TREATISE ON MILCH COWS. 77 



LOW COW, 



FIBST ORDER. These Cows, while at the hight of&quot; their How, yield ten litres 

 a day, and continue to give milk until they are eight months gone with call. 



SECOND ORDER. These Cows yield eight litres a day, and continue to give 

 milk until seven months gone with calf. 



THIRD ORDER. These Cows yield six and a half litres a day, and continue to 

 give milk until six months gone with calf. 



FOURTH ORDER. These Cows yield five litres a day, and continue to give milk 

 until five months gone with calf. 



FIFTH ORDER. These Cows yield four litres a day, and continue to give milk 

 until four months gone with calf. 



SIXTH ORDER. These Cows yield three litres a day, and continue to give milk 

 until three months gone with calf. 



SEVENTH ORDER. These Cows yield two litres a day, and continue to give milk 

 until two months gone with calf. 



EIGHTH OEDER. These Cows yield one litre of milk a day, and go dry upon 

 conceiving anew. 



BASTARD OF THE DEMIJOHN COW. 



When the streaks marked F F are found in the Cow of this Class, of the di 

 mensions specified in the description of the Bastard of the Curvcline Cow, they 

 serve here also to detect the Bastard Cow ; and her badness in regard to the rapid 

 loss of her milk will be in proportion to the size of these streaks. The smaller 

 they are, the less defective will she be in this respect. (See Plate IX. Fig. 6.) 



CLASS VI. 



Cos). 



The name indicates the appearance of the escutcheon, the upper part of which 

 is shaped like a carpenter s or mason s square. 



HIGH COW, 



FIRST ORDER. Cows of this Order and Size yield, while at the hight of their 

 flow, sixteen litres a day, and they continue to give milk until they are eight 

 months gone with calf. 



The skin within the escutcheon is of the same yellowish color as in the supe 

 rior Orders of the preceding Classes. The udder delicate, covered with short, 

 fine hair. The escutcheon begins as in the foregoing Classes ; and, rising from 

 just above the hock joint, on the inner surface of the thighs, spreads outward to 

 the points A A. (See Plate VI. Order 1.) Above those points it represents a 

 square. A right line runs across to the points J J, distant from each other from 

 five to six inches. Thence the figure is bounded by two -right lines, which meet 

 in an acute angle at the point E, distant about two inches from the vulva. Above 

 that, to the left, the figure of a square is formed by two streaks of hair, E E aryl 

 B C (the point C being at the orifice of the vagina) ; the former of which is about 



f four inches long, by an inch and a quarter wide, and the latter from five to six 



\ inches long, by somewhat less than the same width. 



