December, 1951 ORS!

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December, 1951 ORS! December, 1951 ORS!: COLT CONTEST RESULTS WILD HORSE CHASE AMERICAN RIVER _ RIDER CLUB ROBERTS HORSE FARM Hi-Pass, San Diego County, California BIteecie4 a/ /1449caa of Glii9hea /Woad BLACKMAN 8622 Senior Stallion in Service Mountcrest Joe Bailey 7119 Sellman 7289 Kitty E. 03308 Redman 8065 Pongee Morgan BLACKMAN Red Dot 04577 7427 8622 Rodota 04185 Black 1 Foaled 1942 Go Hawk 7457 Sunny Hawk 7456 Go5ea 04610 Bombo 04379 Knox Reade 7089 Jeanne 04140 Jean Ann 03250 Our fifty broodmares have been most carefully selec led. We have at all times Morgans of all ages and both sexes for sale. MR. AND MRS. E. W. ROBERTS, OWNERS Address correspondence to: 236 West 15th St. Los Angeles, California Tel. Richmond 7-0658 THESE FOUR OFFERED FOR SALE ..• • e—c- 'Awn" WEANLING FOAL GOLDEN HYLEE 07144 Sire — SQUIRE SKIMP 9631 Sire — ILLINI 8425 Darn — GOLDEN HYLEE 07144 Darn — DOLLY MAE 05939 DIABLITO 10378 Yearling HYLEE'S HONEY DEE 07748 2 yrs. Sire — SQUIRE SKIMP 9631 Sire — JUSTIN DART 8496 Darn — DOLLY MAE 05939 Dam — GOLDEN HYLEE 07144 Seasons Greetings from LI?I I r' Jr11111111 Breeders of Registered Alorgan Horses and Collie Dogs Mr. and Mrs. Bob Belding, Owners R. R. 1 Cambria, Wisconsin Table of Contents Special Articles The MORGAN HORSE Magazine Colt Contest 6 tettem to O Be Joyful Wild Horse Chase 10 American River Riders 14 theEditot4 New England Morgan Horse Association Meeting 18 Harrisburg Horse Show 18 Toby, Pride of the Boston Police 19 Great Lakes Association Meeting 23 Thank You — See page 37 Hycrest Morgan Yarns 23 Dear Sir: New Bunswick Horse Show 25 Three cheers for the Morgan Horse Carlson Engagement Announced 25 Plains King and Wild Bill Elliott 38 Magazine, its October issue and the decision to make it a monthly! Now Regular Features we have twice as much to look 12 forward to. It will he more profit- The Vet Says Names and Pedigrees 13 able to advertise in the monthly issues, Breeze from the Great Lakes 16 for the horses and equipment will not Maine Morgan Horse Club 17 be sold by the time the ad comes out Morgan Pictorial 20 27 now. New England News and Notes Stable Hints 39 Please, for the sake of all the mare and stallion owners, can we have a stallion issue in March or April which is dedicated to the breeding of better Officers of the Mor gan Horse Club and better Morgans? In the spring a President MERLE D. EVANS breeder's fancy turns to the ideal Ohio Merchants Bank Building, Massillon, Ohio stallion to suit his favorite mare. Few Vice-President FREDERICK 0. DAVIS of us can spend the time and money Windsor, Vermont to drop all our spring seeding and Secretary FRANK B. HILLS planting to make a tour of the stud 90 Broad Street, New York 4, N. Y . farms in our area. But for his Treasurer WHITNEY STONE reason many mares are not bred, or are 90 Broad Street, New York 4, N. Y bred to a local stallion, or one that is advertised all the time, because the mare owners are unaware of the other animals that are available. The Morgan Horse Magazine Charge $5 or $10 for each owner who enters a photo. Print the picture Vol. XI December, 1951 No. 6 (all the same size and if possible, the A Bi-monthly same position and without tack), the The Official Publication of name and number of the horse and THE MORGAN HORSE CLUB, Incorporated that of both his sire and dam, his 90 Broad St., New York 4, N. Y. owner and fee. That's all! There should Publication Office: be no slogans or comments or lists of Leominster, Mass. winnings or get in this sort of listing. Publisher Otho F. Eusey If breeders want to send in additional for The Morgan Horse Club, Inc. ads that information should be in Editor Sumner Kean those ads. It would be best to place CONTRIBUTING EDITORS them as near as possible by State, area Dana Wingate Kelley Mabel Owen C. Fred Austin or type. This would serve as a quick Helen Brunk Greenwalt Russell Smith reference for mare owners wanting SUBSCRrPTION RATES either a nearby stallion or a certain type One Year S2.50 Two Years 54.00 of stallion. It would he a permanent record and make this particular issue very valuable as well as an excellent THE MORGAN HORSE MAGAZINE, published bi-monthly by THE cross section of the breeding of Mor- MORGAN HORSE CLUB, INC., 90 Broad St., New York, New York. by The Eusey Press, Leominster. Mass. Entered as second class gans in the U. S. I really think you Printed matter at post office, Leominster, Mass. would get a tremendous and immedi- ate response. This way mare owners