
 

 
  

 

 

 

. ‘ ' . Y a - ‘ ' ,

  

‘-

 

 

W  Independent

Farmer’s Weekly Owned and

Edited in ’M ichigan

 
 
 
 

 

Vol. VII, No. 42.

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1920

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
 

 

 

J The World’s Market at Michigan’s Door!

A Glimpse at What the Proposed Great Lakes to Ocean Route Will Mean '

F PLANS which are being rushed to
completion are not blocked by selﬁsh
and Short-sighted easterners, the beginning
of a project which is destined to link the

Great Lakes with the Atlantic ocean will soon

be under way. '

Who has not wondered as he stood 0n the
deck of the great ships which plow. our great
fresh-water inland seas, why it was that he
was cut off from the seas by only a narrow
stretch of rapid-s, or the limitations of a
Welland canal? ' *

Why should the farm and factory products
of the great central west be leadedaboard
freight cars in tiny quantities, carried miles
over mountains andlthrough valleys, unload-
ed at New York, Philadelphia or Boston and
lightered to ocean going ships, most of which
are smaller than the great barges which carry
the. freight ofthe great lakes?

Compared with the advantages of the Pan-
ama canalto the people of the United States,

this link in our transportation system should i

have been built ﬁrst; had it been, the great
war might have ended many months before
it did.. ‘ .

' Advantages to Michigan

We hope we are no more than humanly
selﬁsh, but we cannot help but point out to
the farmers of Michigan and the states which
have ports on the Great Lakes, the tremend-

.ous advantages which will accrue from this

saving in carrying charges. From Liverpool
to Ho‘ng Kong the ports of the world will be
at Michigan ’s door, at least for nine months
out of every year, and wheat, beans, potatoes
or apples loaded at South Haven, Bay City

to the Business Farmers of Michigan

 

 

T DETROIT, July 22d, 23rd and

24th. will be held the Great Lakes-
St. Lawrence Tidewater Congress, at
which it is hoped to bring to a head the
many years of conscientious endeavor
on the part of those who have been ad-
vocating a direct ocean outlet to the
Atlantic.

Cértain Eastern states because of
their important ocean ports have begun
an active opposition to this great for-
ward step, selﬁshly they are taking the
position of the dog-in-the-manger and
seeking to stop progress.

With the railway situation as it is
today the gross error of trying to force
the great agricultural and manufactur-
ed products of the central west through
the small end of the Atlantic port fun-
nels has been only aggravated.

We are happyto voice, we believe, the
earnest prayer of every business farmer

 

 

 

 

in Michigan and the central/west for the
early completion of this
great project.

   

  

or Detroit, can go direct without a transfer
to compete with the products of every land.

At the present time, says Hugh J. Hughes
in the Review of Reviews, when a bushel of
wheat starts forward on its journey to Eur-

ope its ordinary route from the plains of
North Dakota or Saskatchewan is to one
of the great wheat-receiving terminals on
Lake Superior, and thence by boat down the
Lakes to Buffalo. At Buffalo it is lifted out
of the boat into an elevator, and transferred
to cars that carry it to the Jersey City water-
front in New York harbor. There it is light-
ered to a tramp steamer bound for Liverpool.
“Now this is the all—important fact to con-
sider: That the cost of unloading the bushel
of wheat at Buffalo, plus the cost of rail haul
to Jersey City, plus cost of reloading onto
the ocean~going steamer, is fully one-half of
the entire cost of transportation from Duluth
to Liverpool. Another curious fact in this
connection is that when the wheat arrives at
Jersey City it is farther away from Liverpool
than when it left the elevator at Buffalo!
Half the incurred freight bill is spent in
moving the wheat backward instead of for-
ward to its port of destination. I

“Since this cost is, in normal times, from
ten to twelve cents, it follows that about ﬁve
cents per bushel could be saved if we could
do away with the land haul, and proceed di-
rect on our journey by boat. And since the
demand in Europe sets the price at which our
wheat sells in competition with the export
wheat of the rest of the world, this ﬁve cents
saved would be saved to the wheat—grower.

“When Wheat is selling around $2.50 a.
bushd‘, ﬁve cents 0n the bushel may not ap-
pear as a matter of importance; but there
have been times, and they may readily come
again, when this margin of ﬁve cents net
would determine (Continued on page 11)

 

 

   

FREIGHT
85 CARS

10,000 TONS

 

 

 

 

  

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I
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PORT‘ARTHUR ' | -  ,3   -      t/ a»:
so I
,ME F’s/9,0, cameos , ,1
DULaT-HH ' V .4 ‘ QUEBEC .
' . ,1 A ,
LAKE MONTRE v
HUR 0N. /.

 
 

‘ 'l-EQELA'ND‘

aurmto

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

C‘— MUCHIGAN”

'0 .Busmesg ,FAnngn, { . '

 

 

 

 

'7“.- > 7‘

$1 PER YEAR

     
 
 
  
   
  

 

 

    
  


  

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

STATE DAlBl‘JdENS’ MONK}
July 13th and 14th are the dates
chosen for a State Dairymens’ picnic
at Gttawn Beach and J enisen Park,
a short distance from Holland on
the shores of Lake Michigan and
Black Lake, under the auspices o!
the Michigan Allied Dairy Associa-
tion, an organization embracing all
phases of production, manufacture
and distribution of milk and. hill];
products in Michigan. The dates
are especially timed to suit best the
season and also when dairymen and
others engaged in the dairy industry
in Michigan will be the last busy-

It is planned to make this a two-
day vacation aﬂair and elaborate.
preparations are in progress design-
ed for the amusement, comﬁort and
instruction of those attending. U’n-
ique contests between the several
units all the organization will be
staged. Plans are also in‘progress
to obtain the presence of several
prominent speakers for both- days
among whom will be Mr. N. P. Bull,
of Lansing. President of the, Michi—
gan. Milk Producers’ Association and
Mr. Milo D. Campbell, of Goldwater,
President of the National Milk Pro—
ducers’ Association, and a, candidate
for governor on Republican ticket-

The picnic will be unique in that
it embraces both producers and man-
ufacturers of dairy products. Michiu
gan is fast developing into one of
the ioremost diversiﬁed dairy states

the Union. Practically ever: known

variety of dairy products are now
manufactured Within her ~ borders,
and the industry is: fast'forging
ahead as a state known for its num-
erous herds of pure bred animals.
The industry is regarded as the back-
bone of Michigan agriculture and al-
ready from the standpoint of dollars
and cents is exceeded only by a few
other farm products in value, and
one purpose at the.  un-
der whose auspices the picnic. is to
be hold, is to make it second to none
through tile principle of co—opérative
effort between everybody interested
in the dairy industry, and which
from the standpoint of the essential

-toodelemcatnintlepmdmtsotm

cow, would include everybody.

thlLE MARKET STAPLE

Compact, block-y males at good
proportions, with good’ life and qual-
ity, are selling quickly and proﬁtab-
ly, no matter what their size. The
top» prices go for mules standing 15.3
hands "and weighing 1,200 to 1,250
pounds. The market. for them is as
staple as [or wheat and corn.

Farmer producers are selling or-
dinary mule colts at weaning time at
prices ranging from $65 to $125, be—
fore incurring any appreciable ex.—
pense for feed. At three. years, the
mule standing 15.3 hands, weighing
1,250 pounds, easily brings from two
to three hunde dollars; and at ﬁve,
a big sugar mule; commands ﬁve

hundred dollm or sometimes more.

Norcdoles there seem to be any risk
to rai‘singrthem. Mule colts are hardy
and are not subject to blindness,
sidebones. or other . unsoundnesses
common to homes. They are also
capable of self protection from the
time. they stand oniour legs until
they retire from active service via
burial.

D. E. Van Pelt, a tarmer near
Shared, Ion makes good, use at
their marketability. He says: “I
takeadmtagoatthe tact mum
heaviest demand for mules comes at
a time when I can spare then. I
buy eight big mining‘mules in wint-
er, out. of mu, tor about $450 a
poi-.1, to» do my spring work. When
the busy season is over, I sell them
3:13.500 to $550 a pair. Then. a little
before I sell these mine males, I buy
eight big mare mules {or the sugar
trade. I buy them thin at about
$450, or $475. About January ﬁrst,
I sell: them. Last spring (1919) I
bought two pair at $500? and» $550
and sold them in January (1920)
for a total of $1.790. They did sum—
mer and fall work and made me a
proﬁt of $550 besides."

Your paper is a good one, fearless
and progressive: when the farmers
buy or build their milk canning and
distributing factory and also the best
sugar factory they will be making a
great . jump in progress.—7Albert
Spencer, Alcnm County.

FBENCHDRAIRAGS IN MICHIGAN
By-WKHNB‘E PALMER '

A novel test of vertical drainage
was tried last October on the farm
of Henry Palmer, Manchester, Mich.

There was an oval pond in one of

his ﬁelds which could not be drained .

by. drinking because the. slope of the
land ofered no outlet. We decided
to try an experiment we. had read
about in one of the. farm papers.

The'bottom or theme! merit

underlaid with ha-rdpan and blue
clay. Beneath the clay was graval.

With an 8' it. earth auger, we put
down a bore hole eight net deep at
the point where the.water was deep:
out. and two holes at. each” end the
feet deep It was the aim to get the."
eight foot hole down to within about
three inches of the bottom of the
layer of clay, or in other words to
within three inches of the pervious
gravel stratum- This was accom—
plish-ed by making a test boring. not:-
in-g the character of the soil on the
auger spirals-

In each of the three holes Iva
 or 40 per cent ammonia dy-
namite were loaded. The three
charges were connected together in
series and ﬁred simultaneously with
a bloating machines. No tannins of
the charges was necessary as the wa-
ter ﬁlled the bore holes.

The sink holes made by the‘blasts
have been carefully watched to see
whether they would keep the pond
clear or water. With the exception
of the time that frost prevented the

 

Silo Prices Smashed

Startling Reductions in

This is without question the biggest silo
offer we have ever been able to make.
This Redwood was purchased by the
Government for war purposes. It was not
used and due to our big purchasing power
we were able to buy the whole lot at an
astonishingly low price—much lower than
present market prices. We are passing

these savings along to you.

75' Ton Silo Only $377

Think of it, a 73 ton Saginaw Redwood
Silo for $377.00. It is almost unbelievable.

. . u n I I . . . . . h

: éllllilllgilﬂ a, , 
y? illllllliélllllllh;
j gillllllsullmslg;T
r ‘sﬁlllllblilgllllli'

 

Every Silo a Saginaw
Every one of these silos is a bona-ﬁde
Saginaw—4 the some type of silo that has
made good for years on thousands of farms
all over the country. ’

This Offer Appears only once

Ornce this announcement is made, these silos are going like hot cakes and
these prices hold good only so laughs-our supply of this wonderful Redwood
lasts. If you are lucky enough In get one of these silos you must act quickly.
You will never have an ' opporturﬁy like this again.
Tlu'soﬂ‘erwin bemodnmlyonce. It’s up to youto
act W. - '

Wrﬂa Whhhﬁculm and Camp”

Pr'no ‘Lht. we” Department No. 12

a...” nu: precwns COMPANY can

as arm m- r... Silo; to” race comma: v.9»

Thesesﬂm positively willnot be soldﬁlnivl
  Net more tin mo  
   be  V

 

Saginaw Redwood Silo
Prices Made Possible by Purchase of Redwood '
from Government—Saves $100 to $300 per Silo

And the same reductions apply on all sizes.
It's your chance '

It’: Beanﬁfd Redwood
We have bought millions of feet of Redwood
and never have we seen any ﬁner silo stock
—-clean, clear slaves that will make beauti—
ful, lasting silos. You know that Redwood
is mum's awn silo material.

     
    

.-~.~

    
   
   
 
 
  

   
   
 

  
  

 
 

   
  

water from percolating to the holes

case.

The job most all told $3 and was
‘ done in three hours time.

‘ If the holes clog we shall blast
them out again and rm them with
gravel, cinders or some coarse ma-
, terial than. cannot run together.

 

" CLINTON COUNTY FARMERS SUP:-
Pom CAMPBELL
Enclosed please ﬁnd cow of res-
olutions adopted by Bath Union.
Farmers." Club—H. B. R, Clinton
County.
' ““Whereas, Milo D. Campbell who
is actually engaged in agriculture
and has declared himself a. candidate
for governor and having been endors-
ed by the Michigan State Grange; the
g Ancient Order oi Gleaner; and: the
, State- Association of Farmers! Clubs,
' is our choice for governor.
“Be it resolved that in the pres-
, out period at under production and
. industrial unrest, that business, ag-
. riculture,. labor and. all classes of
‘ good citizens should be represented
by a: man who is not for class legis-
lation alone but who is willing to
’ give all interests an equal showing
and believing Mil‘o D. Campbell is
such a man.

Be it further resolved that as Milo
D. Campbell has pledged himself to
look after all these various interests
of our great state and that he is a
brother tamer with us and having
all other interests equally at heart
We believe he would execute his
promises if elected and that we
should give him our best support at
the primaries and if he receives the
nomination, also support him at the
fall election.

“Resolved that a copy of these
resolution be spread upon the rec-
ords of this organization nd a copy:
be printed in one of our local papers.
Roscoe .7. God, John Youry, Howard
, B. Hera. .

 

.MAGOMB- COUNTY OONHIGMNT
SALE OF HOLSTEINS
l The ﬁrst consignment sale ever
held in Hacomb county will take
place Isle 30th at the Fairchild
Farm: at ChesterﬁeldgAt one o’clock:
sharp bids will be called for on tho_
ﬁrst Wu, Sixty-one more reg-
istered “inbred Black and Whites
will be dated, in turn. Thar. will
be three auctioneers,- 001. R. E.
Hanger; Barry Robinson and I. V;

 

Dr

 

aside, In ﬁrebox. 

 

; the result has been a complete suc-

 
 

Kelley, while R. Austin Becki! will I. ‘ ’

 

ﬂ—ugmamguhl-aan.¢_ A.

reﬁzhv haoaahnanum

33*! EJ‘CGE

E ﬁ‘subecidns

§3€§Shiﬁgi

.’ i”

, .
,_

 

 

 
 
 
 

      
 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

mission In in.

 

 

 
  

-—Courtesy Detroit Journal.

 

 

etroit Fourth Largest City in United States

Mkhigm’s Metropolis Show Largest Growth Nmnerically of any City Except Nan York; Passes

5A1" DETROIT’S slogan, "A Mil—
lion by 1310," which the city
adopted 1Q years also, came leer

boils reclined was made known June
18th then the census board at
Washington sent out a public state
must giving the population of sever—
“ of the largest cities in the Uni-ted
States. The population of the Mich-
igan metropolis was given at 993,—
73! which means an advance of
113.4 per cent during the past 1-0
years as Detroit’s population in 1910
was 465,768. This rate «I increase
has laid only one equal in census nec-
onds. Chicago being the only city to
show nearly as rapid an advance.
The Illinois city went from 503,001)
in 15880 to 1,D99,850 in 1890. its
percentage was 118-5, just a shade
above the one now made by Detroit.

The statement by the census zboard
M the “Auto City" as tom-tn
m city in the United sum, as, 1
according to the latest nvailnible
census ﬁgures and authorntiwc uti-
 oit countries, seven—
teenth largest city in the world. In
 these hm honors 
distinguished base]! by  the
only city of 109,000 or over that has
mere than doubled in population
during the last 10 years.

hmw20yeamorasi-cethe
beginning of the twentieth (rennin,
Detroit his quadrupled in min—
elson,“ says the  News. And
the New: goes on «to describe the his-
tory of Michigan’s .metropolis as
follows:

“m a hinterland trading post
in the early days of the eighteenth
century (Detroit was founded by
 in 1701,.) the city in gmwn
to be one of the hall dozen leading
cities of the United States in point of
population, as well as the chief in—
dustrial and  commun-
ity in the North American continent.

“There werei600 souls in Detroit
in the ﬁrst mm of its foundation,
including Indians. There were no
white women.  population was
not maintained, however, and in M
was not equalled until 15%) years lat-
er. Montreal opposed Defu'oifc
growth by all the Inca-us within its
power, leaving that the new North-
west trading post would become an
inn-patent rival.

“The year 1791; found the city with
5% people. About this time there
was an emigration to Amherstburg,
the Canadian city opposite the ex-
cuu'on island, Bob-lo, which reduc-
ed the city's scanty population. In
18.5 the city was grantically 
out by file. It haul «6059 people at the
time. In 1805 Gov. Hull and Judge
Woodward went to Washington to
foster a bill authorizing the rulers or
the territory to lay out in lots the

Boston, 51; Louis, ’Cieaeiand,  Ballimre in
"Ten Ym- 1mm!!! to Famaem of 

new town and 10,630 am a! land
on the north.

Just a Few Squares

“In 1811) Detroit’s population num-
bered' 770. In 1312 when Detroit
had :80!) men, women and children
within its conﬁnes, one city extended
along the river from between what
is new Brush and Wayne streets.

“There were soc in the city in
1.817. In .1818 the Walk-in-hhe—Wa—
ter, the ﬁrst steamer to ply the De-
troit River, opened up a new era of
transwrtat‘ion.

"The growth oi! the city was
steady, the ﬁg—
ures being, 1,-

Detroit attracted national attention
by being the city with like mind larg-
est increase in population for the
decade, its new population being
4485.766. 0'! this number, 155,565
were foreign-born, the German and
Canadian elements being the great-
er. There were only 5,741 negroes
in Detroit in 1.910. The number of
new is now estimated at 70,000,
or an increase of more than 1,090
per cent.
Four Acres in Area

“Cadillac’s village and Ft. Ler-
oult, which was then outside the town
were only four
acres in area.

 

 

110 for 3,819;
1,!!! In! 1820,“,
1,517! for 1828,

and 3,222 m New York . . . . . . .
[830... Between gm

the you: 1814 W ban,

and 1325 the ' Wt tin-ﬂ can-nu
area of the city ﬁaﬂﬂ‘

Ira cal-axed by in“. ,

the addition 

thereto at the “'9 “m” I
military re- m Vii-undue»

wve."i‘he aspen-
.ing at the Erie
Canal in 182.5
served to en-

 

16 leading-C'lt’iest. '5.

 

The Sava
liver, whi .c h
ﬂowed acres :8

m and then
eventually emp—
tied into the De.
mu River near
the Wayne Ho—
tel long hind-er-
od the expan-
sion at the city.

 

 

 

Mace the city’s o W by W In 1801 t line
numbers. About 3% natagifgcs dlg‘gfget Figures for town was en—
a  of De- ‘ ‘ " (“mo . - , urged to extend
mit’s populn-‘  Bond 0‘ W'" two miles back ‘
‘mm was slave from the river
at this time. and in 1815 the

“We 11 g h limits were

cholera epidemics in 13832-34 brought
about deaths or several hundred,
the city’s myu‘lation in the 10 
from 1830 to 18410 increased nearly
409 mar 12me In 1834 the city had
4,968: in 1.841) it had $491“, in 184:5
this increased to 13,955. In 1859
the ﬁguremtood at 21,911). In the
next four years the  nearly doub-
led in population, 1854  De-
troit was 40,127. The growth the
next six years was not so languid, but
the ﬁgure had increased to 415,619 in
1850. _

“Despite the Civil War, or perhaps
beam 01 it, the city in 1864 mum—
med 53,170- In 1868 the popula—
 was 88,827., and in [8‘70 it was
79.57 7. In 1874 Detroit passed the
109,000 mask with the new ﬁgure at
101,325.. - m years 18380 and 188-1
credited Deﬁcit with 116,342 and
134,834 inhabitants respectively.

“In .1890 Detroit gassed the 200.,-
900 mark with £05,876 people. In
me next ten years this increased to
:285,704, the population la 19-00. In
1.904 this was 817,531.. In 1910

again extended. By 18.84 the bound—
aries of the city were extended seven
times and curtailed tom- .tim-es. In
1:890 the area of the city was 22.1:
square miles, in 19% 28.35 square
miles, 419.79 mare miles in 191.0
and at the present time 78.61 square
miles."
Detroit Census Sensational

Detroit has accomplished in the
last halbscore of years what it took
New York and Philadelphia 3 score
and a hall? to do and Eastern [9&-
pers say “Detroit’s growth is nothing
short or sensational, but wlmt it
would have been if it “hadn’t become
the auto industry center is only a
matter of conjecture.”

The Board of Water Commission-
ers of the “Auto City” estimate
““Greater Detroit” has .a population
of 1,200,001). By “Greater Detroit"
they mean including all territory in-
side the city limits, as Highland
Park, Grosse Point, Hamtramck,

"River Rouge, Oakland, Ecorse and

some small scattered settlements,
all of which are independent cities,

 

mm and villages within the limit-
of Detroit. '

"The unprecedented growth of De-
troit and environs during the [at de-
mde primarily is due to the anus—
ing growth or the motor car indus-
try, in which the city has been all-
ed upon to furnish the world with 70
per cent of the motor vehicles pro-
duced,” says the Detroit Journal.

Another factor that attracts tho
people is the high wages. Detroit
workmen receive higher wages than
is paid in any other industrial cent;-
er in the country thus making con-
tented workmen. and their wages am
so high that the largest majority of
them own their own homes, but the
 is increasing so inst at
present that houses cannot be built
fast enough. The housing problem
is the only thing that will hinder the
city’s growth.

Banks have played a big plrt i.
the growth of the city as they 
ed the automobile industry when i
was in its "infancy.

The Next 10 Yeas

What will Detroit’s .censans_be at
the end of the next decade? 780m.
men predict it will again double.
Several plants under headway already

should work wonders in that direc-
tion. . .
One or these ls the “Great Lake:
to Ocean Route."

Another project, of which privatu
ﬁnancing is already in sight would
be the building of a $28,000,003
bridge over the Detroit river. T1111
would make Detroit the leading er-
port gateway Irom this country to
Canada.

Another factor would be the com-
pletion of the Pennsylvania rail-
road’s improvement which will open
a road for tramc from the South and
East.

Also several big concerns are
planning large plant expansions in
the next few years. '

Then is no question as to whether
Detroit’s growth means much to the
farmers of Michigan. It means
thousands of dollars in their p(u....e.s
because it provides an immediate
market for all of Michigan’s farm
produce, thus assuring the producer:
a higher price than if the products
were sold to dealers who must ship
most 01? it outside of the state. “While
the growth of the Michigan meme~
olis hurts the farming industry oi
the state some by inducing the boy]
and girls to go to the city there is a
time coming. especially if the “De-
troit to Canada” bridge is built and
the “Great Lakes to Ocean Route” in
established, when farming will “be
proﬁtable enough to not only keep
the young people at home "but many
city cousins will turn farmward.

