<<

T&e ^Morgan Jforse

A QUARTERLY MAGAZINE

Office of Publication

SOUTH WOODSTOCK, VERMONT

VOL. II MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 NO. 4 7986

Chestnut: f. of May 17, 1936. THIRTEEN MORGAN STALLIONS PLACED BY Bred by Chas. A. Stone, Va. THE WAR DEPARTMENT Sire: Benign 7755 by Bennington 5693. Dam: Alda 04247 The following is a complete distribution list of Morgan stal lions: Stallion Agent Location ABBOTT C. B. Burton CofTcyvillc. Kan. NO MORGAN SHOW BOB ROMANESQUE R. W. Schaeffcr , Mo. DELMONT Forest Bordelon Plaucheville, Fla. AND George Long Haven, Fla. HAVEN Merle D. Evans Massillion. Ohio NO MORGAN SALE HAWK JIM Robt. M. Stockett Jackson, Miss. V1ANSCOT GLORY L. E. Wyman Due to the gasoline embargo affecting all pleasure driving and Vina, Calif. REVERE Saml. Hessclgesser Burwell. Neb. to the acute labor shortage in this area, it has been thought neces­ ROMANESQUE Pine Ridge Ind. Agency Pine Ridge, S. D. sary to call off the Morgan Horse Show and the Morgan Horse Hiebert Brothers Hillsboro, Kan. SWANTON Sale usually held in connection with the Trail Rides at Wood­ Leo Light Snowmass, Colo. TEHACHAPI ALLAN stock, Vt., and the Annual Meeting of the Morgan Horse Club (Awaiting Assignment) Front Royal, Va. ULYSSES H. D. Perry Hollywood, Fla. will be postponed. UPWEY BEN SCOTT Very truly yours, VIRGIL C. M. GREER, JR 2nd Lieut.. Q. M. C Assistant. War Department, Washington. TRAIL RIDES AS USUAL, SEPTEMBER 2, 3 and 4 For the Quartermaster General: It may be a mistake to say the Trail Rides this year will be "as usual"—all that can be said is that the Trail Rides will be held at Woodstock, Vt., on the above dates, under very modified conditions, since there is extreme shortage in man power at the SALT AND WATER SAVE HORSES! Inn Stables and for laying out trails, etc. But Doctor Johnson, head of the Green Mountain Horse Association, reports that out Overheating of horses and mules will not occur if the animals of many inquiries received about the 100-mile and the 50-mile are allowed free access to salt morning, noon and night, and are Rides, he expects there will be a dozen or so participants and given some water every hour while at work. since the 100-mile Trail Rides originated in Woodstock and are In blazing hot weather, when temperatures in the shade are nationally known, we should not abandon them and deny to 95° F. or above, temperature in the sun where horses and mules horsemen this vacation activity. are at work will often exceed 110° F. •r Horseback riding does not require gasoline, and riders can W. H. Forbes and R. E. Johnson of the Fatigue Laboratory, ride to Woodstock as part of the training, as was done by a win­ Harvard University, who have made exhaustive studies of sweat­ ner some years ago from Lake Placid. ing in men and animals, recently wrote Wayne Dinsmore, Sec­ This event is not a build-up to secure spectators, collect admis­ retary of the Horse and Mule Association of America, Inc., as sion money or share in any gambling racket—this is purely a follows: horse event, and as stated by Doctor Johnson: "A working horse must sweat profusely in hot weather to "It is designed primarily to stimulate greater interest in the keep cool. The sweat must be replaced if he is to continue work. breeding and the use of good saddle horses, possessed of stamina Sweat consists principally of water, but contains a significant and hardness and qualified to make good mounts for trail use." amount of salt, as well as minute and probably unimportant amounts of many other instances. As far as is known the water (aj To demonstrate the value of type and soundness and the and salt are the only ones which are lost in sufficient quantity to proper selection of horses for a long ride. require special consideration. (b) To learn and demonstrate the proper method of train­ "Salt is very important for maintaining the balance between ing and conditioning horses for a long trip. the various constituents of the body and between the fluids and (c) To encourage horsemanship in long distance riding. solids of the body. (b) To train and demonstrate the best methods of caring "Both water and salt are essential but water is the more for horses during and after long rides without the aid of arti­ important. The chief importance of salt is that it helps in main­ ficial methods or stimulants. taining the water balance in-the tissue of the body." The ride this year will terminate on Saturday, September 4 Men who see to it that their work animals have all the salt they in Woodstock instead of South Woodstock, Vt. For full infor­ want, and who take a barrel of water to the field and water their mation, entry blanks, etc., address Green Mountain Horse Asso­ horses or mules every hour in hot weather, do not lose horses ciation, Rutland, Vt. or mules from excessive heat. They are competent horsemen. PURE-BRED MORGANS SECRETARY HILLS QUESTIONS THE LIFE By an Old Timer PAINTING OF JUSTIN MORGAN In 1931, after voluminous correspondence with Mrs. Cushing "You asked for information of the Quarter Horse in this partHil l of Middlebury, Vt., and her cousin, Burton Thompson of of Illinois. If you will please turn to Volume III, Wallace's the West Jersey Corporation, Elizabeth, N. J., I purchased a American Trotting Register, page 92, you will find Banerges ch. painting of Black Hawk by Theo. Marsden. This painting foaled in 1841. You will find the starting point in the cham­ had been owned by David Hill who owned Black Hawk from pion Quarter Horse sire Roan Dick, for his dam traces to this about 1844 until his death in 1856. It is probable that David stallion. She was by Greenstreet's Banerges, he by Owen's Hill had the painting made since in 1855 he published copies Banerges. he by Lowrey's Benerges, he by Hyson Ackley's of an engraving or woodcut. I think these were supplements to Banerges. So far as to the dams of Greenstreet's Banerges and some agricultural publication such as the Rural New Yorker, Owen's Banerges, they were never given so far as I know. Low­ but I am not sure of this point. Mr. Charles A. Stone owned rey's Banerges dam was Jennie Crasson, afine Quarte r bred one of these prints which Whitney now has at Morven. I ran by Edward Lowrey at Norwich. N. Y. Foaled in June, 1937: onto a copy a few years ago and bought it for myself. These 3 golden chestnut; 15 4 bands high and weighed 1,175 lbs., with prints were from the painting which the Club now owns, and silver mane and tail. Second dam was Nellie, a stage mare, this painting is hanging in the outer office. It is a very bad foaled in 1811 by Fenton's Weasel, a Dutch horse owned by painting. Marsden certainly wasn't a horse painter. It is quite Richard W. Fenton of St. Johnsbury, Vt. As to the breeding possible that David Hill had him make a painting based on of Black Nick dam and sire Charley Stewart's Telegraph he was imaginative woodcuts or line drawings of Justin Morgan which sure a Quarter Horse. He was tried against anything that came probably may have been in existence when Black Hawk and along and was never beaten for a quarter of a mile. Their breed­ his sons achieved such a great reputation throughout the coun­ ing has never been given as far as I know. try. "Of course, there never existed a pure-bred Morgan save Justin No interest in the horse Justin Morgan was shown by anyone Morgan, or a pure-bred Hambletonian save Rysdyk's Hamble­ until Black Hawk and his sons acquired their reputation in the tonian. The descendants of each horse have been very much 1840s and 1850s. It seems almost certain that no one would interbred, but all have numerous out-crosses. Possibly the have taken the trouble to paint Justin Morgan in 1797. descendants of no stallion that ever lived have been so much It is possible that the painting which you have may be another inbred as those of Justin Morgan. But pure-bred Morgan or one of Black Hawk or of some of his get while he was owned pure-bred Hambletonian would not be true, no matter to what by David Hill. extent the inbreeding is carried. If Justin Morgan had been Green Mountain Morgan was a contemporary of Black bred to a full sister or his dam, and the produce interbred there Hawk and in Vermont a good deal of the time up to 1853 there might have been upon the earth a purebred Morgan. But apparently. Does the painting which you have resemble in any his sons and daughters were coupled and the process repeated respect the wood-cuts of Green Mountain Morgan, some of until today the Morgans as a family possess more of the blood of which I think are in Volume I of the Register and also in Linsley's their founder than any other family of horses. So much so that book? I wonder from what the woodcuts in Linsley's book a Morgan Stud Book is being published—something that was which are entitled Justin Morgan, Black Hawk, etc., were made? never undertaken for any other family of horses. There is a F. B. HILLS wide distinction between a family and a breed. A son possesses only half the blood of his father, so a sire cannot establish a breed that will be purely of his blood save as above indicated. For instance, when we sold our farms and stud of Morgan horses MIXED-BLOOD IN SADDLE REGISTER in 1917, we had 32 head of colts having won from 7 to 9 top registered crosses. As a breed they were pure-breds. As a The discussion about mixed-blood" has shown that in family they were just grades. But they all could have been many present day breeds of horses, other than the , cross­ registered in the Morgan Registry. ing on outside blood, grade stock or stock of mixed breeding is "Now, if you will please turn to the Morgan Horse Club being followed. The rules of the American Register of names—year 1913—you will find in the list S. J. organization have admitted American Thoroughbred crosses Grigsby, Blandinsville, 111., and a little farther down the list you with Desert Arabs and the Saddle Breed of Kentucky are giving willfind th e writer's name. The last Registration Blank I have every encouragement to the development of Half-Saddle Stock is of 1920 and the registration requirements are as follows: from scrub mares, as follows: Rule 1. The produce of a sire and dam registered in the American "Fillies produced by registered Saddle stallions out of scrub mares, when Morgan Horse Register. bred back to a registered Saddle-bred stallion, may have thefillies an d geldings Rule 2. To register any horse in the American Morgan Horse Register of such unions registered in the American Saddle Horse records." which is not the produce of a sire and dam both registered therein, application with full particulars should be made to the Executive Committee of the The substitution of a registered Morgan, in place of the Morgan Horse Club at 3 East 44th Street, New York. N. Y., whose decision "scrub mare," would permit a daughter (a half-Morgan) will be final.' becoming the dam of a registered Saddle horse. "Now, if there is any place in the Morgan Register that says Pure Bred Morgans' I have failed tofind it . If there was a Rule forfive to p registered crosses for sire and four top crosses for a dam, there would be lots of Pure Morgans as a breed." THE MORGAN HORSE IMPORTANT WM. E. LOWREY The following is from the book "Vermont a Guide to the Box 24, Ferris, 111. Green Mountain State"'—a book of over 400 pages and upward of 100 illustrations of Vermont scenes: PAINTING OF JUSTIN MORGAN "The Morgan horse, which was developed as a distinct breed in this State, has been important for more than a century and a quarter in the agriculture On the cover there is reproduced a painting which is said toof Vermont, on whose hill farms horses can never be entirely supplanted by be an actual painting of the original Justin Morgan. machinery. The preservation and stabilization of the pure Morgan strain The painting, on canvas, measures 24]/? inches high by 29 J/^ has been the province of the horse-breeder rather than of the dirt farmer. But the farmers of Vermont have reason to be grateful for the Morgan's inches wide. In the lower left hand corner on a rock it bears stamina and will to work, which have proven to be pre-potcnt attributes even the name of "Justin Morgan" and in the lower right hand corner when the blood was crossed with thai of heavier breeds." the following, "Marsden 1797." 1 Published by Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston. 193 7.

70 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 HISTORY OF HEADLIGHT MORGAN by Headlight, one bay mare left, others don't know. One pair By BAIER of Oklahoma of bay geldings sold for $700 and went to Washington, D. C, when other good driving teams were selling around $200. in .a letter to H. J. Rankin The other was a bay mare, 15 J. 2 hands, 1,100 lbs., Molly Yes, I am still here, but mighty busy. Wayne, my son, is inMarti n 035 24. She was afirst clas s roping horse, and a first class cutting horse. She was a pet with my eight-year-old daugh­ the service, and it leaves me the farm here and the ranch to look ter and she wanted Molly five-gaited. It only took three weeks after. Would like to see your new colt. I will get three Morgan colts this spring by Roe Hawk 8171: two of them will be from to gait the mare so that she took her gaits promptly for a little real good mares. Now, as to Headlight Morgan 4683, I know tot and that on a single rein. "In summing up Headlight Morgan as a breeder his faults were him like a book that I've read twice, and I still have some Mor­ this. Sometimes when you least expected it he would throw a gans tracing to him. He was a straight up-headed, clean-legged colt very coarse from the knee and hock down, or a crooked horse and if he ever stopped growing it was when he was past hind leg with very heavy fetlocks or low back. His good traits 25: weighed around 1,250 at that time. But he was not located were these—all the Headlight tribe has got good cow sense, and at Halstead—he was at Meade where Uncle Dick (Richard) no matter what they are made like there is no road too rough or Skinner had him. Headlight Morgan was not appreciated as he too long for them, and a Headlight will not balk or kick you, should have been in Meade County until he was an old horse but they are bad scrappers among other horses. All of them are and his sons and granddaughters came on. He had a good horseman and a gentleman for an owner, or I believe he would easy keepers. Have seen some of them get some awful rides and have fallen by the way instead of leaving a good family. drives, and just turned loose and in just a few days you could not tell it on them. "At the time Headlight was at Meade there were two other "One more thing—I have yet to see a ringbone curb or sprain real good stallions within 15 miles of him. One was Silver- thorne 2.15, standard bred, at the height of his glory through on a Headlight. But I did have the complaint that too many of his sons and daughters racing. Silver Sign 2.1 7 was one of them: the get of Headlight hadfistula o f the withers. On investiga­ the other horse was Clark's Jim. owned at Fowler by Gif Clark. tion I found that all these were hard used roping horses, not at rodeos, but on the range day after day, roping and holding This horse was a 16-hand chestnut, Morgan bred but not regis­ horses, mules and cattle as big and bigger than your saddle horse. tered—by Bald Hornet,first da m by Blue Bull, Jr., by Blue "Well, it is time to roll in, and I hope this will give you the Bull; second dam by Red Buck by Copper Bottom. Silverthorne information you want." and Clark's Jim got most of the good mares in the county. Uncle Dick and Mr. Clark bucked each other pretty hard: either one GEORGE BAIER would rather give you a colt than have you go to the other Wilburton. Okla. horse. The only colts I know of that were sired by Clark's P. S. In comparing Headlight Morgan with other Morgan stallions of his Jim and of a mare by Headlight, was the good Cavalt horse, a time I would not rate him as high as Fred Hudson, General Gates, Jubilee De Jarnette or Benjamin Whirlwind. These families are my pet families. 1,200-lb. chestnut horse. Made a lot of the big rodoes as a steer-roping horse and was hard to beat in any man's quarter- mile cow horse race. Then Lady Law 01384, by Headlight was bred to Clark's Jim and produced what I believe yet was the best IOWA STALLIONS colt Clark's Jim ever got. He went to the army. Her next foal by Clark's Jim was Funny Face, dam of Twinkle Toes X05066. I note by the last MORGAN MAGAZINE you are listing all the Morgan Stallions by states. I would like to have you list the Headlight Morgan following: "Headlight Morgan did not get very many good mares until Illini 8425, Mr. Sellman got him at Roselle, Texas, and that is a reason Sire: Rosco Morgan 7573. why in 1922 when Meads put on one of the biggest county fairs Dam: Madell 05217. in the state with Morgan classes, an outside horse, Diamond Color: Chestnut. Light mane and tail. Hawk, 5298 (carrying no Headlight blood) was Illawana Don 8381, Morgan stallion and an outside mare, Wilma Boran (no head­ Sire: Captain Red 8088. light blood) was champion mare. Grand Champion National Show, Des Moines, 1939. Here is what Headlight Morgan did when he was at Meade. Dam: Gildia 04614. He was champion stallion at the State Fair I believe three dif­ Color: Black. Not many like him. Kind that can win. ferent times, and here is what he produced when he got mares that Dan Dee 8151, had some breeding (but get me, I don't count the ones as well Sire: King Shenandoha 7892. bred that were out of his own daughters. Outside of Rex, Dam: Rarette 04885. McDonald, I believe Headlight was bred to his ownfillies oftene r Color: Bay with small star. To E. M. Kersten, Fort than any horse I know and all such crosses are better off three Dodge, Iowa, who has just bought him from myself. Kindly or four generations back in the pedigree than close-up, and I send E. M. Kersten, 414 Carver Building, Fort Dodge, Iowa, call that going backwards and not well bred. Now as to the a sample copy of your next MAGAZINE. I am sure he will sub­ good ones—one mare bred in Indiana by Gambetta Wilkes bred scribe as he is a great Morgan booster. to Headlight produced Marrs Morgan, 15 hands, 1,050 lbs., CHRISTENSEN MORGAN HORSE FARM, a fine horse, complete in every way. Then another Indiana bred mare by Gamewell (first dam by Gambetta Wilkes, second dam ANTON CHRISTENSEN, OWNER by Blue Bull) bred to Headlight produced Lady Law 01384. Ames, Iowa This mare left a tribe all her own. They are sure-footed at the end of a hundred miles as they are at the start, and can walk free IOWA NEWS and easy always taking it fast enough to make horses trot that you are leading. Christensen Morgan Horse Farm, Ames, Iowa. Sells to E. M. "Then there was Justin Headlight 7008 out of a mare by Kersten, Fort Dodge, Iowa, Morgan stallion Dan Dee 8151. Young Diamond; second dam by L. S. (th). Justin Headlight He is a beautiful bay with small star. He has been shown several could pull a buggy a three-minute gait, and with a very short times in western stock class, always in the money. He was sold period of training could rack as fast as he could trot. Then the for consideration of $450.00. Will make balance of season at mare. Brownie, by Chief (register marks Chief as said to be farm one-half mile west Pioneer, Iowa. This is first Morgan Morgan; it was so little he should not have been called Morgan). stallion in Northwest Iowa. Doctor Kersten expects to cross­ He was by Jay McGregor 2.07\4 . Brownie produced four breed several draft mares with him.

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 71 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE A WORD ABOUT MORGANS Devoted to the Interests of the Morgan Horse By NELL GILES on her article "On the Farm" in the Boston (Mass.) Daily Globe, Jan. 4, 1943.

VOL. II. MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 No. 4 In fact, if you want to get historical about it, the first pure American horseflesh came from the Connecticut Valley in Mas­ A Quarterly—Subscription, $1.00 a Year in Advance sachusetts. Once there was a man named Justin Morgan, a singing teacher Display Advertising Rates who lived in Springfield as long as he could give lessons. Then One page, $20.00—j/2 page, $10.00—!4 page, $5.00 he moved to Randolph, Vt. Classified Rates The folks in Randolph saw him coming home from a long Cash in advance: One cent a word. No advertisement less than walk one day in the Autumn of 1795, leading a nubby colt. twenty-five cents Somebody owed him money and couldn't pay, and Justin Morgan took the 2-year-old in place of cash. The strange thing is that nobody was ever absolutely certain NO NATIONAL MORGAN HORSE SHOW who were the sire and dam of this odd little fellow, but he grew up with royal qualities. He was strong, tough and beautiful. and But he didn't ever have a name of his own. People just called NO ANNUAL MORGAN HORSE SALE him "Justin Morgan" for the singing teacher. Justin Morgan grew up to be the founder of thefirst breed AT WOODSTOCK THIS YEAR of American horses. It's true that Vermont claims the Morgan horse .... but the EDITORIALS little two-year-old colt actually came from the Connecticut Valley." HORSE * * * * "In these days, however, a stock farm is not a good business to A solid-hoofed perissodactyl quadruped (equus caballus) be in. But a man who horses will sell his shirtfirst. He'l l having aflowing mane and tail, whose voice is a neigh. raise a cash crop for cash and horses for a hobby." OXFORD DICTIONARY

ARE YOU "SAFETY MINDED?" MORGANS LEAD OTHER BREEDS Prevent Fires! HALF-MORGAN WILL AID FARMER "I am replying to your letter. I am in the horse breeding Fires cost rural people in this country about $225,000,000 business since June, 1906. I have had several types of stallions. or $1 6 per farm, and in 1941 3,500 people lost their lives in these As far as I can judge the Morgan is far ahead of all other kinds fires. of horses. They will meet the demands of any man for any Be Prepared for Fire! Have— purpose. Next comes the Standard Bred. No other colts can A good ladder long enough to reach upstairs window. compare with the Morgans. Next the Standard Breds. You A rope ladder long enough to reach from the upstairs bedroom ask me if a Half Bred registration office should be put up. Yes. to the ground. This is the only way to encourage the small farmer to improve his An axe and wrecking bar. is the only way to encourage the small farmer to improve their A good quantity of emergency water storage in tank, barrels, stock. There is already one put up in Portland, Ore. or well. "As for the slip I am enclosing—I have my half and three- Fire extinguishers in good operating condition. quarter bred registered and am having lots of my clients register First aid kit to treat burns. theirs. You may write to them for full particulars. There are Each member of family know what to do in case of fire. no registered Morgan mares in Louisiana. I wish I could buy one, but I am not able to pay for one. I have four stallions Don't Smoke in the Barn from the government. A Morgan, Hawk Jim, I bred him in 1939-1940-1941 and 1942. He gets real good colts. I am to exchange him December 15 or 16 for a Morgan, Delmont, which I will keep four years. FAVORS OLD FASHION TYPE Results of Breeding I am enclosing my check of one dollar for one year's sub­ scription of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE, which I trust will 1939 Colts 33 be devoted entirely to "Pure-bred Old-Fashion Vermont Type" 1940 " 24 "Morgans" and not to the so-called "new improved type." 1941 " 23 1942 Bred 39 mares. Miss WINIFRED M. CARRIGAN 2 Munster Terrace, Waltbam, Mass. "If I can give you more information, you may write me. The Horse Van Co. will leave , Ky., on December 14 with Delmont. "As I said, I wish I could buy a registered Morgan mare about NO DATA ON MARSDEN 1 5.1, to weigh 1,000 to 1,100, gaited under the saddle. I know I could sell the colts. But a poor man can't do what he wants. A dictionary of American artists gives: You may ask any officer in charge of the East Central Remount MARSTON, J. B. Portrait painter, who worked in Boston Area. Lexington, Ky.—they have seen me in person. Colonel in 1807. His portrait of Gov. Caleb Strong is in the Massa­ Paul H. Manis in charge now, stayed over night with me three chusetts Historical Society. weeks ago." EDITORIAL NOTE: Can any reader give us any information about FOREST J. BORDELON "Marsden" or "Theodore Marsden?" Planchville, La.

72 Tnii MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINI- MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 FACTS ABOUT MORGAN HORSES By W. H. WELCOM—(Continued) In fine; Justin Morgan was an animal of extraordinary utility and style, to an extraordinary extent, also, he stamped his image and impressed his qualities upon his descendants. FAIR VIEW FARM Are there any real Morgans left today? Shortly after the turn of the century, a number of public Can Stable Your Horses, Also Furnish spirited gentlemen of the Northern New England states sud­ denly realizing that the breed was about to be entirely dis­ Lodging and Good Food for Riders bursed or absorbed into other breeds entirely, decided to assemble a small band of the pure-bred individuals remaining of the We Have an Instructor and Guide, Also breed, at a little settlement outside of Middlebury, Vt. And shortly thereafter the Department of Agriculture became interested in the project, which resulted in bringing Beautiful Unused Roads Which You Will together a considerable number of individuals drawn from the Enjoy four corners of the United States. Colonel Battell Founder Colonel Battell was also the founder of the American Mor­ SADDLE HORSES TO RENT WHEN gan Register, a work which took up the authentic recording of Morgan bloodlines at a point where D. C. Linsley, also of NOT IN USE Middlebury, Vt., left off. The movement to keep together the best Morgan blood appealed to Colonel Battell, and he gave outright to the United States Department of Agriculture a 400 acre farm in the town of Weybridge, Vt., to assist in putting All Modern Conveniences the work on a substantial foundation. Later on this farm was augmented by additional acreage, so at the time of the World War, one, 550 acres adjoining the original track were purchased, making a farm consisting of 1,000 Tel. Felchville 2451 acres. Those in charge of this farm spared no effort in tracing the descendants of the Morgans sold in the early days, 1840 to 1860, and sent from New England to other sections of the Mrs. E. Vanessa Hufnail country. READING, VT. An All Purpose Horse By 1871 Justin Morgan's descendants were found in nearly every state in the Union. He was the greatest producer of all purpose horses. Among his descendants were found the follow­ ing: Quarter horses; Red Jacket, Gold Dust, and the Admiral. Stock Horses; Champion Knox, Black Eagle, and Novato Chief. MORGANS IN Tennessee Walking Horses; Vermont Black Hawk, Brooks and Tom Hal. The endurance gang; General Gates 666, has produced more MID-WEST endurance record horses than any other one stallion. Show Ring; Peavine, Lady Dedarnette (The greatest show Mid-West breeders have some mare of all times), Blood Chief. Trotters; Peter the Great. The Harvester, Uhlan, Lee, and outstanding Morgans to offer. Axworthy. In conclusion, as in years gone by, nobody has any quarrel with the men who want to breed 16 hand Morgans, 1,200 Before buying, investigate the pound Morgans, Forest King Morgans, or Two Minute Mor­ gans. Their ambitions do not interest the breeders of the fine selection of Morgan Horses original Morgan Horse, but they have no objection to them. However, they have as the foundation of their structures some in the Mid-West. Morgan blood, which they value. Bear in mind the time may come when they need more foundation of the same kind. They will not get it from the one-thirty-second, or the one-sixty-fourth Morgan. They will want it as strong and pure as it can be found in an animal of For list of reliable breeders and the normal, natural Morgan type. It is hoped that the members of the Morgan Horse Club will always own horses that will be information, write able to supply that want. MID-WEST MORGAN HORSE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS FOR SALE ASSOCIATION Cornwallis, 7698—one of the greatest Morgan stallions living today—pos­ sessing the breeding and conformation of the "old stamp." C. E. Allen, Bald­ 105 West Adams Street CHICAGO (3) winsville, N. Y. Yearling Stud Colt For Sale. Out of Registered Morgan Mare by "Sheri­ dan Acres" (Sire of "America" Beautiful champion three-gaited saddle horse 1940, 1941 and 1942).—CARL M. BAUMAN. R. D. NO. 2, Laurel, Md.

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 73 VIEWS OF MR. EVANS successful season for him in our community, and I would like to make the suggestion again, as I made before to the breeders Due to the pressure of business, I neglected to read your last that they attempt to obtain for themselves and their com­ issue of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE, until this morning, munities from the Remount Service, the type of Morgan that and find there is a matter up before the Morgan Horse Club as will be acceptable to the farmers and it will in itself act as to the establishment of a half-Morgan register. the best means of propagating the Morgans and reintroducing Drop Rule 2 him to the farmers of the United States. On hurriedly reading some of the arguments for and against Advises Use Remount Morgans this book, I note that some of the members and non-members are advocating an increase of registrations under Rule 2 of the I have for a number of years been taking my vacations in Register in preference to a half breed register. I have been different parts of Montana and Wyoming, and have made it my opposed to Rule 2 for a number of reasons and still am for the business to advertise the Morgan to all the ranchers that I could reason that if Morgan horse breeders, such as myself, ever expect contact in these states. I know from my conversations with them to place the Morgan horse on the high standard of quality that that they are very much interested in the Morgan breed, and we hoped to attain, it is absolutely imperative that Rule 2 should particularly in good Morgan stallions of the right conformation be dropped permanently. Quality can only be attained by care­ for crossing with their local mares. However, they all do, ful, selective breeding in the particular breed that you desire. without exception, desire a stallion that is registered and of blood There are now thousands of Morgans throughout the United lines that will assure a uniform type of horse for their work. States and surrounding countries, and if the breeders themselves It seems to me that in view of so many facts and the experience are willing to take the time, and trouble to build upon the founda­ of so many breeders, that it would be extremely beneficial to the tion stock which they now have, I am sure that in time the Morgan horse to absolutely abolish Rule 2 from the Register Morgan horse can gain the prominence which it deserves. permanently, and to build up within the breed itself a superior It seems to me that it is impossible to ever attain what we hope type of animal." to call a pure blooded Morgan with a continual infusion of out­ MERLE D. EVANS side blood. I have bred and raised Morgans for over a decade Massillon, Ohio. and have avoided any animal with an X before its number. All ''Hawk Jim 7689 (bred by Elmer Brown, Kan.), sire. Linsley 7233 by Morgan students know that the blood itself was diluted suffi­ General Gates 666: dam Lady Spar 04515 by Sparhawk 6874. ciently at its inception without infusing it at the present time with additional cold blood.

