630.7 0k4C no. 44 COP. 5 ' DIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN AGRICULTURE 1 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2013 http://archive.org/details/secondannualrepo4419okla J^fcm^uag copy 2-ricultural Library Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station STILLWATER. OKLAHOMA Circular No. 44 January, 1918 Donald Jr. 122304 SECOND ANNUAL REPORT For the Year 1917 BY THE OKLAHOMA STATE LIVESTOCK REGISTRY BOARD OFFICE OF THE BOARD e Office of the Board is Located on the First Floor of Morrill Hall Oklahoma A. & M. College. Stillwater Oof- & Oklahoma agricultural experinent station Second Annual Report Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board For the Year 1917 Stillwater, Oklahoma 2 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Second Annual Report 3 Letter of Transmittal Hon. Robert L. Williams, Governor of Oklahoma. Sir: I have the honor to transmit, herewith, the second annual report of the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board for the year ending December 31, 1917. HENRY G. KNIGHT, President. 4 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Henry G. Knight, Dean of Agriculture, Stillwater, Okla., President L. L. Lewis, Dean of Veterinary Science, Stillwater, Okla., Vice Presi- dent. J. S. Malone, Professor of Animal Husbandry, Stillwater, Okla., W. L. Blizzard, Assistant Professor of Animal Husbandry, Stillwater, Oklahoma, Secretary and Treasurer. Second Annual Report 5 Financial Report OKLAHOMA STATE LIVESTOCK REGISTRY BOARD FOR YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1917 Dr. To receipts for the year ending December 31, 1917, as itemized below $ 3,865.04 Interest on daily balances at bank 41.44 Cr. To expenditures for the year ending December 31, 1917, as item- ized below $ 2,897.52 Balance December 31, 1917, turned into general rev- enue fund of the State 967.52 $ 3,865.04 $ 3,865.04 Itemized Receipts, 1917 1,029 Licenses at $2.00 $ 2,058.00 1.616 renewals at $1.00 $ 1,616.00 176 transfers at 50 cents 87.50 Excess fees, which were later refunded 35.00 Parts of fees, later refunded 12.00 Two certificates of soundness 3.00 For returned checks 9.00 Money received for postage .60 Money received by mistake for various articles and was later refunded 2.50 Interest on daily balances 41.44 $ 3,865.04 Itemized Expenditures, 1917 Salaries and labor $ 1,594.38 Stamps _ 190.00 Printing supplies and stationery 111.00 Publications 645.35 Traveling expenses _ 197.71 Refund on fees 108.00 Returned checks 13.00 Office equipment 38.08 $ 2,897.52 6 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Horse and Jack Registry Associations RECOGNIZED IN OKLAHOMA A list of all American stud book assocoations recognized by the Okla- homa State Livestock Registry Board is appended. Purebred licenses can be issued only for horses and jacks correctly recorded in one of the asso- ciations. American Associations American Trotting Register Association, Frank E. Best, secretary, 137 South Ashland boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. Arabian Horse Club of America, H. K. Bush-Brown, secretary, 1729 G street, N. W., Washington, D. C. American Association of Importers and Breeders of Belgian Draft Horses, J. D. Conner, Jr., secretary, Wabash, Indiana. Cleveland Bay Society of America, R. P. Stericker, secretary, 24 West Lake street, Aurora, Illinois. American Clydesdale Association, R. B. Ogilvie, secretary, Union Stockyards, Chicago, Illinois. French Coach Horse Society of America, Duncan E. Willett, secretary, Maple avenue and Harrison street, Oak Park, Illinois. National French Draft Horse Association of America, C. E. Stubbs, secretary, Fairfield, Iowa. German, Hanovarian and Oldenburg Coach Horse Association of America, J. Crouch, secretary, Lafayette, Indiana. Ameircan Hackney Horse Socity, Gurney C. Gue, secretary, 308 West Ninety-Seventh street, New York City, New York. American Morgan Register, T. E. Boyce, secretary, Middlebury, Ver- mont. Percheron Society of America, Wayne Dinsmore, secretary, Union Stockyards, Chicago, Illinois. The American Breeders and Importers Percheron Registry Company, John A. Forney, secretary, Plainfield, Ohio. American Saddle Horse Breeders Association, R. H. Lillard, secretary, Louisville, Kentucky. American Shetland Pony Club, J. M. Wade, secretary, Lafayette, In- diana. Welch Pony and Cob Society of America, J. H. Leet, secretary, Man- tua, Ohio. American Shire Horse Association, Chas. Burgess, secretary, Wenona, Illinois. American Suffolk Horse Association, Alex Galbraith, secretary, Janes- ville, Wisconsin. American Breeders Association of Jacks and Jennets, J. W. Jones, sec- retary, Columbia, Tennessee. Standard Jack and Jennet Registry of America, Wm. E. Morton, sec- retary, Scarrett building, Kansas City, Missouri. Second Annual Report 7 Horse and Jack Registry Associations NOT RECOGNIZED IN OKLAHOMA American Horse Breeders Trotting Registry Association, 161 High street, Boston, Massachusetts. American Horse Registry Association, N. J. Harris, secretary, Des Moines, Iowa. American Iceland Pony Club, Geo. H. Simpson, secretary, Wheaton, Illinois. American Jack Registry, W. L. DeClow, secretary, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. American Percheron Registry Association, S. M. Heberling, secretary, La Grange, Illinois. Belgian-American Draft Horse Registry, A. J. Myers, secretary, Lov- ington, Illinois. Coach and Draft Horse Association of America, Frederick Wightman, secretary, La Crosse, Wisconsin. Hortman Stock Farm Registry Record Company, Adam Krumm, sec- retary, Columbus, Ohio. International Consolidated Record Association, H. A. Jones, secretary, Pen Yan, New York. Morrison's International Roadster Register, Des Moines, Iowa. National Percheron Horse Breeders Association, W. E. Phillips, sec- retary. North Missouri Jack and Jennet Breeders Association. Oklahoma Horse and Jack Registry, D. W. B. Lamb, secretary, Vinita, Okalhoma. Oldenburg German Coach Horse Society, T. W. McClean, secretary. The National Standard Pacing and Trotting Horse Breeders Associa- tion, Thos. C. Parsons, registrar, Cleveland, Ohio. United States Horse Register, J. E. Ragsdale, secretary, Gibson City, Illinois. Wagon Horse Association of America, D. M. Carpenter, secretary, Kansas City, Missouri. 8 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Livestock Registration Law House Bill No. 334 AN ACT providing a lien for the services of stallions and jacks registered according to the provisions of this act. Be It Enacted By the People of the State of Oklahoma: License — Board. Section 1. Every person, persons, firm, corporation, company or asso- ciation that shall stand, travel, advertise or offer for public service in any manner any stallion or jack in the State of Oklahoma, before being entitled to the benefit of the lien hereinafter provided for the services of such ani- mals, shall secure a license certificate for such stallion or jack, from the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board, as hereinafter provided. Said board shall consist of the dean of the division of agriculture, head of the ainmal husbandry department, and the head of the veterinary department of the Oklahoma State Agricultural College. Requirements — Fees. Section 2. To obtain a license certificate as herein provided, the owner of such stallion or jack shall comply with the following requirements: First. The owner of a purebred stallion or jack shall forward to the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board of Inspection, the registry cer- tificate or a certified copy of the registry certificate of such stallion or jack, also other necessary papers or documents, relating to the breeding and ownership of such stallion or jack. Second. Owners of crossbred or grade stallions or jacks shall forward to the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board afficravit showing the breeding of such stallion or jack. Third. Owners of scrub stallions or jacks shall forward to the Okla- homa State Livestock Registry Board a statement of the age, color and size of such stallion or jack. Fourth. The fee of such stallion or jack license shall be two ($2.00) dollars and said fee shall accompany each application for license. Revocation of License. Section 3. The Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board shall have power to revoke, cancel or recall any license when said board shall find that such licence does not truly and correctly represent the horse or jack for which said license was originally issued, and when a license is revoked by the said board, it shall be the duty of the sheriff or a constable of a county where such license is located to take possession of said license and deliver the same to the said Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board when called upon by said Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board to take possession of the said license. Kinds of License. Section 4. The Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board shall issue four kinds of licenses, as follows: Purebred, for stallions or jacks correctly recorded in stud books, recognized by the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board; crossbred, for stallions or jacks whose sire and dam are Second Annual Report 9 of different breeds but each are correctly recorded in a stud book main- tained for that particular breed, providing said stud books are recognized by the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board; grade, for stallions whose sire or dam is recorded in a stud book that is recognized by the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board; scrub, for stallion or jack whose sire and dam are neither recorded in a stud book recognized by the State Livestock Registry Board. Investigations — Registry Books and Associations. Section 5. It shall be the duty of the State Livestock Registry Board to examine and pass upon the merits of each registry certificate and state- ment of breeding submitted as herein provided, and it shall use as its stand- ard the stud books and signatures of the duly authorized officers of the va- rious horse pedigree registry associations, societies or companies certified by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, Bureau of Ani- mal Industry, in order No. 136, dated June 20, 1906, and any other stud or jack books which may be established in the future when an association or company establishing such stud or jack books shall prove to the satisfac- tion of the State Livestock Registry Board that they are doing an honest, reputable and creditable business, and that such stud or jack books are necessary for the protection and encouragement of that particular breed. Term — Renewal License. Section 6. Each license issued by the Oklahoma State Livestock Reg- istry Board shall expire December 31, of the year of which it is issued but such license may be renewed each year, provided, the owner of said stallion or jack makes application for renewal before March 1, following the date of expiration, and forward with such application for renewal a fee of one ($1.00) dollar for each renewal and submit satisfactory evidence establish- ing the identity of stallions or jacks for which renewal of license is re- quested. Each renewal shall expire on December 31 of the year for which it is renewed. Failure to have license renewed, as herein provided, before March 1 following the dale of expiration, shall forfeit the right of renewal, and when said right has been forfeited, the owner of said stallion or jack shall procure a new license as provided in Section 2. Description and Contents of License. Section 7. The license certificate for a stallion or jack correctly re- corded in a stud or jack book recognized by the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board shall contain the following information: License number, registration number, breed, color, age, pedigree, name and address of owner, . date of issue, the seal of the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board, and the signature of the secretary of the Oklahoma Livestock Registry Board. The license for a crossbred, grade or scrub