 

 

 

i‘

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   


 
 
 

 
  
  

South. n. 

  

5 OUTH DAKOTA bankers are prac-
tically a unit’ in endorsing the
state rural credits system which

has been in operation in that state
since 1917. During a week recently
spent in South Dakota, every bank-
er with whom I came in contact with
‘ spoke freely in favor of "the - plan
under which the state loans money
on farm land.

“I have watched the operation of
the law in our county very closely,
and am convinced that every state
where agriculture is an important in-
dustry should have a similar law,"
said R. A. Bielski, head of the Bielski
Farm Loan mpany of Philip, South
Dakota. That statement in substance
was repeated over and over again

I by bankers all the way from Pierre
to the Minnesota line. In addition,
I have a score or more of letters from
.bankers in the part of South Dakota
west of the Missouri River, all of
them enthusiastic for the state loan
system.

I want to emphasize the banki'
r

support of the South Dakota ru
credits system. because bankers have
always opposed to state loan systems.
Bankers in states where sta-te loan
systems are under consideration are
protesting vigorously against their
establishment. Back in 1915, 1916,
and 1917, the bankers of South Da—

' kota were protesting also. They
said that it would be an unwarrant-
ed interference with the business of
loaning money for the state to loan
money on the land. Some of them
even said that it would compel them

' to shut up shop. Ninety-ﬁve per cent

I of the bankers of South Dakota, I am
convinced, believe that the state rur-
al credits law is one of the most for-
ward looking pieces of legislation on
the statute books.

Here and there in South Dakota
I was told by Claude M. Henry, rur—
al credits commissioner, are bankers
who do not yet see the desirability
- of the state .loan system. “I do not
see how it is possible for us to op-
erate of $24,000,000 business, as we
have done, without tramping upon
somebody’s toes,” Henry says. “The
bankers who are opposed to the sys—
tem now are largely those whose bus-
iness is that of loan brokers rather
than commercial bankers. A few
perhaps do not like us because we
may not have loaned as much on
land for their clients as they thought
_ we should; the amount we loan is
of course determined by our exam-
iners, and if they report that land is
not worth the loan wanted, we turn
it down. A very few may be opposed
to us for political reasons."

Bankers to Handle State Loans

To make the evidence stronger
that South Dakota bankers are be-
hind the state loan system, let it be
known that more than'90 per cent
of the loans are handled through the
banks. The usual procedure when a
South Dakota farmer wants a state
loan is for him to ask his banker to
get it for him. The bank makes the
application, gets the abstract of
title, and attends to practically all
of the details; some banks charge $10
for this, some $25, and others lesser
amounts, but it is much less than
they used to get as commission for
placing loans.

One banker at Redfield, S. D., told
me that he actually lost $3,000 in
commissions last year because farm-
ers had borrowed money from the
state instead of borrowing it from
his bank. He added cheerfully that
he thought he was making money
by losing that commission, because of
the greater chance for better farm-
ing. and farm prosperity under the
long—time state loans.

“That $3,000 is our investment in
the future prosperity of this commun-
ity," he said. “Don’t think for a.
minute that we’re losing permanent-
ly. We’ll get, it all back, with a good
rate of interest added, in the increas-
ed prosperity which will result from
farms handled by men who own
them.” That man has the reputa-

" tion'of‘being‘ a long4headed banker,
utth‘ere must, bone “50%;! many' more

   
  
 
  

a.“

Ninety-five Per Cent of “Sunshine State” Bankers Sciy Rurol~Credit$ Leta is Needed 1’

‘ Agricultural State in ‘the Union,

. By H. s., u“. PRAIRIE FARMER

from the opinions expressed in agree:

ment with him.

“The state loan system on the
whole has proved very satisfactory,"
said W. H. McMaster of Gayville,
near Yankton. cashier of the Secur-
ity State bank; “Over $20,000,000
has been loaned direct to farmers at
a cheaper rate than could have been
obtained from eastern loan compan—
ies, and the loans on the average are
larger than could have been procur-
ed from other sources. Farmers are
able to get their money with little
delay and without the payment of
any additional commission. In my
judgment, it works the greatest ben«
eﬁt by stabilizing the rate of inter-
est and compelling outside parties to
do away with arbitrary rules. The
eastern loan companies, for example,
drew a line across the state and
would not lean more than a small
amount west of this line, though land
values were constantly increasing.”

The testimony of F. E. Swartout of
Gann Valley, cashier of the Bank 01!
Buffalo county, is similar. “The sys-
tem is good for the farmers and for
the state as a whole,” he says. “It
has worked a wonderful help to our
farmers in the reconstruction period,
when assistance was needed so much.

The system has worked very success-
fully. I think, however, that there
should be a limit to the extent that
the state will issue bonds and I think

that it is the intention of our board '

to discontinue the sale of bonds when
the amount outstanding is sufﬁcient-
ly large.” v .
Lower Interest Rates
The rural credits. plan, according
to M. G. Carlisle of the Roberts In-
vestment Company of Brookings, has

been success.c eyondpihe highest
hopes of thosﬂo promoted and es-
tablished it. f'It opened a line of
credit not hitherto available for the
farmers and stockmen at a low rate
and on long time," he says "This
is especially true of the region West
of the Missouri River. There the
loan rates was eight to 10 per cent
in most "cases, and on ﬁve years'
time. The state loans were at 5 1-2
per cent for 30 years with amortiz-
ed payments. The saving in rate
was substantial, but the great ben-
eﬁt was in the long terms. Farm-
ers now make their plans well into
the future with a note coming due
staring them in the face. Many men
just starting in were enabled to buy
land. I am satisfied that it is safe
to loan a reliable man the limit (70

Poultry Infested With Tuberculosis

 

 

“To have a flock of Plymouth Rock hens that began ailing last winter.
One would act dumpish a few days but eat all right, then suddenly die, mak-
ing a great fuss and noise. One or two a month would go like that but be-

singing happily.

the size of a pea on liver and heart, literally covered with them.

.fore acting dumpish they seem perfectly well, laying good, red combs and
Yesterday one died and we opened her, found white spots,

We caught

and killed one who was acting dumpish and her liver was of a peculiar green
color and covered with white spots the size of a pin head. She was a laying

hen, having egg nuecla in her body-
nature of the disease.

mals. such as cattle, sheep, hogs and horses?

What we would like to know is the

If tuberculosis, would it infect the other farm ani-

Please write full particulars

mals, such as cattle, sheep, hogs and horses?—L. s., Montmorency County.

 

 

HIS is tuberculosis and is a dis-
Tease of great importance to the

poultryman or farmer, not‘only
on account of its destructiveness to
his flock, but also on account of its
relation to the health of himself and
family. There are four principle
types of this organism. The one
most commonly affecting man is des—
ignated as the human type. .The one
peculiar to cattle is designated as the
bovine type, and the one peculiar to
fowls the avian type, and there is
still another type of the tuber‘cule
bacillus which affects ﬁsh and other
cold—blooded animals. While there
are some differences in the shape of
the organisms grown for a consider-
able time in.the various animals and
some differences when grown in art-
iﬁcial media after separation, yet the
type peculiar to any of the warm
blooded animals, will grow in any
other warm blooded animal, that is,
the types are interchangeable, which
means that the avian type, (the type

affecting fowls) may cause tubercu-

losis in man and the human type
may cause tuberculosis in birds. It
has been found that a large percent-
age of hogs fed swill from houses
where tubercular persons have ex-
pectorated into it, became tubercular,
and when slaughtered, there is a con-
siderable loss from condemnation of
those badly affected. Tuberculosis
among chickens is rare in some por-
tions, and is very common in other
localities in the United States. It
was first reported in this country in
1900 and received but slight atten-
tion until 1903. It also occurs. in
turkeys, pigeons, and pheasants and
I believe two cases have been'report-
ed in wild geese.
disease seems to be increasing.

Mode of Spread ,
.‘In the progress of tuberculosis .of
chickens-at time there is noted. a

diarrhoea. ,"'..In" these cases. there are}
tubercular ulcers" .of'th'e mucous lin-J .'

     
  

 
 

of the intestines and when thus.
a. or. the air "atria

The loss from this

idly through the flock, as birds are
continually picking feed from the
ground and floors where contamin-
ation is sure to have taken place.
They may also contract the disease
by the introduction of a tubercular
bird in the flock. Tuberculosis
among wild birds has been mention-
ed as a possible fact. There is also
danger of spread from eggs from a
tubercular hen when the eggs ,are
purchased for hatching. There is
also a possibility that birdspby fol-
lowing tubercular cattle, may be-
come infected, as do hogs.

Treatment

Treatment of the affected birds is
not to be thought of, as the germs of
the disease are so often spread thru
the droppings that the only sure
means of eradicating the disease from
a flock is to kill all the birds in the
flock and if possible move the hen-
house to a new location and have
new runs. If this is not practicable,
thoroughly disinfect with five per
cent carbolic acid or ﬁve per cent
creolin, all fences, feed troughs, wa-
tering tanks and buildings should be
thoroughly disinfected. A contamin-
ated poultry yard may remain infect-
ed for a long time, many months and
possibly years- The action of disin-
fectants on this germ is very slow;
direct sunlight will kill the germ in
a few hours.

Birds from an infected flock
should not be sold for breeding pur-
poses, and the birds from such a
flockthat are killed for food should
be inspected by a competent veterin-
arian, so that none may be used for
food purposes that are diseased to
such an extent. as to render the food
unfit for use. All birds in- a. flock
infectedwith tubertulosis that die
should .be {burned to prevent further
spread of the disease ‘fromqthat'

 

  
    
 
 

‘ source. - All droppings and‘cleani‘nge.

from the h-enhouse‘ and 1 runs -'

   
 
 
 
 
   

be disinfected: with can!“ 0 r V 
8.11116' percen * . .
it ’ A» ‘

may

  

n Every -
per cent of the value of the land.)
Parties selling land are' willing'to
take second mortgages if necessary,
for. the amortization'payments are
constantly reducing the “principal of
the loans and increasing the securi-
ty of the second mortgage.”

From Wessington Springs, S. W.
Wright of the Farmers' Savings Bank
writes: “The bankers of South Da-
kota are almost unanimous in' their
opinion that it is one of the best
laws ever put into ,operation. There
is no commission for the borrower to
pay, and the long time in which to
repay the loans gives land owners
freedom from worry about renewals.
We are ﬁn-ding( however, that the
maximum, limit ($10,000) ’is too
small for the high—priced land. Many

. real estate owners have been forced
to go elsewhere to get larger loans
and pay large commissions to get the
money.. The legislature will probab—
ly raise the limit so as to allow larg-
er loans. Even as it is, we like it
exceedingly well, and so do the farm-
ers." ' '

Advantage Over Federal Loans

The South Dakota system is much
to be preferred to the federal loan
system, say many South Dakota
bankers. L. E. Ausman of Wessing—
ton Springs sums up these advant-
ages thus:

1. ' There is no subscription for
stock.

2. There is no local organization

to be maintained.
3. There is no expense in secur-
x ing bond for the secretary-treasurer.

4. The money is secured with less
delay.

“The appraisements have been con-
servative," said Ausman. “The loans
are conservative and.reliable and the
state is fully protected."

Helps Tenant Farmers
The state system has helped tenant
farmers to buy land, according to J.
D. Fargo, vice-president of the Red-
field National Bank. “It has done

a more than anything I know of to

place tenant farmers on land of their
own," he says.- “Tenants who had
accumulated some funds to make a
reasonable payment were enabled to
buy land by borrowing the rest "of
the necessary funds.

“The state loan system beneﬁts the
farmers and the state as a whole. It
has put the real estate loan brokers
out of commission here. We are very
much pleased with the plan as it has
worked out."

 

QUESTIONS THAT WILL INTER-
EST FARMERS AND CONSUMERS

Representative Baer, Non-Partisan
leaguer of North Dakota, in a recent
speech in the House'suggested these
pregnant and pertinent “whys?”

In the last quarter of 1919 the
price paid to farmers by the pack-
ers for hog products fell 43 per cent,
while the price of pork in eastern
markets rose 15 per cent. Why?

Texas farmers are now getting 2
1-2 cents a quart for beans. Freight
to Boston is 1 1-8 cents. In Boston
these beans retail at 18 cents a quart.
Why?

It costs 1 cent a pound to ship
butter from an Australian dairy farm
by a state owned railroad and a gov-
ernment owned merchant marine to
London. But in Wisconsin, eighteen
miles from a cheese factory, the re-
tail price of cheese is double the pro-
duction cost at the factory-and as

high as for the same brand in New _

York City. ' Why?

The southern planter gets only a.

little more than twice as muCh for
his cotton as in 1914, whereas to the
consumer cotton has advanced from
20 per pound, and cottongoods have
advanced .600 per cent. Why?

Perhaps one answer has
found by the raiIWay: brotherhoods
recently bpught a number:
" etori  ‘ ‘ ‘

     

   

   

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H-u-IAn-Hum..-

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/ George W. Dickinson, Secretary-
Ianager olrthe Michigan .State Fair,-
ennounces that the poultry show at
this year’s exhibition will be by far
the largest in the fair’s history. Prof.
0. H. Burgess, Professor of Poultry
Husbandry at the Michigan Agricul-
tural College, has been put in full
charge, and no restrictions are being
placed on his enthusiasm. He has
written the accompanying article on
how to prepare poultry for a fair es-
pecially for THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS
FABMER.

 

HE MANY advantages which a
Tpoultryman or farmer derives
l from exhibiting his poultry and
products cannot be overestimated. To
show birds that are well bred and
well ﬁtted is not only a pleasure but,
when shown in connection with

large classes of the same variety and‘

breeds, a considerable profits is de-
rived therefrom, not only from sell-
ing eggs for hatching but birds for
breeding purposes as well. There
are many men and women who keep
a few well bred birds in their back
yards for the pleasure they derive in
mating and breeding of high class
stock. These small breeders are us-
ually greatest in number at poultry
exhibitions.

The Michigan State Fair has done
and is doing all in its power to pro-
vide a suitable building and cooping
in which to exhibit. Hundreds of
thousands of people pass through the
poultry building every year. The
cost of ﬁtting and entry is very nom-
inal and the advertising power is
very great. The exhibit has doubled
every year for a number of years.
Liberal prizes are paid to the win—
ning birds but the pleasure in win-
ning cannot be measured by dollars
and cents. Many a good bird goes
down to defeat. No matter how well
bred it may be it loses it place by be—
ing ill ﬁtted for the show room.

Hatch chickens early for the fall
fairs. Select the birds for the breed-
ing pens that comply most nearly to

Turning the Devastated Battlefields

What the American Red Cross has Done to Assist French Farmers Rehabilitate A

~{A-MERICAN modern farming ma-
chinery and scientiﬁc agricul-
— - tural methods are being intro—
duced into France by agricultural
experts and it is expected that French
farming will soon be ,upon its feet
again, enabling France to feed her
own population.

A thirty per cent increase in the
wheat yield is espected from Cam—
brai’s spring planting this year as the
result of the use of Barbieri’s new
seed inoculation process. This new
process, which is quite different from
nitrogenous inoculations previously
invented, has been thoroug-hly test-
ed on every vegetable product grOWn
in France and its colonies, including
tobacco and sugar came The Roths—
child estates experimented and found
a thirty per cent increase yield for
wheat and potatoes. Similar results
from t-ests covering forty acres of
assorted vegetables prove conclus-
ively that the process is practical.

This seed inoculation process was
made available to the farmers of
Cambrai by the American Red Cross,
who distributed in that district the
samples received from Dr. Barbieri.

Dr. Barbieri’s researches covered
twenty years, the last three of which
were spent in the chemical labora-
tory of the Sorbonne. .His patents
cover all civilized countries and ‘a
company is now being formed to ex-
ploit the invention. Owing to sev-
eral processes known only to himself,
the inventor can control the menu-1
feature of the inoculus; thus he was.
able to allow the Red Cross the ben-
eﬁt of his researches for its agricul-
tural work without risk of damage
to his own interests. ‘

‘ The organized ﬂarmers are anxious

I _ :0 place larger seed-orders for the

all'sowing- than those of last year.
" ' .1} » wheat and
w ,

chinery of
all kinds
are needed
!b y t h e

  

hm; 

 

. a}
my.

oultryﬂat t *e State 1 Fair

Birds to he Exhibited ~ Should be Carefully Selected, Groomed and Trained

By PROF. C. H. BURGESS, Professor Poultry Husbandry, M. A. 0.

the standard, if pos‘sibl . From the
day the chicks are hatched keep them
in a healthy condition and keep them
grewing. Provide plenty of shade
and good, wholesome food, provide
them with clean runs and roosting

 

 

 

 

 
    
  
  

Secrets r y-M a n-
euer chkl n s o n

Bulldlna. Detroit.

 

 

quarters. Keep the birds free from
vermin. Wherever it is possible it
is advisable to ask advice from ex-
perienced and successful exhibitors
before starting out to prepare the
birds for exhibition.
Training of Birds

In order to Show the birds to best
advantage after they have been well
fed and reared and matured, n'ext
comes the training. Provide coops
about the same size as those used at
the place of exhibition. The train—
ing coops should be placed about
three feet from the floor. This will
accustom the birds to being elevated
from the floor and also during the
training they are not frightened by
persons passing or by the operator
handling them. The birds should be
thoroughly tame and petted in such

a way that they gain conﬁdence in
the attendant so that a judge in ap—
proaching the cage will not frighten
them. This is a very important step
in the preparation of birds for exhi-
bition.

Place only one bird at a time in the
training cage. Allow no caging with
more than one in order to prevent
ﬁghting. The success of the show
will depend largely upon the behavior
of the birds in the pen. Out of two
birdsequally bred, well fed, in full
plumage and standard color, the one
that is most easily handled will be the
one that will receive the prize.
Birds selected for exhibition shoud
be free from blemish and they must
conform to shape and color with the
Standard of Perfection. The inex-
perienced exhibitor should get the

a large

 

measure
been re-

farmers of
France.
Acco r d-
ing to re~
ports sub-
mitted at
r e c e n t
meetings of
Fr 6 n c h
farm e r s’ ,
syndicalte s,
trac t o r s
supplied by
the Ameri—
ca n R e d
Cro s s t 0
these farm-
ers’ associ—
ations in
the d evas-
tated reg—
ions of the
nort h o f
F r a n c e
have in

  

 

 

 

 

French farmers are periloularly careful

cured by sunshlne shall remaln dry.

This plcture shows
the canvas coverlng that. Is use

d to protect a wagon load of

cumulsted through the sale of R
low cost prlees. to the refugees.

sponsi b l e
f o r t h e
che e r i ng
crop pros—
pects for
the s u m-
:m e r. A s
far m i n g
picks up, it
is hope (I,
the syndi-
cates form—
ed last year
will be in
a position
t o b u y
tractors in-
ste a d o f
merely bor—
r o w i n g
them from
the Ameri~
ca 11 R e d
Cross. I n
the me a n-
time, they

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

  

    
 

  
  

  
 
 

  
 

  

W.x

3..

  
  
   

 

, ‘ (893) 

 

advice of an experienced exhibitor.
The Poultry Department of the Mich-
igan Agricultural College will under-
take to give this advice free, of
charge, should it be called upon to
do so.

Special attention should be given
to head points because that is the
ﬁrst thing that attracts the attention
of the judge. A single comb should
not be too high, it should be of good
texture and should not lop except in
the case of females in the Meditter-
anean class. The surface and the
under color should be taken into
consideration and should conform to
the Standard. Brass or creamy birds
should not be selected if possible as!
it is a serious defect. The exhibitors
should send the birds into the show
room in perfect condition of cleanli-
ness. This means the washing of the
comb, wattles, ear lobes and toes in
warm water and a brush to remove
dirt from between the toes and under
the scales. After the legs and toes
are once clean a drop of olive oil
on a woolen cloth should be used to
rub the shanks and toes to bring out
the best lustre.

White birds should be washed. Sea
lect three tubs of water. Birds
should not be washed in rooms that
are colder than 70 degrees Fahren-
heit. In number one the birds should
be thoroughly emerged and scrubbed
with ivory soap suds. The soap suds
should be rubbed clear downtinto
the base of the feathers. The water
should be at about 110 degrees.
Fahrenheit. In the second tub the
water should be just slightly warm.
Emerge the bird and thoroughly
wash out every trace of soap. In
the third tub the water should be at
about 50 degrees and in this water
bluing should be added the same as
for the linens on wash day. Emerge
the bird in this bluing water or rins-
ing water. Place the bird in a warm,
room that has a temperature oil
about 70 degrees and that is free

~from draft. The bird will take care
of the rest. ‘

of France Back Into Fertile Farms

griculture in the Stricken Area

are almost entirely dependent on the
tractors brought to the country by
relief organizations.

French farm workers are crowding
to the towns and cities for employ-
ment, migrating especially to indus-
trial centers such as Lille and Lens,
where wages are higher than those
ordinarily paid on the farms,- thus
fast reducing the agricultural popu—
lation of the country. Among the
distinct advantages of the tractor
French farmers have found, is that
it counters this growing shortage of
farm hands. Each tractor that comes
to France replaces several of these
city going laborers.

