
  

 
 
 
  

 

—‘--?4~.-; -. .1,»

- _ “An Independent it
Fe 1‘- me r’s We e kip-Own ed a nd ,
‘ .‘Ed’ited in Michigan ‘

..__.‘_ __.-._.
Jay...” -v......~.......~_....._-»

 
 

    
  
 

 

1 VOLTVIII, No. 47 -_ '

l

 

 

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1921

 
  

$1 PER YEAR

 

 

 

 

 

L“ fertilizer supplies.

: present nitrate plant in the
_ H . agriculture rather than as a
. Amoney-makin'g proposition.
“ " ‘ ‘COming as this
does after the terriﬁc strug--
1 . ' gles ,of the various farmers
, , “ " . _ Organizations at Washington
, , last fall and winter in their
5 , _ efforts tosget congress to
F i' T make some disposition of
, " p } f this plant that would pre-
. ' ' ' V vent, its falling into the hands
‘ g ' of a giant combine waiting to
31 " e ' ‘ seize on to this new method
' of making . fertilizers and
thereby eiiecting a virtual-
monopoly ofs-the fertilizer
business for all time to come,
farmer leaders at Washing-
ton feel that this plan offers ,
= the solution that they have _

 

L'. '21

 

. , -. , . been (looking for. q
' " Farmers organizations are
also much pleased at this
vindication of their conten-
tion that nitrogen production
at Muscle Shoals is a real
commercial proposition.
' SecretaryiHoover of the De-
partment: of Commerce said
in transmitting the proposal
to the Secretary of War:
“MnFord’s offer does prove
what the. public associations.
_, _ , _ » have contended—that the
$1“: ‘ ‘ . - completionof this project has
a commercial Value.”
This statement is music to

 

who have; steadfastly . stood
by this proposition ever since

. the armistice made the", plant. .
‘ no longer needed " 1; for" .war'
purposes.

  
  
 

  
 
 
  
 

.7.

" themsen'es » ‘of;

 
 

 

  

 

 

proposal ,

As.

the ears ,ofgthe farm leaders

[ , ; . ‘It has been made th
_ thepsmost vitriolic attacks ever » mashed this development.
m against. any" public Works...andat10ne’¥tim§i '
[last winter ~many congressmcnf seXpressedz

great foundation for. the development

6

fern .7. .37.,‘03 sessions T1349, American Cymenid Company. the
‘- the plant account— ’ United States Steel COrPQWtion, a combine,

" ”its ii Bis plates
.. ' _,zona;n;sk

, Ford , Offers to Buy Government Nitrate Plants
i‘ I ' i I If U. S. Accepts Offer for Muscle Shoals Plants, Ford Will Manufacture Cheap

_' ENRY FORD ’S proposal to the Unit--
, :1 . ed States government to take
V and operate the immense Muscle Shoals, Al-
- kabama, nitrate plants and power proper-
ties, when carefully analyzed is seen to be
most favorable to the farmers interest and
holds out great premise for future cheap
. In fact it may be said
{that ' Mr. Ford leeks upon the money in-
. vested in the experimental development of
i .9" v ’ new fertilizers " and the operation of the

Fertilizers for Farmers

By 0. M. KILE, Washington, D. 0.
(Exclusive to Michigan Business Farmer)

OVCI‘

millions, and the. big workings at Nitro,
West Virginia, at similar terriﬁc losses,
while several nitrate plants in Ohio, Vir-
gina and other states were sold for junk, it
is easy to see how close was the escape of
the Muscle Shoals plant from a similar fate
and how fortunate are the farmers in se-
curing a purchaser and operator who will

light of a
of

tilizer proﬁts and retain a monopoly would
be gone. Their tactics were to run down the
plant as much as possible ,and then when
the farmers had been worn out, to slip in
and pick it up for little or nothing.

It is plain therefore that these opposing
interests will make every effort to keep Mr.
Ford from securing control of the plant if
it can possibly be done. A good start has
been made but strong support on the part
of the farmers will be necessary to overcome
the opposition sure to center on this pro-
posal of Mr. Ford’s.

 

 

Mr. Ford’s Proposal for Muscle Shoals Development

-' ‘,~. 1. That the government complete
’ I: both the Wilson dam and dam No. 3,
just above the Wilson dam, at an esti-

mated cost: of $28,000,000. This in-

cludes the installation of locks, turbines,
power houses and all power equipment.

