Shorthorn Cattle. 
101 
winner. Class 93 was another large and very good one, there 
being little to choose between the prize winners. 
Shorthorn Dairy Cows. — The winner in Class 94 (eleven 
exhibits) was an exceptionally grand type, showing what the 
pure-bred Shorthorn is capable of doing as a dairy cow. This 
animal. Priceless Princess, was also awarded the Dairy Short- 
horn Championship (see Fig. 14). The second prize cow was 
a grand animal, and well deserved her position, being also 
Reserve N umber for the Dairy Shorthorn Championship. The 
third prize cow was of a different type, a large-framed animal 
not showing the breed characteristics of the two former, but 
carrying a well developed udder, and giving a large yield of 
milk. The five exhibits in Class 95 showed the care which 
has been taken by breeders to develop the dairying properties 
of the breed. In Class 96 (five exhibits) the care shown in 
breeding was even more apparent, the milk of these two-year- 
old heifers reaching 26 lb., and another entry which had been 
nearly four months in-milk, very closely approached this 
weight, and although yielding the large quantities of milk 
carried good form and flesh. 
Lincolnshire Red Short-horns. — There has never, in the 
opinion of the Judges, been such a fine collection of this breed 
exhibited either in point of numbers (102) or excellence of 
quality. Both in the cow class, with calves at foot, and in the 
dairy classes, they were excellent, as also the young cow class, 
viz., three-year-olds. The Champion Cow (see Fig. 16) stood 
out clearly, a winner not only in her class, but as Female 
Champion. The heifers calved in 1906 made a very large 
class, but here again the winner stood far ahead of all her 
competitors, and eventually won a special prize. The male 
section was not anything so strong as the female, but the bull 
awarded the Championship was a very easy winfier (see 
Fig. 15). 
Herefords. — The first prize winner in Class 110, Pearl King 
(see Fig. 17), was a big bull, with good flesh, but rather off his 
hind legs. This animal also secured the Male Championship. 
The second was a nice quality bull, lacking in his hind quarters. 
-The third, a big masculine stock bull, was rather coarse in his 
points. Class 111 was very good, the first being a very neat 
bull with a wonderfully good top. The second was a nice bull 
with a lot of scale and likely to make a good stock bull. The 
third dropped a little in his back leg standing. The first prize 
bull in Class 112 was of good quality, also likely to make a 
good stock bull, and the second was a very good level animal, 
but had not the substance of the other. The third was a thick 
heavy bull, rather light in his hind quarters. In Class 113 the 
first prize cow was of good quality. The second was rather 
