ene
SS
pa a ep ce ae cece ree
Se Oe at a ae
- a ee
2
@oso000 0000
I]
TOULO [AF
Hrouno4n} ll
stun pes)
ci Ne pisel |
i
New York
State College of Agriculture
At Cornell University
Ithaca, N. Y.
Library
Cornell University Library
Kansas shorthorns; a history of the breed
“aT
KANSAS SHORTHORNS
A HISTORY GF THE BREED IN
THE STATE FROM 1857 TO 1990
By. Pole
Secretary Kansas Shorthorn
Breeders Association
COMPILED AND PUBLISHED UNDER THE DIRECTION
OF THE COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATION OF THE
KANSAS SHORTHORN BREEDERS ASSOCIATION
Committee Personnel
PARK E. SALTER, Wichita, Pres. Kansas Shorthorn Breeders Assn.
JOHN R. TOMSON, Dover, Pres. American Shorthorn Breeders Assn.
W. A. COCHEL, Manhattan, Field Rep. Am. Shorthorn Breeders Assn.
H. M. HILL, Lafontaine, Leading Breeder in Southeastern Kansas.
SEN. FREMONT LEIDY, Leon, Extensive Breeder of Shorthorns.
THE LAUDE PRINTING COMPANY
IOLA, KANSAS
1920)
1'°72037
Published by authority and under the
direction of the Kansas Shorthorn
Breeders Association and based on in-
formation received during 1919 and
1920,
Copyright 1921
BY G. A. LAUDE
PART I.
INTRODUCING SHORTHORNS
It is not in human nature to anticipate
emergencies. The average man—and we are
nearly all average men—goes along in the regular
way until he realizes that he is at ‘‘the parting
of the ways,’’ when he rises to the occasion or
goes down in defeat.
The Kansas farmer has come to the parting
of the ways. Over the greater portion of the
state, in the region of the farm home, he has,
with few exceptions been taking from the soil
bountiful crops until for natural and well found-
ed reasons the old farm is not so kindly in eulti-
vation, nor so responsive to his efforts as it once
was. He has been drawing on his bank account
stored in the soil in the shape of fertility, and
having made few if any deposits, his account has
run low. He sees the warning signals—harder
soul, less resistance to excessively wet or dry sea-
sons and a lighter growth of vegetation that tell
of less humus and less available fertility—and he
is heeding the call now as never before.
There is an insistent demand for live stock
on the farm. Why is it that only when brought
face to face with necessity the farmer, both
large and small, is planning to make his holding
a stock farm? A cattle farm—for it is recog-
6 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
nized that cattle alone have the capacity to turn
the big crops of roughage into cash, yet leave
the farm enriched in so doing. The answer is
easy. He has told us time after time that it was
easier and more profitable not to keep cattle and
who will say that in many cases he was not right?
But this was not altogether a true answer for
some have made a financial suecess of the work.
What is the trouble?) The man who has failed
to make cattle pay has kept the wrong kind of
cattle or he has kept them in a way that outraged
the laws of live stock husbandry. Keeping the
right kind of cattle in the right way always pays
and that is the problem of the Kansas farmer of
the present and of the future, for only in doing
that will he be able to profitably maintain a bal-
ance of soil fertility in his favor.
When a farmer begins to investigate the dif-
ferent breeds of cattle with a view of finding
the one best suited to his requirements he will
remember first of all that he wants an animal
that can get almost everything needed for thrift
and development from the roughage grown on
the farm requiring only a small amount of grain
to land it on a good market. He will remember
that he needs not a cow that will fill either the
requirements for beef or for dairy products
alone, but one that will produce calves equal to
any breed as beef animals and at the same time
give milk and butter for his family and, in the
7
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
case of the small farmer, for market also. In
no other breed is found so well this happy com-
bination as in the Shorthorn.
Shorthorn cattle are pre-eminently the great
machine which turns roughage into cash. No
other breed can approach them in availability
for this purpose. It is not so much of a contest
as to what breed of cattle will thrive best on corn,
for as a grain consuming machine the hog will
produce almost double the number of pounds for
each bushel of corn consumed as will the steer—
and for this purpose the American hog is the un-
crowned king of the universe! Shorthorn cattle
with their big, thick, deep bodies and capacious
digestive organs can consume more roughage
and as a result get more pounds of gain daily
from grass and rough feeds than cattle of any
other breed. This means that they can put on the
final pounds of finish for which grain is required
more cheaply than can those of other breeds, for
they do more with the cheap feeds of the farm.
Shorthorn cattle are the great farm cattle for
they have no rivals in utilizing the farm feeds
whether it be for production of beef or for beef
and milk.
The record price for range grass fat steers
is held by grade Shorthorns marketed in Chicago
at $18.00 per ewt. The record price for feeder
cattle is held by Shorthorn steers sold in Denver
at $20.25 per ewt. The greatest net return for a
8 A FISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
earload of steers at the International (except
the grand champion herd the value of which was
enhanced by winning of the ribbon) was secured
from a load of Shorthorns. The International
grand champions carried a large percentage of
Shorthorn blood. The highest prices paid for
steers at the Missouri River markets have gone
to cattle tracing to a Shorthorn foundation. The
additional weight of approximately 200 pounds
on two-year-old steers which carry a large per-
centage of Shorthorn blood is a very important
consideration when cattle sell at prevailing
prices. The heavy loins, broad backs, deep hind-
quarters and natural flesh of the Shorthorn
make them the ideal farm cattle.
In the herd of Shorthorns at the Kansas State
Agricultural College Farm, Manhattan, there
are seven thick-fleshed, broad-hacked, low-set
Scotch cows having milk records averaging con-
siderably in excess of 7,000 pounds of milk per
year. Their calves are of the same individual
conformation and several of them have won
prizes in the beef shows. But this is not all—
these cows were not put to milking until after
they had raised one or more calves. One of them
had nursed her third calf before she was tried as
a milker. Individually they will compare with
the best cows in the leading herds of the country
and no two are bred along the same line. One is
a daughter of Matchless Dale, that sired the win-
A HISTORY OF SHORTELORNS IN KANSAS 9
ning steer herd which the eollege had out two
years. There is something in this double-pur-
pose achievement. The Shorthorn is the farm-
er’s cow.
MATCHLESS QUEEN 100083
Milk record 8735.1 pounds. Owned by the Kansas Agricultural College.
At the Breeders Sale at Coffeyville, April 4,
1919, twenty Shorthorns from ten months to
four years old, none of them ever in a large crowd
before and many of them hardly halter broke,
were led into Exposition Hall. When surround-
ed by an immense crowd they stood for fifteen
minutes without showing any symptoms of ner-
vousness, and in the sale of nearly 100 head not
10 A HISTORY OF SIORTHORNS IN KANSAS
a single animal behaved in an unbecoming man-
her nor was the emergency post provided for
nervous cattle used once. No untrained and un-
handled cattle of any other breed ever acted so
well. Shorthorn cattle, by reason of their quiet,
gentle disposition are the ideal farm cattle.
More than a century has now passed since
the Shorthorn found its way from the rich val-
leys of England to the United States. During
all this time they have been the popular cattle
for the American farmer. Not only do they
provide more beef than any other breed of cattle
but they also furnish the family with all the milk
and butter needed. After one hundred years
they are firmly established, the great breed for
every section of our country. Other breeds
may be prime favorites in certain localities,
but the Shorthorns are all right everywhere.
Other breeds come and go, but the Shorthorn
goes on forever. They have established them-
selves in the eastern part of our country where
they are unrivaled producers of milk and butter.
From Ohio to Kansas and from Canada to the
Gulf they are firmly established and it is only in
sections where they find any active competition.
They have gone to the ranges of the central West
and Southwest where they became the maternal
ancestry of the range cattle that made Hereford
popularity possible. They are now the popular
beef cattle of the Pacific coast country and have
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 11
no established rivals in that section. What is
it that made all this possible? For answer, look
the Shorthorn over. It is not a breed of extremes
but one which combines the good qualities which
PRIDE’S BESSIE 206445
The first Seotch cow to be admitted to the advanced registry for
milking Shorthorns. Milk record 9210.5 pounls. Owned
by the Kansas Agricultural College.
are demanded by the farmer, not by the special-
ist; they are not the cows that do one thing only
but they combine size, beef, milk, butter. They
are the one and only great machine that turns
the rough feeds of the farm into ready cash to
the very best advantage.
12 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Shorthorns on The Beef Market.—It is some-
times stated that Shorthorns do not command the
highest market price. This isa mistake. Good,
well finished Shorthorns sell at the highest price
paid. They have topped the Kansas City market
for 1920 as will be seen from the following letter:
Stockyards Station, Kansas City, Mo.
7|15|20.
Mr. G. A. Laude, Secretary,
Humboldt, Kansas.
Dear Sir:
Replying to yours of the 13th beg to say the cattle we
sold for Sni-A-Bar Farms at $17 were the top for their
weight for the year. Some yearlings brought $17.25.
The Sni-A-Bar cattle have always killed very satisfac-
torily and are particularly liked by the Harvey people.
Yours truly,
SWIFT & HENRY,
by J. C. Swift.
A Record.—H. M. Hill, the well known breeder
of Montgomery county, has during the past few
years bought many Shorthorn cows of varying
quality. A few years ago he castrated twenty
bull calves. These calves were the poorer ones
and the off-colored ones from all the cows on the
farm only a few having been of Mr. Hill’s breed-
ing. They were wintered so as to maintain thrift
and a good growth, and during the next summer
were fed only a little grain on pasture. Toward
fall the grain was increased and for the last sixty
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 15
days they were on full feed. They were sold at
an average age of but little over twenty months
and brought on the Kansas City market $224.60
each.
Another Shorthorn Achievement.—In the fall
and early winter of 1918 H. O. Peck & Son, of
Wellington castrated five out of twelve bull
calves, these ike Mi, Hill’s having been the ones
undesivable for bulls. They were calved from
September to December. They were given a
little grain while sucking the cows during the
winter, were weaned in the spring and ran on
pasture the next summer. They had access to a
shed and alfalfa hay and received a very small
grain ration. They were on full feed a little
more than sixty days and were sold at an average
of sixteen months at the Peck farm for $119.70.
This sale was made on the low market last March.
These cases show the value of pure bred Short-
horn cows as producers of bect cattle. Only little
erain is required for this class of cattle.
Shorthorns Feed Well for Baby Beef.—W. J.
Sayre of Cedar Point, Chase county, now a well
known breeder of Shorthornus, was until recently
a breeder of Shorthorn calves for beef. These
calves were nearly all of lis own breeding from
high grade and pure bred cows. During a period
of ten vears Mr. Sayre fed annually a carload
of these calves and nine veat's out of the ten he
topped the Kansas City market on baby beeves
14 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
for the year. An account of the one time he
failed to sell at the highest price for the year is
given ina letter as follows:
MR. AND MRS. W. J. SAYRE
Cedar Point, Kansas.
July 25, 1920.
Dear Mr. Laude:
I think I have told you why I failed to receive the
top price one year. It was because mine were too heavy.
The buyers were wanting them very small that spring and
some 500 pound 8. M. 8. heifers sold a little higher than
my Shorthorns, but the Shorthorns brought many more
dollars. Several times I have bought the very best Here-
fords I could buy and fed them with my own and at no
time did any of them gain as much as the Shorthorns and
only on one occasion were they good enough to sell with
them.
Sincerely,
W.J.SAYRE.
A HISTORY OF SUORTHORNS IN) KANSAS 15
Shorthorn Show Steers.—Aside from an oe-
casional steer and a few carloads shown by indi-
viduals it has remained for the Kansas State
Agricultural College to carry on the produetion
of show steers. The great success which has at-
tended their efforts has attracted international
attention to Kansas as one of the leading states
to be reckoned with at the big American shows.
The steers shown by the college in recent years
were nearly all sived by the now thirteen-vear-old
Matchless Dale, a bull that has proved himself
one of the great sires of the breed. Jn ordinary
pasture flesh Matchless Dale weighed 2400
pounds and no one ever handled a melHower hide.
His splendid disposition, wouderful quality and
character have won the admiration of every
breeder that has seen him. The record made by
steers sired by him is remarkable. The college
has shown eighteen steers sired by Matchless
Dale that have been placed not lower than third
at the American Roval or International Live
Stoek Shows. At the American Royal they won
two championships, nine fists, seven seconds
and six thirds. At the International they won
one championship, two reserve championships,
six firsts, four seconds and three thirds.
A Notable Carlot From Kansas.—It was in
about 1910 that a ear load of all red vearling
steers found their wav to the American Royal.
They came from near Lancaster in Atchison
16 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
county and proved little less than a national sel-
sation. Their uniformity and general excellence
were remarkable and before the final coutest it
was admitted by all interested parties that they
were the best load of steers on the ground. These
calves were bred and developed by K. G. Gigstad
and were the product of his Shorthorn herd, uow
one among the best in Kansas. As predicted in-
mediately after their arrival, they won every-
thing in sight including the grand championship
over all breeds and they sold at the high price of
the sale.
The McGregor Exhibits.—E. A. McGregor of
Washington county, an extensive feeder of good
cattle, sent two loads of Shorthorn steers to the
1919 International, that on the face of the re-
turns as interpreted by most breeders and feed-
ers would be pronounced the most profitably pro-
duced cattle sold in the sales. The cattle in one
load were bred by Symns Bros. of Troy, Kansas,
the other load by Fred L. Weiss of Elizabeth,
Colorado. The Kausas load was bought in Jan-
unary 1919 at the average weight of 752 pounds.
They sold ten and a half months later weighing
1438 pounds, a gain of 686 pounds. These cattle
were first in the Shorthorn Speeial and sold for
$24.50, dressing 63.9 per cent. The Colorado bred
Shorthorns wou second place ta heavy competi-
tion and sold for $26.50. hey dressed 64.5 per
cent.
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAB 17
Mr. MeGregor, while looking these cattle over,
told me he had always fed Herefords and had
considered them the best feeders to be had bu
these cattle made him feel that there were none
better than good Shorthorns, as they had outdone
all of his choice Angus and Herefords.
SHORTHORN REVIEW 1810—1857
Forty-seven years before this story begins, the
first great auction sale of Shorthorns was held
at Ketton, England, by Charles Colling, justly
called one of the improvers of the breed. The
original Duchess cow, ancestress of that tribe
bought in 1783 on the Darlington Market for $65,
was dead. Thomas Bates, destined to become
the leading breeder of Great Britain, bought one
of her descendants. She was a little shabby in
appearance but he called her the most valuable
cow in the world and it is reported that he de-
clared he would not take $5000 for his bargain.
