A IirSTORY OF SHORTHORNS TN KANSAS 301 



cliascs ai)d lie lias a herd that should take a lead- 

 ing- position in his territory. Among the 

 cows are Chai'ining Butterfly hy Sir Charm- 

 ing 10th, dam by Baron Daybreak 292830 

 and her yearling heifer by Orange Dale, 

 a son of Wliitehall Roscdale; the Bellows bred 

 Chniee Bearity 2d b}^ Missie's Sultan, son of 

 Glenbrook Sultan and her dam by Good Choice, 

 wdth an excellent bull calf at foot and Gipsy 

 Cuinbei'land 5tli bred l)y C. A. Saunders and 

 sired by Cuml)erland's ]3est out of a dam by 

 Bui'wood Royal, second dam by Ruberta's Goods. 

 Gipsy (Junilterland 5th is a very valuable breed- 

 ing pr(.iposition. 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 be seen in her excellent white bull calf seven 

 or eigiit months 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- 

 cently purchased from the Kansas State Agricul- 

 tural College. She is Ijy Barmpton Knight, the 

 bull that in Tomsou Bros.' herd sired outstand- 

 ing lu'eeding 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 b}' Lavender Viscoiuit, C. E. Leonard's 

 great 1)reeding liull and International grand 

 champion. Other good cows of nice breeding are 



