EVELYN LOCANDA
RACING MARE VISITING FRANK WORTHY THE BLOOD THAT TELLS Evelyn Locanda is having a spell from the training track and is visiting Frank Worthy at the Mardelia stud farm. Later on, W. Nightingale will take her in hand again for spring and summer engagements. Evelyn' Locanda lias proved herself a line racing proposition during the last two seasons, having won over all distances and collected £1,500 in stakes. Sli© should prove an excellent brood mare being bred on high-class lines. Her sire, Brent Locanda, is a descendant of Allerton, and on the maternal side possess the Geo. Wilke’s strain. Evelyn, dam of Evelyn Locanda, was
own sister *to those fine performers Emmeline and Emilius, being by Rothschild, a mighty son of Childe Harold, who was a grandson of Hambletonian 10, from Imperialism. The latter was got by Prince Imperial, a son of Hambletonian Bell Boy, which gives Evelyn Locanda a double strain of this wonderful trotting blood. In mating his mare with Frank Worthy, Mr. E. H. Cucksey is breeding to a great blood line, as the Mardel la sire is a son of Guy Axworthy, who has produced a good quota of “two-minute” trotters. The Auckland enthusiast, who is one of the best sportsmen in the game, deserves to meet with success, and his many friends hope to see the union between Frank Worthy and Evelyn Locanda productive of a future classic and big handicap winner. ANSWER TO CORRESPONDENT Totalisator, Epsom.—-Part 37, Rule 420 reads: “In the event of dividends being paid on the first and second horses, dividends shall be paid in the proportion of 75 per centum on the first horse and 25 per centum on the second horse.” Rule 433: “In the case of a deaclheat, the money available for dividend shall be divided into equal parts, and each part shall be treated as a separate total and separate dividends shall be paid according to the number of investors on each horse. In the case in question 12 h per centum was the available proportion, consequently had the horse won the proportion would have been 75 per centum or six times the amount paid for the dead-heat for second.” B, The correct amount would be £29 11s.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1073, 10 September 1930, Page 13
Word Count
373EVELYN LOCANDA Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1073, 10 September 1930, Page 13
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