2:08^ and 2:15. 



NUTBOURNEa^ELDRIDGE 



NUTBOURNE, out of the dam of Maud S., record 



3:08%. ELDKIDGE, out of the dam of 



Majolica, record 3:15. 



THE FASHIONABLT-BEBD STALLIONS, 



NUTBOURNE and ELDRIDGE, 



will make the eeason of 1889 at my farm, tliree miles east of Tarrytown, Westchester Co., N. T., 

 And twenty-five miles from New York city. Several prominent Kentucky breeders have urged 

 me to let Nutbotirne go to that State, but I have concluded to keep him at home. His full 

 brother, Nutwood, Is the only horse, living or dead, with a record under 3:20 having Jive o/hia 

 produce with records under 3:20, thus showing his capacity to get a high rate of speed. Be- 

 sides, he is the sire of 34 in the 2:30 list, eight of which were added last year. 



Terms: For iV«(6oMrra«, $150 for the season ; for Mdridge, SlOO the season. Mares not 

 .proving with foal to either horse may be returned the following season free of charge. 



NUTBOURNE, 



g. h., 1 6 hands Wgh, foaled 1877, by Belmont (sire of Nutwood, record 3 :18^), dam Miss Rnssell, 

 the dam of Maud S., record 2:08Xi by Pilot, Jr., second dam Sallie Russell, by Boston (thor- 

 oughbred) , etc. As will be seen, Nutbourne is not only out of the dam of Maud S., but he is a 

 full brother to Nutwood, record 2:18^, and Cora Belmont, record 2:24J4- As a five-year-old, 

 Nutboome trotted, with very little handling, in 2:2fi^, last quarter in 35 seconds; but smce then 

 has not been trained, as he has been used exclusively for the stud. Nutbourne^s full brother, 

 Nutwood, is so popular that his services have been raised to $500. The editor of the Turf^ 

 Field and Farm, in speaking of the foals at my farm by JVutboume^ says of one, "It is a trotting 

 gem of the first water," and of another, "There is no disposition to do anything but trot. I 

 never saw so rapid a colt of its age." 



ELDRIDGE, 



b. h., 15^ hands high, foaled 1877, by Brlward Everett (sire of Judge Fullerton, record 2:18), 

 dam Jessie Kir^ dam of Majolica, record 2:15. Jessie Kirk is by Clark Chief, sonof Mambrino 

 Chief. Edward Everett, the sire of Bldridge, is the sire of twelve trotters in the 

 -2:81) list, among them the late Commodore Vanderbilt's favorite road horse Mountain Boy, 

 record 2 :20SC. Eldridge is a grandly formed horse, a rich bay, with black points, and has trotted 

 a trial on my track at Tarrytown in 2:20!4. His dam beingthe dam of Majolica, he should make 

 a great sire. He has sired only four foals, and I sold one of them — the two-year-old colt Cart- 

 ridge, —for $4,000. One of the best judges in the country saya of him; "Eldridge has a 

 splendid hock, and a good, flat leg— in fact, the best set of legs I have ever seen; and his re- 

 markably loose, easy way of going shows that be has an elasticity that he can impart." 



Mares sent to be bred to Nutbourne or Eldridge can be kept on Mr. George W. Campbell's 

 •farm, just on the opposite side of the road from my place, on reasonable terms. Mr. Campbell 

 makes a specialty of taking care of trotting stock. 



Address 



ROBERT BONNER, 



TARRYTOWN, N. Y. 



pg~ mares can be sent to Tarrytown by boat from foot of Franklin Street, 

 jMew York, or by rail to Tarrytown, by Hudson River Railroad, from depot foot 

 »£ 33d Street and 1 Itb Avenue. 



