Fair, 1904, and sweep stakes at State Fairs and National
+Meetings for the last thirty years, should put
+these bucks on the top. We have sold thousands in
+United States, and they have given almost universal
+satisfaction.</p>
+
+<h3>Does.</h3>
+
+<p>Our thoroughbred does trace their ancestry to
+the best stock obtainable. We always have a good
+many grade Angora does on the range, and we are
+prepared to quote prices on carloads, or small lots.
+We gladly furnish information.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right">C. P. BAILEY &amp; SONS CO.,<br />
+San Jose, California.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image43.jpg" width="600" height="383" alt="image43" title="image43" style="border: 2px solid" />
+<span class="caption">PERSIAN FAT TAIL SHEEP<br /><br />In 1892, we received the first importation of Persian Fat-Tailed
+Sheep. They are very hardy, rapid growers (the lambs often gaining
+a pound a day for the first one hundred days,) good rangers almost free
+from disease, and to cross onto fine wooled sheep for mutton and wool,
+we consider them of much value.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Practical Angora Goat Raising, by C. P. Bailey
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Practical Angora Goat Raising, by C. P. Bailey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Practical Angora Goat Raising
+
+Author: C. P. Bailey
+
+Release Date: July 5, 2010 [EBook #33084]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRACTICAL ANGORA GOAT RAISING ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Verity White and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: C. P. BAILEY,
+
+One of the founders of the Angora Goat Industry in America.]
+
+
+
+
+ Practical
+ Angora Goat Raising
+
+ C. P. BAILEY & SONS COMPANY
+ SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
+ 1905.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+For several years beginners in the Angora goat industry were without
+text books, and even to-day there are very few practical treatises. From
+our forty years of experience in farming Angoras, and from the personal
+observations of our Dr. W. C. Bailey, while in the interior of Asia
+Minor, we have tried to select the essential points in the successful
+management of Angora flocks, and to present these points so that they
+may be used.
+
+We have given a brief outline of the history of the Angora goat, but we
+have devoted several pages to consideration of detail in breeding and
+kidding. It has been our aim to make this a practical text book for the
+beginner in the Angora industry, and if it proves of value to him, it
+has fulfilled its mission.
+
+ The Authors.
+
+
+
+
+ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE ANGORA GOAT.
+
+
+As to the origin and early history of the Angora goat little is known.
+It is supposed that the Angora variety descended from one of the classes
+of wild goats, and different writers have contended that different
+genera were the foundation of the Angora species. They have based these
+claims upon the characteristics of the horns, the covering of the body,
+shape and size of the animal, and various other details. Several agree
+that Capra AEgagrus is the class of goat from which the Angora species
+has developed.
+
+
+KNOWN FACTS.
+
+Present history traces the Angora goat to the vilayet of Angora, in Asia
+Minor, and to the country immediately surrounding this vilayet. Some
+have set a date over two thousand years ago, claiming that the Angora
+goat was introduced into Asia Minor at that time, but the only authentic
+history is that given by Tournefort, a French naturalist, employed by
+his government, who explored Asia Minor about two hundred and fifty
+years ago, and who described and pictured the Angora goat about as he
+appears to-day and by Evliya Effendi, a Turk, who wrote in 1550 of the
+goats, and by a few other writers. That they have not changed more is
+due to the fact that the Turk is quite content as he is, and he has no
+ambition to breed a different goat from what he has had for at least the
+past three centuries.
+
+
+ASIA MINOR.
+
+Before we consider the migrations of the Angora goat, we will
+investigate the physical conditions of their native province. The
+interior of Asia Minor, or the Angora goat country, is from one to four
+thousand feet above the sea level. Low, rolling hills and broad plains,
+treeless and almost waterless; dry, hot and desolate in the summer, and
+covered with more or less snow in the winter, form the habitat of the
+Angora. A small fine fibered sage brush is the principal diet of the
+goat, both summer and winter, but in the spring this diet is
+supplemented with weeds and some grass, and in the summer some of the
+goats are driven to the higher mountains, where there are some scrub
+pines and other varieties of brush. There is no winter feeding. The
+goats make their own living on the tops of the sage brush, which
+protrude through the snow.
+
+The indolent Turks do make some provision for the shelter of themselves
+and the goats in the winter. If a cave can be found it is divided so
+that the goats share the quarters with the humans. Sometimes an adobe
+house is so arranged that the goats and other livestock occupy the lower
+part of the house and the natives the upper part, or if there be but one
+floor, a low fence is run across to keep the livestock out of the living
+quarters. Great greyish-white wolfish looking dogs, wearing formidable
+collars of sharpened spikes go with the shepherds during the day and
+watch the flocks during the night. They are used as a means of
+protection from thieves, and not as an aid in herding. The flocks camp
+around the cave or hut, and are not confined in corrals. Fences are
+almost unknown in the Angora country. There are probably four or five
+million Angora goats in Asia Minor. Much of the central plateau region
+of the United States is very similar to the Angora region of Turkey. A
+peculiar fact is that the mohair produced in the different sections of
+Asia Minor varies a little, and the mohair merchants of Constantinople
+readily recognize an appreciable difference in its market value. Even
+the smaller merchants in the country recognize a difference in the
+mohair grown within a few miles of their town. Some try to explain this
+by a difference in food, others by slight climatic changes, and still
+others by the soil formation. Some of the goats from the locality of
+Geredeh, in the province of Kastamouni, have fleeces which are filled
+with grease. They are as black and gummy as merino sheep. This mohair,
+however, scours white. The most marketable mohair comes from Beibazar
+and Eskischehr. That this difference in the quality of the mohair is not
+entirely due to climate or food conditions is evidenced by the fact that
+Angoras taken from Beibazar to California still retain the same
+qualities in the mohair after four years in California. However, it has
+been noticed that different parts of the United States produce different
+qualities of mohair.
+
+[Illustration: SCENE IN ASIA-MINOR.
+
+Turkish owner, his herder, holding an Angora buck kid and the
+grey-wolfish-looking dogs wearing collars of sharpened spikes. This
+picture was taken on the range and one can see the fine fibered sage
+brush on which the goats feed.
+
+Photo taken by Dr. Bailey, 1901.]
+
+
+ANGORA GOATS IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+The history of the Angora goat in the United States dates from 1849,
+when Dr. James B. Davis, of Columbia, South Carolina, was presented with
+nine choice animals by the Sultan. The Sultan had requested President
+Polk to send a man to Turkey who understood the culture of cotton. Dr.
+Davis was appointed, and upon his return to America the Sultan, as a
+courtesy, presented him with the goats. For many years after their
+arrival in the United States these goats were considered cashmeres.
+Early reports about the fleeces and the goats were erroneous, and many
+were led to believe that the fleeces from these goats were worth $8 per
+pound, and that the goats would shear from six to eight pounds per year.
+
+Dr. Davis did not do very well with the goats. He crossed his Angora
+buck onto some of the native common goats, and sold some of the
+cross-bloods and possibly some of the original importation to various
+parties, but in 1854, Col. Richard Peters, of Atlanta, Georgia, secured
+most of the Davis goats. To Col. Peters really belongs the credit of
+keeping the Angora breed in existence in the United States up to the
+early sixties. Col. Peters was very fond of his Angoras, and he
+continued to own and run them up to the time of his death. He made a
+very creditable exhibit at the New Orleans World's Fair in 1885.
+
+
+THE CHENERY IMPORTATIONS.
+
+W. W. Chenery of Belmont, near Boston, Massachusetts, is supposed to
+have made the next two importations in 1861. No one seems to know
+exactly how many goats Mr. Chenery imported or what became of these
+lots. Mr. Thompson quotes the Massachusetts Ploughman as saying, "The
+first of the two lots, consisting of thirty nine animals, was shipped
+from Constantinople on the 26th of March, 1861, and arrived at Boston on
+the 15th of May, except two animals which died on the passage. The
+second lot consisting of forty one head, left Constantinople on the 6th
+of October, 1861, and arrived at Boston on the 25th of November with the
+loss of only one on the voyage. In the whole flock, eighty in all, there
+were about a dozen males, and all the animals wintered well."
+
+It is generally supposed that Mr. Chenery made another importation in
+1866, of about twenty head.
+
+[Illustration: ANGORA GOAT.
+
+Brown and Diehl Importation, about 1868 or 1869.]
+
+
+THE BROWN AND DIEHL IMPORTATION.
+
+The next importation of practical importance, although it was claimed
+that nine head were received about 1861, by one Stiles, was made by
+Israel S. Diehl, a former U.S. consul and C. S. Brown, of Newark, New
+Jersey, about 1868. Mr. Diehl was commissioned by the United States
+government to investigate the industry in Turkey, and he secured a lot
+of Angoras, variously estimated at from one hundred to one hundred and
+sixty head. Mr. C. P. Bailey furnished the money for the transportation
+of these goats to California. He says, "Some were fairly good and some
+were only ordinary. They were of medium size, and with the exception of
+the neck, tolerably well covered with fleece, which however had a
+scattering of kemp throughout. They were conceded to be the best brought
+to California up to that time." Some of these bucks had been tampered
+with and were sterile.
+
+
+EUTICHIDES IMPORTATION.
+
+This shipment followed the Brown and Diehl importation, and consisted of
+between one hundred and fifty and two hundred animals. A. Eutichides,
+was a native of Turkey, and claimed that he had some fine goats, but he
+had an immense amount of trouble with his Angoras, and lost a good many.
+They were held in Virginia for some time, and then were sent to
+Sacramento, California, and were afterwards sold by the express
+company, at public auction, at very low prices. This was about 1873. It
+was generally believed by old California breeders that some of the goats
+offered at this sale were cross-bloods of California origin. The blood
+of this importation, however, has been widely scattered over the Pacific
+Coast.
+
+
+THE HALL AND HARRIS IMPORTATION.
+
+In 1876, John S. Harris, of Hollister, California, returned from a
+perilous journey around the world in quest of new Angoras. He found the
+Thibet goats in the Himalaya Mountains, and finally succeeded in getting
+some goats at Angora, in Asia Minor. He secured two bucks and ten does,
+and brought them safely to California. That was really the first time an
+American had entered Asia Minor to study the Angora industry, as it was
+understood Mr. Diehl had secured Turks to go into the interior for him.
+
+
+THE JENKS IMPORTATION.
+
+This was a small importation of Angoras, supposed to have been three
+animals, made by C. W. Jenks of Boston, and sold to Col. Peters of
+Georgia. They were supposed to have come from Geredeh, in the interior
+of Asia Minor, and they arrived in the United States in 1880. The mohair
+from these goats was not considered very good, and the importation was
+not regarded as very important.
+
+
+THE SHULTS IMPORTATION.
+
+This was the first importation made from South Africa to the United
+States and arrived in 1886. There were two bucks and two does, and they
+went to Fink & Company, of Texas. There was a great deal of question
+about this importation, and so far as is known it was of no value to
+American flocks.
+
+
+THE C. P. BAILEY & SONS CO. IMPORTATIONS.
+
+In 1893, the first importation of Angora goats from South Africa, which
+was of value to American flocks, arrived. The two bucks, Pasha and Dick,
+which were secured by C. P. Bailey from R. Cawood, were sired by the
+great buck Sam. Mr. Schreiner says, "Sam was born in 1888, and sheared
+as a three year old, at twelve month growth, 15 pounds 2 ounces. He was
+exhibited for many years at all chief Agricultural shows and was never
+beaten but once, a judgment reversed at a subsequent show in the same
+year. Sam was the most famous goat in South Africa; with splendid weight
+of fleece, he combined a fineness of fiber rarely seen in an old ram."
