A HISTORY OF SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 483 



Stock Show in 1919. He comes from the Kansas 

 State Agricultural College and is by Matchless 

 Dale, sire of more prize winning and grand 

 champion beef steers at the Royal and Interna- 

 tional than any other trio of bulls of the breed. 

 Matchless Collynie's dam, Cream Toast, would 

 make a strong show in beef classes, yet she gave 

 more milk during the test now under way at the 

 college than any other of the twenty good milk- 

 ing cows in the herd. Her sire is Ingle Lad, 

 every one of whose daughters is a great breeder 

 of beefy Shorthorns and every one is a heavy 

 milker. 



E. W. Runft, Cawker City. Mr. Eunft is a 

 new man in the Shorthorn business. He has 

 youth, a good location in which to build up a 

 herd, and the determination to have a good herd. 

 His cows carry prestige through their sires. He 

 has daughters of Missie's Sultan, son of Victor 

 Sultan out of Sinnissippi Missie; of Fame's 

 Goods, son of Ruberta's Goods and imp. Princ- 

 ess Fame and of Sir Hugo by Snowf lake's Stamp 

 350358 out of Fairy Daybreak 2d. His herd bull 

 is Happy Prince, a Tomson bred son of Prince 

 Valentine 4th, a show and breeding bull of the 

 first class. Happy Prince is out of Harmony 

 18th by Golden Day, half brother to Sweet Mis- 

 tletoe, dam of the $4100 Imperial Mistletoe and 

 Lespedeza Collynie, International grand cham- 

 pion in 1919. 



