286 SOME YORKSHIRE SHORTHORNS. 



He won upwards of £1,500 in prizes, amongst 

 them being wins at Alexandra Park, at the 

 Koyal at Bedford, the Yorkshire, at Newcastle 

 (with champion prize) ; at Manchester, (witli 

 champion prize) ; besides many other important 

 shows ; but perhaps of none of these is his owner 

 prouder than of the brushes he won on him when 

 his old friend John Booth was master of the 

 Bedale. One run from Kiplin, in which he fairly 

 cut down the field after a famous forty minutes 

 over that beautiful country, he still speaks of 

 with pleasure and pride as a capital per- 

 formance. 



When Mr. Hart had his large sale of horses in 

 the spring of 1884, Mr. Hutchinson became the 

 owner of his famous old huntino- brood mare 

 Achievement, and from her he has a orood-lookino- 

 bay filly by Exminster, a big one, and with plenty 

 of quality and good limbs. 



But a two-year-old chesnut by Exminster, out 

 of Codicil, was a better still. She is a hunter 

 all over her, galloping in rare form, and if she is 

 lucky she will give a good account of herself in 

 the showyard and over a country. 



Mr. Hutchinson's cart horses are all very well 

 bred and good looking animals, and some capital 

 specimens of the Shires and Clydesdale are to be 

 found amongst them. There was the Clydesdale 

 Milkmaid, in foal to Castlereagh, who, when in 

 the possession of her breeder, the Marquis of 