+
+Pasha developed into a great sire and his get has been distributed into
+nearly every State in the Union, Canada, Mexico and Australia. Without
+doubt Pasha's blood courses through the veins of more Angoras than any
+sire ever imported. He was acknowledged by every one to be the best
+individual ever brought to America. Mr. Landrum, who had seen most of
+the Angoras brought from Turkey and who saw Pasha at San Jose,
+California, in 1899, pronounced him the most perfect goat he had ever
+seen and a much better goat than any which had ever come to America from
+Turkey. He bought some of Pasha's get for his own flock.
+
+[Illustration: ANGORA BUCK PASHA.
+
+Bailey South Africa Importation 1893.]
+
+In 1899, the buck Capetown was imported by Mr. Bailey from South Africa
+to secure certain points. Size and a little "yolk," together with the
+covering, fineness, freeness from kemp, ringlets and evenness were
+especially desired. Capetown has been a great sire and is still in fine
+condition on the Bailey farms.
+
+
+THE ASIA MINOR GOATS.
+
+In 1901, Dr. W. C. Bailey, armed with an honorary commission from the
+United States Department of Agriculture, personally visited every
+goat-raising section of Asia Minor, and after seeing hundreds of
+thousands, and examining minutely hundreds, secured and succeeded in
+exporting two bucks and two does. The Sultan had passed an edict in
+1881, prohibiting the export of these animals, as he hoped to keep the
+industry for Asia Minor. The undertaking was a hazardous one, and the
+expedition was fought with many and almost insurmountable difficulties.
+Asia Minor is alive with bandits, and to hold a foreigner for ransom is
+a favorite pastime. Then, too, a Christian's life is not considered of
+much value by a Mohamedan. The goats were transported for miles on mule
+and camel back, carried across the Bosphorus under a boat load of hay,
+disfigured by shearing and powdered with coal dust, transported through
+the streets of Constantinople in closed carriages protected from police
+molestation by the "golden wand," and finally condemned by the Italian
+Government because no health certificate accompanied them from point of
+shipment, but eventually landed in California in 1901. The bucks
+Beibazar and Kjutiah, and the does Moholitch and Eskischehr find the
+climate of California suited to their wants. These four goats cost over
+$5,000 landed in California.
+
+[Illustration: BUCK BEIBAZAR AND DOE MOHOLITCH.
+
+Bailey Asia Minor Importation 1901. Photo taken by Dr. Bailey on the
+plains of Asia Minor, March 7, 1901, while the goats were held by a
+Turkish guide.]
+
+Beibazar impresses his qualities markedly on his offspring. His get won
+the Sweepstake prizes at the California and Oregon State Fairs in 1904,
+and the championship for two-year-old buck at the World's Fair at St.
+Louis, U. S. A., in 1904.
+
+
+THE LANDRUM IMPORTATION.
+
+In 1901, Wm. M. Landrum imported two bucks from South Africa. Their get
+has been quite widely distributed in America, and has been of
+considerable value.
+
+
+THE HOERLE IMPORTATION.
+
+In 1904, G. A. Hoerle imported about one hundred and thirty head from
+South Africa. A few of these goats were exhibited at the St. Louis
+World's Fair, and some of them have been distributed to American
+breeders. A large part of them are now in New Jersey, and just what
+their effect will be on American flocks remains to be seen.
+
+[Illustration: BEIBAZAR.
+
+Bailey Asia Minor Importation, 1901.]
+
+
+ANGORA GOATS IN SOUTH AFRICA.
+
+In 1838, Col. Henderson made the first importation of Angora goats into
+South Africa, but while the number reaching the Cape was fourteen, yet
+only two proved to be perfect animals, a doe and her kid. The twelve
+bucks seem to have been tampered with, and they would not breed. Mr.
+Schreiner says: "But for the fact that there were several million Boar
+goats, thoroughly accustomed to the country, to furnish innumerable ewes
+for grading up purposes, the industry would still have been in its
+infancy." It was years before any more Angoras were imported into South
+Africa.
+
+The second importation into Cape Colony was made by Messrs. Mosenthal in
+1856, and thirty Angoras reached their destination. Mr. Schreiner
+reports that some of these goats were sold at public auction and brought
+about $350 to $400 each.
+
+The third importation was made by Sir Titus Salt, the English
+manufacturer of mohair, and arrived in South Africa in 1857. Dr. White
+had charge of these after they reached the colony.
+
+[Illustration: CAPETOWN.
+
+Bailey South African Importation, 1899.]
+
+The fourth importation consisted of about thirty-five animals, and was
+made about 1858 by Mr. W. R. Thompson. These were considered very fine
+animals, and were quite different from any previously imported.
+
+Ten years later in 1868, another importation was made by South Africa
+and from then on to 1880 between twelve and fifteen more lots were
+secured, some of them consisting of hundreds of animals. In the twelve
+years, up to 1880, over three thousand goats were received in South
+Africa from Asia Minor. Some of them brought as high as $2,200 each.
+
+During the next fourteen years there was a lack of importations into the
+Colony. In 1894, the first lot of American Angora goats, six head, were
+secured from C. P. Bailey of San Jose, California. They were sold to the
+Cape farmers by the importers at satisfactory prices, and in June, 1895,
+another lot of twenty bucks were secured from Mr. Bailey for $1000 cash.
+These bucks had a hard trip, and shed their fleece, but they were sold
+by the importer later.
+
+In 1895, another importation of one hundred and sixty-five head were
+secured by consent of the Sultan from Asia Minor. In 1896 another
+importation of sixty-three head were landed and sold to the Cape
+farmers. The highest priced buck of this lot brought about $1,850, and
+the highest priced doe about $1,000. These goats were not considered
+extra, with the exception of a few of the tops. They were not uniform,
+the breeches were bad, bellies deficiently covered, and they carried
+considerable kemp.
+
+
+ANGORAS IN OTHER COUNTRIES.
+
+Even before the arrival of Angora goats in South Africa they had been
+tried in Holland, France and England. Australia also imported some in
+1856, but the industry has not grown to any extent in any of these
+countries. There have been some Angoras exported to Australia from
+America since 1900. Canada, Mexico, Alaska, and some of the Pacific
+Islands, have small flocks of Angora goats at the present time. The
+start has been obtained largely from California.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+MOHAIR.
+
+
+That part of the fleece of the Angora goat, which at a year's growth is
+composed of long, lustrous, elastic fibers, is called Mohair. It may be
+more or less curled, but it is readily distinguishable from that part of
+the fleece of the Angora which is composed of short, stiff fibers, known
+as kemp.
+
+The word mohair probably has its origin in modern times, as the Turkish
+word for mohair is tiftick. A theory which is advanced by Mr. George
+Gatheral of Constantinople, and which is tenable, is that the early
+Dutch traders who visited Angora, found the native clergy wearing a gown
+made of mohair. The Turks called the cloth "mahr," and it is possible
+that the traders applied this word to the raw material. If this be so,
+the English have corrupted the word into the present term mohair.
+
+The color of mohair varies in different localities and on different
+individuals. In the vilayet of Koniah, in Asia Minor, is a breed of
+goats producing a brownish colored mohair. This material is sold upon
+the market as Koniah mohair. The Koniah goat, however, has been rapidly
+disappearing, as the herdsmen found that the foreign demand was for
+white mohair, and they have been crossing the white Angora bucks on the
+brown Koniah does. There are still over one hundred thousand pounds of
+Koniah mohair produced each year. In the Angora flocks of Asia Minor one
+always finds some colored goats. Black, blue, brown or red, usually with
+an admixture of white, are the common colors. The same thing may be said
+of the American flocks of Angoras. One may have been breeding white
+Angoras for years when, without apparent cause, a colored kid is
+dropped. Then color of the soil may give the mohair a peculiar tinge,
+but this usually scours out. The kemp in Asia Minor is sometimes a
+different color from the mohair. The kemp may be red or black and the
+mohair white. White mohair is what the manufacturer wants. If he wishes
+to make colored goods, he can dye white whatever color he wishes, but a
+colored mohair can only be used for certain colored goods.
+
+
+GRADES AND GRADING OF MOHAIR.
+
+In Turkey, after the fleece is shorn, the owner packs each fleece
+separately in sacks. He picks out the tag locks, colored fleeces or
+objectionable mohair, and after washing it, or making it more fit for
+market, he packs this in a sack by itself. Every village has its buyers,
+usually Greeks or Armenians, and there are a few traveling buyers. These
+men gradually collect the mohair. Men who have more money than they
+need put that money into mohair, as mohair is always salable, and it is
+so bulky that there is not much danger of it being stolen. There are so
+many robbers in Turkey that nothing is absolutely safe. One coffee house
+keeper in a small village sent about six dollars down to a larger place,
+as he was afraid to keep so much money in his house. When the mohair is
+collected in the larger towns it is again sorted, care being taken not
+to mix lots from different sections of the country. It is then forwarded
+to Constantinople of Ismidt, which is on the Sea of Marmara, near
+Constantinople. Here expert sorters go over the lots again. They do not
+break up the fleece, but they collect fleeces which are about the same
+and from the same district--for instance, Beibazar, Kjutiah, Kastamonia,
+Eskischehr, etc. These fleeces are then packed in bags and marked
+x - xx- xxx, or lettered a, b, AA, or numbered 1, 2, 3, etc. The
+mohair is then ready for exportation. It can be readily seen that a
+manufacturer who wants a particular kind of mohair can get exactly what
+he wants, if he knows the kind of mohair which comes from the different
+districts, and the grade of mohair which is put up under a certain mark
+by a certain firm. He can order of Mr. B. one hundred bags XX Beibazar
+mohair, and he knows what he is going to find when he opens the bags.
+There is a large room in Constantinople where a gang of men are almost
+constantly at work sorting mohair. The commission men have their store
+rooms around this central room; when the sorters finish with Mr. A's lot
+they commence to sort for Mr. B. Thus the same men sort all the mohair,
+and this insures a uniformity of grade.
+
+In America the plan of handling is somewhat different. It will be easier
+to tell what should be done than what is done. Until each grower becomes
+something of an expert sorter, or until we have central depots, where
+the mohair can be properly graded, the grower should roll the fleeces
+separately; they should not be tied, and put them in a bag or bale. He
+should pick out the tag locks, mohair discolored or clotted with urine
+or faeces, the colored fleeces, burry mohair or very kempy fleeces, and
+after preparation, put them in a separate parcel. Any kind of a bur or
+seed which sticks in the mohair must be picked out by hand. If the
+manufacturer has to do this, he puts a price on the mohair which will
+leave him plenty of margin. That is, he pays the grower about one-half
+as much as the mohair would be worth if it were free from this foreign
+material. If the mohair is very burry, it has to be treated chemically,
+and this spoils the luster. Sometimes the grower can make good wages by
+having the burs picked out before the animals are shorn. One man can
+pick the burs out of from fifteen to twenty-five animals a day, if there
+are not too many burs in the mohair. If the tag locks can be cleaned
+sufficiently by washing, they are of some value; but if not, they are
+hardly worth the expense of shipping.
+
+The mohair shorn from kids should be kept in parcels by itself, as it is
+usually finer and worth top prices. That of the does, if it differs from
+that of the wethers, should be packed separately. When the mohair is
+received by the mill it is sent to the sorting room.
