146 



Maine Agricultural Experiment Station. 1919. 



PEDIGREE OF RIOTER'S JERSEY LAD 580OI. 



Sheet 

 No. 



"O 



rH 



h4 



+3 



02 



O 



CD 



<M O 



=5 3 



CQ 



o'i? 



No. 13656 

 Ida's Rioter 

 St. L, 



d" 

 of 



No. 4558 

 Bachelor of St. 



c? 



L. 



No. 3143 

 Orloff 



d" 



No. 6638 



Charity of St. L. 



9 



No. 24990 



Ida of St. L. 



9 



No. 2238 



Stoke Pogis 3d 



<? 



S3 

 Hi 



CO 



n 



d° 

 f5« 



No. 5122 



Kathleen of St. L. 



9 



No. 62474 

 Dew 



9 



No. 13656 



• Ida's Rioter 



St. L. 



d" 



of 



No. 4558 



© Bachelor of St. L. 



No. 24990 



© Ida of St. L. 



9 



No. 8612 

 Lady Appel 



? 



No. 2219 



Young St. Martin 



s 



No. 5900 

 Isolda 



9 



>> 

 Sri 



.T3 



ca 



No. 19289 

 Pogis Lad 



e 



No. 13658 0" 

 Ida's Stoke Pogis 



No. 4558 



• Bachelor of St. L. 



<? 



No. 24990 



• Ida of St. L. 



9 



No. 12213 

 Daisy Brown 



9 



No. P. S. 259 

 Tormentor 



cf 



No. 9522 



Heedless 



9 



No. 59836 

 Lily Adonis 



? 



No. 20881 

 Wrangler 



d 



No. 17236 

 Roonan's Signal 



cf 



No. 17615 

 Baron's Sophie 



9 



No. 49954 

 Lily Martin 



? 



No. 13658 



• Ida's Stoke Pogis 



d 



No. 32915 

 Sigletta 



9 



The ancestry of these sires is classified first as the num- 

 ber of males and number of females in the pedigree of each 

 of the twenty-eight sires which were of island breeding. One 

 bull, Signal's Successor, had no male ancestry up to the fifth 

 generation which was island bred. Eurybia's Blue Boy had no 

 female ancestry up to the fifth generation which were of island 

 breeding. Outside of these two bulls all the other sires had 

 island bred ancestry on both sides of the pedigree. Seven of 

 the sires listed had all island ancestry. Out of a possible 15 

 male ancestors and 15 female ancestors the average for this 

 group of twenty-eight sires was 8.07 male and 7.79 female an- 

 cestors which were island bred. The leading sires of the Jer- 

 sey breed were consequently more than half island breeding. 

 The percentages, shown under percentages, were 53.8 and 51.9. 



These island ancestors are also classified as to whether they 

 occur on the sire's side or on the dam's side of the pedigree. 

 When so classified nine of these superior sires are by sires of 

 full island breeding. Five lack only one ancestor (the sire) 