stallion shall contain the following information: License number, statement of breeding, color, age, name and address of owner, date of issue, seal of the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board, and the signature of the secretary of the Okla- homa State Livestock Registry Board. Advertising Bills — License Number. Section 8. Every bill, poster or other advertisement of every kind or nature, issued by the owner, keeper or person in charge of any stallion or jack enrolled and licensed under this act, and used to advertise such stallion or jack by said owner, keeper, or person in charge, shall have as a heading for such advertisement the class of license issued for said stallion or jack and the number of his license: Thus "Purebred license number — ". "Crossbred license number — ", "Grade license number — ", or " Scrub li- cense number — ", as the case may be. In all advertisements this heading shall be set in the largest and boldest type used in the advertisement 10 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Posting License Certificater Section 9. The owner, keeper, or person in charge of any stallion or jack standing for public service in this State shall post and keep affixed during the entire breeding season, the license certificate of each stallion or jack issued under the provisions of this act, in a conspicuous place in each stable or building where such stallion or jack stands for public service. Transfer of License. Section 10. Upon transfer of ownership of any stallion or jack licensed under the provisions of this act, the new owner shall forward to the office of the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board, the license issued in the name of the former owner together with a fee of fifty cents and satisfactory evidence that the stallion or jack transferred is the one for which the li- cense was originally issued. It shall be the duty of the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board to record such transfer and issue a license in the name of the new owner. List of Owners — County Clerk to Furnish. Section 11. It shall be the duty of the county clerk of each county in the State of Oklahoma to file with the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board before July 1 of each year, a complete list of all t he stallion or jack owners in his county, together with the number of stallions or jacks owned by each as shown by the assessor's report of that particular county. He shall also file with the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board before July 1 of each year, the total number of horses in his particular county. Certificate of Soundness — Optional. Section 12. It shall be optional with the owners, keepers or persons in charge of stallions or jacks standing for public service whether or not said stallions or jacks shall be examined for soundness, but no stallions or jacks shall be advertised in any manner either directly or indirectly as a sound stallion or jack until a certificate of soundness has been issued for said stal- lion or jack by the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board, and then said stallion or jack may be advertised as sound only during the life of the certificate of soundness. This certificate of soundness shall become null and void and not in force on December 31 of the year during which it was issued. The fee for each certificate of soundness shall not exceed $2.00 for each stallion or jack. * Penalty. Section 13. Any person, persons, firm, company, corporation or asso- ciation that shall violate any of the provisions of this act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction in any court of competent ju- risdiction shall be punished by a fine of not less than $20.00 and not more than $50.00 for each offense. Funds — Disposition. Section 14. The funds accruing from the above named fee shall be used by the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board to defray the ex- pense of enrollment of pedigrees and the issuing of licenses, to publish re- ports or bulletins containing lists of stallions or jacks, licenses and trans- fers, and all money accruing above the amount necessary for said purpose shall be turned into the general revenue fund of the State. It shall be the duty of the Oklahoma Livestock Registry Board to make annual reports including financial statements, to the Governor of the State, and all finan- cial records of said Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board shall be open to inspection, Second Annual Report 11 Liens for Services. Section 15. The owner of any stallion or jack, upon complying with the provisions of this act, shall have a lien upon any female animal, subject to prior liens, to which such animal is let and upon the offspring of such animal, the result of such services for the sum contracted therefor. Such lien shall attach at the time of service of such male and shall be superior to any mortgage lien placed upon the female animal or offspring after the time of service, and such lien shall not be lost by reason of any sale, ex- change, removal from the county, or other disposition of such female ani- mal or offspring, but upon such sale, exchange, removal or disposition without consent of the person holding the lien, the same may be immedi- ately enforced. Printed Bills— Duties. Section 16. The owner of any tsallion or jack who avails himself of the provisions of this act, shall during the breeding season of such animal, keep posted in a public and conspicuous place on the premises where the services of such animal are to be performed, a plainly written or printed handbill, showing the charges for the services to be rendered and the terms of payment thereof, and any person breeding a female animal shall be held to have consented to the price and terms of services as stated therein. Liens — Procedure to Collect. Section 17. At any time within twenty months after his right of action accrues the owner of such sire may file with any justice of the peace in the county, a written statement, duly verified, setting forth the amount of his claim, his cause of action, and a description of the animal or animals upon which he has a lein, and the justice shall thereupon issue summons as in other cases, and embody therein a description of the animal or animals upon which said lien is claimed, and an order to the constable to take the animal or animals and hold it or them subject to the order of the court. Bond Pending Trial. Section 18. The owner may give bond for the retention of such animal or animals as in action for the recovery of personal property. Section 19. If, upon trial, judgment be rendered for the plaintiff, the court shall order a sale of the animal or animals, as in execution sales, to pay the judgment and costs, and, if bond be given for the retention of the animal or animals, the court shall render judgment on the bond against the sureties thereon for the amount of the plaintiff's debt and costs. Sale of Animals Served — Notice. Section 20. Any person who shall sell or otherwise dispose of any ani- mal subject to the lien provided for in this act, without notifying the person to whom said sale or other disposition is made, of^ the existence of the lien shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction for such offense shall be punished by a fine of not less than $25.00 nor more than $100.00 or by imprisonment in the county jail for not less than ten days nor more than thirty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment. Approved February 25, 1915. REGISTRY RULES AND REGULATIONS The law as passed is very liberal in its provisions, leaving the matter of registration and license entirely to the option of the owners, but making provision for the legal and easy collection of service fees for those availing themselves of the privilege of registration and license. 12 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board It also provides that no stallion or jack may be advertised, either di- rectly or indirectly, as sound until such animal has been examined by a rep- resentative of the Registry Board and a certificate of soundness issued. It is not necessary, however, to have a certificate of soundness in order to secure a license or to stand for public service. No stallion or jack will be given a certificate of soundness if any of the following physical defects or diseases are present: Moon blindness (periodic ophthalmia), Cataract, Roaring or Whistling, Heaves or Broken Wind, St, Vitus Dance, String Halt, Bone Spavin, Ring Bone, Side Bone, Navicular Disease, Thoroughpin, Box Spavin, Curb with Curby Formation of Hocks, Glanders, Farcy, Urethral Gleet, Mange, and retention of one or both testicles (cryptorchid). Certificates of soundness that may have been issued will be revoked whenever any of the above diseases or defects are detectd at later exam- inations. The registration andn license fee is $2.00 for each animal registered. A renewal of the license, if applied for before March 1 of the following year, may be secured for $1.00. Stallion owners wishing to have a certificate of soundness for their horses, should make application for the same to the Board, and whenever possible such examination will be made, the maximum fee for which will not exceed $2.00 for any one horse. Blank forms of application for stallion and jack license must be filed giving necessary information before license can be issued. These blanks can be secured from the Livestock Registry Board, Stillwater, or from the county clerk of each county upon request. A purebred license can be issued only when the stallion or jack has been recorded in the stud book of one of the associations listed below as being recognized by the Registry Board. The application for a purebred license must be accompanied in every case by either the certificate of regis- tration, commonly called the pedigrees, or a certified copy of the same, be- fore a license can be issued. A grade license can be issued to a stallion that is not purely bred and registered only when the name and pedigree number of the sire or the dam is given on the application blank. The sire's pedigree must be recorded in a recognized association stud book. Two forms of license only are issued for jacks; one for purebred or registered, and the other for scrub or non-registered jacks. Under the provisions of the law certain registry companies that make a practice of issuing certificates of registry or pedigrees for grade horses shall not be recognized by the Board in the issuance of purebred licenses or certificates. Address all communications to THE LIVESTOCK REGISTRY BOARD, Stillwater, Oklahoma. Second Annual Report i3 States Having Stallion Laws California. — Stallion Registration Board; Chas. W. Paine, Secretary, Sacramento. Colorado. — State Board of Stock Inspection Commissioners; E. Mc- Crillis, secretary, Denver. Idaho. — State Livestock Sanitary Board, Dr. V. C. White, secretary, Boise. Illinois. — Stallion Registration Board; B. M. Davison, secretary, Spring- field. Indiana. — Stallion Registration Board; E. H. McCartney, secretary, Lafayette. Iowa. — State Board of Agriculture; A. R. Corey, secretary, Des Moines. Kansas. — State Livestock Registry Board; Dr. C. W. McCampbell, sec- retary, Manhattan. Michigan. — State Veterinary Board; O. J. Howard, secretary, Coloma. Minnesota. — Stallion Registration Board; J. S. Montgomery, assistant secretary, University Farm, St. Paul. Missouri. — Stallion Registry Board; Professor E. A. Trowbridge, sec- retary, Columbia. Montana. — Stallion Registration Board; Professor C. N. Arnett, sec- retary, Bozeman. Nebraska. — Livestock Sanitary Board; Dr. J. S. Anderson, secretary, Lincoln. New Jersey. — Department of Agriculture; Professor F. C. Minkler, Livestock Commissioner, New Brunswick. North Dakota. — Stallion Registration Board; Professor E. J. Thomp- son, secretary, Agricultural College, Fargo. Oklahoma. — State Livestock Registry Board; Professor W. L. Blizzard, secretary, Stillwater. Oregon. — Stallion Registration Board; Professor D. E. Richards, sec- retary, Corvallis. Pennsylvania. — State Livestock Sanitary Board; C. J. Marhsall secre- tary, Harrisburgh. South Dakota. — State Livestock Sanitary Board; A. E. Beaumont, sec- retary, Pierre. Utah. — State Board of Horse Commissioners; W. E. Carroll, secretary, Logan. Washington. — Department of Agriculture; Dr. H. T. Grave, Acting Commissioner, Olympia. Wisconsin. — Stallion Registration Board; Dr. A. S. Alexander, secre- tary, Madison. 