2. The Ford Company will then lease
this entire power outﬁt for a period of
100 years and pay the government an-
nually a sum equal to six per cent of the
$28,000,000 and in addition a sum each
year sufficient to extinguish within the
100 years the entire cost of the dams, es-
timated to be in the neighborhood of
$40,000,000. Mr. Ford also makes cer-
tain proposals to arrange foil the main-
tenance, and upkeep of the structures
during the period of the lease.

' 3. The Ford Company offers to pur-
chase all the nitrate plants, equipment,
lands, quarries and other property in
connection with the plants for a sum set
at $5,000,000.

4. To convert and operate the large
nitrate plant (No. 2) for the production
of fertilizers of various kinds, and to
keep it in readiness to produce nitrates
for explosives for the government in case
of war.

5. In order to insure that fertilizers
will be produced at lowest possible costs
and. sold to farmers at low proﬁts, Mr.
Ford binds himself to limit the profits
to not more than 8 er cent and to create
manutacturo of nut-ates In America. a boa rd made up 1:)1' representatives of
the large farm organizations, and other interested bodies, to meet with
representatives of the plant, have access to all books and records, and
determine Whether or not this maximum is being observed. ‘ ,

By proper engineering developments the power made available
at the dams would eventually far exceed that needed for fertilizer pro-
duction and Mr. Ford is to have this for his own manufacturing uses.
A large use of this addition power is necessary in order to keep down
~ the cost of the power wed in fertilizer production.

 

HENRY FORD
Mlchlm'3_ mow famous manufact-
urer who has main mun Ms nonlus
In broader ﬁelds of
to make I practical sum of the

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ffargetfor so well. protect their perculiar interests in

, " Thereal 'oppositibn tolthe plan proposed
by thetfarmers last year to have the govern-
' ‘méntjpp’erate :the. nitrate plant ‘come from

  

o ,

. /

ably be possible to produce a
water¢power amounting to something like
800,000,000/ horsepower.
few years while the power is somewhat un-
. certain and expensive, Mr. Ford’s propos-
al provides that the payments be reduced.
The ultimate water power developments atj’
- _Muscle.Shoals is second only. to that of - .
, Niagara Fallg, Fewappreciate today just
what this movamay mean. ~ g;
. While it is not known} just what. useMrﬁ v
Ferd '_ pacts. to (as media .me in

     
    
    
      
     
         
   
          
        
        
 

In case the government ac-
cepts the proposal it is Mr.
Ford’s intention to operate
nitrate plant number-2 for
the production of either cyal
namid or ammonium nitrate,
or both, just as soon as the .
water power is available from “
the Wilson dam now under |
construction in the Tennes-

’ see River near the plant. It
is anticipated that at least
another year will be requir~
ed to complete the Wilson
dam and the construction .
equipment will then be im-

   
         
         
      
  
 
  
  
  
    
    
 
   
   
   
    
  
  
  
 

mediately removed to the
site of the second dam. It
will not be necessary, how-

ever. to await the completion
of the second dam before op.
eration of the plant could be
started. A total of 600,000
horse-power would be created
by the hundred foot head of
water falling over Wilson
dam, but owing to the ir-
regular flow of the river
only one hundred thousand
would be available continu-
ously. A 90,000 horse-power
steam plant is available, how-
ever, to supplement the wa-.
ter power when needed, but
the use of this adds to the
cost of the product. One ' .
hundred thousand horse-pow- ‘
er is all that is needed for
the one nitrate plant.

With the two dams and
other engineering develop-
ments, in time it will prob-
continuous

§

    
      
    
      

 
 

 

       
      
      
      
     
 
       
    
        
  

During the ﬁrst

 

  
 
  
  
  
  

 

 

         
    
 

 

  

 
 
  

 

 

  


  

'V'What’s '
The- Price?

YOu will be surprised at
the bignwnéysavhg rc-
ductiomonthecomplete J
.l‘mc of Saginaw Silos. '““

We’re down to rock- '
bottom. 2‘“

WWW BATTERIES

. to bny__thc pnce cm/ at. ‘ : direct From {solely and save
applies on our

     
   
   
 

  

  
  
 

    
   
 
  

 

 

 

   
 
  
   
    
  
    
    
    
    
 
  
  
   
   
   
    
   
    
 
   
   
       
 
 

   

Staveﬂginaw Boga}: -1. ' . ' ‘
Wall . ' ' . \ 1
3.1.... W“ 6V0ll normals?
Write today for reduced k 01/ ammﬁl

prioelisto ”' I 12VOII 7P1ate$ 20‘”

Address Dept. 12 B

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

._n y (719/ dryer/155V
The McClure Co.
Cain-0.111. ' Saginaw. Mid- , Mﬂaﬁkw 41977722;an
‘ : ﬁar guaranfee 1
’ WHEN ORDERING ow: MAKE 1
Used Cars and Fordson 1 , or CAR AND YEAR MADE.
T F i A’S‘E DEPOSIT MUST ACCOM-
ractors 01' Sale PANY ALL ORDERS.
We are well equipped to do all , QLLgAgLERm-zfgwpm up?!” '
kinds of Ford and Fordson repair '0' ' NE 0 INSPEC'ON .

