SYNAGOGUE IN INDIA
Form Not Impressive ■ Not much has been heard of Synagogue since he went to India, but a recent cable received in Australia shows that he was third in a w.f.a. event at Bombay last montb. The winner was the AnstraliaD horse Cotys, a four-year-old son of Thracian and Charybdis. The cable was sent to the Adelaide sportsman Mr Theo Gove by his brother, Captain R. V. Gove, stating that Cotys had won the Hughes Memorial Plate, a w.f.a. event decided over li miles. The Plate carries a stake of 15,000 rupees. Cotys scored nicely from Rosecrag and Synagogue, and he was xidden by J.. Munro, who has had an excellent season in India. Cotys was a useful horse in Melbourne prior to his export to India. On the same day as Cotys was successful, the New Zealand-bred Devastate (Philamore — Rapina) , also bought by the Gove brothers and sent to India, won a mile and a quarter handicap. He was ridden by the English jockey Harding, and won in attractive style.
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Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 47, 11 March 1937, Page 8
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173SYNAGOGUE IN INDIA Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 47, 11 March 1937, Page 8
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