1962-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1962 July Voice | Page 25
23
Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse
Business Week
(Continued from Page 22)
tastes. Among ponies, the Welsh anti
cross-bred Arabian, which can jump
and are taller than the shetlands, are
favored.
The Arabian horse is enjoying the
fastest popularity growth in the pleas
ure riding field.
The price for an Arabian horse
runs anywhere from S750 to 58,000.
HORSE
Magazines
Per
AMERICAN SADDLE HORSE
Year
National Horseman, monthly
..................... S7.00
Saddle & Bridle, monthly, except Jan.
. 7.00
Horse World, Show Horse Digest,
monthly, except Jan. ..................................... 6.00
The Horseman’s Ad-Visor, mo.,
except Jan.
4.00
PONIES
American Shetland Pony Journal
monthly, except Jan........................................ 4.00
THOROUGHBREDS
The Chronicle of the Horse, weekly,
the Thoroughbred in sport
.................... 9.00
Blood Horse, weekly, racing and breeding . . 8.00
Thoroughbred Record, weekly ....................... 7.50
Turf & Sport Digest, monthly,
racing stories, etc......................................... 5.00
Rocky Mountain Thoroughbred &
Quarter Horse, 10 Issues ................................4.00
Canadian Horse, Thoroughbreds, monthly .. 4.00
Thoroughbred of Calif, monthly ................... 4.00
BREEDS
Arabian Horse News, 10 issues ................... 3.00
Morgan Horse, monthly, except Jan. .......... 3.50
Palomino Horses, monthly ........................... 3.00
Quarter Horse Journal, monthly ....................... 4.00
international Quarter Horse
Tally Book, quarterly ................................... 2.00
Quarter Horse Digest, Monthly—
digest size ................................................... 3.00
Pinto Horse Nev/s, bi-monthly ................... 2.25
(Harness) Horseman & Fair World,
weekly .............................................................. 9.00
Voice of the Tenn. Walking Horse, monthly,
devoted exclusively to the breed ...........4.00
WESTERN
Western Horseman, monthly ........................... 4.00
Horse Lover, bi-monthly, 10 issues
Western—All Breeds—Plenty on
Quarter Horses .................................................. 3.00
Hoofs & Horns, monthly rodeos ..................... 5.00
The Ranchman, monthly, Cattle & Horses . 2.00
Texas Horseman, mo., magazine of
western riding
....................................... 3.00
Quarter Racing Record, mo............................ 3.50
IRA, Rodeo News, mo........................................ 3.00
Micnigan Horseman News, mo., except January,
all breeds ...................................................... 2.50
The Horsetrader, m., national classified ads 2.00
Horse Illustrated, monthly ............................... 4.00
Modern Horseman, monthly,
for Midwest .................................................... 3.00
Piggin String, news particularly West Coast,
monthly ...............................................................3.00
QHB Magazine & Quarter Horse
Bulletin, information and articles ........... 3.00
Rodeo, Sports News, twice monthly ............. 4.00
Saddle-ite, bi-mo.................................................. 2.00
Rush in your order today.
Order as many magazines as you wish, with only
one check or money order payable to Ken Klmbel.
Then mail your order and remittance to
KEN KIMBEL, Dept. V
Plant City, Fla.
If you go for brood stock to r aise your
own, however, you’ll pay 52,500 and
up for a good mare and 55,000 and
up for a proven stallion, according to
Mrs. Garvin Tankersley, owner of Al-
Marah Arabian Horse Farm near
Washington.
BUSINESS GROWING. Compan
ion to the spurt in riding popularity
is the mushrooming business of rid
ing academies, suppliers, and horse
shows. Miller Harness Co., Ind. of
New York, a traditional old-line sup
plier to the horsey set, blossomed
forth this year with a record 137-page
catalogue running the gamut from
formal riding attire to a $375 wicker
pony governess cart. Many suburban
shopping centers are including tack
and tog shops as a part of their one-
stop shopping theme.
Most of the established riding
schools are booked up from six
months to a year in advance, with new
schools and additional instructors
rapidly pressed into service.
Horse shows, where both riders and
horses can demonstrate their skills,
are increasing rapidly. Some 8,500
shows are members of the American
Horse Show Assn. But, for every mem
ber show, the association estimates
there are five nonmember ones each
year.
(Reprinted from the June 9, 1962 issue of
Business Week by special permission. Copy
right (c) 1962 by the McGraw-Hill Publish
ing Company, Inc.)
M c K enzie
The AMERICAN
WALKING HORSE
ASSOCIATION
Invites You To
JOIN
The National Association of Walk
ing Horse Enthusiasts Who Conduct
the Annual School and Disseminate
Information of Interest to Walking
Horse Lovers everywhere.
WRITE
ALAN STEVENSON, President
Box 24, Utica, N. Y.
stables
Peterstown, West Virginia
WALKING HORSES FOR ALL AGES
SUITABLE FOR AMATEURS
READY TO SHOW
VISITORS WELCOME
J.
M.
and DAVID McKENZIE, Owners
Phone PLS 3-4303