40 Bulls and 10 Heifers 50 HEREFORDS Selling At The MONTANA HEREFORD ASSOCIATION LEAR PEDKRIE SALE BOZEMAN, MONTANA JANUARY 31, 1962 All sale cattle will be shown at the Montana Winter Fair Hereford Show January 30th Catalogs On Request: Montana Hereford Association REEDPOINT, MONTANA • */». lO.fr. o HEREFORD RANCH Pete Kindsfather & Son Clyde Park. Moat. Featuring These Herd Sires: FO Battle Intense 18th HP Real Silver 4th Flashy Brackett 31st Battle Intense 251st MONTANA'S GALLATIN VALLEY Ü Source 0î.| K JäS You? V. # SPAIN BROS. ROLFE & WOOD Phone 052R3 BELGRADE, MONT. I Phone JV 6-543« BOZEMAN, MONT. EDMISTON LAND & CATTLE CO. REGISTERED HEREFORDS Jim Edmbrton, Owner Gibbs Rehm, Manager Phone SK 2-9653 — Kails pell. Mont. K CHOTEAU, MONTANA 'Light Up Your Herd With Lamplighter Bulls' ••• n : Farming Is a hazardous business. Guard carefully against accident bat protect SPECIAL ACCI y— rsel f from DENT INSURANCE POLICY. Fäh information by -taking mit a-Montana Treasure State Herefords "with . huilt-in . gainahility Real Prince, Advance Domino, Anxiety 4th, well-known, clear bloodlines. For Solas 20 Yearling Heifers ror Date 2 0 Yearling Bulls Also Bull and Heifer Calves VERNON SMILEY Phone Stockelt RE 6-4515 Eden, Montano n CHANGING to a better method of doing business is the basis of prog ress in any industry. That's why cattlemen who are changing to a strain of Herefords choose POLLED HEREFORDS. When You Think of Progress Think of SPIDEL BRED POLLED HEREFORDS Roberts Loon & Cottle Co. Roundup, Montano WS- w n"', wwft d JLa -i a. * , w bu fa • %... flerefa REGISTERED HEREFORDS Wilsall, HENRY GUTU >a SIM & SCHOCK REGISTERED HEREFORDS FOB SALK 30 Balls—20 Bull Calve# 40 Heifer Calves WilKom Schock Geo. B. Sint H*«b «rood, Mont. % Vi Day-to-Day Operations Of a Dairyman-Feeder By ALBERT KING Dairymen May Invade Red Meat Market DAIRYMEN IN MONTANA may soon be invading the red meat market which is traditionally a stronghold of the beef cattle industry. The production of meat for the Amer ican family table has been the prov ince of farmers and ranchers whose business it is to raise beef cattle, hogs and lambs. It is true that cull cows from dairy herds, a limited number of dairy type steers and veal from surplus dairy calves have made up a small portion of the red meat trade. The glamour of a beef or lamb feed lot has always been much more tempt ing than a side-line in the dairy in dustry. Times are changing and the house wife today is buying RED MEAT. Sur plus fat on choice and prime beef has no sale value and the vast quantities of trim that are discarded by the butcher and the packer represent a tremendous waste in the processing of meat. This fat costs money to put on the cattle in the first place and dietitians claim it is not healthy in the second place and the ultimate consumer just doesn't want to buy it. For years it has been maintained that in order to I have flavor and tenderness good meat I must be marbled with fat. This may not be so. i Breeding for Meat Beef producers in their breeding programs today are paying much more attention to the ability of an animal to convert feed into red meat than ever before. Gobs of surplus fat are definite ly undesirable on a finished carcass. The area of the rib eye and the num ber of pounds of red meat that can be placed on the scale and sold to the consumer is the final test of the value of a carcass. It is impossible for even the best livestock judge to determine accurate ly the carcass value of an animal while it is still alive. Contention on this question has been prevalent for years. Much discussion has been had and volumes have been written on the sub ject. Dairymen as a group have been strong believers in some kind of a testing program which would measure the ability of cows to produce and of sires to transmit high production capa bilities to their offspring. Beef men are now starting to think along similar lines and are seeking ways to measure production capacity of beef herds. Supplementary Income All dairy farms, mine included, need a source of supplemental income. Hie answer to this problem may be found in a feed lot designed to produce good quality red meat from dairy bulls. A leading farm magazine recently reported the experiences of a couple of Indiana farmers who have made a special business of making beef out of dairy bulls. They report gains of 2 to 3 pounds per day and feed costs per pound of gain were very favorable. It has been found in many tests that bolls will gain faster and more eco nomically than steers. Many tests have also shown that the quality of beef from young bulls that have not EARL B. RICE CHROMO POLLED HEREFORDS Nothing for solo until next September. FORSYTH, MONTANA Schock Polled Herefords "High Quality Herefords Without Horns" Strong in Gold Mine ond Anxiety 4th breeding. VIDA, MONTANA POLLED HEREFORDS Plato Domino 36th Breeding 1 Herd Bull Prospect#—Range Bull# and Females AT ALL TIMES JMnfJlicB Sons Ine SHERIDAN • WYOMING POLLED HEREFORDS YEARLING BULLS FOB SALB HERD SIRES: E Domestic Bocket and OK Gold Emblem Jr. CHAS. & ALICE HINDERAGER Morony Star Boute GREAT FALLS, MONTANA l¥tmm * > &JM* 1 * ADyANCE DOMINOS twty, wyp. •ITT; FRANCIS LOGAN & SONS HAFTE» 33 CATTLE CO. Big Horn, Wyu. FOB SALE: 20 Coming 2-year-old Bulls. 10 Bred Heifers to calve in February. ken . conzelman ft AUCTIONEER Box 48 BOZEMAN, MONTANA JU 6-S202 A few yearling bulls for sale at the ranch. Montana #1 Hogs for Sale Bred Sews and Boars W. K. (Bill) & JIM TURNER GREEN VALLEY ANGUS Hobson, Mont. Phone GA 3-5424 H.B. CLPtd CowMenciai ANGUS . ■ \* Main Herd Sires Eileenmere 4 of VG Eliminator 7 of VG FOR SALE: 20 Com ing 2-year-old Balls. Mr. and Mrs. FRED O. HARRER Rte. 1, Bozeman, Mont. min mm * ill] S JJ 3 ANGUS RANCH Yearling Bulls A Females far Sale HOWARD A MARY BAIRD Judith Gap» Moataas Phene 473-2293