A ”19 DISCOUNT WILL BE AL-

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

Wk - town) lF nus ADVERTISEMEH’ it
Reboring and regrinding of cy- ,1, IS RETURNED WITH ORDER. F
lhders, a specialty. . . F
”Ford Authorized Dealers 515-“? Bil-£52 Sewlce C0“ ;
‘ v‘ . 6432 E. JEF RSON AVE. ’

Mt. Clemens Garage & Motor DETKO'T M ‘C “-

 

Sales Company
1, South Gratiot Avenue
Mt. Clemens, Mich.

 

An ad. in our Business (Farmers’
Directory will bring results!

Make Your Money Buy More!

 

 

 

 

 

‘; _ MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER, 1 year _

'1 McCall’s Magazine ....... . . . . . .1 year A“ for' $2.00

1 Today’s Housewife, . . .' . . ....... 1 year VALUE $3.00

‘, 'THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER will save you money on I
" your ‘reading matter. ORDER NOW. H

_ 1 THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER, 1 year and any 0: the 1
following, each one year .. F

 

 

1 Reg. Price

L WITH Amenlcan Magazine ................................. 33.50 83.06 3
Breeder's Gazette .................................. 2-50 FOR 2.00
I WITH. Christian Herald ................................. ' 3.00 FOR 2.25
WITH Delineator ......................................... FOR 3.00
WITH Everybodr'a Moons-inc ................................. 3.75 FOR 3.25

' WITH Hinder-Trader- Trapper .............................. 3.00 FUR 2.55 ‘
WITH little Folks ................ . ...................... 3.00 FOR. 2.40
WITH Motion Picture Magazine ............................ 3 50 FOR 2.75

wire Modem ..................................... 2.25. 1 ',

TH People: Home Journal . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................. 2.2‘5 FOR. 130 E
WITH Review ................................. 6.00! m 4.05

“1TH. Successful Farming .................................. 1,35 FOR 1.25 ,
WITH WomﬂﬁomeComm nion ............... ‘.~...........3.00 FUR 2.50'

, wrrn American Poultry Advocate .................. - ........ 2 no For: 1.155 - F

WITH Bo zine .................................... 3.00 FOR 2.05 , l
WITH Collier’s Week ................................... 3.50 FOR 2.75

Wl'ﬁ! r and Womn'h Maurine ....................... 3.00 FOR 2.00 *
Etude ........................ , .......... r ......... 3.00 FUR 2.50 ;

WITH Illustrated Vim-hit ...... , ........................... 4.00 3.10 '
WITH Utenry Digest .................................... 5.00 FOIL r1.00
WITH McCall's no. .................................. 2 00 1.50
WITH. N. Y- Thme-a—Woek World .......................... 2.00 FOR 1.75
\VITEI Pictowlol Review ....... g ........ , ................... 3 .50 FOR 3.00

\VITH. Popular Science Monthly ...... -. -1 .................. 4.00 m 3.50 *
WITH Scribnet'b Man-Illa ........................... - ...... 5.00 FOR 4.50
WITH. Today'l Hound‘s .................................. 2.00 FOR 1.50

WITH Youth‘s Companion ................................. 3-50 FOR 8.15 i

. . To save money on your reading matter send all orders to

MICHIGAN BUSINESS. FARMER, Mt. Clemens, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHAT “E van Ill THEAHAIKET FOB ? USE "HS W!