+
+
+SORTING BY THE MANUFACTURER.
+
+Each goat's fleece is made up of a variety of different grades of
+mohair. Before a fleece can be spun it must be separated into these
+different grades as nearly as possible, and this is done by expert
+sorters, who select from the raw material about seven different degrees
+of fineness of fiber. They also take into consideration freeness from
+kemp and color. In separating the fleece much dust is liberated, and as
+some mohair is liable to carry the bacillus of anthrax, or other
+dangerous material, this dust, if allowed to circulate in the air, would
+become a serious menace to the health of the sorters. Wool sorters'
+disease is by no means uncommon, and one of the American mill owners
+reported that his sorters had such a dread of a foreign mohair which
+came packed in a distinctive package, that he had to stop handling this
+particular lot, although it was profitable stuff to spin.
+
+[Illustration: MOHAIR TRANSPORTATION IN CONSTANTINOPLE, TURKEY.
+
+Photo taken by Dr. Bailey.]
+
+To obviate this danger as far as possible each man opens the fleeces on
+a table covered with wire screen, under which circulates a strong
+exhaust current of air which is mechanically generated. Thus small
+foreign particles and dust in the fleeces are drawn downward. When the
+fleece is opened the sorter selects that part of the fleece which is
+known to be the coarsest, _i. e._, the breech and a strip along the
+center of the back, and puts this in one lot. Next he selects a narrow
+strip along the side of the fleece, which is known to be the finest part
+of the fleece, and puts this in another lot. Now the neck and the belly
+are separated and thrown into their classes. If the whole fleece were a
+fine one, and free from kemp, it would be sorted in the same way, but
+different parts of the fleece would go into proportionately higher
+classes. The lots which these sorters make are known to spin
+comparatively definite qualities of yarn. Thus the low breech and the
+back of most fleeces will not spin over No. 20 to No. 24 yarns, and the
+sides of good fleeces are fine in fiber and will spin No. 40 to No. 60
+yarn.
+
+The quantity of mohair which one man can sort varies considerably,
+according to the class of mohair which he is given to work upon. One
+mill estimated that experts can sort between two and three hundred
+pounds of domestic mohair a day, and that it costs about a cent a pound
+to thus separate the fleece. After the fleeces are graded, the mohair
+is ready to be sent to the mill proper for scouring and spinning.
+
+
+SCOURING.
+
+To-day the process of washing or scouring the fleece is done by
+machinery. The mohair is fed into a machine in which revolve paddles,
+which thoroughly mix the fiber with the liquid in this machine. At the
+opposite end from where it was fed in, the mohair is rolled out over
+warm rollers, and it is ready to be spun. It is claimed, and with some
+justice, that American mohair loses or shrinks about 12% to 20% while
+passing through this washing machine, and that Turkish mohair only
+shrinks about 13%. This may be due to the fact that some of the Turkish
+hair had been washed before it was shipped to market, and that by
+previous sorting some of the dirt had fallen out of the mohair. Then,
+too, some of the American growers are not very careful to keep the
+fleeces clean. Straw, sticks, hats, and even stones have been found in
+some domestic stuff.
+
+
+MIXING.
+
+After the mohair is thoroughly cleaned it is ready for spinning or
+carding. In order to spin the fibers most economically, evenly and to
+the best advantage, some of the mills mix different qualities of mohair
+of about the same fineness. For instance, Turkish mohair is mixed with
+Texas and California stuff, or Oregon is mixed with Iowa material. The
+spinning qualities of mohair from different sections varies, and this
+mixing tends to give uniformity. After the fibers have been mixed to
+suit, the mohair is run through straightening machines in preparation
+for the combing process.
+
+
+FIRST OR NOBLE COMB.
+
+This comb is so arranged that about two and a half inches of the base of
+all of the mohair fibers, and any other fibers which may be mixed with
+them, are held, the ends of the fibers which are longer than two and a
+half inches, hang freely and are caught in a revolving machine and
+dragged loose from the combs which hold the base of the fiber. Thus only
+those fibers two and a half inches long, or less, are left in the first
+comb. The longer fibers, or tops as they are now called, to distinguish
+them from the noil, or short fibers, are collected and are again passed
+through a second comb.
+
+
+SECOND OR LISTER COMB.
+
+Much the same process as was gone through with in the Noble comb, is
+repeated, except that now only the Noble top is combed, and as all of
+the fibers, less than two and a half inches, have been removed from this
+mohair, the comb is set so that any fibers shorter than four or five
+inches, shall be held as noil, and only those fibers which are longer
+than four or five inches shall be included in the top. This combing
+completed, we have a collection of mohair fibers none of them less than
+about five inches in length. This top is now ready to spin. This combing
+is rendered necessary by the fact that all of the mohair contains an
+admixture of kemp, and kemp cannot be spun with the finer grades of
+mohair. In getting this kemp out of the mohair many of the short mohair
+fibers are lost, so that combing is an expensive process. It costs in
+time, labor and mohair.
+
+
+SPINNING.
+
+Many strands of this Lister top are now drawn down into a single thread.
+This thread, if the fibers comprising it are coarse, may have some
+projecting ends, which give it a rough, uneven appearance, and if so,
+these ends are burned off. The thread is passed through a gas flame at a
+given rate of speed by machinery, and the projecting ends are singed.
+This is called genapping. The yarn is now ready for manufacturing. In
+Bradford, England, there are mills which only spin the yarn. Their trade
+is with the manufacturers, both at home and abroad, and it is a known
+fact that, while France and Germany manufacture much plush and braid,
+they buy all of their yarn from Bradford.
+
+
+CARDING.
+
+Short mohair, that is, mohair less than six inches long, is not run
+through combs, as above described. It is run over a carding wheel, or a
+large metal cylinder covered with small brads, which mix all the mohair
+and kemp. After passing over a number of these wheels, which revolve in
+different directions, the material thus carded is ready to spin.
+
+
+NOIL.
+
+Some of the noil collected by the combing process is composed of a large
+percentage of short mohair. This noil has a considerable value and is
+sometimes carded. The lower grade noil is sold to carpet manufacturers
+and various users of low grade stuff. Noil usually brings from twelve to
+twenty cents a pound.
+
+
+USES OF MOHAIR.
+
+As yet mohair has been used for only a limited number of things. Its
+possibilities have not been developed. New uses for the fiber are being
+discovered, and it seems probable that there will be many things made of
+mohair in the future. The yarn has a beautiful luster and is very
+durable. When ladies' lustre goods are in fashion a large amount of
+mohair goes into these fabrics. Much mohair is used in dress goods and
+men's goods. There is a steady demand for mohair plushes and braids.
+
+There is no plush made which will give the service, present the luster
+and retain a standing pile as long as mohair. One may crush the nap of
+a mohair plush as often or as long as he pleases, but the pile
+immediately resumes its upright position upon being released. Then, too,
+the dust shakes out of a mohair plush very easily. One rarely sees a
+dusty railroad car seat, although the country through which the car is
+passing may be very dusty. The rich effect produced by a heavily
+upholstered palace car is due to the mohair plush. Nothing has been
+found which will take its place. For furniture upholstering there is
+nothing more elegant and durable than mohair plush. The amount of plush
+thus used is governed by fashion. In countries where large military
+forces are retained there is always a heavy demand for mohair braids.
+There is no braid made which has the luster, combined with the
+durability, which mohair braid possesses. Here it may be stated that a
+coarse yarn can be used in making braids, so that when there is a heavy
+demand for braids there should be a proportionately high price paid for
+coarse long mohair. Mohair braids are always in demand, and will
+continue to be used upon ladies' clothing, as well as for military
+ornamental purposes.
+
+The variety of uses to which mohair is adapted is almost innumerable. In
+the manufacture of hats it plays an important part, and recently the
+demand for long fiber for the manufacture of wigs, ladies' hair nets and
+other toilet articles has been created.
+
+
+WORLD'S SUPPLY AND CONSUMPTION.
+
+At present Asia Minor and South Africa can be regarded as the two
+leading producers of mohair. The Asia Minor exports vary considerably,
+according to the price allowed, and as no manufactured stuff is
+exported, one gets a fair idea of the amount produced. It may be broadly
+stated that the Asia Minor clip amounts to about nine million pounds
+annually. That of South Africa amounts to about ten million pounds, and
+the United States now produces about one million pounds annually. Of
+this production a very large percentage of that coming from all these
+countries may be regarded as inferior stuff. We mean by this, that the
+Angora goat raising industry is yet in its infancy, and that much of the
+mohair produced is sheared from goats which have been bred from the
+common hair variety. Many of the characteristics of the fleece of the
+common goat still persist in the mohair.
+
+From the foregoing estimate the world's supply of mohair may be stated
+as twenty million pounds annually. Australia is as yet producing only a
+very small amount.
+
+Practically eighty-five to ninety per cent. of the world's supply of
+mohair is handled in Bradford, England. Nearly all of the South African
+and Turkish stuff is shipped directly to Bradford, a small amount of the
+Constantinople export coming to America, but a large part of the
+American import comes from Liverpool, England. At Bradford the raw
+material is manufactured, some of the manufactured stuff being exported
+as yarn, but the larger part is used to produce the finished article.
+The remaining ten or fifteen per cent. is manufactured in the United
+States. At times the demand for mohair goods stimulates the demand for
+raw material, and the United States has been known to use from twenty to
+twenty-five per cent. of the world's supply. To recapitulate, the United
+States produces five per cent. of the world's annual supply of raw
+mohair, and manufactures from ten to twenty-five per cent. of the
+world's annual production.
+
+
+MOHAIR PRICES.
+
+The price of mohair has fluctuated with the caprice of fashion. Supply
+and demand are the essential factors in its valuation, but demand has
+been so influenced by the requirements of fashion in the past that one
+finds a wide range in price for the raw material. In a report issued by
+the Bradford _Observer_ we find the price ranging from fifty cents a
+pound in 1856, to eighty cents in 1866, ninety cents in 1876, and then
+down to thirty cents in 1886 and 1896. In 1903 the average price in the
+United States was about thirty-five cents a pound, and for 1904 about
+thirty cents a pound.
+
+[Illustration: READY FOR THE SHEARERS.]
+
+To-day there is a demand for mohair, regardless of fashion. During the
+past two years the price of raw material has been low, but there has
+been a margin of profit in the industry, and considering the fact that
+fashion's decree has eliminated the manufacture of luster fabrics for
+the present, the mohair producer can feel assured that there will be a
+steady market for his material. With the occasional good times when
+luster goods are in demand, the mohair grower should do well.
+
+
+SHEARING AND PACKING MOHAIR.
+
+The goat should be shorn before he commences to shed, as the mohair
+loses its weight and luster after the shedding process begins. There are
+a few goats, which, under certain kinds of food and climatic conditions,
+will not shed their fleeces, but most goats will shed, and even goats
+which have carried their fleeces over a year in one section, may shed if
+they are moved a few miles and the food is changed. A class of
+non-shedders would be very valuable, but so far a distinctive class of
+non-shedders, under any and all conditions, and which transmit this
+peculiarity, has not been identified. The Angora goat will usually
+commence to shed early in the spring, or as soon as a few warm bright
+days come.
