324 THE TROTTINO-nORSE OF AMERICA. 



up to one of her rapid bursts of speed, she headed thft 

 stallion at the score, and got the word to her advantage; 

 She seemed determined, now that she was ahead, to keep 

 there ; and by very fast and resolute trotting, she dropped 

 him behind, so that she led four lengths at the quarter. 

 At the half-mile, in Im. lis., he got closer to her, and he 

 bained slowly on the ",ower turn. In the stretch he was 

 aear enough to her to be dangerous ; and, as she made a 

 skip, it looked so. But James caught her again at the in- 

 stant of time, and on she came. In the endeavor to col- 

 lar her the stallion broke, tired, and Flora won by three 

 lengths in 2m. 22js. ' 



In the third heat they got away together at a great rate, 

 and the stallion soon broke. He lost four lengths by it. 

 On the second quarter they trotted very fast, — about 

 thirty-four seconds being the time. At the half-mile, she 

 was leading three lengths and a half. On the lower turn, 

 he got closer, and they came up the stretch with little day- 

 light between ; but before they got home, he broke, and she, 

 won in 2m. 23|s., by four lengths. This was very great 

 trotting ; and though Patchen was surely being defeated, 

 and was the worse off the further he went, he certainly 

 made a good, game fight for it. In the last heat. Flora led 

 all the way, except for a stride or two at the start, and this 

 she won in 2m. 26|s. Take away their own race in June, 

 and this in August was the best that had ever been wit- 

 nessed on the Union Course. Patchen never made such 

 another in harness ; and, as he went on with her in her 

 customary tour that fall, she took more and more of the 

 steel out of him, just as she had formerly done out of 

 Princess and aU the others that ventured on a long cam- 

 paign against her. 



After this race Flora went to Fonda, and beat 3rown 

 Dick, mile heats, three in five, in harness, in three heats; 

 On the 28th of the same month she met Geo. M. Patchen 

 at Boston, at the Franklin Course, for a purse of $1,500, 



