Louisville Turf Notes, Daily Racing Form, 1935-04-03

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1 LOUISVILLE TURF NOTES John Marsch is expected here over the week-end to inspect the horses Roscoe Goose is training for him. JHe has ten under Gooses wing. Seven are three-year-olds and the others juveniles. Geldings by Epinard and Supremus and a colt by North Star TJI. comprise the younger trio. Goose also has three-owned by Mrs. Goose and one the joint property of Polk Laffoon and C. H. Trotter. Divisions of the Joseph E. Widener, J. W. Parrish and Jake Lowenstein stables, came in Tuesday morning from Hialeah Park. Miami. They unloaded at Churchill Downs, while the horses of Jesse Spencer, Lou Unger, T. Trotsek and several others which came in from the same point at the same time, went to Douglas Park. C. Leroy King and Frank Podesta, well known racing patrons of Memphis, are here for a few days. The several horses J. W. Fuller raced for King at Oaklawn Park reached Douglas Park Tuesday. Jockey Charles Kurtsinger, who is with the Warm and Mrs. Silas B. Mason stables, and W. Boganowski, a veteran who rode at New Orleans and Hot Springs during the winter, put in appearances at Churchill Downs Tuesday morning. Kurtsinger lives here. Three two-year-olds, all colts, two by Victorian and another by Tryster, will bo transferred from Hartland Farm and added to the Warm Stable which Tommy Taylor has here. Three more, now at Duntreath Farm, will be taken up by Taylor next week. In addition to the crack handicap racer. Head Play, owned by Mrs. Silas B. Mason, Taylor also has Demonstration, Coulee Dam, Drawn Sword and The Mauler at the Downs. The Mauler, a son of TSull Dog and named for the Kentucky Derby, is rapidly recovering from a severe quarter crack which forced him out of training at Santa Anita almost two months ago. Frank P. Letellier, New Orleans horseman, who hasnt missed a spring meeting here in years, has seventeen head at the Downs. The winter division of the stable, which accounted for many purses at the Fair Grounds, New Orleans, arrived Monday from that point. Four three-year-olds accompanied Joseph E. Wideners Chance Sun, winter book favorite for the Kentucky Derby, here from Elm-endorf Farm. They are Silversmith, Sickle Hour, Chance Dame and Shotproof. Trainer Pete Coyne will alternate Shotproof and Silversmith as work companions for Chance Sun. Eighteen others slated to carry the Widener silks this season were left at the farm. Some few of them may be transferred here before the opening of the Downs meeting, according to Coyne.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1930s/drf1935040301/drf1935040301_14_1
Local Identifier: drf1935040301_14_1
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800