+
+In some sections of the country it is thought advisable to shear twice a
+year. Many points in favor of this method are advocated. It is claimed
+that the price realized for the two medium length, or short stapled
+fleeces, together with the increased number of pounds shorn in the two
+clippings a year, pays much better than the one long staple fleece which
+can be shorn from the same animal for a year's growth. There are many
+reasons both for and against shearing twice a year. The mills prefer
+long mohair, or at least fiber more than six inches in length (combing
+length). They pay the best price for this class of mohair, and it must
+be left to the individual to decide whether it pays him best to shear
+once or twice a year. At present possibly one-third of the Angoras in
+the United States are shorn twice a year, and the remaining two-thirds
+only once. In Asia Minor one finds the goat shearer using a pair of long
+bladed scissors to cut the mohair. The goats are shorn in the spring,
+and only once during the year. The animal's feet are tied, and then by
+using both hands, one at either end of the scissors, the goat is shorn.
+Recently some Englishman has introduced an ordinary spring sheep shear,
+but most of the natives prefer the scissors.
+
+To-day one finds the hand shearer and the machine shearer at work in
+America. The hand shearer should use a pair of short bladed (about five
+inch blade) sheep shears. This is to prevent the point of the shear from
+cutting mohair, which is not intended to be clipped with that
+particular stroke of the shear. If, for instance, the shearer is
+clipping the mohair along the sides of the animal, and the point of the
+shear cuts some of the mohair at least three inches out from the body,
+this stubble is shorn again (double cut) when the shearer gets to this
+place, and this three-inch mohair is too short to be of much value. It
+will be combed out at the mill as noil. An expert shearer can clip about
+the same number of range goats that he can range sheep--from ninety to
+one hundred and twenty a day.
+
+The machine shear is rapidly taking the place of the hand shear. It
+clips the mohair close to the skin and almost does away with double
+cutting. It requires less skill to shear with a machine shear, and it
+does the work more uniformly. There is also less danger of cutting the
+animal. The machines do the work very rapidly.
+
+After the goat is shorn the fleece should be collected and rolled into a
+bundle, "bump," and placed in a sack or bale. It should not be tied, as
+the mill men object to the particles of string which remain in the
+mohair and disfigure the manufactured product. Any colored fleeces,
+discolored mohair, or mohair containing objectionable features, such as
+burrs, straw, etc., can be placed in separate parcels. The kid mohair
+can be kept by itself, and the wether and doe mohair can be separately
+packed. The long mohair should be kept separate from short stuff. Thus
+one grades the mohair to some extent on the farm, and he has a better
+idea of what the clip should bring.
+
+If the mohair is to be shipped a long distance, it will pay to bale the
+fleeces, as compact bales occupy much less space than sacks. The freight
+rates are usually less upon baled mohair than they are upon the sacked
+material. The cost of baling the mohair is a little less than the cost
+of sacking.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+BREEDING OF THE ANGORA GOAT.
+
+
+One can learn very little about breeding the Angora goat from the Turk.
+As we know from Tchikacheff's work, which was published over fifty years
+ago, cold winters often killed many of the Angoras in Asia Minor, and
+the Turk then imported from more favored districts common bucks or does
+to breed to the Angora. This was before the great demand for mohair,
+occasioned by the increase in manufacturing plants at Bradford, England,
+caused the Turkish mohair raisers to resort to all manner of means to
+increase the supply of raw material.
+
+To-day the Turk is treading in the paths of his forefathers. What was
+good enough for them, certainly ought to be good enough for him, so he
+reasons. He eats with his fingers, cooks on a brazier, sits on the
+floor, eats, drinks, sleeps and works all in the same room, and keeps
+his wives in seclusion.
+
+When he comes to breeding the Angora he leaves that to his servants, if
+he be wealthy enough to have any. Most of the breeders cannot read or
+write. They have never traveled. They have no ambition, and they know
+nothing of the principles of selective breeding. As a natural
+consequence the Angora goat of to-day has not improved, nor is he likely
+to improve under Turkish management. One large breeder who supplied
+bucks to some tributary country, said that he thought that it was a
+shame to castrate a buck, no matter how bad he might be. The Turk
+separates the bucks from the does at breeding season, as Asia Minor has
+cold weather late in the spring, and the danger of losing kids, if they
+come too early, is great. When the bucks are turned with the flock they
+are allowed to run until the next breeding season, and all of the bucks,
+regardless of quality or quantity, are allowed to run with the does.
+
+When the first few Angoras arrived in America the natural procedure was
+to cross them upon the common short-haired goat of this country. It was
+a new industry, and many wanted to try the Angora. Very slowly the
+Angora, or the cross-bred animals were scattered over the United States.
+Stories were told of the wonderful things for which the mohair was used,
+and some supposedly reliable authorities quoted mohair at $8.00 a pound,
+as has been stated. Companies were started, and of course the supply of
+good Angoras, that is, goats which would shear about four pounds of
+mohair (worth at that time about seventy-five cents or a dollar a
+pound), was limited. Men bought any goat which had a trace of Angora
+blood in him as a thoroughbred Angora. A few years, however,
+demonstrated the fact that a common goat, with a little admixture of
+Angora blood, did not produce either the quality or the quantity of
+fleece wanted. Only a few of the more persistent breeders continued the
+experiment and their investigations. They sent and went to the home of
+the Angora, and brought more of the original animals to America. It took
+the American breeders about thirty years to find out just what the
+Angora goat was and how he should be handled. During that thirty years
+large flocks of common goats, which had been crossed with the Angora,
+and which might be properly termed "grade flocks," had been formed. Only
+a few thoroughbred flocks, that is, flocks of the original Angora, as he
+came from Turkey, were in existence.
+
+
+CROSSING WITH THE COMMON SHORT HAIRED GOAT.
+
+By experience we have learned that the common short coarse haired goat
+can be crossed with the Angora goat, and that after sufficient crosses
+have been made, the cross-bred Angora so nearly resembles the
+thoroughbred that for all practical purposes he is an Angora. We have
+also learned that certain kinds of common goats respond rapidly to the
+infusion of Angora blood, and that others retain certain peculiarities
+of the common goat for generations. The Angora will not cross with
+sheep. For instance, a common goat with a long mane on the back, or tuft
+of long hair behind the foreleg, or on the flank or the hip, will
+continue to perpetuate this long coarse hair on the offspring for
+generations, even though the best of Angora blood be infused. The color
+of the common goat is of some importance. A brown or reddish brown goat
+retains the reddish cast at the base of the mohair much longer than one
+of a bluish or bluish black color. It is equally true that a pure white
+mother may drop a colored kid occasionally. In Constantinople the mohair
+is graded into parcels containing red kemp, black kemp, etc. There it is
+the kemp which retains the color. As has been stated, there is also a
+breed of brown Angora goats, or at least mohair-producing goats, in
+Koniah in Asia Minor. Presuming, then, that one has a suitable common
+doe and a good Angora buck as a basis, the following may be deduced as
+relative changes in the different crosses:
+
+[Illustration: PASHA V--A True Breeder.]
+
+The first cross, or half-blood Angora, will have a covering of short
+coarse common hair and a thin covering of mohair, which does not grow
+very long. If the animal were to be shorn, possibly a half pound of hair
+of a very inferior grade might be yielded. If this hair were to be
+offered to a manufacturer, he would class it as noil, and refer it to a
+carpet manufacturer, who would possibly pay ten or twelve cents a pound
+for it. The skin of the animal will be a little fluffy, and not suitable
+for fine goat skin trade. It will not take a good polish after tanning,
+and it is not desirable for shoe leather. It will be worth about half as
+much as common goat skin. The meat of the animal will be a little better
+than that of the common goat, but it will be inferior to Angora venison.
+The animal will still be as prolific as the common goat. Twins and
+triplets will be a common occurrence. The kids will also be hardy. If
+one were to stop at this stage in breeding, he would have decreased the
+value of the skin of his goat without increasing the value of the
+animal.
+
+The second cross, or the three-quarter blood Angora, will have a
+covering of short coarse common hair, especially noticeable on the back,
+belly, neck and hips. The mohair will now be fairly thickly set upon the
+sides of the animal, and of medium length, about seven inches long for a
+year's growth. If the animal were to be examined by a novice, he would
+be called an Angora from his general appearance. If shorn, he will yield
+about one, or one and a half pounds of hair, and the mohair manufacturer
+will pay about twelve or fifteen cents a pound for the material. The
+skin is valueless for rug, robe or trimming purposes, because of the
+coarse back and the scanty covering of mohair. It is fit for glove
+leather after tanning, but its value for this purpose is less than that
+of the common goat. The meat is more like Angora venison, and can be
+sold on the market as mutton. The animal is still prolific. From the
+second cross on, the grade goat rapidly assumes the characteristic of
+the Angora goat, but if for any reason poor bucks are used (an
+occasional animal without apparent reason retrogrades), the animal as
+rapidly resumes the characteristic of the common goat. Quite a
+percentage of colored kids will be dropped by does which are themselves
+white.
+
+The third cross, or seven-eighths blood Angora, will still have the
+coarse back, a partially bare belly, coarse hips, and the neck will be
+insufficiently covered. The sides will be covered with good quality,
+long staple mohair, comparatively free from the coarse, dead underhair,
+or kemp. The animal will shear about two or three pounds of fair mohair,
+which will be worth from twenty to thirty cents a pound. This mohair
+will be fit to run through the combs, and the "top," or long mohair,
+free from kemp, will be used in the manufacture of plushes, braids, etc.
+The skin will have some value for rug, robe and trimming purposes. The
+meat will be juicy, palatable and salable as mutton.
+
+The fourth cross, or fifteen-sixteenths blood Angora, will be hardly
+distinguishable from the average thoroughbred Angora. The coarse back
+will persist to some extent, and the hip will be plentifully covered
+with kemp. A good many of this grade will be poorly covered on the
+belly, and an occasional bare necked or off colored animal will be
+dropped. The animal will shear from two and a half to five pounds of
+mohair of good quality, which will be worth from twenty-five to
+thirty-five cents a pound. It will be from eight to twelve inches long
+at a year's growth, and it will be combed at the mill. It is fit for
+manufacturing into any of the goods for which mohair is used. The meat
+of the animal is rich, juicy, and free from the disagreeable qualities
+so often noticeable in mutton. If the animal be fed upon browse, the
+meat will have the flavor of venison. The tendency of the mothers to
+drop twins will be lessened, and it will be rather the exception for
+twins to be born. The kids will be rather delicate when dropped.
+
+Subsequent crosses will tend to reduce the amount of kemp upon the
+animal and to improve the back. The question will now resolve itself
+into one of breeding for points. Bucks must be selected which cover the
+points the does need most, and by careful selection the grade flock will
+soon be indistinguishable from the thoroughbreds.
+
+
+METHODS USED IN AMERICA TO-DAY.
+
+By gradual steps the original Angoras imported into America have been so
+improved, and the cross-bloods have been so highly graded that some of
+the American flocks equal the best Turkish flocks. America has many
+high-grade flocks, which, if it were not for the remaining coarse hair
+of the common goat, would be upon a par with the Turkish flocks. There
+are enough good goats in the country for a foundation stock, and a few
+years more of the careful, painstaking, selective breeding which is in
+progress throughout the United States to-day, will bring forth an Angora
+superior to the Turkish stock. Sections of the country modify the
+characteristics of the Angora. Probably climatic conditions, varieties
+of food and water, and certainly mental vigor of the owners is largely
+responsible for this. One man selects large, well formed, rapidly
+maturing goats and breeds for this type. It is surprising how soon his
+flocks assume this type. Another breeder works for fineness of fleece,
+regardless of size or shape of the animal, and he gets his points.