Here began the boom that made sane men lose
their heads in the greatest era of folly known in
live stock history. Bates heralded his claim for
the Duchess cow and her descendants. Thomas
Booth developed a class of Sherthorns that vied
with those bred by Bates and for several decades
the fight for supremacy was waged. The nobility
lined up on the Bates side and threw vietory to
Bates’ cattle with the Duchess tribe in the lead.
The excellent importation made by Col. Lewis
Sanders in 1817 which ineluded the Teeswater
Sow, the Durham Cow and Mrs. Motte, filled
parts of Kentucky and Ohio with splendid cattle.
Later importations, notably the descendants of
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 19
the one made by the Ohio Company in 1836, were
used to discredit the descendants of the import-
ation of 1817. Though not able to claim and sub-
stantiate superiority in fact, appeal was made
to fads and the older importation lost popularity.
In 1840 George Vail of New York imported
from Mr. Bates’ herd a bull calf combining two
of his most precious families. Later he bought
some heifers, also. Mr. Bates died in 1849 and at
the dispersion of his herd in 1850 three head
were bought by Morris and Becar of New York.
In 1853 Samuel Thorne bought at the sale of Earl
Dueie, the man upon whom Mr. Bates’ mantle
seems to have fallen, three Duchess cows, and a
year or two later he bought the Morris and Becar
herd. He now had a monopoly of the Bates’
Duchess and Oxford blood in America. Numer-
ous importations of excellent cattle had been
made prior to this time, most of them by Ken-
tueky and Ohio breeders, and there had been
hittle discrimination in favor of any family.
R. A. Alexander of Kentucky made his notable
importation of thirty-six cows and five bulls in
1853 and in 1855 he imported Duke of Airdrie,
the bull that was to revolutionize public senti-
ment in America by turning it toward the Bates
standard. Imported Duke of Airdrie began
making his influence felt at the time this story
opens and when Shorthorns had become well
established from the Atlantie to the Mississippi.
SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 1857—1880
Kansas developed its early Shorthorn interests
slowly. This fact is not surprising when con-
ditions existing at the time are considered.
Pee
LAVENDER EMBLEM, A NOTED KANSAS STATE FAIR AND
AMERICAN ROYAL PRIZE WINNER
walton Renown, secoud dam np. Lavender
~ Bloom by Silver Plate. Lavender Emblem was
second at Topeka and third at the Royal in 1920.
That the merit and breeding of this bull put lim
ina high class can not be dened and the young
calves by lim are most promising,
Jj. F. Lukert & Sons, Robinson.—More than
usual care has been taken i putting this business
on foot and there is more than the usual showing
found with new breeders. The pure bred herd
\ HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 201
is Succeeding a herd of grade cows and it is ad-
mitted that the producer of good high grades is
well equipped to produce pure bred Shorthorns.
The cows selected are uniform in type and that
type is good size, close to the ground, straight
lines, feminine head and neck, with apparent
constitution and at least reasonably good milk-
ing propensity. The calves at foot are numerous
and of desirable type and quality.
The purchases were made from good herds.
John McCoy & Son furnished several head by
Pride of Collvnie, Good Scotchman and Gladys’
Chief, the first named having been a full brother
to the dai of an International grand champion
and the last named out of a full sister to the
champion, Lavender Viscount. (See MeCoy
sketch.) Secret Goods by Howell Rees & Sons’
Ruberta’s Goods is out of a dam by Norton’s ex-
cellent Banker’s Victor. Lord Lancaster by
Governor Shallenberger’s His Highness; Orange
Lad representing Lavender Viceroy; Lovely’s
Scotchman by Good Seotchman mentioned above
and other bulls of simular breeding and quality
are the sires of the cows found on the Lukert
farm.
The bull used the past season, the sire of the
calves, 18 a nice roan, rather large but smooth
and even. He is by Augusta’s Sultan, bred at
¢
Browndale, and out of Sittyton Augusta 2d by
Masterpiece. He is satisfactory and would be
352, A LISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
retained longer but for the purchase of a red,
imp. Myreton Seal, a Bruce bred son of Sir Star.
This bull has good length, he is smooth and even,
with nice head and neck and is attractive, but
like most of the bulls recently imported, is not
so well grown out as our best American speci-
nens. Two other additions to the herd recently
acquired by purchase are Saturn Seeret and
Choice Butterfly. Saturn Seeret was bred by
Mr. Harshberger and sired by Sir Charming
10th. Her dam was out of a daughter of imp.
Kaight Templar. Choiee Butterfly is by Col-
lyme Goods who was a full brother to Diamond
Emblem, he having had for sire the champion,
Diamond Goods and for dam the clegant cow,
Kmily by imp. Collymie. (See TH. M. Hill sketch.)
If the reader will stop to consider the value of
a foundation such as is presented in this herd, he
will be convinced that it is the might way to begin.
The idea of the Lukerts was to get the kind of
cattle they wanted and in doing so they got ele-
eant ancestry as well, for only rarely do first-
class Shorthorns come from any but. first-class
ancestors.
John McCoy & Son, Sabetha.—There are fow
better herds in Kansas than the MeCoy herd.
It is one of the oldest in the state and alter forty-
one years is still partially under the care of the
founder. Phe foundation was laid with excellent
judgement. Mr. MeCoy tells the story of how he
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 2538
went to John G. Cowan’s in 1881 with money
enough to buy, as he thought, seven or eight cows
and Unele John explained to him why he should
buy the very best though fewer in number. He
took the advice and went home with four fe-
males, two by Loudon Duke 6th and two that
were out of his daughters.
Loudon Duke 6th was one of the greatest
American bulls and these excellent purchases
were worthy of consideration anywhere. Lord
Byron, also from the Cowan herd by Bell Duke
of Thorndale was a show bull of the first class
and proved a good sive. Again the Cowan herd
was resorted to for a bull and this time a son of
imp. Scottish Lord was chosen. It was the first
strong infusion of Scotch blood and on the big,
smooth cows a great success was scored.
For years no additions of females were made
but later some choice specimens were added. As
I saw them they were all of the same old McCoy
type as the cows descended from the Cowan pur-
chases. They are all of the choicest modern
breeding. Three of them I especially noted. One
came from W. A. Betteridge, one from T. J.
Dawe and one from Hiverett Hayes and a few
other choice ones came from R. T. Scott of Ne-
braska.
Good bulls have always been used in this herd.
While this does not mean that in every case they
were bred in the latest fashion, yet it would be
2o4 A TISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
hard to find a more popularly bred bull, or one
descended from better ancestry than Pride of
Collynie. He was own brother to Captain Archer,
Stodder’s famous sive, and to Sweet Mistletoe,
dam of the $4100 Imperial Mistletoe and Les-
pedeza Collynie, the 1919 International grand
champion. Gladys’ Chief, another good one, was
by Chief Justice by imp. Spartan Hero and out
of a full sister to the International champion,
Lavender Viscount. Seeret Goods, by Ruberta’s
Goods was used with excellent results for sev-
eral years and Good Scotehman by Scotchman
245103 out of Good Lassie, a granddaughter of
nnp. Golden Hair by Choice Goods, grand
champion of America, was used until recently,
siping a splendid lot of females.
The history of the McCoy herd is one of con-
tinuous success. It has almost ceased to be a
question of improvement but it is now rather a
question of maintaining unusual size and quality.
This standard has been attaimed by sound judg-
ment, liberal feeding and good eare. The herd
is a living monument to a man who recognized no
rule except that of individual excellence.
N. B. Hansen, Willis—Mr. Hansen apparent-
ly has everything needed to make a suceess of
Shorthorns meluding a first-class farm. More
than ordinary judgment has been used in mak-
ing Initial purchases. The cows are good indi-
viduals, nearly all of them having plenty of size
\ HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 259
and being of the type usually proving reliable
breeders. Bulls from good herds have been used
with satisfactory results.
Three of the cows eame through Miss Sharon
oth bred by G. Y. Johuson and sired by Royal
Sharon, a son of Courtier 2d by imp. Prince
Bishop out of Norton’s Sweet Charity 4th. Two
others are worthy of special mention. One is
Emblem’s May by the well known Diamond Eim-
blem, Mr. Dawe’s late show and breeding bull,
whose get in the Dawe show herd recently won
honors at the Missouri state fair. Her dam is
by Good Seotchman, the splendid bull used so
successfully by D. E. Reber and John McCoy.
The other cow is Lady Marshal by Cumberland
Marshal, best known to Kansas breeders as the
sire of Village Marshal, the big white bull at the
head of Tomson Bros.’ herd. Her dam is by
King Cumberland 2d by Cumberland’s Last,
a line of breeding not excelled. Mr. Hansen
made a valuable addition to his herd in
Victoria Dream 756125 bought at the 1920 Cen-
tral sale and will continue to improve both by
breeding and by purchase.
H. V. Kleppe & Sons, Everest.*—Here isa herd
of fifty females descended from excellent an-
eestry. Matilda, a daughter of the MeDermott
bred True Goods, is out of Naomi Ruth 5th, a
daughter of imp. Naomi’s Ruth 2d. Another
Telephone, Leona Mutual.
256 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
good daughter of True Goods is the red, Goldie.
Her dam is by Snowflake Baron, son of Snow-
flake, sive of the International grand champion,
Ringmaster. Seotehman’s Helene is a white by
Good Scotchman, a bull that did splendid service
for years in Brown county. Good Scotchman’s
dam was the well known Good Lassie by Choice
Goods. Emblem’s May is by Diamond Emblem,
well known sire and show bull in T. J. Dawe’s
herd. The dam of Emblem’s May was by Good
Seotchman. The cows range in size from medium
to large and the herd is being given hberal treat-
ment.
One of the best bulls used was True Goods, a
son of Fair Goods, the sou of two famous show
and breeding animals, Choice Goods and Ru-
herta. Choice Goods was America’s champion
for three vears and Ruberta was the undefeated
show cow of her day and one of the country’s
best producers. Clansiman, bred and much used
by T. J. Sands, was also in service. The present
herd bull, Homewood Augusta Lad, is a red by
Village Glory out of Village Augusta, both his
sive and dam being by Villager Omega, one of the
favorably known sons of dnp. Villager.
E. E. Taylor, Hiawatha.—Mr. Taylor has a
eood little herd which he is planning to inerease
both in numbers and im quality. He is well
located for the business. Recently he has taken
steps which make lis an aceredited herd. Some
mA
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 207
real Shorthorn bulls appear in the immediate
ancestry of Mr. Taylor’s cattle. Pride of Col-
lynie out of imp. Collynie and out of imp. Mistle-
toe 15th was a bull that sired a great lot of cows
for John MeCoy and he was own brother to
Captain Archer and Sweet Mistletoe; Snow-
flake, owned and well known in Brown county,
later the sire of Ringmaster, American grand
champion; Victor Butterfly, the sire of Victor
Orange, Henry Stunkel’s great breeding bull;
Dale’s Cumberland by Cumberland’s Last;
Prince of Tebo Lawn; Royal Diadem and Snow-
storm, both good ones, used locally; imp. Cup-
bearer, three years America’s champion;
Barmpton Knight that went from this locality
to Tomson Bros. and became famous all over the
West and Hampton’s Best, a great sire by imp.
Merry Hampton.
The herd bull is Secret Cumberland by Dale’s
Cumberland and his dam is by Golden Lavender
from George Bothwell’s herd, out of a Grand
Victor cow. It is only reasonable to presume that
this infusion of excellent blood both in females
and in the herd bull with the practice of proper
care and liberal feeding will enable Mr. Taylor
to produce first-class Shorthorns.
C. A. Babbit, Willis —Mr. Babbit keeps only a
few cows but he savs these may as well be Short-
horns, even though he milks them. The little
herd is selected with a view of producing good
258 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
calves and a profitable amount of milk. This
line of work will be continued. Thoughtful
people everywhere recognize that on high priced
land every edge must cut if anything like a rea-
sonable profit is to be made in farming and this
plan of Mr. Babbit’s with good milking Short-
horns instead of scrubs is rapidly gaining in
favor.
BUTLER COUNTY
Park E. Salter, Wichita.—This is one of the
leading herds in the entire central West and its
vise to prominence has been very rapid. The
farm upon which the herd has been kept until
this time is twenty miles southeast of Wichita
and consists of about 1000 acres of excellent
limestone blue stem land. Good crops of alfalfa
are being grown. Mr. Salter has recently bought
two farms of 160 acres each, close together,
lying ten miles east of Wichita and the three
farms will be used in the growing of Shorthorns,
the cattle being divided to suit the occasion. It
would be difficult to find better natural re
sources for successfully carrying on the work
than are found here—all kinds of pasture, an
abundance of running water of the best quality,
fertile fields that will grow big crops of forage,
with plenty of sheltered locations in belts of tim-
ber to furnish shade in summer and comfort in
winter. The improvements already on the farms
IMP. BAPTON CORPORAL
260 \ UISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
and those planned for the future will facilitate
the handling of stock in the best possible manner.
How Mr. Salter came to take up breeding Short-
horns and what he has accomplished is one of
the interesting stories of the development of the
industry in Kansas.
It was in the cheap times, about 1890, that Mr.
Salter’s father bought a red Shorthorn bull calf
(they had to be red in those days) and turned it
over to Park, then a boy, with instructions to
take care of it. The boy did so, not only feeding
it well but breaking it to lead and to ride. The
bull developed into a big, fine fellow and was
the basis of Mr. Salter’s early fondness for
Shorthorns.
Some years ago while still handling steers in
large numbers, as was the custom of all farmers
in his neighborhood, Mr. Salter decided that the
buying and selling of steers was too uncertain
and coneluded he would keep cows instead. Be-
ing unable to buy a lot of good grade cows, he
bought some cheap pure breds but, ike many
others, he did not adhere closely to the original
plan of producing only market cattle. By selling
and buying he improved the quality of his cows
and, after using medium bulls for two years, he
awoke to the fact that if he was to make any
mark asa breeder he must have a high-class bull.
Rosewood Dale, a son of Avondale, the outstand-
ine bull of his day and out of imp. Rosewood 92d,
262 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
one of the best cows in the Carpenter & Ross
herd, was available and for $3000 he was placed
at the head of the Salter herd of Shorthorns.
Better cows were added, some of the first good
ones having been secured at the dispersion of the
Hasebrook herd in Wilson county.