M "mofnlﬁwlllhlnnouofonoormmd minnow-1.1mm.
””1111.ch below the item- you aro Interested In. ml It to u: m we am not dependable
ma mhmdrowturmmdlompmmuwmﬁIWR
On nyour part. ' _, 2 _ I

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

n‘alry Food . Hog Feeders 111.15.. , .1
Intuit . “ podium-o ‘\ ~ Iktov
Enollm‘ Ouuor -uubor , xltumn Puller
'm Ill Llolﬂn Honk I
- are our: mm... :13?“
\ - m n . ~
I'm-m Rm. Manure W m m
Feet m My oh ‘ Tm 4
21:31er _ llllkl umhl’m prank»
Fm' T‘m m ,
’ E‘ ‘ :0: ”3a m m
‘11:: m Poul»! Smiles W. ,Imodhn
Gain I'll ”on m
Ilene Geller: ~Po|m w M
W :m . (m u Mine
ignite“ _ ‘ W' , .
H- Proun anal Ilanhln'r ' Wed Simon
, ,1! -"" 1 . I’m“ - 1w".

   

 

   
 

 
 

(wwnmmmquWMnumu-omw)

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.. -. -._.g.. -..—_. -mu‘a

m woo-loo..."-of{notIbo-luoau-co-oowuomaoononun-oer-tocornmeal-roves...loI...

u-

’w-y

3°" or marketing micultnsy

. zv. ~e1'
, :1 away-1593' uguows GgEANe‘defRANaEL (

 

WOOL SHEEP .

OARSE wool sheep are being

culled out by many sheepmen

of the state, largely because oi

the economic influence of the state

farm bureau wool pool, says Don

Williams, sheep extension specialist

for the Michigan Agricultural Col-

lege, who is cooperating with the

farmbureau by handling sheep in-

struction work at the various pool-
ing centers.

_ COtsWolds, Lincoln and Leicesters
are being eliminated because they
produce such a low grade of wool,
says Mr. Williams. Their fleece
.goes largely into the manufacture of
carpets and similar products. Pack-
ers frequently dock the large lambs
of the coarse wool sheep for being
over weight and their owners are
turning to the medium and ‘ﬁne

sheep are being retained in many
cases sheepmen are using the type
of ram to better the general quality
of their wool, according to Mr. Wil-
liams.

Grading crews of the State Farm
Bureau wool pool will invade the
upper peninsula July 25, according
to the farm bureau. It is possible
the pooling operations may be prac—
' tically at end in the southern pen-
insula by mideugust.

The farm bureau wool department
ls nearly through with the 1920
- pool. About 250,000 pounds remain
to be sold. It will be cleaned out at
an early date, according to the de-
partment. Practically no wool of
the 3,500,000 pooled could be sold
until February, 1921,, because of the
‘ mills shutting down. Since then,
wool has been sold at the rate of
more than a carload a. day for near-
ly six months. The magnitude of
. the pool and the bookkeeping task
of closing it up-lt almost beyond
comprehension says the wool de-
partment. A. E. Illenden, chairman
of the state farm bureau wool com-
mittee and a member of the state
farm bureau executive committee
is. assiSting the department to close
out the' 1920 pool at the earliest. pos-
- sible moment, says the farm bureau.

With the 1921 pool moving

~’toward the third million, wool de-

partment headquarters at Lansing
. is a busy place. Due to the de-
velopment of a special system oi!
wool pool bookkeeping last spring,
the 1921 wool pool a in closing out
shape every day, according to the
department.

Harvest season rush on the farm
has caused the farm bureau to let
* down temporarily in its wool. cam-
paign. Where farmers have time
for a grading day, graders are on
hand. Several of the teams are
operating on a day to day basis at
present. Resumption of £1111 speed
operations is expected by August 1.
Grading dates for the week of July
25 are: Monday—Rogers City, Cros—
. well, Kalamazoo CO. Tuesday—On-
away, North Branch, Kalamazoo CO.
Wednesday — Cheboygan, Lapeer.
Thursdawaaylord, Imlay City.

. Friday—Lewiston.

 

, WOOL GRDWERS m BEN-

EFITS 0F Clo-OPERATION
00L GROW’ERS are beginning
to realize the importance of
economy. of distribution of

their-product as Well as my in
production," says C. .I. Fawcett,‘dl-

’recﬁor of wool marketing for the

American Farm Bureau Federation-
in commenting on the tremendous
strides rm“: made within the
put month by 19 farm bureau

, states having wool. pools.

‘Tar'mers the nation over are
ﬁnding that it is cheaper to collect,

‘ and concentrate wool through their
- own organizations and sell it to

mills direct through growers’ sales
agencies," says Mr. Fawcett. “One
great step has been taken in way or

._ economy of distribution. We' are

beginning to realize that it our meth- ,

 

Fm CULLING OUT OOABSE

wool types. Where coarse wool‘

 

        
   

g “The direct from grower to eon-a ‘
‘sumer method of marketing, if fol-

lowed consistently through a period

of years, will demonstrate that the

grower is entitled to, and may re»
min, a. larger portion o'f the consum- .
. er's dollar without materially ad- ~‘ ‘~
‘mdng’ the retail price of ﬁnished '
. products. Such a method is surely
based upon sound principles and
should meet with approval of all."

