view raw text
FIFTEEN HORSES DIE AT NEW ORLEANS ; Th,- death of P.. A. Jones good two-year-oMs celt. Billy Hess, brings the total number of horses that j have ilinl ai the N-w Orleans meetiag to iitteen. " As ,ia offer of 5,668 was recently refused for this aod colt, Ue was probably the most valuable of the t hit. Mr. .bnes is soiaeuh.it con-oled. however, by the fact that he holds a Hartford polio for a . - Ily amount on the celt. Lukes Pet was another that stepped in a hob- daring a ran-, breaking her leg. .loan W. Schorr, the wealthy owner of this good filly, was also protected bj an insurance policy in the Hartford. Baasymiag, "|" "f Mean t.oht- blatis bones, was about ready for a race- when 1 he "picked up a nail- in his work, puncturing the foot tee such an extent that it was n.-e e--s u- for Doe tor Talbott to destroy him. To protect himself against sack happenings, which frequently ,. occur, Mr. Goldblatt also hail his leel-se- insured with , tin- Hartford. Among the number 11I-" was Charles , Hawks Seafarer, a go .1 bone, that died from I fever contracted while being shipped to New- Orleans. A Hartford policy looked good to Mr. Hawk. These are only a lew of the immlM-r covered i by Hartford policies, and horsemen generally are arailiag themselves -f this protection. All of these 1 1; les were written through the General Ageacj of John A. Payne, Cincinnati. Ohio. Adv.