204 The Trotting and the Pacing Horse 



was bred to her half-brother, Magic Flute, and 

 the result is Miss Fearing, 2.19!^. The daughters 

 of Jay Gould stand high as speed producers. 

 The son of Hambletonian and Lady Sanford 

 was an impressive horse on the track, in the 

 show ring, or the stud, and his closing days 

 were somewhat sad. When misfortune overtook 

 Henry N. Smith and his stud was disbanded, 

 Jay Gould, then 29 years old and but a shadow 

 of himself, was led into the auction ring and sold 

 for #50 to James O'Neil, formerly in the em- 

 ploy of Mr. Smith, who kindly cared for him 

 until he died, June 10, 1894. 



Edward Everett 



Edward Everett, formerly called Major Win- 

 field, was a bay horse, foaled in 1855; bred by 

 Adam Lilburn, and got by Rysdyk's Hamble- 

 tonian out of Fanny by imported Margrave. Mr. 

 Robert Bonner paid $20,000 for him when the 

 world was talking about his two sons. Judge 

 Fullerton and Mountain Boy, and transferred 

 him to his farm at Tarrytown. He died in 

 August, 1878, leaving behind him 13 trotters, 

 one of which was Hambrino, 2.21^, who is the 

 sire of 39 trotters and eight pacers. Delmarch, 



