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Birmingham Daily Post

Sporting Intelligence

... Messrs. William Field and David Smith, who have never left him, night or day, since the accident. His medical attendants speak confidently of his being well enough to return home in a few days, and to resume his professional duties on the Derby Day.-Froee ...

Sporting Intelligence

... above all, let him learn ' that offences once condoned no longer exist exdept in the pates of babbling fools and marplots.' I speak in the words of the wise, but they appear to me so perfectly in point on the present occasion that I cannot resist the aphorism ...

Sporting Notes

... influence resorted to. The Yankee farmer, for he is a young agricul- turist, has met with many rivals here recently; and all speak with the same confidence. To our knowledge, there is a Yorkshireman, a tenant of Lord Zetland's, who exer- cises the same power ...

Sporting Intelligence

... G~rowsesnor to give -enella 141b, to Jdpo; after her Newmarket running 101b , to Prolou 8b to Greta 10Jbh This sort of work speaks for itese e tha other handicaps are pernsed, the same disc~rsE b will be found in the Shrewsbury Handicap, wherein Recb receives ...

Sporting Notes

... in stein Cromwells day. These antient walls anodly 8srmn tell, Through rolling years'still faithfu'l to their trust, They speak of life, smooth as a marriage bell, And happy hearts now monld ring into dust. Here as I muse upon the stately pile And fine ...

Sporting Intelligence

... And in no one point has this worship of intellect been overdone, however strong the orations of Van Barei and the other tall speak- ers who garnished the Morphy Festivals 'on the leading occasiofls. It is something for Amerioa to be able to say with truth ...

Sporting

... Gladiator out of I ?? e NUit, v hadthe glory of being the winner. so i no very distinguished place in the . W : was, so to speak, totally unknown, i I r b i''b any race. It was besides reported !I:. as' , ?? condition, or had broken down. ?? , -o ': ...

Sporting Notes

... actually never passed the post. Of course ill-natured remarks were nmade, and, to all appearances, people had reason for speaking out, and it really seems as if they were all for Ignoramus, whose noble owner, with Lord Zetland, came expressly to see hbn ...

Sporting Notes

... is still lingering; the second Eleanor is coin- pletely wasted away. 'l'mc sales of blood stock continue; but generally speaking the prices elicited are bad. Lord Wilton's horses sold very so-so on Monday, at Tattersall's, Peeping aiom fetching but 52 ...

Sporting Notes

... northiert itoor, is very firtli in the itlarheb; alid Jouli Scott littself, ;C kilo, haslao a grefat faticy for iter. Gitrally speaking, ttowog, weo dislike mares for our great three-year-old raoes since te Duchess's year, mllore thabs forty yealrs agoise, ...

Sporting

... brutal; if they are, the fact can be ac- counted for by the old proverb, Give a dog an ill name, &c. Consider a man a brute, speak of him as a brute, treat him as a brute, and he will soon become a brute. Jackson was not a brute, Gully was not a brute, Cribb ...

Sporting Notes

... Lough Bawn and Knight of the Shire are in force for it, whilst Tom Moody looks a little under the weather. A knowing turfite, speaking of the latter, remarked to us at Notting- ham, Get all you can out of him. There were some merry doings in Sherwood on ...