FALDONSIDE TO DALGIG. 257 



as some of the rest. She divided the Caledonian St. 

 Leger with Mr. Ewing^s Lucknow^ an eight-dog stake 

 at Biggar^ with Cazzarina, and a stake at Southport 

 with Mr. Jones's Jeopardy, but never won anything 

 outright. She was also second at the Birmingham 

 Show, and has had three litters of puppies. Cam-ye- 

 -by Athol was one of her first litter of young Jacobites, 

 of which Mr. Campbell presented one to Lord Eglin- 

 ton. Cadazooro and Calabaroono (which the papers 

 would persist in calling Calabaroono) are the cracks 

 of her second litter; the saplings are by her first 

 cousin Daring, " a nice little dog/^ who is making his 

 way at the stud, and she is about to visit Cardinal 

 York again. We may note that Cam-ye-by- Athol 

 was sold for £80 before he was ever slipped at a hare, 

 to Mr. Johnstone, who changed his name, without 

 applying to any privy council, into Jock of Dalgig. 

 This compliment Jock felt deeply, but alas ! his 

 namesake died soon after winning the North Lan- 

 cashire Stakes at the Pddgway Club — in a wire fence 

 near Blackburn. Cazzarina was sold for £dO to Mr. 

 Gibson, after winning a Caledonian and a Clifton 

 Cup, besides running up for the latter to Sea E,ock, 

 and is the dam of Gunboat by Jacobite. 



But we must hark back to Scotland Yet. Nothing- 

 came of her Condolorado litter of whites and blacks, 

 which arrived on the New Yearns morning of ^59, and 

 Mr. Campbell was in a mood to realize when the 

 second Beacon litter were ready for action. Sea 

 Pink, late " Coorareena," and Sea Foam, late "Co- 



