. A great year Lord Glanely's horses. f the glorious uncertainty of theTurf she did vastly better than any of the one never knows ! Loved One, the property of Mr. Manton, as theDowager Duchess of Montrose chose to be called,was always there or thereabouts as a slowly to hand he waited till the NewmarketFirst October Meeting (1885), when he ran PrinceSoltykofFs Mephisto, on whom 3 to 1 was laid, to alength for the Boscawen Stakes, and in the Clearwellhe finished third, beaten just a length by the Duke ofPortlands subsequent Oaks winner Miss Jummy, thefavourite,


. A great year Lord Glanely's horses. f the glorious uncertainty of theTurf she did vastly better than any of the one never knows ! Loved One, the property of Mr. Manton, as theDowager Duchess of Montrose chose to be called,was always there or thereabouts as a slowly to hand he waited till the NewmarketFirst October Meeting (1885), when he ran PrinceSoltykofFs Mephisto, on whom 3 to 1 was laid, to alength for the Boscawen Stakes, and in the Clearwellhe finished third, beaten just a length by the Duke ofPortlands subsequent Oaks winner Miss Jummy, thefavourite, Lord Bradfords Martinet, One took the Cheveley Stakes from a Frenchcolt, M. Lupins Phcebus, and then showed the extentto which he had come on by beating Mephisto threelengths for the Home Bred Foal Post Stakes at theHoughton Meeting. As a three-year-old he led offby cantering away with the Wokingham, the verdictbeing six lengths. That was his last success, for hewas beaten in the Stewards Handicap by Crafton and 192. HE, SKY-ROCKET, AND TRECLARE in the Chesterfield Cup by Saraband, being, however,set to receive only 5 lb. from that good horse. Othersbeat Loved One it must be understood, as he wasunplaced, and he failed again in the Select Handicapat headquarters. TRECLARE Lord Glanelys Treclare is a son of Tredennis andClare, and the history of his sire as a racehorse is verysoon told. He did nothing. As a two-year-old henever ran, as a three he carried Captain Machells white,blue cap in the Tudor Plate at Sandown, ridden by alittle known jockey and made no show, the absenceof his name from the market quotations suggestingthat this was extremely probable. He did not comeout again until the Newmarket Second October, whenhe was one of the ruck in a Visitors Handicap, withouta price. As a four-year-old he went to the post for aWelter Handicap at the First Spring and did no betterthan he had done before. It seems probable that thename of Tredennis was never writte


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1921