+
+There has been much vagueness as to what points the breeder should try
+to produce. Some have claimed that the most profitable animal to raise
+was one producing heavy ringletty fleece, regardless of the quality of
+the fleece, except of course that it should be as free from kemp as
+possible. This day has passed. We know what the mohair is used for, and
+know how it is prepared for manufacturing. The future may change these
+uses or methods, but we know what we want now, and we know how to breed
+our goats to produce the most money per head for the present at least.
+Fashions vary, and the fashions vary the demand for certain grades of
+mohair. Coarse fibered, long staple, fine luster mohair possessing a
+great amount of tensile strength and elasticity will make good braid
+yarns, but if braid yarns are not in demand, such fiber is not the best
+for plush or dress yarns. Fine fibered, long staple, pliable, lustrous,
+easily spun yarn can be used for braid stuff, or at least part of the
+fleece will be heavy enough for this purpose, and the finer parts have
+such a variety of uses that they spin yarns which are always in demand.
+Looking at the question from the manufacturing standpoint, we see that
+the most staple product is the fine-fibered mohair. But a producer might
+have animals which would shear two and a half pounds average (the
+average of the Turkish flocks) of very fine mohair, while another grower
+might have animals which would shear four or five pounds average of
+coarse mohair. And even though the value per pound of the coarse mohair
+may be considerably less than that of the fine mohair, the grower owning
+the coarse haired heavy shearing Angoras will realize more money per
+head for his clip. The value also of the carcass and skin of the Angora
+is of importance. A heavy carcass and a large skin are of more value
+than a light carcass and a small skin.
+
+If the Angora breeder would produce the animal which will yield the most
+money per head, he should aim to produce an animal which will shear the
+heaviest fleece of the most marketable mohair, regardless of fashions,
+and one which, when put upon the market, will dress the most possible
+pounds of desirable meat, and yield a readily marketable skin. There are
+not many such animals on the market to-day, but the time when there will
+be plenty is coming. We have the fineness of fiber; we have the density
+of weight of fleece; we have the covering of the animal and the size and
+stamina of the individual, and we have breeders who are endeavoring to
+unite combinations to produce the Angora of the future. But while we are
+without the ideal, one should choose that point which is hardest to
+attain, most necessary for the best paying animal, and work especially
+for that. That point is fineness of fiber, always remembering freeness
+from kemp. There are many large goats, many heavy shearing goats, but
+there are very few fine fibered comparatively free from kemp goats. One
+should not make the mistake of neglecting size and weight of fleece.
+There are few animals which will respond more rapidly to careful
+crossing than the Angora goat. A buck will usually stamp his
+individuality upon every kid, hence the necessity of carefully selecting
+breeding stock.
+
+
+GESTATION.
+
+The period of gestation varies slightly with the individual, but the
+average may be approximately stated as one hundred and forty-seven days,
+or about five months. Both the bucks and the does have a breeding
+season, but this season may be changed or varied by different elements.
+As a rule the bucks commence to rut about July or August here in
+America, and the does soon after the time the bucks commence. Some bucks
+which have been allowed to run with the does all of the time, never
+cease rutting, and the does conceive about every six months. The does
+come in heat about every fourteen days, and remain in this condition for
+about three days. If the bucks are allowed to run with the does, one
+buck should be used for about every fifty does. If the buck is only
+allowed to serve the doe once, a grown animal will serve one hundred and
+fifty does in forty days without permanent injury to himself. The does
+conceive at about the age of seven months, and the bucks breed at about
+the same age, but the wise breeder will not sacrifice the individual by
+interfering with its development. Both the buck and the doe should not
+be bred until they are at least a year old. The bucks should be fed at
+breeding season, and if one has a sufficient number of bucks, it is well
+to turn the bucks with the does in relays. It is advisable to have the
+kids start coming slowly, so that one may get new men trained to handle
+them properly. One or two bucks turned with a flock of a thousand does
+for a few days, and then removed and allowed to rest, and a new relay of
+three or more bucks turned with the does, to be removed in a few days,
+and a new relay being introduced into the flock, will do more
+satisfactory work than they would if all of the bucks were turned in at
+one time. The same principle can be applied to smaller flocks. The does
+should be protected from cold storms or rough handling when they are
+heavy with kid, else they are liable to abort. If for any unusual cause
+the doe aborts one season, there is no reason why she will not carry her
+kid until full term another time, and experience has proven that she
+will.
+
+[Illustration: PASHA V AND BISMARCK.
+
+American bred bucks, Bismarck shearing 12 pounds, was the sire of the
+grand champion buck at the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904.]
+
+
+BREEDING OF REGISTERED STOCK.
+
+The breeding of registered stock, or stock of known ancestry, requires
+much care and quite different handling. Both the does and the bucks must
+be marked with an ear tag, brand, tattoo number, or some other permanent
+individual mark, and the kids should be marked at birth. Fifty known
+does may be put in a pasture or pen and a known buck put with them. He
+should be allowed to run with them at least forty days. After this the
+does may be collected into a flock and several bucks turned with them,
+but only the kids which are dropped from a known buck are fit for
+record.
+
+A more accurate method, and one which can be used with a large flock, is
+to place the bucks in a corral adjoining the one used by the does at
+night. The does should be brought into their corral early in the
+evening, and all of those in heat will work along the fence next to the
+bucks. The doe in heat can be caught and the number taken and recorded
+in a book. She is then placed in a small pen with a buck and his number
+is recorded with hers, together with the date. If the doe does not
+conceive, she can be put with the same buck again at a later date, and
+one has approximate knowledge of when she should drop her kid. In this
+manner a buck will serve about two or three does in the evening, and one
+or two in the morning. The kid is marked at birth and the number
+recorded after that of the mother. The breeding of recorded stock is of
+value only for special reasons, and is not advisable with large flocks,
+as it is expensive.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ANGORA VENISON.
+
+
+Angora venison is the name which should be given to the flesh of the
+Angora goat. At the present time it is usually sold in the markets as
+mutton. The term goat meat should be applied to meat of the common goat,
+and the term mutton belongs to sheep. Because the Angora goat feeds
+largely upon that material which nourishes the deer, the meat of the
+Angora is flavored like venison. The fat is well distributed, and the
+healthfulness of the animal renders this an especially desirable meat.
+The Turk has long recognized Angora venison as an important element in
+his diet. Angora kid is above comparison, and it occupies the principle
+place on the menu at private as well as state affairs in the Orient. As
+one passes through the market places in Asia Minor he sees the carcasses
+of the Angora hanging in every shop. There is no mistaking the animal,
+as the skin still remains on the goat. One takes his choice, and as a
+rule more Angora venison than mutton is sold. Some of the Turks keep
+their wethers until they become coarse-haired and too old to pay to keep
+longer, eight or ten years old. This class of meat ranks with old
+mutton, and sells at a discount. Young wethers and does are in good
+demand. There has existed in America some prejudice against the flesh of
+the goat. To-day thousands of goats are being consumed annually, but
+most of them are sold as mutton. Packers and butchers still insist that
+Angora venison must be sold as mutton. They pay about one-half a cent to
+a cent a pound less for the goat than for sheep.
+
+The goat never fattens as well along the back as the sheep, and hence
+the carcass does not look so well. The fat is more evenly distributed
+throughout the animal in the goat. An expert once said that to know
+whether a goat was fat one should feel the brisket, and if there was a
+considerable layer of adipose tissue between the skin and the breast
+bone, the animal was fat.
+
+Some of the American breeders do not send their wethers to market until
+they get too old to produce valuable fleeces. The animals are then
+slaughtered when they have grown a half year's fleece, and the skins are
+reserved by the breeder. These skins are valuable, and help to bring up
+the average price of the goat.
+
+At present some of the packers recognize no difference between shorn and
+unshorn goats. The price is the same, so it pays to shear the goats
+before bringing them to market. There is absolutely no strong flavor in
+prime Angora venison, and this is where the meat differs from that of
+the common goat.
+
+The goat is a slow grower, and not until the second year do the bones
+ossify. Therefore, a two-year-old can be sold for lamb, as he has a
+"soft joint." Grown Angora wethers do not average much more than one
+hundred pounds as a rule, although there are occasional bands sold which
+average one hundred and fifteen pounds.
+
+It is safe to say that Angora venison will never supplant mutton, but it
+will have its place among the edible meats.
+
+[Illustration: ANGORA BUCK--Early Importation.]
+
+
+
+
+ANGORA GOAT SKINS.
+
+
+An Angora goat skin differs considerably from the skin of the common
+goat. In the first place the Angora skin is covered with more or less
+mohair; and in the second place, the texture of the skin itself is
+different. The skin of the common goat is firm, and the different layers
+are so closely united that they cannot be separated. The layers of the
+Angora skin are not so closely united, and the skin is slightly fluffy.
+The outer layer of this skin peels off when it is used. The Angora skin
+is valuable both with the fleece on and without it. Its principle value,
+however, is with the fleece on. After the skins have been properly
+tanned, they are used for rugs, robes, trimmings, and imitating various
+furs. When ladies' and children's Angora furs are in style, these skins
+become very valuable for this purpose. One skin has cut $17.00 worth of
+trimming at wholesale. Of course, the value of the skins depends upon
+the quality and character of the mohair with which the skins are
+covered, and their size. Large, well covered skins are always scarce and
+command good prices. They are worth from $1.00 to $2.00 each. Most of
+the Asia Minor skins are sent to Austria, and the prices paid for the
+raw skins are about the same as in America. The skins which have had the
+mohair removed are valuable for the manufacture of gloves and morocco
+leather. They do not make as fine leather as the common goat skins, but
+they are as extensively used. All skins should be carefully handled.
+
+The skin should be carefully removed from the carcass. Goats do not skin
+as easily as sheep, and the careless operator is liable to cut the inner
+layers of the skin if he is not careful. These cuts are called
+"flesh-cuts," and skins badly "flesh-cut" are comparatively valueless,
+because "flesh-cuts" can not be removed by the tanner. A sharp knife
+should be used, and the operator should avoid cutting the skin.
+
+The skin should be well salted, care being taken to see that the salt
+penetrates every portion of the raw surface. The skins can be cured in
+the shade without the use of salt, but sun-dried skins are worthless. If
+the edges of the skin are allowed to roll, so that raw surfaces come
+together, the part so affected will heat and the hair pull out. It is
+not necessary to stretch the skins while curing them.
+
+Goats should be killed when their fleece is suitable for robe and rug
+purposes. Those carrying a six month's fleece, if it is six inches long,
+have about the right kind of skins. There are some Angora skins imported
+from Turkey and South Africa.
+
+[Illustration: Prize winners at the Columbian Exposition, Chicago,
+1893.]
+
+
+
+
+BY-PRODUCTS OF ANGORA GOATS.
+
+
+The Angora goat should not be classed with milch animals. As a rule the
+does give a sufficient amount of milk to nourish the kid or kids. The
+more common blood there is in the goat the better milch animal she is.
+However, some Angoras have been milked, and the milk is as rich as that
+of the common goat. A quart of milk a day may be considered a fair
+average for a fresh milch Angora doe. It has been suggested that because
+the milk of the goat contains a heavy percentage of fat, it is a proper
+substitute for mothers' milk for babies. This is probably a mistake, as
+that part of the milk which is the hardest for the baby to digest is the
+protein, and it will be observed that in the following table of analysis
+submitted, the percentage of protein in goat's milk and in cow's milk is
+about the same, and that it is considerably larger than in mother's
+milk. A very desirable feature in goat's milk is that the fat is
+distributed throughout the milk, and that it does not readily separate
+from the milk. This would assist in the assimilation of the fat by an
+infant. Some experiments made with coffee demonstrate that it requires
+half the quantity of goat's milk to produce the same effect upon this
+beverage which cow's milk produces. This may be partially explained by
+the quantity of fat in goat's milk, and partially by the fact that the
+fat does not readily separate from the milk. The bottom of the can is as
+good as the top.
