1968-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1968 July Voice RS | Page 32

thus far, winning top amateur championship classes at Thomasville, N. C., Bassett, Va., High Point, N. C , and Dallas-Gastonia, N. C. SAM has also taken re­ serve wins at Rock Hill, S. C. and Hickory, N. C. Bob Cherry showed SAM as a two-year-old and as a three-year-old, placing in the money 34 out of 36 times in the show ring. The Longs bought SAM dur­ ing the 1967 Murray Farm Sale from Bob Cherry and showed him in four-year-old competition in North and South Carolina and Georgia last season, winning four blues and six reserves. SAVAGE SAM is a top-bred stallion by EASTER'S GO BOY out of a MERRY MAKER mare. The Longs have recently started working their four- year-old EBONY BIG MOMENT mare. This mare was Tennessee State Two-Year-Old Mare Class winner in Nashville. MIDNITE PERFECTION H., a beautiful solid chest­ nut two-year-old stallion by MIDNIGHT SUN and out of a SUN DUST mare, is being worked for the Longs by Sam Garwood, the very capable trainer and owner of Double 'O’ Farms in Lexington. N C. This colt is a perfect specimen and should be in competition soon. C. A. BOBO & SON STABLES We recently learned that the folks at the Bobo Sta­ bles in Shelbyville, Tennessee are busy selling horses as well as training them. Top news recently was the sale of GO BOY’S BLACK ANGEL, a truly outstand­ ing black mare that is as great as her name implies. This mare was recently purchased by Mr. M. R. Cor­ bin, Jr. of Houston, Texas for a price well into five figures. Charlie Bobo will continue to train and show her through the Celebration and after that Mrs. Ann Corbin will show her in Amateur and Ladies competi­ tion. Future plans call for the mare to be placed at Dorothy Duke’s Bayou Park Stables after the Baton Rouge Horse Show in the fall. The mare was previous­ ly owned by Mr. C. M. Waters, Jr. of Jackson, Miss. BILLY BRANTLEY STABLES Down in Theodore, Alabama, Billy Brantley has been busy for the past eight months building a string of horses at the Deep South Stables. He is operating on his own and has 23 horses in training at the present. Tops in his string is the ever-popular SETTING SUNS APOLLO, the 1963 World Champion Two-Year-Old and Class Champion in the Pony Division at the 1967 Cele­ bration with Lynn Doughty up. He has been shown six times and has won five blues this year. Billy says that he will be going strong by Celebration time. An­ other horse in the Doughty string is MYSTIC TIMES, a three-year-old sorrel stud that Tommy Doughty is showing. Tommy, a well-known athlete and sports en­ thusiast in Alabama, has "gotten the bug” and if he approaches the show ring with the same enthusiasm as he has other sports we better get ready for some tough going. This boy is a competitor. In open competition Billy has been showing SHAK­ ER'S HANDYMAN, a fine chestnut three-year-old stud owned by Slocum and Doughty. He started this colt late and is bringing him along slow but he should be ready for top competition later in the season. Billy has a two-year-old stud colt by MIDNIGHT SUN that has great prospects. His name is SUN’S INDEPEN­ DENCE and he. should be a good one for owners Jew­ 32 el Brantley and Tom Doughty. Also in the two-year- old ranks is a fine colt by BOMB’S BALLY HOO. He is owned by Vance Slocum and shows great promise. Short on aged horses, Billy has one good mare owned by John Waller name JADA’S JAMBOREE. She has been shown six times this year with good results Billy points out that he is in the process of buying some top stock and is aiming at next year when he hopes to build a string of horses that he can really go with. DAVID MASON STABLES One of the most popular young men in the business is David Mason of Murfreesboro, Tennessee. David made a place for himself when he produced SUPER SPORT as a two-year-old in 1966. Since then he has had good success with young horses and has had enough business to enable him to build a new stable. At present he is working fifteen horses, most of them young stock and he has several that he feels will surpass anything that he has shown before. The most talked-about horse in his stable at the present is a black stud named SCAT MAN’S IMAGE. He is owned by McFarland, Maples and Jones, all of Murfreesboro, and has all the potential that a young horse is entitled to. He is big and has a very relaxed way of going. David has been working him slowly with no intention of showing him as a two-year-old. We saw this horse work and he adjusts very well to any changes that are made in boots and his attitude is very good. Don’t be surprised if David Mason comes out next year on a top three-year-old. Maxine Johnson of Kansas City has a sorrel two- year-old in training by RODGER’S GO BOY. He is a sorrel stud colt that made his first show at Woodbury. Also, Fred Jones, Dr. Carl Adams and Carolyn Lane have a fine MIDNIGHT SUN filly that is doing very well. She has not been shown but should be ready shortly. The Mason Stables also boast of a top colt by MERRY GO BOY that is making fine progress. This is a black filly owned by Ray Carter of Lynchburg, Virginia and all reports are that she has the makings of a fine show mare. David appears to have a lot of customers who ap­ preciate patience and are not in a hurry with young stock. We believe we will hear a lot about their horses later on. M c F arland farms We recently made a trip to the McFarland Farms in Murfreesboro, Tennessee and were sorry to hear of the death of SUN’S BLACK MAGIC LM, one of the top stallions standing at the James Rowland Stables on the farm. Mr. McFarland stated that it was not yet determined what the cause of death was but that he died quite unexpectedly. BLACK MAGIC was a well- known and popular stud and had produced some truly outstanding colts that had made the top in the show­ ring. He was owned by Mr. Jim Burns and Mr. H. C. Bailey. While there we inquired about the breeding success of their other two stallions and learned that SCAT MAN had an excellent year, with well over a hundred mares to his courtand thatSHADOW’S REFLECTION, (Continued on page 40) Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse