SUBURBAN FARM SALE. 167 



$2,100. The Oregon bred pacer Chehalis, 2\0J t 1 / 2 , 

 changed owners at this sale for $2,200, and the Dexter 

 Prince mare Hijita for $3,700. The three-.year-old geld- 

 ing Rowellan proved the best racing prospect in the Cleve- 

 land sale, which was held May 21 to 25. James Golden 

 bid him off at $1,075, and after putting him in racing trim, 

 started him at Brighton Beach, where he won a heat in 

 2:15^4 and second money in the race that Carrie Bel 

 placed to her credit. At Readville, the following week, he 

 divided- third and fourth money with Hawthorne in the 

 race won by Nancy Hanks' colt, Admiral Dewey; while 

 at Hartford he defeated both Hawthorne and Carrie Bel 

 in 2:1654, 2:i6y 2 , 2:17, in the $5,000 Horse Review 

 Stake. Rowellan's gross winnings in the three races 

 amounted to $3,150. The only other high priced lots in 

 the Cleveland sale were Eula Mac, $2,700 ; Delma, $2,150 ; 

 Aylwin, $2,100; YVynema, $1,050; Pauline G., $1,975; 

 Boodler, $1,100; Rubber, $1,500; Lady Althea, $1,000, 

 and Dorothea S., $1,700. 



The sale, November 25 to December 4, was referred 

 to above in connection with the disposal of the Marcus 

 Daly stock. The other important consignment in it came 

 from the Suburban Farm, Glens Falls, N. Y. That estab- 

 lishment sold one hundred and twenty head for $92,585, 

 an average of $771.54, its best figures being obtained for 

 Directum, $12,100; Adbell, $10,000; Directum Spier, 

 $6,000; Major Delmar, $2,900, who proved one of the 

 best horses in training in 1902 ; Dainty Daffo, $2,525 ; the 

 yearling Ethel's Pride, by Directum-Ethelwyn, $2,500; 

 Copeland, $1,850; Miss McGregor, $1,650; Nellie A., 

 $1,550; the yearling Janey's Gem, by Directum-Janey T., 

 $1,300, and the eight-year-old Dictator mare, Tintoret, 

 $1,800. Riverside Farm, Berlin, Wis., sold the Futurity 

 winner Peter Stirling, 2:11^, for $9,200; his half broth- 