14 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Second Annual Report 15 Progress of Registration Work The second annual report of the Oklahoma State Livestock Registry- Board is herewith submitted to the public. It includes a financial statement for the year 1917, a list of all licenses issued, a separate list showing the purebred stallions grouped by breeds, and other interesting tables and in- formation concerning the work. We have also succeeded in getting some of the leading horse and mule men of the State to write short articles upon upon important phases of the business. During 1917 there were 2,649 licenses issued to stallions and jacks, as compared with 2,352 in 1916. This increase of nearly three hundred does not necessarily show an actual increase in the number of such animals in the State. The license law is not compulsory in Oklahoma, but gives a lien on mares and offspring to those who comply with the law. Increase in the number of licenses issued may therefore simply show that a larger percent of owners are taking out licenses. A number of changes have taken place in the makeup of the Registry Board. Dr. Henry G. Knight succeeds W. L. Carlyle, and J. S. Malone takes the place of W. L. Fowler. Dr. L. L. Lewis still retains his position on the Board. During 1917, up to August 31, O. J. Moyer was secretary. Com- mencing in January, 1918, a new secretary has been secured in the person of W. L. Blizzard. GAIN IN PUREBREDS It is interesting to note that while there is an increase of 12.6% in the total number of licenses issued during 1917, as compared with 1916, there is a gain of 25.4% in the number of purebred licenses, both stallion and jack. Most of this increase in purebreds was among the jacks, there having been a gain of 207, while the purebred stallions only gained 31. The following table shows fewer Standardbreds, Morgans and German Coach, but decidedly more Percherons and French Draft. There is a small increase in Belgians and Hackneys. PUREBRED STALLIONS OF EACH BREED Breed 1917 1916 Percheron * 435 405 Standardbred 67 82 French Draft 61 45 American Saddle 24 24 Belgian 21 18 German Coach 19 21 Thoroughbred 7 7 Shire 6 6 French Coach 4 4 Hackney 3 2 Morgan 1 2 Total 648 616 IMPORTANCE OF TRANSFERS The Registry Board has found it necessary to make a strict ruling that purebred licenses cannot be issued on registry certificates unless such cer- tificates are made out to the present owners of the animal, or else are ac- companied by satisfactory evidence that the animal has been transferred to 16 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board the present owner on the books of the association in which it is registered. If a stallion has a purebred license, owners of registered mares will naturally breed their mares to him, expecting no trouble in getting the off- spring registered. If, however, it happens that the owner of this stallion has bought him from another person after he was registered and has failed to see that the seller had him transferred by the secretary of that particular breed association, there will be considerable difficulty in registering the colts. It is to avoid such trouble, and to protect owners of registered mares or jennets, as the case may be, that the Registry Board makes this rule. What is true of stallions and jacks is true of all classes of livestock. The buyer of registered stock should always insist upon the seller having such stock duly transferred to the new owner by the secretary of the asso- ciation. Some associations require a small transfer fee, while others do not. INSPECTION FOR SOUNDNESS The stallion law of Oklahoma does not require that animals be in- spected for soundness before giving them licenses. A license shows the breeding of an animal, but says nothing whatever as to soundness. If a man wants his stallion or jack inspected, however, the Registry Board will send a qualified man to do it, and if the animal is sound a certificate of soundness is given the owner. Such a certificate may then be used in ad- vertising the horse, but until then the law does not allow him to advertise his horse as being sound. Greater use should be made of this provision for inspection than has been the custom in the past. The law was made optional in the beginning in order that it might not work too great a hardship on owners of unsound animals, and yet give the owners of sound stock a chance to use the name of the State in advertising. Strict stallion laws of neighboring States are driving a great deal of unsound stock into Oklahoma. FAKE PEDIGREES During the past year sixty-five applications for licenses have been re- ceived for stallions and jacks with fake pedigrees. These animals were all registered, and their owners expected purebred licenses, but the fact that they were not recorded in recognized associations prevented their getting such licenses. In some cases it was possible to give a grade license, while in still others a scrub license was the best that could be given. Many of the Middle West States had stallion laws before Oklahoma did, and it is very natural that many stallions with fake pedigrees should have found their way from those States into Oklahoma. Owners of such animals have in some. cases expressed dissatisfaction upon being refused purebred licenses. The only way to avoid disappointment in the future is to buy no stallion or jack without knowing him to be registered in a recog- nized association, a list of such associations being given elsewhere in this report. The Registry Board is qualified and willing to inspect any registra- tion papers that are sent to it. The non-recognized associations are not recognized by most stallion boards. If the OJklahoma Livestock Registry Board recognized any of these so-called fake associations it would throw the State open, and stal- lions and jacks that could get a license would be sent here after # they had been refused in some other State. The Oklahoma Livestock Registry Law in this way affords protection to stallion and jack owners and prospective purchasers. Many of these fake associations are refused licenses for the reason that their requirements for registration are too lenient. The man who goes out to buy a jack or stallion should take the follow- ing percautions: Second Annual Report 17 1. See that the color, markings and description given on the pedigree corresponds with the actual color and markings of the horse. 2. That age given on the registry certificate should check with age as shown by teeth. These inspections should be made carefully as alterations, changes and erasures are often found. 3. If in doubt as to whether or not the stallion or jack is recorded in a reliable registry association, seek the services of the Oklahoma State Lievstock Registry Board before completing your purchase. GREAT DIFFERENCE IN COUNTIES Certain counties have so many more licensed animals than others that it is hard to account for the great difference. Caddo county leads with 87 licenses, and Lincoln county is next, having 81. On the other hand, we find only one in Latimer county and two in Love county. While it is true that the central and northwest portions of the State pay more attention to the raising of horses and mules than the southeast portion, yet much of the difference is no doubt due to the fact that in certain localities a larger per- cent of the stallions and jacks hold licenses than in other localities. It will be noticed that in the following table the number of purebred stallions does not correspond with the number given in the table of breeds. This is because the table of counties gives the total number of licenses issued, some of which have been transferred during the year, making it necessary to issue two licenses for the same animal. The table of breeds shows the actual number of purebred stallions which have been licensed. LIST OF COUNTIES WITH NUMBER OF STALLIONS AND JACKS LICENSED IN EACH Purebred Grade Scrub Purebred Scrub Total Total County Stallions Stallions Stallions Jacks Jacks Stallions Jacks Adair 11 6 8 11 14 Alfalfa 24 2 4 9 9 30 18 Atoka 1 5 2 5 Beaver 21 13 10 17 8 44 25 Beckham 9 9 7 8 18 15 Blaine 18 7 11 12 7 36 19 Bryan 11 3 12 15 5 26 20 Caddo 25 13 18 20 11 56 31 Canadian 22 4 6 7 5 32 12 Carter 4 2 2 4 4 Cherokee 1 5 7 9 6 16 Choctaw 3 4 7 3 7 14 10 4 2 2 4 6 6 Cleveland 7 13 11 18 10 31 28 Coal 4 4 11 4 9 19 13 Comanche 5 12 9 7 2 26 9 Cotton .. 7 8 8 6 9 23 15 Craig 18 7 5 7 12 30 19 Creek 3 6 1 5 9 6 Custer 24 3 7 8 4 34 12 8 Delaware 5 2 2 6 8 Dewey 21 7 8 9 8 36 17 Ellis 7 6 4 3 1 17 4 Garfield 22 6 4 18 7 32 25 Garvin 5 13 15 10 11 33 21 Grady 17 8 14 18 13 39 31 Grant 19 4 6 6 7 29 13 Greer 7 6 2 7 5 15 12 Harmon 8 2 2 2 17 7 Harper 7 8 2 2 4 17 6 Haskell 6 1 5 6 ' 6 12 12 Hughes 10 3 13 12 15 26 27 Jackson 5 6 14 5 16 25 21 Jefferson 4 2 9 6 7 15 13 Johnston 3 7 2 10 4 12 14 Kay 12 5 6 5 8 23 13 Kingfisher 20 8 4 15 6 32 21 Kiowa .... 8 7 15 9 10 30 19 18 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Purebred Grade Scrub Pii rf*hi*<=»r1 X til cui cu q 1 Total Total County Stallions Stallions Stallions Jacks T°rk j a s Stallions Jacks 1 1 Leflore 5 4 14 4 17 23 21 Lincoln — 19 12 8 30 12 39 42 Logan 13 13 15 19 16 41 35 Love 1 1 1 1 2 7 10 6 17 McCurtain 2 4 2 4 6 6 Mcintosh 5 3 1 1 2 11 19 13 Major 10 3 2 3 4 15 7 Marsnall 1 4 7 8 5 12 13 Mayes 6 4 6 5 17 16 22 Murray .. . 4 1 2 1 9 7 10 Muskogee 6 3 4 9 6 13 15 Noble 1 7 11 8 15 10 36 25 Nowata — 4 5 4 9 2 13 11 Okfuskee 4 7 5 5 11 10 Uklahoma 18 8 5 14 9 31 23 Okmulgee 1 4 5 1 4 10 r O Osage 6 1 2 2 4 9 o Ottawa — 5 2 4 6 2 1 1 Q o Pawnee 1 1 7 if 7 6 23 13 Payne *Pittsburg 1 7 1 3 1 o Q O A 9 90 7 4 9 8 6 20 1 A Pontotoc 4 3 13 9 15 20 24 Pottawatomie 16 4 9 17 15 29 Oa Pushmataha 3 2 4 3 6 Koger Mills 3 4 4 O A 2 Rogers 13 1 O /: o 7 90 13 Seminole . . 3 5 14 8 4 22 1 o C 1 hequoyan 2 4 13 5 20 1 o OA. Stephens 7 7 6 10 16 20 26 10 5 7 9 8 22 17 5 3 3 4 8 7 Tulsa 6 1 6 7 6 Wagoner 5 1 2 3 8 3 Washington 8 5 4 13 4 Washita 10 9 4 7 5 23 12 Woods 12 7 3 4 5 22 9 Woodward 7 1 8 Total 659 349 516 574 551 1524 1125 *Pittsburg county has one crossbred stallion. State of Arkansas has one purebred jack licensed. 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C ° 2 cjjf o d s - . 2c« to 1 ■13 20 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board c c sees o # o o o o o ^ _2 g ca c.2 c 2.2.2 2 to c 'Co . O'o O'o O'y'o'G'D . «r* ^ O o o >>-r; oiSo^oooob?? b'-C to 'Sb'Sb y >»'5, >>"S) >> S 'Sb'Sb'Sc o ^ o >. ° «2«22«tf 2 rt 2^2222* ^y«yy y y yyy« c 5 a S a & S°o i o £ o jj & a &3*S£o fi t! c c c 5 c C fl C C C'C C C g< 2 B ««<:o<;<<;«.«9 Q „ BSoS3=JS.