Farm schools are being organized
in France, and through these it is ex-
pected to interest the younger gen-
erations in agricultural pursuits. The
Junior Red Cross of America has
pledged 200,000 francs for the es-
tablishment of apprenticeships for
these schools, and 50,000 francs for
the purchase of modern farm ma-
chinery, and sums to be given from
these amounts, at intervals, Will‘be
equal to these granted by the.Min—
istry of Agriculture, A committee oﬂ
nine Frenchmen, including a former
Minister of Agriculture, agricultural
experts, engineers and practical
farmers, was appointed to supervise
with the Junior Red Cross, the dis-’
tribution of funds for these farm
schools. The appointment was made
by the Auxiliary Committee of the
Apprenticeship Farms of the Minisd,
try of Agriculture." ’

The one condition stipulated by}
the Ministry of Agriculture in launcha
ing the work was that the committee
be charged to make known the fact:
that it has been made possible bythe
generosity of Americanschool child-4
ren. The Junior Red Cross will be
given all. possible facilities to invee-i
tigate the functioning of the. farm! .

th 1:.de aid»

 

   
     
  


 
    

   



 

 

3 . '  . ‘ , A .~ - “admit/#51. 
.1 An Independent '
«u -' ’ _, Farmer‘s Wee}? Owned and
v "Boned-lo lchlqan

 

 

SATURDAY. JUNE 26, 1920

Published every Saturday by the ,
RURAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. Inc. '
A "I. cleanse, mm
Members Agricultural Publishers Association
Represented in New York. Chicago, St. Louis and Minneapolis by
the Associated Farm Papers. Incorporated

  

" -      warms  
, _ in danger of  crosswise Whom ”
. , 2 e .   gbe'csr'meiome cw"weatheror"the dame“

 

 

 

GEORGE M. SLOCUM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PUBLISHEB

lonnnsr Lonr- ...,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .EDITOB
' ASSOCIATES

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Imon Grinnoll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Edltorlal Department

II. D. Lamb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Auditor

Funk )1. Weber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Plsnt Superintendent

Hebe! Glare Ladd . . . . . . . . . . ..Women's and Ohlklnen's

William E. Brown . . . . ..- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Len.l Bentham
ONE YEAR. 52 ISSUES, ONE DOLLAR

£30 Issue: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8230

PM ween, 2 m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..eeoo

 

Ides: Forty-ﬁve cents per onto line. 14 llnee to
the column- ch, 768 lines to page.
LII. MI and Auction Ode Whine: We o‘er model In.
armznlmm broaden of lhe stock end poultry: “if. I-
e

OUR GUARARTEED ADVERTISERS
We respectfully ask our readers to ("or our sl-
We when possible. Their-catalogs and prices
are cheerfully sent free. end we guarantee you
against loss providlnz you say when writing or oe-
derine from then. “I aw your ad. II .1 mm
Business Met."

Inbred u second-clue matter. at post-once, Mt. Gleam. Itch.
Calamity Howling

SORGHUM SMITH ate a bit too heartily
one evening of strawberry short-cake and
e the next morning he came in from the ﬁelds
with half a dozen pains racing back and forth
between his stomach and liver. He told Ma
Smith that he guessed he’d have to lie down
a spell on the parlor sofa. By and by the mail
carrier came. Ma Smith hurried out to get
the mail and in the little pleasantries that'fol-
lowed she imparted the information that Sorg-
hum wasn’t feeling well that morning. “You
know,” said she to the mailman, “Sorghum’s
been a hard worker’all his life and he isn’t as
young as he used to be.” The postman went
his way and Calamity Ed, whose farm adjoin-
ed the Smith’s On the south, was soon hearing
about Sorghum Smith’s “attack.” In the
next day ortwo all the neighbors within a rad-
ius of ten miles of Skimmilk‘ Corners had
heard of Sorghum Smith being stricken while
at work in the ﬁelds, “a great strong man like
Sorghum, just think of it,” and were specu-
lating on whether Widow Sorghum would have
to sell the farm and go to the city in order to
support herself and the fatherless Sorghum
children.

Some folks are natural born calamity howl-
ers. They magnify their own troubles and the
troubles of their neighbors. It requires no
great stretch of their imagination to change a
harmless stomach-ache into a deadly cancer. If
the doctor diagnoses a rash as scarletina they
are sure he must be mistaken because anyone
with half an eye can see that the child has
scarlet fever or diptheria. Chicken pox means
sum]: [was to them, and a. scratch on the ﬁnger
is a positive forerunner of blood poisoning.

If the sun doesn’t shine it’s going to be a
7 cold summer. If the rain doesn’t fall at regu-
lar periods there’s going to be a drought. If
there is a wet spell the seed is sure to rot in
the ground. And if the sun shines just right
and the rain falls just right it’s a sure sign
that there’s going to be an early frost. A few
grasshoppers in the back meadow are a plague
and crops will be mined and farms will be
abandoned.

Now drought and wet weather and early
frosts and grasshoppers are bad enough with-
out exaggerating their extent or effect upon
the crops. Some of the stories that have come
out of northwestern Michigan about the
drmght and the machoppes- plague are noth-
ing short of ridiculous. Of course, the westb-
erhasbocndry. Tellusaseasoninthclnst
'tenyearsthatham’thsditsdiy' audit:
prediction offruined crops.  1 Inner

 

 

 

‘1‘  We  mam. 

    

 ' ,

   
   

f f f
ale

  
 

crops b’y grasshoppers. TAndwe do not sanc-
‘tion the publishing of stories in the daily press
to this effect. For such stories not only work
great harm to. the state as a whole, but to in;
dividual farmers as well for who wants to buy
a farm that is set down in the midst of a Sa-
hara desert or is the breeding place of a billion
grasshoppers.

Crippling the Department of Agriculture ”

E T. MEREDITH, Secretary of, the Depart-
0 ment of Agriculture, has published a list
of forty-nine projects which 7 the Department
will either have to entirely abandon or curtail
greatly as a result of Congress cutting out
something like six million dollars from the De-
partment’s estimates.” to its needs. The See-
retary calls attention to the fact that the de-
creased purchasing power of the dollar makes
the cut all the more serious and handicaps the
work of the Department in a large measure.
But Congress suﬁered a lapse in its economy
mood and failed to cut out an appropriation of
$239,000 for that old political pap of free seed
distribution, although its elimination was rec-
ommended by the Secretary.

While the public will hardly approve of
Congress’ niggardliness toward the Department
of Agriculture at a time when the farmer needs
all the assistance he can get, we would hardly
claim that the agricultural interests will be
jeopardized because of the Department ’9 tom-
porary inability to render its usual services.
Moreover, we expect that the Department will
ﬁnd a way of carrying out its most necemary
projects even under the handicap of enforced
economy. ,

Congress is not to be entirely excused for the
peculiar inconsistencies in its economy program.
After a much-heralded examination of the pork
barrel and the removal of a few ﬁnds and
cheap cuts, the choicest pork still remains and
will be distributed as usual where best serves
the political future of the pork-barrel politi-
cian. Nevertheless, we have long since learned
that Congress is not a perfect machine and con-
sequently we do not expect perfection in its
economy program or any other program it
might undertake. We rather feel like compli-
menting Congress for even thinking in terms of
economy and if that thought has moved it to
action against the farmer’s department of ag-
riculture, we suppose we ought to accept what
is handed us and show that we can take our
economy medicine with good grace. It is all
very well to cry loudly for lower taxes but un-
less we are willing to accept our share of the
consequences of reductions "in appropriations
our complaints will carry little weight.

Trucks and Highways

HE USE of the truck for long distance

hauling has brought up an entirely new
and withal a very serious problem in highway
construction. It was long ago demonstrated
that gravel, macadam or asphalt construction
could notwithstand the pounding of heavily
loaded tracks, but it was believed that concrete
would give reasonable service. Hence, hund-
reds of miles of concrete roads have been built
with the expectation that they wopld stand up
for a period of years under the heaviest traffic
which the law would permit to be hauled over

them. But they have not done so. Concrete

roeﬂebuiltinlﬂBandsubjectedtoheevytrsf—
ﬁchavegonctopioceealreedyendareinwell
mghtohlmin. Mimﬁefeultotthe
 and endurance.

 tube-«ﬂew
' most economical type. But it nut be re’mtere—

 

 

:    
.  Put  Mother commercial-vehicles m' *
the close of common carriers, ﬁx their carrying .

 
 

charges and force them to pay a high tax into
the state for the use of the highways. It has
more recently been proposed that ~cemmercial
vehicles be required to provide their own track-

age. The taxpayer ’s ﬁrst and natural impulse

is to approve of thi suggestion, but a careful

study of it will show that it is not well taken. a

The truck has found a most wential‘ place in
the nation’s transportation and it should not
be surrounded with insurmountable handicaps.
The use of the truck should on the contrary 
encouraged and the best road Conditions pom-
ible provided for it. But the present method
of building and maintaining made over which
it plys its way should be entirely 
Certain highways of the state between the.
larger cities have become the accustomed routes

of travel for trucks. These are principally

trunk line highways. Under the state law the
state bears a certdin large percentage of the
cost of these highways and the county through
which they are built the balance. Now when it
is certain that the people of the average county

in southern Michigan who hear a percentage of

the cost of these roads do not require the use
of the roads in proportion to their share of
building them. A main highway is used much
more by transient than by resident taxpayers.
It is a well-known fact that the principal dam-
age to the main highways has been done by the
trucks of concerns located in the cities who pay
no share of the local cost of maintaining the
roads. Hence, it is clearly unfair to charge
those who are unfortunate enough to reside in

the locality of these roads with the cost of keep-

ing them in repair.

There is a. better and certainly a more equiv: '
able way of distributing the cost of maintain-=
The State Highivay“

ing principal highways.
Department should be empowered with the
duty of declaring certain highways of the
state as truck routes, and prevent trucks exh-
cept by special permission to travel, any oth-
er route. These roads should be specially con-
structed and the counties through which they
pass should be expected to pay such propor-
tion of the construction as they would normal-
ly require for their own purposes. But there
their responsibility should end, and the state
or federal government should come in and pay

all the additional expense of the special con-'4

structiOn and all the cost of upkeep.
It is bad enough to have to live on a main

. traveled highway nowadays Without being

obliged to stand for the damage done to tho

' roads by people living ﬁfty .or a hundred .

miles away. -

The  Ward

‘C E HAVE lost our-ﬁght; there is no

hope for the liquor people.” So said
Levi Mayer, Chicago attorney for the liquor
forces, when the Supreme Court’s decision wm
rendered that the federal prohibition laws are
constitutional.

The decisiOn of the Supreme Court of the
United States is ﬁnal. The constitutionality
of the various acts posed by Congress, unend-
ing the constitution and providing enforce-
ment machinery, have been held in question by
various state authorities Some states, like
New Jersey, for instance, openly ﬂeuntcd its
deﬁance to the federal statutes and pned
their own laws ﬁxing the alchoh‘c parentage
of been and  They claimed that this
maehtc’sright, thosemooldgagth'etw.
Inked by the southern states in the aim
day: and that predpatcd the Civil War. But
he suntan/310m holds My and the
decis- d that body will tend. - I -

Theliubettlein Ana-ice'cwar against

boeIeMBecn fought andthevictoryissthst
secure. -

 
 
 

   
          
  

 

   

H

21~QQ.QE‘PQE§H HHHHJHH

 

 
   
  
  

     


 

  
 
  

   

L

FARME- ‘ R TURNED DAY LABORER

I am going to try and express my-
self on a few issues of the days es-
pecially H. C. of L. I am at present
working for Henry Ford '& Son in
Dearborn. " I am here owing to ill
luck and the exorbitant rate of in-
terest one has to pay for the use of
money where I live.» I am trying to
pay off debts accumulated while try-
ing to farm. If any one thinks farm-
ing is a get rich scheme and wishes
to try their hand I will say that I
have 160 acres partly improved land
in the northern part of the stats and
that I will sell the same very reason-
able. I would be very glad if I had
the money out of it that .I have inlt.
I guess I have run about all the
riskIcaretoatpresent.Ihavernn
the risk of frost, drought, grasshop—
pers, losing stock and last but not
least of all, I have had to take mar-
ket prices for whatever it might be
that I produced.

Some people seem to think it is
a sure way to get rich but if they
had to pay for farm products accord-
ing to prices asked for other commo-
dities you would hear a greater howl
about H. C. of L. than we do. From
the present outlook wages will be
higher next summer than now. Even
now $6 is minimum wages in Des
troit for common labor. Some con-
cerns have offered $6.50 for labor
a day and the end is not in sight.

Very nearly every day one can
hear men talking of having farms
that are working in the shops. Un-
lessamanhasafamandagood
one at that and has it paid her and
free of debt he will ﬁnd it uphill bus-
iness. He will iind then that he puts
in more hours for the money
than if he were working in a
shop. I will say this, that I was
born and raised on a farm and if I
had a good farm and out of debt,
with stock and tools to work with, I
would be there today. As it is my
sympathy is with the farmer, for I
know what he is. up against.

If I can save enough to buy a
small place and have it free of debt,
I expect to go back to the land, but
I do not like to be a slave to keep
things going and make ends meet.

I am thinking the farmers will
have to work out their own salvation
with fear and trembling. If they
cannot see alike and do not hang to-
gether they will have to hang sep-
arately. .

The nearest to a solution that I
can odor is that the people get
back to the _ original state of
things as created in the beginning. I
believe all things were created for
man and I do not think it was intend—
ed for one man to have 9. mon-
opoly on the necessities of life.

The way of the trans'gressor is
hard. In the beginning man didn’t
even need clothes and the earth
brought forth in profusion. All men
needed to do was to plant and prune
and work a little perhaps, but be-
cause Adam ate the apple and fol-
lowed his wife’s advice rather than
the creator, he has now to pay the
bill. There is a way that seemeth
good unto a man but the way there-
of is death. He has to pay for every
thing he puts in his face and every—
thing he puts on his back and a
good deal has to go through too
many hands and they all want too
big a rake-off.

The only thing will be for the
working classes to own the factories
and run them for the beneﬁt of them—
selves- A reasonable proﬁt could be
returned to- those working and a per?
centage go to the government. What
is capital but proﬁt on labor when
we sum it all down. And why could
not this be put to work’for those
who 'do the work? In my opinion
if we expect to out the cost of living
we will have to~cut out the middle
man as far‘ as possible and sell di-
rect. I would like'to see the day
when every" article would be la-
belled; showing what hands it
.. "went through and just how much

every one got for their labor, service,

~ work or whatever they should
 call it. 'It loch like tome
‘ «3.3! new“: _ .

      
  

 ' was 

   

 

 

'sem bled.

' would say. ‘

IQ“:
‘ a: 

sugar reﬁneryof their own and sell
direct to the consumer through
their own agencies or warehouses.

Now I cannot give much lighten
the hired man question on the farms
for I do not see how a man can hire
unless he gets a better price than he
does for his crops in proportion to
what he has to buy, so I think I will
pass it up to some one else who is
more able to solve the mystery.—
J. 1!. 1L, Wayne County.

—--——-—9-
You t to go back to the land.
Things wil not always be as they have
i and are new. Thi. question of
marital and credit tor the farmer will
sonic day be solved and solved right.
who the anti make the soil
them their bread and butter and a uni
besides for a rainy day—Editor.

HR. FORDNEY AGAIN

While I am not a subscriber to
your paper, one of the men I am
working with has been kind enough
to let me have his and I want to
conrmend you for position you have
taken on many positions, especially
on Mr. Fordncy’s stand on the bean
tarid. It seems to me as if there
was ever a flagrant case of “passing
the buck” that is the biggest in the
bunch. If we ever needed more

.3

 

sense and business and less politics
in our government, than we do now,
it must have been long before our

generation. Hoping you’ll have the
nerge to say what you think in the
future as plainly as the past. I wish
you a very successful future.—
P. J., Munith, Mich.

It doesn’t take any nerve to say what
you ought to say when the crowd is

with you. But when you have to fight
tildeit battle alone. that takes courage.—
E or. , ,

SCHOOL AMENDMENT

Enclosed please ﬁnd 31 for renew—
al of my subscription to your valu—
able paper. I jnst’ read what 8. B.
Horton said on the proposed paro-
chial school amendment and it --cer-
tainly is kind of you to print his art-
icle. I think only narrow-minded
people who have no religion at all
are to blame fer it. You will cer-
tainly gain—a lot of friends especial-
ly Catholics for your kindness in giv-
ing some of these people a little
more lights—Reader, Saginaw County.

Yes, and we will gain friends among
the right-thinking Protestants who love
religious liberty. We Protestants are
not so religiously narrow-minded as
some of our Catholic friends think. Every
religious faith has its bigots, and nearly
every generation is cursed with a few
fanatics who want to revive old doctrines
of hate, in the name of God! This pub-
lication concedes the right of people to
worship and educate their children as
they please so long as they remain true
to the laws and the traditions of the
Tinned States of Americans—Editor.

 

 

THE CANDIDATE

Ohio appreciates the honor con-
ferred upon it by the Chicago con-
vention. Without regard to their
own partisan aililiations, citisens of
this state are pleased that one of
Ohio‘s sons has been found worthy
of the highest prize that a great po-
litical party can give to any-one. The
“Mother of Presidents" wears a new
smile—a smile of pride mixed with
no small portion of surprise.

His native state knows Warren G.
Harding as a genial, warm hearted
citizen, much beloved by those who
know him best. As a campaign or-
ator he won his spurs early and has
never lost them. Yet his political
career before he went to the United
States senate was without distinction.
He has been a popular senator, the
not a leader among his colleagues.

Senator Harding is the Republican
nominee by virtue of his rivals’ mis-
takes, rather than by his own
strength. His nomination came thru
the strategy of the "senatorial cau-
cus” at Chicago. The “caucus” was
spokesman for the Old Guard, and.
its triumph was an Old Guard tri-
umph. Mr. Harding carries into the
campaign the label of Old Guard-

The Harding nomination is the
fruition of a program which had its
beginning in the minds of party lead-
ers months before the convention as-
It was this—the selection
of a nominee acceptable to the con-
servative wing of the party—that led
to the insistent demand that the con-
ventionmajority be made up of un—
instru-cted delegates. The bosses
knew that they could handle such a
majority as they Wished when the
convention crisis should come. They
deliberately nulliﬁed the presidential
primary in enough states to give them
this strangle hold on the convention.

Gov. Lowden was obviously the
ﬁrst choice of the Old Guard. He
was to be nominated if the temper of
the convention made it appear safe
thing to do. Except for we facts
brought out by the senate inquiry
into primary expenditures he would
be head of the ticket today. Even
after this exposure and after the con-
vention had begun balloting Low-
den was the Old‘Guard’s real choice.
He would have been named had Pen-
rose and the other managers not
been fearful of what the country

With Penrose and his spokesmen
at Chicago it was a case of anything
to beat Wood and Johnson. When
Lowden ' became modulus, the
switch to Mag was inevitable.

  
 

3 memory. His

  

 

control of the convention in any real
peril. ‘
O O O C
There is, of course, not a trace of
progressive blood in Senator Hard-
- ing’s veins. He is of the old school

through and through. The bi-parti- --

san political insurgency that has
made its impress on the country
since then, that has brought a. new
spirit into the counsels of all parties,
that has written volumes of progres-
sive legislation into state and federal
statues and awakened the conscious-
ness of the American people to their
rights and their opportunities made
no impression on the mind of Mr.
Harding.

To the senator, William H. Taft
in 1912 was the greatest progressive
of the age. Theodore Roosevelt be
likened to Aaron Burr of malod'orous
famous “deference
and devotion” speech in which he
eulogized Boss Cox of Cincinnati, is
part of the annals of Ohio politics.
In 1916 Mr. Harding pleaded for for-
getfulness of the animosities of four
years before. Between now and Nov-
ember he will have many an occasion
to wish that the dead Republican
(past: may be permitted to bury its

ea .

As a member of the United States
senate, Mr. Harding has been a reg—
ular of the regulars; a follower and
not a leader- He has always been
ready and eloquent with his denunci—
ations of the president. No better
viewer with alarm could be found
anywhere. His attitude on the
treaty has never wavered in its reg-
ularity. The Old Guard always knew
where to find him; always knew he
would do precisely as party discipline
required him to do.

So the Old Guard’s happiness over
Harding’s nomination has no mystery
about it. When the time came to
assert its control of affairs, the Old
Guard turned its support to one who
had carried not a single primary ex-
cept that of his own state—and this
by nine less than a solid delegation.
So far as the result at Chicago is
concerned, there may as well have
been no presidential primaries.

* t t i

The Chicago convention has adopt-
ed a platform'evasive‘as to one of
the chief issues and silent as to an—
other. »It has-named a presidential
candidate guaranteed to do nothing
not laid down in the book of rules.
Thus functions the system senio-
umes called the popular tion

 

  

MIND OVER BODY

In the April 3rd edition of your
valuable paper I saw an editorial re-
ferring to the great advance medical
men have made in counteracting di-
seases- Whatever is done to increase
the efficiency and ease of the
people will have to be done through
their minds—for it is obviously true
that the mind OUGHT to rule the
body. Or people ought to have self
control. It is true that food glut-
tony will cause auto-intoxication of
the intestinal tract and poison the
blood, but it is also true that ex-
cessive and foolish food consump-
tion creates "nests of worms for some
people. The medical profession
might tell us, if they have our in-
terest at heart, that the blood is
made up of 12 basic chemical salts
which are extracted from our food
and that this chemicalized material
is turned into blood by being cross-
ed with inbreathcd air at the lungs.
Then the mind ought to be trained to
select proper food-s to furnish these
salts and also to breathe pure air so
as to make pure blood.

Then the mind again needs to be
freed from anger, strife, malice, un-
forgiveness, selﬁshness, greed, etc.,
for they all tend to poison the blood.
But it would interfere with the bus-
iness of drug stores and doctors to
put this information clearly and per-
sistently before the people.

As the life is controlled by the
mind, or ought to be, so the physical
life is in the blood. But what do
you think of a doctor injecting vac-
cine from a sick unto death cow, into
the blood of a man or woman?
Strong recruits keeled over dead
from serums in our into war.

Our poses, and measles and posts
are the results of eating and drink~
ing and breathing contrary to the re-
(fuirements of the blood. ‘

We hibernate in the winter, eat

plenty of meat and grease and also‘

breathe stale, devitaliaed air. 80 of
course, as a natural consequence.
when the temperature moderates the
body throws those poisons OUT of
the system in fevers and sores.

But that is not all by any means.
The Bible is a book of allegories and
parables dealing largely with the
wonders of the human body and its
proper use and purpose.

But the generally accepted theory
of modern civilization is that licens-
ed or matrimonial prostitution or
the self abuse of those not so licens-
ed or married, is essential and nec-
essary and as a consequence people
have no vitality. 'The old saying,
“People are growing weaker and
wiser” is a tremendous lie for if we
were wiser we should be stronger for
we should have learned self control.

Unless the medical profession go
to the foundation of our troubles——
the proper use of the mind in con-
trolling the body—the selection of
proper foods to furnish the mineral
salts needed to make blood and the
necessary pure air to breathe, and
freedom from anger, malice, etc., we
shall continue to swell the high cost
of living by frequent visits from doct—
ors and surgeons and add to the
drug trust proﬁts, but we shall also
help the undertaker and the grave
digger in their respective avocations.

The people do not want the 'truth
yet. They do not care for the task
of thinking for themselves. They
are accustomed to be led and led
astray. They seem to like it. Bar-
num made a success with his circus
because he was able to see their
natures in its true light. But some
of us who know better dislike im—
mensely that this age of medical ex-'
perts are fastening upon us through
legislation and printed propaganda.
———E. R. A., Kent County.

