60G 
The Warwick Meeting. 
decorticated cotton-cake mixed, about 4 lb. a day, with sharps, but 
cake only when out at grass. She was stated to give regularly 
about 15 lb. of butter a week. The second pi’ize went to 
No. 1042, Elhel, a Shorthorn belonging to Mr. Salisbury 
Baxendale, and the third prize to No. 1050, Nancy ^ a Shorthorn, 
which won for Mr. Church a second prize at Doncaster last year. 
Class 97b contained the most i-emarkable cow of all 
exhibited, viz. a Kerry cow, which, while being the lightest 
cow but one, and weighing only 889 lb., gave no less than 
51 lb. 8 oz. of milk in the two milkings, and this of excellent 
quality. The amount of milk was, with the exception of No. 
1016 (disqualified for deficiency of quality), more than pro- 
duced by any other animal in the three classes, and accordingly 
this cow would have easily won the first prize from all the cows 
entered in the Dairy Classes — a really remarkable performance. 
This animal was No. 1041, Bahraham Belle, the property of 
Mr. C. R. W. Adeane, and had been bought at the Dairy Show in 
1889, as a heifer, from Mr. James Robertson, of Malahide, Dublin. 
This was her first appearance in a milking contest, though a 
calf of hers had taken second prize as a Kerry at the Smithfield 
Show. The yield of milk is measured daily, and 52 lb. is 
what the cow is reckoned to give at home in the two milk- 
ings, this being very near to the figures now obtained. The 
cow is generally kept only on grass, but for show purposes 
is, of course, well fed, liuseed-cako, crushed oats, and split 
beans being the principal foods employed. The second prize 
cow was No. 1049, a Red Rolled cow of Mr. Church’s, which 
won a milking prize at the Dairy Show of 1890. The third 
prize-winner, No. 101-8, belonged to the same owner, and is a 
daughter of No. 1049. 
Sheep. 
Leicesters. — These were present in the same strength as at 
Doncaster, but in less numbers than at distant Plymouth in 
1890. The Judges did not consider the display at Warwick 
equal to the e.vhibitions of former years. Mr. T. II. Hutchinson’s 
first prize two-shear ram “is a good sheep, and a fair specimen 
of the breed.” Shearling rams were “ only a poor class, with 
the exception of tho first prize sheep” — Mr. E. F. Jordan’s — 
“ which is of exceptional merit.” The lambs were “ backward 
in condition,” and the shearling ewes “ not so good a class as 
usual.” 
Cotswolds. — The catalogue enumerated 27 pens, which was 
slightly greater than the Doncaster entiy. The display was 
“ fairly representative of the breed.” IMr. Robert Game was the 
