1968-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1968 April Voice RS | Page 4

COVER STORY SUN GLO’S DIAMOND B. COMES UP TO ALL EXPECTATIONS SUN GLQ’S DIAMOND B. MOSE OPPENHEtMER, UP It was in the spring of 1966 that a rangy sorrel three-year-old stud was run through the Murray Farm Sale. His owner, Mr. Clyde Roberson of Clarksville, Tennessee, had always thought he would make a fine show horse and his trainer, Neil Clark, had started him slowly and carefully with the knowl­ edge that he was headed for the sale. Mr. Roberson had bred a fine old MERRY BOY mare to MID­ NIGHT SUN GLO 0, a black stallion owned at the time by Elmore Brock of Sparta, Tennessee (he is now standing at Stallion Stables in Shelbyville, Tennessee) and the result of the cross was this sorrel stud which he named SUN GLO’S DIAMOND B.; a diamond in the rough, or so he thought. 6 6 * GLO S DIAMOND B. has measure P 0 all expectations, as he has turned out to be op show horse. He is now a five-year-old and . ^ env*a^e showring record of ten shows nine blues and one red to his credit. When he that M^1 °Ug:^ Sa*e aS a three~year_old’ about all k 0Se OPPenheimer, a professional trainer from a aw °n> Kentucky, could see in him was natural hims ^ifanC* S*ZG’ ^ose *s a man of some stature som t * S^and*n^ afi°ut six-foot-two and weighing jnci*e J° hundred Pounds plus, so naturally he is the nGn S6aiC^ ^or houses with some size to a Wn/- Frank McD°nald of New Castle, Indium, ing Horse enthusiast of many years, also Voice of the Tennessee Walking He