Urges Both Parents Be Registered HALF-MORGAN COW HORSE I love the Morgan horse for its characteristics and its temper- ment, but--!"'am very careful in my arguments about the merits I have enjoyed the reading contained in the THE MORGAN of the different breeds never to assert that the Morgan is pure HORSE MAGAZINE for some time and am looking forward to blooded. It is not, and never can be, but if we owners of my copies. registered Morgans will stick together and insist that from now A lot has been said about the Morgan horse, especially con­ on that no animal can be registered in the Morgan Register unless cerning their use as cow horses. I have one that I trained it comes from both registered sire and dam, we will, in years to personally, whose sire is a Morgan and the dam, an American come, gain the respect of the owners and lovers of other breeds Saddle mare. more so than we have at the present time. I broke Ace when he was 2'> years old. In three days I I now own 18 Morgans registered or eligible for registra­ taught him to: Pull a saddle blanket from his back. Take a tion, none of which have an X before their number. I have handkerchief from his hip. Pick up articles and fetch article taken great pride in this particular quality of the animals I thrown behind him. possess, and I know that a great many other Morgan lovers Before he knew how to rein I roped myfirst cal f from him by feel the same way about it. After all, the only pride that we using my hat to guide him. By the time he reached his third can have in possession, is the pride of quality and blood and if birthday I could go out and tie on to any critter with him. He we keep diluting it in the Morgan register, we will end up by holds the rope just right for calves or cows and does not even having nothing but the mongrel type. require a choke rope to make him face the stock he holds. But better than all this, when you are ready to turn the Half-Morgan Register Beneficial critter loose, all you have to do, is to raise your hand and he While I am raising Morgans more as a hobby than for com­ will walk up and give the desired slack. mercial purposes, I can appreciate why a great number of owners desire either the half-Morgan register or the retention of Rule 2. Dependable at Three Years It is a lot easier for a commercial breeder to sell a horse that is registered for a larger sum of money than one that is not I have owned and trained many horses, but he is the first registered. If it will benefit these commercial breeders who, one to become a most dependable cow horse at only three years. after all, have done a great deal to improve the Morgan itself, This winter I plan to teach him to dance and generally high to have a register of some kind, I believe it would be beneficial school him for tricks, etc. both to the breed, and to these men to have a half-Morgan Enclosed are two pictures taken at three years. He is now register. After all, if there is a half-Morgan register, it pre­ three and one-half, weighs 1,050 lbs. I even have enough con­ supposes the fact that the Morgan register itself is pure blooded. fidence in him to allow my four-year-old son to ride and rein The United States Army Remount Service has recently allotted him, by himself. to me the Morgan stallion, Hawk Jim,1 for service in my dis­ Would you please return the pictures in the enclosed self- trict. I made the request of the Remount Service for a stallion addressed envelope when you are through with them. If you of this kind, because of the fact that I felt that a good, large care to use the pictures, you are welcome to do so. Morgan would be extremely beneficial to all the farmers in my Also find enclosed $1.00 for the continuance of my subscrip­ community. As my Morgans were more of the saddle type tion. and finer boned, they were notfitted fo r that cross. I find this Yours for more and better Morgans, stallion to be an excellent type of individual, 1,350 lbs. in FRANK FICHTL weight, and of excellent conformation. I anticipate a very P S. My new address is Route No. 1, Caney, Kan.

74 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE. JULY, 1943 BREEDING AND TRAINING MORGANS BLACK HAWK FAMILY NOT SMALL By Glenn T. Watt I, S. D. Wells, on depose and say: From The Mustang—March-April, 1939 That I was born in 1825: that I was a blacksmith in Brid­ port in the horse Black Hawk's time; that I was there when I am proud to be a breeder of the pride and product of Black Hawk was brought into town; that Black Hawk was America, for saddlers in all uses, they have quality, conformation, one of the first Morgan horses that I had anything to do with; symmetry, intelligence and endurance. that he was not a big horse—would weigh about 1,000 pounds Even though it has been 146 years since the colt that grew to and stand about 15,' 2 hands high; was a looking horse— be the foundation of the Morgan strain of the Morgan horses was black, and lots of style—good stylish action; a good speedy foaled, at the present time the Morgan blood can be traced in the horse in those days on a square trot; that he was shown at Mid­ most prominent breeds of American produced saddle horses and dlebury fairs, County Fairs and State Fairs; that he, with a good also some of the fastest harness horses carry Morgan blood in many of his colts, was shown at the first State Fair in Ver­ their veins. mont at Middlebury; that his oldest colt, at that time, was five By 1871 Justin Morgan's descendants were found in nearly years old; that it was a mare and that there was a race between every state in the Union. He was the greatest producer of all- her and Adams' Flying Morgan; that in after years the stock purpose horses. Among his descendants were found the fol­ of Black Hawk was almost all stylish and good fair size; lowing: That we had a horse here in town by the name of Addison— Trotters, Uhlan, Lee, Axworthy, Peter the Great and The the Nearing horse—that sold for $5,000, was a good horse Harvester. and a good style horse and would weigh 1,200; that almost Show-ring, Blood Chief, Lady de Jarnette and Peavine. all were trotters; that from old Black Hawk some of them were Quarter Horses. Gold Dust, Red Jacket, and The Admiral. big horses; that they would average anywhere from 950 up to Stock Horses. Black Eagle, Champion Knox and Novato Chief. 1,100 pounds; that all had this style and action and durability; Tennessee Walking Horse. Tom Hal, Brooks and Vermont that there were some of Black Hawk's get shown at fairs and Black Hawk. they generally came out ahead of other horses of other strains Endurance. General Gates 666 has produced more endurance of blood; record horses than any other one stallion. That I have seen Green Mountan Morgan in Middlebury, Many Saddle Horse Lines and have seen him taken out with a tow string around his neck, and he could be handled just as well with that as with the best Today we have several lines or classes of saddle horses that are bridle in the world; that he was a good sized horse—close to for different uses. The stock horse on the ranch is one class of 1,200 pounds, and would stand 16 hands high, and was a great saddle horses in which the Morgan is taking a very prominent knee actor; part in most parts of the West, although in our immediate part That Ethan Allen was sired by old Black Hawk; was not a of the country there are very few Morgans, but in the countries very big horse—would weigh about 950 pounds and stand about where large cattle ranches are still operating they cross the Mor­ 15 hands high; was very speedy and a good actor; was not of gan with the ranch mares to produce a horse that is very suitable the Black Hawk build or type—was not so handsome a horse; for the work of the saddle horse on the ranch. That Daniel Lambert was bis stock and was as stylish a horse The ranches in the mountains where the dude ranch operates as was ever up in this country; was a trotter; weighed about in connection with the cattle ranch, the Morgan has proven him­ 1,000 pounds and stood 15^2 or close to 16 hands high; that self outstanding for trail horse and pleasure riding. as a family the Lamberts were good horses—although some of On the western coast where the parade horse is of great popu­ them were not so good—the size was good and the Lamberts larity there are vast numbers of Morgans used for this purpose, were good roadsters, stylish and acted as though they were alive; where style, conformation and intelligence play a part in this That the best stallion in Black Hawk's time was Black Hawk type of horse that is very hard to duplicate or equal. when he was in his prime; that there was nothing in the roadster The Palomino is determined by conformation, purpose and that could outclass him as a getter of road horses and for endur­ color and the blood strain has not had much of a part in the ance; that from him to his grandson, Daniel Lambert, I don't qualifications of the horse. The Morgan horse is used to a great know that Lambert had a peer; extent to build up the quality of the Palomino in every respect. That Hale's Green Mountain Morgan was in Black Hawk's The Morgan is a horse that is easily trained and once trained time, and comparing the two horses, Green Mountain Morgan right will be a horse that is very good for the purpose intended in was a bigger horse than Black Hawk; that I never saw Green training. Mountain harnessed; that Black Hawk would compare favor­ It is a known fact that the more intelligent a horse is the ably with Green Mountain; that I think Black Hawk was about further it will go in the way it is trained, if during the course of as good as you can make them; his breaking or training he has had some mishaps or allowed to That the Lapham was a good style horse and would weigh go wrong for a while, it is rather permanent in his course of 1,200 pounds and stand about 16 hands; was a fair made work. horse; The leading horse associations encourage the breaking or train­ That the Myrick horse was a good one; ing the colt young. While the colts are too young to ride it has That Plato was another one sired by old Black Hawk; that proven very satisfactory to drive them to a light cart to get them bridle-wise and well mannered and when they are old enough to the family from Black Hawk were not small horses; that there ride they are practically broken as far as being gentle and ready to have been a great many good horse that were from Black learn whatever the owner has to teach him. Hawk's colts and they were great roadsters and had great MORAL—We must remember, in order to be a successful endurance. trainer, that we must know more than the horse. . Personally appeared at Orwell, STATE OF VERMONT \ Vt„ the above named S. D. FROM IOWA: ADDISON COUNTY j Wells, who took oath to the above statements. Enclosed find $1 for a year's subscription to the MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE. We are in the market for a registered Mor­ Orwell, Vt., Before me, gan filly and a Morgan stallion colt both chestnut in color. March 16, 1911. HAROLD QUICK Notary Public Redding, Iowa

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 75 EDITORIAL NOTE: The following article appeared in the .January. 1943, saw a heavy regiment more splendidly mounted in my life. The issue of The Vermont Horse and Bridle Trail Bulletin. whole of the artillery was horsed from the same region, and HISTORY OF THE VERMONT DRAUGHT-HORSE with precisely the stamp of horse which I now see daily before the New York Express vans; and I myself heard a very dis­ By FRANK FORESTER tinguished officer of rank, who has won still higher distinction From The Horse of America. 1 849. in the Crimea say, that the artillery had never, in his knowledge of the service, been better, if so well horsed, as it was while in IFrank Forester, probably the outstanding American authority on horses during his day and author of two massive volumes entitled "The Horse of Canada. America," had a great deal to say regarding the Vermont Draught Horse. It may be worth while to add, that the Hussars, when ordered Never again, in any other horse literature, have we seen this type of horse home, as is usual, in order to save the expense of transportation, referred to and wonder if any of our readers can tell us just what happened to sold their horses; but the Dragoon Guards and Artillery, unless them.—Ed.] I have been most wrongly informed, took the greater part of In the first place, of the Vermont draught-horse, I have been theirs, and especially the mares, home with them, owing to their able, from his own locality, to obtain no information what­ superior quality. ever; all the horse interest and ambition of that State, and indeed Excellent Stage Horses of the Eastern States generally, appearing somewhat strangely Of the existence of this breed, therefore, there can be no doubt, and injudiciously, I must say, it seems to me, to center in what nor of its excellence. In the old days, while staging was in its they are pleased to call the Morgan family. perfection in New England, before the railroads had superseded Incomparably, however, the best light team-horse, or coaching, it was the lighter animals of this same breed and extremely heavy carriage-horse, and another yet lighter horse of stamp, which drew the post-coaches, in a style that I have never somewhat the same type, are raised in Vermont, and in Ver­ seen approached, out of New England, in America; nor do I mont alone, in perfection. believe that it ever has been approached elsewhere. For several No persons with the streets of New York can fail years it was my fortune, some 12 or 13 years since, when to have noticed the magnificent animals, for the most part Salem was the extreme eastern limit of railroad travel, to journey dark bays, with black legs, manes and tails, but a few browns, a good deal between Boston and Bangor in Maine; and, as I and now and then, but rarely, a deep rich glossy chestnut, always preferred the box, with the double object of observing which draws the heavy wagons of the express companies; and the country, and seeing the horses work, having, also, a tolerable I would more especially designate those of Adams & Company. knack of getting on with the coachmen, who, by the way, were Horses of Immense Power coachmen, on those roads, in those days, not stable-helpers— They are very model of what draught-horses should be; com­ each one coaching his own team along, as well or as badly as he bining immense power with great quickness, a very respectable could, according to the fashion of all the other States in which turn of speed,fine show and action. I have journeyed—I contrived to pick up some information, These animals have almost invariably lofty crests, thin concerning the quick-working, active, powerful, well-condi­ withers, and well set on heads; and although they are emphat­ tioned, and sound animals, which excited both my wonder and ically draught-horses, they have none of that shagginess of mane, my admiration. tail and fetlocks, which indicates a descent from the black horse My wonder! for that, in my stage-coach experiences in New of , and none of that peculiar curliness or waviness York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Upper Canada, from the which marks the existence of Canadian or blood for year 1831 to 1836, of which I had enjoyed considerable oppor­ many generations, and which is discoverable in the manes and tunity—having once voyaged in what was called, by a cruel tails of very many of the horses, which claim to be pure Morgan. irony, the Telegraph Line, from Albany to Buffalo, through, in The peculiar characteristic, however, of these horses, js the three days and two nights—I had formed anything but a shortness of their backs, the roundness of their barrels, and the favorable estimate of American stage-coaching. closeness of their ribbing up. One would say that they are ponies My admiration! for <~hat over roads, though very well kept until he comes to stand beside them, when he is astonished to for the state of the country, which would have made an English find that they are oftener over, than under, 16 hands in height. whip open his eyes, and probably his mouth also, in impreca­ tions both loud and deep, and through a very rough line of Finest Animals in U. S. country, so far as hills and long stages were concerned, I never These horses are, nine out of ten, from Vermont, and not only saw any horses, in my life, do their work more honestly, more are they thefinest animal s in all the United States, in my opinion, regularly, or more quickly. for the quick draught of heavy loads—for which opinion of mine The rate of going was nine miles, including stoppages; to do I have a reason to produce in justification—but the mares of this which it was necessary to make between 10 and 11 over the stock are incomparably the likeliest, from which, by a well road; the time was punctually kept—as punctually as on the chosen thoroughbred sire, to raise the most magnificent carriage- best English mail routes, at that time, when the English mail horses in the world. was the wonder of the world; and I have no hesitation in saying In proof of what I assert, I will relate two circumstances that 10) ) to 1 1 miles an hour, over those roads, is fully equal connected with this breed of horses, which have come under my to 13 or 14 over the English turnpikes, as they were at the own immediate observation, and which cannot fail to have time concerning which I am writing. And I speak on this sub­ weight with candid judges. ject, with the conviction that I speak knowingly; for, between During the Canadian rebellion of 1837, the English force the years 1825 and 1831, there were not a great many fast being largely augmented in the provinces, two cavalry regiments, coaches on the flying roads of the day, on the boxes of which I with a considerable park of artillery, were among the number have not sat, nor a few of the fastest, on which I have not of the reinforcements. The cavalry consisted of the First handled the ribbons. Dragoon Guards and of the Seventh Hussars; the latter All these horses were evidently of the very breed and stamp of which, a light regiment, brought its horses with it from which I describe; and I learned, on inquiry, that it is from the England. The Dragoon Guards, which is as heavy a cavalry region I have named, the northern part of Massachusetts, namely, regiment as any in the world, except the Lifeguards and the Royal Vermont, and perhaps some portion of New Hampshire, that Horseguards, which are cuirassiers, came dismounted, and were most of the horse came, and that from those quarters, moreover, all horsed from Vermont, with scarcely an exception, the is the origin of the horse of Maine, almost without admixture. Canadian horses not having either the size or power necessary to carry out such weight. Origin of the Vermont Draft Horse I saw this magnificent regiment several times under arms, after Whence this admirable stock of horses came, or how it has the horses had been broken and managed, and certainly never been created, there is, as I have observed, no record. I do not,

76 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 nowever, think it impossible, or even difficult to arrive at some­ cerning a single highly-bred branch or offset, as I regard it, of the thing not very far from the facts of the matter; if one looks to general stock of the region. the sources whence he might reasonably expect such a strain to I do not even mean to assert that these horses can claim any be deduced, and then find that such sources are not wanting, and one, or more, individual family ancestors, to all; or that nearly in the proportion one would have suggested. that they have any such actual blood connection among them. In thefirst place , then, the size, the action, the color, the com­ as should constitute them, in actual fact, a family. parative freedom from hair on the limbs, the straightness of the longer hairs of the mane and tail, and the quickness of move­ A Type of Great Merit ment, would, at once, lead one to suspect a large cross, of Cleve­ land Bay. There are, however, some points in almost all these All that I believe, or desire to put forth, is, that there now horses, which must be referred to some other foreign cross than exists a peculiar type of horse of great merit for many purposes, the Cleveland, not thoroughbred, and, as I have mentioned above, over a large district of country, subdivisible into some three or certainly not Norman or Canadian, of which these animals do four secondary classes, modified, as I should judge, by the pos­ not exhibit any characteristic. The points to which I have session of more or less blood—I mean, of more or less thorough referred, are, principally, the shortness of the back, the general blood of the English or American racer—yet all showing the punchy or pony build of the animal, and its form and size, characteristics of the other English families which I have named, larger and more massively muscular than those of the Cleveland and, I doubt not, having derived a part of their own peculiar Bay, yet displaying fully as large, if not a larger, share of blood merits from each one of those families. than belongs to that animal, in its unmixed form. I believe that the mares of all the various classes of this type, The prevalent colors of this breed, or family, if I may so call from the heaviest to the lightest, are the best brood mares, by it, also appear to point to an origin different, in part, from that many odds, of any one class that I have seen in America, from of pure Cleveland Bay, which, as I have before observed, lean to which to raise stout, hardy, sound, active, and speedy stock, for the light or yellow bay variation, while these New Englanders all practical purposes, to well-selected, large-sized, bony, tend, as decidedly, to the blood bay, if not to the brown bay or thoroughbred stallions. At any time, when the stock of heavier, pure brown. larger, and slower mares appear to be becoming scarce, recourse Now these latter are especially the dray-horse colors, and the should be had to powerful stallions of the native stock; not to points which I have specified above are also those, in a great be joined, as sires, to weaklings, under-sized, high-blooded mares, measure, of the improved dray-horse. in order to recuperate the race—for that they will not do—but to be coupled to thefinest and roomiest mares of their own class; Cross Breed from which union will probably result something with yet more bone and less blood, in other words, coarser than either The cross of this blood in the present animal, if there be one. parent; and this offspring, if a colt, when castrated, will prove is doubtless very remote, and whether it may have come from a a capital team-horse; if afilly, wil l be exactly what is wanted single mixture of the dray stallion, long since, or from some half- to stint to the thoroughbred. bred imported stallion, perhaps got by a three-part thorough­ This is nearly what I believe to be the history of the Morgan bred and Clevelander from a dray mare, must, of course, be horse, as it is styled, when it was in itsfirst prime. That is to doubtful. At all events, I should have little hesitation in pro­ say, I believe it to be an entirely made, or artificial, animal; made, nouncing that what I call the bay draught-horse of Vermont has probably, in a great degree, in this instance, by the possessing of in its veins principally Cleveland Bay blood, with some cross of a small portion of one particular strain of blood. thorough blood, one at least, directly or indirectly, of the The perpetuation of that strain by in-breeding, or by breeding improved English dray-horse, and not impossible a chance from sires of that race, either with cold-blooded or hot-blooded admixture of the Suffolk. mares, I know to be impossible, for the original strain must go And to bring this hypothesis which, thus far, it must be on, from generation to generation, in a scale diminuendo. admitted, is in the main conjectural, to something more like But that same stamp of horse can again be reproduced, and fact, we find that so long since as 1821 a Suffolk cart-horse reproduced, and reproduced ad infinitum, by having recourse to stallion was imported into Massachusetts by John Coffin; that the same system of artificial crossing which produced it, and that in 1825 a Cleveland Bay stallion and mare, and a London dray- many if not all its best qualities may be retained, or even horse stallion; and that again in 1828, another Cleveland Bay improved, by judicious breeding, I in no wise dispute or doubt. stallion, with two , "Barefoot," the St. Leger winner, of 1823, and "Serab," who unfortunately proved impotent, were imported into Massachusetts by the late Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin, no less distinguished for his patriotism than for FROM OHIO: his eccentricity and gallantry, in the British service. I cannot, of course, pretend to assert that the race of the "I am the owner of the only horse of Morgan blood in this animals in question are ipso facto the descendants of these very neighborhood. She is a half-breed, stands 13.5; weighs about imported mares and stallions; but when onefinds, i n any region 950; color, sorrel, white stockings, long mane, tail to the ground or district of country, a certain stock, be it of horses or of neat —and a grand personality. I use her to gather my livestock. I cattle, of sheep, or even of swine, strongly showing the charac­ have also put her in harness with another light horse to help out teristic marks of some well-known distinctive race or races, and the mule team. I wouldn't trade "Susie" for a gold mine. She then ascertains that progenitors or progenitrixes of those very understands everything I say to her. I broke her myself. She races were actually introduced into that district, for the avowed responds to leg flexions, bit motion and word of mouth. She purpose of improving the native breeds, at a period prior to any can turn on a dime—and does! positive notice or description of the now existing stock, he would "Now, I am not in favor of a half-breed stud book. I am hardly, I think, be rash in ascribing the present family to the very proud of the full blood Morgan in my half-breed. She intermixture of the bloods of those ancestors in a greater or lesser looks all Morgan, but I know she isn't. How could I be so degree. proud of half-breed from a half-breed, etc., ad inf ? Besides, pure This view, it must be observed, concerning the draught-horse bred would cease to mean anything. I have pure bred cattle of Vermont, which I have ventured to term a family, is not Holsteins. I know the difference. Horses are my real love, intended to militate against the opinions set forth above as to the however, I've fooled with them over twenty years. I've ridden possibility of creating, by intermixture of bloods, a family which all kinds under various conditions—from broncos to races—and shall reproduce itself unmixed. I like the Morgan the best." No such claim has been set on foot for the Vermont draught- DOROTHA J. MOORHOUSE horse, although something of the kind has been attempted, con­ R. D. No. 1, Wadsworth. Ohio.

MAY, JUNE, 'JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 77 A LOVER OF THE MORGAN HORSE BELIEVES IN UTILITY MORGANS I have used them all my life. My grandfather Doaks drove I received myfirst cop y of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE. them to covered wagons from Pennsylvania to Ohio, then to I was very much pleased with it. I have admired that breed of Illinois, then to what is now called Des Moines, Iowa, in the horses for a long time, but don't see them so often. I bought year 1845 where he used to haul merchandise from Keokuk. a sorrel mare about three years ago who, if she isn't a Morgan is Long heavy trips, but they stood the trip well. Also my a dead ringer for one. I bought her to ride, but like to work her mother's folks drove them from Kentucky later on in the fifties just as well. I prefer Morgans built on her lines. As you know near now called Winterset, Iowa. We all have used them for in this era of tractors, we haven't use on our farm for big lumber­ heavy farm work, driving and saddle horses and think they are ing work horses. We want one that can work awhile then be the best horses in the world. They cross so good with all idle awhile without eating two or three cows' feed. Our horse kinds of horses from ponies to draft mares, make very useful gets six ears of corn a day on hard work, while the big team using horses, improve the breed, but I prefer the pure-bred requires twenty. She stays fat, they get thin. Between working Morgans. They are so strong, rugged, honest to pull in harness hours she gets the mail and brings the cows. She has quite a or saddle, very sure footed, much stronger than any kind of crest on her neck for a mare. Large sprung ribs, a wide, deep chest horses, very tough, easy keepers, long lifed like Panic, son of and slender legs. Her feet are so round that people on seeing her Ethan Allen, lived to the age of 40 owned at Winterset and tracks swear she has shoes on. I doubt if she ever had a shoe Little Crow 35, owned also at Winterset. They were great on. She never needs them. I weighed her one winter when she sires of show horses in harness and saddle, several fast trotters was very fat and she weighed 1,200 lbs. She stands 58 inches and running horses and the best of saddle horses, lot of high high. To look at her you would never know how she can trot. stepping show horses, so honest, stout and trusty in harness and She really can go. the best of livery horses. Several lived to the age of 30. Some You ask in your magazine what type Morgan we like. I think were worked on the streets' delivery over 20 years then looked in describing my horses I have told you. I don't like a leggy well. Morgan—let the Saddle horses breed theirs that way if they Morgan Horse Has No Equal like—they were never meant to pull bundle wagons or round up cows. I like Bennington 5693 and General Gates 666 types the My home town was Winterset, Iowa. Used to have several best. good registered Morgan stallions such as Panic and his sons and Most of the Morgans around here look more like Bennington Little Crow and sons, also Wopsie and sons, Black Bird, 5693 and are black, and the owners of these are very proud Napoleon, Ohio Boy, Bashaw Gopher, Redish, Harry Glenn of them. They pull just as big a load on the threshing ring as and many others. My folks never had any registered, but all the big horses. raised and used a great number of them and said the Morgan horse had no equal, always in demand. About 20 years ago I Favors Half-Morgans Registry thought they were going to lose the Morgan horse—no stallions near—many people said they weren't needed—so I bought About the half-bred registry. I think it grand. It would help "Captain Jack" and his son "Winterset" then only a colt but the Association to get in more money and the Morgan to increase. soon matured to a real Morgan stallion. Got one prize at Iowa Pure breds in this section are scarce, and it would be expensive to State Fair, also later his son, Rosevelt took one prize. They us to ship a bunch in. There are many saddle horses around here were bred by old breeders, T P. Royce c3 Son at Naperville, 111., and I believe a Morgan stallion would do well here. For instance, also some mares of the C. T. Ayers, well-known breeder of two brothers each have a pure bred Saddle stud. One has a Osceola, Iowa, that raised many good colts, also bought two lanky, long horse—the other has a rather short coupled blocky registered mares—Regina X04017 and Sabina X04014 that horse. The little horse has three times the output the lanky never raised a colt, foiled to get in foal so I haven't had any one has, which proves people around here would take to a registered from them. I have sold many good Morgan mares and Morgan. I'd recommend you register only mares in the half- stallions nearly all over the U. S., and all give good satisfaction bred register. The Belgian people did it that way and I cannot and induced many to join the Morgan Horse Club and now see any degeneration in that breed. raising the good registered Morgan horses and making money There, I will wind up my views on that wonderful little horse. with them. Also enjoy riding and driving them, also selling I will not agree with Mr. H. I. Rankin that the day of the utility for profitable prices. Like the Geo. Stevenson sale at Des Moines, horse is past. Not here anyway. Our Morgans have got to be several sold him are of my blood of Morgans, they show for first class drafters, cow ponies, saddle horses, etc. Why, we themselves. My Morgan horses have been in good demand, well even have to race them to beat the neighbors, whether we are satisfied customers. I still think the Morgan horse the most hitched to a hayrack, buggy or on board. profitable to raise and use. _ „ ~ (MRS.) HARRY DIERCKS THOS. C. DOAKS R. 3, , Iowa Osceola, Iowa. | An illustration of a Morgan—the blocky type—was drawn in pencil.]

I have written a short description of the Morgan horse. Could have written more but thought enough now, would have sooner but haven't been so very well and busy most of the time. Maybe you can make it out, maybe need a little? out. Let me hear o.J . NEELEY, REXBURG, IDAHO, WRITES what you think of it. I love the Morgan horse. I have used MRS. WATT and bred them all my life. Hope you like this. Let me hear. "We received the paper for the colt. They chose Captain T C. DOAKS Boulder for the pedigree name. Nothing is too good for this colt. This colt is a grandson of Captain Kelloggs out of Joann —Cap's daughter by Stepper Cloud an Am. Saddler." LIKES THE MAGAZINE Morgan Blood Wanted I visited Mr. J. Roy Brunk, Cotton Hill Stock Farm, Roches­ ter, 111. He showed me copies of your very good magazine. As I "These are just a few. Most of the mares were just ordinary am very much interested in Morgan horses, I was greatly and could have been bred to cheaper stallions but their owners impressed with the information given therein. With best wishes wanted Morgan blood. for the continued success of the magazine. "We are so sorry that most of these colts weren't pure-blood FRED HUENERGARTH Morgan, but there are so few Morgan mares near us and those 1503 Telegraph Rd,, Lemay, Mo. at a distance don't seem to be interested."