Mr. Salter now had some cows of real excel-
lence and an outstanding bull. Most men would
have been satisfied with this start and would
have settled down to a quite, easy life. It was at
this time that I first met Mr. Salter and he told
me within fifteen minutes that he was going to
have cows as good as any one had and as good a
bull to help Rosewood Dale as he could find. The
purchase of some excellent cows in Canada along
with the bull, imp. Newton Friar, followed. In-
ported Bapton Corporal, the top bull of the Car-
penter & Ross importation and more high-class
cows were added. Imported British Emblem
came a little later and all the while Mr. Salter
kept his eyes open for cows. This process has
been going on and the indications are that it will
continue indefinitely.
The buying and selling of the cheaper class of
Shorthorns, in which line Mr. Salter did a large
business, have been mostly discontinued and it
is now the main object to produce as good a herd
as possible and to have it unobjectionable in
every way to the critical buyer. The material on
hand for the production of such a herd is of the
(aras
=
TISS SNOWRBIRD SULTAN AND CALF. SOTLD BY MR SATTRR TO) OAPPRNTPP «& DNGEe TAD 2 nan
264 A LUSTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
best. In fact, the herd is already on the farm
but the same desire for improvement that led
Mr. Salter to change from medium to high-class
cows and froin a common bull at $150 to Rose-
wood Dale at #3000 will manifest itself as long as
he breeds Shorthorns for by nature and imelin-
ation he belongs in the class that secks better-
ment.
A visit to the pastures will convince any one as
to the quahty of the cattle. Good ones are plenti-
Ful and it is not diffienlt to find those of out-
standing quality. Aamong these is Hallwood Lavy-
ender by the well known sire, Village Flash. She
is the dain of a very pronusing roan bull calf.
Lavender Leaf comes from Canada, from the
herds of W. ©. Edwards. Her sire, Prince
of Orange, was a noted son of Missie’s Champion.
One of her daughters sold in the 1919 Salter sale
for #2000. An imported daughter of the noted
bull Keep Smiling is Whitehall Mist. She is deep,
thick and smooth and her maternal ancestry for
several gencrationus comes from Ma. Durno’s
noted herd. She has a wonderfully promising
white calf that looks every qeh a real bull and
is Slated for at least some service in the herd and
probably for a show yard career,
It will be recalled that in his 1919 sale Mr. Sal-
ter sold a cow for $3500. Cherry Blossom 6th is
a highly prized daughter of this cow that topped
the highest sale ever held in Kansas. Countess
BSS 5a
LAVENDER +sth.
BRED BY MR, SALTE
YREARLT
G POR son i
R AND SOLD AS A
266 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Missie is an elegant light roan and comes
from Canada. Her sire was Bandsman Coim-
mander and her dam was by imp. Old Lancaster,
one of the best bulls among the many good Can-
adian sires. Fair Mona is by Fair Acres Sultan,
the most noted son of Whitehall Sultan ever
used in the Southwest and her dam is by Fair
Goods, the son of the champion, Choice Goods
out of Ruberta, that as a heifer and cow occupies
leading position in American Shorthorn his-
tory. I shall not close this account of the cows in
Mr. Salter’s herd without telling of three splen-
did daughters of Hampton Spray. These are not
show cows; Hampton Spray was not known as
asire of show stock, but he did get heifers that
developed into big, rugged breeding cows sueh
as few bulls have to their eredit. On their dam’s
side these cows represent four bulls whose names
are household words in Kansas and Oklahoma
Shorthorn eireles: imp. Collynie, Captain Arch-
er, imp. Lord Cowslip and Royal Knight. (See
Hanna sketch. )
The regard in which Mr. Salter’s herd is held
is best found in the appraisement placed on its
products by the buying pubhie. Several public
sales had been made prior to 1919 at whieh good
prices had been secured and numerous private
transactions had seattered Park Place Short-
hors over a wide territory. The announcement
that fifty head from the herd were to be sold at
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 267
auction in Wichita, May 16, 1919, brought out a
large crowd from a number of states. The sale
was a success in every way with a general aver-
age for the entire lot of more than $1500 making
it the record sale for the state. The top price for
bulls was $10000 paid for 2d Fair Acres Sultan
and for females $3500 paid for Cherry Blossom
6th. Two bull calves and two heifer calves by
unp. Bapton Corporal brought an average of
$1450 and a yearling heifer by Rosewood Dale
brought $2000.
When the 1920 sale was announced for May 15,
there were those who wondered if Mr. Salter
would be able to secure so high an average as the
year before. It was pointed out that he did not
have a $10000 two-year-old bull to help pull
values up and that the money market which was
tight would naturally affect purchases of high
priced stock. The day was rainy but a large
crowd from seven states was present and the
entire offering from Park Place Farm was sold
at an average of more than $1900. Missie’s Last
a six-year-old grandson of Whitehall Sultan that
had been doing service in the herd brought $6100
going to H. C. Lookabaugh and the fifteen-
month-old Emblem Jr. by imp. British Emblem
went to E. §. Dale of Protection, Kansas at
#4000. Miss Snowbird Sultan and her white
heifer calf by Fair Acres Sultan Jr. went to Car-
penter & Ross at $5000 and Lady Supreme,
268 \ HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
grand champion at Denver, the Kansas National,
Kort Worth, at innumerable state fairs and at.
the Aimerican Royal was knocked off to Frank
Scofield of Texas at $4800. By reason of these
prices Mr. Salter now holds the record of having
made the highest priced and second Inghest
priced sale of Shorthorus tn Kansas; also of
selling the highest priced bull and the highest
priced cow sold in the state and of producing and
selling the Inghest priced fifteen-month-old bull
ever sold in the state.
John Regier, Whitewater.—If vou do not
know Mr. Regier you should get acquainted with
hin for he is one of Nature’s noblemen. Quiet,
Uhassunine, and conservative he is honest as the
mid-June day is long. When he makes a state-
ment, it is true. But that is not all. He is a
Shorthorn breeder with a record of achievement
such as only a few breeders in Kansas can show.
His twenty-five females, with the exception of
two, were bred on the farm and most of them
ave from cows of lis own breeding. There is
hot a second-class animal in the lot.
It isa umform herd, nothing extremely laree
and nothing small, just a herd of good, big, becky,
smooth Shorthorns. Hvery cow raises her own
calf and it grows big and fat. The Regier herd is
well fed and well cared for but the feed is not
expensive. Knsilage and alfalfa are used with a
protem ration for the calves. LT saw the cows
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 269
recently, some of them suckling, and they are
as thrifty a lot as one could wish to find. This
abihty to do well on farm feeds is second nature
with these cattle, for generations of such feeding
NONPAREIL STAR
with a httle culling out—not much culling has
been necessary—has done the work.
Mr. Regier began breeding in 1902. In 1905
he began showing. He went to the Butler county
and the Harvey county fairs and quoting his own:
words, ‘‘I got first in every class entered.’? The
next year he ventured farther from home, going
to Hutchinson, which was at that time endeavor-
ing to be the permanent location for the state
fair, where with plenty of competition he did not
270 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
win everything for which he showed but he won
his share, among which was first on bull calf. W.
A. Harris was the judge. Later he showed at
Topeka, Wichita, Hutchinson and Kansas City,
GOOD NEWS
always well in the money but seldom at the top
for the reason that most exhibitors had nurse
cows and all kinds of dainties and Scotehmen for
their cattle while Mr. Regier had only the calf’s
mother and good ordinary feed and himself as
herdsman.
The reader will want to know something of
these cows. Calla 2d, a twelve-year-old red, but
very vigorous and thrifty, is by Nonpareil Star.
Her dam is by Orange Hero, a son of Godoy, he
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN. KANSAS 271
by imp. Spartan Hero out of imp. Golden Thistle.
Calla 2d’s second dam is Bashful 6th by Prince
President 2d, the son of imp. Prince President
and Mysie 45th, a cow that was the dam of sever-
al good herd bulls. Then there is Calla 3d, a roan
daughter of Calla 2d by Good News, the bull that
was shown at three state fairs and won three
firsts, before Mr. Regier bought him. News Vic-
toria—the cattle are named after their ancestry
—is one of the good ones and like Calla 3d she is
a daughter of New Goods but her dam breaks in-
to a new line. When Jas. Tomson, away back in
1897, saw the red bull calf that tickled his fancy
and straightway told his father that was the
bull they must buy, Gallant Knight had his com-
ing-out party and this daughter of New Goods
had for a dam 5th Elderlawn Victoria by Gallant
Knight and for grandam Victoria of Maple Hill
by Chief Violet of Maple Hill. Another daugh-
ter of New Goods is Edelweiss 9th, a seven-year-
old roan out of Edelweiss 3d a daughter of imp.
Lord Banff.
It was in 1904 or 1905 that Mr. Regier wanted
a Shorthorn cow as good as the best. M. E. Jones
had bought imp. Lord Banff, a bull for which G.
E. Ward had paid the then unheard-of price of
$5100 and Jones was selling some cows bred to
him and some with calves at foot by him. Im-
ported Edelweiss, probably the best, at least the
highest priced one and one of the highest priced
me)
212 \ LISTORY OF SHORTITORNS IN KANSAS
cows sold in America that yvear eame to Mr.
tegier’s along with a heifer calf by imp. Lord
santt. This heifer was Edelweiss 3d and it is
from this Edelweiss purchase that a cow bred by
MAXWALTON MANDOLIN
Mr. Regier topped one of the Salter sales at
$1625
We have been told and are telling over and
over again that the bull is the big end of the busi-
ness. Nonpareil Star was the first of Mr. Re-
gier’s bulls. So good an authority as B. O. Cowan
has told us in his History of Missouri: Shorthorns
that there was little use of any one else showing
against George Bothwell and the get of imp.
Nonpareil Vietor. Nonpareil Star was the bull
calf in one of Mr. Bothwell’s greatest show herds
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 273
and he was by imp. Nonpareil Victor. His dam
was by Clief Violet 4th, a son of Scottish Chief,
sive of Rosedale Violet 9th and out of Rosedale
Violet 2d, a daughter of imp. Marsh Violet.
Good News is the next bull that left an impress
on the herd. His sire was New Goods, a son of
Choice Goods out of a cow by imp. Collynie and
his dam was by a son of Lavender Viscount,
erand champion at the first International show
in 1900. Then came Dale Emblem, son of Owen
KKane’s Double Dale, the great double cross
Avondale sire of such unusual excellence. Dale
Emblem’s dam was by Snowflake, sire of Ring-
master, the only bull ever awarded the Inter-
national grand championship three times. Scotch
Cumberland followed Double Dale. His sire is
Cumberland Type, the most sensational show
bull of reeent years, said to have been shown
thirty-seven times at America’s biggest shows
and to have won thirty-seven first prizes. His
sire was by Cumberland’s Last, the greatest bull
in C. A. Saunders’ herd. Scotch Cumberland’s
dam is by Burwood Royal bred by Herr Bros. &
Reynolds and sold to Mr. Saunders. Maxwalton
Mandolin is the present herd bull with a reputa-
tion to make and a good chance to make it. He
is by Maxwalton Revolution and is a typical
representative of his family. His dam is by
Avondale.
Since writing the article above, Mr. Regier has
274 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
purchased two yearling heifers of Tomson Bros.
for $3000. It is needless to say they are from
the tops of that excellent herd. It will be of in-
terest to note that his six entries by Scotch Cum-
berland in the Purple Ribbon sale at Wichita,
though only a httle more than twelve months old,
averaged $645.
J. C. Robison, Towanda.—Whitewater Stock
Farm is a magnificent body of land, 1040 acres,
and every acre except that in the bed of the
Whitewater River will grow first-class alfalfa.
A blue grass pasture that would look good to a
native of Kentucky or of Nodaway county, Mis-
sourl, was being grazed upon April 29 by a
Shorthorn to the acre and they had been getting
all the grass they wanted for some time. In ad-
dition to the elegant bungalow, forty by seventy
feet, used as a home for the Robison family, there
are four other houses good enough to rent for $25
or more in the ordinary Kansas town. These
houses are oceupied by the men employed in the
operation of the farm. As they are all married
men and are being well compensated for their
services, I suspect Mr. Robison is not having
labor troubles. The barns are more extensive and
better constructed than those T have found else-
where. If this farm is used to its capacity
in the production of Shorthorns, one can only
wonder at the possibilities of the herd in the
future.
ATATNT DARN WTITITNWUraA DYDD wmMmnil” BDA DAL
276 \ LUSTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
The reader will recall the Robison farm as a
great Percheron breeding establishment, the pro-
duets of which won nation-wide fame. There is
a little story connected with its shifting from
Percherons to Shorthorns aside from the regular
one furnished by the auto and the tractor and the
truck. Wm. Ellett, oldest son of the family, is
a 1920 graduate of the Department of Animal
Husbandry in the Kansas State Agricultural
College and wants to specialize in Shorthorns.
Mr. Robison, while apparently good for many
vears, realizes what some middle-aged men do
not seem to understand, that natural inclination
for any vocation, if properly directed, is an in-
valuable asset in the race for suecess. He knows
that in the natural course of events his sons
should be in the prime of life when for him lfe’s
activities have ceased, hence the trip to Scotland
for Shorthorns, direct from the locality that has
elven fame to the breed.
It is an ‘‘all-imported”’ lot of reds, whites and
roans that is the foundation for the herd of the
future. Some of the younger animals are not as
well developed as the better American specimens,
and at the time I saw them, April 29, were still
showing effects of their recent hardships, imnei-
dent to importation. They are, however, nice,
smooth, breedy looking specimens and within a
few years the good pastures and the alfalfa will
have done the work so scriously interfered
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 20%
with by the war time conditions in Scotland.
There are about thirty females including
heiter calves at foot, in the herd. I was partieu-
larly unpressed with Balleechin Rosewood 3d, a
massive four-year-old roan. She stands on very
BRIGHT GEM As A TWO-YEAR-OLD WITH BULL CALF
A prize winner in Scotland, imported by Myr. Robison.
short legs, has fine length, great depth and very
straight lines. Her head and neck and covering
of flesh ave superb. Barring a little prominence
of hip and unevenness of rump, she could hardly
be improved. She is by the Duthie bred Golden
Baron out cf Rosewood 82d. Her grandam is
Rosewood Toth by Waverly, which cow is the
dam of inp. Rosewood 92d, dain of John Potter’s
Rosewood Dale. Bright Gem is a red two-year-old
278 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
daughter of the noted sire, Collynie Bright Star.
She stood third in her class at the Perth-
shire show last season. She is large, smooth and
looks like a good breeding prospect. txintore
Beauty 4th and Kintore Victoria came from
Sutherlands in Aberdeenshire. Their sire is
Cluny Prince Victor, bred by Lady Catheart.
They look like the making of good breeding cows.
