Churchill Downs Notes, Daily Racing Form, 1932-05-19

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| CHURCHILL DOWNS NOTES | Q, $ Art Goldblatt acquired Abes Pal from Howard Oots and is negotiating for several in the C. V. Whitney string. He goes to Bainbridge Park Friday night. The filly Georgia Lily, which J. F. Patterson, who shipped six to Bainbridge earlier in the week, left here, will rejoin the stable at that Ohio track and will be included in one of the several shipments going out within the next few days. Edward Haughton ships his stable to Washington Park Thursday night Wotan, eligible for several of the stakes to be run at that Homewood track, heads the shipment. Haughton is seriously considering several offers to train for prominent patrons and may open a public stable, disposing of his own horses at public sale at Washington Park or Arlington. R. Wingfield leaves Saturday to inspect Eleven Sixty, which has been running out at one of the stock farms in northern Illinois, and may put the nine-year-old back in training. Cousin Jo has not been doing well since her last race and her owner, Charles Nuckols, may give her a month or six weeks rest. Nuckols sold the three-year-old Cousin Rogers to M. Rieser, who ships to Bainbridge Park. The stable of Herbert M. Woolf, in charge of B. A. Jones, gets away Friday night for Washington Park. Jockey C. E. Allen, who has been showing his best form in the saddle here, goes along. The public stable trained by James Hukill has been added to those moving over to Bainbridge Park and will return to Kentucky for the Latonia meeting. Entry blanks for the seven stakes to be run during the Latonia Jockey Clubs summer meeting opening June 25, and closing July 30, were distributed here. All of the fixtures will close to nominations on June 1. William E. Phillips, for many years patrol judge at the Churchill Downs and Latonia tracks, and former trainer, today passed his seventy-fifth natal day. Many of his friends scattered throughout the country remembered him with cards and messages, and the felicitations of officials and horsemen at Churchill Downs were personally conveyed. J. B. Respess came down from his Highland Farm at Erlanger and will remain for the balance of the meeting. It was his first visit since the death of his son, who was fatally injured in an automobile accident a few miles from this city two weeks ago.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1930s/drf1932051901/drf1932051901_2_5
Local Identifier: drf1932051901_2_5
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800