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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-08-07
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-E ENGLTI DER AMERICAN Ww Mr. Henry Payne Whitney Alone Is Training Handred Yearliags. from Which to Select Entrants for the E: Cy ey ab Stretare for the English Classic in 1913 : . VOrwysteht, 20:1. to the Now Tork Hernia Oo. Ait Hehe reserved.) me Wiich En; : e ee ene Poter Gs iF Gal tare brood mares and stallions there aie aboet tee Danden oplnton of a amin like Yote Hugsing, wae nee aaiinies vba, xual - teh tw ths only ie Docees tn any pert of the world he on mo Cray Ay Cassian hee Wy Crlione tm the Unied Suita, thou Seeger h: bead upon the farm. Te reach its various outlying trained with great success ih England, i corm re snany sacrt superior ciaim to greatness. This upon the testimony - Segram has one at his Waterloo (Canada) breeding portions Mr. Rowe has an automobile, He wad one qidting pee ices, pecuniary and otherwise, woukt be made of Major Dalngerfield, Mr. Keene's able superin- Stud. Oyllene became celebrated at the stud, begot of the first among the horsemen to master its mechan- A good-horse here tru good hors wbroud, he wild. without regret. Derby winners and was then sold to an Argentine tsm. iif you have colts ite Sysonby or Colin or Celt or, More than fifty years ago Richard Ten Broeck, an red breeder for 125,000. Recently his get at public auc- The development of the hundred yearlings is car Peter Pan or Commando or Burgomaster, or any one american turfman, -whose slient-partners- were the vi rive ton tm tha ntry realized 4 o rled on in ac circ trainin ble, which: of a score of such bores, thelr chances to win. . fo bo tet cy. Bat for ol hange in conditions in this fae theo mee eee bas fifty boxes and is atx laps to a mile. Tavare she a are as good as any in that country. found: Park, begin in England country, in the course of a season these forty-two nd half brother to Cataract, mow racing half mile track and a full mile track. This last is - Huggins won many races abroad with horses Salli a ctabbe e Wad Melba tig Satine w cies ane would, according to the experience of previous sea. Witning in England for Mr. Keene. Running Stream, where all the important work is done in fair weather. bred at Rancocas, which is within a few miles of the winning of the Derby with Yankee bred-colt-eons;-have been most formidable opponents fo Mr.. the dam of these colts, did a wonderful thing as s dae Eround seldom freeses and is declared ideal for Brookdale. Jacob Pincus is of the same opinion as Mr. Ten Broeck for a term of years bad great success Keene's youngsters, Under existing ireumstances two-yearold ta England. She defeated a training purposes. The track fs sheltered by a growth Mr. Huggina. with his horses, winning many races, earning the ad- ll sre now stable mates, awaiting the final tests upon Printer called Eager. be being six yeare old. This of trees nearly ten feet high. The idea of Mr. Withers Jroquols, winner in 1881, was bred in Pennaytvania, miretion and good will of all England snd ite ari. which will depend selections for the English turt race wasrun in July, which made tt all the more merl- wt 2 pene the race horses out of sight,of the mares. not an-hour s journey fur BROOkGaM fancrets, tocratic patrons of the turf, but he never: wag the Clasaics. Some, will-fali-to withstand the test and wilt torious-for the youngster. and stallions, of good horses were bred in the vicinity. Foxhalt Derby. . be retained for'the local market, for Mr. Whitney has Sel oees tans ek aS was good enough to have won the Derby of 1881, but ss Dever ceased to race a stable in this country, even represented in the home bred yearlings, Dresen Le MEME roennt, Ee though his operations on the Nngtish turf have beon stud was formed in Kentucky by the late Mr. Whit, boasted theta veteran racer Preak. Yery extensive. - ieee aubeacblans ec osuccasieee agian tes 3p Canada, at Baltimore, in Kentucky and next Shipment of yearlings to Bngland is comparatively feached and the campaign begun. But though the year at other points on this continent there will be a free from danger. Mortality is at.a very low per- Stable wes recruited year after year for several sea- Test demand for young thoroughbreds, as it is a fact i centage, and it is rare nowadays to hear of the deaths fons Mr: Sanford'sidark blue jacket was never in that the number of avaflable ones are now down to so : In Mr. Rowe, an up to date horseman of many years experience, the five score employes have a Fa bates ta. though a few years ago Mr. front in the Derby, and in due course he came back to W 4 figure as to cause appretiension upon the part of a ak ioe transit, : America and gradually relinquished his racing enter'4 ea prises. gt; The horse died en route to America. Sportsman period series of articles 2 ee 1 -woult rather senda homie acro eee the title one Deckoinnerarincen the i , si xt 5 a -- -across-the continent, sald Dr. McCully. E pen of Charies