+
+
+ANALYSIS OF MILK.
+
+ MOTHER'S COW'S GOAT'S
+ AVERAGE AVERAGE AVERAGE
+
+ Fat 4.00 3.50 7.30
+ Sugar 7.00 4.30 4.10
+ Proteid 1.50 4.00 4.18
+ Salts .20 .70 1.21
+ Water 87.30 87.50 83.21
+ ------ ------ ------
+ 100.00 100.00 100.00
+
+Persons in poor health have been greatly benefitted by the use of goat's
+milk. This is probably due to the fact that the fat in the milk is so
+distributed that a large percentage of it is taken up by the digestive
+apparatus. Angora goats are docile, and it is possible that some of them
+could be developed into good milch animals.
+
+
+FERTILIZER.
+
+It is a known fact that packers of the present day utilize all of the
+carcass of most food animals, but it is not the fertilizer which the
+packer makes from the blood and offal of the goat which we shall
+consider here.
+
+Sheep's manure has been used for years on orchards and vegetable
+gardens, and in the last few years goats' manure has been in demand,
+selling at from $6 to $7.50 a ton, depending upon the purity of the
+fertilizer. It must be remembered that only a small portion of this
+manure is dropped at the night bed-ground, the balance is evenly
+distributed over the land upon which the goats are feeding. The goats
+not only rid the farm of objectionable weeds and brush, but they help to
+furnish a rich soil in which grass will grow. This fact has been so
+thoroughly demonstrated that western farmers, who have large tracts of
+wheat or barley stubble to rent during the summer, are always anxious to
+get goats upon this land.
+
+
+OTHER PRODUCTS.
+
+The horns of the goats are used to make handles for pocket knives, etc.
+The hoofs are used in the manufacture of glue.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+FOOD, CLIMATE AND PROTECTION.
+
+
+On the mountains and in the valleys of the United States the Angora has
+had a variety of food. He is a natural browser, and will live almost
+entirely on brush, if this kind of food is to be found, but he readily
+adapts himself to circumstances, and will live and do well upon an
+exclusively grass diet. The fact that the goat is a browser has been
+made use of in clearing farms of brush and objectional weeds. If a
+sufficient number of goats are confined upon a limited area for a period
+of time, they will kill most of the brush upon this land. They will eat
+almost every kind of brush, but they have their preferences and enjoy
+especially blackberry vines and those kinds of brush which contain
+tannic acid, such as scrub oak. They do not poison easily, and if there
+is a variety of food they rarely eat enough of any kind of poisonous
+plant to prove fatal. If, however, they are hungry, and have access to
+places where there are poisonous plants, they will eat enough to kill
+themselves.
+
+
+KILLING BRUSH.
+
+If one wishes to clear brush land, he should confine the goats to a
+comparatively small tract. The goats kill the shrubs by eating the
+leaves and by peeling the bark from the branches and trunks of the
+trees. The brush thus deprived of lungs, soon dies and the roots rot. As
+fast as the leaves grow they must be consumed, so it is well to allow
+the goats to eat most of the leaves off of a limited tract, and then in
+order to give the goats plenty of feed, they should be moved to another
+field. As soon as the leaves on the first tract have regrown the goats
+should be again confined to this land. In this way the leaves are
+continually destroyed. This process can be continued as fast as the
+leaves regrow. By this method it is estimated that a bunch of one
+hundred to one hundred and fifty goats will clear forty acres of thick
+brush in about two years. In countries where the grass grows as the
+brush dies, goats will eat some of this grass, but they prefer the
+browse.
+
+On some of the older goat ranches, where the Angora has been raised
+exclusively for the mohair and mutton, it has become quite a problem to
+prevent the goats from killing out the brush. The goats have done well
+where other kinds of livestock would have starved, but as soon as the
+brush is killed the land produces almost nothing, and even the goats
+cannot make a living. To prevent as far as possible their killing the
+brush the flocks are moved frequently from one range to another, so that
+the shrubs have a chance to recuperate between visits. In this way
+brush can be kept almost indefinitely for the goats. On some of the
+western ranges, where cattle and sheep have, by continual cropping,
+killed much of the grass, good browse remains. These ranges would have
+to be abandoned if it were not for the goat. Goats do not in any way
+interfere with the pasturage of cattle or other livestock. Cattle feed
+contentedly on the same range with the goats, and this fact has led many
+southern cattle men to invest in goats. The goats are herded on the
+brushy lands, and the cattle range over the same territory and eat the
+grass. Horses have a great fondness for goats.
+
+
+SALT.
+
+Goats, like other livestock, should have a small amount of salt. The
+salt should be kept where they can get it at liberty, or else it should
+be fed at regular intervals. If ground salt is given, care should be
+taken to see that individuals do not eat an oversupply of the salt.
+
+
+WATER.
+
+While Angoras do not require as much water as sheep, yet they should be
+given a quantity sufficient at least once a day. In winter goats will
+live upon snow. Men have reported that their goats have gone for a week
+at a time, and all summer long, without any more moisture than they
+could get from browse and weeds, but even if Angoras should stand this
+treatment, they will thrive better with water once daily. It is
+estimated that under normal conditions a goat will consume about
+one-ninetieth of its body weight (about a pint of water for a grown
+animal) in a day. On hot days, when the animals are on dry feed, they
+will frequently drink two quarts of water.
+
+
+SHEDS.
+
+To raise Angora goats most profitably one should really be provided with
+sheds. These sheds should be about the same as those which are provided
+for sheep in the same locality. For years southern and western breeders
+have made a success of the Angora industry, and very few of them have
+had any artificial protection for their goats. But even these breeders
+find that they can raise a larger percentage of increase, and get
+through the year with a smaller percentage of loss if they have sheds.
+Grown goats rarely need much shelter, even in the winter, if the weather
+is dry, but during cold, damp storms the fleece wets through and the
+animal chills. Just after shearing, or just before kidding season, one
+is liable to lose some grown animals, or to have many kids slunk, if the
+goats are not protected from cold storms. Young kids also require
+attention, and proper sheds more than pay for themselves by preventing
+excessive mortality. Whether the shed should be closed on all sides, or
+whether it may be left open, depends upon the locality. Do as one would
+for sheep, under the same conditions, will be a fairly safe rule to
+follow. Allow at least four or five square feet of shed room to each
+mature animal, and the danger of the goats crowding together in the
+corners and smothering the animals on the underside of the pile, should
+never be forgotten. On very cold nights large numbers, especially of the
+kids, may be killed by smothering, if they are not carefully watched.
+
+
+FENCES.
+
+The question of fencing for the Angora goat is not such a serious matter
+as the beginner would imagine. If the goats have not been raised as pets
+and taught to jump, there will be little trouble with the animals going
+over a perpendicular fence of ordinary height. They will, however, go
+through or under the fence, if it is possible. They are natural
+climbers, and if the fence offers projecting steps, upon which they can
+climb, they will soon find their way to the outside of the enclosure.
+Some of the old stone and rail fences will not hold goats. Any
+perpendicular fence, three feet high, with transverse spaces not wider
+than three or four inches for the lower two feet, and not wider than six
+inches for the upper foot, will hold goats. If the spaces in the fence
+are perpendicular, they will necessarily have to be narrower, as small
+kids will crawl through the spaces. A woven-wire fence, two feet high,
+with a perpendicular stay, at least twelve inches apart, so that the
+goats will not get their heads caught in the fence, surmounted by a
+couple of plain or barbed wires, six inches apart, will hold goats, and
+if barbed wire is used, will prevent cattle from breaking the fence. If
+plain or barbed wire is used, the first three wires nearest the ground
+should be placed not more than three inches apart, and close enough to
+the ground to prevent kids from crawling under the lowest wire. The
+space between the next wires may be increased to four, five and six
+inches, and so on to the desired height of the fence. A board fence
+composed of three boards four inches wide, with a space between the
+ground and the first board of about three inches, and a three or four
+inch space between the boards, the whole being surmounted by a barbed or
+plain wire or two makes a very satisfactory goat fence. If pickets or
+posts are used, they should be set closely enough together, say about
+two inches apart, to prevent small kids from crawling between them. An
+objection has been raised to barbed wire, on account of the mohair which
+the barbs pull out. The amount of mohair lost in this way is
+inconsiderable. As has been stated, it hurts the goat to pull the
+mohair, and the goat soon learns to avoid the barbs. Many breeders use
+barbed wire corrals and find them satisfactory. Probably woven wire is
+the best fence under ordinary conditions.
+
+
+HERDING.
+
+In mountainous countries, where it is not practical to fence the range,
+the flocks should be watched by herders. The Angora has a natural
+tendency to return home, or to a known camping ground at night, and in
+some places this tendency is relied upon to bring the flock home, and
+they are not herded. Of course, in countries where there is no danger
+from loss by depredations of wild animals, and where food is so
+plentiful that the goats must find a sufficient amount, the flock may be
+turned loose.
+
+One shepherd should tend from one to two thousand head, as goats flock
+together well. Of course, during kidding season the flocks will have to
+be more closely watched. Goats travel rapidly and cover a considerable
+amount of territory in a day. A flock may travel from ten to twelve
+miles from the time they leave camp in the morning until they return to
+camp in the evening. The herder should walk ahead of the leaders of the
+flock, so that they will not travel too fast, or he may walk upon a
+nearby elevation, so that he can see that the flock does not separate. A
+flock will sometimes string out over a mile. The goats should be given
+freedom. Too often a zealous herder overworks himself and keeps his
+flock poor by crowding them together. A good sheep herder soon learns
+the nature of the goat, and when he understands the animal he would
+rather herd goats than sheep.
+
+[Illustration: Prize winners at the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904.]
+
+
+DOGS.
+
+In some sections of the country sheep-killing dogs have proven a great
+nuisance to sheep-breeders. To say that the Angora goat will prevent
+dogs from killing sheep, and that they will drive the dogs away, would
+be a misstatement. Bucks and grown goats will protect themselves to some
+extent. If a strange dog attacks a flock in a field, the goats will
+usually huddle together and the bucks and grown animals will keep the
+dog at bay. A mother will fight bravely to protect her kid.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+KIDDING ANGORAS.
+
+
+An experience of years has taught the Turk that if he wishes to save
+many kids, he must have them come late in the season. The changeable
+weather of the Turkish spring, the frequent cold rains and the lack of
+proper shed accommodations, have more than once not only destroyed the
+increase, but also killed the grown goats. The Turkish methods of
+handling kids are of little practical value. They know how delicate the
+kids are when they are born, and they usually bring the kid and its
+mother to the house as soon as it is dropped.
+
+The Turkish Angora goat men usually range small flocks, and they also
+have a surplus of help, so that this is a comparatively easy method. The
+kids are allowed to go with the flocks as soon as they are old enough to
+travel. The principal objection to letting young kids go with the flock
+is that the kids go to sleep, and sleep so soundly that the flock feed
+away from them. When the youngsters awake they are lost. If there be
+wild animals about, the kids may be killed, or they may starve before
+they are found. The Turk, however, has so many herders with one flock
+that they usually discover the kids before the flock has strayed.
