APPENDIX. 4G7 



straight heats; and on the Uth at Phiinfield he beat Huntress, 

 St. James and American Girl. On the 22d, he beat Sensation in 

 three straii^ht heats at Fleetwood Park. On the 2d of October, 

 he defeated Huntress, American Girl and Sensation at Sandy Hill. 

 American Girl and Judge Fullerton competed in three more races 

 last year and Camors was in two of them. The latter is a black 

 gelding by General Knox, about fifteen hands and a half high, a 

 plain horse and light in the girth and quarters. Judge Fullerton 

 is a horse of a different stamp. He is a dark chestnut gelding 

 with four white legs and a blase in the face. He is nine years 

 old and has trotted three seasons. He stands fifteen two inches, 

 and is a strong, bloodlike horse, finely balanced, with powerful 

 quarters and stifles, a good back, resplute head and clean cut, 

 gamecock throttle. He is as good a winded one as ever was seen. 

 His action is very bold and decided, like that of Dexter, and he 

 bends the knee so that he has to have a pad on his belly-band to 

 prevent hira from striking his body every time he throws his fore 

 foot up under him. He goes very evenly and smoothly, with his 

 head carried well in front and not cocked up in the air. He never 

 has a check rein or martingale on, and when once squared awa-e 

 on his trot never breaks. This young horse of immense promise 

 (he has already won $GO,000 of public money in purses) was got 

 by Edward Everett, sire of Mountain Boy. The dam of Edward 

 Everett was no doubt a daughter of imported Margrave, and to my 

 mind Judge Fullerton shows the Margrave and Muley blood. 

 Those who remember Molly Jackson and James A. Connolly on 

 the running turf will probably concur in this. The chance of 

 Judge Fullerton to reach the top of the tree is as good as that of 

 any horse out, in my opinion ; yet he is not without a serious 

 drawback. It is not one likely to prevent him from attaining 

 permanent fame and as high a record as anybody's horse, but it 

 may cause him to lose races at times when he would be nearly 

 sure to win, if the defect did not exist. I remember one of th^ 



