Twenty Bradley Horses: Moved from Idle Hour Farm to Lexington Track-Rain and Muddy Going, Daily Racing Form, 1922-04-15

article


view raw text

- | ] J I i ! i 1 1 i 1 ] 1 1 i I 1 t : I , , • 1 TWENTY BRADLEY HORSES: Moved From Idle Hour Farm to Lexington Track— Rain and Muddy Going. LEXINGTON, Ky., April 14.— Col. E. R. Bradley sent in from Idle Hour Farm to the Kentucky Jockey Clulj track today, in j charge of trainer Dick Thompson, twenty Of his home-bred racers. William Hurley already was at the track with lour, so there j are an even two dozen to carry the white j and green hoops at the Lexington spring ! meeting. For want of stable room at the j track, nine others were left at the farm to j be sent later to Louisville and Latonia. All : of the Kentucky Derby candidates were sent to the track. The work watchers now will have their first oppor .unity to form conclusions as to what has been accomplished by and for these horses during the winter and spring at one of the best horse farms in all the country. The horses all appear to be in good condition and came in as though they were feeling good. After the cloudburst of this morning t will be some time before the track at the local racing ground is at its best. It was a veritable sea of mud today and. of course, there was nothing attractive in the way of work. Mose and Jake Lowenstein today filed with secretary Edward Cr. Stoll contracts on the apprentices Robert Eludau and Raymond A. Yelton. The expectation among horsemen here is that John S. Wallace will be appointed handicapper, placing judge and entry clerk, the place made vacant by the untimely death of Edward Jasper. William Dondas, who arrived from Cub; yesterday, motored over to Louisville today to attend to some business and will returi tomorrow. He reports i.nat The Pirate has bowed a tendon. Jockey George Fields, who is under contract to Dondas, is here from Jacksonville. At R. T. Wilsons Kirklevington Stud today Flying Fairy, by Aeronaut — Millie A., foaled a fay filly by Campnre and will be bred to Olambala. B. B. Jones, owner of Audley Farm, Virginia, arrived today and wis at the track. He will go to Louisville tomorrow to see the horses Kay Spence is training for him.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1920s/drf1922041501/drf1922041501_7_4
Local Identifier: drf1922041501_7_4
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800