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- STALLIONS ;t T O TRAVEL :-&x SEASON Nrl this PAPAKAIO, WAIAR. KA, AN!) K.££j NUI DISTRICTS, If sufficient inducement offers, Tlie -fashionably - bred and v-- ry' superim Thorough-i.red Horse ) "R R T O B 5 Eminently suite.l for getting HunteiV Handsome Weig it-carrying Hacks, an( J Horses suitable tor the Indian Market 3 ) PERTH P>F. is a beautiful dapple browj Ptallion, st.uiding 16 hands high," Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., Victoria [5 iS6 1. God by Panic (imported) ; his dam Hester <ll'azebronk, l>y The Premier ( ttr . ported), out of Miss Napier, by Delate ported); Miss Napier's .dam,. Mrs. Kojberti by Wanderer (imported). See I'icloriqh Stud Booh. Vr>l. 11, p Jp[. Panic w.n ported l'rom England to Tasmania, and p ß i to the stud at 3 j-t ;. old. He was traimd ami raced at 4. and again put to the stud. When he was 6 yrs old, he was purchased at a high price and imported to Victoria where he had two. more seasons' trainim and racing. He proved himself -the be 6; fOnglish horse ever trained in Austraii He ran remarkably well, and won several races, carrying heavy weights ; he was both spfedy and staving, of a most docile and quiet temper, wirh a wonderful constitution and legs like iron. Like his sire, that firstc!a.*s Knglis > racehorse Alarm, "h j . never sick, sorrv, or lame," and retbed from the tar-' without a blemish. At. the stud, although from being in an out-of-the-way place, he has not been favorel by many i'li'it class mares, ho has got more winners •nit of half-bred ones than any horse in Yi cm-ia. and for purposes his stock 13 much esteemed. 111 tii:; ..leeiiing <>f PKRTOBE there is a hinati-'ii of s"ine excellent strains of bio.Hi, such as the Waxy-Whalebone, •liar, famous line through D fence, which comes to him on the sides of !io;h sire and dam. On his fire Panic's there is, as well as his good Defence blood, that of the game and stout Venison, the • ■owerful a :d speedy Melbourne, and, most excellent of *ll, that of Pmtaloon. "The value of the Pantaloon blood is undeniable, liaving furnished so many proofs, not alone as to its being speedy and staying, but also to its 'training un,' and being essentially a ' running strain for although some others occasionally produce one or two first-class animals, few, if any, can compete with Pantaloon a« to numbers. A very grand recommendation of this strain'of blood is, that it mixes success uliy v.i hj, and in proves, all others." Thus wr tes I'!oppertliwaits, and other good turf authorities agree With him to the same eff'et. < >ll the sii] the dam of Pertobe the'-e is a lot of good blood coniia j in tlir >ugh The Premier, whose graiulsire. Tombpy, was by Jerry, out... of the Ardrossaii mar > (tfc'. dam of :h 5 mare Bee-, wing, celebrated uot only as . a first-class racer, bat also as thn mate-'fi-l ancestress of England very best family of. raeeli uses at the I time, viz., ;he Newmui ters). Tiie Del&fre' 1 1)1 :od i ;: also vcy good indeed Dslaprft dam, Fortress, by l.'efnoe, was the liamoi the Derby winner, Pyrriius the First. Mrs. Uobvrs,'lie g-eit sirand-d.-un or I'ekiobb, whs l.y Wanderer, and Wanderer's bio 4is good. iie being by Wanderer, by Uokwaa, hy Mercury, by Kclipse. In Tasmania, a innoh is the Wanderer blood thought of, that- they -ay "a bad mie by Wanderer was never known," and if they call trace a pedi-

:.-ree to a Wanderer ma e, they consider that quite sufficient. PEMT- 'BE, hy hj? 3 9P-< 111 E "IHl 3-r 5-1 i* ? c :i = 9, l-r £ r? p r i - 5 - 1,5 § r- z 2, <3? = .=? 2 = 9 i'l I , ; •;• ' " Augur," in the Australasian, Jane 15th, 1373, Sity.-s :"I Ci-ull fill the Australasian with the (Illinois «*f "-Panic,"'anil his dfß- - As a sira of g'jodL sound, aud a-elul stock he his r.evar' had an equal in the Southern b'-niisjjlurro. His victory in t .>e Lauuceiion <.'iiam;iioji Race, and ti)e -tyle'in which he carried lOst. into secoud [>lac-i in the Melbourne Clip, v,'ere performi:io?s of merit, aud iiiiScieiit to satisfy the most exaetmg that he was a racehorse of no nic:iii order. The soundness of hia-tock has jucoms a proverb on the Australian Turf, ind the ancient .Strop who \v»n- a race at Lamiceston in February, is a living'example. Few hor.-ses have gone through such an ordeal is Melbourne, another son at present uer'ormiiig at Q leensiaud. The greaie-st of ail decrees is undoubtedly Lone Hand, ind, he is also a. son of 'Panic, f'ostbny, ?ostrnan, Prodigious, and many other good :ross country Horses,"'too numerous to menion, are also descendants of the*son of ilarm." , -** terms: Jjo-Ss, payable Ist .'.of y 'January, 1879. Groom's fee, ss, payable first service.Paddocks provided, 2s 6d per. wee 1 -" 2very care tuken, buti no-responsibility, For further particulars, arvply to : - JOHN Mfiv.DKRSON, " Groom in charge ; or to A. PATERSON, Oamara.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OAM18780905.2.16.7

Bibliographic details

Oamaru Mail, Volume III, Issue 750, 5 September 1878, Page 4

Word Count
829

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume III, Issue 750, 5 September 1878, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume III, Issue 750, 5 September 1878, Page 4

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