«2o£«5g?l38'3o. ico ffi >h c/) |> S M < M J ffi J in in C3 ^ 10 W j_i ■ 5f b-s^-ss G 22 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Breeding Horses for Profit BY W. L. BLIZZARD In general throughout the horse markets, and also over the farming districts, one will find many horses that are lacking in the good points that are so characteristic of a long-lived, long-enduring workhorse. Many of the horses have poor quality, lacking in depth of body and depth of flank and cleanness of bone. But are people not coming to the conclusion that such horses do not pay for their feed, and are they not trying to dispose of the same, hence the market is overstocked with horses of no particular in- dividual merit. The European countries have given the American farmers and breeders an opportunity to dispose of a lot of the worthless light truck horses, and because they cannot get all of what they want, they are taking what they can get at the cheapest price. There will never be a ready mar- ket for the scrub, and the horsemen in general are realizing that fact and are not going to breed that class of livestock. The European war is a stimulating agent for the draft horse industry of the United States. It is Oklahoma's and America's opportunity to breed good draft horses. Older countries have taught us to breed only good stock, and now is our chance and opportunity to put into practice that which we have learned by observation. The Oklahoma horse breeder can improve the average crop of colts by attention to mating animals that in every way "nick". The next step should be a more rigid selection of stal- lions to mate with the purebred mares and grades throughout the country. The large breeders can more easily cope with this problem. It is hard for the small breeder to find suitable sires. The small breeder can best solve this problem by "community breeding". It is also necessary to have a good mare if yau expect to raise good draft horses. If you do not own the right kind, sell the wrong kind and buy the good kind. Next, breed them to the right kind of a sire. The service fee may be $5.00 to $10.00 more, but there will be more than $5.00 to $10.00 difference in the colt sired by the best stallion when they are of selling age. Sell your horses when you find a buyer at a fair price. This is the rule of successful breeders. Don't get over-stocked so that you cannot provide proper shelter, feed and care. If you have several good brood mares, stock will accumulate if you do not sell at the proper time. It is much more profitable to take good care of a few than to give poor care to a large number. A mistake that is often made in breeding horses is for the farmer to breed the kind that suit shis fancy and does not suit the market demands. He argues that for his own use he prefers a horse that will weigh about. 1,200 pounds, and for this reason he will have horses of about this weight. This may be all right if he is growing them for his own use. H he regards a heavy draft horse as too large for his purpose, it may be all right for him to grow the kind that suits him; but if he is growing horses with a view to selling them when they reach a salable age, surely it is the best plan to grow the kind that will bring the highest dollar. If the farmer will recog- nize and avoid these mistakes and grow horses such as the market wants and will pay for, and avoid haphazard breeding without purpose, there is Second Annual Report 23 every reason why horse-breeding can be made a profitable branch of farming. Most farms have good pastures on which the growing horses can secure their exercise, which is essential to the making of good horses, and the farmer by keeping the bulk of his farm-power in the form of mares suitable for breeding, can make them pay their way outside of the matter of raising colts for sale. To grow the right kind of horses for which the farm is best adapted, and which will at the same time bring a good price, it is necessary that the mares kept on the farm shall have good scale, weighing from 1,500 pounds and upward, and that they shall be bred to a really good sire that will pro- duce colts which, when properly fed and cared for, will mature into horses considerably heavier than their dams. One thing must be borne in mind, and that is we are living in a pro- gressive age, and a progressive county, where the man who can produce the best article will realize the best market price, and the man who cannot compete with him will be forced to drop out. The people generally want better horses than they have heretofore been satisfied with, and the man who can supply this demand will reap the reward. "Try to make the horse you raise as good as any of his kind." Stay by one breed. The man who begins with one breed of horses and then suddenly introduces another breed as a cross, loses everything he has gained in the first cross, and by his own action deliberately kicks down and to pieces all he built before. To breed drafters of weight and quality you must mate "big stallions with big mares" and "feed and grow them". There is no other way it can be done, and you cannot breed good sellers from great, rough, unsound horses; mares or stallions. Quality sells for just as much in a drafter as it does in a Hackney. The drafter must be sound and have size, shape, substance, quality and action. The day of specialism is upon us in the horse business. Never did buyers feel like discriminating more keenly than they do now. Therefore the man who raises horses in the next few years must use good judgment or he will come out a loser. 24 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Raisjng Draft Horses in Oklahoma BY L. A. HAMPTON & SON Although the draft horse business in Oklahoma is in it's infancy, it is fast growing to maturity. Oklahoma, as all other new States, in its wild and unsettled days, was filled with cattlemen, cowboys, and consequently with ponies, but along with civilization came the heavier and better class of horses. Within the past twenty-five years Oklahoma has grown from the pony stage to a State with a large number of good draft horses. In almost every community you can find many good grade drafters and even a large number of breeders of purebred draft horses. To my mind the greatest thing for the draft horse in Oklahoma is its stallion law and the Livestock Registry Board. In the early days of the State, horses were sold and stood, and represented to be whatever the owners wished to call them; so the consequence was that the country was filled with all kinds of horses. Under the present law the stallion owner is compelled to give the correct blood of his horse, thus giving his custom- ers an exact idea of what to expect in their colts. It also gives the stallion man protection in the way of collecting his fees. There is no reason why we should not raise as good horses in Okla- homa as in any other State, for we can grow almost any kind of feed here that can be grown in any other State, and alfalfa makes two more crops each year than in the Northern States. As there is nothing better for young drafters than alfalfa, we have the advantage of the much-famed Northern States for raising good drafters. There is a reason for the change from the pony to the heavy drafter, and that is this: The properly built draft horse, weighing from 1,400 pounds upward, will live and stay fat on the same or very little more feed than the old saddle pony, and when you go to sell him he will bring from two to three times as much. When you keep him on the farm he can pull nearly twice the load, and as the range days of Oklahoma are about over, we need the horse that can pull, and not the pony that can out-run and throw a long-horn steer. I have been speaking of the good grade horse, but I will go farther and say that the same feed which keeps the 1,400-pound grade will keep the 1,800-pound registered drafter, and when you sell him he will bring from twice to three times as much as his grade brother; so why raise scrubs or even grades? How many of us would be willing to go back to the old farm tools used by our grandfathers? The same is true of the horse. While we have made great strides in the last decade, we will make still greater ones in the next. I have been greatly impressed with our State Fair the last few years. Until the last few years our fair was the northern man's draft horse show. They came and brought what they pleased and took our ribbons, and also our money, but now it is different. We can make things so warm for them that they seldom come, and when they do we give them a horse show. When they do not come, we can and do have a creditable horseshow from our own State. Watch the draft horse in Oklahoma in the future and see him take what belongs to him. Second Annual Report 25 Fitting and Feeding Horses for Show BY A. D. OUTHIER Fitting horses for show is a work of love and devotion. You cannot care for your charges and make the personal sacrifice for their comfort and education unless you love them. It is a work of care and love and devotion for which one must sacrifice his personal comfort and rest and sleep in order that his horses may confide in him and trust him, and respond to treatment with thrift and growth and glossy coats, so that when they are put through their different paces and poses of training they will com- ply with graceful and pleasing manners. The assembling of a show herd is so closely interwoven with its care and feeding that I cannot resist going back a little further. You appreciate the fact that it is courting defeat to bestow good care and feed upon an unworthy animal. If you are breeding this show herd, be sure that the sire is big, sound, massive, of correct conformation, full of quality, power and energy. The dams of your breeding herd should be medium to large in size, with great feminine quality and almost speakable intelligence (the sour mare with drooping lip never produced a show horse), indicated by a large, expressive eye and quick, alert ear. The above qualities should be theirs by inheri- tance in order that they may be transmitted to the offspring. If the herd is to be assembled by selection, then the trained mind and accurate eye is necessary for best results. We will assume now that we have our herd assembled, that we have one animal, and sometimes two or more, for every class available, and that they are all in good, clean, comfortable quarters, with abundance of good, fresh, pure water available, and with great abundance of sweet, sound feed suitable for your herd sire, your dams that are suckling foals and carrying the future foal; for the growing stallions and fillies and the suckling and weanling foals. The time to commence on a show herd is the day after you return from the fairs. But we assume that it is now springtime and you are just commencing your fitting. I would recommend that first the shoes, if any, should be re- moved from all horses, their feet trimmed closely, letting them go unshod for at least four weeks, and giving the feet a chance to spread. Then shoe with thin plates for about sixty days, and then you will be ready for show shoes to suit your different horses. While your mares and young things are on wheat and early grass, feed little grain, if any, giving the blood a chance to cool and all humors re- moved, then you will be ready to commence gradually with grain and roughage and soon have them under full swing, with feed, grooming and training to suit each individual of the group as his wants may require. And here is where eternal vigilance and experience make for good. Study the likes and dislikes, and the kind of feed necessary for each animal and see that they get it. As to just what kinds of feed, opinions may differ, so they will not be discussed. While this feeding and caring for feet is going on you must not neglect the training. Many a good horse meets defeat on account of his bad man- agement and awkward position in the show ring. Learn how to braid your horses; learn the colors that harmonize with the gray and black, and fix them up in a neat and attractive manner. - To summarize. — Have your horses well grown, fat and well groomed, beautifully decorated, and trained to the highest degree of perfection. If your horses are good ones, you stand an even break in getting your share of the ribbons. Second Annual Report 27 Care of Brood Mare and Foal BY W. L. BLIZZARD Every farmer should have the ambition to not only raise the best crops, but to raise the best stock of all kinds, and especially horses. If he has the best teams in the neighborhood they will attract a great deal of attention. The farmer's son will certainly be interested a great deal in a fine team of mares and the colts they raise. It would stimulate and encourage him to put forth his best efforts for their care and management. It is generally conceded that not more than half of the horses in this State are of the right type, conformation, quality and action; that is, not more than half of the horses are being raised to meet the demands of the market. The horse- raiser should keep in mind the market demands. There are many who have the idea that the average farmer cannot succeed in raising draft horses. This is a great mistake and without foundation. By the exercise of ordi- nary intelligence, draft horses are as easy to raise as any other stock on the farm. Much depends upon the breeding, care and feeding. The Brood Mare In raising horses it is certainly necessary