J. Foster, a gifted writer of that day J : BTL EF) Such are some of the features of Mr, Whitney's nd a personal friend and at times adviser of . Fs 5 efforts to win the Derby. Let us turn fo an equally Pierre Lorillard, that famous turtman began an Eng- 2 - se oe : cae Sportsmaniike attempt made this year by a young Usb campaign im 1879, and with the yeteran Parole be y nd : 3 - : 4 Englishman, Raymond M. Dale, resident in Canada woke up the English turf to the fact that good horses 3 for the last few years and an ardent lover of horses. were bredin America, Then followed Mr. Loriliard's i As a small boy Mr. Dale often declared that some day + burchase of all the Leamington yearlings bred at he would win the Derby. Since he has had to take Chestnut Hill, near Philadelphia, and though be di care of limself and make his own living his great aim vided the lot each year with his brother George, who has been to breed a really good horse and win the raced exclusively tn America, the owner of Parole great race to prove its worth. Should he ever suc had the great good fortune to keep that brown colt ceed with a colt by his horse Kelston his chief pleas- which in 1881 was destined to. shed lustre on the name: ure would be derived from the fact that once again of Lorillard and to blazon forth anew the fact that lt; te sea bs Toneieliow (ere of Helston) yous ae * America could produce. good horses as well as good roug corroborating his clalm men. He was trained by Jacob Pincus. B. c, Full Brother to Maskette i , n .at the Derby : ; r . purchased by him after being some years at the stud. ete tee ee i p 33 RY agoagoatnge lt;i *, eS bed lt; MD bashes he oy on From the Graphic Other noted American turfmen have tried for the Se Worid'e greatest turf prize, some successfully, f . in. valle Mr. James R. Keene bas failed efter many, SMforts. So has Mr. W. K. Vanderbilt. Mr. HB. Duryea tried with Aceful, which ran badly. The late Me. William:G. Whitney sent Nasturtium overt ;Fenr-atter hie had won with the leased colt Volody- ovski, but the colt never recovered from a sickness thought to.have been first contracted at Westbury that disastrous year when the entire Whitney stable was rendered helpless by some mysterious, malady: Sir M rin fell when running well in the race won by Minord, and this was the vear st of late years that an-American br d cojt came to landing the prige Just thirty years ago an American colt won the Derby, the fixture then being more thau a hundred Years old. It wes twenty years later when Volody- grski won for Mr. Whitey. The young racer was Bnglish bred, however. Six years after that Richard Croker s Orby won the famous classic. He was balf Bnglish, half American, Mr. Croker having bought his dam as 2 weanling In America and in due time having mated her with Orme, the result being Orby. These are the only three instances in 180 years when an American turfman captured this f tart clasele, race sought after in vain by kings com- meni in control of race courses, they fearing that racing moners from all parts of the. world. Many years ago will be seriously tampered even at existing points un- oo KceltOr-tms-not fu Benjamin Disraeli, in sympathizing with Lord George jess breeders are induced to Femain in the business; sa zi : D 3 his hopes, but there is some excuse for this, as the Be upon the failure of-the latter to wis the This year s ent to the Derb et ten cade 7 prize, characterized he Eine 2 Wi ITA me rst of Elis Get To Be Trained Longfellow was one of the greatest horses that over What Does 'Recii lived. This actuated him in sending his colt Kel d Or it Doss to run In the Derby. Mean? Cana Mr. Dale believes that his sire Kelston would e Profit By It. o18 colt met with a setback when very young. Like all By F. A. Carman, ih t dof Ways close fo classes two years ahead) number 328. of Longfellow s strain, Kel d'Or was a big, growthy Star. .rf, and that bas helped to immortalize the stake. Of these Mr. Whitney named nineteen. eleven of colt and could not recover a setback as a smaller colt What is the Cangdian Upon its outcome millions of men and women are sen- which were bred at Castleton by Mr. Keene and the Umentally interested all over the world. In English remainder at Brookdale by Mr. Whitney. In the Castleton bred division are several the get of the might have done. Mr,-Daie-ted-him personally after ng to get out of the and a8 the horse never stopped growing his con- trade-agreement? stitution may have been impaired. Mr. Dale himselt I dare say it is quite broke Kel d Or and trained him also until he placed. ask this question. We him under, the care of Sam Darling, at Beckhamp- customed to measuring t colonies a Derby dinner, especially if the royal col- ors have been successful, is 2 natural a ton, England. Darling considered him very back- from the salesman's po Gh-c., by Vour Running Stream ward in all but growth. Mr. Dale tried to impress. that we are apt to forg pleaedher date teed ee Qpop the great English trainet that all of Kel 0: i iS ted, sta ee