Bouquhan Bellona Princess is by the highly es-
teemed bull, Collynie Cupbearer, and in addition
to beig one of the best cows of the importation,
she has proved a breeder of excellent stock, her
bull calf being one of the best on the farm. May-
flower Mint is a three-year-old roan, bred by
Robert Bruee. She is Bruce bred for ten gen-
erations on her dam’s side and the sires were
bred by Bruce, Duthie, Marr, Taylor, Shepherd
and Cruickshank. Those who want something
coming from top herds all the way down should
be pleased with this pedigree.
T could go on at length and tell of cach of the
several females on the farm, but I shall do so only
in a general way. Some of the choicest herds
of Perthshire and Aberdeenshire have been
dvawn on for these cattle. Amone them are
those of Messrs. Butter, Drone, Strang, Syms,
Hunter, Jaffrey, Wilson, Major Graham Sterl-
ing, Robt. Bruce, Rennie, Durno, Stephen,
Sutherland, Campbell of Kinnellar fame and
Duthie, whose reputation is world-wide.
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 279
Mr. Robison realizes that it is the bull that
must be relicd upon for a good herd and he has
made an effort to get the best available. In order
to have a better chance at selection, he is saving
four young bulls until he can see how they de-
velop. One of these, Herald, (vol. 66 E. H. B.)
is a white of unusual promise, low down, wide,
smooth, well covered and large. His sire is the
Duthie bred Collynie Lavender King. He will
be used liberally this season. Another that is now
being tried out is the red, Diamond Star, bred by
Mr. Drone and sired by Gloaming Star. Though
less than fourteen months old at the time of my
visit and having had at least some set-back by
reason of the long trip and quarantine, he
weighed in only light flesh, 1115 pounds. He is of
accepted show vard type with a full share of
qualifications for the show ring. Another is
Lord Aberdeen bred by James Durno. This
fellow proved a very poor sailor but is doing well
now aud will be given a chance to develop into a
good bull as Mr. Robison believes he will.
As illustrating the owner’s determination to
put a top notch bull at the head of the herd, he
said to me, ‘‘ Now if neither of these calves makes
as good a bull as can be had elsewhere, I will get
one elsewhere, for I am determined to head this
berd with a bull of the highest class.’’ I believe
the spirit which prompted the purchase of Ca-
sino, admittedly the best stallion of bis day, for
280 A UISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
the Whitewater Stock Farm will find a parallel
in the bull which will head this herd.
At the Salter-Robison sale held at Wichita
May 15, 1920, a consignment of twenty-seven
head, which included several of the imported
eattle, made an average of $920. Sweet Fra-
grance, bred by Wim. Duthie, sold to Albert Hul-
tine of Nebraska for $2400, and a number of the
American bred females sold for more than $1000.
It should be kept in mind that the cattle were in
thin flesh and that Mr. Robison retained the
most desirable ones in his foundation herd.
Fremont Leidy, Leon.*—Mr. Leidy is the old-
est breeder of his community. Nine years ago he
went to the Alex Fraser dispersion and bought
three of the best cows of that excellent herd. Pre-
vious to this he had bought from the J. F. Stod-
der herd a trio of splendid cows. This gave him
daughters of Falsetto, the noted Norton bull;
Silk Goods, the son of Choice Goods and Lassie
of Tebo Lawn and Captaim Archer, one of the
best sires in the West. They were out of dams by
th Duke of Hillsdale, one of the last of
his great family; Lord Thistle, son of the
noted cow, Mysie 45th and Gwendoline’s Prinee,
another son of Mysie 45th. he herd has been
very prolifie and four sales of about forty head
each have been held, the greater part of the of-
Ferines having been descended from these cows
Ship ou Frisco or Santa le.
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 281
and from two purchased from B. B. & H. T.
Groom. Some of the best of these cattle are
still on the farm.
Other purchases of good stock were made of
which only a few of those now in the herd will be
mentioned. Ewing Acres Victoria, a handsome
dark roan, is by Linwood Dale. She comes from
the Ewing Bros.’ Missouri herd and is by the
the sire of immerous prize winners. On her danv’s
side she combines the blood of four of America’s
and Europe’s great Shorthorns, nap. Nonpareil
Victor, imp. Collynie, imp. Craven Kiight and
inp. Princess Alice. Lady Ikatherine is a two-
vear-old of great promise. She is out of a mag-
nificent cow by Captain Archer and would be a
eredit to any herd. Lawndale Wildeves 24th has
been and still is an extraordinary breeder. She
is a daughter of Falsetto out of a Falsetto dam.
second dam by Prince Royal 2d giving her the
cross to imp. Princess Alice, the greatest cow of
her day. Princess Beauty by Captain Archer
must be counted among the best cows I have seen
this year. She is large, very attractive, very
smoothly covered and has furnished several
raluable additions to the herd. Maid of Orieans
is another Fraser cow that bas added wealth to
the herd in raising exceptionally good calves.
Two elegant young cows are Rosebud 7th and
White Beauty, both bred in Lowa and by
Prince Blythesome, a grandson of Victor Baron
282 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
and unp. Craibstone with an imp. Nonpareil
Victor cross near the top of the pedi-
gree. ‘They are four crosses from imp. Rose-
blush bred by Duthie. Secrecy, a good young
cow, is a granddaughter of Secret of Hill Farm
3d, a Dustin bred daughter of imp. Merry Hamp-
ton. She has a white heifer calf by imp. Bapton
Corporal for which tempting offers running
near four figures have been refused.
Three additions were made at the Royal sale
in 1919. Musical, twenty-five months old with
heifer calf at foot, was not only one of the bar-
gains but one of the really desirable things in
the offering. Hew Shorthorns have such a wealth
of ancestry. Among her immediate ances-
tors are Pleasant Dale 2d out of the dam of the
$10000 2d Fair Acres Sultan; Captain Archer,
own brother to Swect Mistletoe, dam of Lespe-
deza Collynie, 1919 International grand cham-
pion; limp. Collynie, the sire of Sweet Mistletoe
and scores of the best Shorthorns ever owned in
the central West besides Royal Knight, the best
son of imp. Princess Alice, the outstanding cow
of her generation. As an addition to a breeding
herd Musical should prove of great value. Miss
Monarch 2d, two years old with four grand
champions of America in the first three crosses,
was one of the clegant heifers sold by Harriman
Bros. and fell to Mr. Leidy’s bidding.
The present herd bull is leaving so great an
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 283
lmpress that too mueh could not be said in his
favor. In looking over his calves I was struck
with their valuable Shorthorn characteristics.
They have plenty of size and are uniform in type
and general appearance and they are excellent
feeders. This bull is Cedar Dale. He is not par-
ticularly impressive in appearance and has been
dehorned, but as a sire of real Shorthorns he
will need to be classed among the truly good Kan-
sas bulls.
Mr. Leidy for the first time entered the show
ving at the 1920 Kansas National in Wichita and
won more than the usual honors given new ex-
hibitors. His young herd bull, recently bought
of Tomson Bros., was placed fifth following the
entries of the professional show men with highly
fitted animals. His young herd won second place
in the contest and two of his junior heifer calves
were well in the money. It is a great credit to
any breeder to be able to make a showing in such
closely contested classes,
My. Leidy has ereditably served his district as
state senator and is recognized as one of the best
orators 1n Kansas. Those who have visited the
Leidy home will agree that much of the success
achieved with Shorthorns is due to Mrs. Leidy
who takes an unusual interest in the cattle and
whose judgment on Shorthorns is excellent.
Joe King & Son, Potwin.—This firm has a
large establishment and a pure bred herd has
254 A TISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
heen kept for about twenty years. The main herd,
however, has consisted of high grades and com-
mercial stock. This is to be changed and in the
future they will specialize on Shorthorns. Early
in their work they bought of C. S. Nevius a few
of his famous Scotch Josephines, one of the best
fanules of Kansas Shorthorns. They also
secured Poppy’s Pride bred by B. O. Cowan and
sured by his great bull, Norfolk, and out of a dam
by Victor Knight; Lovely Lassie by Victor Areh-
er 163364, a Prather bred son of Fearless Archer ;
Paquita by Prince of Tebo Lawn out of a cow by
Prince Armour, the great white son of imp.
Princess Alice and others of simular class. This
gave them a splendid working foundation. The
bulls used have, as a whole, been good ones.
Wlule no extravagant prices have been paid,
Messrs. King have held in view first of all the
market requirements and profit to the producer
and have demanded that thei herd bull be a
strictly good beef animal. A study of the pedi-
erees of the bulls used shows them closely de-
scended from the best Shorthorns of the day.
Among the first sives in service was Airdrie Vis-
count bred by CG. KE. Leonard. His sire was Lav-
ender Viscount, American grand champion and
his dain was by the 538d Duke of Airdric, one of
the best bulls of the most popular family of
Shorthorns in the world. The S. C. Hanna bred
Inele 231949; Master Mason 374696 bred by
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 285
M. E. Jones and Supreme Victor 394156, a Stun-
kel bred son of Victor Orange, were among the
good ones used. The bull now in service bred by
H. G. Brookover, Victory 2d 690174, is a nice
roan descended from choice ancestry. He is a big,
smooth, rugged fellow, and, like his predecessors,
one of the profitable kind. The conditions under
which the herd has been kept are such as to de-
velop medium size and to insure to the purchaser
an animal which will continue to do well with
good ordinary farm eare.
Clarence Leidy, Leon.—I feel sure that My.
Leidy is going to be a good breeder. Among the
excellent females in the herd is Superb Cecelia, a
“superb” light roan. Her sire is Superb Omega
by Uppermill Omega and she traces through a
line of good Canadian breeders to the Campbell
bred imported Cecelia 4th. Mysie 2d, a smooth
red, carries her credentials as a producer in her
twelve-month-old heifer, an extra good one by
Cedar Dale. In her immediate ancestry is found
the great old bull Lord Mayor and the equally
great cow imp. Marigold 50th. Two other cows
of the kind it pays to have, come from Mr. Roe-
ingk. The one combines the best Scotch blood
lines with Col. Vaile’s noted Waterloos. The
other is a daughter of Superb Sultan by White-
hall Sultan. She is not only of exceptionally
good beef type but is also a heavy milker. At the
1919 Stunkel sale Mr. Leidy bought two choice
286 \ HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Fomales. Royal Empress 12th is by Cumberland
Diamond. She was not only the best heifer in
the sale but she would look good in any herd and
her breeding is as good as her individuality. Her
dam was by Victor Orange, one of the noted bulls
of the breed and her second dam was by Star
Goods, own brother to Bellows Bros.’ champion,
Diamond Goods. The other cow is by Star Goods
out of a Victor Orange dam and is of the regula-
tion Stunkel breeding.
Mr. Leidy has been using Fremont Leidy’s
Cedar Dale and the two brothers who live on ad-
jJoming farms will continue to co-operate to some
extent in the matter of bulls, but it was also
deemed necessary to have a bull on this farm. At
the Purple Ribbon sale held in January 1920 at
Wichita, the excelent young prize winning bull
from EF. C. Barber & Sons’ consigument was
secured at one of the high prices of the sale.
G. W. Brown & Sons, Leon.—It is a good lot
of cattle which this firm is getting together. The
herd represents their purchases at the last two
sales held by Fremont Leidy where they were
quite critical in their selections. About forty
females are now on the farm, most of them of
the well known Leidy breeding, coming from the
Fraser herd through daughters of Falsetto, Silk
Coods and Crown Prince of Lawnsdale and from
J. FL Stodder through daughters of Captain
Areher and Gwendoline’s Prince, lines” of
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 287
breeding typical of splendid results. They have
added to their purchases some of the very best of
Mr. Leidy’s later acquisitions. Roan Violet, an
outstanding three-year-old heifer, a daughter of
the excellent sire, Wooddale Chieftain, a son of
The Choice of All, is out of a cow by Violet
Chunk, an outstanding sire of H. C. Dunean’s
breeding. Mr. and Mrs. Leidy reluctantly
parted with this cow. Roxana, a splendid roan
by Secret Robin, now at the head of Miss M .V.
StanJey’s herd (see Stanley sketch) is out of a
dam by Wooddale Chieftain followed by Lord
Mayor 3d and Secret Archer, all strictly ligh-
class bulls. Another excellent purchase was the
red, Geraldine, that in her three top crosses
carries the blood of famous sires such as Lord
Lovel, Lavender Viscount and imp. Cupbearer.
With proper handling this should become a
first-class herd.
A. G. Sowers, Leon.—At the Leidy sale held
recently, Mr. Sowers made four valuable addi-
tions to his little herd. His cows are of the same
breeding as Mr. Leidy’s and are good individ-
uals. This herd is built on a foundation largely
representative of the most famous cattle of any
breed in the world’s history, the Bates Oxfords,
Kirklevingtons and Duchesses and it is nicely
topped out with Scotch bulls. Searchlight Lad
by Searchlight; Silk Goods by Choice Goods;
Falsetto, the famous sire in the Fraser herd and
285 \ LISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Hampton’s Sharon by Hampton Primrose, an
excelent Hampton Spray bull, are some of the
sires appearing in the top crosses. This insures
a select line of breeding cows. Mr. Sowers will be
able to use Mr. Leidy’s bulls.
Hubert A. Haynes, Rosalia —Mr. Haynes isa
new breeder with ten females and a good bull.
Most of his purchases came from Fremont
Leidy and a few from J. C. Robison and the
cattle are representative of these two herds. The
first bull used was by a son of Searchlight out of
a Kellerman Scotch Josephine. The present sire
is a Leidy bred son of Hampton Sharon, a son
of Hampton Primrose.
A. J. Tull, Leon.—Mr. Tull is another one of
Fremont Leidy’s near neighbors who laid a good
foundation at his sale. A very promising roan
heifer by Sceret. Robin (see Miss Stanley’s
sketch) should serve as an excellent foundation
to which he intends making an occasional addi-
tion. This heifer comes from an elegant line of
ancestry four generations of which, on both
sides, I knew well and admired on account of
their merit.
CHASE COUNTY
W. J. Sayre, Cedar Point.—The man who ean
breed trom his cows a ear load of ealves and feed
them so they will sell at twelve months at a high-
er market price than any other calves on the
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 289
Kansas City market is not only an accomplished
feeder but he is also a breeder of the first class.
Mr. Sayre did that, not only onee, but he did it
nine times out of ten years he has been feeding
his calf crop. It was not a load selected from
many, but these wonderful market toppers were
the entire crop, culls and all. No breeder within
my knowledge has te his eredit a higher accom-
plishment than has Mr. Sayre for he has gone to
the court of last resort and has received for his
cattle and for his methods the strongest possible
endorsement. Most of these calves were grades,
some were pure breds, probably the culls of both
sexes and the reader can imagine what the choice
ones would be when developed.