78 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 NORTH DAKOTA STALLIONS RAISE MORE MORGANS! I saw it stated in THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE that you The recommendation of Wayne Dinsmore, secretary of the will publish by states names of Morgan Stallions and their Horse and Mule Association (407 South Dearborn Street, owner's address. I hereby submit the following horse bred Chicago) is to "raise more horses"—the nation needs 851,000 and owned by me. I consider him one of the best bred Morgans horse and mule foals under 1 year, we have only 516,000 avail­ living today, along with conformation, style action, etc. Look able; there has never been so great a scarcity of young work over his breeding, go back and see the magazines that are pub­ stock from one to four years. lished on the horse of his relatives and I think you will agree. Morgans and half-Morgans have been found to be excellent Such as Mansfield, Headlight Morgan, General Gates, etc., Ben­ farm and utility stock in New England and in the Middle nington. Also his sire Sidney still alive and active at 18 won West, and for this reason young Morgan colts should be grown at Springfield when he was a foal 7 months of age. and placed in areas where no Morgan stallions are now avail­ \ Mansfield able. / . '- 7255 The Morgan-Draft cross has produced a very valuable farm / Sidney animal, possessing stamina, soundness, long life and splendid 1 ' i Lady Lyndon disposition. Some decades ago the result of such cross-breeding Gold Spinner ) j 03343 developed a strain well known in the East as the Vermont draft REG. NO. 8275 horse, and today with more emphasis on the use of lightweight Dark Chestnut J I Headlight Morgan utility horses, the Morgan-cross is again making a reputation |r ,, I 4683 of utility and versatility not surpassed by any other breed. Irantina K 1 03^14 (FlorieA I 0805 Above horse bred and owned by L. L. Berce, VERTEBRAE IN HORSES Williston, N. D. North Dakota State License I have your letter addressed to the Director of our Museum No. 11551 asking about our collection of horse skeletons. This horse is absolutely SOUND I understand you are interested in finding out the number of vertebrae exclusive of those of the tail. As you undoubtedly know, seven neck vertebrae are present in practically all mam­ ILLINOIS OWNED STALLIONS mals. The back vertebrae are divided into two groups, the rib "Will you please enter our subscription to THE MORGANbearin g or thoracic, and the non-rib bearing, or lumbar. In HORSE MAGAZINE beginning with the current issue? A money this region of the thoracico-lumbar, our eight horse skeletons, order for one dollar is enclosed. unfortunately of unspecified breed, show some variation, six of "Our Morgans are doing fine—at least they were when I left them having eighteen thoracic and six lumbar, one having seven­ recently to complete my work toward my Master's degree here teen thoracic and six lumbar, and one having eighteen thoracic at the University of Kentucky. Mrs. Raplus, the good sport she and five lumbar. is, is "carrying on" at Elgin and I know she has everything under The American Museum, as you probably know, has a control. mounted collection of skeletons of different kinds of domestic "At the moment we have two stallions, a two-year-old, horses. I am not sure if this includes the skeleton of a Morgan, G. Gates Tivormandy 8484. by Ormandy 8153 and out of but it does include the skeleton of the Arab (Nimr) which Dr. Tivanna 04842, our show mare by Tiffany 7517; and a yearling Henry Fairfield Osborn believes to be "probably as pure an ex­ Glenmuir Roctivlin 8680, by Roscoe Morgan 7573 and out of ample as can be found of the modern Arab, somewhat enlarged Tivanna 04842, the above mare. If you have the space and and modified by favorable western environment and abundant can do it conveniently, we should like to have you list them under food." The United States National Museum has the skeleton column heading—Illinois-Owned Stallions. of another Arab, "Lexington," and the British Museum is also "We enjoy reading your fine publication and wish you con­ said to have a mounted skeleton of an Arab. tinued success with the THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE. As yet I have found no reference to skeletons of Morgans, but MR. AND MRS. H. E. RAPLUS will certainly let you know if I do. I will also let you know if I R. 3, Box 242, Elgin. III. find any authoritative comments on the number of vertebrae in the Morgan or any other types of horses. BARBARA LAWRENCE, MORGANS POSSESS FIVE LUMBAR VERTEBRAE Assistant Curator of Mammals Mr. H. H. Reese, the former superintendent of the U. S. Morgan Museum of Comparative Zoology, at Harvard College. Cambridge, Mass. Horse Farm, Middlebury, Vt., wrote Department Circular 199, "Breeding Morgan Horses at the U. S. Morgan Horse Farm," and in that he stated, "ABBOTT 7704—MAGNIFICENT MORGAN "Post-mortem examinations of Morgan horses have revealed STALLION" only five lumbar vertebrae, whereas most horses have six. Gen­ eral Gates 666, Donald 5224, Dude 4673, and a weanling colt This is the title of the cover illustration of the June, 1943, sired by Troubadour of Willowmoor 6459 out of Lady Lyndon number of The Kansas Stockman. 033342 possessed this characteristic." "The front cover picture on this issue of The Stockman is that of "Abbott 7704," Morgan stallion owned by the United States Department of Agriculture and placed by the Bureau of Animal Industry through the Army Remount for service in VERMONT LEADS NEW ENGLAND AS A Montgomery County, Kansas. Abbott's present home is at the HORSE STATE Pecan Valley Farm at Coffeyville, owned and operated by Cliff Burton. He is chestnut in color, with a star, a snip and two Vermont, with a total of 23,582 farms (Maine 38,980; white hind socks, stands 15 hands and half-inch high, weighing Massachusetts 31, 897) leads all the New England states in total 1,090 pounds. A picture of Abbott's head and neck appeared in number of horses, 41,000. the November-December, 1942, issue of The Horse, a magazine Vermont is a leading dairy cattle state, possessing more cattle having national circulation and published in Washington, than humans.

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 79 "I stated in my letter I had two stallions but neglected to give their breeding. Here'tis: "My Roma 7908, chestnut with white ankles behind. Eight years old. He is sired by the good horse Romanesque, 7297, out of Margett I. Bred by the late Elmer Brown at Halstead, Kan. I purchased this stallion when he was 18 months old and have broke and trained him myself. He is five-gaited. Having won in competition in Wichita last year, that was American Royal bound. He is high schooled and has a routine of fifteen tricks. Has won infine harnes s wherever shown, and this year won the cow horse class at Wichita. Though he only stands 14.2 he can win with the best of the American Breds. Will Use Half-Morgan Register ' 'My other stallion is his colt, blood bay, 19 months old. This colt, Cyclone McAurther, is better than 15.1 now and should make 15.2 by spring. He is out of old Agnes Lee—don't have her number at hand although she is a registered standard bred mare with quite a track record. He is a typical Morgan and has the disposition of his father. Should like to register him if you IDA AND IDA MAY SENTNEY— Twins get the Halfbreed book. Enclosed please find one dollar for Mr. Pechin's subscription." Sire: Ranger L. MRS. LILLIAN M. VAN Y Dam: Roxie. 828 So. Oliver, Wichita, Kan. They are Linsley 7233 blood lines. Sold May 6, 1943, to Mrs. Ruth Hanna Simms, Trinchera Ranch (248,000 acres) Fort Garland, Colo. From: Pop R. S. Sentney, Kansas Cow Boy, Table Top FROM KANSAS: Stables, Hutchinson, Kan. "Well, here's another subscription. I'm getting them slowly, but surely. MORGAN STALLIONS IN KANSAS "I have sold my Morgan stallions and purchased another, and am now looking for a couple of good registered mares or Answer to your letter relative to the Headlite stallion fillies. which Elmer Brown is supposed to have used has been delayed "My new stallion is Loren Belle 8641. Bred by the late until I had time to do a little looking into the past. Elmer Brown at Halstead. His sire is Tehachapi Allen 7910. I wasn't around, apparently, when Mr. Brown installed his Dam—Lisabelle 04627. He is chestnut sorrel, with silver mane first Morgan—at any rate records of the office do not go back and tail, two white feet and blaze in the face. I purchased him to 1910 and I fail tofind Headlite on the public service list since from the Chilocco Indian School, Oklahoma. that year. It is entirely possible, however, that Mr. Brown "I've driven all over central United States and I believe he is had and used him during this time. Thefiles show that Dude the best I've seen. Chilocco has five of the best stallions, for Hudson 5654 was thefirst stallion he licensed, to be followed herd sires, and as beautiful a uniform herd of mares, as you'll in order by: Linsley 7233; Sparhawk 6874; Rockwood 7423; see anywhere, I believe. Romanesque 7297; Tehachapi Allan 7910 and Senator Knox "Sorry to hear the magazine was made a quarterly, but I know 6132. how we all have to make the best of what we have in these There is a bare possibility that Historical Societyfiles ma y topsy-turvy times. contain some information and I shall check on this. It was a "Please send the magazine to the enclosed name and address palmy day if someone paid 4 Gs for a Kansas hoss! and find also enclosed one dollar. Hoping for more and more BILL ATCHISON circulation and lots of good luck and good horses." State House, Topeka MRS. LILLIAN M. VAN Y 1 828 So. Oliver. Wichita, Kan.

William A. Atchison is Special Assistant Secretary of Agricul­ ture for Kansas. For many years, he has had charge of the Enclosed is my personal check No. 1,617 in the amount of Stallion Registration Department. $3.00 covering three subscriptions to THE MORGAN HORSE If Bill Atchison could not dig out the information you asked MAGAZINE for the following: for, it is quite probable that there is no foundation for the rumor, Mr. John H. Tatlock, 111 South Topeka Ave., Wichita, Kan. as you reported it. Mr. John H. Tatlock, Jr., Route No. 3, Piedmont, Kan. C. E. BURTON Mr. Thomas A. Tatlock, Box 946, Ellinwood, Kans. EDITORIAL NOTE: The "rumor was that some breeder from Texas, or elsewhere, paid $4,000 for a Morgan stallion. JOHN H. TATLOCK Witchita, Kan.

MORGANS IN KANSAS "Enclosed please find my check for $1.00. Send your "Received the October issue of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGA­magazine to Mr. Locke Theis, Dodge City, Kan. Also a receipt ZINE yesterday and was very much surprised to see my letter to him. reprinted in it. Noted you asked for every reader to send in a new "I sold Mr. Locke Theis, Dodge City, Kan., 6 mares and 3 subscriber, so here is mine. Send the magazine to Mr. C. A. colts by side of 3 mares. Pechin, 252 No. Spruce, Wichita, Kan. Please start his sub­ "Anxious to see adv. sent you for next issue of magazine. scription with the September-October issue as I know he is very "I still have Belle Rockwood, No. 04586, and stud baby colt anxious to read the magazine. by side for sale." "Mr. Pechin has a half-Morgan gelding for a cow horse, and R. S. SENTNEY he is really sold on the breed. Hutchinson, Kan.

80 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 AMERICAN MORGAN HORSE REGISTER

Second Supplement to Vol. V

Published by THE MORGAN HORSE CLUB, INC. 90 Broad Street New York, N. Y. . •

Spread the Gospel That Morgans Were th e Original American General Purpose Breed!

AND AS A FAMILY UTILITY HORSE THEY ARE NOT SURPASSED TODAY!

/ DOCILE DISPOSITION / AND GOOD TEMPER \ INTELLIGENCE AND ] QUICK ADAPTABILITY Morgan Charaderist!cs < j STAMINA AND I SOUNDNESS 1 LONG LIFE AND \ EASY KEEPERS

Tell Your Horse Friends to Subscribe to the MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE $1.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE

AAA

An illustrated — and interesting — and informative quarterly devoted to America's Most Versatile Breed WOODSTOCK, VT.

—^—^——————-—^^—-—^—-^_^^^_^^^—_ 2 STALLIONS Alphabetically Arranged — 8576-8725

ALLEN'S ARISTOCRAT s725 -Chestnut; very small star; f-()ctciher 31. 19 12; COPPER PENNY 8690 - Chesl nut; no white markings; f-May I. 1912; br-J. C. br-Charles E. Allen. Indian Spring Stoek Farm, Baldwins ille. New York. S: Corn- Jackson, Harrison, Montana. S- Delbert 7707; D: Pretty X-04920. walhs 7098; I): Hepatica 05099. CORISOR OF UPWEY K055 -Bav; left hind foot while; f-April II. 1942; ....AN"i A}rN h^;'_;rllest"ut: -,:"'- flli"* st'-'P. loft bind fetlock white; f-March 29, W s>ni M;ir br-Charles E. Allen, Baldwinsville, New York; o-Owen Moon. Woodstock, Vermont. vliiu n u ft "' ' K"»te. Arroyo Grande. California. S: Antman S: Cornwallis 701IH; D: Arissa II16611. A-H318; D: Red Tawn ()i;>31. ioiARh,Hr' P^^M^M'"; NliHl7„Ba):: fnl,,t Mi"' k>ft ''""l P^'>'™ white: f-Mav 12, CORTNKY 8715 Chestnut; small star, branded "III" on thighs; f-February 1912; hr-Horscshnc Callle Company, Gustine, California; o-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, Cali­ 1912, bi-(. J. ONeill, Manteno, Illinois. S: Archy Hudson 7olls; |): Mnllic () 05088. ,n,AKiR")V,M"wl\S700TC''.cstn"t; st:ir- P™>Io"Ked into narrow strip; f-Mav 11, fornia. S: El Cortez 8070; I): Sallie Ann 04980. -IH' n 11" ,;-C,';nn'°tt' Jr" '"' ,e'"°" St" A»"»l'i'. California. S- Red Vermont DAKOTA CHIEF 8663 Chestnut; small, elongated star; foaled June 19, 1042; inyrf, u. Anna o.>oJ: Pr,,Io"irert st'"-. ^'liP. white on huth hind coronets; munity School. Fort Totten, North Dakota. S: Da r S-lludson si Hi; D: Tude 0510H. branded l.l on thighs; f-April 1942; l.r-Horseshoe Cattle Company. C.ustine. DALE UK .JARNETTE 87lls Chestnut; medium star; f-May 29. 1912; br-W. W. California; o-Ro!and (.. Hill. C.ustine. California. S. Sonlield 7li;,2; D: S.iloiia ilsoil. Chatterton. Wapello, Iowa. S: Glendale 7 185; D: Susette 04975. BAR S .ICE s621— Chestnut; large star connecteil with narrow strip widening DANDY LEE 85s I -Light bay; star, black mane and tail; f-July 11, 1940; m lower face and between nostrils; left front pastern, right front and right hind br-Reon Wills, R.F.D. 4, , Pennsylvania. S: Allen Lee 7854; D: Helen stockings white; left hind coronci white: white spot on front and inside of left H. Olsiil). hind hock: f-April 22. 1942; br-O. E. Sutter. 306 Kourth Nali .1 Bank Bldg DANZER 8713 Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip, both hind stockings Wichita. Kansas. S: Romanlight 7H00; D: Lightfoot Russle ills 17. white; branded ":is" on thighs; f-March 1942; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. , ,?AJ? S MAJ0R SI12H—Chcslnut; connected star, strip and snip; f-April 2s iu i • • S: Sonfield 71152; D: Deana B. 0 1907. BAR S WINTERSET 8602 -Bay; no marking; f-April 1 - 191" br-O. E. Sutter, DELLS VALLEY JI'UILEE 8582—Chestnut; star, left hind fetlock and right br-0306 . FourtE. Sutterh Nationa. 306 lFourt Banhk NationaBid;;., l WichitaBank ,Bldg. Kansa, Wichitas S-, KansaRinces S Monte Leon 8216; D: Mary R.M. 0 1955. UK; D: Bar S hind stocking white; f-April II, 1942; br-Simon E. Lantz, t'ongen ille, Illinois. Star 0t9li i. S: Plainsman s2iis; D: Jusista 01837. (May 10, 11141; br-.lones Hereford BELPEPPER s.-,s7—Brown; no markings; DIABLO 8576- -Black; no markings; f-Mav 2, mil; br-J. I.. Hanna, O'Keefe . S. l'epper SOlii; I): Be'cresta 05071. Ranch, Route 1, Box 359 A. Hollister. Californi Lane, Los Altos, California. S: Millbrae 7871; D: Millitent 1)4425. mi thighs; f-March 19 12; BERT EL 8709—Chestnut; narrow strip, branded "II" DINWOODY 8691—Chestnut; star, snip, right front ankle white; f-May 1942; 1): Betty Skinner Ol9s7. br-Roland G. Hill. C.ustine. California. S: LI Cortez 8070 br-L. C. Sheep Company. Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 76KI; D: Shoshone BILLADY X-sii93—Che-tnut: small star; f-September s. 1912; br-R. L Berry X-05193. & Son. Sheffield. Vermont. S: Berry's Billy 71132; D: I.aclv (unregistered)' dark DOMINO ROGERS K710—Chestnut; connected star and short strip; snip; left chestnut; strip, right front and left hind-ankles white: f-l'910: br-B H Wheeler front fetlock white; branded "35" on thighs; f-September 6. 1942; br-C. G. Stevenson, Sheffield, Vermont; o-R. L. Berry & Sons; by The Young General iio:i2. 2nd D: Topsy Des Moines. Iowa; o-Roland G. Hill. Gustine, California. S: Will Rogers 7943; (unregistered); chestnut: no markings; f-about l!iii:>; br-Andrew Hill, Greensboro, D: Miga 04800. Vermont, who owned her sire, a Morgan horse known locally as '-Cub." pedigree DON JAUQUIN 8iiKi —Hay; large star; f-April s, 1942; br-Lelia Mae Davis, unknown. 5330 San Pablo Dam Rd„ Richmond, California; o-CTarence C. Reed, M.D., 701 BLACK BEN 8696—B'.ack: star and narrow strip ending between nostrils, left E. Compton Blvd.. Compton, California. S: General Ben 7733; D: Rose B. 04 912. hind stocking white; f-July 1, 1942; br-Anna Buresch. Route 3. Delman, Wisconsin; DOCGI.AS MuARTHUR 8639 -Chestnut; small star, left front fetlock white; o-Pine Ridge Indian Agency Extension, Pine Ridge. South Dakota. S- Shenandoah scattered roan hairs on body; f-April 22. 1941; br-W. E. Giles, Limestone. Montana. 7417; D: Mnlnu 05117. S: Sea Gull 7979; D: Sonda 041196. BLACK HORNET s.1711—Black: no white markings; branded A left law: f-March BLACKIE S711—Black; branded "36" on thighs; f-April 111 12; br-C. G. Steven- DR. T. H. 8612 -Black; no markings; f-May I. 1942; br-Elmer Brown. Halstead, 30, 1940; br-Thos. W. Adams. Huson, Montana. S: Justin's Silhouette s2o;i; D-Mon- son, Des Moines, Iowa: o-Ro'anrl G. Hill, Gustine. California. Si Will Rogers Kansas; o-Chilocco Agricultural School. Chilocco, Oklahoma. S: Tehachapi Allan tan7943a; SunshinD: Kathleee 0 4054n McCav'i. n 05012. 7910; D: Dorothy D.H. 04790. BLACKMAN 8622—B'ack; small star; both hind fetlocks white; foaled June EBONY BOY 8695—Black; small star, left hind coronet white; f-July is, 1942; 23, 1942; br-R. L. Welborn. Campo. California: o-E. W. Roberts. 61:1 Venice Boule­ br-Anna Buresch, Route 3. Delavan, Wisconsin; o-Pine Ridge Indian Agency Ex­ vard. Los Angeles, California. S: Redman so.iii; D: Gojea 04010. tension, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Shenandoah 7417; D: Lady Lou 0527 1. BLACKMONT 8654—Black: star, short strip in lower face ending in snip; ELCHKM siiio—Bay; no markings; f-June 5, 1942; br-Florence Holwav. 8738 f-April 4, 19 12; br-August H. Schmidt. 31 Willow St., Salinas, California: S: Mount- Point A\e., Niagara Falls, New York; o-Zygnuint Tarnowski, R.F.D. No. 1. Million crest Sellman 72sli; D: Kitty Kat 04753. Dollar Highway, Ransomville, New York. S: Justinian 8172; D: Janee 05202. BLOOMFIEI.D s.71-1—Chestnut; star connected with irregular strip; branded ENOWEE 8606—Dark chestnut; small star, right hind fetlock white; f-May 1940; "39" on thighs; f-January 1912; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Sonfield br-R. G. Stewart, Rancho Dos Vientos. Camarillo, California. S: Uhlan 7564; 7952BRADBER; D: BlossoY 8676—Chestnutm C. 04911. ; small star; f-May 17. 1942 br-Kohert Tynan, Jr., D: Piedmont Arabella 04901. Stella, Nebraska. S: Agazizz 7700; D: Goldy Herod 05300. ERIC GEDDES 8012—Chestnut; long, narrow strip; f-April 30, 1941; br-Alexander BRICKTOP 8502—Chestnut; small star; f-June s. 1942 br-R. A. Sperry, 1003 G. Ruthven, Ann Arbor. Michigan. S: Romax Light 7907; D: Ruthven's Polly Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles. California. S: Red Vermont 7893 D: Rouge Rubee 05061. Ann 05219. BROOKFIELD 8716—Chestnut; strip, left front coronet and left hind fetlock FLENBiJO 8653—Bay; no white markings; branded "1" on left hip; "2" on white, branded "41" on thighs; f-February 19 12; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, Cali­ right hip; f-June 18, 1942; br-R. A. Sperry. 1003 Higgins Bldg.. Los Angeles, fornia. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Angel 0420U. California. S; Red Vermont 7893; D: Starglow 1)5650. BUGLETT 8686—Chestnut; white on left hind coronet and heel; f-May 18, 10 42; 8601—Chestnut; small star, long narrow strip; left front fetlock br-J. C. Jackson. Harrison, Montana. S: Delbert 7707; D: Montana Bird 05261. and right hind fetlock white; left hind coronet white; flaxen mane and* tail; CALGARY 8577—Dark bay: large star, both hind pasterns white; f-Mav 7, 1932; f-April 15. 19 12; br-H. I. Rankin, 724 West Third St.. Wellington, Kansas. S: Parader br-Thos. W. Adams, Huson, Montana. S: Sea Quail 6752; D: Alice Dean 02699. 8102; D: May West 04804. CAMACHIE 8687—Chestnut; right hind pastern white: f-June 5. 1942; br-J. C. FRANCES T.H. 8643-Chestnut; star; f-April 20, 1942; br-Elmer Brown, Hal­ Jackson, Harrison, Montana. S: Delbert 7707; D: Rosy Posy X-05192. stead, Kansas; o-C'hilocco Agricultural School, Chilocco, Oklahoma. S: Tehachapi CANPHIL 8698—Chestnut; large, prolonged star; snip; f-August 25, 1942; Allan 7910; D: Fanita 0 1730. br-University of Connecticut, Storrs. Connecticut. S: Canfield 7788; D: Phillipa otsia. GENE DE JARNETTE X-8685—Brown; large star, left front pastern and both CAPTAIN JINKS 8650—Bay; small star; f-April 16, 1942; br-Gcorge H. Iftner, hind fetlocks white; f-April 15. 1912; br-C. J. ONeill, Manteno, Illinois: S: Dude R.F.D. 2. Pekin, Illinois. S: Illawana Hawk H155; D: Dude's Tivanna 04969. De Jarnette 7325; D: Little Billey (unregistered); bay: no markings; f-1930; CARMEN M. 8658—Dark chestnut; connected star, narrow strip and snip; white br-C. J. O'Neill; by Selim 5926. 2nd D: Trotter (unregistered); bay; no markings; spot on underlip; both hind fetlocks white; f-June 29, 1942; br-Paul B. Herrington, f-1923; b\ The Exponent (Standardbred); 3rd D: Bay by Sunday Pipes (Stand­ 509 Norman Avenue, Arcadia, California. S: Ken Carmen 7815; D: Fan R.M. 052 12. ardbred) . CHESTER S.F. 87Z7—Chestnut; narrow connected star, strip and snip; left hind GENERAL BOB 8599—Dark bay; no markings; f-May 7, 1939; br-Henry G. fetlock white; branded "42" on thighs; f-March 1912; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Darling, East Burke, Vermont; o-Harry & Milton Zabarsky, 76 Portland St., St. Gustine, California; o-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Sonlield 7952; Johnsbury, Vermont. S: Sonny Bob 7693; D: Hepsibeth 04388. D: Raisy D 04979. GENERAL MAC 8707—Chestnut; large star prolonged into strip narrowing in CHIEF OF ALL 8651—Dark chestnut; long, wide strip, both front and hind lower face and ending in large snip; left hind stocking white nearly to hock • stockings white; f-May 1, 1942; br-H. G. Stubblefleld, Osceola, Iowa. S: Chief f-May 17. 1942; br-Mr. ^ Mrs. Lewis A. Burtcli, Route" 5. Box 125. Bakersfield, Romanesque 7685; D: Queen Mae 05457. California. S: Eagle 8189; D: Shirley Alice 05512. CHIEF PINE RIDGE 8578—Bay; right front and left hind coronets white: GENERAL M.u ARTHUR «5so—Bav: star, small snip, white on inside of both branded "-2A" right shoulder; f-July 31, 1910; br-Thos. W. Adams, Huson, Mon­ hind pasterns; f-March Is, 1942; br-W. T. Carter. Sanger, California. S: Black- tana. S: Monterey 7475; D: Night Bird 04995. haux 7973; I): Leora 04756. CHILE PEPPER 8588—Bav; small star; f-April 26, 1941; br-Jones Hereford GEORGE MADISON 8641—Black; right hind heel white; f-May 2. 1942; br-Chilocco Ranch, Route l.Box 359 A, Hollister, California. S: Pepper 8010; D: Reba Ro 04528. Agricultural School, Chilocco, Oklahoma. S: King George R.M. 8073; D: Dolly CINCO PESOS 8591—Chestnut; star; short, narrow strip; left hind fetlock Madison 052 17. white; branded "1" on left thigh; f-May 7, 1941; br-A. J. Alexander. Onyx, Cali­ GLEN DO 8670—Chestnut; connected star and narrow strip; snip; f-April 20, fornia; o-R. A. Sperry, 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, California. S: Dandy R.M. 19 12; br-Helen B. Greenwalt, Pawnee, Illinois. S: Flyhawk 7526; D: Glenalla 04363. 8012; D: Dorris F. 04705. GLENMUIR ROCTTYLIN 8680—Chestnut: star, both hind stockings white; COLONEL LEE 8600—Bay: left hind fetlock and right hind coronet white; f-April 27, 19 12; br-H. E. Raplus. Route 3. Elgin, Illinois; o-Mr. & Mrs. H. E. f-May 9, 1941; br-Reon Wills, Somerset, Pennsylvania. S: Allen Lee 7s54; D: Marie Raplus, Route 3, Elgin, Illinois. S: Rosco Morgan 7573; D: Tivanna 04842. Morgan' 05052. GOLDEN CHIEF 8720—Lt. Chestnut, right hind pastern white; f-June 23, 19 12; br-Nellie Fickert, Tehachapi, California. S: Chestnut Chief 8135; D: Dickens 05313.' JoiCityf-1905Ingerson eHA rear,Youn ;LUtah l :; b bGygf-Augusyrigh . DaX-8595—Bay Fearnaugh99tS.n : 2nhin PatctPrinc dd24 Dh tcorone,:e ; (3732 192sGif DollArgosmalt t;y3231 ltbr-WmSwifA.T.R.)an .star Had4t t,l lefh. blef, t6307 yDGullicksen whost:Dominiohin fronEv; de aD t pasterIngerso:paterna pastern.Doll Georg61nly 2ln whitbSoutgrandawhitPatcye Roya(Parker's)ehe h extendinextendin12tlm(unregistered) Georgwah Wests. gega 3r,(Battersby'sjontontdaughte dSal ooD t:;fetloc bavNellLakr ok:fye . HAPP> LANDING 8657-Black; few white hairs in forehead; f-.June 12, 1912; MONTY GIFT 8669—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip; right hind fetlock br-Mrs. Anna K. Zeitler, Route 4. Box 315, Santa Cruz, California. S: Cloverman and left hind stocking white; f-October 10, 1942; br-O. C. Foster, 1330 South Grand 8047; D: Kitty Q. 050 45. Ave., Los Angeles, California. S: Montabell 8117; D: Glenna 05312. HEDLITE'S PATRICK 8586— Black; bald face; front, inside and rear of right MURRIETT\ 8719—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip; left front coronet hind pastern white; f-March 17, 1942; br-Marv H. Smith, Route 1, Box E, Camarillo. and both hind fetlocks white; branded "34" on thighs; f-Apnl 1942; br-Roland California. S: Hedlite 7977; D: Piedmont Cresta OIHIII. G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Joaquin Morgan 7947; D: Marnetta Mane 04751. ILLAWANA DAN 867 I—Chestnut; small star, right hind fetlock white; f-July 211, NATAN 8662 -Bay; black points; f-May 2, 1942; br-Joseph R. Brunk, Rochester, 1912; br Allan Taylor, Hanna City, Illinois. S: Dan Dee 8151; D: Gosette 01611. Illinois. S: Juzan 7895; D: Neltalia 05335. INDIO L. 8597—Chestnut; star and connected short strip; f-.June 7. 1912; NIGHT STAR 8699- Black, no markings; f-June 24, 1942; br-V. J. Gianelloni, brMr. & Mrs. James M. Lemon, R.F.D. 1, Sheridan, Wyoming. S: Lobo 8116; P. O. Box 8396, University, Louisiana. S: Night Tide 8038; D: Wapati X-05317. D: Indian Summer 04971. NUGGET 8637—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip, right front pastern JOAQUIN'S PRIDE 8018—Chestnut; small star connected with narrow strip white extending onto fetlock; right hind stocking white; f-May 18, 1939; br-Merle ending in snip; left hind pastern white extending above fetlock on inside; f-April D. Evans, 600 Ohio Merchants Bank Bldg., Massillon, Ohio. S: Captor 7789; 2, 1942; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California; o-Tressa Nickum, 1003 Washington D: Gleneida 05023. Blvd., Bellllower, California. S: Joaquin Morgan 7947; D: Princess Spar 05284. OJO DEL MAJOR 8616—Dark chestnut; medium star; f-May 10, 1942; br-A. S. JOE BARR 8646—Bay: right hind heel white extending onto fetlock; f-April 23. Russell, Route 1, Lafayette, California. S: General Ben 7733; D: Lu La 04794. 1942; br-W. G. Berry, Virgil, Kansas; o-Chilocco Agricultural School, Chilocco, O'NEIL'S MORGAN CHIEF 8683—Brown; no markings; f-August 3, 1942; Oklahoma. S: Barberry 8089; D: Betty Joe 04919. br-C. J. O'Neill, Manteno, Illinois. S: Archy Hudson 7098; D: Pearl De Jarnette .JUBILEE KEN 8615—Bay; no markings; f-Mav 26. 1942; br-F. K. Dzengolewski, 05195. Alhambra. Illinois; o-Oglala Community High School, Pine Ridge. South Dakota. PEPPER SHAKER 8661—Bay; no markings; f-May 1, 1942; br-Jones Hereford S: King Shenandoah 7892; D: Illawana Topsy 05177. Ranch, Route 1, Box 359 A, Hollister, California. S: Pepper 8016; D: Oretia KATRILAN PRINCE 8667—Chestnut; star, short strip in lower face, right hind Spar 05251. stocking white; f-April 20. 1912; br-Hearst Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, PILOTAYR 8611—Bay; large star; f-May 4, 1942; br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall San Simeon, California. S: Katrilan 8121; D: Trincess Allan 04635. St., New York, New York. S: James R.M. 7946; D: Angelayr 05235. KEDRON GATFJS 8604—Dark chestnut; large star connected with narrow strip PINE RIDGE DUDE 8613—Chestnut; strip and snip; both hind feet white; ending in snip; left hind stocking white extending higher on inside; f-Mav 2, 1942; f-May 14, 19 12; br-Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas; o-Oglala Community br-Ina M. Richter, P. 0. Box 585, Santa Barbara, California. S: McAllister 7896; High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Silver Ranger 7813; D: Mae 05385. D: Golden Dawn 05O8 1. PINE RIDGE GENE 8678—Black; white on both hind coronets; f-May 28, 1942; KEDRON KNOX 8603—Dark chestnut; small star, connected with narrow strip br-Oglala Community High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Bar-S-Hudson ending on left of face; f-May 21, 1942; br-Ina M. Richter, P.O. Box 585, Santa 8146; D: Jean Arthur 05248. Barbara, California. S: McAllister 7896; D: Upwey Roxana 04928. PINE RIDGE SMITH 8679—Chestnut; small star; f-July 15, 1942; br-Oglala KENNEBEC BOY' 8585—Brown; star; f-April 19, 1912; br-Florence Williams and Community High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Chief Joseph 8078; D: Kate G. S. Williams, Windsorville, Maine. S: Tipperary 7518; D: Perhaps 0 43 48. Smith 05013. KNIC-K 8677—Bay; no markings. f-March 20. 1942; br-Dr. Lester C. Clark, PLAINSMAN OF DELLS 8583—Bay; no markings; f-April 10, 1942; br-Simon E. Rushville, Illinois. S: Cotton Hill's Choice 8093; D: Noxa 04009. Lantz, Congerville, Illinois. S: Plainsman 8268; D: Madell 05217. LANTZ' MICKEY 8704—Brown; no markings; f-June 5, 1912; br-C. J. O'Neill, PONGEROD 8593—Chestnut; wide star prolonged into a wide strip, tapering Manteno, Illinois; o-Charles Lantz, R.R. 4, Kokomo, Indiana. S: Archy Hudson into a snip; right front and right hind stockings white; f-May 11, 1942; br-Mr. & 7098; D: All There 05291. Mrs. Streeter Blair, El Granito Springs Farm, El Cajon, California. S: Redman LIPPITT JEEP 8672—Bay; no markings; f-July 6, 1942; br-Robert L. Knight, 8056; D: Herodona 0 4452. Providence, Rhode Island. S: Lippitt Sampson 8168; D: Ne Komia 04489. RAYMOND S. SENTNEY 8649—Chestnut; prolonged star, snip, left hind stock­ LIPPITT VICTORY 8673—Dark chestnut; blaze, widening in lower face to ing and right hind coronet white, flaxen mane and tail; f-September 5, 1942; br-W. P. cover nostrils and upperlip, little white on underlip; little white on left front Thornhill, Miami, Texas; o-R. S. Sentney, 536 East Sherman St., Hutchinson, coronet, both hind stockings white; f-August 7, 1942; br-Robert L. Knight, Provi­ Kansas. S: Chocolate 7586; D: Skiner 05209. dence, Rhode Island. S: Lippitt Searchlight 8167; D: Lippitt Sally Ash 01566. RED SPARROW 8688—Dark chestnut; little white on left front coronet; f-May LOAFER L. 8598—Bay; star and connected strip widening between nostrils; 3, 1942; br-J. C. Jackson, Harrison, Montana. S: Delbert 7707; D: Red Bird 04917. right hind pastern and left hind fetlock white; f-April 16, 1942; br-Mr. ^ Mrs. REY DEL MUNDO 8638—Dark chestnut; small star, white spot in face, snip, James M. Lemon, R.F.D. 1, Sheridan, Wyoming. S: Lobo 8116; D: Lovely right hind fetlock white; f-July 31. 1942; br-Justin Dart, Rimrock, Arizona; o-Merle Lady 05061. H. Little, El Rancho Poco, 1457 So. Mountain Ave., R.F.D. 1, Monrovia, California. LOREN BELLE 8641—Chestnut; star connected with narrow strip leading to S: Squire Burger 8282; D: Fontaine 05272. right nostril; snip; right front and right hind fetlocks white; f-April 22, 1942; RHODOAK 8636—Chestnut; small star, short strip in lower face; right hind br-Elmer Brown, Halstead, Kansas; o-Chilocco Agricultural School, Chilocco, Okla­ ankle white; f-April 12. 19 42; br-Dr. & Mrs. F. Flinn, Forest Knolls Estate, R.R. 7, homa. S: Tehachapi Allan 7910; D: Lisabelle 04627. Decatur, Illinois. S: Illawana Ruban 7994; D: Highland Lady 05120. LOU ALLAN LINSLEY 8656—Chestnut; star; f-July 12, 1942; br-Hiebert Bros., RHOVIN 8635—Chestnut; star, both hind stockings white; f-May 10, 1942; br-Dr. Hillsboro, Kansas. S: Tehachapi Allan 7910: D: Maggy Linsley 04802. Fauntleroy Flinn. Forest Knolls, R.R. 7. Decatur, Illinois; o-Dr. & Mrs. F. Flinn, LUCKIE SHENANDOAH 8614— Chestnut; star, left hind foot white; f-March 30, Forest Knolls Estate, R.R. 7, Decatur, Illinois. S: Mountain Silver Sheik 8280; 1942; br-F. K. Dzengolewski. Alhambra, Illinois; o-Oglala Community High School, D: Junita 04882. Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Cinnamon Lad 8270; D: Shenandoah Queen 05418. ROMANAYR 8608—Bay; right hind coronet white extending onto fetlock in MAC-A. 8671—Chestnut; no markings; flaxen mane and tail; f-February 2, 1942- rear; f-May 12, 1942; br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall St., New York, New York. br-Dr. Lester C. Clark; 351 South Liberty St., Rushville, Illinois. S: Cotton Hill's S: Jack Sprat 7688; D: Josephine Romanesque 04812. Choice 8093; D: Rugee 04558. ROSCO LEE 8645—Chestnut; star, right hind pastern white; f-July 5, 1942; MAC ARTHUR 8630—Chestnut; right hind pastern white extending in back above br-Chilocco Agricultural School, Chilocco, Oklahoma. S: Allen Lee 7854; D: Racher fetlock; f-May 9, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont 05211. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Romance 04355. RYDER 8712—Chestnut; very small star, left hind fetlock white, branded "37" MACBETH 8624—Chestnut; broad strip from forehead into nostrils; both hind on thighs; f-Februarv 1912; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; socks white: f-May 16, 1942: br-U. S. Department of Agriculture, Middlebury Ver­ o-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Angel A. 04976. mont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Willys 04622. SAI.OM 8665—Chestnut; star, snip, right hind fetlock white; f-March 31, 1942; MADISON 8632—Chestnut; small snip, right hind fetlock and left hind pastern br-Hearst Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, San Simeon, California. S: Ha­ white; f-July 7, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Gold- cienda Chief 8273; D: Piedmont Salome 04904. field 7991; D: Fawn 04968. SENOR MORGAN 8647—Chestnut; connected large star, strip and snip; left MAGELLAN 8625—Chestnut; star, right hind pastern white extending in back front stocking white extending higher inside; left hind stocking and right hind above fetlock; left hind sock white; f-April 28, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, fetlock white; light mane and tail; f-July 10, 1942; br-Justin Dart, Rimrock, Arizona; Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Topaz 04 112. o-Merle H. Little, 1457 So. Mountain Ave.. R. F. D. No. 1, Monrovia, California. MAJORAYR 8610—Bay; star prolonged to short strip; both hind stockings S: Squire Burger 8282; D: Bonnie Sue 05436. White; f-June 8. 1942: br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall St., New York, N. Y. S: Jack SHEFFIELD'S PRIDE 8691—Chestnut; prolonged snip; right hind stocking Sprat 7688; D: Myra L. 0 4895. white; f-Mav 22, 19 42; br-R. L. Berry & Sons, Sheffield, Vermont. S: Mansfield MALTA 8626—Bay; no markings; f-June 13, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, 7255; D: Berry's Bess X-04931. Middlebury, Vermont. S: Mansfield 7255; D: Hypatia X-05595. SIERRA KING 8702—Chestnut; faint star, snip, both hind fetlocks white; brand "GA" below left shoulder: f-April 30, 1942; br-G. A. Wessitsh, P. 0. Box MANILA 8634—Chestnut; very faint star, left hind sock white; f-June 25, 1942; 23, Verdi, Nevada. S: Peerless A. 8017; D: Katrina 04262. br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D- Ulwina SILVER ROCKWOOD 8617—Chestnut; small strip and snip; light mane and 04510. tail; f-Mav 14, 19 42; br-Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska; o-Oglala Community MARQUIS 8623—Brown; star, left front pastern white extending in back above High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Agazizz 7700; D: May Rockwood 04801. fetlock; right front ankle and right hind sock white; f-May 8, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Novice 04052. SIMI 8652—Light chestnut; small star, branded "11" on left hip; f-July 28, 1942; br-R. A. Sperry, 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, California. S: Tejon Prince MARSHALL 8633—Chestnut; small star, left hind coronet white; f-Mav 26, 8105; D: Dorris F. 0 1705. 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991- D: Doreen 01821. SMOKEY DAWN 8082—Dark bay; no markings: f-May 8, 1942; br-Lelia Mae McCLELLAN 8631—Chestnut; star and strip connected; snip; both front pasterns Davis, 5330 San Pablo Dam Rd., Richmond, California; o-CIarence C. Reed, M.D., white extending in back over fetlocks; f-July 3, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture 701 E. Compton Blvd., Compton, California. S: General Ben 7733; D: Hegrita 04749. Middlebury, Vermont. S: Hudson X-8401; D: Florette 04233. ' SMOKY' L. 8596—Brown; no markings; f-June 25, 1942; br-Mr. & Mrs. James M. McMULLEN MORGAN 8675 -Chestnut; star; f April 12, 1912; br-Elmer Brown Lemon. R. F. D. 1. Sheridan, Wyoming. S: Major R.M. 8011; D: Allestra 04556. Halstead, Kansas: o-Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska. S: Tehachapi Allan 7910- SONNY CORTEZ 8648—Dark chestnut; prolonged star, narrow strip, small snip, D: Jipsy L. 04890. left bind coronet white; right hind stocking white, extending higher on outside; MEADE 8628—Chestnut: star, strip, small snip, right hind coronet white inside- f-February 1942; br-Jean Hill Borrelli, Gustine, California; o-Marvin S. Jeppesen f-May 30, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S- Goldfield h Irene K. Jeppesen, 8 17 Washington St., Reno, Nevada. S: El Cortez 8076; 7991; D: Glady 05020. D: Fawn K. X-05077. MENTOR 8627—Chestnut; irregular star, broken strip, both hind pasterns SQUIRE DEE 8089—Light Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip; f-June 27, white; f-May 19, 19 42: br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont S- Gold 1942; br-J. W. Dart, Medtield, Massachusetts; o-Mrs. Brenton H. Dickson, Weston, field 7991; D: Fairytop 04960. Massachusetts. S: Squire Burger 8282; D: Dee Dee 05334. MERLIN 8629--Chestnut; star, faint broken strip and snip; f-May 9 1942- SUNCREST 8591—Bay; no markings; f-June 18, 1942; br-R. S. Sentney, 536 br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Hudson X-8401- I)- \udrev East Sherman St., Hutchinson, Kansas; o-South Dakota State College, Brookings, 04670. ••- ey South Dakota. S: Texas Brownie 8217; D: Sunflower Girl 05183. MONTEREY GENERAL 8640—Chestnut; left hind coronet white; f-March 20 SUNNY VERMONT 8705--Chestnut; no markings; f-March 28, 1912; br-John 1942; br-Louis Nippert, 2116 Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio.' S: Fillmore W. Garrett, Jr., 50 Lemon St., Arcadia, California. S: Red Vermont 7893; D: Laura 7948; D: Golly 05029. A. 05037. SUNTAN 8590—Chestnut; star, both hind fetlocks white; f-April 1, 1942; br-Miss white; f-May 4, 1942; br-Parker H. Rice, R. D. 2, Manchester, New Hampshire; Sid Forsyth, Star Route, Arroyo Grande, California. S: Antman X 8318; I): Sun­ o-Owen Moon, Jr., Woodstock, Vermont. S: Upwey King Peavine X-8074; D: Up- shine Maid 04581. weycleis 04795. TEJAS CHOCOLATE 8721—Light chestnut: small star, light mane and tail; UPWEY PENROD 8697 Black, large star; f-May 10, 19 12; br-Ovven Moon, Jr., f-June 19 42; br-W. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas. S: Chocolate 7586; I): Minnie South Woodstock, Vermont. S: Upwey Prince Tarik X-7801; D: Penona 04463. Morgan 05481. VALIANT MORGAN 8661-Chestnut; large star, both front and left hind TETON 8660—Chestnut; connected star, ship and snip, right front and both coronets white, right hind stocking white; f March 18. 1912; br (has. C. McGonegal, hind stockings white, branded "S" on left hip: f-Mav 1942; br-L. U. Sheep Com­ P. O. Box 16, Sunol, California; o Chaplin Packard, 2101 Grow St., Berkeley, Cali­ pany, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 76s i; D: Paintbrush X-05 191. fornia. S: Millbrae 7871; D: Lulu Bell 05073. ITMBERLINE 8659—Chestnut; star, strip and snip connected; left flout and VK'I'OKAYK 8607 Bav; slar; f-May 11, 1912; br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall left hind fetlocks white; branded horseshoe bar on left thigh, "2" on right shoulder; St., New York, New York. S: Jack Sprat 7088; D: Queenc Allan 04703. f-May 1912; br-L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 7684- D: Grace X-05490. WAR CHIEF 8008- Dark chestnut; no markings; f-March 31, 1942; br-Hearst TOWNSHEND JOHN 8700— Brown; black points; f-July 13. 1942; br-Anna Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, San Simeon, California. S: Hacienda Chief Dickson Ela, Townshend Morgan Horse Farm. Townshend, Vermont. S: John \ 8273; D: Querita 05070. Darling 7 470; D: Bunting 049H5. WAR HAWK 8605 -Black; no markings; f-May 23. 19 42; br-Helen B. Greenwalt, TOWNSHEND MAC ARTHUR 8701- Dark chestnut; large star; f-May 25, 1912; Pawnee, Illinois. S: Flyhawk 7526; D: Sentola 0 1555. br-Anna Dickson Ela, Townshend Morgan Horse Farm, low nshend, Vermont S: Sea WARRIORAYR 8009 -Brown; star, left hind fetlock while; inside right hind lect 7266; D: Gladloss 04687. coronet white; f-May 2, 1942; br-Charles F. Ayer, II Wall St., New York, New York. TRILAN 8666—Dark chestnut; irregular star, prolonged into short, narrow S: Jack Sprat 768K; I): Sallysen 04940. strip; f-May 2. 1942; br-Hearst Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, San Simeon, WILLIWAW 8692 Chestnut; connected star and wide strip extending over nose California. S: Katrilan 8121; D: Clover Bud oi:,83. and upperlip; white on underlip; f-May 1942; br-L. II. Sheep Company, Worland, UPWEY COMMANDER 8703- Brown, connected star, broad ship and snip, Wyoming; o-Helen G. Greenwalt, Pawnee, Illinois. S: Plains King 7684; D: Luna left front pastern, left hind stocking and outside and rear of right hind pastern 05872.

MARES Alphabetically Arranged — 05867-06020

ABBY GAIL 05928—Bay; left hind fetlock white; f-March 3, 1942; br-I.ouis Nip- BRILLIANT LADY 05903—Bay; few white hairs in forehead; f-April 12. 1942; pert, 2116 Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. S: Fillmore 7948; D: Gadabbott br-Willis Grumbein, Dodge Citv, Kansas: o-Oglala Community High School, Pine 05024. Ridge, South Dakota. S: Silver Ranger 7813; D; Lady Sutter 01867. ADA SENTNEY 05935—Bay; left hind pastern white: black mane and tail; CAFE CONLECHE 05874—Dark chestnut; no white markings; branded "2" f-June 5, 1942; br-W. P. Thornhill. Miami. Texas; o-R. S. Sentney, 530 East Sherman on right thigh; f-April 8, 1941; br-A. J. Alexander, Onyx, California; o-R. A. Sperry, St.. Hutchinson, Kansas. S: Chocolate 7586; D: Danlyn 052()s. 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, California. S: Dandy R.M. 8012; D. Ailica 04471. ADDY MAY 06009—Chestnut; faint star, left hind coronet white, branded "30" CANNOXAYR 05894—Bay; star, narrow strip, snip, left hind fetlock white; on thighs: f-Februarv 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; f-Mav 28, 19 12; br-Charles F. Aver, 14 Wall St., New York, New York. S: James o-Roland G. Hill. Gustine, California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Addy B. 05160. R.M. 7946; D: Poppit 04934. ALMA FIELD 06006—Bay; star, white on left front coronet; branded "27" CASCADE 05920—Dark brown; large star, both hind fetlocks white; branded on thighs; f-Februarv 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company. Gustine. California; horseshoe bar on left thigh, and "1" on right shoulder; f-May 1941; br-L. U. Sheep o-Roland G. Hill, Gustine. California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Angel B. 1)5035. Company, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 768 4; D: Ethete X-D5492. ALVA 05888—Chestnut; star and connecting strip ending between nostrils; CINNAMON DOLL X-05997—Bay; small star; f-May s, 19 12; br-F. K. Dzengolew­ white spot on underlip; left front pastern white extending above fetlock on inside; ski, Alhambra, Illinois. S: Cinnamon Lad 8270; D. Babe (unregistered); bay; right front fetlock, right hind coronet and left hind stocking white; f-February f-April 1938; br-F. K. Dzengolewski; by King Shenandoah 7892. 2nd D: Peggy 14, 1942; br-Stone Farm Association, Charlottesville, Virginia. S: Alton 8157; (unregistered); bay, star; f-1935; br-F. K. Dzengolewski; by Duke (half Morgan). D: Althea 04595. 3rd D: Pal, bay, of Morgan type. AUGIE 05968—Brown; no markings; f-April 16, 1942; br-Dr. Lester ('. Clark, CLAUDETTE 0598 1—Bay; small star, both hind fetlocks white; f-August 4, 1942; Rushville, Illinois. S: Cotton Hill's Choice 8093; D: L.C. X-05151. br-Thos. W. Adams, Huson, Montana; o-Pine Ridge Indian Agency Extension, AUTUMN 05992—Brow n; faint star, both hind pasterns white extending Pine Ridge, Soutli Dakota. S: Calgary 8577; D: Night Bird 04995. onto fetlocks in rear; f-August 27. 1942; br-Paul J. Furnas, Spring Hollow Farm, CLEVINE BENNIGATES 05948—Light Chestnut; medium star; f-April 18, 1941; Media, Pennsylvania. S: Gingersnap 8035; D: Alola 04245. br-Parker H. Rice, R. F. D. 2. Manchester, New Hampshire; o-Gerald A. Minor, BABE KING 05930—Chestnut; few white hairs in forehead; f-April 6, 19 12; Bethlehem, Connecticut. S: Upwey King Peavine X-8074; D: Upweycleis 04795. br-Chilocco Agricultural School, Chilocco. Oklahoma. S: King George R.M. 8073; CLOVER KATIE 05913—Chestnut; left hind fetlock and right hind pastern D: Bay Annie 05212. white; f-May 31. 1942; br-Mrs. Anna K. Zeitler, Route 4, Box 345, Santa Cruz, BANNERAYR 05892—Brown; small star; left hind pastern white; white on California. S: Cloverman 8047; D: Katie 05164. right hind heel; f-June 9, 1942; br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall St., New York. New CLOVER RAINDROP 05944—Chestnut; prolonged star; f-May 25, 1942; br-Mrs. York. S: Jack Sprat 7688; D: Angela K. 04700. Anna K. Zeitler, Route 4, Box 345, Santa Cruz, California. S Clovermah 8047; D: Fawnette 05168. BAR S BLACK BESS 05886—Black; no markings; f-May 2, 1942; br-O. E. Sutter, 306 Fourth National Bank Bldg., Wichita, Kansas. S: Royce 7748; D: Bess R.M. CLOVER ROSE 05945—Chestnut: large star, left hind pastern and right hind X-04990. fetlock white; f-June 7, 19 12; br-Mrs. Anna K. Zeitler, Route 4, Box 345, Santa Cruz, California. S: Cloverman 8047; D: Rosella 05072. BAR S POTENA 05887—Black; no markings; f-April 28, 1942; br-O. E. Sutter, 300 Fourth National Bank Bldg., Wichita, Kansas. S: Royce 7748; D: Bar S Belle CONNIEDALE 05985 -Chestnut; irregular star; f-June 6, 1942; br-George S. 05268. Kramer, North Thetford, Vermont; o-Gladys W. Kramer. North Thetford, Vermont. S: Lippitt Croydon Ethan 7929; D: Annadale 04672. BAR S SPAR 05906—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip; both hind stock­ ings white; f-May 2, 1942; br-O. E. Sutter, 306 Fourth National Bank Bldg., Wichita, DAKOTA DAWN 05959—Chestnut; small star, left hind fetlock white; f-June 21, Kansas. S: Romanlight 7906; D: Bar S Lady 04994. 1942; br-Oglala Community High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota; o-Fort Totten Community School, Fort Totten, North Dakota. S: Chief Joseph 8078; D: Allen BAR S VELMA 05905—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip; light mane Dawn 05170. and tail; f-May 10, 1942; br-O. E. Sutter. 306 Fourth National Bank Bldg., Wichita, DAWN V. 05900—Black; very narrow strip in lower face; f-April 14, 1942; Kansas. ' S: Monte Leon 8216; D: Bar S Bonnie 05019. br-Clark Ringling, Lovelock, Nevada. S: Vanguard 8234; D: Fanchon X-05553. BEAUT 05973—Black; small star; f-August 10, 1942; br-L. R. Gillogly. Patterson, Iowa. S: Eagle Chief 8402: D: Delos 058 12. DEE COLONEL 05931 —Chestnut; star, snip near right nostril; f-October 15, 1942; br-Chilocco Agricultural School, Chilocco, Oklahoma. S: Colonel's Boy 8185; BEAUTY ROSE X-05879—Chestnut; prolonged star, silver tail; f-April 20, 1942; D: Deanna Dee 05507. br-Joe Dinwiddie, R.R. 2, Lowell, Indiana. S: Doctor Bailey 7728; D: Goldie (un­ DELL'S MELODY' 05870—Chestnut; short strip; f-March 30, 1942; br-Simon E. registered); chestnut, long wide strip; f-1934; br-Joe Dinwiddie; by Archy Hudson Lantz, Congerville, Illinois. S: Plainsman 8268; D: Rubby X-05238. 7098. 2nd D: Dolly (unregistered); chestnut; o-Joe Dinwiddie. BESSIE SONFIELD 06008—Brown; star, snip; black points; branded "29" on DIANA FIELD 05999—Chestnut; star, narrow strip, branded "1" on thighs; thighs- f-April 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; o-Roland f-February 16, 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; o-Margaret G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Robessie 05042. H. Fish, Route 2, Box 69, Gustine, California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Addy C. 05279. BETTY CORTEZ 06005—Brown; star, right hand coronet white; branded "26" on DIANA RO 05960—Bay; small star; f-April 20, 1942; br-Jones Hereford Ranch, thighs- f-February 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; o-Roland Box 359A, Route I, Hollister, California. S: Uhlan Ro 8134; D: Deana Spar 05252. G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: EI Cortez 8076; D: Dan's Betty 05005. DIXIE DREAM 05924—Chestnut; star connected with short narrow strip; f-July 6, 1942; br-A. E. Swartz. 214 Wr. Maple Ave., Independence, Missouri. S: Missouri BLOSSOM F. 06011—Brown; black points; branded "32" on thighs; f-February King 8298; D: Midze 0563s. 1942- br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine. California; o-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, DOLLY' MAE 05939—Chestnut; small star, right hind fetlock and left hind pastern California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Blossom E. 05159. white; f-May 16, 1942: br-Mrs. Don M. Savage, Galesburg, Illinois; o-Anton Christen­ BONNIE JARNETTE 05995—Chestnut: faint strip; snip; white on underlip; sen, 616-9th St., Ames, Iowa. S: Captain Red sosS; D: Golden Honey 05143. f-August 15, 1942; br-W. W. Chatterton, Wapello, Iowa. S: Glendale 7485; D: Bon­ DONNA BELLE 05996—Bay; no markings; f-June 20, 1942; br-F. K. Dzengolewski, nie Sensation X-05866. Alhambra, Illinois. S: King Shenandoah 7892; D: La Belle X-05224. BONNY BELL X-05980—Chestnut; few white hairs in forehead; f-July 9, 1942; ECKHOLM RUTH 05904—Chestnut; strip, snip, Jeft front and left hind feet br-J C Jackson, Harrison, Montana. S: Delbert 7707; D: Lady (American Half- white; f-February 21, 1942; br-Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas; o-Oglala Bred Register No. M-105), brown; star, left front pastern and right hind coronet Community High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Silver Ranger 7813; D: Lulu white- f1936; br- and o-J. C. Jackson; by Hal Finis 7859 2nd D: Lady (unreg­ Belle R.M. 04894. istered); brown; snip, three white feet; f-1913; br- and o-J. C. Jackson; by Cinco EL BLAZIE 06012—Chestnut; two white spots in forehead; small snip; left (48798 Th.). 3rd D: Minnie (unregistered); black; br- and o-ITios Jackson front heel and both hind fetlocks white; branded "33" on thighs; f-March 1942; Harrison, Montana; by Treaver, son of Marshall (6507 A.T.R.). 4th D: Bell br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: El Cortez 8076; D: Blazie Q. 04909 (Standardbred), untraced. FALCON 05951—Bay; star, snip, left hind coronet white, branded horseshoe LUN \ 05872—Brown; no white markings; branded horseshoe bar on left bar on left thigh and "2" on right shoulder; f-Mav 1912; br-L. U. Sheep Company, thi"h "9" on right shoulder: f-May 1939: br-L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 70si; D: Shasta X-05188. Wyoming. S: Night Tide 8038; D: Black Dinah X-0.5497. FANTAN 1)5950—Bay; star, branded horseshoe bar on left thigh. "2" on right MAID\ L 05880-Chestnut; no markings; f-May 2. 1942; br-Mr. & Mrs. James shoulder: f-May 1942; br-L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains M. Lemon, R. F. D. 1, Sheridan. Wyoming. S: Major R.M. 8011; D: Highwood's King 7684; D: Monty X-05199. Maul 0 5529. FAY' TEMPLETON 05890—Chestnut; large star connected by narrow strip with MANNEQUIN 05915—Chestnut; star, faint strip; f-May 6, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. large snip; left front coronet and left hind fetlock white; f-March 27, 1912; br-Clark of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Mansfield 7255; D: Flashlight 04961. Ringling, Lovelock, Nevada. S: Vanguard 823 4; D: Anneka Revere 05369. MANTILLA 05910—Chestnut; star, strip and snip connected; left hind coronet FLAVIA 0590S—Chestnut; small star; f May 1912; br-L. U. Sheep Company, white; f-May 2 1, 19 12; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Gold- Worland. Wyoming. S: Plains King 7084; D: Ishawooa X-05491. field 7991; D: Redfern 04360. FLICK A 05907—Chestnut: small star; right hind fetlock white: f-May 1042; MANTUA 05922 —Chestnut; no markings; f-May 7. 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of br-L. U. Sheep Company. Worland, Wyoming; o-He!en B. Greenwalt, Pawnee. Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Lady Sealect 04587. Illinois. S: Plains King 708 1; D: Mallow X-05498. MANZANITA 05937—Chestnut; small star, left hind pastern white, extending GENTIAN 05952—Chestnut; left hind fetlock white, branded horseshoe bar higher in rear; f-April 21), 19 12; br-Frances H. Bryant, R. F. D. 2, Springfield, on left thigh, "2" on right shoulder; f-May 1942; br-L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, Vermont. S: Mansfield 7255; D: Paragraph 04027. Wyoming. S: Plains King 7684; D: Gro\ont 05500. MARDI GRAS 06001—Bay; small star right of center; f-March 1942: br-Horseshoe GILL'S BABE 06019—Chestnut; long, narrow strip; f-May 11, 1942; br-Charles Cattle Company, Gustine, California; o-Clarence C. Reed, M.D., Compton, California. E. Allen, Indian Spring Stock Farm, Baldwinsville, New York. S: Cornwallis 7698; S: Sonlield 7952; D: Deana A. 04977. D: Gill X-04456. MARGF.T SENTNEY' 05933—Chestnut; blaze, left hind stocking white; f-June GLENA PRIDE 05991—Dark bay; irregular star prolonged into short strip; 12, 1942; br-W. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas; o-R. S. Sentney, 536 East Sherman f-April 30. 19-42; br-John H. Ackerman, Greensburg, R. D. I. Pennsylvania; o-W. St.. Hutchinson. Kansas. S: Chocolate 7586; D: Mae Morgan 05478. Glenn Silvis, Greensburg. Pennsylvania. S: Big Shot 8231; D: Heather X-0 1921. MARGUERITA SONFIELD 0597 4—Dark chestnut; strip, snip, left hind sock GLIDERAY'R 05891—Chestnut; small star, left front fetlock and right hind sock- and right hind coronet white; f-March 4. 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, white; f-Mav 30, 1942; br-Charles F. Aver, 14 Wall St.. New Y'ork, New York. Gustine, California; o-Clarence C. Reed, M.D., 701 E. Compton Blvd., Compton, S: Jack Sprat 7688; D: Elma Belle R.M. 04954. California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Bessie Ro 04978. GLORY'AY'R 05893—Brown; left hind pastern white with black spot on coronet; MARIGOLD 1)5917—Bay; star; f-May 27. 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, right hind sock white; f-May 9, 1942; br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall St., New York. Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Ingrid 05292. New Y'ork. S: James R.M. 7946; D: Queenayr 05230. GOLDENA C. 06016—Chestnut; no markings; f-Mav 15, 1942; br-W. T. Carter, MARIONETTE 05918—Bay; both hind pasterns white; f-June 16, 1942; br-U. S. Sanger, California. S: Gold Dollar suoo; D: Geena 04657. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Evadne 04870. HACIENDA KITTY" 05963—Brown; star connected with narrow strip; snip; MEADOWLARK 05:121 Chestnut; star, broken strip extending between nostrils; right hind coronet white extending onto fetlock on the outside and rear; f-April 9, left hind ankle white; f-May 1, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, 1942; br-Hearst Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, San Simeon, California. Vermont. S: Goldfield 7991; D: Damsel 0 1822. S: Hacienda Chief 8273; D: Kitty Pongee 01529. MECCA 05870—Bay; small star; f-June 15, 1942; br-R. S. Sentney, 536 East HANNABELLA 1)5976—Lt. Chestnut; long, narrow strip: f-March 8, 1942; Sherman St.. Hutchinson. Kansas; o-South Dakota State College, Brookings, South br-Horseshoe Cattle Company. C.ustine. California: o-Clarence C. Reed, M.D., 701 Dakota. S: Texas Brownie 8217; D: Maurcena L. 05354. E. Compton Blvd., Compton, California. S: El Cortez 8076; D: Marie Ro 0 1707. MISS BROWN 05954- Brown; right hind coronet white, branded "12" on HER MAJESTY' 06000—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip: left hind thighs; f-June 9, 1942; br-Charles A. Scbultz, Julius Kuck and Robert G. Schultz, sock and right hind coronet white; f-February 1912; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, 122 West Miner St., Y'reka, California. S: North Fork 8082; D: Tabette 05105. California; o-Clarence C. Reed, M.D., Compton, California. S: Sonfield 7952; MISS TWEEDIE 05809—Chestnut; star, strip; both hind socks white; f-May D: Iva 04757. 11, 1941; br-G. S. Williams and Florence Williams, Windsorville, Maine. S: Tipperary HIGH \'ALLEY' MECCA 0593s—Chestnut; small star, left front pastern and 7518; D: Perhaps 0 13 18. right hind stocking white; f-July 6, 1942; br-Justin W. Dart, Rinirock. Arizona; MISTMAIDEN 05920—Chestnut; both hind ankles white extending above fetlocks; o-W. D. Fulton, Route 1, Box 75 H, Camarillo, California. S: Squire Burger 8282; f-Mav 12. 1942; br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfield D: Carmel Snow 05656. 7991; D: Goodgirl 05028. ILLAWANA JO 05971—Bay; left hind heel white; f-May 6, 1942; br-Allan Taylor, Hanna'Cify, Illinois. S: Captain Red 8088; D: Hirette 04965. MONA BIRD X-05979—Black; left hind coronet white; f-May 2, 1942; br-J. C. Jackson, Harrison, Montana. S: Delbert 7707; D: Topsy 3rd (unregistered); black; ILLAWANA JOANNE 05972—Bay; no markings; f-May lo, 1942: br-Allan f-April 1933; br- and o-J. C. Jackson: by Hal Mercury Jr. 6819. 3rd D: Topsy Taylor, Hanna City, Illinois. S: Captain Red HOSS; D: Illawana Ruby 05031. (unregistered); black, white hairs in face; f-1913; br- and o-J. C. Jackson; said JEAN MARIE 05956—Dark chestnut; small star, flaxen mane and tail; f-April to be partly trotting bred. 20, 1912; br-Joseph R. Brunk, Rochester. Illinois. S: Juzan 78H5; D: Black Dee 04833. MOONBRIGHT 05919— Chestnut; no markings; f-July 12, 1942; br-U. S. Dept. JINA L. 1)5881—Chestnut; no markings; f-April 14, 1942; br-Mr. & Mrs. James of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont. S: Goldfieid 7991; D: Narissa 04132. M. Lemon, R. F. D. 1. Sheridan. Wyoming. S: Major R.M. 8011; D: Juniina 04848. MOUNTAIN MUSIC 058S3—Bay; large star prolonged into wide strip extending JUBILEE JUNE 1)5965—Chestnut; no markings; f-April 2 1. 1912; br-Earl Willa­ between nostrils and into right nostril; left hind fetlock white; f-March 27, 1942; man, Transfer. Pennsylvania; o-Albert D. Willaman, R. D. 1, Transfer, Pennsylvania. br-H. L. Frost. M.D., Pittsford, Vermont. S: Mountain Sheik 8033; D: Toy 04381. S: Mickey s250; D: Junette 05119. MY BABY' 05878—Chestnut; star; f-April 111. 1941; br-Elmer Brown, Halstead, JUBILEE Y'ICTORIA X-06018— Chestnut (gold); strip, white mane and tail; Kansas; o-Sain Murray, 1917 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, Florida. S: Tehachapi Allan f-July 4. 1942; br-Mrs. Kathleen M. Daley. 45 E. Camino Real. Arcadia, California. 7910; D: Lillian R.M. 05240. S: Red Y^ermont 7893; D: Ramona B. (unregistered); gold; large star, right hind NANCY" LY'NN 05998—Bay; narrow strip, right hind fetlock white; f-April stocking white; f-March 1935; o-Mrs. Kathleen M. Daley; by Stonewall King 1942; br-Roland G. Hill. Gustine, California; o-Jean Hill Borrelli, Gustine, California. (8720 A.S.H.R.). Through both his sire and dam Stonewall King is descended from S: Joaquin Morgan 7947; D: Nancy Jane 04908. Clark's Chief 2993 and Indian Chief 53s. and through his dam from Peavine 636. NELLANNE U5957—Dark chestnut; flaxen mane and tail; f-May 3, 1942; 2nd D: Golden Girl (unregistered); by Golden Eagle Denmark (10250 A.S.H.R.). br-Joseph R. Brunk, Rochester, Illinois. S: Juzan 7895: D: Nella 04235. 3rd D: Columbia Girl 0444. JUDY' GARLAND 05897—Dark bay; very small star; f-April 12, 1942; br-Clark NEOGA 05953—Bay; no white markings; branded "S" on left hip; f-May 1942; Ringling, Lovelock, Nevada. S: Y'anguard 8234; D: Red Falcon R. 05365. br-L. U. Sheep Company. Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 7084; D: Sox X-05490. JUNNETTE 05990—Chestnut; no markings; f-June 1942: br-Tliomas T. Brunk, NETTIE SENTNEY" 05934—Bay; no white markings; black mane and tail; Route 3. Springfield, Illinois. S: Cotton Hill's Choice 8093; D: Dennette 04737. f-June 20, 1942; br-YV. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas; o-R. S. Sentney, 536 East Sher­ KATELLA 05902—Dark chestnut; large, prolonged star ending in short strip, man St.. Hutchinson, Kansas. S: Chocolate 75sii; D: Silverlyn 05614. snip; f-April 26. 1942; br-Hearst Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, San NIGHT MOON 05986—Chestnut; snip; f-June 24, 1942; br-Y". J. Gianelloni, P. 0. Simeon, California. S: Katrilan 8121; D: Luetta 04591. Box 8396, University, Louisiana. S: Night Tide 8038; D: Chamita X-05318. KITTY" HAWK 05910—Chestnut; irregular star, short strip in lower face ending NUBBIN'S PRIDE 00020—Chestnut: snip; left hind pastern white extending in snip; left hind fetlock white; f-April 21). 1942; br-Helen B. Greenwalt, Pawnee, onto fetlock in rear; f-Mny 17, 19 12; br-Charles E. Allen, Indian Spring Stock Illinois. S: Flyhawk 7520; D: Annabella 05444. Farm, Baldwinsville, New York. S: Cornwallis 709s; D: Nubbin 05647. KITTY' KAY' 05912—Chestnut: small crescent shaped star; f-May 19 12; br-L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 768 4; D: Kaycee X-05495. OJO DE DEANA 051170— Dark bay; black points; f-April 7, 1942; br-A. S. Russell, Route 1, Lafayette, California. S: General Ben 7733; D: Deana 04755. LADY JAY' 05966—Chestnut; strip: f-April 20, 1912; br-H. G. Stubblelield, Osceola. Iowa. S: Chief Romanesque 7085; D: Jay 01809. O'LINDA 05977 Hay; no markings; f-April 30, 1942; br-Charles J. O'Neill, Manteno, Illinois. S: Archy Hudson 7098; D: Lady Russle 04723. LASSIE HUDSON 05871—Bay; right hind fetlock white; f-April 15, 1942; br-C. J. O'Neill, Manteno, Illinois; o-Sturges P. Taggart, Lake Geneva Wisconsin' ONE GRAND 0597s—Bay; no markings; f-July 30. 1942; br-C. J. O'Neill, Man­ S: Archy Hudson 7098; D: Sally "O" 05299. teno, Illinois. S: Billie ('. Morgan X-8 109; D: Roxie De Jarnette 05296. LEEOLA X-05993—Chestnut; large star, left hind fetlock white; f-April 15, 1912; PATRICIA LINN 05889 -Chestnut; long narrow strip with small snip running br-Paul J. Furnas, Spring Hollow Farm, Media, Pennsylvania. S: Lee's Kin-' to left of nose; f-May 31, 1942; br-George H. Gessner, 901 Winona Dr., Y'oungstown, (11244 A.S.H.R.) by Bourbon King (1788) out of Lee Chief (7872) by Rex Chief Ohio; o-Raymond Pugh, Pugh Farm, R. D. 4, Y'oungstown, Ohio. S: Allen Lee 7854; A. (2473). Bourbon King (1788) is a full brother to Anne of Bourbon 070. and D: Holly 05138. traces through three lines to Clark Chief 2993, Richelieu 11211 and Kentucky PEARLAY'R l)5sno- Chestnut; few white hairs in forehead; both hind fetlocks Chief 1117. Rex Chief A. (2173) also traces to Clark Chief 2993 and Tom Hal white; f-April 2H, 19 12; br-Charles F. Ayer, 14 Wall St., New Y'ork, New York. 854; D: Virola 05115. S: Jack Sprat 7088; D: Queensen 0 19 11. LIBERTY LADY 05913- Chestnut; star and ship; f-May 1942; br-L. U. Sheep PINE RIDGE DAISY' 00015-Bay; few white hairs in forehead; f-May 2, 1942; Company, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 768 1; D: Black Dinah X-05197. br-Oglala Community Higli School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Bar-S-Hudson LINDA ROSALIE 05975 -Bay; no markings; f-April 16, 1912; br-Lelia Mae 8116; D: Illawana Daisy 05277. Davis. 5330 San Pablo Dam Rd., Richmond. California; o-Y'irginia Howard, 701 E PINE RIDGE EDNA 05909—Chestnut; medium star, left hind stocking and right Compton Blvd., Compton, California. S: General Ben 7733; D: Phebc 050:10. bind coronet white; f-September 13. 1942; br-Robert Tvnan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska; LIZZIE MITCHELL 05940— Dark chestnut; star, left hind fetlock white o-Oglala Community High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. S: Agazizz 7700; branded "2" on left hip; "2" on right hip; f-June 29, 19 12; br-R. A. Sperry D: Kitty Edna 0511 I. 