ak fas + his purse im order to obtain the most desirable Mr. Keene's yearlings a few months ago was sug- aan ied Doee a oe are accordance with custom. it arouses profound sentiment in the nearts of old eduines. After his death the stud-was removed to gested by bon. 5 be easily discouraged. Tacegoers to run over these pedigrees. There is, for Brookdale. Weeding Out the Youngsters. The young horseman shipped Kel d Or trom bis. Instance, a fall brother to Maskette. In the best days If America has really made progress in developing Mr. Whitney desired some young mares to breed home in Saskatchewan, Canada, in the summer of. snecessfal year upon the turf, his horses, all bred by Of the turf be could not have been purchesed for any the thoroughbred in the last thirty years, since Iro- from, said be, and I knew in that lot there must be 1910 to Beckhampton in person, The Journey te- him, haying won 400,000, world s record. money While Mr. Keene was on the turf, and would ols won the Derby and St Leger, now is the time to e tt quired twenty-one days, They stopped three days in cane, Answered the veteran, but you must re surely have reilizod at leant 25,000 if rat oboe the member that I have not yet won the Derby, and strain were backward, so that the trainer would not Ar. James R. Keene was congratulated by a friend at the close of the year 1907 upon having had bis most And: yet in the last a only object with which 1 thing is to be able to thing else. Both prod gale are merely . means 1 and that end is constimy + Montreal, and were overrun with kodak flends, so. the satisfaction -of the market any time in 1907, when the turf was at the . fuch attention hud been attracted to Mr. Dale's of really the-final end of tr Richard Oroker has. : helght of its popularity and Mr, Keene's racers were ghee young feross the ocean was slow, but sare trade treaties, and. thi ' Hope for the 1913 Derby. winning all before them. That-was the year of Calin, ee Seer ak ste tay at ow bees a, Dest Dut when the vesed) Marconigram was sent to Darling, BM ought to be the most n: ea: of Celt, of Petet Pan, of Ballot, of Superman, of Resti. sether patriotic purpose Vessel arrived there wus 30 one to meet Woveriatadi It is within the bounds of Probability that a colt * the visitors, so Mr. Dale the world. Nevert gouche, of 2 dosen others of leas renown, who con- bred by Mr. Keene may win the race in 1913, though tributed to the great total won that season 400,000. not in the name of his breeder. The cataclysm * pronounced the agreement has bee from many points- of vi Disguise was not much inferior as a to try the youngsters. In fact, they were only then Inds many oe Berea to Diamond Jubilee, the winner of the Brookdsle, as is well known, was once the beloved joing broken, fe have no set time to try them be- reared about 180g, Suse the trials/must come ost favorable- Iil Luck of Kel D Or, ae seen ee Dest bedieaat ieee tly was sold to the German leading spirit of the American turf up to 4 to the yearlings. Some are Next morning Sam Darling compliin rae zu what it wil government for a very large price. Deih was a first Whe legislative complications in New Jersey crippled they must be waited with. Others are precocious. upon owning sich a good looking tole eesti kay we At the very outset of t Sless racer, winner of the Withers amt te'moni, of T is-in that State and broke the heart of the man Actual work in the racing stable begins as early as compared favorably with the best English youngsters,. one is met with a diffic 1004 His clef opponent that year in those macea WHO bullt new Monmouth Park. After his death tt gout ociock at Summer; liter as the season advances, like four-year-old. - tecpretation. -What is Payslaues of more than half a hundred yearlings bred Sonca ay beet his near relative, Broomstick, then ?ctme the property of Colonel W. P, Thompson, 8nd The string is eo large that it ust be handled in ones ing Peer ; until the: follow BE this Agent cathe owned by Captain Sam Brown, but be was sick When be died it passed on to his sons. It was in and the day is well advanced before the morning's ference? The agreement three months bave been undergoing the necessary nen tn. stakes were run. However, in the Brighton Colonel Thompson's lifetime that James Rowe first work 1s through. The feed, with measured quantities Seen aenEEEEEEEEEEEE oe re aoe Tees a pene: on Handicap, a tew weeks later, he won a phenomenal eyes james Ir. Master of the Horse. race from the gume Irish Lad, who broke down in it, Hol whieh sbook racing: in New York to its foundatian may have had one regrettable outcome In the cessa- -home of the late D. D. Withers, for many years the tion of Mr. Keene's efforts to add this great prize to D7 1900: Yoter fs sire of Ballot, one of our ra et i : i i : i e anil i seni cesses; not only for Colonel Thompson, but for his peek in one transaction Mr. Henry Payne Whitney, rhivgetden by aoc Seine toe Sons, who continued to race in the name of the Brook- ject of close scrutiny. The tensperature a closely 3 Purchased the entire yearly output of the Castleton oughbred. It ss predicted that he will achieve great ale Stud. watched and sometimes serious trouble is averted by PHONE. 