You are right, "the people do not
want the truth.” It is as hard for them
to follow right mode of living as right
modes of thinking. it is easy for men
and women to go astray morally ,
initially. And. it is equally as easy for
than. to - what their common--
sense talisman: lathe riﬁtdywayto cat,

. and «rotor the“I to. Faring
-’ My believe, inten-

   
  

 
 
 
       

   
   
 
  
  
  
  
   
    
  
  
    
   
  
  
   
   
 
  
  
  
    
   
   
    
  
  
   
  
    
    
   
    
   
  
   
    
    
    
  
    
  
   
    
   
    
  
  
    
    
   
 
  
  
   
    
   
  
  
  
   
  
    
  
    
    
     
    
   
   
    
   
  
  
  
   
     
    
    
  
   
  

 

 
 
 
 
 
    
  
    
  
   


  

  


t at.

 

n, A- Department for the Women

 

 

 ome ’

 

and they must now turn their

thoughts to the more serious bus—
iness of making a living. What 'vo-
cation they shall take up depends en-
tirely upon themselves for we can do
in this day of possibilities, anything
we WILL do. And wise indeed is
the girl who chooses to do the kind
of work she enjoys. '

For the girl who loves children,
there is the very commendable occu-
pation of teaching, and with the pres-
ent rating given teachers, it is now
possible for a girl to ﬁt herself for
this occupation, knowing that she
will be as well paid as others who en-
gage in different lines of work. But
a girl who has no patience with child-
ren should never engage in this work
in the wide, wide world, for, no mat-
ter how much she knows, she will
never be a successful teacher. A
successful teacher not only knows,
but knows how to impart to others
with sympathy and understanding.

There are the business courses,
for which a girl can ﬁt herself with
only a few months of concentrated
work, and which bring ﬁnancial re-

, wards to those who make a specialty
of their line of work. To those who
just use a vocation as a money mak-
ing institution, it will never mean
much—not even much money, for in
order to make a success of any kind
of work, one must love it—love it
well enough to work overtime when
necessary, in fact to work for others
in your chosen line as if the work
which you were doing really were
your own, and upon you depended
the success of the undertaking. Rec-
ognition will surely come through
this method of work—if not ﬁnan—
cially, then you will acquire the habit
of doing so well the thing you have
set yourself to do that you will be—
come an expert, and you can branch
out for yourself or others will seek
you out.

Just now the State of Michigan is
trying hard to recruit 1,000 student
nurses. The classes open in,Septem-
ber and for those who enjoy being
able to relieve suffering, who have
good health, a fair amount of
strength, and an unlimited amount

FOR MANY, school days are over

Edited by CLARE NORRIS

of patience, there is no ﬁeld which
offers better opportunities. But the
school in which the nurse trains has
such an inﬁnite lot to do with her
success afterwards, that it behooves
every girl who thinks of taking up
this work to take time to thoroughly
satisfy herself as to the requirements
of the school and the advantages of-
fered. Michigan has as good nurs-
ing schools as will be
where, then why go to the eastern
schools, where you can’t spend the
time and money

found any- ,

invalids, where the work is not too
exacting, while many other occupa-
tions call for the assistance of only
the younger women, and as soon as
one begins to get old, they are shelv-
ed for the younger women. This is
not so with a. nurse. Once a nurse,
always a nurse, with always plenty
to do. .
There are at present 41 accredited
Nurse Training schools in the state
of Michigan. Of these 34 require
three years’ training and seven two
' and one half

 

 

to go and per-
sonally interview

the head nurse _

and be Shown “’Tis well our hands
through the dor- ,

mitor i e s a n d For' strength to

have a personal duty done,

interview before
signing up for
three years? It’s
too big a gamble

to make

heart ache.”

Weekly Cheer

keep toiling on for others' sake,

And he is blest, indeed, who learns

The Joys of others sure his own

years. Young wo-
men 18 years of
age are admitted
in 32— schools and
nine places the
age of entrance
is 19 years. -All
of the 41 schools
except six, make
a cash allowance

must still

bear is found in

 

 

 

to ‘ pupil nurses

 

when you consid-

er that after entering training school
it is almost impossible to get into
another school. One training school
does not, except in rare occasions,
accept pupils who have trained or
partly trained elsewhere, except as
post graduate nurses. For instance,
afterrhaving trained for a deﬁnite
length of time, there are Women's
hospitals which will accept student
nurses from other schools and give
them the special training in obstet-
rics.

But do not accept a school because
it promises to train you in a short
course, because unless you are a col-
lege graduate, and have been given
credit on the regular course because
of this advanced preparatory work,
you will find that the school is not up
to par, and more often than not, the
doctors treat the nurses from these
schools the same as a legitimate doct-
or treats a quack doctor. There is
no quick and easy way—it is through
patient practice that one becomes
efﬁcient at this work. But it is a
work which one can engage in, and
later in life a woman can accept
cases which are easier—cases with

which varies
from $5 to $10 per month. En-
trance requirements in 20 schools
call for an eighth grade education-
Four schools demand complete high
school education, nine admit with
two years of high school, and eight
require but one year of high school
work.

As further qualiﬁcations for ad--

“mission to the training school the
applicant must be a woman of good
moral character; she must be of av-
erage height, weight and physique,
in good physical condition, and free
from physical defects.

The course of instruction while in
training includes a prescribed num-
ber of hours in the subjects of anat—
omy, bacteriology, hygiene, medical
nursing, surgical nursing, obstetric
nursing, and a certain number of
hours in the laboratory, in the op-
erating room and the diet kitchen.
The time spent in training is divided
as to duty between the different de-
partments of the hospital so that the
student may acquire bedside experi-
ence in the handling of medical, sur-
gical, obstetrical and children’s dis-
eases as well as operating room and

_
. . . m n
i 

diet kitchen technique. Some of the

hospitals furnish public health, so- ..

Vcial service and laboratory experi-

ence.

 

“GET v MORE OUT OF YOUR
HOME," SAYS JINGLE SAM
HE GOVERNMENT, in this work
has wisely pointed out the fact

L ~that. thrift may mean not only
the actual saving of money but also
the wise spending of money, spend-
ing that brings returns in comfort,
happiness or eﬂiciency.‘ Below we
quote the advice of the Department
to farm women on the subject of get-
ting more out of the home:~

“By making the house and its sub-
roundings healthful, convenient, com-
fortable, and attractive. '

“By securing a sanitary water sup-
ply; by using running water where-
ever possible—a simple piped system
for water may cost only a few dol-
lars. .

“By providing for proper disposal
of sewage.

“By thorough screening against
flies and mosquitoes. ,

“By adequate ventilating, lighting
and heating and well arranged stor-
age places. .

“By equipping the kitchen and
other workrooms as conveniently as
the farm buildings—get the man to
study this problem with the woman:

“By machine equipment—pump;
power washer and wringer; milk sep-
arator; churn; but don’t buy a $3,-
000 car and carry water because we
can’t afford a water system.

“By cutting out waste space and
useless belongings.

“By choosing furnishings that
are comfortable, easy to care for, and
pleasing to look at.

“By providing simple, well-cooked,
palatable meals.

“By choosing clothes which are
comfortable, suitable and becoming.

“By having a simple, practicable
plan for the housework and follow-
ing it. ‘

The above advice oﬂers a very de-
sirable program which should be car-
ried out to the fullest possible extent.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

E)

\

 

 

 

 

 

 

EAR CHILDREN: I am very
D proud of all of my little

nephews and nieces, and of what
you can do, and this week I am es—
pecially happy to be able to award
three more prizes for drawing, which
appear on this page. It is so near
the Fourth of July and I know every
little boy and girl will just love to
own a flag that I am sending a flag
to the three winners, Beulah Engle,
Margaret Cook and Helen Wagner,
and next week there will appear the
prize essay on “The Days We Display
the Flag" and the winners will also
receive flags as prizes. Their names
will be published next week. So
you see there are always plenty of
opportunities for prize winning. If
you can't draw, you can perhaps
write.

How I wish more of the boys
would write to me—all the girls keep
wondering why the boys don’t write
.more letters. I am sure theyread
our page, but boys never seem to en-
joy writing letters as do girls. But
boys like prizes just as well as girls,
so come on and get busy boys; if
you can’t do anything else to win
a prize, secure some subscriptions to
OUR paper and send them direct to
me, with $1 for each new subscrip-
tion and I will be glad to award you
a prize. And you can have your

7 choice of a pocket knife, 3. pencil box
' or a flag. while if you can secure two

 

Sargent. .DeWitt, , Mich. .»

    

 
 
   

«- DRAWN BY—
Beulah Emile
Custer.M|ch

DRAWN BY—
DRAwu 8v... Helenwmner
MRFAaYeI; Cook, Cmsulell,

EIsue, Mich.

    

 

 
    

  
 

 

 

new subscribers, I can give you some
very wonderful prizes, such as a larg-
er pencil box, containing three pen-
cils, pens, ’erasers, etc., or a flash
light. You have plenty of time dur-
ing vacation season, let’s see who
the winners will be. _ Affectionately
yours—AUNT CLARE.

b

OUR Boys AND GIRLS

Dear Aunt Clare—I am a girl 10 years
old and am in the 6th grade. I have no
sister but I have 2 brothers Howard and

Vernon. 1 live on an 80 acre farm.— We
have three horses, 4 cows and 4 calves
We take the

and about 70 chickens.
M F. and like it very much. > Mabel

 

Dear Aunt Clare—I have never wrote.
to you before. My father takes the M.
B. F. and likes it ﬁne. I live on a farm
ﬁve miles from town. I have for pets
a cat, a rabbit and two little ones. Will
have to stop as it is time for dinner.—
Harold Hall, Leslie, Mich. ,

Dear Aunt Clare—II am a girl 11 years
old and in the 5th grade at school. Our
school was out the 11th of May. I have
one sister, Helen, he is 13 years old
and one brother, Leonard, four years
old. We live on an 80 acre farm._ We
have 4 calves, 4 horses and about 76
chickens, For pets I have a do: and a
cat. My father takes the M. B. F. and
likes it ver much. I like to read the
Children’s our. ,
hat miles west of Mt.
close. 110me to see

orls W“ lkhis,‘ R

 

 
    
 
   
  
   
    

        
     

,, Pleasan
lens sf

old and I am
teacher's name is Miss-Covert.
on an 80 acre farm."
horses.
I have one dog for a pet.
would send a picture of a, pig to you. I
drew
County.

and in the 5th grade next 'year.
the Eagle School.
I have written the M. B, F. We live on
a'slxty acre farm. My father takes the
M. B. F. and likes it very well.
a cat, and dog for pets. I
brothers. _
print. Ora. Rutter, Clare Mich., R 1.

the M. B. F. and like them ﬁne.
years old and "in the ﬁfth grade._
moved from Illinois about three months
ago.
an

and 2 cows.
brothers older than myself..
M-ulvany,

We live eight and one-» 4'
V  W111

 

.  N  . r“;
  1 £33433; =:'-.'-;- I'll-{"1 it’ll?“ I
Dear Aunt Clare—I am a girl 10 years
in the 6th grade, y
I live

I We have four
10 cows, 11 pigs and two cats.
I thought I
it myself.

Letha Rizer, Calhoun

 

Dear Aunt Clare—+1 am 12 years old
I so to
This. is the ﬁrst time

I have
have two
I hope to see my letter in

 

Dear Aunt Clare—I read the letters in
I am 9 ,
We

I like it lineup here. We live on

acre farm. We have 4 horses
I have two sisters and two
Genevieve
Breckenrlee. Mich. _

Dear Aunt Clare—1am- a girl 10 years

old and in the 4th grade. ‘ My school is
out the 30th oprrll.
Ma let me make a cake the ﬁrst one' I ,
ever made. , ,
land township. ' 8 miles straight west of
Marion.
our M. 3.1?
we had a program.
to see m V,
of the 1 tie girls would write to me.—
Edna. M. Eaby, Tustln,’

The other day

Itgwas nus. I live in High-
! can hardly wait until we get
For the last day of school
I will close, hoping
letter in print. I wish some

 

 

      
 
  
   
 

Mich., R 2. l  ,

I

 

 
 
  
    
     

{.
l
l

 

  
 

 

 

   
   
    
  

       
     
   
  


 

    
   
    

.
l
l

  

 

 

 

ch of exit ~- offtob‘acco,‘ match,

iris , a; . 
splinter-s, r and] cloth-fluff. “This will

not burn," he challenged, inviting in-
vitation by extending the pinch of
{ubbish over the bowl as if to drop
1; n_ - 

The Queen nodded consent, and all
saw the rubbish fall upon the liquid
metal surface. The particles made
no indentation on that surface. Only
did they transform into smoke that
sheened upward and was gone. No
remnant of ash remained.

“Still is it cold,” said Torres, im-
itating Francis and feeling the out-
side of the bowl.

“Thrust your ﬁnger, into the con-
tents,” the Queen suggested to Tor-
res.

“No,” he said.

“You are right,” she conﬁrmed.
“Had you done so, you would now
be with one ﬁnger less than the num-
ber with which you were born.” She
tossed in more powder. “Now shall
ﬁacg behold what he alone will be—

01 ."

And it was so.

To Leoncia was it given to see an
ocean separate her and Francis. To
Henry was it given to see the Queen
and Francis married by so strange
a ceremony, that scarcely did he
realize, until at the close, that it
was a wedding taking place. The
Queen from a flying gallery in a great
house, looked down into a magniﬁ-
cient drawing-room that Francis
would have recognized as builded by
his father had her vision been his.
And, beside her, his arm about her,
she saw Francis. Francis saw but
one thing, vastly perturbing, the
face of Leoncia, immobile as death,
with thrust into it, squarely between
the eyes, a slender-bladed dagger.
Yet he did not see any blood flowing
from the wound of the dagger. Tor-
res glimpsed the beginning of what
he knew must be his end, crossed
himself, and alone of all of them
shrank back, refusing to see furth-
er. While the Sun Priest saw the
vision of his secret sin, the face and
form of the woman for Whom he had
betrayed the Worship of the Sun, and
the face and form of the maid of the
Village of the Long House.

As all drew back by common con-
sent when the visions faded, Leon-
cia turned like a tigress, with flash-
ing eyes, upon the Queen, crying:

“Your mirror lies! Your Mirror
of the World lies !"

Francis and Henry, still under the
heavy spell of what they had them-
selves beheld, were startled and sur-
prised byv Leoncia’s outburst. But
the Queen speaking softly, replied:

“My Mirror of the World has nev-
er lied. I know not what you saw.
But I do know, whatever it was, that
it is truth.”

“You are a monster !” Leoncia
cried out. “You are a vile witch that
lies !"

“You and I are women," the
Queen chided with sweet gentleness,
“and may not know of ourselves, be-
ing women. Men will decide wheth—
er or not I am a witch that lies or a
woman with a woman's heart of love.
In the meanwhile, being women and
therefore weak, let us be kind to
each other." '

“-——And now, Priest of the Sun, to
judgment. You, as priest under the
Sun God, know more of the ancient
rule and procedure than do I. You
know more than do I about myself
and how I came to be here. You
know that always, mother and daugh-
ter, and by mother and daughter has
the tribe maintained a. Queen of Mys—
tery, a Lady of Dreams. The time
has come when we must consider the
future generations. The strangers
have come, and they are unmarried.
This must be the wedding day de—
creed, if the generations to come af-
ter of the tribe are to possess a Queen
to dream for them. It is well, and
time and need and place are met. I
have dreamed to judgment. And the
judgment is that I shall marry, of
these strangers, the stranger alloted
to me before the foundations or the
world were laid. The testis this: If
he one of these will marry, then shall
they die, and their warm blood be of-
you‘ before the altar of

' -  .3 . .Ifonewm marry me, then

an Time hereafter will

 

as ' forth a”

  
   
 

 

 ' By JACK LONDON

' Author of the “Valley of the Moon," and other stories.

    
       

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Sun Priest, trembling with his
anger, strove to protest but she com-
manded: . ‘

“Silence, priest! By me only do
you rule the people. At a word from
me to the people—well, you know. It
is not an easy way to die." ‘

She turned to the three men say-
ing: ‘

“And who will marry me "
hey looked embarrassment and
’ ernation at one another, but
spoke.
am a‘ woman,” the Queen went
on teasingly. “And therefore, am I
not desirable to men? ' Is it that I
am not young? Is it, as women go,
that I am not beautiful? Is it that
men’s tastes are so strange that no
man cares to clasp the sweet of me
in his arms and press his lips on mine
as good Francis there did on my
hand?”

She turned her eyes on Leoncia.

“You be judge. You are a woman
well loved of men. Am I not such
a woman as you, and shall I not be
loved?" '

“You will be ever kinder to men
than to women,” Leoncia answered
—cryptically as regarded the three
men who heard, but clearly to the
woman’s brain of the Queen. “And
as a woman,” Leoncia continued,
“you are strangely beautiful and lur-
ing; and there are men in this world,
many men, who could be made mad to
clasp you in their arms. But I warn
you, Queen, that in this world are
men, and men, and men."

 
 

 

Having heard and debated this,
the Queen turned abruptly to the
priest.

“You have heard~priest. This day
a man shall marry me. If no man
marries me, these three men shall
be offered up on-your altar. So shall
be offered up this woman, who, it
would seem, would put shame upon

_me by having me less than she."

Still she addressed the priest, al-
though her message was for the oth-
ers.

“There are three men of them, one
of whom, long cycles before he was
born, was destined to marry me. So,
priest, I say, take the captives away

into some other apartment, and let,

them decide among themselves which
is the m'an.” _

"Since it has been so long destin-
ed," Leoncia flamed forth, “then
why put it to the chance of their de-
cision? You know the man. Why
put it to the risk? Name the man,
Queen, and name him now."

“The man shall be selected in the
way I have indicated,” the Queen re-
plied, as, at the same time, absently
she tossed a pinch of powder into the
great bowl and absently glanced
therein. “So now depart and let the
inevitable choice be made.”

They were already moving away
out of the room, when a cry from
the Queen stopped them.

“Wait !” she ordered. “Come,
Francis. I have seen something that
concerns you. Come, gaze with me
upon the Mirror of the World."

house, and he saw beside him the ,
Lady Who Dreams, his arm around ,
her. Next, he saw her curiosity at *
sight of the stock-ticker. As he tried ‘-
to explain it to ‘her, he glanced at
the tape and read such disturbing
information thereone that he sprang.
to the nearest telephone and, as the
visionfaded, saw himself calling up
his broker. ,

“What was it you saw?" Leoncia
questioned, as they passed out.

And Francis lied. He did not men-
tion seeing the Lady Who Dreams in
his New York library. Instead he
replied:

“It was a stock ticker, and it
showed a bear market on Wall Street
somersaulting into a panic. Now how >
did she know I was interested in '*
Wall street and stock tickers?”

(Continued next week)

 

BLACKING HARNESS

From time to time formulas are
given in articles appearing in farm
papers for making a good harness
blacking. The formula calls for the
purchase of four or ﬁve different in-
gredients and involves considerable
work and time in compounding them.

It is not necessary to further bur-
den the housewife by asking her to
make a homemade harness blacking,
for at any leather store and at most
drug stores, it is possible to buy a .
small can of leather renewer, all
ready for use and costing little if
any more than the separate ingredi-
ents used in the home compound.
This is merely a labor saving sug-
gestion, and who is more deserving
of being saved from unnecessary
work than the overworked farm
housewife.

 

 

 

~

Look for the
BOWEN A
trade-mark
on the sack

 

nutrition.
the nutrition values of the wheat.
able is used. It is cleaned four times, scoured three times and
actually washed before going through the processes 'of breaking
and milling. Every atom ‘of dirt and undesirable material are
eliminated.

healthful.

THE SIGN OF QUALITY

 

The Brawn That Made

America Great Came from Flour

The pioneer men and women whose strength and
stamina laid the rock-like foundations of America’s
greatness were bread eaters.
made from good flour they obtained the nutrition
that gave them strength to work and achieve.

For nearly sixty years the particular women of Mich-
igan have used

‘ Lily White

“The Flour the Best Cooks Use”

In this flour they found the means to give their families the
good main-stay. Save for milk, bread is the food of greatest
LILY WHITE is scientiﬁcally milled to retain all
Only the best wheat obtain-

This is Why three generations have found \bread made from
LILY WHITE FLOUR delicious, palatable, wholesome and
Looks good, bakes to a perfection that makes

“homey” women proud. The same with biscuits and pastry.
’ LILY WHITE is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction.

VALLEY CITY MILLING CO.

GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
“Millers for Sixty Years"

In wholesome bread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 
 
  
   
   
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
   
     
   
   
   
     
     
   


   
    
   
   
 
      
 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

m .. 2. l 8.00
. Mlxod ..i 2.95 I and
m""‘6i‘£*v_ﬁi‘eob*—W W
om lpeyﬂt roman] a. v-
.80. 2 ma .....l,2.u l i
In. 2 Inn ..-1 1 i
In. a has “.1142 l i

 

“Wheat has moved only moderate-
ly the past week. The overseas de-
mand is continuous at Chicago but
meat is light at present. 01
mﬂmnmuld besocnredah't-
do bore readily there is not ranch
doubt but that the demand would
pick up briskly. Higher prices may
prevail in the near future owing to
"the reports owning from the grow-
ing section. showing the crop to be
in. rather poor condition. We are
unable to prove the sincerity of these
mom but the crop is far enough
along to seriously ail'ect the trend
of prices if dealers believe them to
be true. The 1321) wheat crop of
Argentina is estimated at 214,140,-
“. bushels. The estimated acreage
and yield in Australia are 6,570,402
acme planted and the yield 46,210,-
380 bushels. France and England
are buying all of their imported
grain from this country now owing
to the export duty that Argentina
has placed on her wheat. This duty
lakes the Wheat .3 higher price than
is asked here.

 

 

 

 

 

mu enrol-:3 PglLﬁuLJuﬂ‘E ca. 1920
trade libstroll mom; .1 n77."
' No. 2 Yellow .. .| [1:90 ,- 2.”
No. 3 Yellow . .i 2.00 l  %
1m.av-mw...41951 I
glisssgsmugco‘
  “£903 ‘- '-
m. z Vollow .1 1.32 l 1. a
No. a Vo‘ﬁow 1 1.32 ' “A
.« Ho. 6 Yellow 1 1.84 I

 

 

Great strength has been shown in
the corn market owing to the unfav-
orable condition of crops in general.
Some news has come from the dis-
tricts where corn was planted early
and many of the growers report dam-
age from the cutworms.

