A niSTOKY OP SHORTHORNS IN KANSAS 423 



calves are not old enough to determine what he 

 mil do as a breeder, they are quite promising. 

 On his sire's side, he is representative of Mr. 

 Gentry's Victoi-ous and Leonard's Lavender Vis- 

 count while his dam is ])y the show Indl, Blythe 

 Conqueror and out of imp. Pavonia, one of the 

 best impoi'ted cows ever owned in eastern Kan- 

 sas. Mr. Loi'imer is secretary of the Johnson 

 Count}^ Sliorthorn Calf CIuIj. 



Gallanaugh Bros., Gardner. — It sometimes 

 liaj^pens that I talk with a young breeder and 

 decide almost inmiediately that he will he a suc- 

 cess. Such was the case when I visited Gallan- 

 augh Bros. They have laid a goc)d foundation, 

 drawn from relial^le sources of sux:)ply, and they 

 intend making additiou^s by j^urchase and devot- 

 ing their energies toward producing real Short- 

 horns. The females carry the Idood of strictly 

 high-class l)ulls from some of the l:)est herds in 

 eastern Kansas and with their good breeding 

 they comlhne individual merit. One of the 

 cows comes from D(_)nhanis. Her sire is a 

 son of Prince Pavonia, favorably known in 

 the I^evius herd, and her dam is b_y Giltspur's 

 Knight. This line of breeding is recognized in 

 eastern Kansas as having produced excellent 

 results. 



Hoover's Dale, the bull in service, is from the 

 well known herd of E. S. Stewart, Sturgeon, 

 Missouri. His sire, Wooddale Stamp, is one of 