Copyright 1951 by The Morgan Horse Magazine can look at their mares and compare His neigh is like the bidding of a monarch, them with a group of sires to deter- mine which best corrects whatever the and his countenance enforces homage. mare lacks. -- 4'449. o-1(est-uf Yours truly, Mary McCulloch Old Lyme, Conn. (Continued on page 12) OUR COVER The Editor's Comments Although New England has already had its first snowfall and riding is not now the sport it was a couple of months ago, it is an excellent time to sit by the fire and think about it. We don't mean riding in horse shows. We mean trail riding— riding not for exhibition purposes in best bib and tucker but riding for the fun of it. To the man or woman who says "I have no access to trails. I exercise my horse (s) in a nearby ring and the only chance I get to ride elsewhere is in a show,"—to that person these remarks are directed. Trail riding, if you've never tried it, is more enjoyment than anything we know. It is relaxation, scenery, wood and field, streams to ford, logs to jump, tricky bridges to navigate. In short it is the be-all and end-all for keeping a horse. In the west, well-fortified riding clubs have banded together and pushed through legislation which has provided state-created and Our cover, this month, naturally is maintained trails. These trails running up the west coast are things concerned with the Colt Contest, and of beauty beyond even the imagination of the easterner. In that because this Magazine is published in warm and beautiful country outdoor living hits the zenith and a New England it is also only natural group of riders and their pack animals may enjoy wonderful week- that we should show the presentation end trips or longer vacations. by Robert Lippitt Knight of a regis- - .Here, in the thickly-settled East, trail riding is more difficult. tered Morgan weanling to the Eastern . Save in Vermont and parts of New Hampshire and Maine there states winner. is little of it. However, Vermont, with its many backers, has really She is Miss June Wollenberg of achieved something in the sport and the riding visitor is sure of Unionville, Connecticut, a student at great fun in picturesque country. The 100-mile trail ride and its Connecticut State College where she attendant events makes Woodstock a mecca for the horseman annu- will major in Animal Husbandry. We ally. arranged to accompany her and her But, as in the west, clubs, banded together with a unity of parent to Randolph, Vermont for the purpose, can accomplish great things in other areas, the southern official presentation. New England states, for instance. Mr. Knight, not content merely to Back in the early days of the depression we remember donate a colt, allowed this eighteen- pleasant associations with executives of the Mass. Forest and Park year-old girl to make her selection. Assn. With its secretary, Harris Reynolds, we drove and walked After she had determined that she over a projected area which would provide a trail from the tip of wanted a filly. five of them were Cape Cod to the Berkshires. In every section local horsemen were brought out on the floor, and she contacted,—show people, hunt clubs and even the guy with a single chose a liver-colored, strip-faced young- horse who had penchant for ferreting out old roads. Topographical ster by Ethan Eldon, out of the proven maps were studied and "fineline" roads were traced even though brood mare, Triply. some were heavily brush grown. Then came the question of a name A federal relief agency, providing a living in those barren for registration purposes. Mr. Knight times resulted in assignment of a young engineer to the task and he informed her that all his horses carried marked with white and yellow painted spots the Cape-Berkshire the prefix, Lippitt, and such names as trail. Considerable publicity was given the project; there were area Lippitt Story Teller and Lippitt Win- committees and chairmen; hostelries were contacted and stabling ner were suggested. But June decided arranged. to go home and think it over, and to- The result? To our knowledge not a single rider eves made day she wrote us that because her the trip. winning story was entitled "0 Be Why did this fail? Why is the 20-year-old trail all but Joyful" and the nickname Obey was abandoned? Lack of interest among people who never gave it a clear to her, she had decided to call chance. the filly, Lippitt 0 Be Kean. You horse owners, breeders, and riders in the New England Which of course puffs us no end.
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