Another worm that promises to
raise havoc with America’s corn lat-
er iu the season is the corn-borer.

Secreted in a cargo of broom corn
imported from Austria, the nnbidden
guest has invaded 2,750 square miles
in four states~Massachusettm New
York, New Hampshire and one conn-
ty in Pennsylvania.

The so—caIled corn borer, named
by reason of its tunneling operations
through the stalks and ears of corn,
is the worst of pests, destroying from
one-fourth to one-half of the infest—
ed crops of corn, millet, hops and
hemp in its naLive lands of Europe
and Asia. Its depredations in the
cornﬁelds of this country have been
such as to deprive the worm of none
of its unsavory reputation as the
arch enemy of plant life yet introduc—
ed into the United States.

 

OATS ADVANCE

. on micssiﬂgn su., JUNE 22, 1920

 

 

qradi;m “irlrpetrolti'ﬂl Chicadoﬂl;N.AV:
No. 2 ‘Whlte ...|1.28..l1.21'/2|1.33
No. 3 White ,..11.27 1 1.17 l
“7.117.28er

. "0- 4 Willis.  ..._ ,
"Times..o~§1.fYEA,R_ 491;“
____-,.°m,de:   wrnu-i.l_ﬁg:_
Standard  . . . . .115 'l I

No. 3 'VJhlte . . .l 14%! .71 %I
No. 4 W'hlte ..l .705“ l

 

Rain is needed badly in many sec—
.tions where cats were modded in
and then hot and dry weather came
onlzbaking the ground. Some sec—
tions report oats to be heading with
straw very short. Large orders for
cats to be shipped East have had to
be cancelled because it is impossible
to get the grain. Threshing has
started on a large scale in Texas but
.very little of the Texas crop will be
available for shipment East as most
thogsouthernlrade. _' ‘
. RYE HIGHER
* . Rye has advanced again and is
quie} and easy on the Detroit mar-
 82.28101' No. 2. The market
at {re-:7: 9611563184 at present, and ,

.ofjifthe surplushals been promised tel V

 

 

   
  

  
  

  

 

   

 
   
  
 
  
 

» DETROIT—Wheat not active. Oats ﬁrm and in good local"
demand. Corn higher. All live stock markets strong.

 

 

  
  
  

. Damn ' Misrsoguaaeﬁgarmaggg
CHICAGO—Corn sets new high price mark. Favm'alde crop M van; ‘m' "Banana" " "..."...- 4:
ports koe ts any Wheat active Hogs lower —_*"’m—g‘19ESLQWQ—§

re, OI e . - '- - =l No.1 1 No.1 1 No.1

9 ¥ ' mun. Inn! Novel-
' Dunn - . moarmoamsoou
(floss: The above mum-l: w- tlgmmolni  the bole-us d the  me gmmo‘gwk. .338 oog‘ag‘ﬂggg $2146.00 0“
2 m. M m M M“ - mu m  ﬂ ( ‘ 9w . Z

‘3. ELM... ‘ . Plzuburg 140.50 a so”. loose

 
   
 

of the leading, potato states as fol-
lows: Michigan, good to fair; Main-'8,
good; Minnesota, fair to 100 'per
gent; Ohio, good: Illinois, poor to
air. _

 

HAY SGABCE

 

“‘0. I “Dbl Stan. Md lo. 2 Thu.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly Trade and Market Review

DEMAND for money does not relax, and restrictions on borrow-

ing are forcing liquidation and mare careful haying. Such luxury
dealers as those selling automobiles and jewelry are having a doll oes-
Therc is a distinct but reluctant decline in the prices of these lux-
uries. The West is ﬁnding it hard to secure money for cattle opera-
 Thc Southwest has its money tied up in considerable of last
year’s wheel; which they still have on their hands owing

3031.

to get ears, and the new crop is ready to harvest. 

The future trend of commodity prices is still a
take the next six months to ﬁnd out

public to buy at present prices will
of production.

need his money to purchase new

Late mercantile reviews op
but conditions in the money market
prices. If money remains tight prices will be lower as the merchant will
stock but if the money market loosens

up so the merchant can secure credit again watch out for higher 

Grain markets in general
to unfavorable reports of the

more advances are looked for if the
situation does not clear up within a
few days. were is considerable o:-
port buslnes going on and clearances
are holding up well. Actual exports
for the week of June 12th amounted
to 2,287,000 bushels. It is estimated
that there is around 8,009,000 bush-
els yet of the visible supply.

 

BEANS DECLINE

 

are enjoying a feeling of strength owing
growing crops caning him the 

ter soils of Michigan. As for white
beam, Michigan’s product is so well
known for quality that it can stand
very strong competition.

“All indications are that Michigan
bean growers will ﬁnd a better mar—
ket next winter, (particularly late in
the winter) for Michigan grown
beans than the pessimistic forecast of
the past fall and winter indicated.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘ seal! Pmces {enigma Jun: 22, 1020 NEW POTATOES EASY
c Ti":mde *?;‘gu-9:l§3%'—2§J'— 8Puos PER cwr., JUNE 22. 1920
n'od knurleys'""'j_ ' 115.00 [16.00 i Snow-I sun
emcee on: YEAR A00 Dunn . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..l :1: t
'   I ' “lilac . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .l >
9"" m' ’9“ ' ' Pltuburg . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 0.31 I
,0- H- P- ---- “1‘ 815 1 In. York . . . . . . . . . . .. on l
:21 mdiéfﬁljl "so  vnlcss on: vsAn goo
' Dunn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..| 2.49 ‘ 2.33
The beam market at Detroit us Wmllg'zxxxxzxx'z“ 2'“
made two declines during the last in... York . . . . . . . . . . . ..| l
week; one of 25c and another of 160.

Chicago and New York markets are
ﬁrm.

Professor Cox, head of the farm
crops department at the M. A. C.
thinks Michigan ought to plant more
red kidney beans.

“The Japanese have not competed
heavily with red kidney bolus,” says
Professor Cox. “These are in great
demand, and it would appear that a
considerably larger acreage 0! red
kidneys could be planted on the bot-

l

 

 

New spuds are lower on nearly all
markets. There is no such a thing
as old "potatoes on the Detroit mar-
ket. Prices for potatoes of the 1919
crop are all shot to pieces at Chicago.
One drop of $4.50 was made in one
day but advances followed and $9
per cwt., potatoes sold for $6.50 at
the close.

The weekly crop report at the Am-
erican Steel 8: Wire 00., gives the
condition of the 1920 crop in several

 

k

l‘

 

Fuller'a “’ellhsr Chart for July 1920 l
1H,“; lam: '
 , ml» is
‘J ‘ 1  ﬂ‘l l"l“v1

“» .II  ’ T!

p

 
  
 

 

  

  

J‘une
1920.—~Warm waves will reach Van-

WASHINGTON, D. C., 26,
couver, B. C., near June 26, July_2,
7. and 13 and temperatures Will use
on all the Paciﬁc slope. They “Will
cross crest of Rockies by close of 27
and July 3, 8, 14; plains section 28
and July 4, 9 15; meridian 90, upper

 

  
  
    
  
   
 
 
  
  

 

great lakes, Ohio-Tennessee and low-
er Missippi valleys 29 and July- 5, 10.
16‘, lower great lakes and eastern sec--
tions 30 and July 6, 11, 17, reaching
vicinity of Newfoundland about July
1, 7, 12, 1 Storm waves will follow
about one day behind warm waves,
cool waves amt one day behind the
storm waves.

M‘dlxturbanoes will control the
cmther m m: June 28’ to

    
  

THE WEATHER FOR THE. WEEK
As Forecasted by W. T. Foster for The Michigan Business Former

‘ sufﬁcient short on rain to threaten a

July 18. Moderate temperatures are
expected up to near July 13 and
warmer following. Frequent thunder
storms are expected and a general
average of less rain than usual but
we]! distributed moisture, bringing
rather favorable cropweather for all
sections. Southern parts of plams
sections are in doubt and may. be

raid by grasshoppers. Showers ~in
Ohio and other middle latitudes are
expected to check the Bosnian fly,
Middle to northern latitudes are ex-
pected to get fairly good weather for
harvesting but may have to dodge the
showers which are not expected to be
heavy enough to do much damage.
General results of July cropweather
will Check the hopes orvbig crops but
no serious extensive drouth is ex-
pected. Crop prospects are expected
to be_ better at the end of June than
they were “at the end of May. ' Some
hall is expected before the season
ends. July and August are the most
dangerous hail months. ‘

L Myerth

 

 

  

 

to the inability

question. It will
whether the  of the
be counteracted by the curtailment
pear to forecast lower prices
will have much to do with future

 

 

_ "V 'E‘ﬁ_9__"j'_"_°'_ _
in. a mum-math.
“moan memos!

 

 

cm "magma m £88
In: M moses-num- columns:
my .Mzﬂ.“u.“”0-
l no.1 I h. I I .11.!
. lumﬂx- WWI: 1.199.“-
Detroit . .13750 @ 38135.00Q36132.00
Chlmo

Q38,

.- . 33.00@3421m.ﬂ317.”.21
.Row York ' 4.00046M4’9G481

M .MCMMMQWOQ36

 

 

Rm}! WOOL MARKET
The Commercial Bulletin says,
"The wool market is still waiting de-
velopments. Very little business has
been done here or in the West and
quotations are largely nominal still.

Some consignments are reported.
from the 
"The manufacturing situation,

also is very uncertain and mills are
running generally on three to four
days schedule a week, son-stints
less.

"The foreign markets have stood—
ied somewhat on the lower Landon
basis.”

moms-n and New York “men——
Fine unwashed, 80.; dekine unwash-
ed, 79®13g 1—2 blood  £8
@10; 3-8 blood unwashed, 596986.

 

DETROIT Paoovm: WT

Buyers are Buying more attention
to hens and chickens and a. ﬁnner
tone is quoted. The market is not
troubled so much as it was with
hold-over supplies. Dressed calves
are doing a little better and there is
a steady market for hogs. Dairy
products are in liberal supply and
active. The feeling in eggs is easy,
but there is active buying of butter
and the market holds steady.

 

max Mm

DETROIT—Cattle; dry fed strong,
grassers dull; camera 59 to 75s low-
er; best heavy steers, $14.59@15;
best handy weight butcher steers,
$14@14.75; mixed steers and he!!-
ors, 811@11.5°; handy light butch-
ers, ﬁneness; light butchers, 39
09.50; best cows, 38.5039; butch-
er cows, 365067.58: cutters, $5.50
@575; comers, $4.50.@ 6; best
heavy bulls" $8.756”): bologna hulls
81.6068; stock bolls, $7@7.50:
feeders, $9@10.25; smokers, $8@
8.75; minors and springeu, $850
110. Veal calves: opened strong, $1
higher, cloning do] with advance lost
but. $15@15.50; others, $96314.
Sheep and lambs: market steady:
best lambs, 317@ 18; fair lambs, $13
@14; light to common lambs, $10
@12; yearlings, $13QI4; fair to
good sheep, $4@8; calls and com-
mon, $2@3. Hogs: Market strong;
pigs, $14; mixed hogs, $1‘5.50@
15.60; heavy, $15.25.

CHICAGO—Cattle: Bulk beef
steers steady to 25:: lower; top heavy,
$16-90; yoarlings, $18; other grades
25c to 400 lower; few choice cows
and heifers steady, other she-stock
mostly 25c to 40c lower; bulls steady
shooters and. feeders weak, unevenly
25c to 40c lower; calves 25c lower.
Hogs: Market active, opened 10c to
25¢ lower, closed strong to 10c to
15¢ higher than early»; top, $15.75;
bulk light and light butchers, $15.40
815320;. bulk .250 pounds and over,
81436614.“;plgs, 25: lower, with p
but at $12.25@13. 'Sheept' over
half direct to packers: very good
Idaho lambs, $16.25; :bost anti , ‘
$18; bulk, $114016; Comm
lambs, 316.“; best Vending, $12;
choice m; $0.30G1‘;'mm $1.50:
Mart-1a even. 31'; 19*
“5113550433.: ‘ ‘ ‘

 

 
 

 

 
 


     

 
   
 

  

(M    I) “ .. 3M

« . _ or not the Winonwheat-
 mid remain/in 7 business.
Ahdsinoo the plains oi the Dakotas
end the Canadian Northwest are cap»-
oble of feeding bread to a large part
of the bread-eating world, the ques—
tion of rates and proﬁts assumes
world—wide importance.

“Take your map of North Ameri-
ca, and put your ﬁnger on Duluth
in. Minnesota, or Port Arthur in Can-
nda. Then follow down Lake ~Su-
perior to the “800” Canal at Sault
Ste. Marie, where the waters 01 Su-
perior drop twenty feet to the level
of Lake Huron. Here there are locks
deep enough, long enough, and wide
enough to let through the gigantic
10,000 ton Great Lakes heightens——
locks large enough to handle all but
about 5 per cent of the ocean—going
height-carrying shipping of the
world. _ ,

“Passing on through Huron we
come to the St. Clair and Detroit
rivers, and these likewise can wry
any ocean—going ship except such
meek as the Mauretania and Levi-
ethan.

“The next stop on our all—water
route from the Middle West to Eur-__
ope is at the new Welland Canal.
Canada is building this to meet the

 

ope

 
 

the

lug

add
in
on!

capacity ot the “Soo” locks, and
when completed any at the great
ireighters of the Upper Lakes can

comfortably drop down through it
onto Lake Ontario.

“Below Montreal, all the way to
the sea, the St. Lawrence affords a
broad, deep, sate ship highway that
would bring Europe one thousand
miles closer to our Middle West were

“Econ-ts

 

order to relieve our

  
  
  
  

to inure {it

.. it
cheaper

development of the American

railways to the point where they can
properly take. care oi the growing
volume of transportation.
penditure of less than 5 per cent of
this amount will provide an all-wa—
ter route from the heart of the Am—
erican continent to the sea,
expenditure will bring the Mississippi
Valley and the plains of Canada
thousand miles nearer to Europe, and
if, ﬁnally, it will. divert from the
Eastern states a volume of. through
traﬁc that serves no other purpose
than to congest roads already break-

112 the ex-

if this

a

down under local trailic and con-

tinental trails originating within the
manufacturing urea along the At-
lantic count—then it would seem that
immedioiestepe should be taken to

the St. Lawrence all-water route
overloaded

crumbling system of continental

transportation.”

 

TEXAS ‘FARMIE‘RS GET $2.50 FOR

THEIR WHEAT

New wheat was selling (or $2.25
to $2.50 a bushel from farmer to
dealer in and around Fort Worth,
Texas on June let.
elated to be the highest price paid
there in several years.

Thiswas de—

 

 

ft not for less than titty miles of
tumbling rapids in the upper St.
Lawrence. The improvement at this
ﬁfty miles, by the creation of two
great dams to hold back the waters V
of the river, is now becoming a mat-
ter of international concern.

“Engineers are agreed that this
work can he done at a cost approxi-
mating $110,000,000, and that the

I tour million horse-power of electrical
energy that will be released by creat-
ing these artiﬁcial lakes will more
than pay the entire carrying charges
of the undertaking. So'that from a
ﬁnancial standpoint the proposition
uppears entirely teosible. With these
dams built, and their locks in opera-
tion, a steamer of. 5,000 tons capacity
could enter the St. Lawrence, carry-
ing a. cargo from Europe, lay down
that cargo at any one of the Great
Lakes parts, and then proceed to the
head of the lakes to re—loed with
wheat or ﬂax or livestock for the

‘ return journey. The eﬂect would be
to thrust an arm of the ocean midway
into the heart of the American con-
tinent, and bring the prairie region
west of Chicago and Duluth into ov-
ernight contact with the sea.

“This would place all the central
region of the United States and Can-
ada in a much more favorable situ-
ation in the coming competition for
world commerce.

it

etc.
his

Id

face

('J‘OID

would mean.

“It would help to solve in a very
large measure, the pressing trans-
portation problem, because it would
shorten the rail haul of products
west of» the Alleganies destined for
overseas consumption; and by so do-
ing it would in effect add materially
to the carrying capacity of the pres-
ent rail equipment.

“It is. a well-established tact that
car congestion md car shortage, the

. twin hugahoos of the rail men and

beef

past

 

who

and
ot a

butler, 45c: butterfat. 55c;

IOQIéc:
bags, 13 1~2cr—R. B. C

SHIAWASSEE—The drought of

not doing as well as it was before
drought came on. Oats and corn seem
to be practically- at a.- standstill,‘
potatoe- u‘e» up enough to cultivate but
themeeropasorulearojmheing

Crop Reports 

ARENAC (ED—Well the rain reached
on at last and has been sending down
the moisture every day, so much that
farmers cannot get on their ﬁelds to cul-
tivate or ﬁnish getting in their beans

 

It led“ like another one at those
iced years. On clay ground it 13

HI“
utterly irnpossible to do a thing, and will
at least be a. week before farmers can,
provided it does not
Good old Damomt
M. B. F'. stated a. few days ago, the
banks are- very careful who they '
loans W
Prices on farm modiﬁes are. lowering.
Wool is nearly a dead Lane and. unless
u wish to take a small price.

rain any more.

times is here and as

let. out
tight here every week.

better

on some time. The storms were

ferocious and did enormm damage, tear-
ing down silos, blowing fruit trees down
and the hall was responsible tor some
damage.
week and looks like lower]-l

Poultry took some drop last
price in the
of high priced teed— . Be. It

 

TUSCOLA—Farmers are still planting
pontoon and
and millet. cultivating corn and early po-
tatoes.
a good stand. Cutwonns and. crows took
u lot of it. Hay is going to be a. light

beans, sowing buckwheat

Corn looks very yellow and not

by the looks of it now. Weather

has been very dry and hot until Monday
when it started to rain and it has ruined
hard for “to days. Tuesday night we
had the worst storm of the season, light-
ning, rain, hell and wind, doing a lot of
harm to trees and beans.
3 nice horse killed by lightning.
lowing prices were
Wheat

One man had

Caro '

offered at .
$1.05 ;

$2.90; com, $1.75; oats,

: . - rye, $1.90; buckwheat, $3.50 cwt.; beans,
‘ But  is by no means all that a H R ‘7 m4 hams?“ mm”. 33
the canalizrng of the St. Lawrence @4 per m; hens, 25@280; broilers. 50c:

can. 360:
steers, beef cows, 6@90; veal calves,

sheep, SQSC: lambs, 13@1k,

 

the
mouth or more ms been a severe

landicap to the ban growers, as many

have their ﬁelds ﬁtted decline to

plant while the ground is so very hot

dry, especially where: the ground is
may nature. Wheat as a rule is
the

Early

shipping public, are largely due to planted. Potato bugs hove not made
the long overland haul oi shipments flunk appearance as yet. at least none
originating at. or bound for, points es:&%$,bwmﬂ%j
west of Chicago. The vast network ggtss $1.08; rye,'83.10; beans (C. H.'P.)"
.- . I - .7 7.0mm, 24 23; it _ ;
of railways draws the streams of am, .5“: Y 3' g 'choaocs $4

are into the already locally congest-
ed ores. east 01 Pimhurg end Wash-
ington; and when. the wheat nip-
nents oi early on begin, the conges-
tlenheeoine 3 ion, and the ion be-

veal

   
  
   
 
 

when the etmn of Iake-nd-raﬂ tnt- No.

of“! and side-track space that is
need by the tram alreudyon the
; mum.» '  '- ~

on

  
 

t the I St.,_ Lawrence
 ' m at

W
mace! rain our the last few days,
no", carnage-ably, QM

. . b jut brutal-c

res-gar"; 818:0 
1' timotny'gn; No. ’1 ii

at ' 38 :
m tloﬁlar—D. n. It.“ ' c

 

(N. W.)—-We have had

be following
rare. :
gilt mixed

he comes pouring down the Great m-  «dons. In It: cah-
Lakes and debarks at Buffalo and  7°“ “N .. i “a: gas»
v ,. demanding care and right 34c; strewbiarries.’   ' “8‘

 . _ and quicker ail-wear"
' route, and a fiir port '01 the all—rail
that now   Atlantic ports
would ﬁnd its natural route to Eur—
‘through its most convenient lake
port and thence by oeeamgoing ship-
ping direct to Europe.

“It has been estimated that four
billions of dollars «are necessary for

    

 

 
 
   
   
  
 
    

  
 
   

age Guarantee

Hirth—Krause Shoes
are made to give whet
a shoe for “the man
who works" should
give; service, mile: 0!
wear and more com?
fort.

Made from the best
of leather, scientiﬁcally
treated in a great
Hirth-Krause tumory
to make it water and
acid resisting.

For the man who»
works this is the m
looks like an aristo-
crat and wears like iron

Sold everywhere by
Quality First Dealers.

   
    
 
 

    
        
         
       
   
    
     
         
       
      
      
      
     
     
       
     
      
       
    
   
    
     
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
 
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
   
 
  
   
  
 
 
  
  
    
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
    

mun norms, non.

 

STATEMENT

Citizens’ Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.

A: of June let, 1920
CLAIMS PAID

No. Amount
Since organization .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,431 $458,226.98
First 5 months of 1920 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 667 95,850.85
During May, 1920 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161 23,134.09
RESOURCES
Current—
Cash in Banks, Commercial Acct. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 39,331.74
Cash in Banks, Savings Account .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 22,009.09
U- S. Bonds and Stamps . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 26,240.50
capiul.‘ $ 87,572.24
Insurance Building and Site . . . . . . . . . . . $27,547.67

. . . . . . 10,806.96 ‘$ 38,354.63

Up—to—date Ofﬁce Equipment . . . . . . .

Total Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $125,925.31

Why insure in a small company with a small surplus when you

can insure in- the largest exclusive automobile insurance company in the
. world organized on the mutual plan, with experienced ofﬁcers and ad-
Justers to take care of all serious claims. 
Call on our local agent, or write the Home Oﬂlce.

