SOME YORKSHIRE SHORTHORNS. 287 



Londonderry, won prizes all over as a brood 

 mare. Then a representative of Forshaw's Bar 

 None, a big well-grown filly foal off a Lincoln- 

 shire Lad mare, with nice quality and the best of 

 pasterns and feet, claimed our attention. But 

 perhaps the best of the lot is a chesnut mare 

 which was purchased of Mr. W. R. Rowland, of 

 Creslow, and which won at the Buckinghamshire 

 County Show, and was third at the Boyal at 

 Preston. She is a very big, powerful mare, a 

 great width, with a good chest, nice quality of 

 bone and feather, and capital feet and pasterns. 

 Notwithstanding her great size she is a fine mover, 

 going in a light and corky style. 



Bainesse and the Manor House have done 

 much to make the history of agriculture and of 

 pedigree stock breeding during the last quarter of 

 a century, and everything that has been attempted 

 at either place has been done thoroughly well. 

 Both Mr. Outhwaite and Mr. Hutchinson are 

 celebrated as good judges of stock, and both were 

 good managers. But the care Mr. Hutchinson 

 has taken in preserving the pedigrees of his stock, 

 and the intelligent attentiou he has paid to line 

 breeding cause the Manor House herd, to have 

 had more influence on the history of the short- 

 horn than that at Bainesse, which seems to have 

 flashed like a meteor across the sky, and to have 

 had, if a brilliant, at any rate not a very last- 

 ing effect upon the breed. 