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, California. S: Tejon Prince 8105; D: Solica 01128.'' PIXY' IIAYVK D5S82 -Black; no markings; f-April 21, 1942: br-Helen B. Green­ LORETTA ANN 05895—Bav; star connected with strip; left hind fetlock and walt, Pawnee, Illinois; o-Walter J. FVkert, 80 1 Times Star Tower, Cincinnati, Ohio. right hind coronet white; f-May 15, 1912; br-Reon Wills, Sonierscl Pennsylvania S: Flyhawk 7520; D: Polly Priiiun 05670. S: Benison 8213; D: Ann Morgan 05051. ' PRINCESS SONFIELD 06001-Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip, both LUKTTA B. 00010—Bay; strip, left hind fetlock white; branded "31" on thighs- hind stockings white, branded "25" on thighs; f-Fehruary 1942; br-Horseshoe f-April 1942; br-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; o-Roland G Fliil' Cattle- Company. Gustine. California; o-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Son- Gustine, California. S: Sonlield 7952; D: Luetta A. 1151117. field 7952; I):' Princess Sabab X-05076. LULA B. 061)03— Chestnut; very small star, left hind fetlock while, branded PRINCESS TONYA 0601 I—Light chestnut; small star; f May 4, 1942; br-Wm. M. "24" on thighs; f-March 1942; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California S- El Cortez Hull, 226 San Ramon Rd., Haywarcl, California; o-Clarence C. Reed, M.D., 701 East 8076; D: Lula Lee 01704. Compton Blvd., Compton, California. S: Sparbcau 7731; D: Marietta 04317. 6 QUAKER MAID 05911—Chestnut; large star connected with broad strip emend­ TOWNSHEND MANDY 05994—Dark brown; faint star, left hind stocking ing to upperlip; left front and both hind fetlocks white; f-May 1942- br-L U Sheep white; f-.June 12, 19 12; br-Anna Dickson Ela, Townshend Morgan Horse Farm, Company, Worland, Wyoming. S: Plains King 7684; D: Kanda X-or. I'K'J. ' Townshend, Vermont. S: Mansfield 7255; D: Selection 050-49. QUESTION 06007—Chestnut; irregular star; "U" shaped snip; branded "2s" UPYVEY' ANNETTE 05981 Chcslnut; connected star, irregular strip and snip; l hs f nren 1 2; °d V}!S A "? „ ?.' b'-Horseshoe Cattle Company, Gustine, California; o-Roland white spot on left of underlip; .while spot on the inside of left hind coronet; G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Sonfield 7952; D: Addy A. 1)5041. f-June 14, 1912: br-Owen Moon, Jr., Soutli YVoodstock, Vermont. S: Upwey King REVA 05868—Black; right hind foot white; branded V left jaw; f-Mav 14, Peavine X-807 1; D: Analellc 04799. 1939; br-Thomas W. Adams, Huson, Montana. S- Heath -rblooin 798 ; D: Glen UPWEY' KATE X 051111—Chestnut; irregular strip, left hind pastern white; Garry 04988. f-April 11, 1912; br-Owen Moon, Woodstock, Vermont. S: Upwey Prince Tarik RHOSEN 05873—Chestnut; no markings; f-April -3 lor ; br-Dr. & Mrs. Faunt- X-7861; D: Upwey Linnie Peavine (unregistered); chestnut; wide strip, snip, leroy Flinn, Forest Knolls, Route 7, Decatur, Illinois S- Illawana Ruban 7991; both front pasterns and both bind socks white; f-May I, 1936; o-Owen Moon, Jr., D: Sentide 05265. by Upwey King Peavine X-8071. 2nd D: Linnie I.ee (13714 A.S.H.R.) by Forest ROELM MORGAN 05947 -Chestnut; huge star, left hind sock while- f-June 30, King (1102) tracing lo Cabel's Lexington 1223, Tom Hal 854, Drennon 007 and 1942; br-Adolph Eddlemon, Acampo, California; o-('has (' McGonegal ' P. 0. Box Black Hawk 20. 3rd D: Mildred Whirlwind (10018 A.S.H.R.) by Benjamin Whirl­ No. 16, Sunol, California. S: Kenelm Morgan 8077; D: Rohoss 04179. wind, grandson of Indian Chief 538. 4th D: My Lady Ecton (5998 A.S.H.R.) by Ike ROSECLIFF 05982—Black; no markings; f-May 13 191'- br-Mr & Mrs. Geo. (728) tracing to Green Mountain Morgan 42. A. Garrigan, 318 Strong Bldg., Beloit, YVisconsiii. S- Roscvelt 7H-M • D: Paula UPWEY SALIENT READE X-05885 -Bay; small star; black points; f-March Clifford 04841. " ' 7. 1940; br-Owen Moon, Jr., South Woodstock, Vermont. S: Upwey King lJeavine ROSE-LY'N 05083- Chestnut; connected irregular star, wide strip and snip X-8071; D: Upwey Mollie Reade (unregistered); bay; f-1925; o-Owen Moon, Jr., by left hind pastern white, right hind fetlock white extending higher on outside ami Rob Reade 6047. " 2nd D: Mollie McDonald (3405 A.S.H.R.) by Rex McDonald (833) rear; f-April 29, 1942; br-Mr. & Mrs. Geo. A. Garrigan, 318 Strong Bldg Beloit tracing to Cabel's Lexington 1223 and Tom Hal 854. 3rd D: Lee R. (401) by Wisconsin. S: Rosevelt 7S21; D: Linsley's I.ynella 05278. Mambrino Le Grand, Jr. (1193). Itli D: Maid of the West (400) by Bogie's Whip. ROSE O. DAY" 059 19—Chestnut; connected star and strip; snip- both hind fet• VAN'S STAR 05898—Dark bay; star; f-April 27, 1912; br-Clark Ringling, Love­ locks white; f-April 17, 1942; br-Osear Thompson, Clermont, Iowa. S- Morgan lock, Nevada. S: Vanguard 82.-)i; D: Star Ruby R. 05307. Profile 7644; D: Daisy L. 0 1516. VIOLET LINSLEY 05932- -Chestnut; star, connected strip, snip, both hind ROSETA CORTEZ 06013—Chestnut; star, left front pastern white- ri-ht hind stockings white; f-May 2, 1942; br-Elmer Brown, Halstead, Kansas; o-Chilocco stocking white; branded "23" on thighs; f-March 1912; br-Roland G Hill Gustine Agricultural School, Chilocco, Oklahoma. S: Tehachapi Allan 7910; D: Viola California. S: El Cortez 807 6; D: Hemala 041 so. Linsley 04789. ROSETTA 05901—Chestnut; no markings; f-April 15. 19 12; br-J ones Hereford VI VAN 05899—Brown or black; large star connected with strip; both hind Ranch. Route 1, Box 359A, Hollister, California. S: Pepper 8010- D- Rclm Ro stockings white; f-April 19, 1912; br-Clark Ringling, Lovelock, Nevada. S: Vanguard 0452S. 823 1; D: Brown Leaf R. 05366. ZAZA 05929—Chestnut; snip; f-April 20, 1942; br-Robert Tynan, Stella, Ne• ROXIE KELLOGG C. K. 05967—Chestnut; large irregular star, broad strip in braska. S: Agazizz 7700; D: Rozel 05080. lowef face covering nostrils and upperlip; left front and both hind stockings white; f-April 8, 1942; br-Glenn T. Watt, Paxton, Nebraska. S: Captain Kello"" 7647; D: Gwenalan 0517s. ROYAL ANN 05914—Chestnut; no markings; f-March 6. 1912; br-Helen Brunk Greenwalt, Pawnee, Illinois. S: Flyhawk 7526; D: Ann Royal 05322. ROZ 05923—Chestnut; large star, very narrow strip; snip; f-May 19, 1937; STALLIONS-Transfers br-U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Middlebury, Vermont; o-Merle D. Evans, 000 Ohio Merchants Bank Bldg., Massillon, Ohio. S: Delmont X-7930; D: Ceres 01770. ROZELLA 05927—Chestnut; connected star, strip and snip left hind stocking white; f-May 8, 1942; br-Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska S: Agazizz 7700; D: Rocky Hazel 04891. ALLEN'S INDIAN BOY X-8184—October 30, 1942 to Dorville S. Moore, Andes, RUBY' D. 059 46—Chestnut; strip, both hind stockings white, flaxen hairs in tail New Y'ork. and mane; f-May 15. 1942; br-J. L. Harvey, Granby, Colorado. S: Bar-S-Oak 8148; ALLEN'S INDIAN CHIEF 8183—July 1, 1941 to Mrs. Hazel E. Brown, Oneida, D: Annie Lee Morgan 05458. New- Y'ork. RCSSELLINE 05988—Chestnut; irregular strip ending in snip; light mane ALLEN'S INDIAN CHIEF 8183—September 5, 1942 to J. B. Davidson, 30 Highland and tail; f-August 1942; br-Thomas T. Brunk, R.R. 3. Springfield, Illinois. S: Cotton Ave., Montclair. New- Jersey. Hill's Choice 8093; D: Hattie C. X-05156. ALLEN SONFIELD 8505—August 12, 1942 to E. M. & W. E. Hammond, Merrill, RUTHVEN'S MARY ANN 05902—Chestnut; medium star; f-April 13, 1941; Oregon. br-Alexander G. Ruthven, 815 South University Ave., Ann Arbor, Michigan. S: Lip- ALLEN'S ONONDAGA CHIEF X-8304—August 31, 1942 to Richard P. Abbott, pitt Moro Ash 8084; D: Rutlnen's Sally Ann 05220. 70 1 Elm St., Rome, New Y'ork. SALLY' MAREA 05936—Bay ; small star; f-Mav 7. 19 12; br-Frances H. Bryant, ALONZO SENTNEY 8441—April 8, 1942 to A. N. Kay, Route 12, Box 299, R. D. 2, Springfield, Y'ermont. S: Lippitt Saul Moro sl09; D: Delight Marea Phoenix, Arizona. X-05189. SALLY' ROGERS 05901—Black; no markings; f-August 9, 19 12: br-C. G. & Beatrice ALTON 8157—August 12. 1942 to Francisco de Sola, San Salvador, Central A. Stevenson, Des Moines, Iowa; o-Earle Brown, Lyndonville, Vermont. S: Will America. Rogers 7943; D: Bird L. 04893. AMERICAN ACE 8 475—September 11, 1942 to Roy Williams, Black Hills Dude SANTA SUE 05875—Chestnut; small star; small strip: f-April 29, 1942: br-A. J. Ranch. Camp Crook. South Dakota. Alexander, Onyx, Calfornia; o-R. A. Sperry. 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, ANNDY' PERSHING 8390—August 3, 1942 to Anna K. Zeitler, R. 4, Box 345, California. S: Dandy R. M. 8012; D: Allica 04471. Santa Cruz, California. SENECA LADY' ESTHER X-05909—Chestnut; no markings; f-May 5, 1942; ANTHONY EDEN 8260—April 2i), 1941 to Archie A. Jones, M.D., 308 Orange Ave., br-Charles E. Allen. Baldwinsville, New Y'ork; o-YY'esley H. Nieman, Rome, New- Long Beach, California. York. S: Cornwallis 7698; D: Betsy Ross (unregistered); chestnut; br-Dr. W. L. ANTHONY' EDEN 8260—June 18, 1942 to Hugh H. Logan, Glendale, California. Orcutt. West Newbury. Massachusetts. S: Sir Ethan Allen 6537 by Ethan Allen BABARR 8340—September 11, 19 42 to Frank F. Owen, Meeteetse, YVyoming. 3d 3987 and out of a bay mare by Corbett 4393. 2nd D: Chestnut mare o-F. H. Orcutt, East Burke, Y'ermont. Said to be American Saddle Horse. BANNER R. M. 8127—May 23, 1942 to Owen B. Brennan, 18600 Asbury Park, SERENA 05964—Dark bay; small star, left hind fetlock white; f-April 2, 1942; Detroit, Michigan. br-Hearst Sunical Land and Packing Corporation, San Simeon, California. S: Ha­ BAR S ALLAN 8431—September 14, 1942 to Andrew W. Mahaffev, Russell, cienda Chief 8273; D: Serenade Ann 04568. Kansas. SILY'ER PRINCESS 05989—Grey; strip, widening between nostrils; left hind BENAY'R 8191—March 10, 1942 to Delos Huff, Spanish Fork, LJtah. coronet white; f-June 1942; br-Thomas T. Brunk, R.R. 3, Springfield, Illinois. S: Mountain Silver Sheik 8280; D: Daisette 04264. BENISON 8213—January 1, 1942 to Edward Macialek, R. D. 1, Lambertville, New Jersey. SNOOPER X-05877—Star; strip, snip; left front coronet white; both hind stock• ings white; f-April 29, 1942; br-Chas. Cowdrey, 1015 Albany St., Caldwell, Idaho. BENNY A. 8480—April 0, 1942 to Al. G. Evans, 11632 E. 15th St., Independence, S: Sonny Boy (unregistered); chestnut; blaze, both front and right hind stockings Missouri. white, little white on left hind foot; f-May 15, 1933; br- and o-Charles Cowdrey; BERRY"S MOUNTAIN BOY' 7933—January 26, 1912 to Tongue River Agency, by Hal Mercury, Jr. 6819 out of Ethel bv son of The Child of the Mist (Th.), Ethel's Lame Deer, Montana. dam by Vitringa (Th.); D: May Fly 05246. BLACK BARON 8290—September 18, 1940 to Yellowstone -National Park, Y'ellow- SUE ANN 05958—Dark chestnut; small star, faint strip, left hind fetlock white, stone Park, YVyoming. flaxen mane and tail; f-Mav 10, 1942; br-Lewis H. Pape, Pawnee, Illinois. S: Juzan BLACK HORNET 8579—March 1, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, 7895; D: Patty 05468. South Dakota. SUSIE Q. 05955—Black; no markings; f-April 18, 19 12; br-George Washington BLACKSTONE 8139—February 20, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Birthplace National Monument, Washington's Birthplace, Y'irginia. S: Gipsey King Ridge, South Dakota. 7200; D: Minerva 04047. SWEET NELL 05884—Chestnut; right hind coronet white; f-June 17, 1942; BOB ABBEY 8399—January 16, 1942 to David Rheault, 4411 Texas St., San Diego br-Thos. B. Dawson, Cuba City, Wisconsin; o-Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. California. ' S: Tiny Tim 7897; D: Timai 04615. BROYVNIE A. 8481—April 6, 1942 to Al. G. Evans, 11632 E. 15th St., Independence, TABIE FIELD 06002—Chestnut; left hind coronet white; branded "22" on Missouri. thighs: f-February 1942; br-Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. S: Sonfield 7952; BROWNIE A. 8481—November 5, 1942 to A. E. Swartz, 214 W. Maple, Inde• D: Tab 04214. pendence, Missouri. T. ALLEN LINSLEY 05942—Chestnut; strip; inside left hind pastern white; BROYVN KNOX 8360—March 1, 1942 to Roland G. Hill, Gustine, California. f-May 1942; br-Hiebert Bros., Hillsboro, Kansas. S: Tehachapi Allan 7910; D: Ella BURKEY' 8419—April 16, 1942 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. Linsley 04788. TEEWINOT 05925—Chestnut; star, branded horseshoe bar on left thigh. "2" BURKEY' 8419—June 30, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, South on right shoulder; f-May 1942; br-L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, YVyoming. Dakota. S: Plains King 7684; D: Auburn X-05487. CALGARY' 8577—September 1, 1942 to Jack Hudson, Box 1662, Grand Coulee TEJAS NELL 06017—Bay; very small star; black points; branded "35" on Washington. ' thighs; f-June 1942; br-W. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas. S: Chocolate 7586; D: Sil- CALY'IN 7914—September 9, 1938 to Albert Long. verjen 05644. TORREYA ROSE 05867—Chestnut; narrow star, strip; f-June 26, 1941; br-Mr. CALVIN 7911—May 6, 1942 to M. M. Treadwell, Chelan, Washington. & Mrs. Richard C. Eames, Torreya Farm, Millbrook, New York ;o-Genevieve Torrey CHARGER 8251—April 23, 1942 to McNamara & Marlow, Inc., Big Sandy, Eames, Torreya Farm, Millbrook, New Y'ork. S: Rarben 8020; D: Lippitt Rose Montana. Ash 04872. CHARLIE CHOCOLATE 8528—March 5, 1942 to J. B. Baird, Quitaque, Texas. TOWNSHEND LADY 05987—Brown; no markings; f-April 20, 1912; br-Anna Dickson Ela, Townshend Morgan Horse Farm, Townshend, Vermont. S: Sealect CHARLIE DIX 8113—January 1942 to Raymond Sparks, R, F. D. 2, Pratt 7266; D: Townshend Lass 04772. Kansas. KNICKERBOCKER 8345—January 2, 1942 to R. L. Berry & Sons, Sheffield, Ver­ CHARLIE SENTNEY 8443—April 3, 19 12 to YV. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas. mont. CHIEF OF CHESTNUT 8177—May 13, 1941 to Dan Nickum, 1003 Washington LAMONT 8497—August 10, 1942 to Robert E. Rush, Jr., Pittsfield, Illinois. Blvd., Bellflower, California. LINSLEY PATCH 8357—August 19, 1912 to Grove Ranch Co., Charles C. Theis, CHIEF PINE RIDGE 8578- March 1, 1942 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. Inglewood, Kansas. LINSLEY'S JUBILEE PAUL 8087—July 23, 1941 to Simon E. Lantz, Congerviile, CHIEF ROMANESQUE 7685—December 22. 19 12 to YVillis Grumbein, Jetmore Star Route, Dodge City. Kansas. Illinois. CHOCK L. 8527- March 5. 1942 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. LINSLEY"S JUBILEE PAUL 8087—February 6, 1942 to Oglala Community High School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. CHOCOLATE 75S6 -April 3, 1912 to R. S. Sentney, 536 E. Sherman St., Hutchin­ LINSLEY'S JUBILEE PAUL 8087—May 4, 1912 to Fort Berthold Agency, Elbo- son, Kansas. woods. North Dakota. CHOICE MASTER 7810—December 1934 to Rancho Santa Margarita y Las Flores, LIPPITT BUNDY' ASH 7725—September 11, 1942 to Miss Jill Sewell, Woodstock, P. O. Box 597, Oceanside, California. Y'ermont. CHOICE MASTER 7810-October 19 42 to Clarence C. Story, Fallbrook, California. LIPPITT MORMAN 8211—August 22, 1941 to J. W. Griess, Hamilton, Massa­ COCOA 8529—March 5, 1942 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. chusetts. COLONEL LEE 8600—September 19, 1942 to Dr. S. E. Enfield, Cumberland, LIPPITT MORMAN 8211—September I, 1942 to Robert L. Knight, Box 542, Maryland. Providence, Rhode Island. COLONEL LEE 8000—November 16, 19 12 to Dr. A. G. T. Twigg, Cumberland, MARBEAU 8289—September 22, 1940 to Fernand L. Boulogne, Bear Creek & Maryland. M Sts., Merced, California. COLONEL LINSLEY 8533- November 23, 1942 to J. Marden Mahnsten, Burwell, MASTER R.M. 8188—February 13, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, Nebraska. South Dakota. COMIDORE X-8002 -December 21, 1942 to Tom Connor, Melrose, Montana. MASTER R.M. 8188—March 23, 1942 to Fort Totten Indian Agency, Fort Totten, CONGO 8354—December 10, 1942 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala City, Central North Dakota. America MAX LINSLEY 7805—December 6, 1941 to Mrs. Edward Fuller, MeCausland, COPPER CHIEF 8230—November 6, 1942 to Uintah & Ouray Agency, Fort Du­ Iowa. chesne, Utah. MICKEY' 8256—November 13, 1942 to Otto B. Hosack, Brookfield, Ohio. CUY'AMO 7974—March 4, 1942 to Mrs. Elmor Hill, T. S. Ranch, Battle Moun­ MONTE L. 8423—November 21, 1942 to Mrs. George Suplee, Wheatland, Wyoming. tain, Nevada. MOONGLOYV 8415-March is, 1942 to J. N. Bryan, Campbell Creek Ranch, CUY'AMO 7974- May 12. 19 12 to Jesse Gardner, c/o Tonopah Stage, Ely. Nevada. Austin, Nevada. DAN DEE 8151—May 1942 to Anton Christensen, Ames, Iowa. MOUNTAIN GRAY' HAWK 8472—September 21, 1942 to Jos. F. Luongo, 39 DANDY' R.M. 8012—April 21. 1938 to A. J. Alexander, Onyx, California. Bulkeley Ave., Hartford, Connecticut. DANDY' T. A. 8388—October 10, 1942 to YV. E. Franz, Box 66, Canoga Park, MOUNTCREST SELLMAN 7289—May 15, 1942 to Chas. Sambrailo, Watsonville, California. California. DAYY'N 7749—February 2. 1942 to Fred Nottolini, Elgin, Illinois. NATAN 8662—December 8. 1942 to R. H. Guidebeck, Otsego, Michigan. DELL'S Y'ALLEY' JUBILEE 8582—May 23, 1942 to M. Lantz Willerton, Danvers, NUGGET 8637—October 16, 1942 to John King, Massillon, Ohio. Illinois. PLAINS KING 7684—October 16, 1938 to L. U. Sheep Co., Worland, Wyoming. DUKE OF YVINDSOR 8259 -September 5, 1942 to Owen Moon, Jr., Woodstock, PLAINS KING 768 1—December 12, 1942 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala, Cen­ Y'ermont. tral America. EAGLE CHIEF 8402—December 22, 1942 to YVillis Grumbein, Jetmore Star PLAINSMAN 8268—October 1940 to Simon E. Lantz, Congerviile, Illinois. Route, Dodge City, Kansas. PLAINSMAN 8268—February 6, 1942 to Oglala Community High School, Pine EARL OF MANSFIELD 7835—June 26, 1942 to Gerald A. Minor, Bethlehem, Ridge, South Dakota. Connecticut. PLAINSMAN OF DELLS 8583—May 23, 1942 to F. K. Dzengolewski, Alhambra, EARL OF MANSFIELD 7s35—September 17. 1912 to Charles B. Jacobs, Jr., Illinois. Bethlehem, Connecticut. PLETONIA 8334—June 1942 to Floyd Holloway, R.R. 1, Arcadia, Indiana. EL CABALLERO 8393—October 29. 19 42 to Chas. D. Luce, Nevada City, California. PONGEROD 8593—July 20, 1942 to John B. & Robert B. Mason, Le , EL CORTEZ 8076—December 23, 1941 to John ('. Silva, Lewiston, California. California. ENOYVEE s606—1942 to A. A. Brierly, Independence, California. POWERFUL 8415—February 13, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, ERIC GEDDES 8012—April 16, 1942 to YV. H. Ranson, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. South Dakota. FIREBUG 8300—May 29. 1942 to Chas B. Peters, Sr.. Tulsa, Oklahoma. POYVERFUL 8415—March 23, 1942 to Rosebud Indian Agency, Rosebud, South FLYING COLORS 8470—December 12. 1942 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala, Dakota. Central America. RARBEN 8026—March 9, 1942 to F. H. Hessels, Millbrook, New Y'ork. FRANCISCO 8390- -March 6, 1942 to J. Sheldon Potter, 200 Bush St., San Fran­ RED FLASH 8416—Feb. 14, 1942 to Lloyd Corporation, Ltd., 5410 Wilshire cisco, California. Blvd., Los Angeles, California. GAY" MAC 7988 -April 24, 1942 to Dr. Clarence C. Reed, 701 E. Compton Blvd., REDMAN 8056—April 7. 1942 to W. J. Halliday. Bishop, California. Compton, California. REDOLENT 7295—About 1925 to Tom L. Burnett, Fort Worth. Texas. GIPSEY CHIEF 8 182—May 15, 1942 to Yellowstone National Park, Yellowstone REDWEY' 8367—September 5, 1942 to Joyce Marcia Spalding, South Weymouth, Park, YVyoming. Massachusetts. GLENDO 8670—December 22, 1942 to Earl Willaman, Transfer, Pennsylvania. RED WINDSOR 8 468—April 1942 to John R. Gallagher, YVest Lebanon, New HALSTEAD 74 48—February 2. 1942 to A. E. Swartz, 214 YV. Maple, Independence, Hampshire. Missouri. RED YVINDSOR 8468—September 11, 1942 to Clarence F. Atwood, Hartland, HALSTEAD 7448—October 2, 1942 to C. R. Allen, R.R. 1, Princeton, Indiana. Y'ermont. HEROSCO 8479—June 19 42 to Mrs. P. A. Knowles, Olive Drive, Spring Valley, RHODOAK 8636—October 15, 1942 to Doak, R.R. 2, , Illinois. California. RHOY'IN 8635—December 26, 1942 to Alvin Taylor, Marshall, Michigan. HIGHLAND GLKN 8349—June 9, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, ROLIND C. K. 8377—January 26, 1942 to George F. Hossack, Sidney, Nebraska. South Dakota. HIGHLAND LADDIE 8120—June 0, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine ROSCO MORGAN 7573—October 9, 1942 to Guy Streepy, Udell, Iowa. Ridge, South Dakota. ROSCOE SENTNEY' 8442—April 3, 1942 to YV. P. Thornhill. Miami, Texas. HIGHLAND LARRY' 8341—March 1, 1942 to Roy V. Morledge, Hart Albin Bldg., ROSEFIELD 856s—October 20. 1942 to Dean Witter, 45 Montgomery St., San Billings, Montana. Francisco, California. HIGHLAND SIOUX 8486—February 28, 1942 to M. W. Petersen, Luther, Montana. ROUBIDOUX 83 12 November 13, 1942 to Earl W7illaman, R. D. 1, Transfer, HORNSBY K. 7907—March 1, 1942 to William Helm, 714 Helm Bldg., Fresno, Pennsylvania. California. SENATOR GRAHAM 8361—February 2. 19 12 to Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Ne­ HURRICANE s:i35— May 2.1, 1942 to A. Christensen, Ames. Iowa. braska. ILLAYVANA DON 8381—April 6, 1942 to Anton Christensen, Ames, Iowa. SENATOR GRAHAM 8361 -October 3, 1942 to L. U. Sheep Company, Worland, Wyoming. ILLAWANA TOBY' soso—April 18, 19 12 to William Ray Taylor, Carrollton, Ohio. SHEIK STAR 8509 -June 26, 1942 to A. E. Swartz, Independence, Missouri. ILLINI 8 125—May 23. 1942 to A. B. Christensen, Ames, Iowa. SHENANDOAH 74 17 -April 16. 1942 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. IOYVA BOY' 80.(7—April Hi, 1942 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. SIDNEY' 7441—October 21, 1942 to Marcus M. Schnell, Minot, North Dakota. IOYVA BOY 8037—June 30, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. SILVER CHIEF 8136— June 22. 1912 to Rosebud Indian Agency, Rosebud, South Dakota. IOWA BOY' 8037- August 19 12 to Fort Totten Indian Agency, Fort Totten, North Dakota. SIR LINSLEY' 705 1— March 9, 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, JAMES R. M. 7910 -October 13, 19 12 to Patricia L. Toothe. Meeker, Colorado. South Dakota. JASON 82 18—October 15, 19 42 to M. D. Evans, Massillon, Ohio. SIR LINSLEY 705 1 -July i,, 19 12 to Ft. Totten Indian Agency, Ft. Totten, North Dakota. JAY' 8217 -October 15. 1912 to M. D. Evans, Massillon, Ohio. SPRATAYR 8192-January 5. 19 12 to Verne Caldwell, Grand Junction, Colorado. JEKY'LL 8215—September 1912 to Office of Indian Affairs, U. S. Dept. of Interior, YVashington, District of Columbia. STAR BOY' 8208 August 15, 1941 to YVillis Grumbein, Jetmore Star Route, JOEL 82 11 -October 15, 1912 to M. D. Evans, Massillon, Ohio. Dodge City, Kansas. JOHNSON 82 13—October 15, 19 12 to M. D. Evans, Massillon, Ohio. STAR BOY' 8208—February 27, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, JUBILEE KING 7570—May 2, 1942 to Frances H. Bryant, Springfield, Vermont. South Dakota. JUGO 7819—October 20, 1942 to Bernard M. Kcene, Jr., R.R. 16, Box 05, TARRON 7963—December 16, 1912 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala City, Central Indianapolis, Indiana. America. JUZAN 7895—December 10, 1942 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala City, Central TEXAS BROWNIE 8217- September 26, 1941 to W. H. Gosney, Goddard, Kansas. America. TEXAS BROWNIE 8217 April 18. 1942 lo Lloyd V. Ray, Midian, Kansas. KING GEORGE R.M. 8073—July 9, 1912 lo Cheyenne River Agenc\, Cheyenne Agency, South Dakota. TEXAS R. 8530- March 5. 1942 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. TEXAS RAIN BOW 8220—February 13, 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine BONNIE LEE 05510—February 16, 1912 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, Ridge, South Dakota. South Dakota. TEXAS RAIN BOW 8220—March 10, 19 12 to Uintah Indian School, Whilerocks BONNIE LEE 0551(1- March 17, 1942 to Rosebud Indian Agency, Rosebud, South Utah. Dakota. TIFFICAN 8281—June 4, 1912 to Menno Lengacher, R.R. 2, l.oogootee. Indiana. BONNIE MAGGIE 05803—October 1, 1912 to Owen Moon, YVoodstock, Vermont. TIFFICAN 8281— October 2s, 1942 to Joseph S. Kemp, R.R. 2, Box 71) I goolee BONNIE SHE 05136- May 30, 1912 to Merle H. Little, 1157 So. Mountain Ave., Indiana. R. F. D. 1, Monrovia, California. TINY TIM 7897—July 11, 1912 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. BONNY JEAN 0 1930—June 9, 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, TRAIL BLAZER 847 1 March 13, 1912 to John W. Davis, It. F. D 2 Westerly South Dakota. Rhode Island. BRADY 05370 -January 22, 19 12 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, South UPYVEY CHIEF 8495- June 10, 1912 to Gibbs, Barrington, Rhode Island.Dakota . UPWEY' KING BENN 8210- September .,. 