Ciﬁzens’ Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., Howell, Michigan

 

 

 

 

 

 

It Does More and Goes Farther
Than Any Product Known

Wire Stockmen Everywhere
are TIX-TON Users

M9 ANTISEPTICS

 the year around keep stock healthy
" ’. and free from disease germs. worms,
makes $60.00 worth of medicated salt, or

 
   

-r' I

. ‘ e; :
and ticks. A $7.50 Drum
stock conditioner—saves you big money.
 $3.00 for a box of “TIX TON-MEL” by parcel post. It. will
mediate a burrs! of salt. For hogs, sheep, cattle, horses. and podtry. .
PARSONS CHEMICAL WORKS: Grand lmﬁ

Write for Club Oﬁ‘er Ilean- Perlr I'll-ms Exwlmenl sullen

  

 

 

Little Live Stock Ads in
M. B. F.
Do the Trick!
m

 

 

 

 

     

What Are You In the Market For? Use This Coupon.

hermetlmr.wmbohneedole-u—ed ﬁngw v
beta.“ momrowmiammmmhgwgi}
shoal-inglenook WidowmtumyuumMIm—gnum
u and we. will oak dependable Ill-mm to and m and: ' m
“Mfrs-Id nuanm-m—I

   
     
   

 
 

         
       
    
    
    
   
       
    
       

mormmm usury rm manner.” more
‘31,:  nmnlrrrgam. uncanny: Ina. sum.
' none 181133; gagginmn grim "
‘ m .- mm. . . mm m mam;
may rum FAle m mercury sun.

    
 

BUILDING 301'. mum "1‘0me

    
 

  
 
   

‘ WAGON!
, ammo FIJI-RITE“ PLO“ rem
.ouurvA-ron nous! “LI-LII POTATO EACH. when]! m
an! “PB . mm 3.0me Hub“?!-

     

‘MMGI ELY “I” SAW!“ RAGE. -
nun m mvnsrm STOCK 1‘00]! ml. tum:
(Write on munch hole. anything you wont not listed elem)

 
 
    
   

 

    
   
   
  

ei

 
 
  
  

4‘;
run...-uonceunouwootooowgouo-eno...nee-boonsooo’ouou—ioo-aowouro-d-o-u ' '

u . , ,.
  'ﬁ"F'9'VIOeQ-no-w-wesop-ooh.onu. ‘ t ‘9'}--.- 

‘ run will“! BUSINEIS rm Service m”. if. m l

’A

   
  

  

 

  


         
 
   
  
  

To introduce the best auto-

,clusive Internal Hv‘draulic

 

 

 
 
 
  
 
 
  

 

 

"er-nu Rapids Herald

,: ' _ Ear ansion Processthat elimi-

'7 ‘ nates Elow-Gut—Stone-Bruise—
' Rim Cut and enables us to sell
* out-tires under a

10,000 MILE
[GUARANTEE

We want an agent in every
community to use and intro-
duce these wonderful tires at
our astonishingly low prices
to all motor car owners.

FREE TIRES forYOUR OWN CAR
to a representative in each community.
Write for booklet fully describing this new
process and explaining our amazmg intro-
ductory offer to owner agents.

Hydro-United Tire Co.

DEPT. 189 PHILADELPHIA. PA.

   

~ —‘.

 
  
   
   
 
 
 
   
    
   
   
   
   
  

 

 

80 Classes
From One
Package

A package of Hires Household
Extract—25c at your grocer’s, a yeast
cake and some sugar. These will
make 40 pints or 80 glasses of the
best rootbeer you ever tasted. And
it’s so easy to make.

The actual juices of roots, barks,
herbs, berries—and pure cane sugar
make Hires Household Extract pure
and healthful.

Our special airtight, patent
\ bottle stoppers keep the
‘~ . ﬁzz from escaping until
you are ready to
drink. Your
grocer has

     
 
 
 
   
     
  
  

you get this
package. It brings .
you the genuine '
Hires Household Extract.

THE CHARLES E. HIRES COMPANY
Philadelphia. Pa.

 

 

 

 

Saws 25 Cords a Day

The Ottawa Lo Saw falls trees or cuts off stum a
level with groan . Saws up logs cuts nip branches. to
cutter, runs ump jack and other-belt mach nery. Mounted
on wheels. Easy to move an here. 10 Year Guarantee.
stys Trial. Write for Free 00!: and Cash or Easy’l‘ennl.
OTTAWA MFO.CO.. “81 Wood St, Ottawa, Kane.

 

 

For best results on your Poul-
try, Veal, Hogs, etc., ship to

CULOTTA & JULL
DETROIT

Not connected with any other
house on this market.

 

 

 

MICHIGAN BUSINESS FABMEB
——and——

YOUR FAVORITE DAILY

—-at a—

GREATLY REDUCED PRICE
(Good on R. F. D. Only)

, Names ' of Newspaper Special Price

Detroit Journal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.50

Grand Rapids Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ 5.50

Ypsilantlan Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.10

Detroit Free Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.50

Jackson Citizen-Patriot. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.50

Ianlstoo News-Advocate . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.50
' (In County)

Ida-limo ﬂows-Advocate . . . . . ... . . . . .. 4.50
, (Elsewhere) ' _
Pt. Huron Times-Herald . . . . . . . . . . 4.50
Detroit News ..... . .‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.50
' nu Olty Times-Tribune . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I450

4.50
"All. YOUR ORDERS 1'0

1' 9 A, iiiieiiiwi sunnssrnnnsn

Mt. Clemens. Michigan.

.“‘NTEDI
mobile tires in the world.
Made under our new and ex-I

 

 

 

 

 

 

(K Clearing Department for-‘farrners'
this department. We are here to serve you.

REQUIREMENTS OF ASSESSOR

.In taking an assessment is the super—
VISor obliged to' have his tax roll with
him? Does he have to write with pen
and ink? Also will believe to give the
owner. a. receipt showing his assessed
valuation or hasn't the owner any right
to this information—A Reader, Arenas
County. ‘

The law requires the supervisor
or assessor to ascertain the taxable
property of his» district and for this
purpose SHALL require each person
having taxable property to make a.
statement of his prOperty under oath.
It is made a criminal offense to re-
fuse to make it or to make a false
one.
him when he requires such state-
ments. He is not‘obliged to ﬁx the
values when he visits the taxpayers
and owners. Such action should be
after he has viewed all of the prop-
erty. The copying in the names and
descriptions of property is clerical
and should be done in ink and may
be done by a clerk but the ﬁxing of
the values is an act that the ofﬁcer
must ﬁx for himself and can not thus
allow a clerk tomerely copy a roll of
former years. He is not required to
give the owner the amount of the as-
sessment but must furnish the in-
formation if requested—W. E.
Brown, legal editor.

 

GREEN LEG PLYMOUTH ROCKS

Are there any pure bred Barred Ply-
mouth Rocks having dark Colored feet
and legs?——Mrs. I. N, M.. Standish Mich.

Barred Rock pullets often show a
dark green or slatey green leg, ow-
ing to, I think, the fact of exhibition
breeding to increase the number of
bars on the feather that the yellow
pigment has about left the beak and
the leg in the modern bred Barred
Plymouth Rock. The cockerels show
yellow legs and are very apt to have
green in the beak. The cause of this
is the breeding more black into the
fowl, which of course is moving tow-
ards the Black Java blood that was
originally crossed to produce the
Barred Rock. ‘

By the standard of perfection you
will notice that the Black Java
shanks and toes are black or nearly
black with a tendency towards wil-
low but black preferred. This would
give ample chance for the dark col-
ored shank. For a good many years

there were green spots on the shanks

of the Barred Rock female but later
on of course we ﬁnd the greenish
slate leg on most all of them.—
0. H. Burgess, Professor of Poultry
Husbandry, M. A. 0.

“’ORDING OF CONTRACT SHOWS

Last August I listed my farm for sale
with our local agent, gave him the ex—
clusive sale of it for 12 months, but he
did not bring any one around for eight
months (I had signed a contract with
him for a ﬁve per cent commission.)
Last February I saw an ad in the ’Chi—
cago Daily‘News which I answered. The
Chicago broker came out with the owner
of Chicago property and we made a deal‘
here to trade equity for equity, I agree-
ing to pay the Chicago agent $450 com-
mission. Now our local agent after
hearing that I had traded,,comes along
with a proposition for a. trade, after I
had signed a contract with the Chicago

man. Can our local agent hold me for
commission?—A Subscriber Van Buren
County,

Your question is a complicated one
and may be controlled by the word-
ing of the contract you made with the
ﬁrst broker. Unless that contract
would control I am of the opiniOn
you would still beable to make a
deal yourself and not be liable to him
for any commission. Such a matter
should be submitted to your attor-
ney with all of the facts to assist in
construing the question of liability.
—-W. E. Brown, legal editor.

HOMES FOR THE AGED
Is there an old peoples’ home in Mich-
igan, if so, where is it located and what
are the terms and conditions under
which a. person of nearly 70 years old
can gain a home there'I—A der.

There are several homes of this
kind in the state; some are main-
tained by lodges for their members,
some by churches for their members;
a few are for women only and soy-'-

eral are for, aged people :of any faith .

He does not need his roll with r

/

"every day troubles. Fromm. careful attention . no. to all 00m"
Subscribers desiring a personal answer by mil to I anemone

of sect. Of the" last named there are
three: “Home for the Aged,” located
at Grand Rapids; “Old. People’s
Home,” located at Muskegon; “Old
People’s Home," located» at South
Haven.
aged people of '60 years'or more» and
are maintained by individuals, charit-
ties and'contributions by inmates.-
Editor. . ‘

 

WIFE NOT LIABLE FOR HUS-
BAND’S DEBTS

I would like to have you print in your
paper what you know in regards to the
paying of notes signed for men going
to the war and not returning. Now
these widows refuse to pay same after
they have signed their name on the re-
newal note for the ﬁrst one signed by
dier husband. 'I have a. note that I paid
a. year ago that I signed with a young
man that was working for me when he
was drafted. His wife ~renewed this
note and signed her own name to the
renewal now she receives her insurance
from her husband who was killed in
France and refuses to do anything with
it at all. Please print your advice. on
this as there are perhaps others who
would like to know this same thing—'—
E. M. G., Osceola County.

A married woman is not liable for
her husband’s debts even though she
signed the note. It would not make
any difference how much money she
had. If the deceased left no estate
of his own from which the amount
of the indebtedness could be collect-
ed you would be without a remedy
in law—W. E. Brown, legal editor.

SHEEP HUSBANDRY BOOK
Where can I get a book describing the
different kinds of sheep?—-O, P., Vesta-

burg Mich. . r

We are oﬂering for sale a book
that treats this subject very thor-
oughly. If you will look on page-19
of your June 5th issue of THE BUSI-
NESS FARMER you will ﬁnd an ad de‘
scribing this book and the price of
it.—Editor. .

RAISING \VATER ON LAKE

Have individuals owning lake front-
age which embraces an outlet to several
lakes the right to raise the water level
of these lakes by daming the outlet?
What procedure would be necessary, on
the part of parties wishing to raise the
level. to make the daming legal. The
raising of the level would be detriment-
al in several instances to parties own-
ing frontage on the lakes to be raised.
Have the parties who would be serious-
ly affected any powers to prohibit the
raising of the water 1evel?—A Living-
ston County Subscriber.

The parties who desire to raise
the water on the lakes must have
the right of flowage of all of the bor-
dering land to legally raise the wa—
ter. They can acquire this right of
flowage only by purchase. The per-
sons likely to be injured by threaten-
ed flowage would be entitled to an
injunction upon a proper bill’ in
chancery paying for such injunction.
—W. E. Brown, legal editor. '

 

THE COLLECTION BOX

NEW YORK COMPANY RETURNS

‘ SUBSCRIBER’S MONEY

I have noticed an article in the
last issue which corresponds some-
what with the predicament I am in-
On Nov. 11, 1919, I sent an order
amounting to $30.21 to the B H
00., of New York ‘City and have
never heard a word from them, al-
though I wrote many times. Will
you please see what you can‘do, and
I, like the other reader you helped
would be willing to pay you amply.

 

 

 

 

,—-Miss M. A. K., eron County.

We took the matter up with the
B Company and receiv-
ed a reply from them stating that
theywere mailing a. check to our
subscriber covering the entire amount
due and on June 12th we received

 

 

'the following letter from .Miss M.

 

, 'A. K., Huron Gounty.

A. K.: ,
Your letter received in regard to

my trOuble with the B 

Co. and after seven months I have

received my money. : Many thanks

to yen. Very truly yours.—Miss M.

 

 

   

(We do not make any charges to
our subscribers ‘for making collec—
tions) :' - _‘ ‘ ~»

 

 

V CREAM BUYER mum For: CAN

These homes are open to.

’ igned

   
  

- convey all: seeding“ ,th
A interest in sterile t1 e-Po,

 

 

  

    

mind or re‘quesis wi- lnlorm’at‘ie'ii decreased In

Last summer a. Cream buyer bought
cream «in this neighborhood. "Elf-Ia wwould
call once,a.w_e‘ek, take'a can of cream
and bring back an empty and payffor
the one he took away the Week before,
Now the last trip was Dec. 16 and he has
not returned the empty can nor paid
for it or the cream. Is there any way
I can Collect? He lives in the next
county—W. . J. Y., Roscommon County.

 

The purchaser of cream is liable
in a personal action for the price of

the cream, and for the can, if he re-_

fuses to return it. I would be of the
opinion that a demand would have
to be made upon him for the can be-
fore an action for the, price would
lay, unless you have an agreement
with him as to the time of its return.
Unless the goods were obtained by
what in law would amount to false
pretenses there would be no crimin—
al action. You having trustedhim
there would be only an action for the
amount he owes you- You can sue
him in the other county or in your
own county if you can have summons
served on‘him in your county—4
W. E. Brown, legal editor.

VALUE OF ENSILAGE

What is a. fair price per ton for 3
good grade of silage? How many tons
per foot will two year old silage weigh
in the bottom six feet of a 12 x 42 silo
that has been ﬁlled both years?—-A Hur-
on Candy Reader.

The value of ensilage will depend
upon the class of livestock to which
it is to be fed, the maturity of the
corn, and the distance necessary to
haul the ensilage. At the present
price of hay, from $12 to $14 per

ton is a fair estimate. The weight
per cubic foot of ensil-age varies
greatly at different depths. In a

12 x 42ft. silo, the ensilage will
weigh from 30 to' 35 pounds per
cubic foot, 10 feet from the top,
while the bottom 6 ft. will weigh

from 60 to 70 pounds per cubic foot.
Assuming that the weight per cubic
food is 65 pounds, each footof silage
will weigh approximately 3.6 min;
at the depth mentioned—0. R. Megee,
Ass’t Professor of Farm Craps, M. A.
0.

TENANT FURNISHES ALL

. When a man rents his farm on share
geiting one third of grain and one—h
of hay, should he furnish seed and fer-
tilizer?—Subscriber, Sanilac County.

It is usual to provide in the lease
what each shall furnish but if there
was no such agreement and the ten-
ant was to have two—thirds and the
landlord one—third I would be of the
opinion that the tenant furnished all.
——W. E. Brown, legal editor.

NEW ERA ASSOCIATION

I would like to learn everything pos-'
sible about the New Era. Association at
Grand Rapids, Michigan. It doesn't
look very solid to me, appears to be too
much of a speculation. How about it
ﬁnancial standing? Is it growing?
Won’t the rates, soon be boosted way up '
What is its future? Several around here
are carrying insurance in theassoolatio

some that are not ﬁnanciall able to lo *
their protecti0n_——Anxious ent County.

In accordance with your request
of May 19th, we are giving you be'
low a statement of the ﬁnancial com
dition of the New ._Era Association,
Grand Rapids, Michigan, as, of, De-
cember 31, 1919, as shown by its
annual report filed with this De-
partmentr‘Admitte‘d -- assets, $82,-
433.36; liabilities; $88,883.73.—

' Frank H. Ellsworth, State Insurance

Commissioner, Lansing.

l-DEED WITHOUT RESERVATION

C and. F‘boughta 40 acre .tarm to-

, gather (joint deed) of W, a single rman.

According to contractthey were to pay
W $100 per year and he make it his
home with them for 20 years. Last. Sep-
tember F signed, off fair and square ,0! ,

,his own accord. to C_wlth C's consen F ’
making no reservations- whatever.~ it
my recorded at the time.~ What I wan

to know is" F _ eghtitled to  share
the new seeding at was'ma'de before he
owl—A. Sibseriber. Genesee
County ' .

A deed without res

   

Haitian ,,

 

Itiqn‘ 'of:
it

 
 
    

a less! nature shouldj‘e‘no'loa M'Vfor‘ I.) 

\

   
  

 


 
    
 
 

> plenty

 

  

 or": A (was: alas]! Ifsus'; MINI-

. ,  mum-sloped” . 2W0? s. _ 0. .me n-
hln this low rate. we 'ero compelled to.,oumlnste
. ‘" -b°°ll.,|l,ufins.' Therefore. .outherms on class.
- l advert sins are cash In full .wlth order.
m ll one word each Inltlsl and «oh srouv

ﬂlures. both In the body of the ad and in the
“dress. 'The’rste is [cents a word for each Is-
“!0- rdleu of number of times ed runs. There
' no lseount. Oopy must reach us by Wednes-
“Y 01’ Preoedhw week. You wlll help us eon-
tlnue our low rate by making your remittance
".0"! right—Address. Michigan Business Farm-
”! A41in Don't. Mt. Clefnens, Mlohlasn.

      
 

 
 

 

 

25 COWS.
location.

near town; close creamery; broad machine-worked

282-AORE FARM WITH HORSES.
tools, crops. Big steady income; ﬂne

1101113. 4-00W spring-watered pasture; 2-stm’y 10-
room house. spring water, maple shade; biz stock
born. silo, water supply, poultry house; owner un-
able occupy, throws in horses, cows 3 yearlinge,
W0 2-year olds, machinery, tools, part. growing
crops; less than $30 an acre for everything. part
cash easy terms. Details of this and another at
$2.900 page 29 Strout's Big Illustrated Cat-

 

slogaiog Farm Bargains, Michigan, Ohio, Wis-
consin, Indiana and 29 other es. Copy free.
s'rnou'r FARM AGENCY. E. Ford
Bldg., Detroit. ‘

STRIPPED HARDWOOD LAND. _ RICH
Olly loam—easy terms, $12.50 to $10-00 an
sore. Neighbors, roads, schools. Four to ﬁve
miles from Millersburg. Never faihng clover
seed will make your payments. JOHN G.

KRAUTH, Millersburg, Mich.

FOP. SALE—80 ACRE FARMl EXCELLENT
sell, all under cultivation, good house._ fair barn,
water. Will sell entire equipment in-
cluding 8 high grade Holstein females. 4 miles
from town. Inquire LYLE SHARP, Clifford,
Mich.

FARM FOR SALE—18 ACRES. CLAY LOAM
well drained. Best of soil. No county ditch.
Good 'buildings, newly painted. Acetylene lights,
will sell with or without stock. tools and cm
60 ‘rods to school, 2 miles to good market A
main road. A. R. ZIMMERMAN. Newaygo, Mich.

FOR SALE—120 ACRES. GOOD BUILD-
' inn, 80 acres improved; flowing well, water in
house and born. Also stream through pasture.
Will sell part or all. Price $80 per acre. For
further information write Wm. VANDEPOL,
Marion. Mich, R No. 4.

FOR EXCHANGE—EQUITY IN A THREE
story Chicago Flat Bldg, consisting of two stores
-on let. 2-6 and 2-4 rooms on the second and
the same on the third floor. All rented and in
ﬁne shape. Income better than $5,000 for a
clear Michigan farm. Give full particulars in
'first letter. Addrem J. A. ROCKWOOD, Hast-
ings, Mich.

STORE AND 4 ACRES. 13 MILES FROM
Alpena on Mich. Pike, $1,800. Stock at in-
voice price. Owner, JAMES J. LINCE, Ossineke,
Mich, B R 1. .

MSCELLANEOIE

BUY FENCE POSTS DIRECT FROM FOR-
est. All kinds. -De1ivered prices. Address "M.
M." care Michigan Business~Farming, Mt. Clem-
ens. Mich.

 

 

BUILDERS’ PRODUCTS 00.. 14 PASADENA
Detroit. _Wholesale to consumers—Paints,
Spraying Materials. Sprayers. Manual
mailed free. M. B. TEEPLE. Mgr.

FOR SALE—AVERY TRACTOR 12-25 AND
P. ¢.O. four bottom plow. Good second hand
condition. If taken soon, $600. HARVEY
POWERS, Fremont, Mich.

WANTED—GOOD CART AND HARNESS
for a pony 43 inches high. GEO. FLEllﬂNG,
B 2. Grand Ledge. Mich.

WANTED—FOREMAN FOR LARGE FARM.

Rent and living free. Salary 31,200 ,per year.
MICHIGAN STATE PRISON. Jackson. Mich.

RESULTS !

April 6. 1920

 

 

 

 

 

   
   
  
 
   
  
    
  
   
    

 

Michigan Business Farmer,
Mt. Clemens, Mich,

Gentlemen: — Enclosed please
ﬁnd check for $14.60, the sum due
for 13 weeks‘ chicken ad and one
week strawberry ad. If we need
any more ads we will let you
know later.

Your ads surely bring business.
We’re all sold out for April and
May. Yours is the best paper 1 r
Michigan farmers that there is n
the state. Continue in the same
good way and you will have the
support of every bona ﬂde farmer.

Cordially yours,
C. W. HEIMBACH,

Route 5, Big Rapids, Mich.

M. B.IF. brings them

 

 

 

 

Is Your Farm for Sale?

Write out a plain description and n‘.
no lo for eooh- word. initial or group of
harem-Send it in for one. two or three
times. There's no cheaper or better way
of selling o form in ,Mlchlg‘on ' and you
deal direct with the buyer. 0 Inputs or
,7 commissions. If you wont to son or trade
your um, send in your ad sod-1. Don't
 ‘f’mm.

 

e 4’ 

  

-grub, and apply either alcohol

snout  one .Boslness rem.

 

 

 and" night is s

 

  
 

 

GRUBS IN-OATTLE
My cattle have big grubs in their
backs, some of them have about a. hund-
red and others not so many. Can YJU
inform me how to get rid of them and
what causes them to get there?—-H. F.,
Sanilao County.

The grubs to which you refer ap-
pertain to the life history of the Bot-
f'ly. This grub, or the larvae of this
fly, when grown, is smooth, white,
and transparent, as it enlarges it
becomes browner, and about the time
of its full growth it is of a. deep
brown color. The larvae having at—
tained its .full growth and size, ef-
fects its escape from the abscess of
the back of the affected animal and
drops to the ground, it is then of a
dark brown color, narrower at one
end than at the other, flat _on one
side and very round and convex on
the other. They remain in this state
for.about six weeks, and the fly ap—
pears. The grubs usually escape
during the months of May or June.
Sometimes these grubs are very
numerous and cause a great deal of
pain and uneasiness in the animal,
which becomes thin in flesh, hide-
bound and feverish, more frequent-
ly, however, they do no harm except
to the hides. Treatment: Whenever
cattle have these tumors along the
back ,it is advisable to press out the
or
Tr. Iodine—W. A. Ewalt, Veterinary
editor.

