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STALLIONS NOTICE TO FARMERS. HE well -Jcnown CI HEATHER the WAIAREKA DISTRICT, caUiq the Homesteads of John Reid and ThJ Rainforth, Esqs. ; also, the PAPAK DISTRICT, calling at the Residency Alex. M'Master, Thae. Y. Dunoan, asj Schlnter, Esqs. Paddocks provided free of oharge tat Month at the Farms of the Owner at r\ cray and Clifton Falls.' Every care ti) bat no responsibility. Terms: L 5 per Mare, payable lit) raary, 1879. Groomage, 6s, payable on i HE IMPORTED CLYDESDa HORSE YOUNG BAN K'fiß \{ Will Stand at BURNBANK, Oamaru, f ot J} coming season.. W\ Terms—Ten Guineas each Mare, to^ys paid for before removal. Good paddti^ provided free of charge for four weeks j»ra that time 2s. 6d. per week will be charg t 3 All care taken, but no responsibility. • For Pedigree and particulars sea I JOHN DONALDSON, J$ Proprietor, BumbaalpJ TO TRAVEL SEASOiI IS THK PAPAKAIO, WAIAREKA, AND lAI • NUI DISTRICTS, If sufficient inducement offers, The fashionably - bred and very supa Thorough-bred Horse ' h E R T OB Eminently suited for getting Hunt Handsome Weight-carrying Hacks, i Horses suitable for the Indian Market PERTOBE is a beautiful dapple to, Stallion, standing 16 hands high, Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., YiaUrk, 1869. Got by Panic (imported); his ( Hester Grazebrook, by The Premier | ported), out of Miss Napier, by Delaprt ported); Miss Napier's dam, Mrs.- Rob by Wanderer (imported). £p* ■ • V,iek■s Stvdßooh, Vol. 11, p. 47.. Panic waif ported from England to Tasmania, ani J to the stud at 3 yrs. old. He was tnl and raced at 4, and again put to .the «] When he was 6 yrs. old, he was pnroh| at a high price and imported to Viofal where he had two more seasons' trail and racing. He proved himself the § English horse ever trained in Auitrl He ran remarkably well, and won <tv& races, carrying heavy weights ;, he was if speedy and staying, of a most docile § quiet temper, with a wonderful eehstitnti and legs like iron. Like his sire, tkat ■« class English racehorse Alarm, .?*ks | never sick, sorry, or lame," and retired & the turf without a blemish. At ths'io although from being in an aut-of-tan,, place, he has not been favored by first-class mares, he has got mere win'j! out of half-bred ones than any horse i»l<& toria, and for general purposes his atari much esteemed. * In the breeding of PERTOBB then |. '< combination of some excellent - blood, Buch as the that famous line through Defease. Q which comes to him an the aides •( V'M sire and dam. On his sire PaaVi i,|s| there is, as well as his good Defence Vtsd that of the game and stout Yemisen, powerful and speedy Melbourne, ani, n 'i,-j excellent of all, that of Paataleea. "! * ■ value of the Pantaloon blood is nndennl having furnished so many proofs, net il as to its being speedy and staying, kit i to its 'training on,' and being essMtialj| | ' running strain ;' for although sons «U 1 occasionally produce one or two ixi\i animals, few, if any, ean compels t > j Pantaloon as to numbers. _ A vary Brad ,J$ commendation of this strain of bl«o< i»,l|jr it mixes successfully with, and. others." Thus writes Oopperthwait*, i other good turf authorities agree witk 1 to the same effect. On the «d«'; the dam of Pertosk there is a 111; good blood coming in through Tk»_lj' mier, whose grandßire, Tombey, "*y Jerry, out of the Ardrossan ma» ft. dam of the mare Beeswing, oe\wti| not only as a first-class raoar, l { also as the maternal ancestress of Engla very best family of racehorses at the srsP time, viz., the Newminsters). The DeLj blood is also very good indeed. Dshd dam, Fortress, by Defence, was the i»A the Derby winner, Pyrrhus the Firßt. 19 Roberts, the great grand-dam of Pjebth was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's Mm good, he being by Wanderer, by Gekw by Mercury, by Eclipse. In Tasmanu| much is the Wanderer blood thougW| that they say " a bad one by Wandewf, never known," and if they can tra.oo ap~ gree to a Wanderer mare, th.ey oonßider quite sufficient. PERTOBE, by W W H wg Op-* g *V§ P-p _ a «- i. ' ; "Augur," in the Australasian, June li' 1878, says :—" I could fill the Austral*! with the doings of "Panic," and hi» A. cendants. As a Biro of good, sauna, * useful stock he has never had a* equdj the Southern hemisphere. His victory the Launceston Champion Race, mi ' style in which he carried lOst. into secC place in the Melbourne Cup, were porfoS ances of merit, and sufficient to satisfy i most exacting that- he was a racehorse «fi mean order. The soundness of hisatocklj become a proverb on the Australian T» and the ancient Strop who won a net' Launceston in February, is a living exafflftj Few horses have gone through such an onf as Melbourne, another son at '■.: present V forming at Queensland. The greatest of' steeplechasers is undoubtedly Lone Bt> and he is also a son of Panic. PobW Postman, Prodigious, and many other g* cross country horses, tod numerous to »* tion, are also descendants of. the sol '• Alarm." Terms: L 5 ss, payable Ist of Jano«! 1879. Groom's fee, ss, payable w service. ■ , Paddocks provided, 2s 6d per we« Every care taken, but no responsibility. For further particulars, apply to JOHN HENDERSON, Groom in charge; Of! A. PATERSON, Oamaru.

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Bibliographic details

Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 850, 6 January 1879, Page 4

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896

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 850, 6 January 1879, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 850, 6 January 1879, Page 4