Domestic Animals
The progress that a nation is making can with reasonable accuracy
be measured by the kind of live stock it raises. The general rule is, poor stock, poor people. All the
prosperous nations of the globe, especially the grain-growing nations, get a large share of their wealth from
raising improved stock. The stock bred by these nations is now, however, very different from the stock raised
by the same nations years ago. As soon as man began to progress in the art of agriculture he became
dissatisfied with inferior stock. He therefore bent his energies to raise the standard of excellence in
domestic animals.
By slow stages of animal improvement the ugly, thin-flanked wild boar of early times
has been transformed into the sleek Berkshire or the well-rounded Poland-China. In the same manner the wild
sheep of the Old World have been developed into wool and mutton breeds of the finest excellence. By constant
care, attention, and selection the thin, long-legged wild ox has been bred into the bounteous milk-producing
Jerseys and Holsteins or into the Shorthorn mountains of flesh. From the small, bony, coarse, and shaggy
horse of ancient times have descended the heavy Norman, or Percheron, draft horse and the fleet Arab
courser.
The matter of meat-production is one of vital importance to the human race, for animal
food must always supply a large part of man's ration.
Live stock of various kinds consume the coarser foods, like the grasses, hays, and
grains, which man cannot use. As a result of this consumption they store in their bodies the exact substances
required for building up the tissues of man's body.
When the animal is used by man for food, one class of foods stored away in the
animal's body produces muscle; another produces fat, heat, and energy. The food furnished by the slaughter of
animals seems necessary to the full development of man. It is true that the flesh of an animal will not
support human life so long as would the grain that the animal ate while growing, but it is also true that
animal food does not require so much of man's force to digest it. Hence the use of meat forces a part of
man's life-struggle on the lower animal.
When men feed grain to stock, the animals receive in return power and food in their
most available forms. Men strengthen the animal that they themselves may be strengthened. One of the great
questions, then, for the stock-grower's consideration is how to make the least amount of food fed to animals
produce the most power and flesh.
Horses
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