THE BEDLINGTON TERRIER. 119 
points unequally divided between coat and colour are here equally 
valued, each being allotted fifteen. A pure and opaque white is 
considered essential, without any tendency to pink or yellow, and 
the skin should be so well covered that no part is bare except the 
belly. The eyes, nose, and claws should be as dark as in the 
Manchester dog. 
XIX.—THE BEDLINGTON TERRIER. 
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““TynesiDk,” Bedlington Terrier, the Property of T. J. Pickett, Newcastle-on-Tyne 
Until within the last ten or twelve years this breed was unknown 
beyond the counties of Northumberland, Cumberland, and West- 
moreland, and it was long before the general public would admit 
its existence as a separate one. Even its chief admirers do not 
profess that it is much older than the Dandie, and only date it 
eighty years back or thereabouts, when it is said to have been 
