PRINCE LOREE IQI 



fully and freely forgiven when the late Harry Neely wired 

 Capt. Shaw the result of the race. 



And following the Syracuse race Prince Loree went 

 jauntily about his business and won first money in the $10,000 

 trot at Columbus, giving him the honor of winning two of the 

 three purses of the year of that goodly size. 



He tried for the Transylvania in 1918 and Royal Mac 

 and others beat him. He went back the next year for the 

 same event, defeated Royal Mac and won the coveted prize. 

 He won the Tavern Stake the same year at North Randall. 

 He was a busy and a highly successful trotter. And it might 

 be added that he is the only trotter that was sold for a fairly 

 long price, discarded and sold for $50 and in spite of all 

 his adversities became a Grand Circuit stake winner and 

 the holder of two world's records for trotters, which he was 

 at the close of the racing season of 1919. One was the green 

 gelding record of 2:051/4, held jointly with Just David and 

 the other was the fastest race heat by a gelding — 2:03^/4, 

 held jointly with Early Dreams. The latter has since been 

 lowered by Peter Manning to 2:02l/> and in 1921 to 2:021/4 

 by Greyworthy. 



The fractional time of his record mile at the pace which 

 made him the world's champion double-gaited performer was 

 30, 5934, 1:30, 2:00. 



Prince Loree was foaled in 1911, was bred by the late 

 J. H. Shults, at Portchester, N. Y., and was sired by Prince 

 McKinney and his dam was the noted trotter Deloree 2:091/4, 

 a daughter of Axtell's great performer, Elloree 2:08l/o. 

 Walter Cox says that Prince Loree was a long ways the fast- 

 est trotting colt he had ever sat behind and as he was to go, 

 when he sold him, into the hands of W. J. Andrews, Walter 

 expected great things of the youngster. Failure to solve 

 the problem of his stifle muscle ''kink" made Prince Loree 

 almost an outcast as has already been told. 