to have the right breeding stock. In selecting the breeding stock we must keep in mind the old rule, like produces like. This principal applies to the brood mare as well as to the stallion. The bad qualities in the mare are as likely to appear in the colt as are the undesirable qualities possessed by the stallion. The influence of the mare in transmission of qualities to the colt is, as a rule, very much underestimated, and sometimes entirely ignored. The farmer who keeps worthless mares for breeding will not be able to compete with his neighbor who keeps only the best brood mares, even though they both use the same stallion. Once in a while he may get a very fine colt from an inferior mare, but this is very rarely the case, and no one can afford to breed horses for this exceptional chance of getting a good one. Feed and Care of Brood Mare Mares, if they are worth keeping, are entitled to the best of feed and care. A question of combining feeds that will give good results is one of the most importance. A combination of several feeds has the following advantages: (1) Furnishes succulence and, if properly combined, will add bulk; (2) gives variety and therefore increases palatability ; (3) should fur- nish a balanced ration. The question of combining feeds that are economical is no doubt the most important at this time. On most farms some or all of the following feeds are available for the brood mare: Corn, barley, oats, kafir, bran, oil meal, alfalfa hay, oat straw, sudan hay and paririe hay. A few suggestions in feeding these feeds to mares are as follows: Corn and alfalfa hay are a good combination for the work horse, but have a tendency to heat during hot weather, and they do not furnish suf- ficient protein for the mare. Oats and bran, with a little corn and kafir added, come nearer filling the bill and counteract the tendency to heat. 28 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Corn, barley or kafir will give better results if c'ombined with some oats, bran and a little oil meal. Oats added to any of these feeds will increase their efficiency. Oats alone is a better feed than either corn, kafir or barley by themselves. Oats and bran combined, half and half, are especially well suited for a brood mare and growing horses or mules. The following combination of feeds has been found entirely satisfac- tory for feeding the brood mare: Ground or rolled oats 40 pounds Bran ! 40 pounds Chopped hay 20 pounds The feeds, oats and bran, make an excellent combination. Bran is es- pecially good as a conditioner. The chopped hay or chaff may consist of alfalfa hay, sudan hay or bright oat straw. These hays when reduced to a fine-cut form and mixed with a grain not only add bulk to the ration but they reduce the cost. The big mare needs a bulky ration in order to build capacity. After the cut hay has been thoroughly mixed with the grain the whole mixture should be wet with one-sixth water by weight at the time of feeding. A sprinkling of oil meal added to this ration will increase its ef- ficiency. The quantity of feed that the mare will consume should be regu- lated by the way in which she cleans it up. The mares should be fed in such a way that they will always have a keen appetite. The feeder should study his mares carefully, and he can govern the amount that they need largely by the way the mares are doing. It is advisable to give the mare a bran mash every Saturday night. The bran mash will consist of 1^4 to 2 gallons of bran, to which have been added 2 to 4 ounces of epsom salts, dampened with warm water. This bran mash helps to keep the mare in good condition and loosens the hide. No mare can be expected to do well if she is hidebound. If the skin and flesh handles well it is the best indica- tion that she is doing well. Some advocate feeding hay once a day, others not over twice. If cut hay is added to the grain ration properly, once a day feeding of hay will be sufficient. There is no certain amount that can be provided, but they should receive about what they will clean up, as this is generally what they need. The hay should be bright and of good quality and free from dust. Do not feed one kind of hay one day and another the next. Changes are not advisable, but if necessary they should be gradual. The most satisfactory way of providing salt is to keep it before them at all times. The pure salt is the best. A careful feeder can supply salt by adding it to the grain ration, but when it shows up as brine in wet feed, too much is being given. The Foal From three-fifths to three-fourths of the total growth of the horse is made by the foal in the first year of its existence. Of the remaining por- tion of the growth, about half is completed during the second year, while the rest is distributed over the third, fourth and fifth years. It is only dur- ing the first two years that the rate of growth can be perceptibly influenced by generous feeding and good care. After that but very little influence can be exerted in this direction except in respect to bringing about more thick- ening and promoting muscular development. A foal learns to eat grain quickest with its mother. The foal should have some feed as quick as he will eat it, which will be in less than a month's time. Feed the foal about all he will eat of the following mixture before and after weaning time: Ground oats 37 z / 2 pounds Bran 37 J / 2 pounds Chopped pat straw, timothy hay or sudan hay 25 pounds Second Annual Report 29 Add a sprinkling of oil meal and dampen with one-sixth water at feeding time, by weight, and mix thoroughly. When cut alfalfa, hay is used, feed 20 pounds of alfalfa to a 100 pounds mixture, using more oats than bran, of the grain. The cut hay in this mixture, in addition to improving the ration, re- duces the cost and build capacity. In addition he will nibble a little at hay after he is a few months old, especially if he is not on grass. Supply some good, bright alfalfa hay that is free from dust. Other hays, such as sudan and prairie, are very desirable. Give the foal the best and brightest hay on the farm. If on grass, give a little dry hay. It is a mighty good thing to feed grain on the grass. It will give you greater profits for your grain than will the elevator. Draft horses were never developed on grass alone. Weaning time is an important crisis in a colt's career. You cannot make draft horses by allowing the colt to lose his colt fat after weaning time and to live in a cornstalk field or on wheat pasture the first winter. If you have given him the proper care up to five or six months, he will be eating almost the grain ration of a grown horse. Give him the best of hay along with the grain ration recommended for him previous to weaning. It is a ruinous policy to rough colts through winter on coarse, non-nutritious straw and hay. At weaning time take the colts away from their mothers, running them all together. They seem to do better and will eat grain better if several are kept together. Do not take the colt away from its mother gradually, but a better way is to never allow him to nurse after he has been taken away — he should quit nursing at once. In addition to proper feeding, it is likewise necessary to protect the young, growing colt againts every possible chance of discomfort and un- health that would tend to retard his growth. Shelter therefore must be suf- ficient, disease must be fought against, lice and mange must be prevented from sapping the constitution, and there should be plenty of fresh air and sunlight. Catch and hold when three or four days old. Teach him that you are master. The general custom is to wait until the colt is two or three years old and then place him in between two or three horses on a gangplow, and he finally becomes of some service, but he is not broken. It is more apt to make him headstrong and unruly. This custom will not make a good work- horse that is a pleasure to work. Halter-break while young. This lesson will not be forgotten. Remem- ber, it is not necessary to drag a colt by the hand in order to persuade him to lead. Generally the harder a colt is pulled the harder he pulls back. The first time a colt is tied, sec that the halter and rope will hold, for once he breaks loose he never forgets it and will try it again. Give the horse a liberal education in handling, breaking, etc., throughout his growing period and when the buyer comes along he is more apt to sell because: (1) He is apt to be worth more; (2) the owner has better opportunity to show him be- cause he has been taught to carry himself in the right manner; (3) the pur- chaser has a better opportunity to estimate the real merit that he possesses. Handle his feet and take good care of them. Teach the colt in the be- ginning to allow you to handle his feet. These lessons are not forgotten. If the colt has his feet held and trimmed for the first time when he is two or three years old, or older, it will be more than one man's job. The colt's feet should be trimmed every four to six weeks if they are properly taken care of. There are more unsound horses made through neglect and lack of care of the feet than through natural deficiency of conformation. Note the colt's feet occasionally, and if they are growing too long or out of shape, trim them, keep them level and not too high at the heels. High contracted •heels are apt to cause sidebones to develop. The edges of the hoof wall 30 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board should be rasped so as to prevent the foot from splitting. A pair of hoof pincers, a knife^ rasp, plenty of energy and willingness to do the work, to- gether with a little care in trimming, are the things it takes to keep the colt's feet in the proper shape. You will find that the colt will grow larger, become more robust, and have decidedly better feet if you keep him out of doors most of the time, that is, when it is not too hot, or when the flies are not bad. He certainly needs plenty of fresh air as well as good feed and exercise. Do not tease. Teasing or making a pet out of a colt has a tendency to cause them to be ill-natured or slow and lazy. Do not allow the colt to follow in the field. A colt will do much better during hot weather and fly-time if he is kept in a box stall in the daytime and allowed to run with his mother at night in the pasture. The colt will also do much better if he is not allowed to follow his mother from one end of the field to the other every day or upon a dusty road. No colt will make two or three pounds gain a day under these conditions. The handling, feeding and care of mule colts is right in line with the suggestions contained in this article. Selling Percherons BY J. H. JACKSON The first requisite in selling Percherons is to produce them. In pro- ducing them, in order to attain the highest degree of efficiency, great care must be exercised in selecting the foundation stock, and especially the sire. It is truly said that the head of the herd is one-half the herd, and this state- ment is just as true with Percheron horses as with any other breed of live- stock. There are well defined rules outlined for the selection of sires and dams which I will not take time and space to outline here, but which would be cheerfully furnished the beginner by the Livestock Registry Board at Stillwater. Recognizing the characteristics of a good sire or dam some- times requires an experienced eye, and even experienced breeders are some- times sadly disappointed in the results of their most hopeful matings. There is an old saying, "A thing well bought is half sold". This is also true with regard to production, for if you produce a good animal you always have buyers for him without much effort on your part, while to sell an in- ferior Percheron requires good salesmanship. To sell an animal you must first find the buyer, and what is the most effectual and economical way of bring buyer and seller together is a ques- tion which has puzzled many of us. My opinion is, to exhibit your stock at the district, county and state fairs, together with a card setting forth the kind and quality of the stock you have for sale, carried in some farm jour- nal which has a good circulation in the territory where your buyers are most likely to come from, are the most effectual agents. There are other means of advertising, such as handbills, posters and business cards, which are inexpensive and often bring good results. 