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<h2> CHAPTER XIII </h2>
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CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS
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<p>Few people realize how many kinds of cats there are. The
fashionable world begins to discuss cats technically and
understand their various points of excellence. The "lord
mayor's chain," the "Dutch rabbit markings," and similar
features are understood by more cat fanciers than a few years
ago; but, until within that time, it is doubtful if the
number of people who knew the difference between the Angora
and the Persian in this country amounted to a hundred. It is
but a few years since the craze for the Angora cat started.
These cats have been fashionable pets in England for some
years back, and now America begins to understand their value
and the principles of breeding them. Today, there are as
handsome, well-bred animals in the United States as can be
found abroad. The demand for high-bred animals with a
pedigree is greatly increasing, and society people are
beginning to understand the fine points of the thoroughbred.</p>
<p>The Angora cat, as its name indicates, comes from Angora in
Western Asia, the province that is celebrated for its goats
with long hair of fine quality. In fact, the hair under the
Angora cat's body often resembles the finest of the Angora
goatskins. Angora cats are favorites with the Turks and
Armenians, and exist in many colors, especially since they
have been more carefully bred. They vary in form, color, and
disposition, and also in the quality of their hair. The
standard calls for a small head, with not too long a nose,
large eyes that should harmonize in color with the fur,
small, pointed ears with a tuft of hair at the apex, and a
very full, fluffy mane around the neck. This mane is known as
the "lord mayor's chain." The body is longer than that of the
ordinary cat in proportion to its size, and is extremely
graceful, and covered with long, silky hair, which is crinkly
like that of the Angora goat. This hair should be as fine as
possible, and not woolly. The legs are of a moderate length,
but look short on account of the length of hair on the body.
Little tufts of hair growing between the toes indicate high
breeding. The Angora cat, in good condition, is one of the
most beautiful and elegant creatures in the world, and few
can resist its charm. The tail is long and like an ostrich
plume. It is usually carried, when the cat is in good
spirits, straight up, with the end waving over toward one
side. The tail of the Angora serves as a barometer of its
bodily and mental condition. If the cat is ill or frightened,
the tail droops, and sometimes trails on the ground; but when
she is in good spirits, playing about the house or grounds,
it waves like a great plume, and is exceedingly handsome. The
suppleness of the Angora's tail is also a mark of fine
breeding. A highbred Angora will allow its tail to be doubled
or twisted without apparent notice of the performance.</p>
<p>The Angora does not reach its prime until about two years.
Before that time its head and body are not sufficiently
developed to give the full beauty and grace of the animal. As
a rule, the Angora is of good disposition, although the
females are apt to be exceedingly nervous. They are sociable
and docile, although fond of roaming about, especially if
allowed to run loose. As a rule, they do not possess the keen
intelligence of the ordinary short-haired family cat, but
their great beauty and their cleanly and affectionate habits
make them favorites with fashionable people. The proper
breeding of the Angora cat is a regular science. Of the
colors of the Angoras, the blue or maltese is a favorite, and
rather common, especially when mixed with white.</p>
<p>The white Angora is extraordinarily beautiful, and brings a
high price when it has blue eyes and all its points are
equally good. The orange, or yellow, and the black with amber
eyes are also prize winners. There are the tigers also, the
brown tabby, and the orange and white. Mixed colors are more
common than solid ones; the tortoise-shell cat of three
colors and well mottled being considered particularly
desirable.</p>
<p>The Persian cat differs from the Angora in the quality of its
fur, although the ordinary observer sees little difference
between them. All the long-haired cats originated from the
Indian Bengalese, Thibetan, and other wild cats of Asia and
Russia. The Persian cat of very great value is all black,
with a very fluffy frill, or lord mayor's chain, and orange
eyes. Next to him comes a light slate or blue Persian, with
yellow eyes. The fur of the Persian cat is much more woolly
than that of the Angora, and sometimes in hot weather mats
badly. The difference between a Persian and an Angora can
usually be told by an amateur, by drawing the tail between
the thumb and first finger. The Angora's tail comes out thin,
silky, and narrow, although it immediately "fluffs" up. The
Persian's tail does not compress itself readily into a small
space. The Persian cat's head is larger, its ears are less
pointed, although it should have the tuft at the end and the
long hair inside. It is usually larger in body and apparently
stronger made, although slender and elegant in appearance,
with small bones and graceful in movement. The colors vary,
as with the Angora, except that the tortoise-shell and the
dark-marked tabby do not so frequently appear. The temper is
usually less reliable and the intelligence less keen than the
Angora.</p>
<p>The Russian long-haired pet is much less common even than the
Persian and Angora. It is fond of cold weather, and its fur
is denser, indicating that it has been used to colder
regions. Many of the cats that we see are crosses of Angora
and Persian, or Angora and Russian, so that it is extremely
difficult for the amateur to know a thoroughbred cat which
has not been mixed with other varieties.</p>
<p>There is also a fine short-haired cat coming from Russia,
usually self-colored. Mrs. Frederick Monroe, of Chicago, owns
a very handsome blue and white one.</p>
<p>In Pegu, Siam, and Burmah, there is a race of cats known as
the Malay cat, with tails only half the ordinary length and
often contorted into a sort of a knot that cannot be
straightened, after the fashion of the pug dog or ordinary
pig.</p>
<p>There is another cat known as the Mombas, a native of the
west coast of Africa and covered with stiff, bristling hair.
