Harry Stover Dies At Salt Lake., Daily Racing Form, 1909-06-04

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HARRY STOVER DIES AT SALT LAKE. Salt Lake City. Utah. June 3. — Harry Stover, the well-known California horseman and breeder, died here this forenoon of pulmonary consumption. He had been suffering from hemorrhages and general debility for months and the eud was not unexpected. The body will be taken to Petaluma. Cal.. tomorrow for burial. Stover was the owner of Kenilworth Stock Farm at Petaluma. He had been identified usually in a managerial way with several of the smaller meetings of the northwest In recent years and was to have had charge of the forthcoming Butte meeting. He was fifty years of age and is survived by a widow, but no children. Besides owning the Petaluma race track outright, he was one or the principal stockholders in the Butte Jockey Club. He had acted as assistant manager and backer of the recent Ogden meeting. i It was only a few days ago that he came to a decision to sell the dozen head of thoroughbreds comprising ids arable at Salt Lake City, in consequence of his inability to give his horses the personal attention that he had been accustomed to. Native Son. Sevenfull. Invader. Klevation. Bonfils and seven two-year-olds, mostly by Kenilworth. made up the string that he had been training in Utah.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1900s/drf1909060401/drf1909060401_1_13
Local Identifier: drf1909060401_1_13
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800