THE JERSEY 



341 



The Rosette family traces from Rosette through her daughter 

 Rosette 2d, F. 943 H. C. and her granddaughter Rosette ^th, 

 P. 2128 C. Bred to Sarabond, P. 797 H. C, Rosette 4th pro- 

 duced Rosette sth, P. 2881 H. C, imported by Mr. Cooper under 

 the name of Sultana's Rosette 149740. She proved a remark- 

 able breeder and dropped the bulls Flying Fox, P. 2729 H. C. 

 (Champion Flying Fox 61 441, imp.), Ravachol, P. 2032 C, 

 and Forfarshire, P. 2914 H. C.,. three of the great island-bred 

 bulls, and the cow 

 Alicante, P. 3880 

 H. C, dam of the 

 Owl, P. 2195 H. C, 

 a leading island-bred 

 sire, first over Jersey 

 in 1897. Spermfield 

 Owl 57088, a son of 

 the Owl, has been one 

 of the leading sires in 

 America, his daugh- 

 ters Spermfield Owl's 

 Eva, Spermfield Owl's 

 Temisia, Owl's Sayda 

 Queen, Owl's Inter- 

 ested Tones, Sperm- 

 field Owl's Victoria 

 Lass, and Violet's Owl 



being a remarkable group of sisters with milk records ranging 

 from 13,158 pounds to 16,457 pounds and butter-fat records 

 ranging from 680 pounds to 993 pounds. 



Fig. 143. Sultan's Finance (14100), first-prize cow 



over Jersey. A very beautiful Island type. From 



photograph by the author 



American Jersey Families 



The Signal family descends from old Pansy 8, calved in 

 1853 and imported when two years old by Mr. John T. Norton 

 of Connecticut. She had four daughters — Pansy 2d 259, Pansy 

 5th 414, Pansy 6th 38, and Pansy 7th 130— and two sons — 

 York 8 and Living Storm 173. Pansy 6th 38 dropped ten sons 

 and daughters, one of which, Pansy Morris 2060, calved in 1870, 

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