A new order of things has arisen. The nursery
which furnished the material for the conquest of
the beef market of the Southwest has now turned
into a different channel. The grades have been
disposed of and the least desirable of the pure
breds have gone into other herds. The forty-
five females now on the farm are such as to meet
the exacting requirements of the owner. This
means that they are not only first-class individu-
als but also that they carry through their anees-
try an inheritance of merit and uniformity rich
enough to almost guarantee they will reproduce
their kind. This is an inestimable advantage to
the buyer of breeding stock for he can be sure
before hand of the kind of calves he will ect from
290 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
a bull so descended. A study of the ancestry of
Mr. Sayre’s cattle reveals the fact that I am
eorreet in making the foregoing statement.
The first bull used was Lopez 231291. His sire
was Lord Mayor 112717, a son of Baron Laven-
der 2d, the most wonderful bull ever produced at
Linwood and imp. Lady of the Meadow, one of
the best breeding cows in the Linwood herd. His
erandsire was imp. Baron Victor, the bull that
established Cruickshank prestige in America.
The dam of Lopez was by Vanquish by Galahad
the sire of Gallant Knight, the state’s greatest
sire of prize winners, and her sire was imp. Mas-
ter of the Rolls, sire of Master of the Grove,
Ameriean Royal and International grand cham-
pions. Another bull used was Victor Chief, also
out of a Gallant Knight cow. His sire was Dicta-
tor by Norfolk, a bull said by B. O. Cowan to have
been seeond only to imp. Seottish Lord. An own
sister to Dictator, Forest Daisy 2d, was the dam
of New Year’s Delight, grand champion every-
where west of the Mississippi and junior echam-
pion at the International. Norfolk, by the way,
was by Prince Royal, son of imp. Princess Alice,
ereatest American cow of her day. Another bull
was Hampton Crown by Hampton’s Best, prob-
ably the best son of imp. Merry Hampton.
The bulls now in use are Jolly Dale and Glen-
dale, both by Maxwalton Rosedale, full brother
to Whitehall Rosedale, the grand champion bull
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 291
all over the central West and sire of the 1919
champion, Violet Dale. Maxwalton Rosedale was
out of the same dam as Pride of Albion, Royal
grand champion. They both came from Tomson
Bros., being the best bulls of the desired age and
out of the best cows in the herd. Female addi-
tions by purchase have been few. Eight heifers
were recently bought from H. C. Stephenson and
what I have seen of Mr. Stephenson’s cattle war-
rants me in saying they are good ones. These
heifers are of choicest ancestry. Their sire, Non-
pareil Knight, was by Gallant Knight’s Heir and
their dams are by Cherry Knight by Barmpton
Knight out of Cherrybud, dam of one of Tomson
Bros.’ best prize winning heifers.
Ina letter of December, 1920, Mr. Sayre says
that Glendale is proving the best bull he ever
owned and that his 1920 calves are the best he has
ever produced. Ona ration of alfalfa and three
pounds of oats each, per day they are carrying
more flesh than any of the car lots he sent to
market carried at a corresponding time.
Mr. Sayre’s twelve-year-old son, Paul G.
Sayre, bids fair to grow into a good Shorthorn
man while working with his father in this ex-
cellent herd.
Frank H. Yeager, Bazaar.—Mr. Yeager is one
of the most prominent breeders of this section,
his herd having been established fourteen years
ago and now numbering fifty females. He is
292 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
producing eattle for service that will give maxt-
mum results from the feed consumed and one of
the requirements is that the cows be good nulkers.
Pushing for extra development is not practiced,
but thrift and a good growth are maintained.
The result is that eattle purchased here are not
stunted, yet will respond well to good farm care.
The herd consists of choiecly bred cows. One
ot the most valuable and best is Collynie Prim-
rose and she is so royally bred that but few cows
in Ameriea could be classed as having a pedigree
as good. Her sire, imp. Collynie, has the distine-
tion of being sired by the world’s greatest pres-
ent day breeder, Win. Duthie. Collynie’s dam,
Lavender 45th, was Mr. Cruickshank’s favorite
from among all his Lavenders and her ancestors
for five generations were all bred by Cruick-
shank and were the eattle that made Scotch
Shorthorns famous the world over. Collynie
Primrose is out of Primrose 6th, one of the
smoothest, thickest, large cows in Mr. ITanna’s
herd when that herd was at its best. Primrose
6th was by imp. Inglewood, a 2500 pound show
bull at four vears old and the sire of much out-
standing stock imeluding the dam of Ingle Lad,
now famous as the sire of great producing cows
such as Lad’s FKmimia, seeond dam of the grand
ehampion, Lady Supreme. But this is not all.
Primrose 6th was out of imp. Primrose 4th by
Seottish Archer, an own sister to the cow that
A HISTORY OF SHORTMORNS IN KANSAS 293
for three years produced the highest priced bull
in the Duthie sales and to Prince of Fashion,
leading show bull in Scotland. Tmention Collynie
Primrose at such length because Mr. Yeager has
several of her daughters and granddaughters
and her family is mereasing rapidly and becom-
ing a ereat part of his future herd.
There are other good females, but I shall now
call attention to the bulls Mr. Yeager has used.
Hampton, bred by Mr. Hanna, was by the 2500
pound Hampton Spray, one of the best sires used
in Kansas and sold with the herd to F. A. Gilles-
pie of Muskogee, Oklahoma. UWampton’s dam
was Golden Queen 3d by imp. Collynie and she
was out of imp. Golden Queen, one of the largest
cows of the breed. (See Hanna sketch, Part 1.)
The bulls now in use are Village Champion and
Seotchman. Village Champion is by Double
Champion, son of Choice Goods, the champion of
America for three years and out of Russella, dam
of Ruberta, the greatest heifer and cow of her
day, and for three years the undefeated female
of the American continent. Village Champion’s
dam is by imp. Invincible and his seeond dam by
imp. Hospodar. Scotchman is by Hampton and
Collynie’s Primrose, both mentioned
He is an exeellent young bull that Mr.
‘er finds it advisable to use on a part of the
OWE “OL
herd. Any one at all familiar with the Short-
horn history of the past will readily see that Mr.
294 A LISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Yeager has in his herd, as outlined above, all the
elements necessary for success and popularity.
CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY
Chas. Casement, Sedan.—This is the largest
and most prominent herd in Chautauqua county.
The cattle are strictly a utility lot, handled to
get very good growth and development without
any disposition toward forcing. While the herd
could have been better developed without injury,
yet it has not been underfed or neglected to the
extent that deterioration has taken place, rather,
the cattle are in the best possible condition to
make profitable returns for increased attention
given them.
These cows are from desirable ancestry. Sev-
eral females by St. Valentine 12th by St. Valen-
tine were added a few years ago. The herd
represents a blending of Scotch ard Bates with a
toueh of Booth and the blood lines chosen have
been good ones. This probably came from a dis-
position to use the right kind of bulls rather than
from a study of pedigree, but as is always the
ease, good bulls come from good ancestry, so I
was not surprised to find in evidence near the
top of the pedigrees, Gwendoline’s Prinee by
imp. Prince President, Champion’s Best by Val-
ley Champion, Choice Goods, Collynie, the Vaile
bred Winsome Duke, Mr. Snodgrass’ prize win-
ning Seott Jr. and imp. Scottish Emperor that
A TISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 295
did service for Bellows Bros., T. O. Ford and H.
M. Hill.
Among the herd bulls used were Majestic, bred
by D. P. Norton by the Canada bred Buccaneer ;
Sedan Chief, a graudson of Collynie; Hallwood
Viscount by Choice Goods Model, a son of Rose-
dale Violet 9th and Victor Hampton by Hamp-
ton Spray. The present herd bull, Lord’s Dale,
is a big, straight, heavy fellow with a very mas-
culine appearance. While not a bull of extra fin-
ish, he is not at all rough and must be classed as
a good bull and a good breeder as his calves will
prove. He is by Mr. Lookabaugh’s Lavender
Lord and came from M. W. Babb’s herd where
he had done satisfactory service.
The article above was written in June 1919.
Since then Mr. Casement sent a cow to the
Southeast Kansas sale held at Independence
April 2, 1920 and she sold for $625 to so good a
judge as 8. M. Knox. Mr. Casement bought for
use in his herd a yearling bull, Rose Dale bred by
Park E. Salter and sired by Rosewood Dale out
of adam by Count Broadhooks 2d 36437.
M. L. Holroyd, Cedar Vale—I met Mr. Hol-
royd frequently while he was a student at the
Kansas State Agricultural College in the depart-
ment of Animal Husbandry. There was a large
Shorthorn herd on his father’s farm but the eat-
tle had not all been kept recorded. Mr. Holroyd,
now in charge of the farm, is building up a
296 4 HISTORY OF SHORTILORNS IN KANSAS
registered herd from the recorded ones, and ad-
ditions that will be made from time to time. Good
bulls have been used and the eattle are good.
Among recent sires was a son of Careless Oon-
queror 2d by imp. Conqueror out of imp. Blythe-
some loth. This bull was out of a dam by Violet
Chunk, a Duncan bred show bull by Headlight,
and proved an excellent sire. He was followed by
a son of Royal Gloster, well known in the Garver
herd as a high-class show and breeding bull. This
farm, destined to become the home of a real
Shorthorn herd, is one of large pastures, splen-
didly watered, and big ficlds of alfalfa,
J. M. Hamill, Grenola—Mr. Hamill has a
lierd of about thirty females which he is keeping
in the ordinary farm way and he is getting fair
development. Ie finds a market for his surplus
at moderate prices near home and, while not ob-
taming the measure of suecess which would fol-
low more careful handling and more liberal feed-
ing, he is producing a useful class of cattle and
is seeurine far better returns than he eould
secure from common stock. In addition to the
usual crosses from good bulls found in loeal
herds, Mv. Hamill’s eattle carry a cross of Forbes
Bros.’ Baron Gloster and the splendid Bates
bull, Peeulated Wild Eyes. The herd bull is by
Victor Hampton, a son of Hampton Spray.
Chas. J. Buchele, Cedar Vale—Mr. Buchele
boueht a few Shorthorns recently. One, Minnie
A HISTORY OF SHORTILORNS IN KANSAS 297
Sharon by Refinery 377210, is out of Minnie 37th
bred by Abram Renick and sired by his splendid
bull, The Professor. This cow, in Mr. Stodder’s
herd, was an excellent producer of high-class
show stock. Mr. Buchele also has a daughter of
Minnie Sharon by Johu B. Potter’s Avondale
bull, Rosewood Dale, formerly much used by
Park E. Salter. Other cows of approved breed-
ing are in the little herd which is headed by Red
Warrior 612235 by Hampton 2d, a son of Hamp-
ton’s Demonstrator.
CHEYENNE COUNTY
R. K. Standish, Saint Francis.—It will doubt-
less be a surprise to many to learn that in the ex-
treme northwest corner of the state is found a
well cared for herd built from very excellent
foundation stock. Private sales have taken care
of the surplus as rapidly as it could be produeed.
A silo is to be built and a show herd started out
this season (1920) and occasional choice addi-
tions will be made by purchase. The herd now
ee May was bred by
consists of forty females.
Rapp Bros. and is by the sire of American Royal
and state fair prize winners, Gladstone, an excel-
ce
lent breeding son of
Wi hite a all Sultan. Victoria
Beauty 3d is by Gloster’s Favorite, a bull of the
ehoicest biarce dine, Wn 1 her dam is of the best
blood lines. Lady B. was bred by Geo. Allen and
her sire, Victor Sultan, ranks with the best of
298 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Whitehall Sultan’s sons. Her dam is Dorothy B.
bred at Browndale from the noted family of that
hame.
One of the bulls used is Palmetto Cumberland
by Roan Cumberland, a son of Cumberland’s
Last out of Pine Grove Mildred 11th. Another
is Model Type by Cumberland’s Type out of
Marengo Cumberland, a daughter of Cumber-
land’s Last out of imp. Lady Marengo. The
roan, imp. Grand Fortune, a son of imp. Modest
Princess, was also somewhat used.
My. Standish has just written me that he re-
cently purchased the massive roan calf, Supreme
827618 for $2100. This calf was well in the money
at the Nebraska State Fair last fall. His sire is
Royal Supreme by the International grand
champion, Village Supreme. His dam is from
choice ancestry, having been out of a cow by the
ehampion bull of his day, Viscount of Anoka.
This brief outline given an idea of the excellent
blood lines found in these cattle. Plans for the
future include the production of a large and
high-class herd.
CLAY COUNTY
S. B. Amcoats, Clay Center.—Mr. Ameoats
has been very active in Shorthorn circles for ten
years. His early purchases were made from M.
C. Vansell of Atchison county and later he
bought the entire I’. M. Gifford herd. The best
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 299
of these cattle were retained and the process of
making occasional purchases with the retention
of the best has been continued until there is now
an excellent herd on the farm. In addition to
the purchases mentioned, Mr. Ameoats has
drawn on the herd of Governor Shallenberger, E.
D. Ludwig, R. T. Scott, W. A. Betteridge and
George Allen & Sons.
The array of good bulls, whose blood was
brought into the herd through the cows acquired,
includes such animals as Missie’s Sultan by
Glenbrook Sultan; Victor Sultan by Whitehall
Sultan; Godwin, son of imp. Spartan Hero and
Golden Thistle; Lord Marr by Lord Mayor out
of imp. Marigold 50th; Barmpton Knight by
Searlet Knight; Sempstress Valentine, T. P.
Babst’s bull that sold for $1000 in the era of low
prices; Lavender Viceroy, possibly the best
known son of the grand champion, Lavender Vis-
count; Baron Violet by Victor Bashful, the son
of Sweet Violet 2d, and many others that figure
at the top, not at the bottom, of the pedigrees.
Among the choice cows in the herd is Matchless
Princess by His Highness, dam by Victor Sultan,
second dam by Godwin. Her first calf by Type’s
Goods is the best thing ever calved on the farm
and tempting offers have been refused for her.
Barmpton Knight has an excellent daughter in
the herd that is a great producer. Her bulls have
gone to head good herds while her daughters
500 A LUSTORY OF SHORTITORNS IN KANSAS
have been retained. Butterfly Sultan by Se
cret’s Sultan is a valuable cow with several toppy
heifers to her eredit.
