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STALLIONS! THOROUGHBRED HORSw RI N G L E A D\ , Will travel this season in the Oamara and Surrounding District RINGLEADER stands 16jt hand. .. and is dark' brown ; bred by Mr fll of South Australia (breeder of PriHo Hill, the Ace, liapid Bay, &o.). v Australia, imported by Mr. Charles pfl'"' l his dam, Ringleader, by Jersey (im n Jt If! •dam, Fairy Queen, by Moaatt grand-dam, .Fairy Queen, by Moaart • grand-dam, Fairy, imported bv nyLautour for the Cressy Company and' nounced to be one of the finest m&iJ. P, tu ever left England; South Australia r Cotherstone; dam, Johanna, by p• v grand-dam, Johanna, by Sultan • fUI6! grand-dam, Philagree, by Mozart by Wanderer (imported)* J"* l Merino (imported), by Whalebone. TERMS .... £5 6a. Payable at the end of the Season Paddocks provided at 2s 6d per weoic Mares sent to the Northern Stahlosloo^ Full particulars to bo obtained , T. Richards, Commercial Stables. , EDWARD DEVINE, TO TRAVEL THIS IN THE PAPAKAIO AND WAIAREKa DISTRICTS, And will stand at J. Henderson's \ The fashionably • bred and very Thorough-bred Horse PE R T 0 BR Eminently suited for getting HunW Handsome Weight-carrying Haoka ani Horses suitable for the Indian Market PERTOBE is a beautiful dapple Ww. Stallion, standing 16 hands high, Bred by H. Phillips, Esq., Viotoria. i„ 1860. Got by Panic (imported); hia d at 7 Hester Grazebrook, by The Promier (i m * ported), out of Miss Napier, by Delaprd in! ported); Miss Napier's dam, Mrs. BoboV by Wanderer (imported). See Viclnri, Stud Book, Vol. 11., p. 47. Panic waa? n , 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 atui When he was 6 yrs. old, ho 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 Auatra!i» He ran remarkably well, and won severa! races, carrying heavy weights ; ho was both speedy and staying, of a most dooile quiet temper, with a wonderful constitution and legs like iron. Like his Biro, that first! class English racehorse Alarm, "ho wu 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 Vic, toria, and for general purposes his stock ii much esteemed. In the breeding of PERTOBE there is t combination of some excellent Btrains o! blood, such as the Waxy-Whalebone, in that famous line through Defonoo, and which comes to him on the sides of both sire and dam. On his sire Panio'a side there is, as well as his good Defonco blood, that' of the game and stout Veniaon, the powerful and speedy Melbourne, and, moat excellent of all, that of Pantaloon. "Thei value of the Pantaloon blood is undeniably having furnished so many proofs, not alooai as to its being speedy and staying, but also to its 'training on,' and being essentially t ' running strain for although some other* occasionally produce one or two first-class animals, few, if any, can compete with Pantaloon as to numbers. A very grand n» commendation 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 sido o( the dam of Pertobe thore is a lot oS good blood coming in through The Pb-. mier, whoso grandsire, Tomboy, waa by Jerry, out of the Ardrossan mare {the* dam of the mare Beeswing, colebrateil not only as a first-class racer, bat also as the maternal ancestress of England's very best family of racehorses at the prosont time, viz., the Newminsters). The Dolaprf blood is also very good indeed. Dolaprd's dam, Fortress, by Defence, was the dam oi the Derby winner, Pyrrhus tlio First. Mrs, Roberts, the great grand-dam of PertobJ, was by Wanderer, and Wanderer's blood ii good, he being by Wanderer, by (Johanna, by Mercury, by Eclipse. In Tasmania, m much iB the Wanderer blood thought 01, that they say "a bad one by Wanderer wm never known," and if they can trace a pedigree to a Wanderer mare, they consider that quite sufficient. PERTOBE, by I * > fP I §-r 1 . pr g §t ~ i' t2i hJ | £ £. ►* S a g <<! S' B kb W H 3 dog a><4 p-f ii Iv it 3 Si P- U 3. e*| B pf <5 8S- * J" -<3 2" I.ZIK g I ft g - 8® It sr ar « n Q M M 3 *1 —2. li|T ffl' t —r» °5 " 5 ? Hrl a a D •* * % l.fellr i «? < SH-og M § 8 S ? g- p % i? o > §§ « g g ° o crt?Q cr OVJP © IgS-r | S I "Augur," in the Australasian, Jon« 18ft 1878, says " I could fill the Australasia with the doings of "Panic,"and hu d* cendants. As a sire of good, sound, W useful stock he has nover had an equal the Southern hemisphere. His viotory the Launceston Champion Race, and t style in which he carried lOst. into seoo place in the Melbourne Cup, were l^ o vr* ances of morit, and sufficient to satisfy t most exacting that he was a racehorso oi mean order. Tho soundness of his stooK become a proverb on the Australian ' and the ancient Strop who won a raoei Launceston in February, is a living Few horses have gone through such an ora as Melbourne, another son at proaent; pa forming at Queensland. The truid. steeplechasers is undoubtedly Lon® . and ho is also a son of Panic. P h Postman, Prodigious, and many otne g cross oountry horses, too numerous to tion, are also descendants of tne rernS": L 5 6s, payable Ist of J"j u g 1880. Grooms fee, 6s, payable service. „, „ nuk Paddocks provided, 2s 6d P®.... Every care taken, but no responsible i> For further particulars, apply to JOHN HENDERSON, R. ORR, or to A. PATERSON, 0r,7 Oa»«®» _

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OAM18800819.2.16.7

Bibliographic details

Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1319, 19 August 1880, Page 4

Word Count
1,022

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1319, 19 August 1880, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1319, 19 August 1880, Page 4

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