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STALLIONS R THOROUGHBRED HORSE INGLE A D E R Will' travel this season in' the • Oamaru and Surrounding, Districts. RINGLEADER stands handß high, and is dark brown ; _bred by Mr. Gerrard, of -South Australia (breeder of .the Hill, the, Ace, Rapid Bay, &o.) f ; by South Australia, imported by Mr. Charles Fisher; hisdamj Ringleader, by Jersey (imported); grandrdam. Fairy Queen, by Mosart; great-grand-dam, Fairy, imported by Colsnel Lautour for the Cressy Company and pronounced to be one of the finest mares that ever left England; South Australia, by Cotherstone; dam, Johanna, by Priam; grand-dam, Johanna, by Sultan; great-grand-dam, Philagree, by Soothsayer; Mozart by Wanderer (imported); dam, Merino (imported), by Whalebone. ' TERMS ... £5 ss. Payable at the end of the Season. Paddocks provided at 2s Gd per week. Mares sent to the Northern Stables looked after. . . Full particulars to be obtained from J j T. Richards, Commercial Stables. EDWARD DEVINE, 6 Proprietors. R A THIS U IMII SEASON IN THE PAPAKAIO AND WAIAREKA DISTRICTS, And will stand at J. Henderson's Windmill, The fashionably- bred ■ arid very superior Thorough-bred Horse P E R T O B E, Eminently suited for getting Hunters, Handsome Weight-carrying Hacks,- and. 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. Gob by Panic (imported); his dam, Hester Grazebrook, by The Premier (imported), out of Miss Napier, by (imported) ; Miss Napier's dam, Mrs. Roberts, by Wanderer (imported).—See Victorian Stud Book, Vol. 11., p. Ift. Panic was imported 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 stud. When he was 6 yrs. old, he was, purchased at a high price and imported to Victoria, 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 ; he was both speedy and staying, of a most docile and quiet temper, with a wonderful constitution, and legs like iron. Like his sire, that firstclass English racehorse Alarm, "he was never sick, sorry, or lame," and retired from the turf without a blemish. At the stud, although from being in an out-of-the-way place, he has not been favored by many first-class mares, he has got more winners out of half-bred ones than any horse in Victoria, and for general purposes his stock is much esteemed. In the breeding of PERTOBE there is a combination of some excellent strains of blood, such as the Waxy-Whalebone, ia that famous lipe through Defence, and which comes to him on the sides of both sire and dam. On bis sire Panic's side there is, as well as his good Defence blood» that of the and stout Venison, the powerful and speedy Melbourne, and, most: excellent of all, that of Pantaloon. " The value of the Pantaloon blood is undeniable, having furnished so many proofs, not alone as to: its being speedy ind staying, but also to its 'training on,' and being essentially a ' running strain for although some - others occasionally produce one or two first-claaa animals, few, if any, can compete with Pantaloon as to numbers. A very grand recommendation of this strain of blood is, that it mixes successfully with, and improves, all others." Thus writes Copperthwaite, and other good turf authorities agree with him to the same effect. On the side of the dam of Pertobe there is a lot of good blood coming in through The Premier, whose. grandsire, Tomboy, was by Jerry, out of the Ardrossan mare (the dam of the mare Beeswing, oelebrated not. only as a first-class racer, but also as the maternal ancestress of England's very best family of racehorses at the present time, viz., the Newminsters). The Delaprti blood is also very good indeed. Delapr6's dam, Fortress, by Defence, was the dam of the Derby winner, Pyrrhus the First. Mrs. Roberts, the great' grand-dam of Pertobb, was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's blood is good, he being by Wanderer, by Gohanna, by Mercury, by Eclipse. In Tasmania, so much is the Wanderer blood thought of, that they say " a bad one by Wanderer was never known," and if they can trace a pedigree to a Wanderer mare, they consider that quite sufficient. PERTOBE, by r— * ——\ S?K £ fc a £> t s £• ® W f 8» »» « cd © a g ■» §2 & S * d f fj |g H B Cr 1 M" S « 3. SgW ■ g*§ §•§ »£ so- * J" 3 I 0S" 2 $ CD 2 . w © 2 fj* oP4 2- & t? D & S |.g.| Bog ■»" I s is. o §§» i* ° M ol§ s. g'B--2.3 - Ts 3- QSP.p 5* * cf O >1 £CD t* - °o ,2* S 9 1? ~"2 § & £s<S|" g g. § P p— 2 3 sv 0 9 8• « g p 8> P* O » » a r> 5 s s &■ p M Sa) P;»> a p- 1 ® ® rj U CD O "Augur," in the Australasian, June 15th 1878, says :—" I oould fill the Australasian with the doings of " Panic," and his' descendants. As, a sirp, of good, sound, and useful stock lie has never had an equal in the Southern hemisphere. His victory in the Launceston Champion'lCabe, and the style in which he carried 10at. into second place in the Melbourne Cup, were performances of merit, and sufficient to satisfy tho most exacting that he was a racehorse of no mean order. The soundness of his stock has become a proverb on the Australian Turf, and the ancient Strop who won a race at Launceston in February, is a living example. Few horses have gone through such an oraeal as Melbourne, another son at present performing at Queensland. The greatest of all steeplechasers is undoubtedly Lone Hand, and he. is also a son of Panic. Postboy, Postman, Prodigious, and many other good cross country horses, too numerous to men« tion, are also descendants of the son of Alarm." Terms: L 5 ss, payable Ist of January, 18S0. Groom's fee, ss, payable first " service. Paddocks provided, 2s 6d per week* Every care taken, but no responsibility. For further particulars, apply to JOHN HENDERSON, R. ORR, or to A. PATERSON, 957 Oamaru.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OAM18800122.2.15.7

Bibliographic details

Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1175, 22 January 1880, Page 4

Word Count
1,036

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1175, 22 January 1880, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1175, 22 January 1880, Page 4

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