Paraguay cats are only one-quarter as big as our ordinary
cat, and are found along the western coast of South America,
even as far north as Mexico.</p>
<p>The royal cat of Siam is a short-haired cat, yet widely
different from other short-haired varieties. They are
extremely pretty, with blue or amber-colored eyes by day
which grow brilliant at night. These cats also frequently
have the kink in the tail, and sometimes a strong animal
odor, although this is not disagreeable. The head is rather
longer than the ordinary cat's, tapering off sharply toward
the muzzle, the forehead flat and receding, and the eyes more
slanting toward the nose than the American cat's. The form
should be slender, graceful, and delicately made; the body
long; the tail very thin and rather short; the legs short and
slender, and the feet oval. The body is of a bright, uniform
color, and the legs, feet, and tail are usually black.</p>
<p>The Manx cat is considered by many people as a natural
curiosity. It differs from the ordinary domestic cat but
little, except in the absence of a tail, or even an apology
for one. The hind legs are thicker and rather longer than the
ordinary cat's, and it runs more like a hare. It is not a
graceful object when seen from behind, but it is an
affectionate, home-loving creature with considerable
intelligence. The Manx cat came from the Isle of Man
originally, and is a distinct breed. So-called Manx cats have
tails from one to a few inches long, but these are crosses of
the Manx and the ordinary cat. In the Crimea is found another
kind of cat which has no tail. The cats known as the
"celebrated orange cats of Venice," are probably descendants
of the old Egyptian cat, and are of varying shades of yellow,
sometimes deepening into a sandy color which is almost red.
There are obscure stripes on the body, which become more
distinct on the limbs. The tail is more or less ringed toward
its termination.</p>
<p>There has been a newspaper paragraph floating about stating
that a prize of several thousand dollars had been offered in
England for a male tortoise-shell cat. This is probably not
true, as a Mr. Smith exhibited a tortoise-shell he-cat at the
Crystal Palace Show of 1871. Several tortoise-shell and white
toms have been exhibited since, and one of these has taken
nine first prizes at the Crystal Palace Show; but the
tortoise-shell he-cat is extremely rare. The real
tortoise-shell is not a striped tiger nor a tabby. It has
three colors usually, black, yellow, and red or brown; but
these appear in patches rather than stripes. It is said that
the tortoise-shell cat is common in Egypt and the south of
Europe. It comes from a different stock than the ordinary
short-haired cat, the texture of the hair being different, as
well as the color. The tortoise-shell and white cat is much
more common, and is the product of a cross between a tortoise
shell and a solid color cat. In this case the hair is usually
coarser and the tail thicker than in the ordinary cat.</p>
<p>Among cat fanciers there is a distinctive variety known as
the tortoise-shell tabby. As the tabby cat is one of the
varieties of striped or spotted cats having markings, broad
or narrow, of bands of black on a dark tan or gray ground,
the tortoise-shell cat would have both stripes and patches of
color.</p>
<p>Of the tabbies, there are brown tabbies, silver tabbies, and
red tabbies. It is said that the red tabby she-cat is as
scarce as the tortoise-shell he-cat. The ordinary observer
considers the brown tabby with white markings as much the
handsomest of the tabbies. But fanciers and judges do not
agree with him, the cats having narrow bands and spots being
the ones to take prizes. The word "tabby," according to
Harrison Weir, was derived from a kind of taffeta or ribbed
silk which used to be called tabby silk. Other authorities
state that tabby cats got their name from Atab, a street in
Bagdad; but as this street was famous for its watered silks
perhaps the same reason holds. The tortoise-shell used to be
called, in England, the Calimanco. In America, it is
sometimes called the calico cat.</p>
<p>The red tabby is of a deep reddish or yellow brown, with a
well-ringed tail, orange or yellow eyes, and pink cushions to
