Chance Plays Book Full: Quality of Miss Careful Results in Demand for Services of Young Stallion, Daily Racing Form, 1932-03-03

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CHANCE PLAYS BOOK FULL Quality of Miss Careful Results in Demand for Services of Young Stallion. LEXINGTON, Ky., March 2 Mrs. Elizabeth Kane announces that the Lenox Studs Chance Play, standing at the Greenwich Stud of W. B. Miller, has a full hook for 1932. The good showing of his first starter, Miss Careful, winner of two races at New Orleans, and the good reports of the Chance Play colts in training elsewhere, have caused bookings of mares to come in more rapidly than is the case with most of the good young stallions in Kentucky. Harry B. Scott, manager of Samuel D. Riddles Faraway Farm, received a shipment of seven mares, six from the Riddle farm at Glen Riddle, Pa., and one from Walter M. Jeffords. The Riddle mares were Centerstone and Hasten, to be bred to Man o War; Crowfeet, Thirty Knots and Problematical, to be mated with Big Blaze, the sire of Burning Blaze, and Brush Up, going to American Flag. Mr. Jeffords sent the good filly Allez Vite, by Man p War, to the court of Black Servant. Mr. Scott received at his own farm In a separate shipment seven mares belonging to Robert Sterling Clark and one the property of Admiral Cary T. Grayson, to be mated with various sires in Fayette County. Of Mr. Clarkes mares, Armid goes to Macaw, Serenade to Black Servant, Meridienne to St. Germans, Ora Trlx to Blue Larkspur, Flying Field to Toro, Rambling to Which-one and Bright Legend to The Porter. Admiral Graysons mare Idleness, dam of Up, goes to High Cloud. Jay D. Weil has bought from the Green-tree Stable the three-year-old filly Toodleoo and the two-year-old fillies Chicaloo and Minxy. Toodleoo will be retired to the stud this year.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1930s/drf1932030301/drf1932030301_21_3
Local Identifier: drf1932030301_21_3
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800