302 THE HORSE. 



he dispLayed, while he ran as gams a race as any horse that ever 

 made a track. After the wonderful j^erformance of Boston on 

 Tuesday last, his race of yesterday will, we have no doubt, be 

 esteemed one of the most remarkable in the annals of the Turf. 

 — Spirit of the Times, vol. xii., 124. 



Those superb animals, Boston and Fashion, never met again, 

 though both fully maintained their distinction. 



Fashion's races with Peytona have been elsewhere described. 

 In the end, she was trashed off her feet, and beat by Passenger, 

 when she was not in a condition to start against a cocktail. 



Boston, as a stallion, has done as nobly for the country in 

 the stud as he did on the track, as a racer. 



Fashion is, as yet, untried, but I am happy to announce on 

 the authority of her owner, Mr. Reber, of Lexington, Ohio, that 

 she was never better, and, is this fall, as fine as a four-year-old. 



H. W. H. 