32 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board The Stallion and Jack During and Out of the Breeding Season BY W. L. BLIZZARD Many stallions are at least partially ruined between seasons. This is due to improper feeding and care. Some men starve their stallions after the breeding season on the theory that they cannot afford to feed liberally when there is no income. This is certainly a mistake. It does not even result in a saving of feed, as it will cost more to put the horse back into the proper condition when the breeding season opens. It is cheaper to keep a horse in good flesh all the time than to allow him to run down during a part of the year and then by heavy feeding for a few months bring him back to the required condition. Many stallions as the breeding season approaches are fed too high and exercised too little, and as a result they are fat and soft. Some are not put on feed until the season begins, then they are crowded under the impression that a horse gaining flesh is improving in breeding qualities, but this is not so. To keep the horse in good breeding condition all the time is what the man feeding the stallion should strive to do. Crushed oats and bran, with good hay, is hard to beat. Ground corn br kafir, together with plenty of bran and oil meal, also makes a splendid ra- tion. Horses that are overfed on corn or kafir are never sure foal-getters. Bran is always a valuable supplement to any grain ration. It relaxes the system generally, corrects or prevents digestive disorders, and at the same time furnishes an abundance of bone and tissue-building material. Soft, warm bran mashes once or twice a week will serve to keep the bowels in good condition, and a little epsom salts may be added. Roots should be provided in some form during the fall and winter seasons. They certainly help to keep the stallion in good condition and to keep his digestive tract in a good, healthy condition. In the springtime a few pounds of grass or other green feed may take their place. Some people regard green feed not good for the breeding stallion, but if it is given before the breeding season opens, so that the horse is accustomed to it, it will prove more beneficial than detrimental. The stallion can be brought into the desirable physical condition only by good care and feed throughout the entire year. Conditioning a stallion is not laying on flesh, but it is getting him in good health, improving his muscles and putting plenty of vigor and vitality into him. The amount of grain that should be fed horses will vary so much in their requirements that it is difficult to name any definite quantity which a horse should have as a daily ration. It should be regulated by the man feeding the horse, and should be governed by the capacity and needsofthe horse. A stallion should not be given more than he will clean up within a half hour after feeding. Always leave him a little hungry. Do not over- feed on hay, as it is not necessary to crowd the horse full of hay all the time. Do not stuff his manger full of hay once or twice a day and allow him to eat till he cleans it up. That is a poor way to feed hay. Chopped hay, mixed with the grain, increases the efficiency of the ration. The horse should be supplied with plenty of good, fresh, clean water. During the hot Second Annual Report 33 weather the horse should be watered quite frequently. Overfeeding and little or no exercise tends to cause swollen legs, scratches, grease, and a wet stall causes thrush and canker. Watch the horse's sheath, for if it becomes foul it may cause consid- erable trouble. This can easily be prevented by washing the sheath out with bran which has been mixed with water, about the same as you mix a bran mash; also add a little potassium permanganate. By cleansing out the sheath occasionally with this preparation it is much easier to ward off disease. When you have done your part, so far as feeding is concerned, remem- ber that the horse needs exercise. If you have a paddock in which he can run, so much the better. If there is no other way to furnish exercise, the horse should be walked. He must have exercise if you expect results form him. A horse that is confined is not a very sure foal-getter. The very best exercise for a stallion is to work him daily at some light work. If every stallion received a moderate amount of exercise, the number of foals would increase from 10% to 20%. Keep him in a well-lighted stable, and do not have him alone away from the other horses. Another thing some people forget is grooming. Frequent and thor- ough grooming is very essential to keep the stallion comfrotable and the skin in good, healthy condition. The above information applies to the jack as well as to the stallion. 34 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Second Annual Report 36 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board Registered Purebred Stallions and Jacks CLASSIFIED ACCORDING TO BREEDS AND IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER LIST OF BELGIAN STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 19U NAME AND NUMBER Ami de Puers 7363 (72974) Bijou D Otrange 1622 (24698) Caranval 4301 Caesar D Aeltre 3612 Coriola U. 3366 (46618) Coy 1851 Cruze 5792 Dud 7499 Fiermenneke 6095 (65158; ... Heritage 8375 (82508) - Honest John 8^29 Lion II De Vynckt 6757 Maroc De Hamel 3910 Midnight 4861 Moselli 5117 (58726) Mourzonk De Jehay 3594 (42282) Nectar 5328 (58254) Orphelin 4804 (38252) Porthos XIII 995 Provost 6773 Robert De Rebecq (32750).. OWNER POSTOFFICE COUNTY Dowell, W. S Welch Craig ' Will, Caas. N Hennessey Kingfisher Mastersori, H. L Watonga Blaine Hamilton Bros Medford Grant Haney, J. T— Big Cabin Craig Whitehead, Clinton Bailey Grady Schooling, R. N Fort Cobb Caddo Biehler, Chas. H Omega Kingfisher Rjjthes, J. A Geary Blaine Lloyd & McCallum Laverne Harper Every, R. P Kingfisher Kingfisher Corbett & Todd Bradley Grady Sturgeon, C. M Ames Major Cassel, D. E Chetopa, Kans. Craig Hughey, L. R Alva Alfalfa Tippie & Osborne ... Pryor Mayes Pruett, C. E. & G. E.. Piedmont Canadian Ketch, Chas. S Kingfisher Kingfisher Staats, F. B Indiahoma Comanche Pierce, W. I Chetopa, Kans. Craig Lewis, J. B Wanette Pottawatomie LIST OF FRENCH COACH STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 Marquette 3834 Hanev, J. T Big Cabin Marquette 3981 Scrivncr, C. O Stonewall Paganine 3512 Bryan, Frank S Perkins Violent 2877 Fitzpatrick, A. C Verden Craig Pontotoc Payne Grady LIST OF FRENCH DRAFT STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 Aristo 12007 (3415) VVyatt & Sons. R. F Orlando Noble Babylon 21907 Fry & Co., Z Claremore ^ogers Banker 19051 Walker, E. E Cherokee Alfalfa Barney 21358 White, J. W Glencoe Payne Bazar 26052 Sneed, Mat Putnam Dewey Benton 21624 Jones, G. M Albert Caddo Benton 22733 Beber, A Putnam Dewey Bentown Jake 17956 Pilgrim, Jno. & Harris R... Ramona Washington Big Ben 26107 Troyer, J. J Choteau Mayes Black Boy 12148 Harrah, J. T Stillwater A ayne Bovard 28467 Hagan, Fred Quinlan Woodward Bowden 12499 Hamilton Bros Medford Grant Boynton Prince 22524 Bohan, P. J Caldwell, Kans. Bruce 24732 Wildrick, G. E Big Cabin Craig Butser 19963 Barker, W. B Balko Beaver Casino 29942 Schwemby, J W Sparks Lincoln Coco L. 23582 Madison, Joseph F Big Cabin Crai" Conquerant 14869 Wilson, Albert Dover Kingfisher Cremiux 14891 Parker, B. F Orlando Logan Second Annual Report 37 NAME AND NUMBER Dejon 14698 (668) Denis 13680 (60274) Dewey 13726 Dicktro 27575 Dicteur 27577 Douglas G. 24939 Duke of Normandy IT 18234 Eagle 28244 .'. Ford 27767 General Sealem 27428 Grey Tom 15998 Grossaint 22575 Handy Jack 18928 Headlight Vesta 28440 Jerome 11771 • Jupiter 27121 ivaiser 28415 Lon U. 23454 Mac Boy 25949 Mack Williams 13858 Maxwell 21137 Monarch 22092 Omar 28673 Padock 12359 (6004) Patton 25392 Paul 15341 Perfection 18731 Picador 24501 Prince Albert 25874 Rantoul 11833 OWNER Madison, J Hunter, T. tond, - re< Decker, G. Irvinj P., Jr. Ractus 22295 Reco 23448 Reuben 27703 Robert 16758 Rufus Rastus 16606 ... Saint Paul 14941 See Bright 20543 Starlight France 24949 Valseur 13648 (59122) Vernon 14412 Victrola 19341 Woodrow 28135 Urban, 1 Davis, J. McWhirt, Stephens & E Akin, Dave McCoun, Os< Nestor, W. L Rasmussen, 1 Bryan, T. A Crawford, R. Wilson, J. A Alexander, E. N Kermeen, lames Brooks, I. N Tohnson, S. B Turner, B. F Lett, A. Q Ecasley, R. L Lawson, G. S Vandeveer, J Page, G. Z Tones, Tesse B Wallace', J. S Aydelotte Horse Imp. Association Crawford & Chocklc- Brown, J. ( Koelsch, S. Wagne K E Nighswoncer, Rhea, J. L... POSTOFFICE COUNTY Big Cabin Craig Leedey Roger Mills Fort Cobb Caddo Taloga Dewey .. Arapaho Custer ..Tecumseh Pottawatomie .. Avard Woods Pond Creek Grant Wann Nowata Stuart Hughes ..Ma u d Pottawatomie Texas . LaKemp Beaver Perkins Payne Clarita Coal Dewey Wasshington Canton Blaine . Amorita Alfalfa Mountain Park ]\ \ f) \y -j Sulphur IVI Li ri'ciy Okeenc Maine Sulphur Murray Elliott Nowata .Homestead Blaine Llarcmore Rogers .Norman Cleveland Carney Lincoln .. I )elsware Nowata Hooker Texas Meeker Pottawatomie Madison Beaver Bliss Noble .Moore Cleveland Butler Custer Shawnee Pottawatomie Tryon Lincoln .Dover Kingfisher ..Crescent Logan Alva Woods Little Seminole Renf row drant Hunter Garfield LIST OF GERMAN COACH STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 Apollo 2641 Griswold, P. B Agra Aster II 4873 Cockburn, Jerry Cruce Autor 4339 Ruckcr, E. N Cookson Cavalier 5003 Bantock, H Walter Dutch 5417 Darnall, Hal TI Longdate Ebolo 4007 Pitt, J. L Duncan Freitag 4421 Murphcy, J. D Guthrie Heifer 5165 Scott, W. E Spiro Henry Sanderson 5869 Goodwin, Sid Madill Kosack 1879 Martin, J. D Bluejacket Lorenza 5683 Reynolds, J. A Stigler Mohikaner 3261 Williams, W. M Verden Mohr 5637 Brown, Orvillc Grove Ranger 2309 Jennings, L. T Prague Seebar 5347 Allen & Sorrell Soper Ten Brock 3725 Tucker, J. A Yale Titus 5263 Scott, Chas. E Poteau Wapemut 5185 Ouaid, L. H Milburn Wanderer 5187 Skeen, C. A Pauls Valley Lincoln ^tepnens Caerokee Cotton Blaine Stephens Logan Leflore ■ .arshall Craig Haskell Grady Delaware Lincoln Choctaw Payne Leflore Johnston Garvin 38 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board LIST OF HACKNEY STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 NAME AND NUMBER OWNER POSTOFFICE COUNTY Black Prince 1834 Hill, Fred Tiawah Rogers Dexter 9351 Trosper, Hugh Kiel Kingfisher Kansas Ambition 989 Reigel, Geo. E Jennings Pawnee LIST OF MORGAN STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 Morgan Tige 6662 Woodard, R. N Morse Okfuskee LIST OF PERCHERON STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 Abner 54552 Smith, Tohn Indianapolis Custer Adelbert 91070 Dunn, Wm. M Clarita Coal Albany's Model 97470 Mize, J. S Waurika Jefferson Albino 108347 Maloy, D. F Bearden Okfuskee Alburtus 113695 Maddox, A. D Port Washita Alfalfa Boy 94513 Rogers, G. W Snyder Kiowa Alford 97492 Smelser, W. E Perry Noble Alger 100158 Nicholson, R. E Talala Rogers Alison 55785 Douglas & Curreathers Tester Greer Alonzo 32897 Huffman, A. R Canton Blaine Amos 60017 Fry, J. P Stratford Garvin Arbaces 59728 Chappell, John W Union Canadian Archiduc 109443 Henthorn, A. T Oklahoma City Oklahoma Archie 72652 Brown, J. C Butler Custer Archie 95722 Wicke, Henry Deer Creek Grant Arlatte 54644 Heineman, Chas Clinton Custser Article 48689 Reese, G. A Lenora Dewey Aveze 40581 (48703) Klick, C. E Cherokee Alfalfa Avise 75488 (61543) Bodes Bros Fairmont Garfield Bajardo 68306 (4oj-~„ Riddle, T. L. & Goss, J. W.Maud Pottawatomie Banker 108862 Perry, Jesse Goltry Alfalfa Bard 116314 Grant, Roy Grandfield Luman Barnabe 51867 (66685) Lindsay, J. K Elmore City Garvin Bayard 101414 Dunlap, John R Enid Garfield Bayard, Jr., 119893 Stein, C. T Lexington Cleveland Baymont 52055 Evans, F. E Logan Beaver Bay Prince 69816 Fugate, J. M Cleveland Pawnee Bazan 40138 (52154) Sharp, S. H Konawa Pottawatomie Ben Hur 104441 Jones, Elmer Aledo Dewey Besigue 109027 Wesner, J. C Foss Washita Billie Mondie 61666 Bellomy & Bull Willowbar Cimarron Billy