1942 to Owen Moon, YVoodstock Ver BRADY' 05370—March 17, 19 12 to Rosebud Indian Agency, Rosebud, South Dakota. mont. BROWN MARIE 05013—December 1. 1911 to R. Danley. Willows, California. UPWEY MONT-PENN 8352—September 5, 19 12 lo Paul J. Furnas, Media Penn• BUCEPHALA 04316—September 18, 1912 to Miss Virginia Wingate, Upper Mont- sylvania. clair, New Jersey. VARAGRAPH 7 7 58—December 19 12 to Mrs. Yale Siminoff, Route 8, Box 785 BUCILLA 0507 4 March 1, 1941 to Bcrman Stock Farm, Pacoima. California. Phoenix, Arizona. BUCILLA 1)507 1—February 14, 1912 to Lloyd Corp., Ltd., 5110 YVilshire Blvd., YVAKEFIELD DUKE 8223 August 1, 1940 to Yellowstone National Park, Yellow­ Los Angeles, California. stone Park, Wyoming. BUMPUS 05142—June 20, 19 12 to University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut. WHITEFOOT CHIEF 8170- August 1912 to J. L. O'Donnell, 1229 Y'irginia Rd BUTTERCUP A. 0 1579 August 22, 19 12 to Leigli YV. Nickerson, 610 Alvarado St., Long Beach, California. Redlands, California. YVITCHATA 7903—August 31, 1942 to Ray J. Seipp, Parkway Hotel, 2100 Lincoln CARMEL 04530 March 1, 1941 to Bcrman Stock Farm, 9419 Y'an Nuys Blvd., Park YVest, Chicago. Illinois. Pacoima, California. YVONDERMAN 7671- June 27, 19 12 to Mrs. R. J. Stiles, Oxford, Maine. CARMEL 01530—February 14, 1942 to Lloyd Corp., Ltd., 5410 Wilshire Blvd., YVOODLAND CHIEF 7902- April 1, 1912 to Justin Dart, Boston, Massachusetts. Los Angeles, California. CAVEY" 04988—January 22, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. CAVEY' 04988 March 17, 1912 to Rosebud Indian Agency, Rosebud, South Dakota. COIMA MORGAN 05170—December 19 10 to R. L. YVelborn. Campo, California. COIMA MORGAN 05 170—April 20, 10 11 to Archie A. Jones, M.D., 308 Orange MARES-Transfers Ave., Long Beach, California. COIMA MORGAN 05170—August 2. 1942 to Mr. )v Mrs. Streeter Blair, EI Cajon, California. DANLYN 05208—April 3, 1942 to R. S. Sentney, 536 East Sherman St., Hutchinson, ADDY' C. 05279—January 20, 1912 to Margaret H. Fish, Gustine, California. Kansas. DAN'S BABY' 04045—February 13, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, ALLEN DAYVN 05170—March 13, 19 12 to Fort Totten Indian Agency, Fort Soutli Dakota. Totten, North Dakota. DAN'S BABY' 046 15-June 22. 1942 to Rosebud Indian School, Rosebud, South ALLICA 04471—1932 to A. J. Alexander, Onyx. California. Dakota. ALLICA 01171—Oct. 21, 1941 to Russell Hill, Keene, California. DARK ORCHID 05580 -March 9, 1912 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, ALLICA 04471—February 1, 1942 to R. A. Sperry, 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los South Dakota. Angeles, California. DARLEEN 05154—September 26, 1942 to Owen Moon, YVoodstock. Vermont. AMORITA X-05408—March 26, 1942 to R. S. Sentney, 536 E. Sherman St., DARLEEN 05154—October 3, 1942 to Arthur D. Norcross, 2 11 Madison Ave., Hutchinson, Kansas. New Y'ork, New Y'ork. ANNABELLA 05444—June 1, 19 12 to Martin YV. Littleton, 149 Broadway, New- DEE DEE 05331 -September 29, 1942 to Nancy A. Kelieigh, Plain Rd., YVayland, York, New Y'ork. Massachusetts. ANNIE BELL R.M. 05138— February 2, 19(2 to Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, DELIAH 05 165—October 14, 1942 to Bernard M. Keene, Jr., R.R. No. 16, Box Nebraska. No. 051. Indianapolis. Indiana. ANNIE BELL R.M. 05438—December 2 1. 19 12 lo Gilbert Switzer. Holmesville, DELL'S MELODY' 05870—May 23, 1942 to G. YV. Ault, Kirkland, Illinois. Nebraska. DEUCE X-05307—June 23, 1912 to Mr. & Mrs. F. J. Munson, 1738 Fairgrove Ave., ANN MORGAN 05051—August 3, 1942 to J. E. Jackson, Corbin Hall Farm, Baldwin Park. California. Samos, Y'irginia. DINALEE 05804—April 6, 1942 to Anton Christensen, Ames, Iowa. ANN ROY'AL 05322—June 1, 19 42 to Martin YV. Littleton, 149 Broadway, New DOLLY D. 04787—February 10, 1942 to R. S. Sentney, 536 East Sherman St., York, New Y'ork. Hutchinson, Kansas. ANTELLAH X-05751—August 1942 to E. YV. Roberts, 643 Y'enice Blvd., Los DOLLY' D. 01787—March 9, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, Angeles, California. South Dakota. ARABIA 04676—July 2, 1042 to Owen Moon, YVoodstock, Vermont. DONBELLE ALLAN 05243—February 2, 19 12 to Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, ARISSA 04669—July 2. 1942 to Owen Moon, Woodstock, Vermont. Nebraska. AUTO FLY X-05725—January 9. 1942 to Man in S. and Irene K. Jeppesen, 8 47 DONNA DELLA X-05590—October 15, 1942 to G. B. Farnam, YVallingford, Con­ Washington, Reno, Nevada. necticut. BABY DIX 05213—February 13, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, DOROTHY' ABBEY' 05783— April 7, 1942 to E. YV. Roberts, 643 Venice Blvd., South Dakota. Los Angeles, California. BABY" DIX 05213—June 22. 1942 to Rosebud Indian School, Rosebud, South DORRIS F. 01705—1932 to A. J. Alexander, Onyx. California. Dakota. DORRIS F. 04705—April 25, 1941 to R. A. Sperry, 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, BAR S DELIGHT 05539—Februai-y 13, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine California. Ridge, South Dakota. DUCHESS OF YVINDSOR 05337—September 28. 1942 to Anton Christensen, Ames, BAR S HAZEL 05709—December 30, 1912 to Mrs. Andrew W. Mahaffey, Russell, Iowa. Kansas. EASTER FINE S. 05545—February 13, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine BAR S SPRY 05705—November 1, 1941 to M. F. Jarvis, YVinfield, Kansas. Ridge, South Dakota. BEAUTY PANIC 05346—April 16, 1942 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. EASTER FINE S. 05545—June 3, 1912 to YVind River Indian Agency, Fort BEAUTY PANIC 05340—June 30, 1942 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, South YVashakie, YVyoming. Dakota. ELIZABETH HEROD 05585— January 22, 1942 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, BELCRESTA 05071—September 3, 1937 to Jones Hereford Ranch, Route 1, Box South Dakota. 359A, Hollister, California. ELIZABETH HEROD 05585—June 3, 1942 to YVind River Indian Agency, Fort BELLE ROCKWOOD 04586—April 23, 1942 to R. S. Sentney, 536 E. Sherman, YVashakie, YVyoming. Hutchinson, Kansas. ESTHER FINE S. 05514—February 13, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine BENALDA 05357—October 20, 1941 to Reon Wills, Somerset, Pennsylvania. Ridge, Soutli Dakota. BENALDA 05357—June 6, 1942 to Ed Macialek, Lambertville, New Jersey. ESTHER FINE S. 05544—June 3, 19 42 to YVind River Indian Agency, Fort BERRY'S JENNY X-05611—January 26, 1942 to Chilocco Agricultural School, Washakie. YVyoming. Chilocco, Oklahoma. ESTRABEL 05215—February 15, 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, BERTHA C. A. 05440—February 2, 1942 to Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska. South Dakota. BESS' ANN 04651—March 5, 1942 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. ESTRILLETA 05186—May 26. 1942 to J. P. Burke, D.Y'.M., Ashland, Maine. BETSY JOAQUIN 05628—November 16, 1942 to Hellen F. Lynch, Fiddletown, FAUSTELLA 04777—April 16, 1934 to Jack Emery, Billings. Montana. California. FAUSTELLA 04777—May 24, 1940 to Roy Y'. Morledge, M.D., 310-312 Hart-Albin BETTY ANN 04950—April 14, 1942 to Dean Witter, 45 Montgomery St., San Bldg., Billings, Montana. Francisco, California. FAWNETTE A. 05627—May 10. 1912 to YV. E. Franz, Canoga Park, California. BETTY DEAN 05210—June 22, 1942 to Rosebud Indian School, Rosebud, South FAWN K. X-05077—July 17. 1942 to Marvin S. and Irene K. Jeppesen, 847 Dakota. Washington, Reno, Nevada. BETSY JOAQUIN 05628—November 16, 1942 to Hellen F. Lynch, Fiddletown, FLAVIA 05908—October 6, 1942 to Sam Doak, Paris, Illinois. St., Claremont, California. FLICKA 05907—October 6, 1912 to Sam Doak, Paris, Illinois. BLACK SATIN 05066—March 30, 1942 to Joe Neri, San Bernardino, California. FONTAINE 05272—May 30, 1942 to Merle & Edna May Little, 1157 So. Mountain BLUE GRASS QUEEN 05196—April 6, 1942 to Al. G. Evans, 11032 E. 15th St., Ave., R. F. D. 1, Monrovia, California. Independence, Missouri. FORFEIT 04636—1932 to A. J. Alexander, Onyx, California. BONNIE LEE 05516—February 16, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, FORFEIT 04636—April 25, 1941 to R. A. Sperry, 1003 Higgins Bldg., Los Angeles, Dakota. California. GLEN GARRY 0 1983- January 17, 1912 to Tine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, LORANE DELI. X-D5501 -May 23, 1942 to A. Christensen, Ames, Iowa. Soutli Dakota. LORETTA ANN 058D5—October 19, 19 12 to Mrs. Emily Crawford, 228 South GOJEA 1)1610- April 7, 1912 to E. YV. Roberts, 043 Y'enice Boulevard, Los Angeles, sth St., West Side, Connellsville, Pennsylvania. California. LUCY' BELLE 05669—February 14, 1942 to Lloyd Corp., Ltd., 5410 Wilshire Blvd., GOLD BEAUTY' X-05823--November 2. 1912 to T. R. Haggcrty, Remsenburg, Los Angeles, California. Long Island, New Y'ork. LUELLEN 05517—October 10, 1941 to Helen Greenwalt, Pawnee, Illinois. GOLDEN HONEY' 05113—April 6, 1942 to Anton Christensen, Ames, Iowa. LUELLEN 055 17—February 22, 19 12 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, GOLDETTE 05022—September 23, 1912 to Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs, Con South Dakota. necticut. LULA SPAR 05375 -May 4, 19 12 to Loretto Menary, Klamath, Del Norte Co., GRACIA 05021—April 3, 19 42 to Raymond P. Pugh, Hennrietti Pugh, 162 In- California. dianola Rd., Y'oungstown, Ohio. LULU BELLE R.M. 04891— February 4, 1942 to Oglala Community High School, GUSTA 05349—February 20. 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, Pine Ridge, Soutli Dakota. South Dakota. MADELIN 05080—January 21, 1942 to Glenn E. Rowell, 198 No. Main St., HACIENDA BUTTERCUP 057 18—August 19 12 to Miss Sid Fors> th. Star Route, Rutland, Y'ermont. Arroyo Grande, California. .MADELIN 05086—June 17. 1942 to Alan N. Mann. Woodstock, Y'ermont. HACIENDA SALOME 05749—August 1912 to E. YV. Roberts, 013 Venice Blvd., MADELL 05217—May 23, 1942 to F. K. Dzengolewski, Alhambra, Illinois. Los Angeles. California. Y1AF. 05385 -February 4, 1942 to Oglala Community High School, Pine Ridge, HARRIET X-04933—May 17, 193s to Car! YV. Cow-ell South Dakota. HARRIET X-01933- August 18, 1938 to J. F. Williams, Guff Bldg., Clarksburg, MAE MORGAN 05478—June 4, 1912 to R. S. Sentney, 536 East Sherman St., YY'est Y'irginia. Hutchinson. Kansas. HEATHER X-OI92 1—June 20. 19 12 to YV. Glenn Silvis, Silvis Farms, Inc., Greens­ MALOU 05117—April 16, 1942 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. burg, Pennsylvania. MAI.OU 05117—June 30, 1912 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, Soutli Dakota. HELEN B. 04860—April 18. 1942 to George M. Seesc. Box 100, Route 1, Turtle MANSFIELD'S FOLLY' 04608— August 10, 1942 to Miss Margaret Burbank, Dal- Creek, Pennylvania. ton, Ylassachusetts. HELEN B. 04861)—June 22. 19 42 to Ed Macialek, Lambcrtville, New Jersey. MANSFIELD'S FOLLY" 04008—August 10, 1912 to Mrs. Darwin S. Morse, Green HERA 05046—December 7. 19 12 to Sazette Blair. EI Cajon, California. Ylcads. Richmond, Massachusetts. HERODONA 04452—December 7, 1942 to John B. & Robert B. Mason, La Mesa, MARGARIT HEROD 05792—October 3. 1912 to Helen B. Greenwalt, Pawnee, California. Illinois. HIGHLAND TEG 05353—February 13, 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency. Pine MARGARIT HEROD 057 92—October 25, 1942 to Robert H. Guidebeck, Ostego, Ridge. South Dakota. Michigan. HIGHLAND PEG 05353-March 10, 19 12 to Fort Berthold Agency, Elbowoods, MARIE MORGAN 05052- August 3, 1942 to J. E. Jackson, c/o Corbin Hall Farm, North Dakota. Samos, Y'irginia. HIGHLAND SILHOUETTE 05583—February 13, 19 12 to Pine Ridge Indian YLYRY" LEE 05411—September 19, 1912 to Dr. S. E. Enfield, Cumberland, Mary­ Agency, Pine Ridge, Soutli Dakota. land. HIGHLAND SILHOUETTE 05583- March in. 1912 to Fort Berthold Agency, MAUD R. 01620—March 9, 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, Elbowoods, North Dakota. Soutli Dakota. H1GHTONE 05796—January 1942 to A. E. Swartz. 214 YVest Maple St., Inde­ MAURANE DELL X-05502—May 23, 19 12 to A. Christensen, Ames, Iowa. pendence, Missouri. MAY' DAWN 05798 March 4, 19 42 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, HOLLY' 05138—April 3. 1942 to Raymond P. Pugh, Hennrietti Pugh, 102 In- South Dakota. diahola Rd., Y'oungstown, Ohio. YIAY' ROCKWOOD 01801—February 13, 1912 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, HY'PATIA X-05595—October 1.5, 1942 to H. A. Dye, Gloversville, New Y'ork. South Dakota. ILLAYVANA ANN 05805—March 27. 1942 to YValter YV. YVinget, 121 YV. Wilcox MAY' SENTNEY 05718—June 4. 1942 to YV. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas. Ave., Peoria. Illinois. Mc DONNA 1)5059—June 23, 1912 to N. E. Munson, Baldwin Park, California. ILLAYVANA JANE 05807 -March 19 42 to YVm. F. Jacobs, 3200 East Alameda St., Denver, Colorado. Mi JOY 05660—May 1, 19 12 to Joseph R. Brunk, Rochester, Illinois. ILLAYVANA JO 05971—December 23, 1942 to Mr. & Mrs. Don Savage, Salem, YIcJOY" D5000— December 16, 1942 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala City, Central Iowa. America. ILLAYVANA JOANNE 1)5972—December 23. 1942 to Mr. & Mrs. Don Savage, MEHI.ADY' YVOODBURY' 04338—September 18, 1942 to Mrs. H. P. YVingate, Salem, Iowa. Upper Ylontclair, New Jersey. ILLAYVANA LADY' 0580s—May 1942 to F. K. Dzengolewski. Alhambra, Illinois. MONTANA DAYVN 05170- Ylarch I, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, Soutli Dakota. ILLAYVANA SHIELA 05625—January 22. 19 12 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. MONTANA DAYVN 0">176—April 30. 1942 to Uintah Indian School, YVhiterocks, Utah. ILLAYVANA TOPSY" 05177—February 14, 1942 to Pine Ridge Agency, Tine Ridge, South Dakota. MONTANA MAID 0 1655—March 1, 1942 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. IPHIGENIA 05275—November 10, 1942 to Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs. Con­ necticut. MOUNTAIN DAYVN O5OH0—June 9, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, South Dakota. JANE ABBEY' 0510 1—March 23, 19-12 to 0. ('. Foster, Calabasas, California. MY'LY'NDA 05091—February 22. 1912 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency. Pine Ridge, JENNIE ANN 05480—Ylarch 5. 19 42 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. South Dakota. JIPSY L. 04890—February 2, 1942 to Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska. MY'LY'NDA 05691—June 3, 1942 to YVind River Indian Agency, Fort Washakie, JONQUII., 05399—September 23. 1942 to lTniv. of Connecticut. Storrs, Connecticut. YVyoming. JOY'OUS 05397—September 23. 1942 to Univ. of Connecticut. Storrs, Connecticut. NANCY' JANE 04908—January 20. 1942 to Jean H. Borrelli, Gustine, California. JULIANNA 05515—February 16, 1942 to Oglala Community School. Pine Ridge, NELLIE MAE MORGAN 05176—March 5, 1942 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, South Dakota. Kansas. JULIANNA 05515—June 3, 1942 to YVind River Indian Agency. Fort YY'ashakie, NELLIE MAE MORGAN 05 176— June 30, 1942 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, YY'yoming. South Dakota. JUNEBUG 05517 -February 16, 1912 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, NIGHT BIRD 0 1995 January 17, 19 12 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency. Pine Ridge, South Dakota. South Dakota. JUNETTE 05419—December 12, 1942 to Y'erna M. Hosack. Brookfield, Ohio. OCEAN YVAY'E 05731—February 14, 1912 to Lloyd Corp., Ltd., 5410 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, California. JUSISTA 04837—May 23. 19 12 to M. Lantz Willerton, Danvers. Illinois. PERHAPS 0I3IS-- January 31, 1939 to George S. YVilliams and Florence Wil­ KAYCEE X-05495—July 12, 1942 to Richard Brunk Greenwalt, Pawnee, Illinois. liams, YVindsorville. Maine. KITTY EDNA 05114—February 13, 19 42 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, PIEDMONT ARABELLA 01901—November 15, 1942 to Jack & Harriet Davis, 2128 South Dakota. ('amino Real, Arcadia, California. KITTY' HAYVK 05910—October 6, 1942 to Earl Willaman, Route 1, Transfer, PINE LADY' 05080—April 14, 19 12 to Dean YVitter, 15 Montgomery St., San Pennsylvania. Francisco, California. KITTY KAY 05912—October 6. 19 42 to Yl. F. Griffith. Damascus, Ohio. PINE QUEEN 05079—April II, 1942 to Dean YVitter, 15 Montgomery St., San LADY" BENTON X-05107—August 26. 1041 to Audrey Margaret Williams, Quaker Francisco, California. Hill, Pawling, New York. PINE RIDGE BEAUTY' 05710—June 22, 19 12 to Rosebud Indian Agency, Rosebud, LADY" FIELD X-05731—June 19 12 to Albert L. Spencer, Bellows Falls. Y'ermont. Soutli Dakota. LADY' GRUMBEIN" 05 no-February 4, 1912 to Oglala Community High School, PINE RIDGE NELLIE 1)5711—June 3, 1912 to YVind River Indian Agency. Fort Pine Ridge, South Dakota. Washakie, Wyoming. LADY LOU 05274—April 16, 1912 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. PRINCESS JOAQUIN 05631- May 5, 10 12 to W. E. Franz, Canoga Park, California. LADY' LOU 05274—June 30, 1942 to Pine Ridge Agency. Pine Ridge, Soutli QUAKER MAID 05911 •-October 6, 1942 to Earl YVillainan, Route 1, Transfer, Dakota. Pennsylva nia. LADY-STAR 05198—December 11, 1941 to E. E. Gustason, Lake Mills, Iowa. QUEEN A. 052S0 June 13, 19 12 to Clarence C. Reed, M.D., Compton, California. LADY' SUTTER o 1867—February 1, 19 12 to Oglala Communilv High School, Pine QUEEN A, 05280 -December 15, 1912 to Horseshoe Cattle Co., Gustine, California. Ridge, South Dakota. RAPIDAN 05098—April 19, 1942 to Merle Little, Monrovia, California. LASSIE HUDSON 05871— June I, 19 12 to St urges P. Taggart, II, Lake Geneva, RAPIDAN 0500H--Apiil 28, 1942 to Mrs. Loring Hutchinson, 774 YV. Tenth St., YVisconsin. C'aremont. California. LAYDEE X-05680 March 4. 1942 to Mrs. Elmor Hill, T.S. Ranch, Battle Moun­ RAKETTE 01885- February II, 1912 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Ridge, South tain, Nevada. Dakota. LIBERTY LADY' 05913 October 0, 1912 to Albert D. Willaman, Transfer. Penn­ RAVALLI MAID 05637 March I, 1912 to Oglala Community School, Pine Ridge, sylvania. South Dakota. LIPPITT ADELINE 04937 March 9, 19 12 to F. II. Ilcssels, Millbrook, New York. KEI1A RO 0 1528—September 1937 to Jones Hereford Ranch, Hollister, California. LIPPITT YVALLY MORO 05182 November 20, 1912 to H. A. Chartier, 27 Elgin RED LEAF X-05780- Ylarch 23, 1942 to 0. C. Foster, 25251 Y'almar Rd., Calabasas, St., Granby, Quebec, Canada. California, NewfcJersey0D 01,8l-"-Ausuat -1'101 -'t o M«- '"-""nl Bull.-l, 8s5 Valley Ud., Clifton, SKINER 05209—June 4, 1942 to R. S. Sentney, 536 E. Sherman St., Hutchinson Kansas. Datata™ 0Ma8-Mnrch '' 19'- to ''ine Ri»^ Indian Agency, Pine Ridge. South SON DA 04996—February 9, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian Agency, Pine Ridge, Dakota. REVA 08808—April 3.1, 1942 to Uintah Indian School, Whitciocks Utah STARETTE 05120 -June 21, 1912 to J. Ann Ainscough, R. D. 2, Mercer, Penn Sou^rffi™ 05,M-Feb™«>- -»• '»'- "> Pine Ridge Indian Agency. Pine'llidgc, sylvania. STARLESS NIGHT 05715 April 16, 19 12 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, RHODORA 0 1502-March 23. 19 12 to C. I). Baker, Charlottesville, Virginia Kansas. OSEN 5873_Jl K 2rK 1! Nli Eva H Illilfoi1i ° " ' ' "'-' '" ^ ""t. R- F. D. 2. Box so. Tuscola. STREAMLINE 05524-August 25, 19 12 to Mrs. Ruth B. Hazelden, Waterville, New Y'ork. RHOSEN 05873- October 1, It, 12 to Dr. & Mrs. F. Flinn, Decatur Illinois SUNICAI.-DOT X-05531-August 1012 to E. W. Roberts, 643 Venice Blvd., Los RHOSF.N 05873—October 3, 1912 to Sam Doak. R.R 2 Paris Illinois Angeles, California. T. ALLEN LINSLEY 05912 November 27, 1942 to J. Marden Malmsten, Burwell, CalrtoS™ R° °5162 Novemb" 1U' »« '» ""re,.™ C. Reed.'M.I,., Compton, Nebraska. ROCKABYE X-05522 -April 15, 1941 to H. V and Mar-uct G i,i.,i_ •>•>- k-„u „ n TILLA 05341- February 1, 19 42 to L. W. Rutledge, Sanger, California. Ave.. YVhitefish. Montana. "JKt ''• A'1''"' ii:' ^ilispoll TIMAI 01015—July 14, 1012 to Willis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. TORREYA ROSE 05867—February 10, 1912 to Miss Edith M. Behr, Lopez, Penn­ CaliforniaSTRA X"'SM-June -"• 1!U2 '" M'*- Anna Laura YVeatherly, New Idri.i. sylvania. ROZAN 0558 1—December 2 1. 19 12 to Hale Quigley, l.ewiston, Idaho. TIIOE 05108- March 13, 1912 to Fort Totten Indian Agency, Fort Totten, North ROZELLA 05927-October 22. 19 12 to Helen B. Greenwalt, Pawnee. Illinois. Dakota. TWINKLE L. (U517- .March 10, 1942 to Pine Ridge Indian School, Pine Ridge, ROZELLA 05927--December 20, 11112 to Dr. ,x Mrs. F Flinn, Decatur, Illinois. Soutli Dakota. RUBBY X-0523s-May 23. 1912 to G. YV. Ault, Kirkland, Illinois. UPWEY' CLEIS 04795—September 4, 1912 to Owen Moon, Jr., Woodstock, Ver­ mont. LyoRU™c,,iganS MARY ANX """"" -SePtember 21- 1B'-' '» St. Clair Hamlin, South UPYVEY DAISY T. 05827—June 16, 1942 to Mrs. F. H. Bryant, Springfield, Ver­ mont. SoutiiNDDakota:"',;!:,l^FebrUa,y 10' ""L' '° "Kl:l1" Commu'litV School, Pine Ridge, UPWEY' EMERALD PRINCE X-o.i 130— July 6, 1942 to Ruth Hoyt Landon, New t0 Myrtle H B W Re w d Haven, Y'ermont. Soutir^nta^a^Sifo^nia. '" '"" " '" "' ™'~' " "> "'*»™>' UPYVEY KATE X-05911—November 2s, 1912 to Dr. F. B. St. John, 520 E. 86th SARA LEE 05761-November 30, 1942 to Earl Willaman, Transfer, Pennsylvania St., New Y'ork, New Y'ork. SEALECT LASS 04733-May 26. 19 12 to Rev. E. R. Grandin, Sheridan, Ylaine. UPYVEY KIAN 05434—June 30, 1942 to Miss Deboraii Chace, Otis Hill Farm, Woodstock, Vermont. SENECA MAID X-05520—October 6, 1942 to P. w. Bellinger, Vernon, New York. UPYVEY SALIENT READE X-05885—September 3, 19 42 to H. J. Weed, East nDE 5265 June 23 iSi Illinilofo£" " — - - *" Mi«s F.\a Hunt. R. F. D. 2, Box 86, Tuscola, Montpelier, Vermont. UPWEY WOODLAND GIRL 05779—July 11. 1942 to Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs, SENTIDE 0526..—October 1. 1942 to Dr. & Mrs. F. Flinn, Forest Knolls Estate Connecticut. lc Route 7, Decatur, Illinois. ' Y'AI.ENTINE X-05306 -November 15. 1941 to R. H. Card, Ann Arbor, Michigan. SHENANDOAH DIXIE 05572-February II, 19 12 to Pine Ridge Agency, Pine Y'ELVET R.M. 05437—February 2, 1942 to Robert Tynan, Jr., Stella, Nebraska. Ridge, South Dakota. ..in*. Y'IRGINIA ALLEN 05015—March 10, 1942 to Robert P. Gibb, Warrenton, Vir­ SHENANDOAH QUEEN 0541s-February 14, 1912 to Pine Ridge Agency Pine ginia. Ridge, South Dakota. ' YVENDA 05144—September 26, 1942 to Owen Moon, Woodstock, Vermont. SHIRLEY ALLEN X-05373—March 1. 1910 to F. D. Trippett, Wavnesburg Penn­ YY'ENDA 05144—November 14, 1942 to Adaline E. Moore, Osborne Terrace, sylvania. Springfield, Massachusetts. SILY'ER BABE 05473—June 22, 1942 to Rosebud Indian School, Rosebud Soutli WHISPERING WINDS 05297—May 23, 1942 to A. Christensen, Ames, Iowa. Dakota. YVY'NTOON 05663—September 5, 1942 to Owen Moon, Jr., South Woodstock, SILVER DELL 05479—Marcli .,, 19 12 to YVillis Grumbein, Dodge City, Kansas. Y'ermont. SILVERLYN 05614—April 3, 1942 to R. S. Sentney, 530 East Sherman St ZANA 05780—December 16, 1942 to Hector A. Pivaral, Guatemala City, Central Hutchinson. Kansas. America. „ SILVER'S GAL 05474—June 20, 19 12 to R. S. Sentney. 536 East Sherman St., ZAZA 05929—October 30, 1942 to Helen B. Greenwalt, Pawnee, Illinois. Hutchinson, Kansas. ZUANA X-05441—June 23, 1942 to Mr. & Mrs. F. J. Munson, 1738 Fairgrove Ave.. SILVER'S MOLLITA 05816—March 9, 1942 to YV. P. Thornhill, Miami, Texas. Baldwin Park, California.

