RACEALONG 223 



were out of Reel by imported Glencoe. Lecomte died 

 a few weeks after he landed in Liverpool. The other 

 two proved winners, Prioress being one of the best 

 race mares of her day on either continent. They also 

 bred the Lexington mare Queen Bess which was the 

 dam of Creole the sire of the third dam of Peter the 

 Great. 



WINNING DRIVERS IN 1929 



The returns for the campaign in 1929 show that 

 H. M. Parshall of Urbana, Ohio, stands at the top 

 of the list of winning drivers with fifty-four races 

 to his credit. Harry Brusie is in second place with 

 fifty-one and Sep Palin third with forty-eight races, 

 all but two of which were won at Grand Circuit 

 meetings. 



Parshairs fifty-four races were won by fourteen 

 horses. Bin Direct by Binville out of the pacing 

 mare Flower Direct 2:00% stands at the top of the 

 list with eleven. Counterpart is the leading money 

 winner. His big bid was made at Kalamazoo where 

 he landed the $25,000 pace in 2:02i4 from a field of 

 nineteen. Of the other horses in the Parshall stable 

 General Walker won six races. Miss Marion Toddler 

 five, Lee Hagyard, Legality, Velocity, Joe Lewis, My 

 Loraine, and Sybil Volo three each. Tease two, and 

 The Flying Parson, Lillian McKinney and Fairview 

 one each with Parshall in the sulky. 



Sweet Echo proved the leader in the Brusie stable. 

 She won eleven races. Brusie won five races with 



