STALLIONS ""NOTICE to farmers. THE well-known Clydesdale Enti« HEATHER JOCK, the; WAIAREKA DISTRICT, 'calline »f Rainforth, Eaqs. ; also, the PAPAKAin TYTfiTRTnT nollincr of. tJiA ■Rom-J-ZTT^y Alex. M'Master, Thaa. T. Dtmoan, and B Schluter, Eaqs. -. Paddocks provided'free of charge for one Month at the Farms of the Owner at Foots, cray and Clifton Falls. Every care taken" but no responsibility. ' Terms: L 5 per Mare, payable Ist Feb. ruary, 1579. Groomage, ss, payable on fi»t service. jqq THE IMPORTED CLYDESDALF HORSE YOUNG BANKER Will Stand at BURNBANK, Oamaru, for the coming season. Terms—Ten Guineas each Mare, to be paid for before removal. Good paddocks provided free of charge for four weeks ; after that time 2s. 6d. per week will be charged, All care taken, but no responsibility. For Pedigree and particulars see Cards, JOHN DONALDSON, Proprietor, Burnbank. TO TRAVEL SEASON IN THE PAPAKAIO, WAIAREKA, AND KARA. NUI DISTRICTS, If sufficient inducement offers, The fashionably - bred and very superior Thorough-bred Horso jER T O B L Eminently suited for getting Hunters, Handsome Weight-carrying Hacks, awl Horses suitable for the Indian Market. PERTOBE is a beautiful dapple brown Stallion, standing 16 hands high, Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., Victoria, in 1869. Got by Panic (imported) ; his dam, Hester Grazebrook, by The Promier (im. ported), out of Mis 3 Napier, by Delaprd (in. ported); Miss Napier's dam, Mrs. Roberts, by Wanderer (imported). See Victorian Stud Book, Vol. 11, p. 47. Paaio was im, ported from England to Tasmania, and put to the stud at 3 yrs. old. He was trained and raced at 4, and again put to the etui ! When he was 6 yrs. old, he was purchased | at a high price and imported to Victorii, where he had two more seasons' training and racing. He proved himself the best English horse ever trained in Australia, He ran remarkably well, and won several races, carrying heavy weights ; ho was bota speedy and. staying, of a most docile and quiet temper, with a wonderful constitution, and legs like iron. Like his sire, that fust, class English racehorse Alarm, "ho was uever sick, sorry, or lame," and retired Im the turf without a blemish. At the stnd, although from being in an out-of-tho-mj place, he has not been favored by man; iirst-clas3 mares, he has got more winnen out of half-bred ones than any horse in Y» toria, and for general purposes his stock ii much esteemed. In the breeding of PERTOBE there is 11 combination ..of some excellent strains ol blood, such as the Waxy-Whalebone, in that famous line through Defenco, and which comes to him on the sides of ktl sire and dam. On his hire Panic's (ill chore is, as well aa his good Defence blood, that of the game and stout Venison, til powerful and speedy Melbourne, and, moil excellent of all, that of Pantaloon. *'The value of the Pantaloon blood is undeniable, having furnished so many proofs, not atai as to its being speedy and staying, but ala to its 'training on,' and being essentiallyl ' running strain ;' for although some othai occasionally produce one or two tirat-clu animals, few, if any, can compcto will Pantaloon as to numbers. A very grand»■ commendation of this strain of blood is,tkl it mixes successfully with, and improves,* others." Thus writes Copporthwaito, ■(T other good turf authorities agree with tl to the same effect. On the side I the dam of Pertobk there is a lot good blood coming in through The Pn mier, whose graudsirc, Tomboy, was hj, Jerry, out of the Ardrossan maro (till dam 'of the mare Beeswing, celebrated not only as a first-class racer, bil also as the maternal ancestress of England very best family of racehorses at the present time, viz., the Newminsters). The Dslsprf blood is also very good indeed. Delaprii dam, Fortress, by Defence, was the damrf the Derby winner, Pyrrhus the First. Mn Roberts, the great, grand-dam of Pimroif was by Wanderer, and Wanderer s blood» good, lie being by Wanderer, by Gohmni, by Mercury, by Eclipse. In Tasmania,* much is the Wanderer blood thoughts that they sav "a bad one by WaiiderenJ never known," and if they can tracoapelt gree to a Wanderer mare, they consider tU quite sufficient. 1 PERTOBE, by 2 85'o e S S.-s'l S -•.SB 1 " Augur," in the Australasian, June' 1 IS7B, says :—" I could fill the Austi with the doings of "Panic," and W; cendants. As a sire of good, sow 4 , useful stock he has never had. an co,"J the Southern hemisphere. His vict 7, the Launceston Champion Race, W, style in which he carried lOst. into » place in the Melbourne Cup, were ]*' ances of merit, and sufficient to satu J| most exacting that ho was a racehorM. mean order. The soundness of hissW*. become a proverb on the Austral* and the ancient Strop who won a Launceston in February, is a Few horses have gone through such» as Melbourne, another son at P r^ e t) forming at Queensland. The j, steeplechasers is undoubtedly and he is also a son of Panic. . Postman, Prodigious, and cross country horses, too nume . ro !L j* tion, are also descendants of »" Alarm." . j tf d Terms: L 5 ss, payable Ist or 1879. Groom's fee, ss, P 3 >* service. , » Paddocks provided, 2s 6a Every care taken, but no respon» u For further particulars, apply *° JOHN HENDEKSON, Groom in cW A. PATERSON, .
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Bibliographic details
Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 900, 5 March 1879, Page 4
Word Count
901Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 900, 5 March 1879, Page 4
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