Pimlico Turf News, Daily Racing Form, 1923-05-08

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PIMLICO TURF NEWS James Healy, Sr., was an arrival today and completed details for the meeting at Ihoenixville, Pa. Jockey Callahan was suspended for five days by the stewards for rough riding in the sixth race on Saturday. O. B. Akers purchased from the J. K. I* Ross stable this morning the horse Bastille. No terms were made public. J. R. Skinkors Slippery Kim was blistered on Friday, the second time this year, while Duke John pulled up decidedly lame fallowing a work and will be on the shelf for a brief period. It was stated today that the stalls for the forthcoming meeting at Devonshire would be allotted about June 15. Applications can be turned in to James Arthur or Ray Bryson at Pimlico or W. Wolatt at Windsor. Tom Healy stated today that R. T. Wilsons Wilderness would not be a starter in the Preakness Stakes and he did not know whether he would start in the Kentucky Derby or not. Wilderness pulled up fine this morning after his exercise. Cecil Knight was an arrival from Toronto, where he was called from Havana last winter, due to the illness of his parents, both of whom died within a short time of each other. Knight reports that his campaigner Panaman is rounding into good form. Trainer W. Hurley received word from E. R. Bradley, master of the Idle Hour Stock Farm, following Blossom Times defeat in her race on Saturday, that she would not be shipped Fast for her Preakness Stakes engagement. F. R. Bradley has no other candidate. The stable here will be shipped to New Ycrk. J. W. Bean, who has been resting at his Silver Springs farm since the close of Havre de Grace, was a visitor this afternoon. Four foals are reported, three by The Wanderer and one by Meridian. Rubidium and Oolden Bantam foaled colts and Nicklands a filly to the former, while Brewing Bell dropped a colt by the latter. Fred Schroeder, recovered from the injuries he sustained in a train wreck en route from Youngstown, Ohio, to New York, which caused him to remain in a hospital for some time, was a first-lime visitor Saturday. Schroeder got his first glimpse of the horses that he took over for A. Siebold — Richard Murray and Feigned Zeal — today. The mare Chaste Star has been shipped back to Youngstown from here. ■ ♦


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1920s/drf1923050801/drf1923050801_12_7
Local Identifier: drf1923050801_12_7
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800