The Demand for Morgans Is on the Increase

ft ft

Breed and Raise ft More Morgans ft and in Areas with Few Morgan Mares Use Morgan Stallions to Produce ft ft ft ft Half-Morgans from Light or Draft Type Mares MORGAN BLOOD IMPROVES Quality Disposition ft Soundness Stamina

11 American Morgan Horse Register

PRICE LIST Bound in half Morocco. Volume I— $5., Volume II—$3., Volume III—$5., Volume IN­ -$5., Volume V—$10.

COMPLETE SET of the five volumes bound in half Morocco $22.50 A Saving of $5.50

Bound in plain buckram. A few copies of Volume V are available at $5. per copy. In Paper Only—First Supplement to Volume V—To Members $2.50 —To Non-Members .$3.50 In Paper Only—Second Supplement to Volume V—To Members ..$1.00 -—To Non-Members $2.00

Address All Communications and Make All Checks'Payable to THE MORGAN HORSE CLUB, INC. 90 Broad Street New York, N. Y.

FEES FOR REGISTRATION AND TRANSFER IN THE AMERICAN MORGAN HORSE REGISTER

To Members To of The Morgan Non- Horse Club Members REGISTRATION:

Animals before passing December 31 of their first year $3.00 $ 5.00

Animals passed December 31 of their first year . . $5.00 $10.00

TRANSFER:

Recorded within six months from date of sale ... $2.00 $ 4.00

Recorded after six months from date of sale $3.00 $ 5.00

12 SENTNEY, KANSAS, WRITES MORGAN BLOOD IN EARLY QUARTER HORSES "I have been a breeder of pure-bred Morgan horses for several By H. B. GREENWALT years—register all my pure-bred Morgans at 90 Broad Street, New York City. Last year I sold the United States government And, have you read in the latest edition of The Western Pine Ridge, South Dakota, Indian School 11 head, two stallions Horseman the Quarter Horse Article entitled "Personal Notes and nine mares. I have a nice bunch on hand and can fill most of William Anson?" . Way back when I was between nine any kind of order from sucking colts, mare or stud colts. Have and 12 years old, we had some very dear friends, Colonel Judy's a few fillies; nice bunch of mares; also have stud yearling, 2-year- family, who we occasionally visited, and who were also neigh­ old stud broke to ride, well mannered; also 4-year-old stud bors of the Watkins family. I very well remember visiting the broke to ride. In fact, can fill most any kind of order. Watkins' place with the Judy's and seeing Peter McCue and the "On February 27, 1943, sold the stallion Chocolate No. 7586 sire of him, Dan Tucker. to George E. Hineman, Dighton, Kan. He was foaled April Dan Tucker was a dark brown horse, definitely a Morgan, 15, 1925, is 18-years old and looks and acts like a 5 year-old. though Watkins always referred to him as a Thoroughbred, Best cow horse I ever rode. Can turn on a dime. Can cut fish much the same type as our Flyhawk. And I remember Peter right out of a pond with him. I have several colts from him McCue was lame at the time. Sam Watkins died some time now. ago, and there's only one member of his family left in this part I am glad 90 Broad Street will not register half-breed Mor­ of the country and he is not a horseman. Eventually, I think gans. I say keep 90 Broad Street tops. it will be published about the Morgan blood lines of Dan "Just sold a pair of twin matched chestnut mares, 4-years old, Tucker, sire of Peter McCue. on April 2, 1943. They were broke to ride and broke to drive single. I sold them to Mrs. Ruth Hanna Simms, Fort Garland, Colo. She is the owner of Trinchera Ranch there—248,000 acres. She is the daughter of Mark Hanna who made McKinley THE HALF-MORGAN SITUATION President of the United States one time. We called these mares Ida and Ida May Sentney—named after my wife and daugh­ As indicated elsewhere, the members of the Morgan Horse ter. I delivered them in a pickup truck—a trip of 9 30 miles Club definitely turned down any suggestion that the Club should from Hutchinson to Fort Garland, Colo., and return. Got a nice open a register for Half-Morgans—animals with one registered price for them; sorry I can't tell the price. Morgan parent. "I am sending you a few pictures so you can see how horse It may be that some members feared a Half-Morgan Register crazy I am. I like pure-bred Morgans best of all breeds of would replace the present Morgan Club Register, but this was horses. Look on the back of the pictures. When you are never contemplated, and it is likely that some members, while through with these pictures, send them to Mr. F B. Hills, 90 objecting to the Club establishing a Half-Morgan Record Book, Broad Street, so he can get a laugh. Some day I will visit would not seriously object to an independent Half-Morgan Rec­ him in New York and you in Vermont. I have often wanted ord, entirely beyond any Club connection or influence. to bring something good to the 100-Mile Trail Ride. But can't A recent number of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE also now as I have no labor. I work from six in the morning till carried a ballot form for non-members to vote for, or against, eight at night taking care of 30 head of horses, milking cows, the idea of creating a Half-Morgan Record, and as the magazine taking care of 100 chickens and bunch of hogs and farming 400 reaches about eight times as many non-Club-members as Club acres of land. All my help has gone in defense work or the members, it has been thought that consideration should be given army. Sure hope this war is over soon as I am getting awfully these actual or potential Morgan horse owners. tired. Sell horses and buy bonds. The basic thought back of the Half-Morgan plan is to empha­ "Enclosed find attached $11.00. $1.00 for your magazine size the Morgan blood in an animal and permit, by means of a and $10.00 for you to run a little advertisement for me in your registration certificate, the recognition of such blood. The Half- next issue. Let's see what kind of an advertisement you can Thoroughbred record book not only seeks to eliminate the Mor­ make out of this $10.00, and if I can get a little money for gan blood in their entries, but claims an animal, half-Morgan some more horses can buy another adv. and a better one I hope and half-Thoroughbred can only be registered in their book—(a next time. Mr. F. B. Hills wrote me I should take your maga­ position they have not taken with other breeds.) zine and give you an advertisement which I am doing. The advocates of a Half-Morgan Record believe when such R. S. SENTNEY recognition is given to offspring of a registered Morgan parent, Table Top Stables, 536 E. Sherman St., Hutchinson, Kan. that the demand for Morgan stallions, particularly in areas with­ out Morgan mares, will increase. This condition might easily result in a demand for registered mares when the results of Half- Morgan offspring are observed. FAVORS REGISTRATION OF ANIMALS WITH The excellence of the Half-Morgan animal are to be found in SIRES AND DAMS BOTH REGISTERED the agricultural areas of New England and the Mid-West, and as working cow horses on the ranges of the West and California. I am sending you one dollar for subscription to THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE. We enjoy it very much. Am also sending A New York City Office you a picture of our stallion Captain Red 8808, a four-year-old For the reason that it is thought a distinct Half-Morgan Morgan stallion, Richard Taylor up, just in from a ride. Record Book would spread the gospel of the Morgan breed, We have had a fine year with our Morgans. Have had very increase the demand for this blood and thereby increase the sale good sales, shipping studs and fillies to the following states: of registered stock, a group of Morgan owners have decided to Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Iowa, South Dakota, Colorado and establish a Half-Morgan Record at 155 East 44th Street, New four to different parts of Illinois, and have several studs and one York 17, New York, with Mr. Alan N. Mann, a Morgan horse fine filly left. owner, in charge. Plans are now afoot to incorporate and pre­ I don t think much of a half-bred Morgan Horse Register, as pare application blanks and certificates of entry. I think it is hard enough to keep one association in line, in so It is to be noted that mares and geldings may be entered, but many different people's hands. I should like to see our associa­ that Half-Morgan stallions are denied entry. tion close their books on outside breeding and register only colts One parent must be a registered Morgan, and the other parent from sires and dams that are now registered in the Morgan Book. of light-horse type. Yours for better Morgans. The registration fee will be $2.00. Several applications have RICHARD TAYLOR « SON already been received. Hanna City, 111.

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 81 OLD LETTER FROM THOMAS E. BOYCE Your letter received re Morgan mares. Since Mr. Battell's death in 1915 I have had little to do with Morgans. The Register was sold to C. C. Stillman of New York City, who has since died. He willed the Morgan Register to the Morgan Horse Club. Several volumes of the Morgan Register went to Mr. Stillman who sold them for $5.00 each. You can find out about this and get other information by writing the secretary of the Morgan Horse Register, 1 20 Broadway, New York City. The U. S. Morgan Horse Farm is near Middlebury, Vt., which is their postoffice. The superintendent is Mr. Earl B. Krantz. He, I think, can give you information. They are breeding to a type for cavalry use and individuals which do not come up to their type are sold at auction each fall— in October, I think. At such times somefine mare s go at very low rates. Krantz can tell you all about it. I have a mare, chestnut color, nice shape, very fast walker that is part Morgan, but I never got her breeding. 1 do not think you would want her as she has been foundered—giving her cold water when very warm. Before that she was a nice, free driver. Charles Chap­ man, Ferrisburg, Vt., might know of some good Morgan mares. There is not much call for medium weight horses now except for saddle horses, and they are bred and trained mostly in Kentucky. They are mostly Thoroughbred or part bred. The Copperbottoms, Tom Hals, and some other old time saddle horses had Morgan blood. The original Copperbottom was got by Justin Morgan, the founder of the Morgan family of horses. Except you can raise something quite superior to the ordinary you willfind a very slow sale. CHOCOLATE NO. 7586—STALLION THOMAS E. BOYCE Foaled: April 15, 1925, 18 years old. Burlington, Vt., September 29, 1930 Owner: Pop R. S. Sentney, Kansas Cow Boy, Table Top Stables, Hutchinson, Kan. Sold to Mr. George E. Hineman, Dighton. Kan. GENERAL SHERIDAN'S MORGAN Sire: Linsley No. 7233. "I enclose my check for $1.00 to pay for one year's subscrip­ Dam: Lady Spar No. 04515. tion to THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE beginning with the Looks and acts like a 5-year-old. Knows what a good stallion April number. and cow horse should know. He is a wonder for roping cattle "My father, John Garlow, born in 1816, enlisted in the 9th and horses. A good boy to snub, too. West Virginia Regiment and served three years during the Civil War. At the time of his discharge he was under the command of General Phil Sheridan, and was present the morning that LOCATION OF MORGANS DESIRED General Sheridan rode his Morgan horse 20 miles from Win­ chester to turn a rout into victory. Father was enthusiastic about In reply to your communication of March 20th, enclosedthe excellent qualities of the Morgan horses." find the ballot sheet marked by me for approval of all three J. B. GARLOW measures notated on said sheet. 344 So. Holyoke, Wichita, Kan. It is my honest conviction that if these three measures are voted for by the majority of the members, as I think should be done, the Morgan breed will receive its merited distinction and A PRACTICAL MORGAN WANTED advancement. I would like to be informed where I may find a registered Will you send me information, and possibly a sample copy Morgan stallion in service where I could breed my registered of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE, which is referred to in Morgan mares. Mr. Butterfield of Oceola, whose Morgan stal­ the accompanying clipping from the Eastern States Magazine. lion I used last year has been sold to Kansas. Do you know if I am looking for a practical magazine that will be of benefit there is a registered Morgan stallion in Ames, Iowa or in Des Moines, Iowa? When it is convenient you may furnish me to the amateur horse owner. I am more interested in the prac­ the above information as I do not have knowledge at this date tical matters of feeding, care and handling, as well as the needs of any registered Morgan stallion in service in Iowa. How for horses and horsemen in the war than I am in shows and could I acquire a registered Morgan Remount stallion to stand? racing. L. R. GlLLOLY. MRS. PRESTON S. LINCOLN Patterson, Iowa. Box 472, Wareham, Mass.

THANK YOU! FROM CALIFORNIA: This is my favorite publication on horses and I wish to keep"Enclosed you will find my check to cover subscription cost a complete file. I am enclosing my check in the amount of of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE. $1.00 to apply on my account, and if I have missed any of the "Just recently I have become a Morgan breeder through the magazines, will you be good enough to furnish me with the purchase of a two-and-a-half-months old Morgan filly from back numbers. Please advise me as to the status of my sub­ Leslie Hoops of Montebello, Calif., whose stock was bred by scription, as I surely want to have each one of the magazines. Roland Hill of Bakersfield, Calif." (MRS.) TALIA HOUSE ZUHARS. 301 S. Sycamore, Wichita. Kan. H. W. ANDERSON 401 Hill Drive, San Gabriel, Calif. 82 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 A QUARTER-HORSE SIRE "Before me is a letter from Montana asking me to send to THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE at Woodstock, Vt., the his­ tory and pedigree of the World's Champion sire of Quarter horses. Well, here it is in a nutshell from the last stud card known to exist: "Roan Dick" The sire of Bob Wade and Jim Miller, the fastest horses on earth. Will aim to be at Rob't Hulan's, 5 miles Northwest of Plymouth, 111., on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Fri­ day of each week. Remainder of the time at my farm, three-and- one-half miles Southwest of Adrian, 111. Pedigree. Roan Dick was sired by Black Nick. He by (Charleys) Stewarts Telegraph. Dam was sired Greenstreets Benerage's, he by Owen's Benerage's, a full-blooded Printer horse from Kentucky. Roan Dick is from the greatest speed producers in the world. All great winners. HEADLIGHT MORGAN NO. 4683 Terms $15.00 for the season, cash in advance. $25.00 to Chestnut. insure a colt ten days old. Colt held for insurance. Care taken Foaled: June 24, 1893. to prevent accidents but I will not be responsible should any Bred by the Morgan Horse Company, Carpentersville, 111. occur. Later sold into Kansas. G. A. ROY. Owner Sire: Ethan Allen 2nd 406, Peter's Morgan, Dam by Ethan June 6, 1892. Allen. History. Roan Dick was a bay roam stallion with black legs, Dam: Lady Stratton. Bred by Truman Stratton, Chelsea, mane and tail. 15 hands high and weighed 1,000 lbs. Bred Vt. Vermont Morgan 462, Dam S. T. B. by Green Mt. Mor­ by Robert T Wade of Plymouth. 111. Foaled about 1877. gan 42. Sold to Charley Ealey of Littletown, 111. Was sold with 15 of his colts at the Ealey's sale. He being bid in for $ 1,000. Soon after this G. A. Roy of Adrian, 111., traded a carload of young HORSE SKELETONS cattle for him and he kept him until he died when 27 years old." Reference is made to that portion of your letter requesting WM. E. LOWREY information on horse skeletons and the number of vertebrae Box 24, Ferris, 111. which are found in various horse breeds. We believe you should be able to find horse skeletons in a "BILLY"—THE MUSEUM MORGAN number of eastern museums, particularly the American Museum of Natural History, New York, N. Y.. and the Amherst Col­ Further examination has brought the following to light in lege Museum, Amherst, Mass. regard to Billy, the Morgan horse: Another book reference which might interest you is, The Born—1850. Evolution of the Horse by Frederic Brewster Loomis. This was Died—1891. Christmas Day, age 41. published by Marshall Jones in Boston, Mass., in 1926. It Breed—Morgan. Raised in Vermont. contains numerous illustrations of horse skeletons and other Presented by—Pres. West End St. R. R. Co. pertinent data. Presented to—Museum, Boston Society Natural History. The most comprehensive information we have been able to Exhibited in Museum—About 36 years. locate on the number of vertebrae in horses appears in the book, Dismantled—July, 1927 Thoroughbred Racing Stock and its Ancestors by Lady Went- Pulled horse-cars—Between Brookline and Boston, not miss­ worth. This was published in 1938 by George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., Museum Street, London, Eng. Lady Wentworth, as ing a trip for 25 years. you may know, is the owner of the famous Crabbet Arabian Formerly used—Pulling stage coaches from Brookline to Bos­ Stud. In her book (pages 367, 375, and 376), Lady Went­ ton. worth gives data on the numbers of lumber vertebrae and pairs Owners—W. R. Wellington, owner stages. of ribs for Arabians, Thoroughbreds, Barbs, Anglo-Arabians, Metropolitan St. R. R. Co. and cold-blooded common horses, as well as the zebra, donkey, Began running 1858, onfirst horse-ca r line from and pony. Inasmuch as the book is copyrighted, we are not Scollay Sq. to So. End to Roxbury. at liberty to forward any of this material to you. Color of Billy—Dark dapple gray, early days. These references are cited merely for your information and Turned white, when old. bear no endorsement from the Department, to the possible detri­ Weight of Billy—1,025 lbs. ment of others. Billy retired—8 years before death. (Article published in Boston Sunday Herald, July 17, 1927.) S. R. SPEELMAY Associate Animal Husbandman, Acting in Charge Horse and Mule Hus­ HENRY D. RUSSELL, bandry Investigations, United States Department of Agriculture. Bureau of Assistant to the President Animal Industry, Washington, D. C.

New England Museum of Natural History, 234 Berkley St., Boston. Mass. FLYHAWK 7526 FROM MISSOURI: Black, 15.1 hands. Weight 1,120 lbs. Foaled: August, 1926. "Enclosed is money order for quarter page advertisement in Breeder: By J. C. Brunk, Springfield, 111. May, June and July issue. „ , Owner: Mrs. Helen Brunk Greenwalt, Pawnee, 111. "Would like you to list my stallion "Brownie A, 8481, by Sire: Go Hawk 7457 by Sunny Hawk 7456, by Morgan the state." _ „ Star 6891. A. E. SWARTZ Dam: Florette 04233 by Allen King 7090. 214 W. Maple St., Independence. Mo. THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 83 MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 INGENUITY NO. 7959 One of the leading Morgan stallions in the West. Champion Saddle Stallion in Tucson, 1941. Champion over all Breeds in Flagstaff, 1941. First Place in Morgan Class, 1942. Owner—Bruce Brockett, Rimrock, Ariz.