Sunday 94759 Ramseyer, P. S Marshall Logan Bisby 55021 Percheron Horse Co Custer Custer Bismark 62059 Husted, D. L Jefferson Grant Bismark 91489 Mock, J. A Burbank Osage Black Boy 52164 Pierce, F. M Ara Stephens Black Chief 105359 Vian Percheron Horse Co.Vian Sequoyah Black Don 43790 Trosper, Hugh Kiel Kingfisher Black Gordon 72796 Wright, Jesse Renfrow Grant Black Joe 51641 Broderick, Wm Gate Beaver Black Mansfield 41163 McCloskey, Chas Minco Grady Black Prince 15881 Buford & Gilbreath Talala Rogers Bob 104720 Irwin, C. H Blanchard McClain Bob Grivois 94845 Riley, W. H Hinton Caddo Boland 51574 Grunau, J. C. & Hein, J. J. ..Isabella Major Bouvart 90866 Price, Geo. W. & Brown ....Stroud Lincoln Brilliancy 95334 Harper, C. E Ouinlan Woodward Brilliant 85371 Bristow & Patrick Comanche Stephens Brilliant 106446 Coover, Jerry Woodward Woodward Brilliant 69920 Gumerson, G. A Kremlin Garfield Brilliant 54205 Parr, A. J Komalty Kiowa Brilliant 99909 Swartzendruber, V Hydro Caddo Brilliant 6o^ol Wyatt & Sons, R. F Orlando Noble Brilliant Complete 78442 Wagner, Theo Alva Woods Brilliantine 94458 McCune, Toe Tyrone Texas Buster 92941 Bell, T. W Allen Pontotoc Buster 91642 Clegg, Wm. A Pond Creek Garfield Buster 122882 Henthorn, A. J Oklahoma City Oklahoma Bustier 84386 Lovell, G. D Fort Cobb Caddo Caiabi 52290 (6847-, Bellomy & Bull Willowbar Cimarron Caleb 68500 Troyer - J. J Choteau Maves Calypso 68283 Ratzlaff, P. P Meno Major Canton F. S. 49593 Cold Springs Horse Co Cold Springs Kiowa Second Annual Report 39 NAME AND NUMBER OWNER Capper 114154 Smith, L. C. POSTOFFICE Fargo Captain 11094o Neighbors, W. M Meeker Carlysle 53296 Swadley, D. R. ^ J. H Council Hill Carnot 100423 Whitman, E. L Carnegie Carton 52727 (68495) Nichols, P. A Cache Caseur 97037 (45462) Hellman, August Alva Casey 93935 Millhorn, W. S Cushing Casidel 74790 Yoder, J. J Hydro Casino Jr., 84560 Cinnamon & Sons, Geo Garber Casino Jr., 87423 Sudik, Vine Oklahoma City Casino Model 74789 Hampton, L. A Dale Casino Prince 94110 Alguire, D. E Oklahoma City Casinoir 65223 Mosher, L. B Thomas Casius 87424 Shotwell, Orlando Cushing Casner 59106 Henthorn, A. J Oklahoma City Cassio 108536 Colby, S. E. & Sons Fairview Cassius 54472 Williams, W. M Verden Castello 8&9b4 Woolsey, A. B Kildare Castilhon III 49930 Morrison, Edwin Union City Castobel 68286 McCoy, W. S Capron Castor 79885 Harman, M. S Orlando Cedarman 50248 Crossland, W. H Keefeton Cesar 56408 Johnston, Ira Waynoka Cesar 41169 Gorey, R. M Broken Arrow Cesar 25174 (44342) Elliott, Jas. W. & Byrun, , H. B Fairland Charley 51969 Man well, E. H Oklahoma City Chariot 29543 (48934) Holtke, W. F Durant Charmaut 54199 Garman, J. R Fairland Charmer 99907 Exline, E. O Seiling Chartier 61558 Litschke, Fred Enid Chashn 107503 Lanyon, R. J Harrah Cherne 103101 Leske, C. H Calumet (ipion 114152 Davidson, C. H Roosevelt Cleante 58314 Husted, W. E Boyd Coco 110942 Lsvertcn M O Dill Coco 58033 (6^931) Milkr Eros Thomas Coccanut 117170 Frakhage T. H I. glioma Coke 119890 p r j ce q g Keota College Signal 118316 Custer, j. I ' Z.'.Z Cherokee Co onel 77957 Nicholson, R. E ..Talala Colossus 31791 Combination 114309 Conde 113965 Condon 86076 .. Confident 105559 ... Corondo 58618 .... Cotton 27085 (43993) Crom, L. ivl Dill Thresher, Louie Stigler Campbell Bros May Montgomery, - L La Kemp Kershaw, L. R Muskogee Wilbur, J. I Pryor Gooch, Roy E Oakwood Couhmer (66804) Taylor. W. L. Fnck Cowley Boy 61520 Gaylord, M. W Phroso Craftsman 42871 Lowman, Walter ... Oakwood Creston Hugo 128094 Miller. I. A Newby nT Sl2 i?o/c 64514) Sketchley, L P Butler o !, nan e 6 /c 9 A S Bart > E ...Broken Arrow TW»n A 5 7*iV Dunagan, D. w McAlester Deneau 46762 Stokes A C Tulsa Des7rteur 46 5 9 2 8 7 6 S6 ll^i W - =s8Kicfc L/eserteur 5Z756 Mmsell, T. L. . Tuttle &sis? <67666> srrs E - L - : :: i' aK -" BSW ::=:::: P™*' j c:::::::=::::::::::fcr , Z ,,,, ; „ Myers. John Hover Hck Hreeding, J. II Iloldenville fc, ::::::::::: p^ili^ssr=:^ Donald, Jr., 122304 Okla. A. and M. College . .Stillwater Dude 116369 Davidson, R. M Durham Duke Casino 108408 Richardson. Fred Clinton Dutch Boy 40587 Pleasant Hill Horse Co Leedey Eclipse 72912 Lowerv G W c nmn5P i Elector 100028 C nstle V 'f " F l Tnn ehsco 85391 ;;;;;; S w: k::z fLma" El Reno Buster 74152 Lamb, Wm. F ! Banner COUNTY Ellis Pottawatomie Muskogee Caddo Comanche Woods Payne Caddo Garfield Oklahoma Pottawatomie Oklahoma Custer Payne Oklahoma Major Grady Kay Canadian Alfalfa Noble Muskogee Woods Wagoner Ottawa Oklahoma Bryan Ottawa Dewey Garfield Oklahoma Canadian Kiowa Beaver Washita Custer Garfield Haskell Alfalfa Rogers Washita Haskell Harper Beaver Muskogee Mayes Dewey Beckham Major Dewey Creek Custer Tulsa Pittsurg Tulsa .Lllis Grady Beaver Caddo Beaver Kingfisher Hughes Canadian Dewey Crai<» Logan Payne Lincoln Roger Mills Custer Dewey Cimarron Canadian Custer Canadian 40 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board NAME AND NUMBER OWNER POSTOFFICE Empor 106340 Kinnamon, O. P Forgan Enos 76634 Outhier, A. D Homestead Excelsior 89382 Burch, John - Calhoun Farmer Lad 49232 Grunau, J. C, & Hein, J. J.Isaella Farmer Tom 54184 Bradshaw, C. F Centraha Farmer Tom 51320 Dalton, T. VV Carter Favoria 54831 Green, R. E Mmco Fearnaught 59260 Raines, a. M Elmore City Felix 68989 McClure, W Anadarko Fenelon 73873 Xander, M. J... Olustee Feretta 57023 Trosper, Hugh Kiel Flibustier 52011 (6biitj Rarricic, O. T Lamont Forfait 44266 Bodenheimer, M. L.. Cherokee Francia 105214 — - Whitman, E. Lj Carnegie Frank Casino 57585 Irion, Sam Granite Frederick 45942 Day, G. W Moorewood Fringant II 89212 ..... .. ... Pancoast, Arthur Red Rock Fringant 64780 (65i91) Volenstine & Goode Hinton Fritz 55249 (65815) Darney, T. J Pond Creek Gallant 108967 Leach, Lee Yukon Gem 88531 Humphreys, W. R Nash General Grant 75814 Griztmaker, P. L Enid Gerald 104669 Wolf, I. G Quinlan Gillot II 108543 Whitman, E. L Carnegie Gladiator 118314 - Okla. A. and M. College.... Stillwater Globule 52291 (71045) Commercial National Bank..Checotah Golden West 94106 Leverton, M. O Dill Gold Mine 51315 Day, B. D Mayfield Gold Ridge 98658 Clark, Geo. W Seiling Goliath 66252 Bond, Geo. E Gray Gothier 63091 Schuler, J. M Harrah Governor Stubbs 71092 Marsh, narry & xoulson, John Kingfisher Governor Cruce 97803 Thiele, Henry Okeene Grantor 88840 Williams, Mark Minco Grenouillet 59837 (72628).... Miller, A. S Hinton Griggs 75909 Little, W.< R Custer Grippe Sou 92721 (/1953) .... Taggart Bros Waukomis Grivois 70807 Perry, Jesse Goltry Gustave 77673 Wheelock, Ed S Watonga Guy 103080 Waters, G. A.-. Pawnee Hallequin 59449 (75422) .... Itschner, Julius E Sayre Harper 107000 Reynolds, Grady Little Harry 90614 Griswold, F. B Agra Hastrau 62367 (74422) Hampton, L. A Dale Hautbau 128813 Burditt, A. J Ninnekah Hautbois 90372 Harrah, J. T Stillwater Hautmay 99906 Schultz, Ed ... Isaella Henri 117017 (76872) Frymier, James Chaney Hercuelas 79773 Vons, Garner Delaware Heroism 93536 Grable, R. C Ponca City Herchel 57374 Waters, G. A Pawnee Hippique 98023 Donaldson, P. E Douglas Honest Tohn 67462 Knarr, C. E Leedey Horace 54491 Upchurch, S. A Clinton Horsa 95436 Chaffin, J. H Mangum Houff 61009 (75726) ... Hubert 112959 Hubert 120716 Hurta 100964 Bryant, J Hussard 80270 Pontius, J Hutin 70543 Livingston, W. J p on d Creek Tyler, L. H Lindsay Reynolds, J. A Stigler W Perry C Yukon Doherty, E. W Amorita Iago 96965 Sowers, C. Idosol 114203 (79219) Li Hunter Kuykendall, Ora L i'.Pond Creek Igon 62337 McChristy, A. T Kinigfisher Illustre 60999 78773) James, T. O Guymon Individu 53444 (50909) Davis Horse Association ....Davis Integre 59430 (81268) Phipps, W. R Featherston Irascible 44559 (82237) Baker, D. C Oolagah Irquin 116617 Pruette, Claude Piedmont Isador 91368 Van Dusen, C. E Vian Ismael 61434 (80707) Corbett & Todd Bradley Ithaque 41591 Kloeckler, Ed Temple Ito 108288 Wolf, Fred T Waynoka Itto 43069 White, O. E Coalgate COUNTY Beaver Blaine Leflore Major Craig Beckham Grady- Garvin Caddo Jackson Kingfisher Grant Alfalfa Caddo Greer Custer Noble Caddo Grant Canadian Grant Garfield Woodward Caddo Payne Mcintosh Washita Beckham Dewey Beaver Oklahoma Kingfisher Kingfisher Grady Caddo Custer L.arfield Alfalfa Blaine Pawnee Beckham Seminole Lincoln Pottawatomie Grady Payne Major Ellis Nowata Kay Pawnee Garfield Dewey Custer Greer Grant Garvin Haskell Noble Canadian Alfalfa Garfield Grant Kingfisher Texas Murray Pittsburg Rogers Canadian Sequoyah Grady Cotton Woods Coal Second Annual Report 41 NAME AND NUMBER Ivykind 88953 Jabrege 80536 (86457) Jackson 84066 Jaguar 94033 (89070) Janville 99122 (88706) Japonais 91216 (88332) .... Japther 55028 Taquier 71684 (86981) jardinier II 118608 Jasper 106722 Jean le Blanc 112670 Jefferson Boy 31409 Jena 29366 Jet 41355 Joe 87065 Joe 104989 Jointout 90831 88272) Juliet 70877 Jules 112767 Tulot 34296 (48689) Jury 93286 Kado 42924 (68413) Kanat 82133 (96268) Kanezou 91594 (92857) .... Kansas Pedro 35876 Keota Captain 31909 Keota Erastus 99981 Keota Extra 62249 Keota Fulton 44788 Keota Gregory 62253 Keota Selkirk 27685 Keota Vampire 49085 Kildare 114312 King 106769 King 112888 King 97893 King Cowley 891*28 King of Highland 4.S468 ... Kingston 24976 Kontroleur 92935 (95822).. Kor 83049 (90361) Krayon 83071 (91403) Kruger 95358 Kuisant 90839 (91881) Kurateur 83059 (93724) .. La Clede 83002 Laghouat Tr. 130458 Laghout 98912 Lato 53283 (68506) Leander 59256 Leander 58256 Lecheur 92345 (101104) .. Leonight 101574 Leopold 87361 Lepy 34294 (51 3o.,; Lero 51037 Lester 83943 Lester 100157 Lewis 102343 Lieutenant 41840 (59790).. Linn 67634 Linot 60096 (65575) Lothair 40471 Louie Isborg 108713 Louis 85073 Loulou 62357 Louvern 117172 McKinley 53485 Madere 119692 (63196) .... Madere 40644 (57181) Majestic 28793 Maior 112468 Malcourt 104760 Marche 105213 Marcus 102181 OWNER POSTOFFICE COUNTY Fillman, C. E Chandler Lincoln Talkington, W. H Hydro Caddo Keeth, J. M Fairfax Osage Johnson, R. M Orlando Nobie Ehrlick, Geo. A Shattuck x^ilis Leach, Lee Yukon Canadian Johnson, S. B Okeene Blaine Corey, R. M Broken Arrow Vvaormer Griswold, J. H Agra "Lincoln Byard, W. P Comanche Stephens Hurst, Ross Inola Rogers Hill, I. N Buffalo Harper Sells, W. E Supply ^lis Lane, Harry Minco urady Brown & Berkenbile Dover Kingfisher Kinney, D. F Sumner Noble Row & Newman Hunter Garfield Finerty Farms Chickasha Grady. Smith, T. S Putnam Dewey Olmstead, W. M Pawnee Pawnee Eggleston, Ed Bishop Ellis Womack, E. R Tecumseh Pottawatomie Ridley, M. R Rush Springs Grady Farmers Mutual Horse Co..Hitchcock Blaine Purnell, W. J Lexington Cleveland Burnes, Mrs. Myrtle Rankin Roger Mills Nichols, W. A Prague Lincoln Knouse, J. P Ryan Jefferson Mosier, J. A Meeker Lincoln Kellogg, Anna A Guthrie Logan McLennan, Kenneth Moore . Cleveland Murry, J. M Mangum Greer Koelsch, August Oklahoma City Oklahoma Kincaid, Irl Foss Custer Lott, Barney Goltry Alfalfa Roe, J. T., & Waters. G. A.Pawnee Pawnee Han an, S. C Waynoka Woods Hough, O Canton Dewey Shepherd, J. F Medford Grant Trotter & Son, «. . N El Reno Canadian Spitlcr, Curtis R Yukon Canadian Bretz Horse Co Hitchcock Blaine Lampert, W. A Brinkman Greer Beer, J. W Guymon Texas Moery, J. F Hennessey Kingfisher McCune, Joe Tyrone Texas Burge, W. C Coalgate Coal Garner, W. J-. ..... . Pawnee Pawnee Gerber, Phillip Driftwood Alfalfa Daily, E. J, & Wilkes, S. J. Weatherford Custer Webb, Horace Kaw City Kay Pierce, W. I Chetopa, Kans. Craig Buckles, J. C Ingersoll Alfalfa Wiersig, H Alva Woods Sayre, W. A Morrison Noble Brown, T. L Sparks Lincoln Austin, T. J Pryor Mayes Pruett, Levi, York, Jno LaKemp Beaver Koppitz, John Alva Woods Vandruff. J. L Alva Alfalfa Newton, J. C Steely Delaware Hixon, Frank Niles Canadian Taylor, S. L Wapanucka Johnston Sweatt, -. D Helena Alfalfa Miller, I. A Newby Creek Pontius, J. C Yukon Canadian Roush, A. H Arapaho Custer Venn. T. A .". Jet Alfalfa Bantock, H Walter Cotton Douglas, B. F Delhi Beckham Asher, F. R Ponca Kay Vandruff. T. L Alva Alfalfa Fry, E. E Thomas Custer Erman, Frank A Apache Caddo Whitman, E. L Carnegie Caddo 42 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board NAME AND NUMBER Marmont 105947 Maroc 41881 (63223) Marquette 85789 Marsello 103949 Martinique 78127 Mascot 59900 Max 79223 Max 82560 Maxwelton 108302 