Secret’s Sultan that came from Bellows Bros.
was one of the best bulls used. His sire was Mis-
sie’s Sultan by Glenbrook Sultan and his dam
was by the well known Victorallan. Ilis heifers
matured into great cows and fine breeders.
Type’s Goods by Cumberland Type has been
used for more than two years. He is a low down,
large bull, good all over, but very strong in the
back and loin. Like Secret’s Sultan he is an ex-
ceptional heifer getter and a lot of yearlings by
him show a number of prospective outstanding
cows. Type’s Goods is out of a cow by Carter’s
Choice Goods, son of Choice Goods and imp.
Clara 6th by Silver Plate. Royal Marshal by
Village Marshal, an attractive white yearling
has recently been purchased from Tomson Bros.
His dam is by Victoria’s Snowflake by The
Choice of All, second dam by imp. Lord Cowslip
out of imp. Roseleaf by Scottish Archer. He is
an unusually smooth, young ae with extra
depth and he isa first-rate prospect. The outlook
for this herd is bright, for Mr. Amieoats has first
class facilities for doing good work and he has
the modern and successful type of eattle
Jacob Nelson, Broughton.*—Mvr. Nelson has
used exceptional judgment im making his
Ship on Rock Lsland or Union Pacific.
A HISTORY OF SHORTITORNS IN KANSAS 301
chases and he has a herd that should take a lead-
ing position in his territory. Among the
cows are Charming Butterfly by Sir Charm-
ing 10th, dam by Baron Daybreak 292830
and her yearling heifer by Orange Dale,
a son of Whitehall Rosedale; the Bellows bred
Choice Beaty 2d by Missie’s Sultan, son of
Glenbrook Sultan and her dam by Good Choice,
with an exeellent bull calf at foot and Gipsy
Cunberland 5th bred by C. A. Saunders and
sired by Cumberland’s Best out of a dam by
Burwoced Royal, second dam by Ruberta’s Goods.
Gipsy Cumberland Sth is a very valuable breed-
ing proposition. Not only does she carry in
every cross what is best in Shorthorns, but she is
reproducing the type of her good ancestry as
may he seen in her excellent white bull calf seven
or eight mouths old. This calf won second prize
in the State Association show at Manhattan,
1920, and sold for $775.
An outstanding cow is Sweet Carmine, re-
eently purchased from the Kansas State Agricul-
tural College. She is by Barmpton Knight, the
bull that in Tomson Bros.’ herd sired outstand-
ing breeding and show stock. Her dam is by
White Goods, one of the best, if not the best, sons
of the champion, Choice Goods and her second
dam was by Lavender Viscount, C. E. Leonard’s
ereat breeding bull and International grand
champion. Other good cows of nice breeding are
302 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
found here and it is Mr. Nelson’s intention to eull
the herd closely, adding occasionally an especial-
ly desirable female.
Imported Lawton Tommy is the herd bull. A
single glance conveys the impression that he will
be a good breeding bull and he possesses to a high
degree the qualities needed in profitable cattle.
He was used for some time by Tomson Bros., but
owing to their having several other bulls of great
excellence, they could spare him so Mr. Nelson
was able to buy him. He is by Diamond Fav-
orite 680396 bred by Alex Crombie and his dam
is by Douglas Chieftain by Collynie Marshal.
The calves by him at Tomsons show excellent
Shorthorn character.
Paul M. Borland, Clay Center.—Mr. Borland
has been in the Shorthorn business for nine years.
He bought his foundation stock of F. M. Gifford,
securing some of the T. P. Babst Butterflys well
known in Shorthorn cireles then and now. The
herd, as a whole, represents excellent breeding,
coming through such bulls as Barmpton Knight;
Golden Victor Jr.; My Lord by imp. Spartan
Hero out of imp. Lady of the Meadow, the dam
of Lord Mayor; imp. Cupbearer, American
champion; Athenian Coronet 4th by imp. Bap-
ton Coronet; Prime Minister; Clay & Winn’s
noted Golden Victor and others of like quality
that could be named. The cows are not so well
grown out as they should be but they are very
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 303
smooth, of breedy type and good Shorthorn char-
acter, descended from excellent ancestors and
are producing good calves. The milking tenden-
cies are quite well developed in this herd. The
herd bull, Gloster Boy, was bred by 8S. B. Am-
coats. His sire is Secret’s Sultan, (see Amcoats
sketch) the son of Missie’s Sultan out of a dam
by Victorallan, the sire of so many good breeding
cows in the Bellows herd. His dam is by a son of
Captain Archer, J. F. Stodder’s bull, second
dam by Violet’s Prince by Potts & Sons’ Laven-
der King 3d. Better development of the young
stock would be all that would be necessary to
produce some really good cattle.
Warren Watts, Clay Center.—Mr. Watts
bought his start from F. M. Gifford twelve
years ago. These cows were a select lot, nearly all
sired by Cordelia’s Knight, a son of Red Knight
by Pro Barmpton the well known Cookson sire.
Cordelia’s Knight was an unusually thick, short-
legged bull that carried along with his
Scotch blood that of Cordelia’s Duke, the noted
show bull by 4th Duke of Geneva. The herd is of
correct Shorthorn type and is a profitable lot of
breeding cows, the money-making kind. Mr.
Watts has exceptional facilities for handling
eattle and should he decide to do so, he can
build up a first-class herd.
Two good bulls have been used, Newsboy by
Gallant Knight out of a dam by the Harris bred
304 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Laird of Linwood by Galahad and The Cardinal,
bred by Governor Shallenberger, a son of Lan-
easter Lad by Seoteh Bank and his dam by Com-
ing Star out of imp. Maud 50th. The present
herd bull is Brilhant Type by the champion,
Cumberland Type, the greatest show bull of the
deeade. His dam is by imp. Manchester, second
dam imp. Bonnie Belle. Brilliant Type is a
show bull. He has fine length, good depth, is
very straight-lined, full in all vital points, covers
well and has an elegant head and neck. He should
make a splendid individual and a suecesstful sire.
M. E. Householder, Clay Center.—Mr. House-
holder is a new man but one who has made a
good start. He has a cow from the Hunt herd at
hy Nonpareil Star, also a bull of outstanding
Blue Rapids by Wodan, the choice Regier bull
worth. Her dam is by Grand Lavender 153671
and she is exceptionally good foundation stock.
On my visit to Mr. Householder I saw a two-
year-old heifer that impressed me very favor-
ably. She is possibly an extreme beef type, but
from the view point of beefy superiority, she
evades high. She eame from the Ameoats herd.
Her sire is Mystie Victor by a good son of
Barmpton Kinight and her dam was by Lord
Mavor, a souree of Shorthorn excellence. Mr.
Householder is breeding to the Ameoats bull and
getting splendid results. This course is highly
recommended to smaller breeders.
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 305
COFFEY COUNTY
C. H. White, Burlington.—Mr. White began
operations in 1°06 and for the last ten years he
has been one of the leading breeders in southeast
Kansas. His herd is kept elosely culled and the
visitor will find some very good Shorthorns on
this farm. Mr. White maintained a show herd
from 1911 to 1913 and exhibited successfully at
the Nebraska State Fair and at the best Kansas
fairs including Topeka, winning well in both
open and state classes. He also showed at the
American Royal with some of his entries well in
the money.
Possibly the best cow that Mr. White owns
and one that would be a eredit to any herd, is
Roan Heather. Her sire, Lord Mayor 3d, was a
high-class show bull by Lord Mayor out of Forest
Daisy, own sister to the dam of New Year’s
Delight, American Roval grand champion and
International junior champion. Roan Heather
was third in her elass at Lincoln and Topeka.
Her dam was a combination of White Goods,
Barrister and Col. Harris’ best line of breeding.
Sweet Novelette 2d is by Richelieu out of one of
the best Shorthorn cows of her day, Charm’s
Novelette by Seotland’s Charm out of a dam by
Viscount of Anoka. Richelheu was by The Choice
of All, son of Choice Goods and the famous
Rosedale Violet 9th. Since Scotland’s Charm
306 A HISTORY OF SHORTIORNS IN KANSAS
put size, quality and milk into nearly everything
he sired and was by imp. Lavender Lad out of a
cow by ump. Baron Cruickshank and sinee Vis-
count of Anoka was a great sire and one of
America’s) greatest show bulls, it is easy
to see why Sweet Novelette 2d should be espe-
cially valuable.
Roan Heather and Sweet Novelette 2d are rep-
resentative in value and in quality of ancestry, of
the eows. Of the bulls, Richelieu, mentioned
above, was probably most used. Castellar 449-
834, a very rugged, deep-bodied roan, is now in
service. On lis sire’s side he carries the blood
of Snowllake, sire of Ringmaster, the only bull
ever three times International grand champion,
and that of imp. Bessie 51st, the dam of White
Goods, probably the best son of Choice Goods.
Castellar’s dam is by Vietor Sultan, a son of
Whitehall Sultan that won fame as an outstand-
ing sire in George Allen’s herd.
W. S. Bozeman, Colony.—Mr. Bozeman has
been breeding Shorthorns for nine years and at
the time of my visit his herd munbered twenty
head of breeding age. Hither the foundation pur-
chases were made with exceptional judgment
or Mr. Bozeman was unusually fortunate. At
any rate, he has a good herd and as is generally
the case, it is well loaded with the blood of real
Shorthorns. Among the aneestors found in the
top crosses are such bulls as inp. Magenta,
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 307
Symphony’s Last, Ceremonious Archer, Mystic
Archer, imp. Chief Steward, 56th Duke of Air-
drie, imp. Collynie, imp. Inglewood, imp. Prince
President, Lavender Viscount, Spartan Iero,
Whitehall Sultan, Godwin, Good Choice and
unp. Conqueror.
The bull at the head of the herd is Chief Stew-
ard, bred by T. J. Sands. His sire is Clansman
by Snowstorm and his dam is by Lavender Viece-
voy 2d, second dam by the Norton bred Courtier
2d. [have not seen this young bull but have been
told that he is a very thick, smooth, short-legged
fellow, attractive in appearance. Mr. Bozeman
has good facilities for handling his cattle, he
seems to be full of energy and his pride in the
business speaks well for future success. If he
fails to produce a real Shorthorn herd it is be-
cause he fails to live up to his opportunities.
E. E. Heacock & Sons, Hartford.—Shorthorn
breeding which began here in 1916, has made
rapid progress. The large herd has been federal
tested and is accredited. The cows are of good
size and quite smooth and are satisfactory breed-
ers and sucklers. While this is not a herd of sky-
high prices, yet it is well bred and useful and is
making money. The management is efficient,
feeding is liberal and the young stock is well de-
veloped. The local show ring is patronized and
at least a full share of the prizes are carricd
away. The Heacocks have an excellent stock
308 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
farm with aburdant pasture and alfalfa and a
silo furnishes sueculent winter feed. That the
Shorthorn business will continue to be carried
on successfully here seems assured for the sons
of the family are even more interested than is
Mr. Heacock himself.
Several bulls have been used more or less but
the leading one is Brawith Heir 351808. Tle was
bred by Tomsons and sired by Gallant Knieht’s
Heir, first prize bull at the Kansas State Fair
and elsewhere. His dam is Gratitude 5th by White
Goods, the great son of Choice Goods and imp.
Bessie 51st, owned by Thomas, Jameison &
Mitehell. Brawith Heir has been used in the
herd with good results. A new bull, Augusta’s
Archibald by the Anoka bred Right Stamp by
Sultan Stamp, has just been bought. Augusta’s
Arehibald is out of imp. Brandby’s Augusta 4th
and carries the prestige of most excellent an-
eestry.
C. L. Buchanan, Lebo.—Mr. Buchanan is one
of the older breeders of Coffey county, having
started with Shorthorns in 1906. A few years
ago he held a suecessful publie sale and there are
now about thirty females in the herd. The ma-
ture cows are of good size for some of the
older ones have been sold on the market and the
average weight of 1400 pounds off grass proves
the assertion. There has been no systematie ef-
fort made to keep up with the fashion in blood
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 309
lines or to produce the highest-class cattle, but
rather to breed a lot of the practical money-
making, farmer’s sort. To do this, however, it
has required the use of pretty good bulls and
they are obtained only from good ancestry.
Among these bulls has been one sired by Prime
Minister whose dam was a full sister to the In-
ternational champion, Lavender Viscount. The
last bull used was Victor Mysie, a splendid breed-
er, as Shown in his get. This same bull also sired
the fine cows mentioned in Hall Bros.’ sketch.
(Allen county.) Aside from the sale referred to
above, the produce has been sold locally at satis-
factory prices.
Stephen C. Odell, Leroy.—Mr. Odell made his
first purchases from the J. C. Thorn sale of ex-
cellent cattle and secured some of the choice
heifers of the offering. They were sired by the
badly named but splendid breeding bull, Kaiser,
a son of the great Collynie cow, Sycamore Secret.
In their top crosses they carried the blood of
Harding, full brother to H. M. Hill’s cow, Sar-
casin, the prize winning Lord Mayor 3d and the
Choice Goods bull, Choice Prince, whose dam
was by Alice’s Prince. Three of the best cows in
the C. E. Hill sale were added a little later. The
herd bull is by Sycamore Victor, a son of
Mr. Hill’s $2000 Svcamore Secret 3d and out of
the top cow of Mr. Thorn’s sale, sold to J. H.
Holeomb of Humboldt for $505. Mr. Odell is a
310 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
young man of splendid physique and ability that
should cnable him to build on this foundation a
herd that would be a credit to himself and a
benefit to the surrounding country.
Wi. Cronin & Sons, Burlington.—Mr. Cronin
began in a small way with Shorthorns in 1909
and in 1919 the firm was able to hold an excellent
sale of thirty-five head. The herd is of popular
breeding. Stock has been shown with success at
the Coffey county fair and it is one of the plans
for the future that showing be continued. Ter-
haps the best bull was Hall’s Cumberland, bred
by C. A. Saunders. His sire was Sce A. Cum-
berland by Cumberland’s Last and his damm was
Lady Dorothy 11th by Baron Golddust 3d. Vus-
ter Dale, a good young bull, now heads the herd.
He is by Robert Russcll’s W alnut Type and his
dain is by Glenview Dale 8d, a son of Avondate.
Ivy Allen & Sons, Burlington.—A small herd
has been kept here for ten years, but real effort
dates from 1920 when the firm added two out-
standing cows with heifer calves. More such
females and a bull to match were secured a little
later. These purchases included Janette 4th by
Choice Prince followed by Morning Star and
March Kuaight and Diamond Queen 13th, one of
the best cows in the 1920 Royal sale.
