STALLIONS THOROUGHBRED HORSE RI N G L E A D E jj, Will travel this season in the Oamaru and Surrounding Districts, RINGLEADER stands 16} hands high, : and is dark brown; bred by Mr. Gerrard' of South Australia (breeder of Pride of tho | Hill, the Ace, Rapid Bay, &o.) ;by South ;Australia, imported by Mr. Charles Fisher: his clam. Ringleader, by Jersey (imported) • : grand-dam, Fairy Queen, by Mosart; great* grand-dam, Fairy, imported by Colenol Lautour for .the Creasy Company and pro. nouncedto be one of the finest marea that :ever left England; South Australia by Cotheratone; dam, Johanna, by Priam; grand-dam, Johanna, by Sultan; great, grand-dam, Phil agree, by Soothsayer; Mozart by Wanderer (imported); dam Merino (imported), by Whalebone. TERMS ... £5 ss. Payable at the end of tha Season. Paddocks provided at 2s 6d per week. Mares sent to the Northern Stables looted after. Full particulars to bo obtained from J T. Riehards, Commercial Stables. EDWARD DEVINE, 6 Proprietors. T O THIS TRA V E L SEASON
IK TEH PAPAKAIO AND WAIARE3EA DISTRICTS, . And will stand at J. Henderson's Wind'milH, The fashionably - bred and very superior > Thorough-bred Horse PE R T O B E. Eminently suited for getting Hunters, Handsome Weight-carrying Haoka, and iHorses suitable for the Indian Market; i PERTOBE is a beautiful dapple bran Stallion, standing 16 hands high, Bred by H. Phillips, Esq.,Vieleria, in 11869. Got by Panio (imported) 3 hia dam, Hester Grazebrook, by The Premier (imported), out of Miss Napier, bra Delaprd (imjorted); Miss Napier's danv Mrs. Roberts,, i>y Wanderer (imported),, See Victoria. Stud Book, Vol. 11, p. Panio 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 purchaaod at a high price and imported to Victoria, where he had two more seasons' training and. racing. He proved himself the bcßt English horse ever trained in Australia, He ran remarkably well,, and won several races, carrying heavy woights ; he was both speedy and staying, of a most docile and quiet temper, with a wonderful constitution,, and legs like iron. Like his Bire, that firstclass English racehorse Alarm, "ha wa* never sick, sorry, or lame," and retired from, the turf without a blemish. At the stud,, although from being in an out-of-the-wayr ilace, he has not been favored by many; irst-class mares, he has got mora winners out of half-bred ones than any horse in Viotoria, and for general purposes his atook isi much. esteemed. In the breeding of PERTOB®. there- U m combination of some escftJAenjb strains of blood, such as the Waxy-vWhalebone, in that famous line through Defenoe, and which comes to him on the sides of bothi sire and dam. On his sire Panio's aid* there is, as well as his good Defenca hlaodj, that of the game and stout Venison, the powerful, and speedy Melbourne, and, most) excellent of all, that of Pantaloon. '■ Tka value of the Pantaloon blood is undeniable, having furnished so many proofs, not, alone as to its being speedy and staying, but alep. to its 'training on,' and being essentially a, ' running strainfor although soma others, occasionally produce one or two first-olaMi animals, few, if any, can competa vrWbi Pantaloon as to numbers. A very grand J{<k commendation of this strain of blood is, ttfstt < it mixes successfully with, and improves,, alll others." Thus r writes Copperthwaite, and other good turf authorities agree with hira to the Bame effect. On the Bide of the dam of Pertobb there is a lot of good blood coming in through The Premier, whose granasire, Tomboy, was by Jerry, but of the Ardrossan mare (tha dam of the mare Beeswing, celobwW not only .as a first-class bull also as the maternal ancestress of Rngltmd'a very best family of racehorses ati thiß pßeaentt time, viz., the Newminsters). Tfhft Uelapr* blood is also very good indeed, Dolaprd's, dam, Fortress, .by Defenoe* w«w the dam »fi the Derby winner, Pyrrhua, the First. Mr»* Roberts, the'great grand-dam of was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's bloprflift good, he being by Wanderer, by Gphanni*, by Mercury, by Eolipse. In Taspiatiia, a* much iB the Wanderer blood thought of, that they say " a bad one by vra» never known," and if they cap, traoe a pedigree to a Wanderer mare,. th,ey oonsider thai quite sufficient. PERTOBE, by , —■» -» Ptt a i $ l< I? & rp tzS wa a .© jo *B. g u w H tog ? t H iJ ii i-3 Wfa- £r 3> S i'g &■§ 83 3 §l* O- *1? it - » - p m go-H W un,'"! o-m O-Mij 2 50 9 P* bg--9 £.2.1 B §•»' - I s ~3 & & sTs:. e* 8 ® 1 g 3 13 4 o 2.0 Sa-S* ? S-S'S 3- Cff" - j> p ** M s S-ftH n mS 8 £ „ s* « J. |§»S g ■ - J P n-ao ® ££ IH&st & 8 sr-r-J" ? • |. ." Aurar," in the Australasian, Juno 15th 1878, says " I could fill the Außtral»»i»# with the doings of " Panio," and hu dc* cendants. As a sire of good, sound*, aai useful stock he has never had vk equal U the Southern hemisphere. Hi* Yiofctfy'i* the Launceston Champion Raee» pni tk* style in which he carried lQat, into puce in the MelbonrnQ Cup, were perform* ances of merit, mid to satisfy tb« l most exacting thai bft was a racehorso of oo< mean order. of his stock ha>< become a proverb on the , Australian and the anpient. Strop who won a race at: February, is a living examplOjj Few .horses have gonft through Buoh; an oraeW as Melbourne, another son, at present poP* forming at Queensland. : The greatest waW steeplechasers is undoubtedly Lone. JSh&4 and he is also a son of Pauio. , jjoatboji Postman, Prodigious, and many qsher good cross country horses, too numer<)U9 to monj tion, are also descendants of the son Alarm." Terms: L 5 ss, payable Ist, qf January* 1880. Groom s fee, 5h, i payable tint service. . Paddocks provided, 2a, 6d per week* Evety care taken, but no.r,osponsibility ( : For further particulars apply to >HN HENDERSON, JOHN R. ORR, or to A. PATERSON, Oam&ru.
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Bibliographic details
Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1314, 23 June 1880, Page 4
Word Count
1,020Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1314, 23 June 1880, Page 4
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