 

 

TUB ULOSIS IN CATTLE

How is‘ ‘uberculosis in pure bred cat-
tle found to be present, and what is the
method of cure. Can an outsider when
coming to a. strange barn detect that
tuberculosis is present in a. herd? I
have heard the remark that calves stand-
ing by their mother is a. good advertise-
ment for no tuberculosis. How much
linseed meal is safe for a horse when
used as a tonic—Subscriber, Mason
County.

Tuberculosis in pure bred cattle is
identically the same as tuberculosis
in grades; the only positive method
of diagnosing the disease is by means
of the tuberculin test, however, the
symptoms in some cases are very
pronounced, for where the lungs are
affected the animal usually presents
a chronic cough. When the mesen-
teric glands are involved there is
apt to be a. persistent or periodical

diarrhoea. One familiar with the
disease may be able to detect its
presence by a casual examination-

There is no cure and the barbering
of this or any other contagious dis-
ease Will sooner or later mean a
great loss. Calves standing beside
their mother is no indication the, dis-
ease is not pres‘ent. One or two
tablespoonfuls of linseed meal morn-

"c is

  

horse-=17.“ A. ‘EWdlt,   eterthary. :;
itbr.  r   

 

RAISING COL BY um

I would like to ask through your vale
uable paper if any of your readers have
had any experience raising a. colt, by
hand. Mare died. Am feeding coWs
milk diluted 3. little. Have been told
to feed an egg 9. day. Veterinary pre—
scribed Cascara. Sagradac at ﬁrst. Would
you advise giving a little now and then.
Colt is 12 days old. About how much
milk would be enough. Its my first ex—
perience and don’t want to overfeed.——
W. M. H., Shiawassee County.

 

When raising a colt by hand the
following is recommended. Dilute
cows milk with an equal amount of

,water and to one quart of this mix—

ture add ﬁve drahms of sugar. The
amount that is required depends on
the size and breed of the colt. It
would be advisable to feed the colt
about six times a day, warming a
fresh supply of milk each time.—
F. O. A. Taylor, Division of Veterin-
ary Science, M. A. 0.

LET BULL ENDORSE YOUR NOTE

The Better Sires campaign con-
ducted by various states in co-opera—
tion with the Bureau of Animal In-
dustry, United States Department of
Agriculture, is developing the fact
that bank credit is available to the
progressive live stock farmer as to
the progressive business man of the
city.

A letter received by the Bureau of
Animal Industry reports the follow—
ing announcement published by a
Wisconsin bank to its farmer pat-
rons:

“Why not keep some of those
pure bred Holsteins home? Many
ﬁne animals will be sold at the ﬁrst
annual sale of the Brown County
Holstein Breeders’ Association to be

held in the Brown County fair
grounds, West De Pere, Wis., on
Monday, May 10. The ‘— Bank

is ready to stand back of any of its
customers who wish to purchase
some of the stock to be offered for
sale and who do not feel able at
present to carry the investment.
Call at the bank and the accommo-
dation can be easily arranged."

THE ONLY DIFFERENCE

The busy millionaire climbed into
his beautiful and purring automo-
bile. A ragged nsewsboy rushed along-
side and offered the sale of a paper.
The successful business man had al-
ready read that particular edition and
to the lad’s insistent demands that he
“Please buy a, paper, mister," finally
replied rather tartly, “No, I said no."
The unabashed newsty came back
with, “Aw, don’t get grouchy, gover-
nor, the only difference between you
and me is that you’re making your
second million and I'm still working
on my first.”—Co-operatz've World.

as ~

’ l

 

 

 

 

 Aspirin: ’

Name “Bayer” means genuine-y '

Say “Bayet”-— insist

 

“Bayer”

when buying
Then you are sure of getting true

Say

Tablets of Aspirin”—-genuine

    
   
 

     
   

i

Asirin.

‘ ayer

Aspirin

proved safe by millions and prescribed by

physicians for over twenty years.

cept Only an unbroken “Bayer package"

which contains proper directions to

relieve

Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,

Rheumatism, Colds and Pain.
boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents.

Han

3m.

gists also sell larger “Bayer packages.”
Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufac-
ture Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.

 

 
 

15c 

  
  
  
  
  
 
   
   
   
 
  
  
  
 
 
     
 
   

ostevery

‘ insects by inhalation. Bugs don’t eel

v . ugs, roaches..mosquiloes, some m
’ [we on animals, b:

X tn
0 or direct by mail on receipt

containers keep insect

Buy Black

paper bags or boxes.

BLACK FLAG
Bolhmo' re. Md.

~> .31 j“. .

 poo eandanimsls. Look orBLACK
mark and red-end-yellow wrapper.
dms, department and hardware store;

 

 0 11 min

Kills ﬂies in closed milking shed. Fold
per put in it two tenspoonfuls ofﬂlsct Flag;
by into sir in milking shed ten minutes before

ieceof

y. Kills
il—tlsey

 breathe it, and die. Destroys ants, ﬂies,

and into. Harmless lo'

FLAG

0‘ .

U. S. Gov’t (Bulletin 771.
Agri. Dept.) shows that (last

wder
la: in

the SEALED GLASS some:
instead of “insect powder" in

 

HARVESTER

 Binder Sold direct to Farmers

03 hosts“. FROG

CORN NARVESTIR

Ono men. one hem one row
BolfGatherin? Eoull to I _
01-22 yrs. Only $ ["3

with fodder hind-r. Free (,stslozahowmg pectur- J
I38 .. SAIIDI. nor .

 

Sale at 1:00 p. m.

001.. n. is. mean.
, 4 ,HABBY-nonmson.
‘ _ n. v- KELLY. ‘

AUQI'IONEERS.

 

    

11:16 A. M. Limited from Port Enron and
12:10 Limited from Detroit will stop at the door.

Also hourly local service both ways.

__ (,2 __

 

Registered Holstein

lst Macomb County Consignment Sale

June 30th, 1920

F airchild Farms,
Chesterﬁeld, Mich.

(25 miles from Detroit on Gratiot Awe.)

“ E. “AUSTIN RADIUS.

 In- the Box

 
 

 

  

Ac.

dtin

Carri

  
  
     
     
 

 


 
  

 

 

 

 
    
 

    

I‘ll I All you
Breeder-3' Auction Sales advertised

(SPECIAL ADVERTISING RATES under this heading to honest
«I wknt ILwIII cost for 18. 28 or 82 times.
here at spool-I low rates: ask for them. Write

IIIIHIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIiii"III!!!iiilliillilimiIillIIiIiiIIiIIiIiIIiII

MI I

breedmofnvemkendpoumywmhmtonm
Youcanoham slinvfnd. or copy as m or you wish.
1

BREEDERS' DIRECTORY, THE INHIBAI BUSINESS FARMER, Mt. Clemens, 

Better still write out who: u have
copy or chem more be "received

Oder.
but

'0
DO.

 

 

 

 

To avoid conﬂicting dates we wm without

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOLSTEIN-FRJESIAN

 

III III! II PRODIIOER

Your problem is more MILK. more BUHER.
Inn PROFIT, per
Pontiac—

now.
of Maplrcrest Application

A. eon
182652—fram our heavy—yearly—milkingvuood-tut-
oer—veers“! dun .

will solve it.
Mcplecrest Application Pontisc's dam made
85,103 lbs. butter in 7 days; 1344.3 lbs. butter
and 28421.! no. ilk

III II 305 Ann

M not too high for tho over-age
Podium cad plies on application.
8.. Bruce Hcthon. Howell. Mich.

BITTER BOY ROSIIA PROE

25151.2. bend a... son of long 0a.. Hit «in
let- v. ‘

 

one! 2111:. Booking order: {or spring pine.
Belgium and Percheron Stallion: and. m Im—
ported and American bred.
“GINA. VALLEY STOCK FAR!
Ell SW i Son. Props" Saginaw W. 8.. lion

FOR SALE

5 HEIF‘ER CALVES
use from 2 to 8 months
a BULL GALVES
one ready for  service

7 c
two with 18 and 20 lb, seven day reoorde. Five
with good pmﬂtnhle_ cow testing “scorch. \Vr'rte

 

He free [mm disease.
. E. BROWN. Breedsviile. Mich.
Breeder of Reg. 'stock only

 

 

BABY BULLS

Grow your own next herd sire. We have
three beautiful youngsters—atrllgbt u a line.
upon-led we. They are all by
our 38 lb. senior sire. KING KORNDYKE
OMSKANY PONTIAC from splendid indi-
vidual dome of A. R. backing and the best
of blood lines.

Write for our mic list.

BOARDMAII FARMS
JACKSON. MIGH.
Holstein Breeders Since

$125.00

l-lven ly ma rkwi.

1906

 

 

 

 

TAKES A HOLSTEIN BULL
cull born Nov. 23, 1919.
Two nearest dams average 22.5

 

 

Ills. Sirmi by a son of Alcnrirn, Pontiac Butter
Buy. Federal (watt-ll herd.
H. L. VOEPEL, Sebewaing, Mich.
Oil'm-H for sull-
TWO YEAR HOLSTEIN BULL
Sim! by VAch unzmu'mnn VASSAR
BELL “UL, dzxm LADY (mth PONTIAC
KURNDYKI'J. who-«v coloring  about 2~3
“11mg, Fm m tlw herd of II. C. (,‘mndali ‘6
Son of HIM.
Price $150

THOS. LEE MUIR. Aimont, Mich,

 

 

 

WOLVERINE STOCK FARM REPORTA noon
mice from their hard. We are well pleased with
czm calves from our Junior Herd Sim, "ﬁlm you.
Um: Lumie Knrxniyke Seals" who la 1 son of
"King of the Poutlsce" from n daulhlor of Pen.
tine Clotllilde [In liol 2nd. A few bull calves for
min. '1‘. \V. Sprsgue. it. 2. Battle Creek. Mich.

 

 

MUSOLFF BROS.’ HOLSTEIN .

We are. now. booking orders.tor.
young bulls from King Pieter Segrs
Lyons 170606. All from A. R.. 0. dams
with credible records We test"a.nnu.
ally for tuberculosis. Write for pric-
es: and further information.

Musloﬂ’ Bros., South Lyons, Michigan

_   LAST ADVERTISED SOLD.
but have one more for sale. Nice-
i:: marked. straight back line, a fine individual.

 

 

 

 

  
  
  
   

   
   
 

 
  
  
 

huge gammy ’ellow with all:t kaing of”: large

bu. '. Jonson-eon o'nood. no:

a" “A‘Nﬂmlﬂ‘tﬂeﬂ.
ﬂow

‘00“: II“ the date of my "we stock sale In
Michigan. If you are considering a sale ad-
vise us ct once and we wlll claim the date
for you. Address. Lm Stock Editor. M. a.
F.. Mt. cuman ,
June 30. Hohteioe. hit-child Farms.
' ~ClreﬁtorﬁolilhMlcb.
v A a. C. limoc-Jeruye .0. 1“. Foster,
Pavilion, Sch.
Oct. 26. Poland mice. Wesley Bile”
Joule. Mi
Oct. 27. Poland (minus. Boone-Hill 00.,
~‘Blnnelnrd. lich.
Oct. 328, Chime. E. R. Leonard,
'83. Louis. Mich. , ..
4  ' Polsnd Ghinas. Clyde Fisher,
8:. Louisa h. l _ 1 /
Oct. 3 . Poland (him; (has Wane! &. -
In. Ithaca.
Oct. 31. Poland Chi-nan. Brewbaker e.
bu. Elsie. lick.

1

 

 

.. . Writes” em imam“ this

 

IIA'I'OII IIERD’

ism; l... mm Tested)
YPSILANTI, MICE.

arms rem suits ;

Yearlings and younger, out
of choice advanced registry
«lame and King Korndyke Ar-
tzs Vale. Own dam 34.16 lbs.
butter in 7 days; average 2'
nearest demo, 37.61. a near-
est 33.93, 20 nearest. 37.83.

 

 

 

BAILEY max FARII
'mluurn, meow.

Increase Your Production at the
Price of $60

Bull born May 3rd. Sire a grandson of
John Hem-meld Lad 61 A. R. 0. Dumb-
tere. Dam a. year old granddaughter of
a 21 lb. cow tint will be tested 'at next
froshenlm. We hope just ﬁnished testing -
2 cows. One made’over 30 Run, the other
Elude 27.65 from 7.79 he. of milk in 7

ye.

JOHN BAILEY
319 Atkinson Ave.
V DETROIT, MICHIGAN

 

 

 

 

REGISTERED ROLSI'EIIS

WM- GRIFFIN. C. 5.. Moll,

Bulls From an Accredited Herd

HILL CHEST ran-e- WIS“ -NOIIOAI
RISING-BURST 10W DENSITY om
195683

Satin-We
m

 

born Nov. 25. 191.15. in oﬂerad for Sale. “is m .

in by Johann. Gonemxih Chaplain 80575 (29
.A. R._O. doughnut, two 30 an, 9 Above 20 lbs.)
who 18 by Colanth Johanna Champion 45674
90 A. R. '0. daughters) a non of Golanths “E‘s
Johann, 35.22. the only cow to ever hold at one
time ll mrld’s records- in every division from
one day to a year. Eh den. Undumod Diniple
2nd 1394.24, 27.33 lbs. boner, 485.30 lbe milk.
new per cent {at (.‘I-D, is by Duke Ormeby
Heinrich De Io! 44134 (10 A. B. 0. doubters.
80 lbe.) and out of Lindenwood Dimple
She bee 76 per cent the use breed-
iu an Lindean Hope, 80.81. Write for price
and other information.
EDWARD I. BENSON a SONS. lumen. lien.

.OF BOTH ‘

 m so:

 

NICE STRAIGHT LIGHT COLORED IULL
«if hour Fehmry let. aired lly Flint Hen-
urvold Led, whose two newest dome avenge
32.66 lbs. butter nod 185.4!) lbs. hilt In 7 dc”.

Dun,e2(lb.dnuhbrofneonotl’ontiecl)e
3 Nijlandcr 35.13 lbs. butter and 750 lbs. milk in
Thy; ertoforpdeeenndeanded

L. c. KETREI
Hint. Id!

 

36 pound son. of KING OF THE
PONTIAC’S Head‘s our Herd

Severn) 30 pound cows a under Federal 'Sup-
“vision, good bull calves and a few bred heifers
for sale.

HILL CREST FARI. Ortonviile.
or writ:
John P. Hehl, 18‘ ﬁlm“ 3L. Detroit. Mich,

Mich.

 

 

OUR HERD SIRE

MODEL KIIIG SEGIS GLISTA

His sire aiso lb. son of Lakeside King Scull

Albsn e 0..
His dam. Gusto Fcnelh. 32.37 lb.

ller dam, Slim Emdjne, “5.98 lb.

His three nearest done Iver-(e over 38 ‘lbs.
smi bio iorty win nearest tented rehﬁves avenge
over 30 lbs. butter in seven days. We offer one
of his arms reedy {or service.

GRAND RIVER STOCK FARMS

Gorey J. Spencer, Owner. Eaton Rapids. Mich.

BIO ROOK HOLSTEIIIS

Herd. Headed by Johan Pauline De
Kol Lad 236554
a son of Flint, Hengerveld Lad
and Johan Pauline DeKol twice
30 lb. cow and dam of Pauline
DeNijlander (Mich. Champion
two years old.)
Bull calves from
28 pounds.
Roy E. Fickies,

 

 

dams up to

I Chcsam'ng, Mich.

 

 

r...“—

_/

 

l

 

 

 

. 0‘ ROLL DAL'ES
rmr‘nesim. II

, REGISTERED GUERNSEYS

 

 

 

 

 

Recliner“!

m men voua sun ML! ﬂow »
miffn w‘ﬁz mm. c?“ m It I" Met Imminent- ut me send you A real pod:
Iold coon. line of better breed

nanny 1'. runs. em. em. , J-  wrunm. North Adams, "lob.
SHORTHOBN , JERSEYS
; o . . _
SHORTHOBIS w, M Highland Farm-Jerseys
1)....“ mm ‘ " 8 u“ “m' ‘1' ""m' ‘ Oﬂerr Bulls of serviceable
‘ - ._ . : . - me. o! B. O. M.
«1‘ men. Imam m u “at u in Site and». Don’s. with high notion recent.
r.nmvvnmm.m {*0 uh Wﬂam nan-tamo-

 

Tlt emmcmmomm
ewAm-hﬁonmeemelrhneeh and!
mm WWW.“
Md; Addre-
H;L.Mlee..lue.ﬂlet.

In In” 00. mm IRIED-
Wen have mock hr ado. both milk

3

 

m.
'Mwm’u ‘eecretu'y
0 )
PRRNK BAILEY. W W.
I “LE—POLLED DURHAM IUL‘LS AID

rd Down Bane.
om J. A. MOAMO. Ink. lieu.

 

Shorlhoms at Famers’ Prices
FOUR SCOTCH TOPPED HULL CALVES

 

 

under one year old. are all mm and
oi .
eh cu FAIRVIEW FAR.
F. E. Boyd ‘ am. Home“
 ONLV A FEW LEFT
AT 0L9 PRICE.
Wm. J. BELL, Rose City, Mich.
FOR SALE

mo REG. SHOR‘I'RORR BULL.
ready for service one . om
heifer. .80“! m teeter! Writ.

bemulin .
M. I. IlALLSTED. 0mm. Nick.

on. one m Dill our
Inn a but" undue-in On.
a c. RUIEI. m was.

 

 

Ur
HAT DO YOU WANT.

I represent {1
BHORTHORN breeders. (In in! in _
truth will: best mm --or beef et‘rm'ns. in“: all :
Central W an Association. lie-H
Bridu. mm "

 

IoRIdueHorddI‘eeWMM-

fers fornicate“: helical! 7310!. old. Alec 2 ‘;
Eu...

younger ona. J. E. TAMI? Inoon. lick.

 

 

HEW
Hardy Northern Bred Homicide

.Eaunm FAIRFAX “MI. "I‘D OF NERO
.20 this year‘s calves for sale. 10 bulb and 1.9

heiien.
JOHN MGREGOII. Mellie. M

REGISTERED HEREFORD CATTLE

KING REPEATER HEADS OUR REID
We still. have eight good bulls and some heif-
ere {or sale. Gone and see then.
IAIIOII STOCK FAR.
Tony 3. m. Prop.

 

 

 

Marion. Itch.

1:0 HEREFORD came. ALI.
know or 10 or 16 loads tom
Shorthorn and Angus steers 5 to 10 0 Ion.
Owners 3 to sell. Will half
commission. C. F. Boll. Feirﬂe d. owl.

 

MEADOW BROOK HEREFORDS

Bob Fairfax 495027 at head of herd. Regin-
tered‘ stock, either sex, polled .or horned. mostly
any age. Come and look them over.
..EARL c. McGARTY. Had Me.

ANGUS

l The Most Proﬁtable Kind. ’

o inning. A our land of a dairy heifer!
from LENAWEE COUNTY'S heevicst milk Dro-
dueers to include o pure bred ANGUS tail of the
most extreme beef type forcombination beef end
dairy farming.

Car lot shipments assembled at GLENWOOD
FARM for prompt shipment.

Me odl exphined in SMITH'S PROFITABLE
STOCK FEEDING. 400 pages illustrated.

GEO. B. SMITH. Addison. Mich.
BARTLETTS’PURE only ABERDEEN-
, ANGUS CATTLE AND 0.I.0.
Swine m ri and are priced right. Corre-

t
wondenoe solﬁgted and inspection .lnvl
GIRL BARTLETT. Lawton. Mich.

‘ GUERNSEYS

UERNSEYS FOR SALE.. 1 BULL, ST. AUS-
tell Sultan, sire Longwater Prince Churmsnt
(18714) 4 A. R. daughters, 416 lb. fat at 2 1—2

Michigan. .

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

years old. Dam. Da‘gna of Hillhurst'(35989) A.
R. 548 lb. fat et 2 1-2 yrs. old. 1 bull calf. 8
mos. old ‘of similar breeding. Also a few ﬁne

heifers of the above bull. It will pay you in
inv he. Prices and ,gedizree on opplication.
MORGAN BR08., 1, Alleaan, Mich. '

 

E. N. BALL,
FELIX WITT
One or the other of the above we]

Business Farmer.

slid
I'D“-
‘M work

v crowed-Lela.

l—lmown experts will visit all live-etock mice of
' m In of The Man

importance in Micbinn, northern Ohio and Indiana. as the exclusive

LIVE srocx‘rmw MEN  ‘ ‘

They are both honest and competent men of, standing h ﬁch- Inei II 
will reps-cent eny‘mder of this weekly, at eny sale, lentil; Ht

Their eerviee roe _
--eroiuelvely 4n 

 
 
 

Cattle and Sheep
Horses and Swine

. . c o . . . . . n n . . . n g u e .

 

 
  
  

   
  
  

 
   
 
 

   

  

 

 

‘.My 1920 crops will he sired

,NO TYPE

. : thither}? J{or

left bred for
-, H.

 3;:

' mam “no real. m. Mich- R a.
 “My an» «ink gum «and Iai-
' . Y

"1" r‘f‘ﬁ’ﬁm Rm“olm”°‘. mm". \

NOV! '01"! Jim” “30 WITH 0";

' of our hot.
FRANK . IOIIIIO‘I‘OI, Ion“. Mich.
' T

 

 

AYBSEIBES
MIA); SALE
REGISTERED AYRSIIIRES

inni June 12th., for 30 days we will eel]
bug-y‘ﬂt I: service for 3100. Bull cslves and
heifer culvee for

 

 

 

POLAND CHINA

BIG BOB MASTODON

.' 8h: In W of the world. Eh Dan's
«in wu nd'chomion at low: m Mr Get
:u gum-toe hook-
.inctorden now. when all com,th
GIOMMMWMMEG Dish.
.er'os Giant. .3 bone and 7 saws. Will eel] open
:or 'W so: '8 t. furrow. 10 BIG OB.
c. E. “an”. iron .

