312 AT THE SIGN OF THE STOCK YARD INN 



SADDLE AND SIRLOIN affairs. His services in the 

 handling of the carload-lot exhibits, and his advo- 

 cacy of the "short-fed special" prizes in connection 

 therewith, entitle him to the grateful thanks of 

 American stockmen. 



JAMES W. MARTIN is another "wheel horse" in 

 International team work. For years one of the 

 most esteemed members of the directorate, a man 

 whose "horse sense" is always in evidence, Mr. 

 MARTIN has acted with EMIL INGWERSEN in the carlot 

 section of the fat stock show, and always in the 

 light of practical knowledge of his subject and with 

 justice and fairness ever uppermost in the working 

 of his practical mind. In the field of blood-stock 

 production he has left a powerful impress for good 

 through his intelligent and persistent work with the 

 Red Polled Norfolks one of England's best dual- 

 purpose types of cattle. 



Col. JOHN S. COOPER, one of the martial figures 

 of the Yards and known to nearly every horseman in 

 America, has been a director of the International 

 from the beginning, sharing with OGILVIE in the 

 honors that have attached to the creation and 

 upbuilding of the greatest equine displays now to 

 be seen in any American showyard, and he is 

 one of the faithful devotees of SADDLE AND SIRLOIN 