433 Stad, chiefly with a view of trying for the Derby of S tcs at the stud. He has im England three very Here t was that L Allouette, winner of the Futurity quickly summoning a veterinarian. Three months i , ao Wena: tided to this number are forty-two of Mr. fet sons, Whisk Hiroe pecan eee and Kemplon, of 1897, was trained, as well as others. It was under not too short a time, in Rowe's opinion, for eolty to Waltney's own breeding, and to this Is added a year fou . tnin country ancther son, Meridian, tac sat thesectroumstances that Mr. Rowe imbibed deep be broken, gradually worked along, and then tried. ling by Watercress out of Hamburg Belle, purchiasdd (one a arvt cin colt, having won, among other races, *T ction for the place, and when opportunity offered Even frat trlals are not concfusive, however, as his. im England when Mr. J. B. Haggin sold his yearlings 1). Kentucky Derby. I. . * he Induced Mr. Keene to tease it for bis ruciug stud. tory is fall of instances where young ters beaten tp there a few months since. seek This lasted sume years. Then It was taken up by-the trials became the best in the stabl eh Just ome hundred yearlings, therefore, comprise Mr. Whitney s Entries, cand the Kentucky stud-as-a et wWhite Mr Whitney's have tot done very totwithstandin, Mr. Whitney's possessions, and they are the best-bred Burgomaster was the Dest son Here-und at Sheepshead Bay the well this year in England, there is some excuse in the Kel d'Or had ones that America could produce, Mor-many-weeks won-the Belmont Stakes of 1906, a his feed,'as shown later, he at once becomes an ob- ted-to Peebles to start hins - Though Mr, Dale did not know t buckled his shins only two weeks be- of. Hamburg; and was- Ve have wl tore the Derby. We have fefeating The Quail late John W. Rogers trained for Mr. Whitney. iliness of some of the chiet meinbers: For instance a f S.4, Qe Oy. One month before the rice be was these have been gradually broken to bridle and aceus- und Accountant. Hamburg, himself high class it ts within an hour and a half's Journey of New year ago the Middle Park Plate, one of the classics re og tomed to the discipline of a training stable, so thatIs . racer, hero of sensational sales, 1a res Ponsible for a showing what a forlorn hope It was. Nevertheless, 4 best Ally of her proposition ever York, and its accessibility renders it all the more de for two-year-olds, was won by his racer Borrow, 9on small bet w: cabled over by Mr. Dale. The colt ran the latter part of October their owner was able to colt out of Eugenia Burch, herself the sirable. Fertile to a degree, the place strikes the-ob: of Hamburg and Forget. Usually a Middle Park creditably fora mille to the top of the ill. sud then vicinity: entertain his friends andvdat'y and hourly view the year, though very unlucky, -server as an earthly paradise. There are no mosqui- Plate winner looms up as favorite for the following ihe elt was pr ee tbe. ee ee, level Jor sere aa they displayed their speed and fitness Such are the Derby entries. In the Gaks, race for town, Mange to say, when speaking of a New Jersey year's Derby, but.in this instance Borrow did not, of'perting tear tte ee a ee year: afd wit great 160 acres as level for the task of worthily upholding the prestige of Gilles and of aumost equal fame as the Derby, Mr. town, Many other advantages are there, appreciated because, being a gelding. he was not eligible, in regret Mr. Dale found t necessary to sell his colt. ds ato the colors abroad. Teeny nas Samed Afteen, the get of Peter Pan, Dis- to the fullest extent by Mn Rowe. there Are eight accordance with a ruling made a few years ago that Though not succeantul this iche Bar. Dale is not dis. groun Entries for the Derby closed in July, however, and guls , Voter, Hippodrome, Broomstick, Hamburg end hundred acres, all of which will be devoted to pastur none but entire colts can take part in the Derby. A recap entrey Reeds of the Epsom Derby, With terms that sien necessary at that time to make selections, iurgomaster. Some of these fillies are daughters of awe tan eecosanuy growing stud. More than a tong filness during the early spring crippled him as Produc Teopett ib ts follieiny oar tan oe Seas: i based, of course, on their relationship to tried per: such famous mares as Artful, Pastorella (dam of million dollara is Yepresented in the land and horses a racer. 1 Mesers. Segram, Hendrie, Dyment, Campbell and: means to get formers and upon. their indtridualitiss. It Is possible, Colin), Pope Joan, Optime ia SE Bysonby) and.ballie Chere. Mew Wits a: bandred avule owe thelr breed . As fy: the ebante-of any one of Mr, Whitney's ther Canadian lovers of the horee, SEE US
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Image 236 (1912-08-07), from microfilm reel 236, (CU1772219). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.