"stallions NOTICE TO FARMERsT^ THE well-known ClvdesrUT. y, HEATHER Jo ct **• The property of Andrew Chrystal W,tc the WAIAREKA DISTRICT the Homesteads ,of Jokn Raid t Raiaforih, Esqs. ; also, the PATuS? IO *! DISTRICT; at tha nJri*?4lo Schlnter, Esqs. Paddocks ._._ „ u Month of the Owner ° cray and Clifton Falls. Every oaA fa** 1, but no responsibility. 6 H, Terms : L 5 per- Marei payable lst'c, ruary, 1879. • Grdomage, ss, payable on fi rpor imporm^clydes^ YOUNG BANKER Will Stand at UURNBANK, Oamaru f 0 coming season. ' '"'» Terms—Ten Guineas each Mare to i paid for before.. removal. Good padd r provided free of charge for four weeks • "ft that time 2s. 6d. per week will be chare a All care taken, but no responsibility For Pedigree and particulars see Cards. JOHN DONALDSON, ' . Proprietor, Burnbaak, T O TRA V E IT~ " IN THE ' PAPAKAIO, WAIAREKAiiANDKARi NUI DISTRICTS, If sufficient inducement offers, The fashionably-bred! and very , Thorough-bred Horse ' ) E R T: O B JL Eminently suited for getting HunW Handsome Weight-carrying Hacks, S Horses suitable for the Indian Market, PERTOBE -is a beautiful dapple too* Stallion, standing/IS hands high, , Bred by H. Phillips, ■ Esq., Victoria, j 1869. ■■ Got by Panic (imported); his di» Hester Grazebrook;: by The; Premier.(i) ported), out of Miss Napier, by.Delaprejii, ported) ;• Miss Napier's dam, Mrs. liobert by Wanderer (imported). See Ftciory Stud Booh, Vol. IT., p. 47. Panic, was in ported from England to. Tasmania, and * to the stud at 3 yrs.. old. He was trains and raced at 4, and again .put : to the etui When'he was 6 yrs; :old, he was purchattl at a high price and imported, to Victory where he had .two more seasons' trainiu and racing. He proved himself the btj English horse ever trained in He ran.remarkably Well,', and , won seven! races; carrying heavy weights; he WMbotl speedy-and staying, of a moat docile aj quiet ■temper,' with a wqnderful constitution ] and legs like iron. Like, his,sire, that finj.] class English .racehorse- Alarm, "he mi never sick, sorjy, or lame," and retiredfroa the turf withc%t % blemish: At the stiij although from'being in-an put-of-the.nj place',, he -has not been. fayo.red by ma| first-class mares, he . has got winotii out of : half-bred ones than any, horse in Vic. toria, and for general, purposesrhis atocVj much esteemed. . , .-■' **ln the breeding of PERTOBE there is i combination Borne excellent strains i blood, such as the Waxy-Whalebone, ii that famous line through , ;Defence, m! which comes: to '.him on -the sides of toll sire and darrii ; On his sire Panic's tiJi there is, .as well as his good Defence blood, that of the game and stout Hi powerful and speedy Melbourne,- and,* excellent of all, that ,of Pantaloon, "Hi value of the Pantaloon blood, is undeniallO havingifurnished so many, proofs, not aloa as to its being speedy and.stayiug, but at to its 'training on,'and being essentially ' running strain ;' for although some othi occasionally produce one or two first-el animals, few, if any, can-compete w.. Pantaloon as to numbers, A very grand ri commendation of this strain of ;blood is, tb it mixes successfully with, and improves, i others." Thus writes Copperfclnvaite, ani other good turf authorities agree with him to the same effect. On the side ol the dam of Pertobe there is a lot o! good .blood coining in through The Pre, mier, whose grandsire, Tomboy, was bj Jerry, out of. the Ardrossan mare (tt( dam of the mare; Beeswing,, celebrate! not: only as a -first-class, racer, U i also as the maternal ancestress of Englandi i very best family of racehorses at the present time, viz., the Newminsters). The Delapri blood is also very: good indeed. Delaprii dam, Eortress, by Defence, was the damol the Derby winner, Pyrrhus, the First. Mil Roberts, the great grand-dam of Pkrtoji, was :by Wanderer,! and Wanderer's blood u good, he bcing.by Wanderer-by Gohaniu, by Mercurv, by Eclipse.-- In TTasmama, » much is the Wanderer ; blood + thought 01, that they say "a bad one by Wandererwa never known," and- if they .can trace« a pedigree to a Wanderermare,. they consider tnil auite sufficient. u PERTOBE, by Era 2<S 0> "Augur," in the Australasian,' June l5Wi 1878, says :—" I could nU?'fihe'Australasi»» :with the.doings of "jParriq/f-and his &' cendants. As a sire of gopct,, sound, ®~ useful stock he has never h'aa ah "equal |" the Southern "hemisphere..-, His, victory J" style in' which Ule : carried lOsti "into seco»» place in the.,Melbourne.Cup, were P ances of merit, and' 'sufficient'to^satisfy 111 ' most exacting: that he was-a racehorse of w mean orden. The .soundness b* become a proverb' on the Australian Tuft and the ancient Strop a race » Launceston in a'Kvmg'exaroJl Few horsesJiave gone through such an ore* as Melbourne, another son at -present P*j forming at Queensland.; 'The greatest of »» steeplechasers is undoubtedly Lone B-f™ ../u;;i _i„„ „ oA« "PonJo PostWy.' Postman, Prodigious, and many other cross country horses,, too numerous to tion, are also descendants of the bob Terms': 1 L 5 55, ; payable Ist of Jan' l *' - 1879. Groom's, fee, ,55,. payable »" service. ; mfle V. Paddocks provided, 2s M P er ww Every care taken,, but no responsibility. For further particulars', apply to JOHN HENDERSON, ■ ■ - Grdpm in charge!«"" A. PATERSON, . Oamaru.
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Bibliographic details
Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 903, 8 March 1879, Page 4
Word Count
861Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 903, 8 March 1879, Page 4
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