. Breeder and sportsman. a with Tuna 2:16 1-2 Sanders trained and drove her in all her races. Herrecord of 2:161 is the record for the Stanford Stakeand a second below the time of Aristo and Eula Mac,who divide the speed honors of the Occident Stakewith records of 2:171, Mr. Montanya has turned Tuna out on the Brent-wood Farm for two or three months, hut she will betaken up in February and enter Henry Sandersstring at Pleasanton, where she will be carefully pre- pared for the Grand Circuit, and will cross themountains to meet the horses in her class during thecampaign of 1904. That she will gi


. Breeder and sportsman. a with Tuna 2:16 1-2 Sanders trained and drove her in all her races. Herrecord of 2:161 is the record for the Stanford Stakeand a second below the time of Aristo and Eula Mac,who divide the speed honors of the Occident Stakewith records of 2:171, Mr. Montanya has turned Tuna out on the Brent-wood Farm for two or three months, hut she will betaken up in February and enter Henry Sandersstring at Pleasanton, where she will be carefully pre- pared for the Grand Circuit, and will cross themountains to meet the horses in her class during thecampaign of 1904. That she will give a good accountof herself is certain, as she is one of the nicest gaited,best dispositioned and most intelligent trotters everbred in California. She will get a record within thecharmed 2:10 circle as certain as no accident happensher. Tunas winnings in the three races in which shestarted aggregated $4125, quite a neat sum to be wonby one little filly in three starts. December 26. 1W031 ®Jte gveebev cmfc gftwdtemcm 21. || SIDNEY AND COUNT VALENSIN ||jj \(P The Man Who Developed Him wM H\V| BY PETER J. SH ELDS Cjffi I think a Christmas edition of your paper would bewholly incomplete without some record of the meritsof the great California sire Sidney, 2:1934, and I think,too, that a reference to the distinguished man who de-veloped him and gave him his reputation would betimely as it is so well deserved. Count Valensin wasa remarkable man, one of the many brilliant men whowere attracted to California because of the romance ofher early history, because of the field she presented forthe moulding of genius into opportunity. And he didmuch to add to the development and the fame of Cali-fornia, and his early death was a loss to his state, anirreparable loss to the industry of breeding fast andfinished horses. His habit was not deliberative, hisjudgments were intuitive. He had a genius for breedingand was a born horseman. His selection of Sidney wasno accident, as is frequently the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1882