20—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 9, 1973 100th Birthday Celebration of Angus in U.S. Celebrated Beef cattle breeders and in dustry leaders from the United States, Canada, Scotland and Guatemala gathered in Victoria, Kansas, May 17 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the im porting of the first Angus cattle into the United States. The first Angus arrived in Victoria from their native Scotland on May 17, 1873. They were imported by George Grant, a retired London silk merchant who had started an agricultural colony in Kansas and founded the town of Victoria. Special guest at the festivities was W. D. McLaren, president of the Aberdeen-Angus Cattle Society from Scotland who read a letter of congratulations to Angus breeders from the Queen Mother of Great Britain. She is the patroness of the Aberdeen-Angus Cattle Society and has an Angus herd. Some 800 people attended the special ceremonies on the out skirts of Victoria The celebration, sponsored by the American Angus Association was held in the old English cemetery where George Grant is buried and where a large limestone monument was erected in his honor in 1943. The activities included the re-dedication ot the monument and the unveiling of a limestone statue of a modern Angus bull that was placed atop it The sculpture was done by Fritz Felten, a native Kansas artist who lives at Hays. In charge of the re-dedication activities was Glen Pickett, president of the Kansas Angus Strip tests prove it: Cattle prefer Pioneer brand sor ghum-sudangrass hybrid over other brands. That means they’ll eat more .... make mote meat or milk. Unbeatable hot-weather pas ture or green-chop. Can be planted on diverted acres and grazed after September 1. Treat your cattle to the pasture hybrid they likebest! See or coll your Local Pioneer Salesman m PIONEER. SORGHUM Plantar it • brand nama; numbtn Identify variatlat. a Regltttrad trade mark of Plonaar Hl-Brad Corn Com pany, Oat Molnat, lowa, U S.A. Association, Emporia, who in troduced two relatives of George Grant who are still living in Kansas, and then tried on a top hat they had brought that was owned by Grant. Later William McLaren placed a large floral replica of the “Union Jack” at the Grant monument while a group of bagpipers in regimental Scottish kilts played for the ceremony. Keynote speaker at the bir thday celebration was Dr. A. D. Weber, executive vice-president of the Kansas Livestock and Meat Industry Council and vice president emeritus of Kansas State University. Guest speaker was John Trotman, president, American National Cattlemen’s Association from Montgomery, Alabama. He congratulated Angus breeders on their 100 years of progress then told of a $6l million ANCA drive to educate the nation’s housewives about the beef in dustry. Housewives need to know that beef prices are not going down any more than are the wages of their husbands, Trot man emphasized. Twenty national organizations that have contributed to the development of the beef industry were honored with special awards by the American Angus Association. They are: American Agricultural Editors Ass’n; American Meat Institute, American National Cattlemen’s Ass’n, American Society of Animal Science; Beef Im provement Federation; Beef Industry Council; Future Far mers of America; National Association of Farm Broad casters; National Ass’n of Food Chains, National Ass’n of Meat Purveyors, National Ass’n of Retail Grocers; 4-H Clubs of America, National Independent Meat Packers Ass’n, National Live Stock and Meat Board, National Livestock Feeders Ass’n, National Restaurant Ass’n National Society of Live Stock Record Ass’ns; Newspaper Farm Editors of America; U. S. Beef Breeds Council; and United States Department of Agriculture. Kansas Senator Robert Dole was a special guest at the ceremony. Master of ceremonies for the program was Robert Giess, a director of the American Angus Association from Arnold, Kan sas. Momentos of 100 years of Angus history in the United States will be locked in a Cen tennial Time Capsule and planted in front of the American Angus Association headquarters on Sunday, June 10. The event will be in conjunction with the quarterly meeting of the Association’s board of directors at St. Joseph, Missouri. Material ranging from early day sale catalogs to present-day advertising campaigns will be microfilmed and placed in the time capsule and buried beneath a huge limestone fence post from the original George Grant Ranch. Other highlights will include a presentation from Frank Rea, Carrollton, Missouri, owner of the Moss Creek Angus Herd, one of the truly “Pioneer Herds” in the United States The Moss Creek Herd was started in 1879 from one of the original four herd bulls imported into the U S by George Grant Rea is the third generation of cattlemen in his family to continue the herd Other presentations will be made by Lloyd D Miller, executive secretary of the American Angus prior to the dedication and planting of the Centennial Time Capsule Mi Mi HOT"! M> omi STA-RITE Can Put A Pipeline In Any Barn WHY BUY A PIPELINE? For An Average 40 Cow Herd You Can . . . Save walking 100 miles a year. Save carrying 292 tons of milk a year. Save 200 hours per year on an average herd. Produce higher quality milk. Increase your milk production. WHY BUY A ST A -RITE PIPELINE? Engineered for the modern dairy farm of today as well as the dairy farm of tomorrow. Around the barn pipelines and milking parlors. 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