+
+In America the kidding season is the most important time of the year for
+the Angora breeder. If he would raise a large increase, he must be
+properly prepared, and he must be constantly alert. If the weather be
+fair, with bright sunshiny days and temperate nights, the kids will do
+well without much care, but if it be cold, stormy and muddy, some of the
+kids will be lost in spite of all care. After the kids are born the
+mothers should have such food as will produce the greatest amount of
+milk. Well-fed mothers make strong healthy kids. Green feed is
+desirable.
+
+The proper season, then, for the kids to come will depend upon the
+climate and range conditions. Allowing for the period of gestation,
+which is about five months, the bucks can run with the does as early or
+as late as one wishes. One can be guided somewhat by the time sheep men
+allow ewes to lamb. When the first warm weather comes the goats usually
+commence to shed their mohair, and as it is too early in the season for
+the kids to be dropped, the does must be shorn before kidding or the
+mohair lost. Care should be exercised in handling the does heavy with
+kid. For the first few days after shearing the doe should not be allowed
+to chill, as she may abort. In some countries it is possible to kid
+before shearing, but there is no practical objection to shearing before
+kidding, provided proper care be exercised.
+
+
+HANDLING OF KIDS.
+
+There are various methods in use of handling the young kids, and all of
+them are intended to save as large a percentage of increase as possible
+with the least possible expense. Almost every man who has handled goats
+has some individual idea which experience has taught him. The locality
+and surroundings of the flock make a vast difference in the way they
+should be kidded. The method which works best with fifty or one hundred
+does in a fenced brush pasture in Oregon or Iowa, would be useless with
+a flock of a thousand or fifteen hundred in the mountains of Nevada or
+New Mexico, where there is often no corral to hold the goats.
+
+With a bunch of from fifty, to two hundred and fifty, and a shed big
+enough to hold the entire lot, it is not difficult to raise a very large
+percentage of kids. If the does are kept in a ten or twenty-acre
+pasture, they should be allowed to run out and take care of themselves
+as much as possible. The doe may drop her kid wherever she may happen to
+be, and she will almost invariably take care of it and coax it to the
+shed at night. The refusal of a young doe to own her kid must be
+overcome, especially if the weather is unfavorable. The mother must be
+caught and the milk forced into the kid's mouth until he learns to
+suckle. After he has been sufficiently fed, place them together in a box
+stall and leave them for a day or two. Then, in all probability, the
+mother will take care of her kid.
+
+The box stall is about three feet square and three feet high, with a
+little door on hinges to save lifting the animal. A row along the inside
+of the shed next to the wall is a great convenience. A doe with her kid
+should be disturbed as little as possible, because, as a rule, she knows
+how to care for her kid better than a herder.
+
+When goats are handled on a larger scale, with no pasture available,
+entirely different methods should be adopted--for the mother must go out
+to feed every day and the kid cannot go.
+
+Probably the most extensively used methods are the "corral method" and
+the "staking method," either used individually or combined.
+
+
+THE CORRAL METHOD.
+
+In the corral method, two or three large corrals and numerous smaller
+ones are necessary. First, the does should be separated from the
+wethers, if they have been running together, and a "wether band" made.
+Then every morning the "doe band" must be looked over carefully for does
+that will kid during the day. Such does must be put in a corral by
+themselves and allowed to kid in this corral. They should be fed some
+hay, or if that is not possible, they should be herded near by for a few
+hours. It has been our experience that most of the kids will come
+between the hours of ten in the morning and four in the afternoon. The
+more does which one can pick out in the morning the better it is, for
+the doe, after dropping her kid, is allowed to stay with it the rest of
+the day and all night. In this way she learns to know it. If one has hay
+to feed the doe, so that she may be left with her kid for one or two
+days, it is a great advantage.
+
+After all the does have been selected which can be found, still some
+will be overlooked, and they will go out on the range with the rest. The
+best way to handle these is to have the herder make a straight drive to
+a certain point where the feed is good, and then stay around this one
+place, allowing the kids to come within as small a radius as possible
+without starving the goats. If it is necessary, quite a distance can be
+covered in this way, and yet the kids will not be scattered over a large
+section of the country.
+
+As a kid is dropped, the doe should be allowed to remain with her kid
+and take care of it until evening. The herd will gradually feed from
+them, but it should be kept as near as possible to protect the kids from
+wild animals. Towards evening one must go out and gather up the kids and
+drive the mothers to the corral. The large herd should be driven home
+in advance, keeping a little apart from the does with kids so as not to
+coax the "wet does" away with the "dry herd."
+
+When the wagon with the kids reaches the ranch, the kids should be put
+in a small corral. They should be placed a few feet apart, and the
+mothers should be allowed to select their own kids. They also should be
+allowed to remain in the corral for the night at least. In case a doe
+will not take her kid she should be placed in one of the box stalls and
+a kid which has no mother placed with her and fed.
+
+When plenty of small corrals and good hay are available, each day's kids
+should be left in a separate corral until the mothers have been with the
+kids one or two days. It will be found that the kids are always given a
+very good start in this way. When it is deemed advisable, the kids are
+put together in a large corral, and as soon as the mothers in the
+smaller corrals are thought to know their kids sufficiently well, they
+are added to this wet band in the large corral. Thus the round is
+completed from the dry band to the wet band, the small corral being
+simply an intermediate step to insure familiarity between the doe and
+her kid. The dry band rapidly diminishes while the wet band increases.
+
+The mothers are now ready to go on the range during the day to feed, but
+the kids should be kept in the corral until they are at least six weeks
+old. The does may be turned out over a "jump board" placed across the
+gate. A jump board is a two-inch plank, eighteen inches high, with a
+four-inch strip nailed on the top for the does to put their feet on as
+they jump over. The kids come to the board but cannot get over. If some
+of the larger kids bother by trying to get over, some one can stand at
+the gate to scare them back by pounding on the board with a stick. The
+does will soon learn to pay no attention to the noise.
+
+[Illustration: THOROUGHBRED ANGORA DOE.]
+
+Even now there will be a few kids which will not be mothered. Every
+morning, before the wet band is allowed to go over the jump board, one
+should walk through the herd, pick out the kids that have not been
+nourished during the night, and select does that are not suckling kids.
+These does should be held until the kids have been fed. A row of small
+stantions is a convenient thing for holding them. After a kid gets a
+good start he will steal a living from different does if necessary.
+
+To kid a band of from one thousand to fifteen hundred does by the corral
+method, will require at least three men--one man to herd the dry band,
+one the wet band, and a man to look after the kids and assist where
+needed. Often the wet band is divided, or when one wet band has reached
+the number of from five hundred to seven hundred animals, another is
+started.
+
+
+THE STAKING METHOD.
+
+The staking method is quite commonly used, and in certain localities it
+is probably the best way to handle kids. The apparatus necessary is a
+smooth piece of half-inch board, two inches wide and four inches long,
+with a hole bored in each end. Through the hole in one end a piece of
+rope eight inches long is passed, and knotted so that it cannot pull
+out. The loose end of this rope is then made fast to a stout stake which
+is to be driven into the ground. Through the hole in the other end a
+piece of rope eighteen inches long is passed and knotted as in the first
+end, in such a way that the loose end of the rope, which is to be
+fastened to the kid's leg, draws away from the stake. When the apparatus
+is in use the small stick with the holes in the ends acts as a swivel to
+keep the rope from tangling.
+
+It is important to select a proper place to tie the kid. He is to stay
+in this place for about six weeks, and he needs protection from winds
+and wild animals, and should have some sunshine and some shade. Usually
+a small tree, a bush, a fence, or a post will offer a good place to
+stake. The does which are expected to kid during the day are separated
+from the flock as in the corral method. The balance of the band are
+herded, so that the kids dropped on the range can be more easily
+handled. Just as soon as a kid is dropped, it is taken to a convenient
+place to stake, and the mother coaxed to follow. One of the kid's legs
+is securely fastened to the loose end of the rope, and the kid and its
+mother are left together. The mother is thus free to go and feed, and on
+returning will know exactly where to find her kid.
+
+Many owners allow the does which have kidded to herd themselves, as they
+usually return to their kids, often coming in several times during the
+day. Of course this necessitates having plenty of food and water within
+access of the staking ground. The wet band could be herded as in the
+corral method.
+
+In this staking method if a mother refuses to own her kid, or if she
+dies, the kid has no chance to steal milk from some other wet doe, and
+unless closely watched, quite a number of kids will starve. The rope
+should be changed from one leg to the other occasionally to allow
+symmetry of development. The preparation of ropes and stakes for a
+thousand kids is quite a task, and it keeps the energetic herder busy
+during his spare moments getting ready for kidding time.
+
+For the first few days the Angora kid is full of life and vigor as any
+animal of like age. If he be well nourished, he will frisk and play at
+all kinds of antics, until he is so tired that he must forget
+everything. The sleep which comes is so sound that any usual amount of
+noise does not disturb him. It is this characteristic which makes it
+unsafe to take kids on to the range with a flock. The kids are liable to
+hide behind some bush, go to sleep and be lost.
+
+
+CASTRATING.
+
+Before the kids are allowed to go out with the flock the males should be
+castrated. The Turk does not alter the males until they have developed
+sexuality and the male horn, _i. e._, the heavy characteristic buck
+horn. He then castrates by either removing the testicles, or by twisting
+or destroying the spermatic cord. When the latter method is used the
+testicles and cord undergo an inflammatory process which destroys the
+regenerative power of the animal. The testicles remain in the scrotum
+apparently unchanged. The animal thus treated presents to the casual
+observer the physical characteristics of a buck. The Turk claims that an
+animal treated in this manner is less liable to die than one whose
+testicles are removed. This is probably true, as the initial lesion
+produced by the operation is very small, and there is less liability of
+infection.
+
+The usual method employed in this country is to remove the testicles
+before the regenerative power of the animal is developed. This gives the
+wether a feminine appearance, and there is comparatively little danger
+of death if the operation is properly performed. It will be easiest to
+castrate the kids between the age of two and four weeks. The kids
+should be driven into a small clean corral, and after undergoing the
+operation they should be turned into a large clean enclosure.
+
+The operator stands on the outside of the small corral, and the
+assistant catches the kids and turns them belly up before the operator,
+onto a board which has been fastened to the fence. A pair of clean
+scissors, or a sharp knife, which may be kept in a five per cent.
+carbolic acid solution when not in use, serve to cut off the distal end
+of the scrotum. The testicles are then seized with the fingers and drawn
+out. The operator drops the castrated kid into the large enclosure and
+the assistant presents another kid. Two men can operate on sixty kids an
+hour. The testicles are slippery and some herders prefer to use the
+teeth instead of the fingers to extract the testicles. Under no
+circumstances should any unclean thing be put into the scrotum. Death
+usually results from infection, and infection from uncleanliness. A
+little boracic acid might be sprinkled over the cut surface as an
+additional precaution, but this is unnecessary if ordinary cleanliness
+is observed. If after a few days the kid's scrotum swells, and does not
+discharge, the scrotum should be opened with a clean instrument. Less
+than one-half of one per cent. of the kids will die from this
+operation.
+
+
+RIDGLINGS.
