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t KEENELAND PARK NOTES 5 Sid Graves, the colored trainer, brought six horses here from Louisville and found accommodations at the Lexington trotting track. Graves has Stormy Ocean, Natalie Alice and Hour Zev for Bert Stewart, and Regards, Metropole and Hum for R. Dun-ston. Graves left three two-year-olds at Louisville and will pick them up after the Keeneland meeting and race the trio at Churchill Downs. Three two-year-olds and a three-year-old which were not ready to perform during the early part of the Keeneland meeting were sent to the trotting track by J. O. Whitlow. The largest single shipment to reach Keeneland this week was the Tranquillity Stable, maintained by H. H. Cross, of Chicago. Trainer E. L. Snyder unloaded ten head which were shipped from Louisville and included Capt Cal, Teddy Green, Khai Fair, Wild Turkey, Border Queen, Lady Thatcher, Wha Hae, Eblis, Pauldron, and Alice G. Some Boy, another to be raced here, is expected to join the division Tuesday. Snyder has twenty-two remaining at Churchill Downs and expects to make several trips a week to the Louisville course to supervise the training of the large string there. Jockey Robert Montgomery has reported to the stable of F. H. Carpenter at Douglas Park and will return to colors during the local meeting, if not sooner, to accept a few mounts at Keeneland. The Collins stable, which occupies comfortable quarters at Douglas Park, is composed of the four-year-olds Indian Lace and Miss Bungle. The three-year-olds are Bell Metal and Lirma and the two-year-olds Josie R., Henrietta, George Krehbiel, Harrys Choice, and Verokee. The youngster George Krehbiel is named for the popular turf editor of the Detroit News. According to advices received here by OHiggins, the first foal of the year arrived at Collins Brook Farm a week ago last. Sunday. It is a colt, by Swift and Sure, from Fine Gold. Collins Brook Farm is near Lenox, Michigan, some forty miles from Detroit,