296 A HISTORY OF THE PERCHERON HORSE 



as well as of other good ones. She produced only 2 

 colts for Mr. Kellogg, but they were winners. Ben 

 Boalt 4746, her first colt for Mr. Kellogg, took honors 

 in the leading shows in America and Fenelon 2d 

 7007, her second, was also of showyard character. 

 Glorieuse 5226 (5970) was another good mare. She 

 won second in the class for four-year-olds under 

 1,750 pounds at the Percheron Society show in 1886, 

 and was a consistent brood mare, raising 5 good colts 

 in 7 years. Mr. Kellogg also bought Lorilee 6. 1532, 

 one of the most noted show and brood mares of the 

 Dillons. Mignonette 7264 (5729) was another good 

 mare, and a regular producer. The mare Tontine 

 13129 (Bijou 21677) was valued very highly by Mr. 

 Kellogg, although she had produced nothing prior to 

 his death. She subsequently became a valuable 

 brood mare. 



Mr. Kellogg was a progressive breeder and appre- 

 ciated the value of showyard exhibitions from edu- 

 cational and advertising points of view. Most of his 

 winnings were made at the Minnesota and Wisconsin 

 state fairs, although he showed a few at Chicago, 

 One of his leading contemporaries says of him: 



"He exhibited mares of uniform kind and his ani- 

 mals were generally commendable for draft type, 

 symmetry, quality, and soundness. Personally Mr. 

 Kellogg was a gentleman, thoroughly reliable in 

 word and act, and at all times courteous and honor- 

 able. He was a breeder of the highest type and ex- 

 erted a profound influence on Percheron affairs in 

 his time." 



Influence on Other Studs.— At Mr, Kellogg's death 