+
+While castrating the kids the operator will discover that some of the
+kids have but one descended testicle. When these animals are found the
+descended testicle should be removed, and they should be recognized by
+some distinctive ear mark or brand. These animals will develop like
+bucks. It is a disputed question as to whether they are able to exercise
+regenerative power, but they will cover the does, and in some cases they
+probably get kids. The undescended testicle can be removed, but as the
+testicle usually lies close to the kidney, and is hard to distinguish
+from that organ in the young animal, it is best to delay the operation
+until the ridgling is at least six months old. The instruments necessary
+for this operation are a stout rope to suspend the animal, a clean sharp
+knife, scissors to remove the mohair from the place to be incised, and
+sharp needles threaded with silk. The knife, scissors and silk should be
+immersed in a hot 5% carbolic acid solution, and they should be kept in
+this solution except when actually in use.
+
+The rope is fastened to the hind legs of the animal and he is suspended
+in midair. An assistant steadies the body of the goat. The operator
+selects a place on the loin of the goat, about two or three inches away
+from the backbone, below the ribs and above the hip bone, on the side
+opposite to that which the descended testicle occupied. He then shears
+the mohair from this part of the goat. The mohair should be removed
+from a space at least eight inches square. A lengthwise incision is then
+made through the skin and muscles, or after the skin is cut, the muscles
+can be separated with the fingers and the testicle is found. It usually
+lies close to the backbone, to the lower and inner side of the kidney.
+It is usually undeveloped and much smaller than the kidney. Its surface
+is smooth and not indented like the kidney. When it is discovered it can
+be withdrawn through the opening, and adherent tissue clipped with the
+scissors. The muscles and skin should be brought together with the silk
+thread. The needles should pierce the muscles as well as the skin, and
+the edges of the skin should approximate. No hair should be allowed to
+remain between the cut surfaces, as the wound will not heal rapidly.
+After the wound is closed some boracic acid powder may be dusted over
+the wound, and the goat allowed his freedom. After ten days or two weeks
+the silk threads should be cut and drawn out, as they will not absorb,
+and they will irritate the wound. If this operation is carefully
+performed, and strict cleanliness adhered to, less than 2% of the
+animals operated upon will die.
+
+
+GROWTH.
+
+A kid at birth is usually small and weak, possibly weighing from four to
+six pounds. For the first few days of life he grows slowly, but as the
+organs adapt themselves to the new life, the kid becomes strong and
+grows rapidly. When the kid is born he is covered with a coarse hair,
+and it is not until he is from three to five weeks old that the fine
+mohair fibers appear growing between the coarser hairs. The kid
+continues to grow gradually, and at three or four months he weighs from
+twenty to forty pounds. The mohair may now be from two to four inches
+long. At a year old the Angora goat will weigh from fifty to eighty
+pounds, and the mohair may be as long as twelve inches, or sometimes
+longer.
+
+
+WEANING.
+
+When does are bred once a year the kid should be weaned before the doe
+is rebred. This allows the doe time to recuperate before her maternal
+powers are again brought into active service. Then, too, a doe nursing a
+kid through the winter, enters the spring with a depleted system and
+produces a poor quality and small quantity of mohair. The kids should be
+weaned when they are about five months old, as this allows the mother at
+least two months rest before she is rebred.
+
+
+MARKING.
+
+There are various reasons for marking goats, and the methods employed
+vary as widely as the reasons therefor. The object in view is to put
+some mark of identification either permanent or temporary upon the
+animal. The ears may be cropped in certain ways, a brand may be placed
+upon the nose, or tags or buttons placed in the ears, or characters
+tattooed into the ears. Probably the most permanent mark is the tattoo,
+and if it be placed on the inner hairless surface of the ear, it is as
+lasting as the tattoo so often seen in a man's arm.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+DISEASES.
+
+
+Some of the older breeders supposed that the Angora was not subject to
+any disease, but as goats have been introduced into new territory, they
+have become affected by some of the same troubles which bother sheep,
+but usually to a less degree. Some of the worst sheep diseases, such as
+scab, do not bother goats, but the goat has some special complaints
+which do not affect sheep. Very few carcasses are condemned by the
+government meat inspectors at the large packing centers. Tuberculosis is
+almost unknown.
+
+
+LICE.
+
+Nearly all goats are infested with lice, a small reddish louse, a goat
+louse. Lice rarely kills the animal infested, but they do annoy the goat
+greatly. Goats will not fatten readily, and the mohair is usually dead
+(lusterless), if the animals are badly infested. It is an easy matter to
+discover the lice. The goats scratch their bodies with their horns and
+make the fleece appear a little ragged. On separating the mohair the
+lice can easily be seen with the naked eye. The best means of ridding
+the goats of this annoyance is with almost any of the sheep dips. A dip
+which does not stain the mohair should be selected. The goats should be
+dipped after shearing, as it does not take much dip then to penetrate to
+the skin. One dipping will usually kill the lice, but the albuminous
+coat covering the nits (eggs of the louse), are not easily penetrated,
+and it is usually necessary to dip again within ten days, so that the
+nits, which have hatched since the first dipping, will not have a chance
+to mature and deposit more eggs. Goats can be dipped at almost any time,
+but if in full fleece they will require a larger quantity of liquid, and
+if the weather is very cold, there is some danger.
+
+
+STOMACH WORMS.
+
+Stomach worms affect goats, and in some instances their ravages prove
+fatal. There are a variety of these worms, but the general effect on the
+animal is about the same. They are usually worse in wet years. The goats
+affected become thin and weak. They usually scour. Sometimes the worm,
+or part of the worm, can be found in the feces. These same symptoms are
+caused by starvation, so the two should not be confounded. There are
+many drenches in use for the treatment of this trouble, and some of the
+proprietary remedies have given some relief. Goats running on dry, high
+land are rarely affected.
+
+Verminous pneumonia of sheep may also occur in goats.
+
+
+FOOT ROT.
+
+Foot rot is a disease which affects both goats and sheep, if they are
+kept on low wet land. It rarely proves fatal, and can be cured if the
+cause is removed, but it sometimes causes a good deal of trouble. The
+goats' feet swell between the toes and become so sore that the animals
+are compelled to walk on their knees. It can be cured by carefully
+trimming the feet and using solutions of blue stone. Goats should not be
+put on wet land.
+
+Sometimes the glands of the neck enlarge, a condition known as goitre.
+This is sometimes fatal with kids, but usually cures itself. There is no
+known remedy for it, but it is comparatively rare.
+
+Anthrax, tuberculosis, pleuro-pneumonia and meningitis, will affect
+goats, but these diseases are very rare. Some of the southern goats have
+swollen ears, but what the cause of this trouble is no one has yet
+determined.
+
+
+POISONS.
+
+There are several plants which will poison goats, but very little is
+known about them. Some of the laurel family are responsible for the
+death of a good many goats yearly, and some milk-weeds will kill if
+taken in sufficient amount at certain times of the year. These plants
+should be avoided as much as possible. Treatment has been rather
+unsatisfactory. If the poisoned animal is treated at once, an active
+purgative may rid the system of the irritant. Epsom salts and crotin oil
+have given relief.
+
+Mr. Schreiner describes an epidemic of pleuro-pneumonia which destroyed
+many flocks of Angora goats in South Africa. The disease was effectually
+stamped out in that country, and it has never appeared in American
+flocks. Mr. Thompson has described a disease called Takosis, which was
+supposed to have caused the death of many goats in the Eastern States,
+and along the Missouri River Valley. Some claimed that this trouble was
+caused by change of climate, others thought that it was starvation or
+lack of proper care. There is very little evidence of it now in the
+United States. All in all, the Angora goat is the healthiest of domestic
+animals.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Our Own Flocks.
+
+
+In 1865, Mr. C. P. Bailey started in the Angora goat industry. There
+were then very few Angora goats in the United States, and those in
+California had originated from two thoroughbred bucks secured from Col.
+Peters of Atlanta, Georgia.
+
+In 1866, Mr. Bailey secured a pair of Angoras from W. W. Chenery of
+Boston, Mass. There were two other pairs secured at this time for other
+parties, and these three does were the _first thoroughbred does_ brought
+to California. The first two goats cost Mr. Bailey $1000. _The first
+thoroughbred Angora kid_ dropped in California was by Mr. Bailey's doe.
+
+In 1869, Mr. Bailey furnished money to bring the Brown & Diehl
+importation to California, with the understanding that he was to have
+first choice. The Angoras secured from this lot were _the best goats_
+which had been brought to California up to that time.
+
+In 1876, Mr. Bailey selected the best buck of the Hall & Harris
+importation, and paid seventy-five dollars service fee for three of his
+Brown & Diehl does. Later he purchased forty-one head from Hall &
+Harris. Some of these were the Brown & Diehl goats, and some from the
+Hall & Harris importation of 1876.
+
+Twelve years after Mr. Bailey commenced breeding Angoras, he moved his
+entire grade-flock, consisting of about 1000 animals, to Nevada, and
+maintained his thoroughbred flocks in California. By careful selection,
+rigid culling, and strict attention given his flocks, Mr. Bailey had
+brought them by 1892, to an excellence beyond any of the imported stock.
+
+In 1893, Mr. Bailey imported two fine bucks from South Africa. An
+account of the buck Pasha will be found in this book.
+
+In 1899, another direct importation from South Africa was made, and the
+great sire Capetown was secured.
+
+In 1901, Dr. W. C. Bailey secured four of the best Angoras obtainable in
+Asia Minor, by personal selection, and added them to the Bailey flocks.
+This was the first importation made in America from Asia Minor for
+twenty-five years.
+
+During all these years, since 1865, Mr. Bailey had been constantly at
+work with his Angora flocks. There were many hardships to overcome, and
+most of the original Angora breeders gave up the struggle. We honestly
+believe that if it had not been for his perseverance the Angora industry
+would not be in its present prosperous condition.
+
+
+Register.
+
+We have been keeping a register of our stock, and this register is the
+oldest in the United States, or the world. Animals registered in the
+Bailey Angora Goat Record have a universal standing.
+
+
+Manufacturers of Gloves, Robes and Trimmings.
+
+The Angora Robe and Glove Company was established in 1875, with C. P.
+Bailey as president. Later Mr. Bailey secured sole control of this
+company. We have been using goat skins and mohair in large quantities
+for the last thirty years, and to-day
+
+WE PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR GOAT SKINS AND MOHAIR.
+
+
+Buck Selections.
+
+From the above history it will be seen that we have several different
+strains of bucks to offer, and the fact that we have taken the Grand
+Prizes and highest awards at the New Orleans World's Fair, 1885, Chicago
+World's Fair, 1893, St. Louis World's Fair, 1904, and sweep stakes at
+State Fairs and National Meetings for the last thirty years, should put
+these bucks on the top. We have sold thousands in United States, and
+they have given almost universal satisfaction.
+
+
+Does.
+
+Our thoroughbred does trace their ancestry to the best stock obtainable.
+We always have a good many grade Angora does on the range, and we are
+prepared to quote prices on carloads, or small lots. We gladly furnish
+information.
+
+ C. P. BAILEY & SONS CO.,
+ San Jose, California.
+
+[Illustration: PERSIAN FAT TAIL SHEEP
+
+In 1892, we received the first importation of Persian Fat-Tailed Sheep.
+They are very hardy, rapid growers (the lambs often gaining a pound a
+day for the first one hundred days,) good rangers almost free from
+disease, and to cross onto fine wooled sheep for mutton and wool, we
+consider them of much value.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Practical Angora Goat Raising, by C. P. Bailey
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRACTICAL ANGORA GOAT RAISING ***
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