the feet. The brown tabby is orange brown, with black lips,
brown whiskers, black feet, black pads, long tail, greenish
orange eyes, and red nose bordered with black. The spotted
tabby must have no bands at all. It must be brown, red, or
yellow, with black spots. In the brown tabby the feet and
pads are black; in the yellow and red, the feet and pads are
pink. The spotted cat sometimes resembles a leopard, while
the banded tabby resembles more the tiger. Some of the
spotted tabbies are extremely handsome, and came originally
from a cross between the ordinary cat and the wild cat.</p>
<p>"Self-colored cats" are entirely of one color, which may vary
in different cats, but must never be mixed in the same cat,
nor even shaded into a lighter tone on the animal; and
whether this color be black, blue, red, or yellow, the
self-colored cat should have a rich deep tint. Of course the
short-haired white cat is the handsomest of all. One of the
peculiarities of this white cat is that it is apt to be deaf.
The most valuable white cats, whether long or short haired,
have blue eyes. Sometimes they have one blue eye and one
green or yellow, which gives a comical effect, and detracts
from their value. By the way, cross-eyed cats are not
unknown. The best white cats have a yellowish white tint
instead of grayish white, as the latter have a coarser
quality of fur.</p>
<p>The jet-black cat is thought by many to be the most
desirable. The true black cat should have a uniform,
intensely black coat, velvety and extremely glossy; the eyes
should be round and full, and of a brilliant amber; the nose
and pads of the feet should be jet-black, and the tail long
and tapering. It is difficult to find a black cat without a
white hair, as usually there are a few under the chin or on
the belly.</p>
<p>The blue cat is the one ordinarily known in this country as
the dark maltese. There is a tradition that it came from the
Island of Malta. Many people do not consider it a distinct
breed, but think it a light-colored variety of the black cat.
It is known sometimes as the Archangel, sometimes as the
Russian blue, the Spanish blue, the Chartreuse blue, but more
commonly in this country as the maltese. When it is of a deep
bluish color, or of the soft silver-gray maltese without
stripes, it is extremely handsome. The most desirable are the
bluish lilac-colored ones, with soft fur like sealskin. The
nose and pads of the feet are dark, and the eyes are orange
yellow. The maltese and white cat when well marked is
extremely handsome, and there is no prettier kitten than the
maltese and white.</p>
<p>The black and white, yellow and white, blue and white, and in
fact, any self-colored and white cat is a mixture of the
other breeds. If well marked they are extremely handsome and
are usually bright and intelligent.</p>
<p>The solid gray cat is very rare. It is, in fact, a tabby
without the black stripes or spots.</p>
<p>In Australia, New Zealand, and New Guinea there used to be no
cat of any kind. The Siamese cat has been imported to
Australia, and some authorities claim that the cats known in
this country as Australian cats are of Siamese origin.
Madagascar is a catless region.</p>
<p>There is in this country a variety known as the "coon cat,"
which is handsome, especially in the solid black. Its native
home is in Maine, and it is thought by many to have
originated with the ordinary cat and the raccoon. It grows
somewhat larger than the ordinary cat, with thick, woolly fur
and an extremely bushy tail. It is fond of outdoor life, and
when kept as a pet must be allowed to run out of doors or it
is apt to become so savage and disagreeable that nothing can
be done with it. When it is allowed its freedom, however, it
becomes affectionate, intelligent, and is usually a handsome
cat.</p>
<p>The term "Dutch rabbit markings" refers to the white markings
on the cat of two or three colors. Evidently, the cats
themselves understand the value of Dutch rabbit markings, as
one which has them is invariably proud of them. A cat that
has white mittens, for instance, is often inordinately vain,
and keeps them in the most immaculate state of cleanliness.</p>
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