. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. 8 WsSW^Mmmmm^mmmmmmmm (Hue gv&e&sv anb gftxtrrismcm [April 22, K(6 THE PEDIGREE OF FLY, grandam of Lou Dillon, has not yet been established, although the Chicago Horse Review representing the Taylor side of the case, and the A Breeder advocating Sam Gamble's theory, are each putting in some pretty heavy licks to show that it has the best evidence to offer. Mr. Gamble has written the BREEDER AND Sportsman a long article on the matter this week, which is printed on another page, and in justice to him I desire to make a correction of a statement attributed


. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. 8 WsSW^Mmmmm^mmmmmmmm (Hue gv&e&sv anb gftxtrrismcm [April 22, K(6 THE PEDIGREE OF FLY, grandam of Lou Dillon, has not yet been established, although the Chicago Horse Review representing the Taylor side of the case, and the A Breeder advocating Sam Gamble's theory, are each putting in some pretty heavy licks to show that it has the best evidence to offer. Mr. Gamble has written the BREEDER AND Sportsman a long article on the matter this week, which is printed on another page, and in justice to him I desire to make a correction of a statement attributed to him in this department, in September, 1903, and on which statement the Horse Review has called Mr. Gamble to task. Soon after my trip to Santa Rosa that year, Mr. Gamble called on me and I related to him the particulars I had gained from Green Thompson about the mare Fly. Mr. Gamble was at that time, as he is now, making an earnest effort to discover some evidence that would lead to the mare's identity and told me that he had a num- ber of old memorandum books packed away with other old horse literature that he had collected at odd times and he might be able to find something from them. He told me of a memorandum he had found in an old book which read "Kimball mare, chestnut, by Red Iron, known as Daniel's ; I printed this statement in this department and added: "In an- other book Mr. Gamble found the following memo- randum: 'Kimball's mare Lady Butterfield by John Nelson, dam by Geo. M. Patchen Jr.'" It is this last statement which I wish to correct. Mr. Gamble did not notice it until it was printed in the Horse Review and he now reminds me that his statement was: "Frank Malone says he remembers the Kimball mare as Lidy Butterfield by John Nelson, dary by Geo. M. Patchen Jr., and I may have some memorandum of her in another of my old ; I doubtless mis- understood Mr. Gamble, and believe that his state- ment to me was as he now


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1882