. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. THE BREEDER AND SPORTSMAN [Saturday, May 1, 191; Sierra Vista Stock Farm Home of Highland Squirrel King Pacific Coast's Premier Sire of Gaited Saddle Horses SAN JACINTO sire or Winner Futurity Ko. Winner Junior Championship and Sweep- states. Cal. State Fair 1SH. HIGHLAND LUCIA Winner Futurity No. , First in 3-yro. Maxe and All Age Mare Combination Classes. State Fair. 1914. EDITH ADAMS Thirteen firsts in thirteen shows. 1914, including Grand Championship, three gaited saddlers. AND NUMEROUS OTHER PRIZE WINNING THREE AND


. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. THE BREEDER AND SPORTSMAN [Saturday, May 1, 191; Sierra Vista Stock Farm Home of Highland Squirrel King Pacific Coast's Premier Sire of Gaited Saddle Horses SAN JACINTO sire or Winner Futurity Ko. Winner Junior Championship and Sweep- states. Cal. State Fair 1SH. HIGHLAND LUCIA Winner Futurity No. , First in 3-yro. Maxe and All Age Mare Combination Classes. State Fair. 1914. EDITH ADAMS Thirteen firsts in thirteen shows. 1914, including Grand Championship, three gaited saddlers. AND NUMEROUS OTHER PRIZE WINNING THREE AND FIVE GAITED SADDLE HORSES. The Farm's Brood Mares include such well known individuals as Thelma H. by Gloster Denmark; Levia (from the famous Castleman Farm in Kentucky) by Blue Grass Hambletonian; Lizzie Cromwell (dam of The Moor, sold for $7,500) by Harrison Chief, being- the famous show mare bred and exhibited by Gen. J. B. Castleman. winner at Madison Square Garden and other gTeat shows; Leonora (dam of San Jacinto, winner of the first saddle horse futurity) by Dick Taylor; The Matron (best obtainable tvpe of the saddle horse brood mare) by Wilson's King, and others of a similar degree of excellence. Here are some of our recent importations from Missouri: King of the Highlands, chestnut stallion (7) bv Judge Collins, dam Flora W. by Greatland; a magnifi- cent type. 16 hands. 1200 pounds, wonderful in action foi ooth car- riage and lightness of gait. Jurist, red chestnut colt (3) by Bourbon's Best, dam by Chester Dare; all style and action, pleasing in every way. Confidence, chestnut gelding (4) by Rex Chief A., dam by Charles Reade. Rex Chief A. is the sire of Lee Chief, Missouri's champion junior mare, 1914, recently sold for $2,500, and Confidence lacks in no way in the general quality that won Lee Chief her fame. Helen Idlewood, black mare (7), one of the best daughters of Rex McDonald; can trot or singlefoot better than a three-minute gait and was a good prize winner la


Size: 2176px × 1148px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1882