TNfc STUB. ftt STAMB THE SEASON AT TAUERU. JAY BELDEN. HI STANDARD BRED TROTTING STALLION. £LD£I: WMwood Beoord 8.4} Imp. " Ike greatest speed producer yet Ifcttwa in Australasia. Sire of Oham- ' a JBiblonwood 5.9 and 4.86 and Idwood Jnnr. 4.83; grandsire of Sua* Cole 9.8 9-5 and 4.31. Wildtnoi u also the sire of Wild ttaak (8.16), Mam OoreUi (2.17), Oarfew Bell (2.18), Papanui (2.19), ~ mlewood (8.19), Willowwood (2.14) JFmattY other good winners. Dam of JAY BELDEN: May Bella* (Ml), mr» of Shylook (2.80), BellS)eUi (8.29 and 8.25), Australian record for 2-yr filliee. •ire of May Belden m Judge Belg&a (8.18), aire of Shylook (2.80), Bellman (1.17) and many other good whip •en. _ grandam: May Imp. . JAY BELDEN hat already sired a few good ones, namely, Onte (»•»*— rs)7 Black Belden (2.29— 2yrs), __rW! (If miles—B.47), Stone BelSen, etc. _ JAY. BELDEN ie » Brown, Bay staadina 17 hands with very .heavy iose fesuraess. .. . , Cbaabf free till mares «re strated. All oar* taken but no responsibility. FEB: Single Mare £8 Bs. Taueru.
"tftPFES HALL JAMESON." (ISIS7) " * 1. J. Copped Hill, ™ M-atorton, and ' Munding district. "COPPED HALL JAMESON" in a grandly bred bay Shire Horse, steading about 17| bands Ugh, with the best of feet, joints, and legs, and a profusion of the sight sort of feather; has great bone and is a grand mover, ancT very correct shapes, and is a Shire Stallion of the first order. He is without doubt the best Stallion ever importad into New Zealand. Ho, was examined and passed sound by the Shire Howe Society's Veterinary Surgeon at London Showa, "1907-8-9, as well as at all the shows he was exhibited at during these years, He has ptot> ~* himself # be § 7*iy BBJ» *Gal-
> the following prizes: 1909—2nd, County s at jaiastonbury; Oomaendad, London^ Slure Horse mended, London Shire Horse Show (in * olaes of 46); Iflt SomerrotXtounty »t Wellington (5 all ages);,2nd, B. «nd W. 8., Dorchester (4 all ages)? Londott Shire Horse Show (in a claes ter: 2nd B. and W.E., at Newport (5 %U ages); 3rd Welsh NatoonaFat Ab•ryawyth; 2nd, Somerset County at ford and South, Essex; Ist & Champion .at the Waikato Agricultural and Pastoral Association's Show, l»Hi Ist and Champion Auckland Show, J9Uj Ist a»d Champion, Te Kuiti, SIRE, Dunsfflore Jameson (17972), hy Moore Zealot (15781), by Potentate (12088), by In&topg* I**ll. (1865); his dam (22191) Moors BonLeicestershire (2608), by . work (229&), by Matchless (1509). . DAM (17526), Upshire Nun, by v Engineer 11. (9300), by DiMfJ*?*" 1 (2564), by Leverton Tom (4522), by Bold Lincoln (231), by Matchless Junr. (1544), by Matchless (1509); -her dam (12409 V, Friary, by /The ■ Friar (4732) by Tom (2156), by Hon-' -est Tom (1105); her dam, Darting, by What's Wanted (4178), by Renown (3972), by Wonder (2357), by MatchJAMESON" (17,927) won prizes: 1898, Ist, Nottingham ; Ist Northampton; Ist, Lincolnshire; Ist, Shrewsbury; let, Leicestershire; Ist, Rugby, Ist, Moreton-on-Marsh; Ist, Coleshill; Ist and champion, Peterborough;. Ist and Challenge Cup, Ashbourne. 1899: Ist and reserve for* Cup S.H.S., London, and he is the leading/ eire of the present day, having sired more prizewinners than any other Shire Stallion during the years 1903-4-5-6-7, and holds the record of being the sire of the largest number of winners at London Show in any one year. Another record: At 1906 London Show no less than 28 animals by this horse were ■elected by the judges and passed the veterinary examination sound, and reJfeeived money awards.- Sixteen animals by him in one sale record average of £236 each, at which Bale Copped Hall Jameson was purchased by THE KEYNSHAM STUD CO., Bristol, England, while at the recent Dunsmore dispersal sale, 21 of bis produce averaged £225 12e. An examination of his pedigree will ehow that he is descended from a ' strain of the .heaviest and most powerful waggoners in England, and that he can claim near relationship with the best and most popular Sire Horses of the day. From his breeding he is bound to make a most impressive sire as hie breeding is of the choicest, viz., .2 crosses of Lincolnshire Lad 11., 3 of Dark's Matchless, and 1 of Welchers' Honest Tom: sires upon which the whole Shire Horse breed has been built up on. "BLOOD WILL TELL." All care taken, but no responsibility. FEE—Four and a-half Guineas. For full particulars apply to—- . O. O'DONNEL. Upper Plain. Ma6terton. Or L. R. BEDDALL.
TO STAND THE SEASON AT WAIHAKEKE AND TRAVEL THE SURROUNDING DISTRICTS. -The double-eaited Standard-bred Trottine Stallion— WAITIPIP! (2.26). (Prince Imperial—Ladv Emma.) VT tiful dark brown, standing 16 hands, has good flat bone, plenty of muscle, and a real good temper. TERMS: £4 4s single mare, two or more as per arrangement. Payable January, 1914. All care taken, but no responsibility. Mares not proving in foal returned free next season; mare sold or exchanged held to be in foal. Regular trios to Martinborough on Mondays, Featherston on Tuesdays. Grazing free. For Jnrtber particulars apply to owner .W. W. HERCOCK. Waihakefce.
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXV, Issue 10713, 8 November 1913, Page 3
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826Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXV, Issue 10713, 8 November 1913, Page 3
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