 

LARGE TV .
IAMchoioehed.lmlforsele. Abhnﬁ
l‘“ E“ aﬁc  near;

b ’3“; "
'g'nm’un by [he em on . .nm,
.BEAU‘I'Y’S CHOICE In OBARGE BUD, by BIG
'ORANGE A.
Free livery to visitom
Wm. J. “ERIE.
mm. Mich.

 

DIE ‘I’VPE P0-
hnd m

Gilt: cll eokl.
Giant Chusmun
‘INo. 324131, sired by Glen C neuron and Art’s
Progress No. 377041

. A. o. GREGORY, Ionic,
‘ HERE'S sacrum coon

MT no TYPE P. 0. III NOR.
1’“ L" mmbredbonrmfmltrhmy
em.

:VIALIIIII' ALLEY

 

Get inner
herd. 1:1 uncommon“ Cone undue

mid «not a The. been
,;In entries: I“. g? Lore Chum
. 0 ‘ a u I ,
“WWI: E LIVINGSTON. Penna. Mich.

 

POLAND GI-IIIAS
WITH QUALITY

Nine hi! tilts out or! litters of relcven and
l .

E. fvERANTS. .sc. Johnsuﬂllch.

FOUR cuotce SPRING AND FALL
bonnie". A'fewextnnleexilte
April furrow.

O. BWARTI. Icheolmﬂ. Mich.

' T. P. 0. me ILL SOLD. ORDERS
'Bbooled for but pine It warring time from
 champion herd. Visitors always welcome.
: E. R. LEONARD, R 3. St. Louis. Illch.

j "I TYPE P. c. sows 0F came: BREED-
lning, .bred' to Big Bone Bone Boulder No. 726,-
672 for Sept. furrow. Spring pigs either sex.
Healthy and growthy. Prices reason: ie.

' L. w. BARNES A DON, Iyron, Hell.

IRED 80" SALE,
For particular:
Amen. Mich.

'LSP

6 TH ANNUAL P. 0.
* Karel! 13. 3920.
w. J. NIGELGHIW.

in Type Poland Chinas. Am offering tbree boar
Bpigs at weaning time at renewable price. Rez-
istered in buyers name.

grimed by Big Long Bob.‘
, . d and. m I
\\ rite f‘gogeemu 8:. Charles, W0”-

Am Oﬂering Large Type Poland cm». Saws.
I bred to F’s Orange at reasonable prices. Also

’ Writ or call.

“u 830E FISHER. R8, St. Louis. Mlqh.
. T. P. 0. FOR SALE. SPRING PICS OF
both sex. ~ {sired by Wiley's King'llob Vibe Bl;

Smooth kind. -
JOHN D. WILEY. Wit, Mich.

 

The  Breeders.

advertise in The Michigan Bus-
.lness Farmer. Irwin ,be worth
your while-£0 read the livestock
eavertieemente in every issue
to teen,  you. whether

  
 

Elmo £0.98 ' 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

  
 
  
  
   
 
 
 


  
 
  

 

 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
  

 

 

, ,, :1... T.
m.‘ Piaf ““ sni- “3"”
 c ce, a- ‘ so 0
’ .ibampionot. the world in 1918.: Also have a
. latter of _,7 ' s, 5 sows and 2 boars, sired by
Prospect Ya k. a son' of the $40,000 Yankee,
that are sure Humdingers. .

F. T. HART. 8t.-Louls. Mich._

 sired» by Hart's--
ck Price. grand

 

 

IG TYPE POLAND CHINA RRED GILTS.
one fell boar, spring pigs both sex, and tried
sows while they last.
HOWLEY BROS.. Merrill, Mich.

 

ANYTHING

new.

cans ALSO sows AND PIGS;

on hand.

and Ox
. and a square deal.
Boned. Portland. Mich.

over 100 head
erons. Holstein
a reasonable p

JOHNC.

‘ FAREWELL LAKE FARM

large type P. C. Have a fine lot of spring pigs
by Chneman’s Image 2nd. The Outpost and

 

 

 

King's Giant. I will sell King's Giant No. 327.—
749. He is a real sire.‘ He was first prize year-
RAMSDELL. Hanover.

L. .POLAND ,CHINAS. Ochre Untied for

tron.
ELDRED A. CLARK. St. Louis. Mlch.. R 3
OLD FOR SALE. ADDRESS .
t C. H. INHI‘I'E Pontlrz. Mich.

ling hear at Jackson Co. fair. 1910.
Mich.
spring pigs from Linc I:qu 8
3 BOARS AND'S SOWB 8 WEEKS
A. F. D. No.

 

 

DUBOCS

     
  
 

Aho reg ereh-\
lords. Everything sold at

 
  
 
 

 Sells Duroc‘s' Aug? 851;}

 

\

. . '-Pev|iion. Mich.

F. FOSTER. Mgr. _,

- s'BE RKSHIREL

LARGE ENGLISH RECORDED BERKSHIRES.
Bred gilts and spring pigs for sale.
PRIMEVAL FARM. 03:60. Mich.

"BERKSIIIRES

lean streak and not so much blubber. A
choice sow pigs to offer. splendid individuals.
ARIA A. WEAVER. Crimping. Mich.

 

ARE QUALITY

few

 

' GREGORY FARM nunxsmnus FOB
profit. Choice stock for sale. Write your
wants. W. S. Corsa. White Hall. Ill.

CHESTER WHITES
CHESTER WHITES SW“ “98 In Pairs or

tries from A-l mature
stock at reasonable prices. Also a. few bred Gilts
for May farrow F. W. Alexander.

 

 

 

Vassar, Mich.

HESTER WHITE AND O. I. 0. SWINE. SOME,

good March pigs for sale. Good bloodlines.
Will ship C. O. D. and register free.
J. A.‘MILLER. Swartz. Creek, Mlch.

 

EGIOTERED CHESTER WHITE PIG: FOR
sale at pricesthat will interest you. Either
m. Write today.
RALPH OOSENS. Levering, Mich.

HAMPSHIRES

DOAR PIGS LEFT.
orders for spring pigs, $15.00

Mlch.

 

 

"0 FA

st 8 weeks old.

5 for ‘catalol.

HOGS”
equipped with that delicious

BOOKING ‘

   

 

 

 

   

 
  
  

rates for 18 times or longer.

   
 

Advertising Department. Mt. Clemens.

 

Advertisements Inserted under this heading at 3,0 cents per line. per
Write out what you have to otter and send it
it In typo, send proof and quote rates by return mail.
Michigan.

issue. ‘ Special
in. we will put
Address The Michigan lesions Fm.”

 

 

 

  
  

 

 

POULTRY

PULLEIS

White and imwn Leghorn and White Rock
Pullets, 8 weeks and 18 weeks old, ready for im-
mediate delivery.

We will sell one. two and four weeks old
chicks to be shipped not more than 100 nulea

Let us live You a description of this stock.‘

All of these I’ullets and Chicks are fine birds
of excellent growth. American high
class English White Leghorns.

TATE FARMS ASSOCIATION
Desk 2. Kalamazoo. Michigan

ORPINGTONS AND LEGHORNS

Two great breeds for proﬁt. Write today for
free catalogue of hatching eggs, baby chicks and
breeding stock.

CYCLE HATCHER COMPANY. 149 Phiio Dido.

and extra

 

Elmira. N. Y.
  MAMMOTH BRONlE TURKEYS.
Toulouse Geese. White Pekin
ducks, either sex, 84 each at once. Old ducks
weigh 10

ads.
CHASE STOCK FARM. Mariette. Mich.

 

LEGHORNS

 

   
    
  

Spring pigs by Welt's

Orion, First Sr. Yearling

Detroit, Jackson. Gd. Rapids and minaw. 1919
Phillips’Bros, Riga, Mich

 IgAR PIGS SIRED IY SECOND
0 er. 20 st 10 weeks. Paper furnished.
GEO. w. BEHNKE. Gladwin. Mlch.. 'Socord m.

    

DUROO JERSEYS. FALL BOARS. WEIGHT
200 Ilia each.

Sir d b 800 lb. b .
Priced reasonable. 6 y a 0“
C. E. DAVIS A SON. Ashley. Mich.

PEACH HILL_FARMIDuroo sows and gilt: sired

by Proud Principal. Romeo Cherry King Brook-

water Gold Stamp 7th and Rajah out of dams

 gran ﬁlmithed [EincipalGhIW Bred to
ion g an a' h on- Col.

INWOOD IROS.. Rouse. y

DURIIG JERSEY FALL BOABS

V I ‘ sired by Orion
Cherry King'Ool. 2nd.~. ﬁrst aged boar at Detroit
in 1919. These are growthy and the right type
priced to sell.

W. C. TAYLOR. Milan. Mich.

nuroc JemySows and Gilt: bred for Aug. and
Sept. farrow. 1.000 lb. herd boar.
J08. SOHUELLEN. Weidmon. Mlch.

 0F BREEDING SIZE AND
C.

QUALITY.
L. POWER. Jerome. ich.
Uffc slows and gllts bred to Walt's King 82949
w1o ias sired more prise winnin i
state fairs in the last 2 years than gm? she? 151:1.-
roe board. Newton Barnbart. St. Johns. Mich.

 

Mich.

 

 

 

 

W. A. EASTWOOD. Chesaninc,
A FEW BRED GILTS LEFT

 and full hour pigs from new
b

lines.
JOHN w. SNYDER. St. Johns. Mlch.. R 4

RAIIPSIIIRES

Am all sold out on sows and gilts bred for
spring fart-owing. Have a few lows and grits bred
for June and July farrowing that are good and
priced right. Spring boar pigs at $15 ea. at.8
weeks old. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call or write

GUS” THOMAS. New Lothrop. Mich.

O. I. C.

o. I. C. Boar Pigs. Eight Weeks oid. Sired by
Mountain Giant. Reg. in your name. $20 each.
HARLEY L. FRY. North Adams. Mlch.

I. C. GILTS WEIGHING 200 to 218 LBS.

in breeding flesh bred for March. April and
Kay (arrow. Guaranteed safe in (km. I will re-
place- any proving otherwise to your satisfaction
or refund purchase price in full. Have a few Oc-
tober boar pigs ready for spring seruce that are
right priced to sell. Herd cholera invmuned .by
double treatment 1". O. Burgess R3. Mason, Mach.

0 l. C. AND CHESTER WHITE SWINE
Choice sow pigs of March farrow. Bloodlines
of the Grand Champions Prince Big Bone and
C. C. Schoolmaster. Write your wants to
CLARE V. DORMAN. Shaver. Mlch.

C.

 

 

R SALE—REGISTERED D. I. BRED

cows and sucking pin.
JOHN ODOERFER. Mariette.

o. I. C.'e—-O Choice young boars, March and
April pigs at weaning time.
CLOVER LEAF STOCK FARM. Mich.

MUD-WAY-AUSH-KA FARM
offers 0. I. 0. spring pigs, also special summer
prices on breeding stock in White Wyandottes,
larl' Rocks. White Chinese Geese and its
Runner Ducks.

DIKE O.

Mlch.

Monroe.

 

No more eggs this season.
MILLER. Dryden, Mlch.

 

 EXTRA GOOD MARCH BOAR PIGS
by Defender's Cherry King from
Brookwater-bred sows, $25 to 835. Registered.
E. E. CALKINS. Ann Arbor

 sofas: GILES AND anooo cows

0 :1 ages. ows bred or 0 en. New-
ton & Blank, Hill Crest F‘anns. Perl-Imam. Mich.
Farm 4 miles straight south of Middleton.

0R SALE: ONE DUROC IOAR FROM
llrookwator breeding stock. Choice spring pigs.
JOHN CRONENWETT, Carleton, Mich.

DUROC BOARS {vigi‘ma’é‘wtzcﬁ
ready for service. G . <
50“. Mich. eo B. Smith. Addi

 

 

 

MEADOWVIEVV FARM REG. DUROC JERSEY
hogs. Spring pigs for sale.
J. E. MORRIS. Farmington, Mlch.

oAKLAIIDS PREMIER oHIEF

Herd Boar—Reference only—No. 129219
1919 Clncago International
4th Prize .Ir. Yearling
A few spring pigs left at $25
' BLANK & PO - R
Potterviile. Mich.

MAPLE LgWN bFARM REG. DUROO JERCEY

swme. s ows red to Model Che Kill 1001
for Aug. and Sept. furrow. Write mrzyyoutgwanm
VERN N. TOWNS. N O. Eaton Mae-Rich.

   S'RING "a.

EITHER SEX
Can furnish stock not akin. Abe pearl

 

ing sows. Will breed for early fall Into“. 
isfaction guaranteed.
F. HEIMS A SON. Davina. Itch.
Spring bred sows all IoId. Havo‘

 good Sept. pigs. both sex. Illpd

Liberty Defender 3rd. from Col. bred

will be bredto anHOrion boar for Sept.
H. G. KEESLER. Cassopoiis. Mich.

O. I. c. SWINE—HY HERD CONTAINS THE
blood lines of the most noted ‘herd. Can furnish
you stock at "live and let live" prices.

A. J. GORDEN. Dorr. Mlch.. R 3.

SHEEP 

I AM OFFERING FOR FALL DELIVERY HIGH

Class registered Shropshire yearling ewes and

rams. Flock established 1890.
- C. LEMEN, Dexter,

FOR SIIROPSIIIRE...‘€‘.£?.‘Z§3 “31%?
write or call on
ARMSTRONG BROS.. R 3. Fowlerviiie, Mlch.

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

Everything sold out. both ewes and rams.
ceding

 

 

Mlch.

I am hr 0 ewes to "Stroman 209" an
excellent big boned type rem lamb that
1118- October 1. Booking orders

weighed 176
for 1920

CLARK U. HAIRE. Witt Branch. MIGR-

 

ANT A SHEEP? Lot American Hampshire
8 Annotation send you a dandy booklet
with l‘nt of breeders. Write COMFORT A.
TYLER. Seo’y. 10 Woodland Ave.. Detroit. Mich.

nuts to nor was BRED sum or ‘
“ransom "lama-:33
. #2.. goth.» ' Iﬂud $11“th
. ,‘. . Shropshire. Polled— shines.

 PARSONS.GrandLedge.Mich. 3.0

    

 

 

 

 

 I CANNOT SELL YOU ANY MORE

ewes until next fall. To some grown up,
I can oler 10 very good young Shropshire ewes
that will lamb in April for 8400. Their lambs
mm to me should not more than .purchue

next fall.
Abe 10 mighty nice ewe lambs {or 8350.
e and see» . i ‘
ROPE-KON FARMS. Goldwater. Mich.

 

E OFFER A FEW WELL-GRID SELECTI-
'cd spring Duroe Boers. the rod low and
(hits in season. Cal} or write
McNAUGHTON A ORDYOI. IL Louis. .5.

DummOJLTS on. 10:“! AUGUST FAR-
.tnol line's ' new man. .

' . all, bred I
guts and I 

 

 

March. April and Kahligrs.
If you want a .310 P. sow. guaranteed right in

 

PET sroc

us- usnu—vooue no can noon,
“1W loud for prices.
3 u IAIIITRY. souls-n. was.

 

O. I. C. SOWS FOR SALE .

ONE OF THE BEST HERDO IN MIOHIGAN

I ship 0. O. 1)., pay

    

    

‘ i

menu-ee- r «

 

 

s o w masons

LAGE HEAVY LAYING STOCK
July chicks $160 each. Parcel post paid.
Guaranteed delivery alive and lively.
Choice hens and pullets very reasonable.

V. A. MORSE. lonia. Mlch.

 

EARLY
excel-

INGLE COMB BUFF LEGHORNS.
hatched Cockerels. Farm range from
lent laying stock.
J. W. WEBSTER.

FOR SALE—HENS. S. C. WHITE LEGHORNS

from heavy laying strain. (lulled by experts

for utility, $2. $3 and $4 each.
HARRY TER HAAR. Iceland. Mlch.,

Bath. Mich.

 

R3.

 

WHITE LEGHORNS
Circular free.
Mlch.. R 4

RABOWSKE'S 8. C.
Stock and on“! for as
LEO GRABOWSKE.

le.
Merrill.

 

 

W Y ANDOTTE _

Silver Laced Golden and White Wyandottes.
Eggs from best quality. 01in $1.75 per 15; $3.25
per 30 by parcel post prepaid. Buy from old re-
liable. Clarence Browning. R2. Portland, Mich.

 

 

White Wyandottes, Dustin's Strain. culled by ex-

perts for utility, size and color. Eggs 15 for

$2.00, 50 or more 100 each. by mail prepaid.
VANO FARM. Hartford. Mlch.

 

 

LANGSHAN

BLACK LANGSHANS OF QUALITY
.Bred for type and color since 1912. Started
from pen headed by Black Bob. First prize cock
at International show at Buffalo, Jan. 1912. Eggs
$3.50 per setting of 15. Winter. laying strain.
DR. CHAS. W. SIMPSON. Wobborviilo. Mlch.

BABY CHICKS

O. K. Chicken Hatchery

THOROUGHBRED DAY OLD CHICKS
Barred Plymouth Rox.
R. I. Reds.
S. G. Brown and White Leghorns.
2! chicks. $8.25; 50 chicks. $11; 100 chicks.

$20.00
. c. MORNINGSTAR. Prop.
Box 263. Phone 115. Fenton.

 

 

 

 

Mich.

   Rose and Single Comb
' R. I. Reds, Barred

Plymouth Rocks. Superior color. Prolific layers.

by parcel plat and safe delivery guar-

Illustrated catalog free.

INTERLAKES FARM .Box 4. Mlch.

 

Lawrence.

 

CHICKS—CHICKS

10,00 chicks every Tuesday in June and July.
Grand laying strain. S. C. White Leghorns at
$14.25 per 100: $7.50 for 50 postpaid. Full

count. strong, lively chicks. 'Also Anconas at
$16.25 per 100: $8.50 per 50. Satisfaction
guitrlanteed. Eleventh season. Order direct. Free
ca a 0g.

HOLLAND HATCHERY. R 7. Holland, Mich.

 

hicks, Leghorns, Minorcas. Spanish, Houdans
'(laniliines. Reds, Rocks. Orpingtons. Brahmas.
\Vyandottcs. Tyrone Poultry Farm. Fenton. Mich.-

  From record laying purebred

stock. White Leghorns,

lirown. Leghorns, $17 per 100. Ancouas, $18.

Postpaid. Live arrival guaranteed. (,‘atalog free. ‘
SUPERIOR HATCHERY. Clinton. Mo.

HATCHIN}; EGGS

Fun 'sALE mama EGGS

FROM A HEAVY LAY-
nig strain of S. C. It. I. Reds at $2.00 per set-
ting of 15 ecu. $10.00 per 100.
ti Stock of excellent type and
n

 

 

 

 

quality at all
res.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
F. HEIMS l: SON. Davison. Mich.
$9 PER 100.

75c each.
Mich.

 

H I. RED HATCHING EGGS.
Smial eggs from 300 cm: hen.
W. H. FROHM. R 2. Mt. Clemens.

 

. C. Leghorn Eggs, from Kulp and Gale Strains
$1.50 for 15, $8 per 100. M. Pekin duck
eggs, $1.50 for 8. Mrs. Claudia Iletts. Hillsdalo.

 

BOSE COMB RHODE ISLAND RED EGGS FOR
hatching stonk. guaranteed. $2 for 15.
Wm. J. RUSCHE. Alpine. Mlch..

 

OSE COMB BROWN LEGHORN EGGS FOR
sade. One fifty per ﬁfteen eggs.
Flemish Giant rabbits that are giants. Quality

guaranteed.
E. HIMEBAUGH. Goldwater. Mlch.

 

ROM COOK'S BEST: 8.
and black Orpington egls. $4
GHABOWSKE BROS” R 4.

C. BUFF. WHITE
per 15: $7 for 30
Merrill, Mich.

 

EGGS FOR HATCH-
$2 per 15. prepaid.

HITE WYANDOTTES:

ing from selected layers.
Pens. $16 to $25.

FRANK DeLONG. R3. Three Rivers, Mich.

  maturing stock from heavy

laying strain. 32 per 15. 5 per 45 by prepaid
parcel post. R. G. Kirby. R1. East Lansing, Mich.

"ATOHING EGGS—PLYMOUTH BOOKS (ALL
varieties) White Wyandotte. Ancons. and Ron-
en Bucks. Cshlog 2c.

SHERIDAN POULTRY Mich.

 

£008 from YIOOI‘OU! early

 

YARDS. Sheridan.

 

 

BROWN LEGHORN EGGS
$1.00 for 13.
Mich.

C. AND R. C.
for hatching winter layers.
EVA TRYON. Jerome,

 

S. C. Black Minorcas exhibition stock Northrup
strain Eggs for Hatching $3 for 13. $12 per 100.
Case Poultry Yard. C. J. Deerkick. Vassar. Mich.

~+every
breeder

Can use M. B. F.’s
Breeders‘ Directory
to good advantage

What have YOU
to offer?

 

 

 

YOU \VAN’I‘ THIS \VEEKLY IN YOUR MAIL BOX EVERY

SATURDAY, BECA USE—

-—-——it brings you all the news of
hiding the plain facts.

—--it tells you when and where to

what you raise!

Michigan farming; never

get the best prices for

—-—-it is a practical paper written b
y Michigan men close
i the sod. who work with their sleeves rolled up! to
—— t has always and will continue to fl
ght every bottle 1
the interest. of the business farmers of our home stat?
no matter whom else it helps or hurts! '

Ono Subscrip-
tion price
to All!

0’ ado-e m or my. ’

Name

'1

1.

County 
I

ONE YEAR........1
THREE YEARS...
YEARS.....

MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER. Mt. Clemens. Mich.
Dear Friends—Keep M. B. F. coming to the address below for

...........y0mforwhichlenclosoherewithS............In.mon-

.0. onecoco-Io..00Dutch-IoooolbotlooleoeesoeoRo Fe DD'Nooooeeg

'. , .   ,_,stai:e.‘. . . . . . .  . . . . 

No Premiums.
No tree-list. but werth
more than we ask.

 

address label from the front/c

   
    

 '21: till“. is'agrenevtaimhrssn 1? €¥§,é"eiic.l°3°_ the. 7.91.19
diver cﬂthis‘iesue to avail?" ‘ . '

      

 
  

 

.7
n...

  
  
  


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Built in a specialized fac-
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What the bulk of the peo-
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You owners of small cars
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Call for the Firestone 31/2.

 

non skid

2.5.9

Gray Tube $37.5

 

 

 

