810 . CLAY IIAMBLETONIANS. 



that he was a sire of powerful impressivencss. Electioneer can not 

 be estimated by any produce he has left, as I am not aware that he 

 has yet produced anything that would indicate his character as a sire. 

 Of each of these stallions the record may perhaps be made up as it 

 has with Saver's Harry Clay. They may not shine as brilliant stars, 

 and the world may not regard them ^s having great or valuable qual- 

 ities, until they shall have reached the age of twenty years, and it 

 shall be discovered in the excellence of their daughters that the blood 

 of the Norfolk trotter in them comes out with a new radiance and 

 increased lustre. As breeding sires they will be most likely to show 

 some degree of similarity toward Harry Clay. If they fulfill their 

 mission with the same degree of success, the breeders of this country 

 may have occasion to profit by their having lived. 



