42 AT THE SIGN OF THE STOCK YARD INN 



their example shall not be allowed to perish. Already 

 its ideals are bearing fruit. 



The Kansas youth who receives his education at 

 the Agricultural College at Manhattan sees through- 

 out his entire course of study an heroic bust in 

 bronze of the farmer- statesman of Linwood, designed 

 and largely paid for by SADDLE AND SIRLOIN influ- 

 ences. The faculty of the College of Agriculture of 

 the University of Illinois, moved by the SADDLE AND 

 SIRLOIN spirit, has founded a "Hall of Fame" that 

 will endure indefinitely and receive an annual addi- 

 tion. The American Guernsey Cattle Club, desiring 

 to honor one of America's foremost expounders of 

 the gospel of good blood and good management in 

 the field in which that body holds so distinguished 

 a position, presents his portrait to the Club, where- 

 upon a movement is promptly projected for the 

 erection of a monument to the great editor at the 

 capital of his adopted state. In brief, the leaven 

 which shall finally leaven the whole lump is already 

 doing its beneficent work. But the real advance 

 lies still ahead. 



When the great agricultural states shall erect 

 shafts like that of NELSON in Trafalgar Square to 

 the pioneers in their development; when some great 

 soul shall some day give the SADDLE AND SIRLOIN 



