1968-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1968 September/October Voice RS | Page 4

■L COULDN'T BE HAPPIER (Above) - Donald and Mildred Paschal catch their breath during the happy celebration on Saturday night after the champion­ ship class. DONALD PASCHAL Rides GO BOY’S ROYAL HEIR to 1968 Crown! Photography by Chappell TWICE IN A ROW (Below) — Dennis and Betty Williams show their pleas­ ure at having ROYAL HEIR win the big stake arter their daughter Candace won the Amateur Championship with him last year. The Tennessee Walking Horse breed has produced some noteworthy horses in the scant thirty-three years that the breed has been registered. Since offi­ cially becoming a distinct breed the Tennessee Walk­ ing Horse has seen some changes that have had a definite bearing on the growth and popularity of this "horse from Tennessee.” The history books relate the story of BLACK ALLAN, who became the number one foundation horse of our breed, and how his natural ability to walk was finally noticed by several Middle Tennessee horse enthusiasts. The ability of BLACK ALLAN (ALLAN F-l) to pass these characteristics