STALLIONS <*'<"■ T «t H> I!'U:I THOROUGHBRED HORSE If I N G L . 'E'. : A D E R ; JLV Will'travel this season in the' Oamaru and Surrounding Districts. RINGLEADER stands : ifij hands high and is dark brown; ! bried • fey ! Mr. : Qerrard' of Soutp Australia (breeder o£ Pride of the, Hill, thß; .-Bay,! &o.) 5 by: South/ Atwtralia,.i)jiported:by!Mr. XDh'arlea Fisher - his dami Ringleader, by ; Jersey (imported) * j'Faisjj grand-dam,,, FaifSS) *mpprted.by Colonel Lautour, tor jphe greasy. Company and, pro. oonnced to be J <ine of" the.finest marea: tW ever left England,; StiuthP 'AustralU by Ootheratqne;' dam;'. Johanna,. by. Priam. , grarid-dam,-' -Jbhaiiiia; ' bj^* : Sultan j gnat' f rand-dim; Philagree; by ' Soothsayer • lozarfc : by. 1 Wanderer ■(imported) • dam* Merino (imported); •by Whalebone. ; TERMS; i.-£BSb. ■■ Payable epd «i, the Season* ( Paddocks provided at 2s 6d per we^t, Mares! sent to the Northern Stableslooked after. j ,• <"!.r . Full particulars to be obtained from J T. Richards, Commercial Stables. EDWARD. DEVINB, 6 i ; Proprietorr*. TO TR. AT EL : S ''' THIS m JP®| PERSON, ' • , i m'THB- -: 1 - 1 ■ PAPAKAIO AND WAIARKKa : DISTRICTS, n. ; And willißtand, at, J.jHkndbrson's.Windmill, The fasHionably - bred and very superior A Thorough-bred ]3oi*e . ...• , v P' E R T ; Q B E, Eminently, suited for getting Hunters, Handsome Weight-cari^ing',' Itaoks, J and, fiorses suitable fof'the Ind»an,K[arket».' PERTOBE .is a 'beaukitul dapple browiu Stallion, ;stiriding 16 liaidSa Hi^h; Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., Viotdria, lm 1869. Got by Panic (imported); his dam„ Hester Grazebrook, by The Premier (im-'.' ported), out of Misa Napier,.by Delapr6 (imported) ; iMiss Napier's, dam, Mrs, Roberts), by Wander©!(imported). See Victoria, Stud Boojt, Foi. IT. ,p; Iff. Panio was im. ipprted frpni ! England to Tasmania, and put to the stud at 3 yrs. old. He was teamed and raced at 4, and again put' to the stud. When he: was 6 yrs.. old, he was jwrohaaod at a high! price, and imported .t© Viotoria; where he had' t\vo 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 spieedy and staying, of a most docile and quiet'.temlper, with a wonderful constitution, and. legs like iron. .' Like his sire, that first* class English, racehorse 1 Alarm/ "he was never sick, awry, or lame/' and retired from the turf Without a blemish. At the stud,, although if Bom being in an W has not been favored by many tirst-class, mares, he has got mote out of half-bred ones than any horse in Viotoria, and for general purposes hia stook isi much esteemed. , In the breeding of PERTOBE there is a< combination of some excellent ■ strains of t blood, such as the Waxy-Whalebone in 4 that famous; line through Defence, audi which comes to him on the sides of botlh sire and: dam. .On his aire Panic's sitiie there is, as well as his good Defence blood ( that of the game and stout Venison*, f ua powerful 'and speedy Melbourne,! andl, Scnosti excellent of all, that of << xhe value of the Pantaloon blood is uoidr jniable, having furnished so many as to its being speedy and staying, _ but also to its 'training on,' and beihst & ,sentially a ' running strain j' for although ' BO me others occasionally produce one ot "two first-olaaß animals, |few,, if' any, can. compete with Pantalooiji as to numbers. .A' very grand rocommendation of this strai; x of blood is, that it mixes Successfully with. , and improves, all others." Thus' Writes and other good turf authorities agree with him to the sam'<j effect. On the side of the dam o£ Pertop ,e there is a lot of good bloa& coming in through The Premier, whose grandf ,ire, Tomboy, was by Jerry, out of the Ardrossan mare (the dam of the map j Beeswing, celebrated not only aa a first-class raoer, but also as the materr ial ancestress of England's very best family of racehorses at the present time, via., the f (ewminsterß). The Delapri blood is, also * /ery good indeed. dam, Fortrespj, by Defence, was the dam of the Derby wir mer, Pyrrhus the First. Mrs. Roberts, the' great grand-dam of Pertobk, was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's blood ia 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 wa» never known," anid if they can trace a pottigree to a Wanderer mare, they oonsider that quite Butecienit. ' ! PERTOBE, by PHI 2 ® I ff cO W" 3 I S O W H tog %>< ts-1 - - *i I 4 II II |f .HMB-g.? 1 jt J*l el. »a 22 o* " 3 Bs B s* v 3" l-i !■ f < F ;| fl - S.S.5* & 8® 3*5-$s % ' » I ° H Sf.lt-- i s»» | ° I: g|--g? o|| £ ?g" cjP £ s» G* 3 , a. " fee & Ma s* rr«' fly JT O* h§ ™ 5 hr° 9 '. i i. r Sit? 2 § i ■ § S. p " go a • g "• o ' 5 trb MW w . cfOQ cr B - ® fuss & rt-® S;K S 0 "Augur," in the Australasian, June jSlh 1878, says :—" I could fill the Australasian with the 'doings of- " Panic," and hia dea« qendantsl. As a siro of good, sound, and useful,,stock he has 'never had an equal 1° the Southern 1 hemisphere. His victory in the Launceston Champion Race, and the style m he carri«iipst. into, seoond place in ihe' Melbourne Cup, were performances of merit, iind- BilfiSoient to satisfy the most exabting that he was a racehorse of no mean order. The eoundnesa of his stook has become a proverb on "the Australian Turf, and the janoient.'Strop'who Won'a raoe at' Launceston in February, is a living example. Few horses have gone through such an oraeal ■ as Melbourne, another son at present per< ■ forming at Queensland. The greatest of all is undoubtedly Lone Hand,. and he is also a son of Panio. Postboy;. Postman, Prodigious, and many other good' oross country horses, too numerous to men>; tion, are also descendants of the Bon of ■ Alarm." Terms: JLS ss, payable Ist of Januaiy». 1880; Groom s ,fee, Bs, payable nrflt ; ■service, Paddooks provided, 2s 6dppetr t weoki Every oaj-e taken, • but ; no responsibility. Foi; further particulars; apply to. ; JOHN HENDERSON, i R. ORR, or to i A. PATERSON, : 7 : Oamaru,
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Bibliographic details
Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1319, 28 July 1880, Page 4
Word Count
1,040Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1319, 28 July 1880, Page 4
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