Penegra Tablet























































































































































































































































































Related article: Guineas forty years ago), who won her first race as a two-year- old, but who has not so far ful- filled her early promise. It is pleasent to go round the stud which Mr. Larnach has formed at Adderbury, for al- though it is not a very large one it comprises fifteen mares, mpst of which ought, if there is anything in the theory of breeding, to give him racehorses of a still higher class than Jeddah, Penegra Tablet though there cannot Order Penegra be a doubt that he was a colt of Penegra Express more than average excel- lence Penegra Online when the ground was not too hard. There cannot, however, be a brother or sister to the Derby winner, for Pilgrimage met with an accident while returning from Eaton, and had to be destroyed ; but there is much to be hoped for from mares like Postscript, the dam of Reminder, and Adden- dum, Hirondelle, a half-sister to Hampton, La Veine, the first foal Penegra Tablets of La Fl^che, Sandiway, for whom Mr. Larnach gave 2,200 guineas at the late Duke of Westminster's sale, and L'£t6, the dam of that good horse Chaleureux. Among the other inmates of the stables at Adderbury is an old hunter whom Mr. Larnach has ridden for 21 years, having bought him as a three-year-old, and whom he has never known to turn his head from a fence. He was at one time very fond of shooting, though of late years he rarely handles a gun, but, although unable now to make his annual visit to Norway, he has not relinquished his interest in fish- ing, and goes in for trout breeding upon a considerable scale. Adderbury, is very conveni- ently situated within reach of three hunts (the Bicester, the Heythrop, and the Warwick- shire, though he and Lady Isabel, 400 BAILYS MAGAZINE. Qpisi who is as fond of sport as her husband, are the most frequently out with the first named. Both of them, in fact, would subscribe to the well-known lines of Whjte Melville ending : — The best of the fun I owe it to horse asd to hound. Cavalry Charges in South Africa. Comparatively very little is known about the work done by our cavalry in South Africa and there are two very sufficient reasons for this; first the nature of the country and the peculiar characteristics of our enemy pre- vented our horsemen from accom- Buy Penegra plishing any of those startling feats which have formed the glory of their arm of the service in times past, and the preparation for Penegra For Women which has been the principal object of all their peace training; and secondly, it was not the habit of the war correspondents to ac- company and describe the action of the mounted troops. These gentlemen as a rule stuck to the main body of the army and only patronised the cavalry when some great movement was being carried out, such as the relief of Kimberley or the heading off of Cronje at l^aardeberg. There is in conse- quence a rather general belief that our cavalry has failed during the war, and many critics have ven- tured to say that its day is past and that for the future its place will be taken by mounted infantry. But this is quite a mistake, for though Penegra 100 its work has not been showy, though it has not been able to bring off any dramatic events, like Kellermann's charge at Marengo, or Sir Stapleton Cot- ton's crushing movement at Sala- manca, it has amply justified its existence by more modest achieve- ments, by constantly Penegra 50 threatening and turning the flank of the enemy and by very effective dismounted work. Lord Roberts' march 03 Pretoria was only accomplish^ with little attendant loss by the assistance of the cavalry brigades, and it is unquestionable that, in this service particularly, they were tried very highly indeed. It may be worth while here to note the special functions of cavalry, as cavalry, and not as merely shar- ing the duties of mounted infantry, and to see what have been the spe- cial difficulties in carrying^ them out during the war in South Afirica. Cavalry are supposed to be charged with the responsibility of reconnaissance and scouting pre- vious to an action and, during an action, they are expected at one time or another to exercise shock power. Well, during the last eighteen months several things have been learned about scouting in modern war. In old times, it was possible for cavalry patrols to approach an enemy with com- parative safety within such a dis- Penegra Tablets India tance that fairly good eyesight could gain valuable information about a position and the number of troops occupying it. Now the long ranging and accurate fire of the newest rifles makes it Buy Penegra Online difficult to approach nearer than 1,500 yards, and, at that distance, no certain reconnaissance can be effected, no estimate can be formed of an enemy's strength and few particulars can be learned about configuration of ground. Still day after day throughout the cam- 190I.] CAVALRY CHARGES IN SOUTH AFRICA. 401 paign, our cavalry have succeeded in localising their enemy and in enabling the other arms to Penegra 100 Mg act ■with effect. That they have done so shows with what extreme daring they have worked and how they have adapted themselves by various expedients to a previously unknown condition of war. We Penegra 50 Mg may take it for granted that what our horsemen do not now know about reconnaissance and scouting is not worth knowing and that, after their rude experiences, if they were called upon to meet a Penegra 50mg less practically instructed foe, say