134 NOTED MAINE BORSES. 



J. H. Gilbreth, of KeriHall's Mills, bought him before he 

 •was one year old, and sold him, when three, to Messrs. 

 Tozier & Jones, of Fairfield, for $800. They sold him, 

 the same season, to Rodney Jones, for $1300. Mr.^Tones 

 sold him, when five years old, to Smith & Jordan, of Old- 

 town, for $2000. As a four* ear old he took the first pre- 

 mium in his class at the North Kennebec Agricultural 

 Society Fair, also, for fastest trotting stallion, at same 

 place. The next season, at Waterville, he won the stal- 

 lion purse for all ages, beating Black Eanger and Gen. 

 Knox, jr. He also won the three-minute purse at Skow- 

 hegan and Dover the same season. He was a horse of 

 large bone, and good_ deal of muscle, and had a big, 

 open, slashing gait. He died in Oldtown, in 1873, from 

 the effects of a kick. 



T. §. LANG. 



Gray stallion, 15J hands high, foaled in 1865, bred by 

 Mr. Woodsome, of Clinton, Me., got by Gen. Knox, dam. 

 Phantom (the dam of Honest John), by Grover's Mes- 

 senger. 



Mr. "Woodsome sold him to the late J. H. Gilbreth, of 

 Fairfield, and he sold him, when four years old, to Messrs. 

 N. Tozier & H. B. Jones, also of Fairfield. In 1870 he 

 met with an accident in the town of Mercer, which 

 caused his death. He broke out of the stable with a stick 

 of wood to which his halter was attached, and it entered* 

 his body, which caused his death in a few days. He was 

 a fine styled horse. He took the second premium in his 

 class at the New England Fair, at Portland, in 1869. 



JULES JUEGENSEN. 

 Formerly "Logan," or the " Littlefield horse.' 