E. E. Brott, Burlington.—Mr. Brott has a few
eood cows and he is planning to inerease his
numbers and become an active breeder. Practical
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 311
utility will be his guiding star and with a favor-
able location and bright boys who are taking a
lively interest in the Shorthorns, the way to suc-
cess is clear. These boys especially attracted my
attention because of the knowledge they had of
the cattle as well as their interest in them.
R. L. Clark, Leroy.—Mr. Clark is laying the
foundation for a good herd and aside from sceur-
ing a few nice cows he has been fortunate in
obtaining a bull that is much better than the av-
erage beginner gets. He is one of the best types
of bulls I have seen in the county and his
ancestry is such as to promise satisfactory re-
sults. Nothing more is needed than sticking to
the business and giving the cattle proper care.
J. W. Harrington, Burlington.—Mr. Harring-
ton is a new breeder who bought three useful
cows and who has a thick, short-legged bull bred
by Win. Cronin & Sons. Like many others
who own land, he realizes that cattle must be
kept on the farms and he believes a rugged
Shorthorn cow that is a good milker is the prac-
tical and profitable kind for the small farmer.
J. F. Knight, Lebo.*—This little herd consists
of purchases that are of very nice breeding from
Cc. L. Buebanan and Win. Cronin & Sons. The
Buchanan cows are by Victor Mysic, an unusual-
ly good breeding bull. The bull used is also by
Victor Mysie. Ulis dam is by a son of Andrew
me Telephone, Halls Summit.
9
312 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Pringle’s Prime Minister, a big, smooth animal
of ereat excellence and the best of breeding.
M. H. Lyon, Waverly.—Mr. Lyon has seven
attractive females and a bull. Wenaford 226317
and Beatrice 226308 are five-year-olds from C.
L. Buchanan’s herd. Their sire is the exception-
al breeding bull, Victor Mysie 345498, sire of
a number of excellent cows in Hall Bros.’
herd at Carlyle. Red Scotch, a desirable bull
from the herd of William Cronin, is in service
and is getting first-class calves.
Harry Shannon, LeRoy.—Mr. Shannon bought
three cows at the R. A. Drummond sale in Feb-
ruary 1919 and he is another of those well fa-
vored persous who can furnish his cattle every-
thing needed for their best development. The
calves that [ have seen would indicate that. at
least two of his cows are excellent breeders, a
fact which only men old in the business appreei-
ate at its full value.
CLOUD COUNTY
F. J. Colwell, Glasco.—Mr. Colwell has a herd
of thirty females above the average in size und
of good conformation. Mand 2d was sired by the
Rustler, a son of The Lad For Me, International
evand champion tn 1900, and out of Russella, the
dium of Ruberta, undefeated American cow sunid
Ditermational grand champion im 1901. The dam
of Maud 2d was by Mr. Gifford’s outstanding
A HISTORY OF STIORTHORNS IN KANSAS 313
bull, Red Knight. Flora 185502 is by Marquis, a
son of Mr. Hanna’s Prince Royal, son of imp.
Collynie and imp. Princess Royal 62d and out of
a daughter of imp. Lord Cowslip. Flora’s dam
is by Gallant Knight that in Tomson’s herd was
the sire of many prize winners at the big shows.
Red Mollie is by Bariupton Model, a Tomson
bred son of Barmpton Knight, one of the best
sires ever used in the Tomson herd. Lady Wash-
ington 54th is by Barrister, a bull that during his
show yard career won 247 first prizes.
One might continue to write such facts, but
enough have been given to show the remarkable
line of ancestry in this herd. The bull in use is
well selected. He is Gainford Lancer by the
great sive, Gainford Champion, a son of imp.
Gaintord Marquis, Junior champion at the Inter-
national in 1911, later famous as a Canadian
sire, and now recognized as one of America’s
ereatest bulls. The dam of Gainford Lancer is
by imp. Jilt Victor and from an elegant line of
ancestors.
Arden Jewell, Concordia.*—Mr. Jewell’s herd
was started a few vears ago and now numbers
thirty females. They range from medium to
large and it is the owner’s intention to grow his
young stock as large as he can. With all kinds of
good grass inchiding alfalfa, with big wheat
fields and plenty of alfalfa hay, he will be
Station and telephone, Talmo
314 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
enabled to come out with a herd of more than
average size. The original purchases came from
Blank Bros. & Kleen of Nebraska and from F.
C. Kingsley of Auburn. The bull being used is
Marshall’s boy 751953 by Marshall’s Choice
340687. Mr. Jewell is fortunately located near
other breeders among whom co-operation is prac-
ticed in the larger sense.
COMANCHE COUNTY
E. S. Dale, Protection.—Eastern Kansas
breeders do not usually associate a high-class
Shorthorn herd with the short grass country,
but had they observed Mr. Dale at the Salter-
Robison sale in 1920 as he bid in $400 install-
meuts on Missie’s Last up to $6000 against H. C.
Lookabaugh and then saw him buy Emblem Jr.
for his Comanche county herd for $4000 over
the bids made by Peter Ross, they might have
changed their ideas. His action is typical of the
man and is reflected in the herd of cattle he
owns. liproved methods of feeding and hand-
ling are being adopted and the second publie
sale from this herd wil be held in 1921. Loeal
shows have been patronized and good winnings
have resulted.
More than fifty females are now on the
farm. The roan six-year-old, Lovely Goods 2d,
is by that outstanding sire, Ruberta’s Goods,
whose get are among America’s most popular
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 815
prize winners and good producing cows. Lovely
Goods’ dam is by Lady Rose of Ardmore by
Scottish Pride. Lavender Mist came from Tom-
son Bros. and is by Mystie Chief, one of the best
known sons of Barmpton Knight out of a Lord
Mayor dam. Lavender Mist’s dam is by Archer,
the splendid son of imp. Collynie and imp. Circe
3d.
Several different bulls have been used. Col-
lynie Lad combined the blood of Prince of Col-
lynie, imp. Collynie and Royal Knight; Mari-
gold’s Chief, a Tomson production, that of
EMBLEM JR., HIGHEST PRICED FIFTEEN-MONTH-OLD
BULL EVER BRED AND SOLD IN KANSAS —.
316 A HISTORY OF SHORTIIORNS IN KANSAS
Barmpton Knight and imp. Marigold 50th.
Roan Monarch was bred by IL. TL Horbes and
was by Royal Monarch out of Sweet Orange.
(See Forbes sketch.) Butterfly Royalist, now
in service, 18 by imp. Butterfly Duke out of imp.
Lady Marion 2d.) In the purchase of Emblem
Jv. for $4000 Mr. Dale secured what will prob-
ably be his best investment, for the bull is even
better than his pictuve shows him. His sire, imp.
British Emblem, was one of the most promising
young bulls in the entire country and his dam
is a cow of great excellence by Prince Valentine
4th, one of the best sires in kansas.
COWLEY COUNTY
Fred Abildgaard, Winfield.—When I first
met Mr. Abildgaard I made up my mind that
here was a man who would become a real Short-
horn breeder. A few hours conversation with
hum later, confirmed this opinion and when I
reached his home, looked over the cattle, ob-
served his methods and listened to his state-
ments, I knew that Mr. Abilgaard was already a
real breeder. Ife has an additional enarantee of
success In his sons who take a very active inter-
est in the Shorthorns and who are giving them
personal attention not offen given except by pro-
fessional herdsmen. he results of such eare
and attention are apparent.
Mr. Abildgaard is no novice in the business. A
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 317
few years ago he was owner of a herd in northern
Missouri, which was sold to Bellows Bros. and
some of these cattle brought high prices in their
sales and sinee then have been resold at from
$2000 to 4000. Three vears avo Mr. Abildgaard
located near Winfield.
There ave teu cows in the herd, all reds, al
three to four years old, all goed ones and as ma-
tured cows they should be a grand lot. Eight of
them are sired by Athene’s Scotchman, a splen-
did bull of H. F. Brown’s breeding, one is by
Rosewoed Dale and one by a son of Maxwalton
Renown. Each of these cows either has a calf
at foot or will calve shortly. It is needless to say
that they carry the blood of excellent Shorthorn
sires. They are being bred to a white bull and
elegant calves, all rears, are the result.
This bull, Villager Magnet, is worthy of atten-
tion. He is about five vears old, a son of Village
Faney 417901 out of a cow by imp. Mutineer that
sold in Bellows Bros.’ 1917 sale for $1750. In
lookivg over my notes I find this entry in regard
to Villager Magnet :‘Can’t say anything too good
about this bull ard his calves.’’ He is the big,
deep, thick kind and a wonderful breeder. He
might stand a little closer to the ground but he
is so massive and has such good Shorthorn ehar-
acter that he ean not fairly be subjected to ser-
ious criticism, especially when his two-year-old
heifers are under inspection.
318 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
While this herd is splendidly developed along
beef producing lines, special attention is being
paid to milk development. Al] the cows are far
above the average as milkers and Villager Mag-
net, the herd bull, is from heavy milking ances-
try of the best Scotch type, his dam having given
six gallons of milk per day.
Ina general way, Mr. Abildgaard handles his
cattle for best results without overcrowding. The
herd receives liberal care and the young stock
is grown and developed to reach what the merit
of its good ancestry makes possible. It is evi-
dent that the cost per day does not enter into the
caleulation so much as does the result to be ob-
tained and the ultimate profit to be derived from
intelligent care and feeding. Mr. Abildgaard’s
location on an ideal stock farm and the eo-oper-
ation of such boys as his sons, assures for his
cattle a leading place among Kansas herds.
Sinee the article above was written, Mr. Abild-
gaard has purchased J. E. Paton’s excellent
herd. This ineludes two cows of outstanding
merit. One comes from the Kansas State Agri-
eultural College and is by that great sire, Mateh-
less Dale. The other comes from C. E. Leonard
and represents the very best of the aneestry
for which that herd is famous. He has also
bought a splendid producing daughter of Cap-
tain Archer out of a Bellows bred Cruickshank
Columbia cow and two Stunkel bred Star Goods
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 319
Victor Orange cows. The acquisition of these
cows, together with the stock already on hand,
gives Mr. Abildgaard one of the choice herds of
southern Kansas.
J. E. Paton, Winfield.—Mr. Paton has dem-
onstrated his ability as a suecessful breeder and
handler of Shorthorns as few young men of my
acquaintance have done, for nowhere in my
travels did I find any one who secured better
VELVET TYPE
results from a herd that did he. The stock on
Shady Brook farm at present consists of only
five high-class females and the herd bull. Em-
erald’s Choice is a big red, bred by C. E.
Leonard & Son. Her sire, Rosedale’s Choice is
320 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
one of the three noted sons of the cham-
pion, Choiee Goods out of the famous
Rosedale Violet 9th. Her dam is imp. Emerald
4th from Wim. Norie’s herd and sired by Wrang-
ler, son of Mr. Duthic’s greatest bull, Scottish
Archer. Silver Lavender is a promising daugh-
ter of Cumberland Star 703360 out of a Leonard
bred daughter of Wooddale Stamp, one of the
best known sons of the Choice of All. This heifer,
Judged by her ancestry aid her merit, should de-
velop into a magnificent cow. The herd bull is
Velvet Type, a prize winner at the Kansas Na-
ational and a bull of such quality as is seldom
found at the head of a small herd. His sire is
Nareissus Type, the Cumberland’s Type bull
used at the Kansas State Agricultural College,
and his dam is Golden Lavender 4th by Wood-
dale Stamp out of a cow by Marengo’s Viscount.
Chas. M. Baird, Arkansas City.—Mr. Baird
has the large herd of Cowley county and it is a
good, useful one, where cattle are kept in a nat-
ural way, reaching normal development and re-
sponding well to care and attention. The cows
represent a desirable line of ancestry, well bred
bulls have been used ever since breeding opera-
tions were begun. The herd is deseended from
such sires as Golden Vietor Jr, used for a num-
her of years by H. M. Hill; Seott Jr., loeally fa-
mous asa show bull in the Butler county herd of
W. J. Snodgrass; Galahad, Col. Harris’ bull and
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 32]
many other good ones that might be mentioned.
At no time has any effort been made to use spec-
lal blood lines, Mr. Baird demanding size and
true Shorthorn character rather than certain
kinds of breeding. He has had local demand for
the bulls and the females have so far been re-
tained in the herd. There are now on the farm a
lot of heifers sired by Marshall’s Best, a son of
the Hanna bred Scottish Chief and to mate with
these, the massive roan bull, Silverheel, has been
purchased. He is by Silvermine, well known in
Stodder’s and Marshall Bros.’ herds. He is a
good one from end to end and he should be a val-
uable breeding bull. Mr. Baird is one of the
state’s heavy farmers, progressive and up to date
in every way, and the Shorthorns produced here
will be satisfactory to purchasers.
J. A. Fasken & Son, Atlanta.—J. A. Fasken &
Son have a splendid tract of land on which to
handle cattle. They began breeding in Morris
county about fourteen years ago, going to Cow-
ley county seven years ago. The present herd
was founded by purchases from David Ballan-
tyne & Sous of Herington and those who knew
the Ballantyne herd know there was a rare
opportunity to select foundation stock. Five of
the cows secured were by Collynie Pride, a splen-
did Hanna bred son of Collynie, that had for
dam one of the excellent cows coming from
Elbert & Fall, and four were by Marshall
oe A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
Abbotsburn 3d whose sire was out of Mary
Abbotsburn 7th, the unrivaled cow of her day.
A splendid bull was secured from 8. D. Mitch-
ell, a son of White Goods, dam by 47th Duke of
Airdrie. (See Mitchell sketch.) Another one
was by Captain Lovely out of a dam by Mr.
Stodder’s great Captain Archer. The present
herd bull is a massive roan by Mr. Hanna’s
Hampton Spray out of Golden Queen 38d by imp.
Collyniec, second dam, imp. Golden Queen. (See
S. ©. Hanna history.) This is a very desirable
Hull and those who lke the big, beefy, deep, thick
kind could not help liking lim. A promising
yearling bull, recently bought from EK. L. Stun-
kel, will also be tried. Ife is by Cumberland
Diamond, dam by Star Goods, second dam by
Victor Orange.
J. W. Sickles & Sons, Winfield.—Substantial
care is being given the good sized herd of Short-
horns on this farm but they are not beimg pushed
for extra development. The appearanee of the
calves speaks well for the cows as producers. I
was impressed with the fact that the Sickles have
ample facilities for handling their eattle and that
it would probably be only a question of time un-
til their ambition would lead them to put up a
high-class herd. The material they have on
hand is good enough, if mated with the right
kind of bulls and developed rightly, to produce
such results.