Meddler 96444 Medoc 101174 Meeting 62131 (62452) .... Meritant Jr., 92525 Milton 80141 Milton 64039 Mineur II 55015 Minor K. 100942 Monarch 86263 Monarch 50393 Monetrose 69987 Mont Negro 102182 Moreiul 51429 Morocco 84489 Mouton 113540 (56701) .... Mozart 47610 Mutt 111805 OWNER POSTOFFICE Beighle & Murray Blackwell Ketch, Chas. S Kingfisher Williams, Clifford Rabit Hockemeyer, G. W Avery Kessinger, S. J Carney Wiens, I. S Lorena Toothaker, Wm Bartlesville Turner, John W Earlsboro Duncan, W. H Hanna McCune, Toe Tyrone Gray, T. W Gray Wolf, Marion El Reno Scott, W. L Perkins Prosser, U. S Burbank Webb, Horace Kaw City Lee, R. E Warner Galbreath, W. W Dacoma Lewis, P. J Ponca Riddle, J. L., & Goss, J. W Maud Tucker, W. M Wayne Whitman, E. L Carnegie Dutton, C. W Ringwood Johnson, R. M Orlando Hayes, J. E. & Wm Cherokee Jones, G. M Albert Thompson, F. W Hooker Neil 102679 Wedd, Tohn Ralston Nelaton 97713 Miller, Gus Bessie Niagra 104280 Lehman, G. A Geary Nianza 59726 Whitman, E. L Carnegie Noir Supion 105568 Franklin & ,ons, Frank ....Vinita None Such 116777 Henthorn, A. Oklahoma City Nortran 48800 Lewis, P. J. Ponca Norvien 113166 Fry, E. E Thomas Obsidian 53774 Smith, Lawrence F Seneca, Mo. Oklahoma 75349 Donahey, A. T Lucien Oklahoma Chief 84537 Whitman, E. L , Carnegie Oklahoma Kid 119693 Williamson, P. M Norman Oreron 42811 (65821) Ehrlick, Geo. A Shattuck Ormeau 47086 Kelly, W. D Broken Arrow Otto 119074 Booth, A. C Xaverne Patrick 68335 (66032) Jessee, L. A Supply Pardee 34867 Bantock, H Walters Perfection 63040 Wright, Jesse Renfrow Plulbert 10905S ... Wilson Wesley Beaver Picador 51182 Homier, H. W. C Kingfisher l 1C l dC / Hilt I ebei ' i Putnam Pickador 54732 Bacon, Sam . Meade Pleasant Prince 113712 Meyer, J. H Tnlta Plunger 85287 Skaggs, " H. NZZZZ Randlett Pollux 28300 (45924) Zimmerman, L. W CarneSe Pride 56367 Ashworth, T. R Din Prince 76272 Meyer, Frank C... Webb Prince 77194 Smith W R "mche Prosper 57869 Adams Bros. & Getz ...ZZ Ep Quinquina 40421 (56774) .... Bluejacket Breeding Co Bluejacket Rapin II 96807 Richmond, W. I Conser Rastus 102227 Cook, O. A Loean Rastus 115984 Georgia, A. BZZZZZZZiSSS Kaiser, C. J Marshall 0l ', nc ; r - T ••• Stillwater Sche ler H. A Frederick "oltke, W F Durant Duval , H E Laverne Litschke, Fred Fnid Arends Edward Enid Reese G A Lenora Dowell. P. P Foyi l A Canton Ray 116368 Red Douglas 42080 Redoutable 52162 (62461). Reichelu 103926 Remus 41392 Reno 92686 Rexall 74377 Reynold 67292 Right Stamp 51914 Rimeur 50491 (62259) Wilson T* Ringmaster 122881 Dodson, J. H Fr^rWirfc Robert 44358 Murphev T D ^redenck Robust:^ 41359 (63305) ZZ Logan & Sons G. 'a Sedey Kocko 72/27 Eberhart, Henry Okeene COUNTY Kay Kingfisher Delaware Lincoln Lincoln Beaver Washington Pottawatomie Mcintosh Texas Beaver Canadian Payne Osage Kay Muskogee Woods Kay Pottawatomie McClain Caddo Alfalfa Noble Alfalfa Caddo Texas Pawnee Washita Blaine Caddo Craig Oklahoma Kay Custer Noble Caddo Cleveland Ellis Tulsa Harper Woodward Cotton Grant Beaver Kingfisher Dewey Bryan Tulsa Cotton Caddo Washita Dewey Caddo Beaver Craig Leflore Beaver Payne Garfield Payne Tillman Bryan Harper Garfield tiarfield Dewey Rogers Blaine Tillman Logan Dewey Stephens Blaine Second Annual Report 43 NAME AND NUMBER Rodgers 81032 Roland 96135 Romeo 104604 Romeo 40786 (58150) Roscoe 113685 Roscoe 35192 Roscoe 40463 Royal 72222 Roy's Chief 50803 Rutheford 100767 Saladin 89446 Sampson 123045 Sampson 57946 Search Me 114311 Seductor 108121 Senator Owen 81398 Seneca 91072 Sinco 77110 Sergeant 40593 Shamrock 63067 Signet 94913 Silver D. 102290 Sirius 86975 ^orex 119792 Southview Chief 129133 .... Souvenir (59747) Spring Up 51512 Sterung Stetson 42507 Stockport King 45991 Stylet 119436 Success 32571 Sultan 59214 Sunflower 89282 Superior 102841 Superior 77288 Superior 82852 Surprise 87447 Tassager 78474 Taupin 120031 Timothy 55204 Togo 43763 Transmitter 103067 Triboullet 46557 Tricot 40020 (48952) Turcoman 49348 Turin 46052 (58151) Turk 80259 Uhlan 62320 Uncas 108303 Urgent 45808 (61480) Vick 63866 Victor 113046 Victor 79574 Victor 109482 Victor 110877 Victor 74909 Victor Dewey 45479 Villa 112816 Villers 108690 Vincent 85804 Virgil 59230 Vivano 81366 Voultaire 86915 Vulcan 104598 Wayne 95480 Waysid eRavish 61740 Wilson 55549 Wilton 55550 Woodrow 104406 Woodrow 77769 Woodrow 111250 Woodrow Wilson 109078 ... Woodrow Wilson 98175 .... OWNER POSTOFFICE COUNTY Hauschild, Toe Homestead Blaine Dowell, P. P Foyil Rogers Kirvanek, Frank Oklahoma City Oklahoma Kroeker, J. D Korn Washita Phelps, John F Fairview Major Lockhart, Josiah Nardin Kay Ricks, C. A Boise City Cimarron Carney, Joe, Jr Addington Jefferson Shellenbarger, Oren Grainola Osage Miller Bros Thomas Custer Tohnson, T. H Hugo Choctaw Estes, Sam Stroud Lincoln Boyce, Ed S Carmen AJfalfa Maloy, D. F Bearden Okfpskee Hon, A. L.."!""""""""'"!~""Hennessey Garfield Miner F J Fairmont Garfield Millburn, ' SZ&ZZZZZZ Valley Pawnee Hawkins, A Cleo Major Grebe, J. B Cloud Chief Washita Grant,' Roy Grananeld Tillman Klopfenstein, A. W .'.'Custer Custer Cloyd, W. H Driftwood Alfalfa Hoagl'and, T. G Comanche Stephens McCaleb & McMeekan Hennessey Kingfisher Coffey. Joel Fletcher Grady Driscoll," Val Dale Pottawatomie Riddle, J. L., & Goss, J. W.Maud Pottawatomie Humphrey & Son, C. C Perry Noble Sowers, C. R Hunter Garfield Lyon, Geo. W Supply Woodward Wyman, H. H Mangum Greer Martin, J. H Meeker Lincoln Broaddus, H. E Wagoner Wagoner Love, E. D Meade Bryan Randels, H. M Wakita Grant Tompkins, W. S Helena Alfalfa Wicker, W. M Blair Jackson Breeding, J. II Lahoma Garfield Weger, W. D Chattanooga Comanche Charleston 'Horse' CoZ^~""Charleston Harper Fritzler, G Hooker Texas Miller, A. S Ilinton Caddo Ferreli, Samuel"" Vv""!I"!!".Quinlan Woodward McNally, R. A El Reno Canadian Breeding, T. H Holdenvillc Hughes Griswold, H. C Wellston Lincoln Stocker, H. G Fairfax Osage Leverton, M. O Dill Wahsita Tyler, J. G Edmond Oklahoma Tacker, "Wilson R Payson Pottawatomie Miller, John Mulhall Logan Downing. E Newkirk Kay Exline, E. O Seiling Dewey Habilton. J. T Pond Creek Grant Harris, B. M Covington Garfield Osborn, J. E Hennessey Kingfisher Tockey, Geo. M Elmwood Beaver Nichols, Robert Butler Custer Cunningham, W. E Ponca Kay Lanyon, R. J Harrah Oklahoma Strother, John Alva Woods Baird, W. F Woodward Woodward Greer, C. L Sand Springs Tulsa Parker, J. W Soper Choctaw Lehman, G. A Geary Blaine Marlow, F. M Blackburn Pawnee Gathers. G. B Lookeba Caddo Tyler, J. G Edmond Oklahoma Brown, T. C LaKemp Beaver Cake, Joe Hunter Garfield Farris, T. H Trail Dewey McMullen, H. A Billings Noble Irion, Sam Granite Greer Wolf, Marion El Reno Canadian 44 Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board LIST OF SADDLE STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 NAME AND NUMBER OWNER POSTOFFICE COUNTY Baker Chief 5103 Mitchell, R. B Albany Bryan Bob Williams 7132 Mitchell, R. B Albany Bryan Chief Highwave 4440 Campbell, T. D Milburn Johnston Choice McDonald 3478 Price, C. E Keota Haskell Crockett Chief 4901 Bacon, W. H Colbert Bryan Dare McDonald 4436 Wade, R. E Quinton Pittsburg Forrest Calloway 5154 Foster, O. F Garvin McCurtain Glenn Rose 3177 Anderson, J. T Hartshorne ' Pittsburg Inlan Chief 5623 Stein, C. T Lexington Cleveland Ireland King 3737 Post, Thomas Eufaula Mcintosh Jasper MsDonald 3005 Nichols, P. A Cache Comanche Joe John 7190 Flowers, J. n Haworth McCurtain Jungle Cnief 4790 Miller, W. H Stonewall Pontotoc Kentucky Wave 3347 Mitchell, R. B Albany Bryan King of Kentucky 3316 Reynolds, J. A Stigler Haskell Knightland 3^46 Cox, E. J Coweta Wagoner Midnight Rex 5769 Jones, J. E Orlando Logan Missouri Mont oo26 Scott & Sons, ^eo. W Checotah Mcintosh Oklahoma Wave 5683 Mitchell, R. B Albany Bryan Peavine Dare 3664 Hamilton, John A Holdenville Hughes Prince Peavine 4269 Conatser-Hill Co Ozark, Ark. S. Y. S. 3539 Haney, J. T Big Cabin Craig Truxton King 5221 Arnold, J. S Beggs Okmulgee Yellowstone 4805 Stokes, A. C Tulsa Tulsa LIST OF SHIRE STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 Berry's Mark 7661 Dodson, J. H Frederick Tillman Tudge Parker 7621 Upchurch, S. A Clinton Custer Royal Paxton 9743 Robertson, # J. N Marshall Garfiedl Stuntney Gold Land 9735 (25679) Donahey, A. J Lucien Noble Thumper ±x 8981 Roberts, J. N. Lamar Hughes Top Rawyer lil 7506 Verhelst, P. B Forgan Beaver LIST OF STANDARD BRED STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 cv vjreen 343u-t Martin, J. H Leedey Dewey Allerti 42240 Newton, J. L Eufaula Mcintosh Ashland B. Allison 41886...- Akin, C. C Holdenville Hughes Bachelor Bov 38133 Campbell, H. L Tuttle Grady Barton G. 47594 Bretz, F. I Oklahoma City Oklahoma Ben Alora 52662 Shaw, J. C Noble Cleveland Ben Baster 54580 Burkett, S. N Gate Beaver Benjamin Jeffrey 56978 Kloeckler, Ed Temple Cotton Billy Lonsdale 56834 Ferguson, Ed Collinsville Rogers • Bower Boy 39963 Rogers, F. M Oktaha Muskogee Carl Crow 44544 Love, E. D Meade Bryan Casey 33283 Nelson, J. C Hobart Kiowa Cecil House 55595 Dewhirst, C. E Agra Lincoln Chrome 50316 Miller, John Mulhall Logan Council G. 59232 Huffman, A. iv Canton Blaine Council R. 55026 Rogers, E. A Waterloo Logan Dan Falmont 50834 Tall Chief, Henry Fairfax Osage Dazzle Leer 63491 Long, W. P Fairland Ottawa Dickleer 57281 Gorey, R. M Broken Arrow Wagoner Doctor McBiff 60545 Wills, Albert E Bartlesville Washington Dougal C. 51627 Poos, Carl Blackburn Pawnee Dr. Hammond 55245 Bailey, J. E Sulphur Murray Dr. Wood 33521 Wilhite, Ola Bartlesville Washington Ed Carmack 50185 Pate, B. K Caddo Bryan Egolatus 48972 Proctor, M. D Welch Craig Electric Fire 61314 Walker, John W El Reno Canadian Enloe Patch 50820 Pearce, B. F Eldorado Jackson Fleete Dale 54379 Long, E. G Phroso Major Floyd Togo 49527 Black, G. H Altus Jackson Golden Zola 63537 Montgomery, ' T N LaKemp Beaver Governor Harmon 57155 .... Slack, T. C Kingfisher Kingfisher Gratt Proctor 56794 „ Proctor, M. D Welch Craig Second Annual Report 45 NAME AND NUlL-ER Halefax Gentleman 46996- Heimore 01310 Tim Bramblet 37095 OWNER POSTOFFICE Dennis, J. C Mountain View Bryant, J. W Perry McFall, C. F Featherston Josh Harris 42503 McComas, E. G Sayre Juneboleer G. 49940 Patton, Wm. I Stillwater Kenner 59720 Linville & Scott Elk City Kid Gordon 63668 Wiser, J. E Blanchard King Allertell 60696 Lahman, W. H Eldorado King Directum 42875 Wade, R. E Ouinton Kyle Wood 57108 Wrestler, G. W Bartlesville Leo McGuire 50655 White, J. A Talala Lonnie H. 36445 Kidd, T. J Wewoka Mack Perkins 50966 Williams, R. VV Castle Major Ellis 60168 Spencer, Wm Morrison Moko-Sym 60012 Collier, T. h Bliss Montell 42045 Martin, W. G Ada Morcata 58470 Black, W. R Lawton Nutkeno's Redwood 52304.... Holloway, G. W. & L. R....Baird Owana 62692 The Ozark Stock Farm Oklahoma City Peerless orattau 4/y44 Green, A. W Walter Prince Ochus 39253 Davis, C. A Thomas Ralph Onward 36141 Davis, Ralph El Reno Rawlins 34393 Brakhage, J. H Lahoma Rogerleer 52870 * Rogers, E. A Waterloo Senator Elect 44934 Wells, E. R Guthrie Sherman Keen 36673 Dewitt, H. L Pond Creek Silk Way 51902 Jones, Geo. ^ Pryor Sir Bobby Burns 43349 Downing, E Newkirk Symbol Wilkin 39668 Pack, C. Ji Oklahoma City Symbolkin 61148 Piplier, Wm. F Harrah The Bondsman 37641 Wilhite, Ola Bartlesville Tom McCurdy 1812 Turner, B. F Sulphur Wander One 55650 Garman, J. R Fairland Welch Boy 59017 Proctor, M. D Welch Young Riley 52807 Howe, Lee Grove LIST OF THOROUGHBRED STALLIONS LICENSED DURING 1917 COUNTY Kiowa Noble Pittsburg Beckham Payne Beckham McClain Jackson Pittsburg Washington Rogers Oklahoma Okfuskee Pavne Noble Portotoc Comanche Cotton Oklahoma Cotton Custer Canadian Garfield Logari Logan Grant Mayes Kay Oklahoma Oklahoma Washington Murray Ottawa Craig Delaware Ashwell 56813 Barnes, Jessie Erick Clysmic 57380 Etheridge, J. J Fort Gibson Gimcrack 24088 Stephens, J. J Fort Sam Houston, Harry Percival 52320 Walker, S. C Bristow Hulen 28906 Houser, C Lenora Krutsch 36886 Spencer, Wm Morrison Luke Cates 56700 Smith, Raymond Guymon Beckham Muskogee Creek Dewey Payne Texas Oklahoma State Livestock Registry Board OONNVOrHOOlAOTt-HN OOOOOsOOt-hO^hO OinO > > >^ ^ to tn "53 "5! n . uo — ON rtvo^^CM rtcocs) 5 O c3 U.T3'o > 2 k 2 S g * o-C ? 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