144 THE TWO-MINUTE PACERS 



was exceptionally fast and would not be considered any- 

 thing else even in these days of extreme speed. 



He was one of the nicest horse to have about that ever 

 was raced, is the testimony of those who had the care of him. 

 The boys call him a "good doer" and that is about as highly 

 complimentary as anything they can say about any horse. 

 If he is a good doer and feeder the rest is comparatively easy. 



His training was just about the same, we are told, as 

 would be given any other sound horse, to fit him for a long 

 campaign where the time was certain to be fast. His oddi- 

 ties, if any he had, have been forgotten but there is no record 

 of any such. 



He wore most of the rigging that goes with the hobbled 

 pacer and that, of course, included knee boots, without which, 

 one turf writer avers, there would be no successful pacers 

 in hobbles. Be that as it may, Frank Bogash, Jr., carved 

 his name on the wall in the hall of pacing fame and for that 

 reason his hobbles and his frailties, if, indeed, he had any, 

 may be forgotten. 



This pacer was bred by E. C. Warner, Sand Hill, Quebec, 

 and was sired by the former Indiana pacer, Frank Bogash 

 2:03'*^ and his dam was Phyllis Stanford by Stanford. 