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 323
In common with all the cattle of this territory,
the blood of imp. Collynie is found strongly in-
fused in the top crosses, also that of Prince of
Collynic, imp. Scotchman and 47th Duke of Air-
dvie, three bulls that figure prominently in many
of the cattle coming from H. M. Hill’s herd.
From the Stedder herd, located near by, came
the blood of the noted sire, Captain Archer. Mr.
Palmer’s Commander; the Bellows bred Cham-
pion’s Best; the well known Valley Champion;
Scott Jr, an outstanding show and breeding bull ;
Dr. Primrose, the great son of Baron Victor
owned by Wilhams Bros. and others of like qual-
ity are much in evidence. With good sized, strong
females of such ancestry and a high-elass bull
which the Sickles intend to secure, the task of
producing real Shorthorns will not be diffieult.
CRAWFORD COUNTY
Theo. Jagels, Hepler.—This is a = substan-
tial herd founded in 1916 to which some out-
standing females, that could not fail to attract
general and favorable attention, have recently
been added. Mr. Jagels has the practical utility
idea firmly fixed in his mind and the eattle T
have seen that went into his herd convince me
that here will be an establishment that will tuin
out a splendid class of best money making Short-
horns.
Three of the ehoicest heifers in Col. Bureess’
324 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
sale at Fort Scott in June 1920 fell to Mr. Jagels’
bidding. Village Butterfly and Rosebud’s Goods
9th are both low down, thick, beautiful speci-
mens of the breed and show anunals of the best
type. The first is by Brawith Villager by imp.
Villager and her dam is by imp. Mutineer out of
a cow by the Duthie bred imp. Royal Fancy. The
other is by Golden King, a son of Mr. McDer-
mott’s famous Cumberland Marshal out of a
Fair Goods cow. Her dain is by a son of Morn-
ing Star out of a granddaughter of Carter’s
Choice Goods. Banff’s Cecelia, while not of such
pronounced show yard type, is a big, smooth two-
year-old that promises to become a valuable
breeding cow. Her sire is by an execllent son of
inp. Lord Banff, the first Seotch bull to sell for
more than $5000.
A herd bull worthy of such females is found
in Barmpton’s Villager. His sire is Mina’s
Avon Villager, a son of Village Flash out of
Maxwalton Mina 9th by Maxwalton Renown out
of an Avondale cow. His dam is by the Norton
bred Crown Prince, an outstanding and well
known sire used by A. O. Stanley, and the rest of
the pedigree is of the best and most popular
blood lines of the breed. With Mr. Jagels’
judement and determination to produce the best,
his suecess ean not be doubted.
H. I. Gaddis, McCune.—I have seen quite a
number of Shorthorns from Mr. Gaddis’ herd
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 325
at different sales and they were all good ones. A
recent visit to the farm has added to the favor-
able impression I held of the cattle and of Mr.
Gaddis himself. There are more than fifty fe-
males on the farm. They are of medium size,
both extremes being well avoided. They are an
unusually neat lot of cows with good heads and
necks, feminine, yet not delicate, in appearance,
the class of females that experienced breeders
would select as profitable producers. Bulls sold
from this herd have proved these assertions in
several instances by winning in state fair con-
tests. Mr. Gaddis has been a contributor to
the Central Sale at Kansas City, the Kansas
National at Wichita and the Southeast Kansas
both at Coffeyville and Independence and his of-
fering is always well received. The herd was
founded in 1898 by his father and himself and he
has been sole owner for a dozen years.
Sultan’s Queen by Red Sultan is one of the
best cows. Her sive is by Village Sultan, a son
of Whitehall Sultan out of imp. Village Maid
30th. Her dam is Village Cup 3d. Rosebud Sth
is by Orange Model, one of the most favorably
known sives in the West and her dam is by Lay-
ender Viceroy by the International grand chain-
pion, Lavender Viscount. A large part of the
Gaddis herd is of similar breeding and most of
the herd is of the most popular blood lines
throughout.
326 A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS
It would hardly be practical to mention in de-
tailall the bulls that have been used. Among the
valuable ones was Scottish Viceroy. He was by
Lavender Vieeroy, mentioned above, and out of
Pride of Orchard Farm B 15th by Secret
Barmpton. This line of breeding is now very
popular in the herds of W. A. Betteridge and
Bellows Bros. Seottish Viceroy was directly
descended from some of America’s best Short-
horns including Lavender Viscount, Baron
Lavender 2d and imp. Baron Victor. Choice
Collynie, used with success, represented on his
sire’s side imp. Collynie and Choice Goods. He
was out of the excellent eow Wistful (see H. M.
Hill sketch) giving him another cross to Collyme
and through Royal Knight to imp. Princess
Alice, one of the country’s greatest cows. Secret
Baron, used until reeently, was by Snowstorm,
the best known western son of Snowflake, sire of
Ringmaster, three times International erand
champion. Secret Baron sired a splendid lot of
stock and he was perhaps the best known of the
Gaddis bulls. The bull now used is Challenger’s
Knight by Dale’s Challenger by Double Dale,
one of the most noted of Avondale’s sons. His
dam is White Marigold by imp. Crescent Knight
out of imp. Seoteh Marigold. Ife is a good vounge
bull from the very choicest ancestry.
E. L. Holstine, Girard.—Mr. Holstine’s early
purchases meluided an exeellent daughter of
A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 327
Baron Marr, one of the best sons of Cumber-
land’s Last. For several years Lord Hampton
by Haimpton’s Challeneer 287618 was used with
satisfactory results. In 1915 Mr. Holstine
bought the bull that proved an outstanding
sive. Hampton Primrose by Hampton Spray out
of Primrose 6th, one of the best cows in Mr.
Hanna’s herd, has been used by him for five
years and the herd now consists largely of his
daughters. I have seen many of Tlampton Prim-
rose’s calves and all were good ones. His dam
was by imp. Inglewood and his second dam was
unp. Primrose 4th bred by My. Duthie and sired
by Seottish Archer, Mr. Duthie’s greatest bull.
This herd of young cows by such a sire should
prove very valuable. Roan Robin, a young bull
of excellent type and quality, is now inuse. His
ancestry on both sides is of the best.
Adam H. Andrew, Girard.—Myr. Andrew has
been with Shorthorns all his life and since 1895
he has been breeding on his own account.
Origin of term, Scotch, 157.
Breeders of Scotch cattle,
158.
Seoteh Shorthorns, 159,
Seotch stands for a type, 160,
st, 161.
Seoteh or Seoteh topped, 161,
Straight Seotch, 164,
Outerosses, 165,
A contr:
Mads and discriminations, 166,
Prue worth only in merit, 167,
Paving high prices, 168.
Where the danger lies, 169,
What is a good pedigree?
169,
Value of the pedigree, 170.
Plain bred, the term, 172.
A HISTORY OF SIHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 645
Shotwell, 8. L., 53.
Shulz, O. E. R., 351.
Sickles, J. W. & Sons, 322.
Silk Goods, 280, 407,
Silver Dale, 526.
Silverheel, 521.
Silvermine, 110, 111, 122, 606,
607.
Silver Plate, 223,
Simonson, Walter, 381,
Simpson, V. O., 533.
Sir Charming 4th, 128,
Sir Hdelweiss, 508.
Sister Susie, Imp., 446,
Slavens, Dr. H. G., 135, 205.
Sriith, By cy, Psi.
Smith, BE. C. & Son, 450.
Smith, Rousseau & Son, 351,
565.
Sni-A-Bar Farm, 12, 37, 177.
Snodgrass, W. J., 119.
Snowhall, 367.
Snowflake, 116.
Snowstorm, 249.
Snyder, Col. John D., 186.
mobba, Henry, 215,
Sobke, Joseph J., 461,
Soil Fertility,
Sowers, A. G., 287.
Speneer, ©. A., 181.
Spexarth, B. J.,
Spiraea, 79, 84,
Springbrook Farm, 596,
St. Albans, Imp., 45.
St Clair, 74.
St. Valentine 12th, 135,
Staley, C. G., 212.
Standish, R. K., 297.
Stanley, Miss M. V., 181, 287,
376, 500.
Star Goods, 108, 597, 599.
Star Shorthorns, 174.
State Assn. Sale, 176, 177, 178.
Stegelin, Hd, 391,
Stephenson, H. ©., 119, 120,
529,
Stevens, J. Frank, 212.
Steward, Arthur, 404.
Stewart, Dr, R. A., 127, 550.
Stockstill, J. B., 115.
Stodder, J. F., 107, 109, 119,
280. BSuL
Stodder, J. F., Dispersion, 603.
On
576,
,
Stone, J, C, Jr, 63, 128,
Stone, T. F., 441.
Stratton, H. a 49.
Stunkel, E. L., 331, 597.
Stunkel, Pema 102,
Stunkel Sale, 285.
Sullivan Bros., 210.
Sultan, 569.
Sultan of Anoka, 552,
Sultan Seal, 526.
Sultan’s Champion, 559,
Sultan’s Marvel, 619.
Sultan’s Pride, 334, 552.
Sultan’s Robin, 218.
Sultan’s Rose, 142.
Sumner County, 6383.
Sumyblink 9th, Imp., 218.
Superior Rosedale, 400.
Supies, Col., 86.
Supreme, 278.
Swain Bros. & Bates, 52.
Sweet Carmine, 301.
Sweet Fragrance, Imp., 280.
Sweet Mistletoe, 108, 490.
Swinney, I. L., 497.
Swinton Liberty, Imp., 227.
Sycamore Chunk, 602.
Sycamore Marshal, 433.
Sycamore Spiraea, 486.
Sycamore Prince, 229.
Symuns Bros., 16.
Syringia, 108.
Taylor, A. H. & Son, 388.
Taylor, B. L. & Son, 465, 468.
Taylor, GC. W.,. 105, 328.
Taylor E.. E., 256.
Taylor, J. H. & Sons, 78, 124,
335.
Taylor, John, 105.
Tebo Lawn, 216.
Tennyson, A. A., 130, 232, 539.
Tennyson, D., 130.
Thisler, O, L,, 124,
Thistletop, Imp., 71, 90, 91.
Thomas, G. O., 390.
Thomas, Jameison & Mitchell,
111, 112, 115, 610.
Thomason, Alex, 505.
Thomas Young Marys, 111.
Thompson, J. E., 115.
Them, J. G., 309, 380.
Thorne, Sam’l, 19.
Mppim, Ax a, V1,
646 A THSTORY OF SHORTILORNS IN KANSAS
Tipton, S. 8., 20.
Tomson Bros., 75, 117, 177,
P40, 274, 345, 396, 404, 538
554, 576.
Tomson, James, 92, 95, 181,
21,
Tomson, John, R., 176, 177,
Tomson, T. K. & Sons, 74, 88,
96, 128, 210,
Towne & Boomer, 49.
Townsend, A. I., 438.
Treadway, John W., 124.
Trimmell, R. H., 219.
Troopers Model, 516.
Troudner, C. L., 533.
True Goods, 255, 515.
True, J. F., 127, 128
True Sultan, 366, 3
394 .
Trundle, L. A., 405.
Trusine, Mr. and Mrs. Vint,
428.
Tyeoon, 27, 46.
Types Goods, 299, 300.
Unger, John, 467.
Ury Dale, 482.
Vail, Geo., 19.
Vaile, H. M., Importation, 489.
Vail & Scott,
Valley Champion, 114.
Vandal, 105, 330.
Van Horn G., 44.
Van Niece, D. C., 132.
Vansell, M. C. & Sons, 259.
Vaughn, Geo. D., 609.
Velvet Type, 120.
Vietor Archer, 127.
Vietor Beaver, 616.
Vietor Chief, 545
Vietor Gloster, 502,
Victor Marshal, 45
Vietor Orange, ie 27, ‘597, 605.
Vietor Sultan, 530, 53
Vietor Swinton, 207.
Vietoria’s Baron 2d, 557.
Vietoria Colony, 40.
Victoria’s Emblem, 609.
Village Alderman, 244.
Village Boy, 256.
Village Champion, 293.
Village Emblem, 432.
Village Goldfinder, 452.
Village Heir, 330.
illaye Marshal, 582, 585.
illage Master, 363.
illage President, 521.
illage Rex, 554.
Village Victor, 470.
Village Victoria 2d, 227.
Villagers Champion, 601.
Villagers Magnet, 317, 318.
Waddell, H. J., 429.
Wales & Young, 537,
Walker, R. R. & Sons, 539.
Walker, W. J., 439.
Walnut Duke, 441, 442.
Walnut Type, 223.
Walton, Fred, 475, 560.
Warfield, Wm., 61.
Watkins Bros., 501.
Watkins, G. T., 55.
Watson, R. C, & Sons, 623,
Watts, Warren, 76, 303.
Waynant, J. W., 399.
Webb, R. E., 596.
Wedd, A. E., 427.
Weddle, ©. os 208, 450.
Weisner, W. J., 574.
Weiss, Fred L., 16.
Wempe, ©. H., 519.
Wenrich, Otto B., 608.
Westfall, E. H., 180.
Westlawn, Blanehe, 228, 238.
White, ©. H., 181, 305, 401,
118.
White, D., 545,
White oe 111, 610.
White Hope, 387, 467.
White, W. 8, 87, 174.
Whitehall Sultan, 165.
Whitewater Stock Farm, 274.
Wichita Sale, 267.
Williams Bros., 101.
Williams, C. G., 534.
Williams, C. H. & Son, 511.
Williams & Householder, 64,
102, P22.
Williams, R. & Son, 56.
Willis, J. D., 164.
Willson, T. M., 180, 596.
Wilson, Andrew, 27.
Wilson, FL P., 466.
Wilson, Frank W., 477.
Wilson, Kenneth, 869.
Wilson, W. W., 246.
Wiltse, Mait, 624.
Ait A
A ILISTORY OF SHORTITORNS IN KANSAS 64
Winifred Maid 4th, 477.
Wischmeyer, Wm., 405.
Wistful, 484.
Wiswell, A. L., 427.
Withers, A. L., 446.
Wittry, G., 213.
Wohlschlegel, D. & Sons, 571,
383.
Wolf, C. F. & Son, 100, 107.
Wolfe Bros., 208.
=
‘
Wooddale Chieftain, 125, 332.
Wooderson, L. A., 607.
Woodford, J. E., o4,
Woodside, W. B., 49.
Woodson, Wm., 336.
Works, Warren W., 201.
Wornall, T. J. & Sons, 329.
Yeager, Frank H., 291.
Yost, John A., 412.
Zeller, Geo., 400.
ee am
Bg sees ee
> ee ardireeabe -