164 MEMOIR. 



$2,361.33. At the first sale, January 30 to February 1, 

 one hundred brood mares sold for $200,430, seven stal- 

 lions for $84,100, eleven three-year-olds for $37,750, 

 sixty-six two-year-olds for $78,300, and a yearling filly 

 by Persimmons for $6,100. W. C. Whitney paid $60,000 

 for Hamburg, while his stable companion, Tammany, sold 

 for $4,000; imp. Ogden, $4,200, and imp. Isidor, $6,000. 

 Of the brood mares, imp. Ayrshire Rose sold for $3,800 ; 

 imp. Berriedale, $4,000 ; imp. Boise, $4,000 ; imp. Cocker- 

 nony, $6,500 ; imp. Dartaway, $4,600 ; imp. Drusilla, 

 $3,100; imp. Goutte d'Or, $4,500; imp. Gwendolyn, 

 $4,000; imp. Mrs. Delancy, $8,200; Pastorella, $10,000; 

 imp. Rose of Hampton, $8,000; Sadie, $4,200; imp. Sis- 

 trum, $4,000; Starlight, $3,000; imp. St. Eudora, $5,000; 

 imp. St. Mildred, $5,600, and imp. The Task, $4,600. 

 Frankfort, a three-year-old brother to Hamburg, sold for 

 $10,100; Emporium, a three-year-old colt by The Pepper, 

 out of Cockernony, for $8,000; Choate, a two-year-old 

 colt by Meddler, for $9,000, and imp. Cathaire Mor, a 

 two-year-old colt by Kendal, for $6,500. The fifty-five 

 Daly yearlings were sold May 24 for $51,525, the highest 

 priced one in the lot being Moondyne, a colt by Hamburg- 

 Mint Cake. He sold for $10,000. In this consignment 

 twenty-seven fillies sold for $22,475, an d twenty-eight 

 colts for $29,050. The third sale of Daly's thoroughbreds 

 was held October 1, the forty-one head catalogued being 

 from his English breeding establishment. They brought 

 $205,100, an average of $5,002.39. At this sale J. R. 

 Keene paid $18,500 for the twelve-year-old mare imp. 

 Field Azure, by Bend 'Or, and August Belmont gave 

 $13,500 for a weanling colt out of her by St. Simon. J. R. 

 Keene also paid $11,000 for Lady Reel, the dam of Ham- 

 burg, her yearling filly by St. Simon going to W. C. Whit- 



