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My dog and I

Chapter 31: THE PUG (FAWN).
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About This Book

A concise handbook that surveys numerous dog breeds, outlining origins, physical standards, temperament, uses, and points scales for judging; it provides breed-by-breed descriptions and typical colors and measurements, illustrated with half-tone images and marginal sketches. Practical guidance covers selection of puppies and adult dogs, daily care and management, treatment protocols for common illnesses, and feeding and conditioning for exhibition. Appendices supply technical terminology and a breeders’ directory to assist novices. The tone is practical and aimed at owners of one or two dogs, simplifying more complex kennel literature for lay readers.

THE PUG (FAWN).

Rookery Kennels, Painesville, O.

Haughty Madge.

Origin.—It is generally conceded that this breed is a cross between the fawn-colored, smooth English terrier and the jet-black Chinese terrier. Vero Shaw et al. concede this point.

Uses.—Purely a pet dog, with a fair amount of intelligence.

* Scale of Points, Etc.

Value.
Symmetry 10
Size 5
Condition 5
Body 10
Legs and feet 10
Head 5
Muzzle 5
Ears 5
Eyes 10
Mask 5
Wrinkles 5
Tail 5
Trace 5
Coat 5
Color 5
Carriage 5
Total 100

General Appearance.—Square and cobby.

Size and Condition.—The weight is from 12 to 15 pounds, and the dog should be shown with bones well covered and muscles well developed.

Body.—Short and cobby; chest wide; ribs well sprung.

Legs.—Strong, straight, of moderate length, and well under body.

Feet.—Between style of cat- and harefoot, well-split-up toes, and black nails.

Muzzle.—Short, square, blunt, but not upturned.

Head.—Large, round, not apple-headed, with no indentation of the skull. Eyes dark, very large, bold and prominent, soft and solicitous in expression, lustrous, and when excited full of fire. Ears thin, small, and soft. The button-ear is preferred to the rose-ear.

Markings.—Clearly defined: the muzzle or mask, ears, moles on cheeks, thumb-marks or diamond on forehead, and back trace should be as black as possible.

Mask.—Black; the more defined, the better.

Wrinkles.—Deep and large.

Tail.—Curled lightly as possible over hip. The double curl is perfection.

Coat.—Fine, smooth, soft, short, glossy, neither hard nor woolly.

Color.—Silver or apricot fawn. Each should be very decided, so as to make a contrast between color and trace.

Defects.—Long-legged or short-legged.