THE GREYHOUND. 



193 



meetings was to have a small covert at 

 either end of a large grass enclosure about 

 half a mile distant from each other, and 

 wired round with only one outlet ; the hares, 

 which had been previously turned down in 

 these coverts, were driven into one of them 

 the day before the coursing event was to 

 take place, and when the stake was run 



Like horses, Greyhounds run in all forms, 

 and there is no doubt that a really good big 

 one will always have an advantage over the 

 little fines ; but it is so difficult to find the 

 former, and most of the chief winners of the 

 Waterloo Cup have been comparatively 

 small. Coomassie was the smallest Grey- 

 hound that ever won the blue ribbon of 



COL. NORTH'S SIMONIAN AND FULLERTON. 



FROM AN ENGRAVING BY R. WALLACE HESTER, AFTER THE PAINTING BY HARRINGTON BIRD. 



By permission of the Trustees of the late F, C. McQueen, owners of the Copyright. 



they were driven one at a time through 

 the aperture, the dogs being in the slips 

 outside. A fairly fast hare would generally 

 manage to reach the opposite goals ; some- 

 times, without being turned or wrenched. 

 The only time that I was ever present at 

 one of these meetings was at Kempton Park, 

 and then the company sat in the Grand 

 Stand to watch the proceedings. This was 

 a tame style of sport compared with some 

 of the big open meetings where wild hares 

 that know the country are coursed. 



Various opinions have been advanced as 

 to the best size and weight for a Greyhound. 



the leash ; she drew the scale at 42 Ibs., 

 and was credited with the win of the Cup 

 on two occasions. Bab at the Bowster, 

 who is considered by many good judges to 

 have been the best bitch that ever ran, was 

 2 Ibs. more ; she won the Cup once, and 

 many other stakes, as she was run all over 

 the country and was not kept for the big 

 event. Master McGrath was a small dog, 

 and only weighed 53 Ibs., but he won the 

 Waterloo Cup three times. Fuller ton, who 

 was a much bigger dog, and was four times 

 declared the winner of the Cup, was 56 

 Ibs. in weight. 



