STALLIONS NOTICE TO FARMERS. JHE well - known Clydesdale * • HEATHER JOCK, the WAIAREKA DISTRICT, 'callin the Homesteads of John Reid and Th Rainforth, Esqs. ; also, the PAPar?"" DISTRICT, calling at the Resident Schlutcr, Esqß. Paddocks provided free of charge fo r Month at the Farms of the Owner at cray and Clifton Falls. Every care tat 1, but no responsibility.. Terms: L 5 per Mare, payable Ist pi ruary, 1879. Groomage, ss, payable ob« service. t$ lto THE IMPORTED CLYDESDau .HORSE 4l < YOUNG BANKER Will Stand at BURNBANK, Oankra,f otl , coming season. " *• Terms—Ten Guineas each {, i paid for before removal. Good paddoA provided free of charge for four weeks • jh? that time 2s. 6d. per week will be chatiwi All care taken, but no responsibility. For Pedigree and particulars see Card, JOHN DONALDSON, Proprietor, BurnW TO TRAVEL NUI DISTRICTS, If sufficient inducement offers, The fashionably-bred and very 8 Thorough-bred Horse E R T\ 0 B Eminently suited for getting HutU Handsome Weight-carrying Hacks, a Horses suitable for the Indian Market. PERTOBE is a beautiful dappla W Stallion, standing 16 hands high, Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., Victoriil 1569. Got by Panic (imported); his 4 Hester Grazebrook, by The PremietpJ ported), out of Miss Napier, by Delaprtji, ported); Miss Napier's dam, Mrs. RoW by Wanderer (imported). See Vktofo Stud Book, Vol. 11., p. ft. Panic \raijj ported from England to Tasmania, and * to the stud at 3 yrs. old. He was traijj and raced at 4, and again put to tho jty When he was 6 yrs. old, he was purckkij at a high price and imported to VictoS where he had two more seasons' traii and racing. He proved himßelf th«lS English horse ever trained iu Anfi, He ran remarkably well, and won fivtoj races, carrying heavy weights; ho wasloj speedy and. staying, of a quiet temper, with a wonderful constitute and legs like iron. Like his sire, that it class English racehorse Alarm, ''he t| never sick, sorry, or lame," and retiredfn the turf without a blemish. At the stf although from being in an out-of-thfcw place, he has not been favored by nuri first-class mares, he has got moro wind out of half-bred ones than »ay horse iil toria, and for general purposes his aback! much esteemed. In the breeding of PERTOBE there iij combination £of some excellent strains j blood, such as the Waxy-Whalebone, j that famous line through Defence, n which conies to him on the sides of k sire and dam. On his sire Panic's ol there is, as well as his good Defence Wool that of the game and stout Venison, II powerful and speedy Melbourne, and, dm excellent of all, that of Pantaloon. "B value of the Pantaloon blood is undeniatl having furnished so many proofs, not ill as to its being speedy and staying, but il to its 'training on,' and being essentially ' running strain ;' for although some otkt occasionally produce one or two first-civ animals, few, if any, can compote H Pantaloon as to numbers. A very grandl commendation of this strain of blood is, li it mixes successfully with, and improves,! others." Thus writes Copperthwaite, 11 other good turf authorities agree with li to the same effect. On the side the dam of Pertobb there is a lot good blood coming in through The ft mier, whose grandsire, Tomboy, was 1 Jerry, out of the Ardrossan mare (II dam of the mare Beeswing, celebnt not only as a first-class racer, I also as the maternal ancestress of Enjjani very best family of racehorses at the pres time, viz., the Newminsters). The Del*; blood is also very good indeed. Dety» dam, Fortress, by Defence, was the dan the Derby winner, Pyrrhus the First, 11 Roberts, the great grand-dam of Paw was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's bid good, he being by Wanderer, by Goham by Mercury, by Eclipse. In Tasmania, much is the Wanderer blood thought that they say "a bad one by Wanderer I never known," and if they can trace a W gree to a Wanderer mare, they consider tl quite sufficient. PERTOBE, by "Augur," in the Australasian, June) 1878, says :—" I could fill the Austrill with the doings of "Panic," and his cendants. As a sire of good, sound, ~„„f,.l „<- I. u» l.„„ „„,,„.. U„A on nnnl the Southern hemisphere. His viotoij bhe Launosston Champion Race, and i style in which he carried 10st. into s* place in the Melbourne Cup, were pen l " ances of merit, aud sulficieut to satisfy' most exacting that he was a mean order. The soundness of his sW become a proverb on tho Australian. £ xnd the ancient Strop who won <k P" Launceston in February, is a living t#n few horses have gone through such anorj is Melbourne, another son at present v forming at Queensland. The. greatest * .steeplechasers is undoubtedly Lone jjj md he is also a son of Panic. P o3 * Postman, Prodigious, and many other P jross country horses, too numerous to don, are also descendants of the BWI Harm." . -j Terms: L 5 53, payable Ist of J*" . 1879. Groom's fee, ss, payabio service. Paddocks provided, 2s 6d per J Hvery care taken, but no responsibility' For further particulars, apply t° JOHN HENDERSON, Groom in charge," A. PATERSON, Oamaru.
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Bibliographic details
Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 876, 5 February 1879, Page 4
Word Count
878Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 876, 5 February 1879, Page 4
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