270 EXISTING SCOTCH HERDS. 



renowned bull Hanton 228, another son of Pat 29. He 

 gained the first prize at the Highland Society's show at 

 Berwick in 1854 as a two-year-old. Mr Bowie's herd was 

 admirably represented at this show, Cupbearer having been 

 first, Earl Spencer 2nd 25 second in the aged class, and 

 Hanton first in the two-year-old class. At the show Mr 

 M'Combie bought Hanton for the large sum of £li)5, and 

 his subsequent career is fully referred to in our notice of the 

 Tillyfour herd. The Lizzie family also produced a number 

 of bulls known by the name of Logic the Laird. The first 

 of these was sold along with Albert of Kelly 346, of the 

 Jenny family, to the Hon. Matthew Holmes, New Zealand. 

 The most distinguished buU of this tribe was, however, 

 Logie the Laird 3rd 862, purchased by Colonel Ferguson 

 of Pitfour for 100 guineas. After winning numerous 

 honours, among them the first prize in the aged class at the 

 Highland Society's show at Edinburgh in 1877, and doing 

 excellent service in the Pitfour herd, he was sold to 

 Captain Beedie, Pitgair. His portrait is given in vol. v. of 

 the ' Herd Book.' Logie the Laird 6th 1623, another bull 

 of the Lizzie family, was sold to Lord Airlie. The Jennet 

 family is associated with a race of bulls called Jim Crow. 

 Jim Crow 344, calved in 1861, after Young Panmure 232, 

 and out of Jenny of Tillyfour 353, was used at Mains of 

 Kelly, and gained the first prize as a two-year-old at the 

 Highland Society's show at Kelso in 1863. Jim Crow 3rd 

 350, after Leo 349 of the Lizzie family, and out of Jennet 

 904, a daughter of Jenny of Tillyfour, won the second prize 

 at the Highland Society's show at Edinburgh in 1869 as a 

 two-year-old. He was sold for 100 guineas to Mr 

 M'Combie of Tillyfour, and was used in the Tillyfour herd. 

 The Guinea Pig family has furnished several very fine 

 bulls, named Gainsborough. Gainsborough 596, out of 

 Guinea Pig 3rd 1182, and after Major 351, was first-prize 

 two-year-old and first in the aged class at Highland 

 Society's shows. He was sold to the Earl of Fife and 