Chestnut: small star; foaled May 15, 1935. Bred by U. S. Range Station, Miles City, Mont. Sire: Monterey 7475, son of Mansfield 7255 and Scotanna 04329. Dam: Carol 04678, daughter of Revere 7422 (sired by Mansfield 7255) and Alibirdie 04282.

ANY MORGANS IN MICHIGAN? I would appreciate any free literature which you may have to offer; also a list of owners. I would especially like to know if there are any Morgans owned in Michigan. MADGE E. MILLER VERMONT MORGANS 4039 E. Carpenter Road, R. F. D. 6, Flint, Mich. This illustration has been used by the National Life Insurance Company, Montpelier, Vermont, in their series of Vermont his­ FROM IOWA: torical features in their national advertising. "Enclosed find $1.00 for one year's subscription to THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE, and any literature or other paper you publish, please let me know, as I am getting a little interested in Morgans and all good horses, especially Palominos. FROM MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY Also keep Jennetts and Jacks. Let me know what literature AT HARVARD COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. you have for sale. "I own old 'Rosco Morgan'—old, but big, fine chestnut Dr. Septimus Sisson, in his excellent work, "A Textbook of stallion with white stockings behind, star and snip. A fine Veterinary Anatomy" published in 1910, states that there are horse—1,350 lbs.— from Livingston's Morgan Farm at Cham­ usually 18 thoracic vertebrae, sometimes 19, and, rarely, 17. paign, 111." Further, that there are usually six lumbar vertebrae and that GUY STREEPY "reduction of the number tofive ha s been observed frequently, Udell, R. 1, Iowa. and may or may not be compensated by an additional thoracic vertebra. This variation is not more common in certain races FROM NEBRASKA: of Sanson and others have maintained. Very few cases are recorded of seven lumbar vertebrae—especially with the normal thoracic We note with approval your Feb.-April issue and Captain number. An anomalous vertebra with mixed thoracic and lum­ Kellogg's photo on the front page. We attach our check for bar characters sometimes occurs at the junction of the two $11.00 and copy for a quarter page adv. in the next two issues. regions." Mr. Osborn and myself feel that we have gone one step on the He does not state the number of skeletons examined. way to improving the blood in the horses in the panhandle of Nebraska and eastern Colorado and Wyoming. The extra $ 1.00 in our check is for subscription for Mr. M. W. Osborn, Sidney, Neb. Though he owns an Arabian he con­ THE BROWN SALE cedes that Morgans are also good horses. HOSSACK IMPLEMENT Co.. The Dispersal Sale of Earle Brown's choice herd of Morgans on May 15, 1943, was fairly well attended in spite of gasoline GEORGE S. HOSSACK restrictions. Sidney, Neb. The highest price was $600 for the top-notch mare, Joan 04659. Joan was the best E. A. Darling breeding sire FROM NEW YORK: Sir Ethan Allen 6537 and dam Jenny Woodbury 03258. There "May I buy the November-December-January issue, Num­ were several bidders for this beautiful mare, and she went to ber 2 of Volume II of THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE;* A Mr. Paul Draper of Boston, Mass. friend of mine in White Plains, N. Y., owns a Morgan horse, and I own equipment, and my thought is to use your magazine to check on size adv. we ought to have for your spring issue. Would appreciate receiving your magazine." "UNCLE SAM'S MORGAN HORSES" RUSSELL FLINK, M.D. In Boston Sunday Globe, July 12, 1942. 438 Bedford Rd.. Pleasantville, N. Y. This was the heading of a double page, illustrated article( in the gravure section of the Globe on that date. Eight splendid illustrations were presented of the Morgans at the Government Indian Brave No. 8186 Morgan Farm at Middlebury, Vt.—one showing a band of Sire: Cornwallis 7696. brood mares with nine foals of 1942—and other illustrations Dam: Hepatica 05099. with the baby colts in action. The photographs were by Arthur Owner; Charles G Mortimer, Jr. Griffin, and the short article about the Morgans established by P. O. R. D. 1, Port Jervis, N. Y. the Government 35 years ago, was by William A. Clark. Phone: Port Jervis 1137J.

84 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 OETICE or__ AMERICAN MOIXJAN REGISTER.

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JUSTIN W. DART ELECTED HEAD OF FROM CONNECTICUT: UNITED DRUG "Thank you for your prompt attention to my recent inquiry. Directors of United Drug, Inc., recently announced the elec­ I have read both copies thoroughly and am enclosing $1.00 here­ tion of Justin W. Dart as president. with for one year's subscription. Mr. Dart joined the United Drug organization a year ago as "Due to sickness I have been forced to sell my horse but have vice-president and director, serving also as president of Liggett all intentions of buying another before too long, and while I Drug Co., Inc., a retail subsidiary. He will continue in that post. shall not be able to afford a high priced horse, I am hoping I can In 1929 Mr. Dart became associated with the Walgreen Co. find a nice little Morgan mare within my financialreach. " following his graduation from college. From 1932 to 1939 he WILLIAM P. CLARKE was in charge of operations of all Walgreen retail stores. In the New Preston, Conn. latter year he became general manager, serving until his resigna­ FROM RHODE ISLAND: tion in October, 1941. I have enjoyed reading your magazine so much ,and also have While in Chicago Mr. Dart assembled on his Arizona ranch gotten a big thrill out of my registered Morgan. He is the a number of Morgans from the Middle West area which were grandest horse I have ever come in contact with. brought to his Massachusetts farm. A number of these were ELEANOR GIBBS. sold at the Morgan Consignment Sale following the National New Meadow Rd., Barrington, R. I. Morgan Show at Woodstock, Vt., last fall. MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 85 FROM VERMONT: "Will you please enter my name on your subscription list? Enclosed is my check for $1.00. I would like to begin with the issue about to be printed which will contain reports of the Morgan Horse Show and the Trail Ride at Upwey. "I was once the proud owner of a little stallion I called Pete Morgan, Jr. I bought him of Chas. Chaffee of Rochester, Vt. I was an R. F. D. carrier and in a very severe snow storm on the mountain in East Roxbury I was definitely lost but he brought me safely out. I hope some day to own another like him. I am enclosing a snapshot of him, and also a Morgan mare then owned and ridden by Rev. R. H. Moore who is now pastor of the Federated Church in South Royalton, Vt. I am just send­ ing the picture to show my interest. Don't suppose you care to "TRAINING use it. If you do, go ahead and return it at your convenience. The Moore mare was raised by Darling over Lyndonville way RIDING HORSES" ~ somewhere." ivith comments by HOWARD J. SMITHERS w ,.„ ^ leading trainers • different Randolph, Vt. • beautiful rice The Smithers Family Goat Dairy. • practical P • understandable • convincing 25? FROM BALTIMORE: HORSE AND MULE "I am enclosing one dollar for subscription to your magazine. ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA I am the owner of a pure-bred Morgan gelding which is a direct WAYNE DINSMORK. SECRETARY descendant of General Gates and many of the other famous 407 S. DEARBORN ST., CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Morgans. "I am very interested in anything that I can find about the breed, and know that I will enjoy your magazine." (Miss) PEGGY CORDNER 1512 Sheffield Rd., Baltimore, Md.

FROM MAINE: Since docility is a Morgan trait, could you use the enclosed snapshot of Delco, 8044, in your Eastern news of the Morgans? Delco is a Vermont Morgan from Townshend Morgan Horse Farm and was 5 years old when this was taken. I got him when he was 5 months old and he was thefirst colt I ever had Orders Now Being Accepted for the 1943 or rode. In fact, he was thefirst light horse colt I ever saw. I would like to express myself in regards to the Half-bred Morgan Registry but I am so in favor of the good old-fashioned ?C 99 type that probably I lose sight of the advantages of a half-bred PALOMINO PROGRESS book. I can see that it would be a good place for the "X" Morgans. They ARE good horses and they do evidently make Paper Binding $2.50 for a little more size. But I don't see any need to cross breeds to use for breeding purposes. Isn't that what is called a mon­ grel? If these cross-breds were to be registered as half-Morgans, Deluxe Binding 4.00 why wouldn't it be a good idea to register no stallions (as such) in it and if a mare, registered as half-Morgan, is bred to a regis­ (Postpaid) tered Morgan stallion, have the results of that mating registered as a half-Morgan, even though the colt is really three-quarter bred? And has anyone an answer to the question of what an old- Send 10c for sample copy of Palomino Horses, type Morgan is "too small" for? From all I have seen and read a monthly magaine devoted exclusively to the of his abilities, he doesn't need to make any apologies for his size. He is the biggest little horse of all! Golden Horse. (Miss) ETHEL M. DOLAN Rural Route 1, Box 12A, Springvale, Me.

PALOMINO HORSE BREEDERS FROM KANSAS: OF AMERICA, INC. "Enclosed please find my check for $1.00. Send your magazine Box 79 Mineral Wells, Tex. to Mr. Locke Theis, Dodge City, Kan. Also a receipt to him. "I sold Mr. Locke Theis, Dodge City, Kan., 6 mares and 3 colts by side of 3 mares. "Anxious to see adv. sent you for next issue of magazine. (A Member-Owned, Non-Profit Association) "I still have Belle Rockwood, No. 04586, and stud baby colt by side for sale." R. S. SENTNEY Hutchinson. Kans.

86 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 PARSONS OF WASHINGTON WRITES I think, however, that no certificate should be given unless it is shown that the male parent is pure-bred Morgan. I can see AT STUD if mares are allowed to furnish the half of the Morgan breeding, there might be much abuse. I have used some Palomino blood Tm-: REGISTERED MORGAN STALLION mixed with Morgan, and it seems to have done very well. ROUBIDOUX 8342 None Can Equal the Morgan Chestnut, light mane and tail.

However. I have never seen a horse, of the dual purpose Height 14.3'/2; weight, 1070 lbs. variety, especially riding, that could equal in any way the pure­ Foaled 1940. Stallion license No. 192. bred Morgan. Palominos arc more of a fad at present than any­

thing and California, as you know, is full of fads. That is one f Jubilee Kinji reason why I feel that so much effort should be made to keep Juzan ) 7570 the Morgan breeding pure on both sides. However, I don't feel 7895 1 Liza Jane Sun : ( 03377 that cross-breeding has shown any improvement in the results AC;.\ZIZZ Nn. 7700 f Oo Hawk over the good old straight American stock. Cizea ) 7457 40612 1 Liza Jane REGINALD H. PARSONS 1. 03377 2300-2305 Northern Life Tower. Seattle. Wash. f Hennington Rockwood ] 5693 7423 | Carolyn IhM : 1 02868 MAI ROCKWOOD - ANY MORGAN IN PAINTS OR PINTOS? No. 04801 f Dude Hudson Mav Hudson J 5654 "Read your magazine with great interest and think you have 01726 | Hazel S. some magazine. In regards to registering of half-Morgans I L think it would be a good move, as I think it would be an This colt has lots of common sense and is a well- inducement to build up. The Morgans and Arabs have always been my ideal of a horse. reined cow horse already. Also broke to work in Morgan Blood Improves double harness. "After reading the article by Clarence E. Bosworth I am wondering if he is praising or finding fault with those sturdy Earl Willaman breeds. He mentions crossing with other breeds to improve those TRANSFER, PA. breeds as if to say they are inferior, when to my way of thinking (J0 Miles Northeast of Sharon) the Morgans and Arabs improve the other breeds and instills in 1 them more life and vigor which the other breeds lack. Any Morgan in Paints? "I would like the opinion of Morgan breeders regarding the claims made by owners of Paint, calico or pinto horses who say THE MORGAN-ARABIAN STUD they are the result of Morgan and Arabianfirst cross . There are owners of Paint stallions who claim such breeding, namely, black FAIR GROUNDS—SIDNEY, NEBR. Morgan stallion and white Arabian mare, and contend they have STANDING AN OUTSTANDING STALLION papers from either club to that effect. It is beyond me to believe OF EACH BREED that two straight colored breeds crossed should result in such an animal. I have done some investigating of my own and find that the largest part of them are a cross of , draft or R0GLEMAR DUKHI ROUND, C. K. mustang or some other, and always on one side or other is a A Proven Sire Morgan Horse Club Paint. Registrations: No. 8377 "I would also like to hear from breeders who combine the Arabian Horse Club two breeds as to color, build and action and if possible, pictures of No. 1059 Sired by Capt. Kellogg of the results of such breeding. I hope to get the true origin of the The Jockey Club Headlight and General Gates Paints." No. 340865 Strain. SHARP F. JOHNSON Family: Get from thoroughbred mares Santaquin, Utah (P. O. Box 86). KEHILAN AJUZ OF NEGAL Being a double registered horse, can be registered with Remount his get out of thoroughbred Association. mares may be registered with FROM ILLINOIS: The Jockey Club. A chestnut sorrell stallion with A dark bay stallion with black white strip. To a limited num­ "Enclosed find check for $1.00 for which please send us THE points of exceptional utility. ber of mares this season. MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE. We like the magazine very much, OWNER OWNER and are also very much interested in Morgan horses as we have a M. W. OSBORN GEORGE S. HOSSACK Morgan stallion." ERVIN E. BEACHY Any colt from either stallion subject to registration in half R. 2, Arthur, 111. breed associations. i Fee, $15.00 With Return Privilege I have been much interested in the paper concerning Morgans, For Appointments or Information, Call or See increasing my knowledge of type, characteristics and blood lines of the breed. The saddle horse I own has Morgan blood and DR. C. W. ZIKE, HANDLER is a fine animal. SIDNEY, NEB. C. F- SPANGLER. Grand Ridge, 111.

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 87 INCREASE IN HORSE AND MULE FOALS NEEDED

Horse and Mule Association of America. Inc., Wayne Dinsmore, Secretary, 407 S. Dearborn Street, Chicago, 5, 111. The United States now is producing annually less than 2/3 as many horse foals, and but little over 1/2 as many mule foals, as are lost by death. Details YOUNG by states were in folder No. 272, sent you on May 24, 1943, which has been given nation-wide distribution. Almost 100.000 copies of No. 272 have been mailed since May 20th, reaching from 5 to 50 men in every county in the United States. An extra copy is enclosed for ready reference. Please pass it on to some farmer who has good mares. The United States has 6,096,799 farms, as reported by the Bureau of the Census of April 1. 1940. The U. S. Department of Agriculture estimates MORGANS there were 9.678,000 horses and.3,71 2,000 mules on farms, January 1, 1 943, of which 12,270,000 head were 2 years or older, available for work in 1943. This means that we had but a fraction over 2 work animals per farm if all farms are considered; but late studies of the 1940 census data by the Bureau of the Census of the U. S. Department of Commerce indicate that there were Colts and Fillies no horses, mules or tractors on 1,457,346 farms or 23.9% of the total. These probably were mainly places with small ificome. which apparently hire their field motive power, if any is used, or were pastures, or non-tilled country and homes. The remaining 4,639,453 farms had motive power as follows: (a) Farms with tractors only, no horses or mules, 277,309, or 4.5% of all farms. A Few Brood Mares (b) Farms with horses and/or mules and tractors 1,13 2,3 88, or 18.6% of all farms. (c) Farms with horses and/or mules, no tractors, 3,229,756, or 53% AT PRIVATE SALE of all farms. This means that 70% of farms reporting horses and/or mules and/or trac­ tors, were operated wholly or in part with horses or mules. Horses and mules therefore furnish all or part of the field motive power on • 4,362,144 farms, which means there are a fraction over 2J> horses and/or mules of working age per farm. There were 1,567,405 tractors on farms when the census was taken. Sales of tractors in 1940, 1941 and 1942 were substantial, and it is estimated they With loss of manpower and an increase brought tractors on farms up to about 1,800,000. Recent reports from many horse and mule buyers and the state agricultural in the number of our 1943 foals, colleges indicate: (a) There is no surplus of horses and mules on farms now. Even many 2 years olds are being worked steadily. Prices have risen from 10% We offer excellent individuals of the to 25% (b) Breeding thus far in 1943 is generally less than 1942, because of best blood lines, of the best type, shortage of labor. (c) Every effort should be made by all who arc interested in horses and and of proven performance mules, to increase the breeding of good mares to excellent sires.

ROBERT BRUCE 6161 Mr. R. J. Kent of Cornwall-on-Hudson writes that: "At the Battell auction many years ago a Chestnut Stallion ('Robert We have been breeding Morgans for 30 Bruce') was sold for $400. He was a mighty fine animal and I lost track of him altogether. Someone got a bargain. He was four years old at the years and believe there is no stock sale." superior to UPWEY stock in Volume IV of the Morgan Horse Register, page 128, gives the following: the country today "ROBERT BRUCE, 6161, (1 8 3). chestnut, stripe in face, three white ankles: foaled. 912; bred by Joseph Battell, Middlebury, Vt.; got by Scot­ land, 6000: dam Beauty (registered Vol. Ill, p. 425); got by Gen. Gates, 666. Sold April 20, 1915, to Charles A. Stone, Boston, Mass.. to The • Secrctario do Agricultura, Havana, Cuba, Oct. 9, 1916. Registered by breeder."

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS UPWEY FARMS AT STUD Ethcn Eldon. Registered chestnut Morgan stallion from old type stock. Fthcn possesses the true Morgan disposition and character, he weighs 950 lbs. Woodstock Vermont Siring beautiful trappy colts. He is very intelligent having been trained to perform 1 9 tricks. For information write Dana Wingate Kelley, Lexington Street, Burlington, Mass. Breeders of Prize-Winning Suffolk-Punch Horses, WANTED Suffolk Sheep and High Producing A thoroughbred Morgan pacer brood marc. Three gaits—walk, pace, canter. A closely-coupled, heavy-boned, strong chest muscled, sound-legged, Jersey Cattle good dispositioned, intelligent, docile horse that approached 1100 lbs. All details, age, color, blood line, registered number, photo, price, etc. Reason­ able. Correspondence confidential. Write to Box A, MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE, Woodstock, Vt.

88 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 SPECIAL MEMBERS' MEETING, APRIL 5, 1943 5. That the number of such members necessary to constitute a majority was .60 Pursuant to notice a Special Meeting of the Member of The Morgan Horse Club, Incorporated, was held in Room 1840, 90 iroad Si reel. New Thereupon, the following proposal was presented to the meeting and a York, N. Y., on Monday. April 5. 1»43, at 1 1 :00 a. m. vole for and against the action therein contemplated was called for: In the absence of the President. Vice-President Owen Moon. Jr.. was chosen Chairman of the meeting. Frank B. Hills, Secretary, kept the records of the PROPOSED, that this Corporation establish a registration for ani­ meeting. mals only one of whose parents is j registered Morgan (establishment of The Secretary reporting that there were one hundred sixteen members "half Morgan" registration). represented at the meeting by proxy and two members present in person, out of Ballot being taken, Carl W. Gifford and Lillian Schlomann, the Judges a total paid membership of one hundred sixty-three, the Chairman announced appointed for the purpose of conducting the vote on said question, counted a quorum was present. the vote and reported that 2 2 members voted for and 94 members voted There was presented a copy of the notice calling the meeting, together with against the action contemplated by such proposal, and that therefore a major­ an affidavit relative to the due mailing thereof to the members. ity of the members represented at the meeting (and also a majority of the The Chairman announced that, in accordance with the notice of the meet­ members of the Corporation at April 5, 1943, paid and entitled to vote at the ing, it was in order to consider and vote upon various questions affecting the meeting) had voted against the action contemplated in said proposal. Said activities of this Corporation. He stated that a vote of the paid members Judges thereupon subscribed a certificate accordingly, which is hereinafter made represented at the meeting, in person or by proxy, would be taken by ballot a part of the records of this meeting and the Chairman declared that said and such vote would be conducted by two Judges appointed for that pur­ proposal had been defeated. pose. There was then presented to the meeting the following proposal and a Thereupon, on motion duly made and seconded, it was unanimously vote for and against the action therein contemplated was called for: RESOLVED, that Carl W. Gifford and Lillian Schlomann be and PROPOSED, that the fees at present in force for registration in the hereby are appointed Judges for the purpose of conducting said vote, American Morgan Horse Register be increased at this time to amounts and to decide upon the qualifications of voters, and to accept their votes, to be established by the Executive Committee of the Corporation. and when the vote is completed to count and ascertain the number of members' votes respectively tor and against the questions referred to in Ballot being taken, Carl W. Gifford and Lillian Schlomann, the Judges the notice of this meeting, and to determine whether the majority of appointed for the purpose of conducting the vote on said question, counted the members, represented in person or by proxy at this meeting, have the vote and reported that 9 7 members voted for and 16 members voted voted for or against said questions. against the action contemplated by such proposal, and that therefore a majority of the members represented at the meeting (and also a majority of the mem­ The Secretary, then furnished the Judges with a true, complete and bers of the Corporation at April 5, 1943, paid and entitled to vote at the alphabetical list, certified by him as being correct, of all the paid members of meeting) had voted for the action contemplated in said proposal. Said the Corporation at April 5. 1943. The Judges proceeded to examine this list, Judges thereupon subscribed a certificate accordingly, which is hereinafter the proxies which had been filed with the Secretary, and the representation at made a part of the records of this meeting. the meeting in person, and reported as follows: The Chairman declared that said proposal had been adopted. That the number of members, at April 5, 1943. paid and there­ There was then presented to the meeting the following proposal and a fore entitled to vote, as shown by the certified list filed with the vote for and against the action therein contemplated was called for: Judges by the Secretary of the Corporation was 163 PROPOSED, that the fees at present in force for recording transfers That the number of such members represented at the meeting in of ownership in the American Morgan Horse Register be increased at this person was .2 time to amounts to be established by the Executive Committee of the That the number of such members represented at the meeting by Corporation. proxy was ...... 116 Ballot being taken, Carl W. Gifford and Lillian Schlomann, the Judges That the total number of such members represented at the meeting. appointed for the purpose of conducting the vote on said question, counted the in person and by proxy, was 118 vote and reported that 105 members voted for and 9 members voted against the

Un the 1/eat 1889

the late Charles Pelissier started to manufacture Harnesses of various types as well as other Horse Equipment. He ordered each man to, "Use good stock. Do a good job and they'll come back." Over a half century has passed and we are still using good stock, doing a good job and they are coming back. Today we maintain the largest stock of Horse Equipment in the East. Over 800 Collars of various types, hun­ dreds of Blankets and Harness parts. At present we have a complete line of new and Rebuilt Single and Double Work Harnesses as well as Driving and Pony Harnesses. We also have a few exceptionally fine Wagons, Sleighs and Hand-made Wolf Fur Robes. We import directly from England, fine Saddles, Bridles, Halters, Crops and other items. You will also find in our stocks, many Western Stock Saddles made to our own specifications and priced from $37.50 to Hand Tooled Show Saddles at $225.00. Used and Rebuilt Saddles $12.00 to $110.00. You are invited to come in and talk over with our expert Harness Makers, any repairs you wish made or any cus­ tom made parts wanted. Satisfaction guaranteed. All Kinds of Leather Repairing s Luggage Store 9 WARREN STREET CONCORD, N. H. TELEPHONE 1406

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 89 action contemplated by such proposal, and that therefore a majority of the members represented at the meeting (and also a majority of the members of the Corporation at April 5, 1943, paid and entitled to vote at the meeting) had voted for the action contemplated in said proposal. Said Judges thereupon subscribed a certificate accordingly, which is hereinafter made a part of the records of this meeting and the Chairman declared that said proposal had been adopted. On motion duly made and seconded, it was unanimously, RESOLVED, to adjourn. FOR SALE A true record. Attest: F. B. HILLS, Secretary.

SPECIAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING, APRIL 5, 1943 Pursuant to notice duly given to each member of the Committee, a Special Meeting of the Executive Committee of The Morgan Horse Club, Incorporated, was held in Room 1840 (18th Floor), 90 Broad Street, New York, N. Y., on April 5, 1943, at 12 noon. Slallioii-ll/v Morgan 8291 There were present Frank B. Hills and Owen Moon, Jr. being a quorum. Owen Moon, Jr., Chairman, presided. Frank B. Hills, Secretary, kept the records of the meeting. Foaled October 25, 1939. Dark chestnut. Broke to ride. The Chairman advised that in order to give effect to the action taken at the Special Meeting of the Members of The Morgan Horse Club, Incorporated, Gentle. held earlier this day, increases should be made in the fees at present in force for registration in the American Morgan Horse Register and for recording Sire: Silver Ranger 7813. transfers of ownership in the American Morgan Horse Register. After discussion, on motion duly made and seconded, the following resolu­ tions were unanimously adopted: Dam: Skiner 05209. RESOLVED, that, effective May 1, 194 3, the fees for registration in the American Morgan Horse Register shall be as follows: To Members of The Morgan To Horse Club, Inc. Non-Members Animals before passing December 31st of their first year $ 3.00 $ 5.00 Animals passed December 31st of their first Stallion-Roscoe Sentney 8442 year ...... 5.00 10.00 RESOLVED, that, effective May 1, 1943, the fees for recording trans­ fers of ownership in the American Morgan Horse Register shall be as Foaled May 14, 1941. Chestnut. Star. Broke to ride. Gentle. follows: To Members of Sire: John Allen 8122. The Morgan To Horse Club, Inc. Non-Members Dam: Boney L. 05239. Recorded within six months from date of sale ... . $ 2.00 $ 4.00 Recorded after six months from date of sale ... . . 3.00 5.00 On motion duly made and seconded, the following resolutions were unanimously adopted:

RESOLVED, that the officers of this Corporation be and hereby are to transfer the bank account of this Corporation from The Marine Midland Trust Company, New York, N. Y., to Central Bank and Trust Company, 90 Broad Street Branch, New York, N. Y. Mare-Belle Rockwood 04586 RESOLVED, that this Committee hereby rescinds the resolution adopted at its meeting held Febiuary 19, 193 2, relative to the signature Sire: Rockwood 7423 by Bennington 5993. of checks drawn on any depository of the Corporation and relative to the countersignature or registration of notes and bonds. Dam: Linsley Belle 04309 by Linsley 7233 by General RESOLVED, that checks drawn on the account of this Corporation with Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company, New York, N. Y., shall be signed, without title, by either Frank B. Hills or Whitney Stone. Gates 666. Also her 1943 stud foal. RESOLVED, that notes issued by this Corporation shall be signed. with title, by any one of: Owen Moon, Jr., Chairman of Executive Committee, Wallace L. Orcutt. President, Whitney Stone, Treasurer, Frank B. Hills, Secretary, and shall be countersigned as a condition to their validity by any other of the above named officers. On motion duly made and seconded, it was unanimously RESOLVED, to adjourn. A true record. R. S. SENTNEY Attest: F. B. HlLLS, Secretary MISSOURI STALLIONS 214 W. Maple St., Independence, Mo.—A. E. SWARTZ. HUTCHINSON, KANSAS Brownie A 8481 of 1941: Breeder: Elmer Brown, Kan. Sire: Tehachapi Allan 79 1 0. Dam: Molly R. M. 05241.

90 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 JUBILEE KING A. M. R. 7570

Copper Chestnut, Stripe, Light Mane and Tail Height 15:2—Weight 1100

The many sons, daughters, grandsons, and granddaughters of this

stallion have a wide reputation for beauty, style, stamina and size.

They arc also sought after for the stud, trail, and show ring.

We are fortunate to have this well proven stallion standing for service in Vermont. Meeting Waters Springfield, Vermont R.F.D. No. 2

MRS. W. J. BRYANT, Owner L. H. WYMAN, Manager

MORGAN MARES and FILLIES

Year before last we advertised our Morgans in the VERMONT HORSE AND BRIDLE TRAIL BULLETIN and sold two years' production. We now have eight mares and fillies, some of them bred to last year's champion two-year-old at the National Morgan Horse Show. (Pictured below.)

These fillies and mares carry the blood of such Morgans as "Ben­ nington," "Allen H," and "In­ dian Chief," going back to "Justin Morgan" through ^Mm' tf*rXM* "General Gates," the "Ethan Aliens," and "Black Hawk." Six of them are daughters or grand­ daughters of the great mare, "Alola" (pictured above). One of them has the making of a ladies' or children's mare, two are show prospects, one is almost the duplicate of "Alola," one is a great trail mare, all of them are Morgan foundation stock, bred at Spring Hollow Farm.

PRICES RUN FROM $350 TO $1000

ONE BRILLIANT FOUR-YEAR-OLD CHESTNUT Paul J. Furnas STALLION, PRICE $750, BROKEN TO SADDLE, SINGLE, AND DOUBLE HARNESS Spring Hollow Farm Media, Pa.

MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE 9 THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE Devoted to the Interests of the Morgan Horse Return Postage Guaranteed Sec. 562 P. L. R.

VOL. II. MAY, JUNE, JULY, 1943 No. 4

Subscription Price—$1.00 Per Year in Advance Publication Office—South Woodstock, Vt.

TO ''/T

In This Number

Registrations and Transfer in Morgan Register 1942 u Brown Sale Club Headquarters and Registration Offices Justin Morgan Painting— MORGAN HORSE CLUB, INC. True or False? 90 Broad Street, New York City

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