the day is long and a gentleman of the old school, he is be- 

 loved by all who have the honor of his acquaintance. 



W. F. Schulte, president of the great Louisville Jockey 

 Club, is one of the rising young turfmen of the country. 

 He has owned several good strings of horses and has raced 

 from one ocean to the other with marked success. The 

 most of the horses in his string at the present time are year- 

 lings and have done nothing, but they are all very promis- 

 ing and he may have some stake winners in the lot. It is 

 hoped that he has, for if there is any man who deserves to 

 meet with success it is Mr. Schulte. In his own town he is 

 very popular, and the people he has met in other cities all 

 over the country are always very much impressed with 

 him. 



Barney Schreiber is one of the best-known turfmen in 

 the great State of Missouri, and there is probably no man 

 who has done more for the racing interests of the State. 



His splendid breeding establishment, known as " Wood- 

 lands," is located thirteen miles from the city of St. Louis, 

 in St. Louis County, between Bridgeton and Florissant. It 

 is complete in every particular, and Col. Schreiber has 

 spared no expense to make it an equine paradise. The 

 stables have every convenience and they are palatial in 

 their appointments. 



At present Col. Schreiber has four great stallions in 

 his stalls and their gets have already distinguished them. 

 At the head of the stud stands imported Sain, who got Otis, 

 a prominent candidate for all the great stakes of the coun- 

 try ; fleet-footed Corrigan and a host of other grand winners. 

 Then there is Foul Shot, who got many good ones ; Bal- 

 gowan, a high-class horse himself, and a stallion of much 

 promise, and Bannockburn, one of whose sons was the two- 

 year-old sensation of the early 1906 in California. 



When the now famous " Woodlands " was started Col. 

 Schreiber collected the best mares that money could secure. 

 This was away back in 1895, and since that time he has 

 clustered about him some of the finest strains that England 

 and Australia could afford. Sain brings with his get, the 

 strain of St. Simon and Foul Shot, the blood of the mighty 

 Musket. This is the blood that is being felt in turf circles 



