Fourth Order. — These Cows yield six litres a day, and continue to give milk 

 until four months gone with calf. 



Fifth Order. — These Cows yield Jive litres a day, and continue to give nailk 

 until three months gone with calf 



Sixth Order. — These Cows yield four litres a day, and contmue to give milk 

 imtil two months gone with calf 



Seventh Order. — These Cows yield three litres a day, and continue to give 

 milk imtil one month gone with calf 



Eighth Order. — These Cows yield tivo litres a day, and cease to give milk 

 upon being got with calf. 



LOW COW. 



First Order. — The Cows of this Order and Size, while at the hight of their 

 flow, yield six litres a day, and continue to give milk until they are eight months 

 gone with calf 



Second Order. — These Cows yield five litres a day, and continue to give 

 milk until seven months gone with calf. 



Third Order. — These Cows yield four litres a day, and continue to give 

 milk until five months gone with calf. 



Fourth Order. — These Cows yield three litres a day, and continue to give 

 milk until four months gone with calf. 



Fifth Order. — These Cows yield two litres a day, and continue to give milk 

 until three months gone with calf. 



Sixth Order. — These Cows yield one litre a day, and continue to give milk 

 until two months gone with calf. . 



Seventh and Eighth Orders. — These Cows yield still less, and go dry upon ( 

 being got with calf. 



BASTARD OF THE HORIZONTAL CUT COW. 



The Bastards of this Class have no escutcheon whatever. The entire space 

 from the vulva to the udder, and on the inner surface of the thighs, is covered 

 with hair growing downward ; no growth of ascending hair is to be found upon 

 the parts where the escutcheon occurs in the other Classes, and in the Genuine 

 Cow of this Class. 



Some of these Bastards are excellent milkers, so long as they are not impreg- 

 nated ; but so soon as they are got with calf, or a very short time afterward, they 

 go dry. Those in whom the hair on the inner surface of the thighs is thick and 

 very fine, will be found to give good rich milk. The reverse holds in regard to 

 the quality of the milk yielded by those in whom these parts are covered with a 

 scanty growth of coarse hair. 



BASTARD BULLS. 



Having attached to the portion of the work appropriated to each Class a de- 

 scription of the Bastard Cow belonging to it, I must indicate here the signs by 

 which a Bastard Bull is to be known. 



Bulls have escutcheons of the same shapes as those of the Cows ; only, as I 

 have already said, on a smaller scale. The growth of asc«nding hair which 

 forms the escutcheon extends from the testicles upward, spreading on the innei 



