158 On Agricultural Buildings. 



The timber partitions shall be framed and fixed up in the 

 usual manner^ and double lathed. 



The upper floor shall get the requisite deafening-boards be- 

 tween the joists. 



The windows shall be framed of the usual description ; double 

 and single hung, with all the necessary apparatus ; and finished 

 with bound shutters and backfolds ; bound ingoings and soffits 

 and architraves to suit the various apartments. Those of offices 

 and cottar-house to be of plain deal linings. 



The interior doors shall be bound 1 1 inch thick, four-pannelled 

 and moulded to suit, and provided with the requisite locks, hinges, 

 and brass furniture complete. The entrance door to be bound 

 2i inches thick, four-pannelled, and hung with strong hinges, 

 provided with strong iron-rimmed lock and furniture, complete. 

 These doors to be provided with all the necessary door-posts, and 

 finished with single and double faciad architraves, set on blocks, 

 to suit the various rooms ; those of offices, &c., to have plain fac- 

 ings. The principal rooms and lobbies shall have moulded base 

 plates, and the others moulded skirting-boards of the usual 

 dimensions. 



The wall-presses shall be lined, and get, together with all the 

 closets, &c., three rows of shelving, from 12 inches to 15 inches 

 broad. 



The sink and wash-tubs shall be fitted up in the usual manner. 



The whole of the outside doors and windows throughout the 

 buildings shall receive two coats of the best oil paint. 



The windows of dwelling-house only shall be glazed with the 

 best crown glass, and to be properly primed. 



The whole of the interior finishings of the dwelling-house shall 

 be done with the best American yellow pine ; the windows and 

 doors, roofing, joisting, beams, lintels, and gates of the best crown 

 Memel ; the flooring and lining of plain deal doors to be of white 

 wood batons. The sarking over stables and byres, of similar 

 batons, and the other parts of American yellow pine. The trevis 

 posts, boarding, mangers, &c., and other interior fittings of the 

 steading, to be of the best larch fir ; all to be of the best quality, 

 and free from sapwood or large knots. 



The carriages will be driven by the proprietor. 



The cottar-houses will be finished precisely similar to other 

 buildings of the same kind, and like corresponding portions of the 

 works above described and referred to. 



Slater and Plumber Works, — The whole of the roofs shall be 

 covered with the best under-sized Ballochulish slates, hung with 

 zinc nails, and having the proper band and cover, and all neatly 

 dressed square, and bedded in lime mortar. The ridges, peans, 

 and flanks shall be covered with the best 18 oz. zinc, of the usual 



