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BTAJJJONB NOTICE TO.FAEMEBS. THE well .'"known Clydegdal» , • HE A T-H E R JO cT The property of Andrew Chrystal wii, the WAIAREKA DISTRICT, ' the Homesteads of John Roid andTt Rainforth, Esqq. ; also, the PAPA DISTRICT, calling at tho Alex. M'Master, Thaa. Y. Duncan 1 Schluter, Esqa. Paddocks provided free of charge fJ Month at the Farms of the Owner at J eray and Clifton Falls. Every carat but no responsibility. . Terms : L 5 per Mare, payable \$ ruary, 1879. Groomage, sa, payable o» service. ' THE IMPORTED CLYDESn HORSE YOUNG BANKER Will Stand at BTJRNBANK, Oamarni coming season. Terms—Ten GiijflfjKe&ch Mare, l paid for before fIRPaL Good provided free of charge for four week' that time 2s. 6d. per week will be ch All care taken, but no responsibility For Pedigree and particulars soo Cm) ■ JOHN DONALDSON, Proprietor, Bura l^! TO TEAVEI IN THK PAPAKAIO, WAIAREKA, AND Kli NUI DISTRICTS, ™ If sufficient inducement offers The fashionably-bred and very |mj Thorough-bred Horse 1 PE R T O B Eminently suited for getting Hub Handsome Weight-carrying Hacks. Horses suitable for the Indian Market PERTOBE is a.beautiful dapple \ Stallion, standing 16 hands high, Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., Victor! 1869." Got by Panic (imported); hisi Hester Grazebrook, by The Promio ported), out of Miss Napier, by Delap« ported); Miss Napier's dam, Mrs. sd\ by Wanderer (imported). See JTftt Stud Book, Vol. 11. , p. 47. Panio tin ported from England to Tasmania, &nj to the stud at 3 yrs. old. Ho was t, and raced at 4, and again pu* to the When he was 6 yrs. old, ho was pure! at a high price and imported to Vie where he had two more Beasons' tri and racing. He. proved himself thi English horse ever trained in Atni He ran remarkably well, and won it races, carrying heavy weights ; he y/n speedy and staying, of a most docili quiet temper, with a wonderful constife and legs like iron. Liko his sire, that class English racehorse Alarm, '% never sick, Borry, or lame," and retired the turf without a blemish. At the although from being in ' an out-of-th place, he has not been favored by i first-class mares, he has got moron out of half-bred ones than any horse ii toria, and for general purposes his eto much esteemed. In the breeding of PERTOBE then combination of some excellent strait blood, such as. the Waxy-Whaleboa that .famous lino through Defence, which comes to him on the sides of sire and dam. On his sire Panic 1 ! there is, as well as hi 3 good Defence I that of the game and stout Venison, powerful and speedy Melbourno, and,! excellent of all, that of Pantaloon. ' value of the Pantalosn blood is undeii having furnished so many proofs, not i as to its being speedy and staying, bill to its 'training on,' and being esscntiil ' running strain ;' for although some $ occasionally produce one or two firrt animals, few, if any, can compete Pantaloon as to numbers. A verxgw commendation of this strain of hVf W it mixes successfully with, au&Yr ;j>\r others." Thus writes Copperthw' other good turf authorities agree wit to the same effect. On the A tho dam of Pektobe there u > good blood coming in through Tit inier, whose grandsire, Tomboy, m Jerry, out of the Ardrossan mart dam of the • mare Beeswing, cold not only as a first-class racer, also as the maternal ancestress of Enj very best family of racehorses at thep time, viz., the Newminsters). The D blood is also very good indeed. Be dam, Fortress, by Defence, was tho i the Derby winner, Pyrrhus the First Roberts, the great grand-dam ofPs was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's b good, he being by Wanderer, by Gel by Mercury, by Eclipse. In Tasmst much is the Wanderer blood thoiijj that they say " a bad one by Wanden never known," and if they can tracoi gree to a Wanderer mare, they coneide quite sufficient. PERTOBE, by "Augur," in the Australasian, J»» 18/S, says :—" I Qould fill the Anatn with the doings of "Panic," and X ceudants. Asi Si sire of good, earn useful sto&k ho has never had an 4 the Scv-tkem hemisphere. His viw the Launceston Champion Race, *■] style in which he carried lOst. intoj place in the Melbourne Cup, \v*w K auces of merit, and sufficient to saw! most exacting that he was a mean order. The soundness of his;* 11 beoome a proverb on the Austral!'' and the ancient. Strop who, won'if Launceston in February, ia a living* Few horses have gone through such i* as Melbourne, another son at presS forming at Queensland. The great** steeplechasers is undoubtedly Loo* and he is also a son of Panic. t ' Postman, Prodigious, and many ott* cross country horses, too numerous * tion, are also descendants of tk' Alarm.'"' . Terms : L 5 ss, payable Ist of «j 1879. Groom's fee, ss, pay» w ' service. r Paddocks provided, 2s 6d Every care taken, but no responsit" 1 " For further particulars, apply *° JOHN HENDERSON,, Groom in chargei. A. PATERSON.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OAM18790122.2.19.7

Bibliographic details

Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 864, 22 January 1879, Page 4

Word Count
840

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 864, 22 January 1879, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 864, 22 January 1879, Page 4

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