   
   
  
   
   
 
 

   
   
   
  

   
      
   

 

   
 

CUT ROXIOUS WEEDS NOW
LEAN UP now on thistle, dock
and buckhorn, the worst noxl- ,
ous weed seeds the red clover
seed grower has to contend with,
says the Michigan State Farm Bur-
can seed department. Time Spent in
.the ﬁeld these days, engaged in the ‘
relentless eradication of these weeds \ _
is time well spent, says the farm . . .. ‘
bureau, declaring that these weeds ' ~ ' ‘ “
often cause a farmers’ grain to be
docked one to several dollars a
bushel. ‘

Prolonged'dry weather may cut ‘ ., _
down considerably the coming clotv- " , ,3
er seed harvest, in the opinion of the. ' ‘
department. However, it is assured
that clean, genuine Michigan clover
seed will have a good market thh
yeti-.11: is always in good demand,
Michigan clover seed that is free
from weed seed alWays commands /
the top price, according to the rm ' , ' , y.
bureau.

   
 

      
 

 

EIGHT MORE ELEVATORS JO]! ' -
EXCHANGE '1
IGHT cooperative elevators join— ,
ing .the state farm bureau ele-
vator exchange within the past
ten days have brought its total up
to 93, according to the exchange.
‘During the ﬁrst ﬁfteen days in July - .
the exchange handled for members 9
220,000 bushels of new wheat and
rye, showing that many farmers are
unloading their crop at once- Ex-
change sales by carloads have in»;-
creased from 64 a month in Novem-
ber, 1920,110 327 in June, 1921.
Included in the elevators which ' ,
have just joined the Elevator 1315- |_
change. are the Brooklyn Co-operativc . L.
Association, the Edwardsburg Co- ' L
operative Association and the fol«
lowing farm bureau locals, Battle
Creek, Romeo, Cement City.
~—J————___—
FARMERS TELL WHAT 18' MAT-
"l'ER WITH WINES
GH FREIGHT rates, inadequate
credits and the collapse of for-
eign credﬁt load as contribu-
tory causes to the farmer's present
ﬁnancial difficulties. That is the x» .1 ,
verdict of Midland county farmers.
ﬁrst to report to the state farm bl.‘ 1 :
reou the results at their community 14. E,
hearing on. the American, Farm Bu— A}

..-——. M..._

.\

.._,~-‘- ”77» ., n _

 

reau Federation questionnaire,
“What Is the Matter with the Farm-
er’s Busmess?” . -

Twelve leading farmers and. one
general merchant of Midland coun— v . ,v
ty testiﬁed at the community hear-
ing, which was held at Midland dur-
ing the latter part of the week of
J 1113' 4.

Too many middlemen in some
lines of business, too long a road of
middlemen between the, producer
and the consumer, with numerous
‘ intervening profits, a tremendous
.lack of proportion between what the , .
farmer is paid for his products and i '
what he has to pay for manufactur- 1
ed goods were cited with examples
by tumors as additional causes for
their ﬁnancial distress.

Dairymen seized the opportunity
to wheel: the importation of cocoa—
nut oil; for use in the manometure
of ﬁlled milk and oleomargarinet
They contended that vast imports
of vegetable oils are undermining
the dairy industry.

. Political administration and war 1
time rule which developed a uno- ‘
factoring industry. at the W at
agriculture were attacked. by.” by
Clarke, Midland county. ._.rn: I:- an?
ofﬁcer or two, men or: 51,!

   
          
    
 
       
          
            
         
      
        
        
      
        
        
        
   
       

 
  
   
 
  
  
  

   
  
 
 
  
 

  
  

  

  


 
 

 

L 4‘1

   

d

< x
v

4}

“Ilumber'47 ‘ I A, BUSIN

    
 

   
   

SS

fzc “’ng

FARMER

  
  

 

 

 

 

 

ARE THE farmers of Michigan lucky? On
- an average their crops are better than in
any of the neighboring states according to
Washington reports. Crops in Indiana have
5 suﬁered heavily from hot weather. ~ Nearly all
: of the Other states are badly in need of rain
! as crops are drying up. Cultivated crops are
making good growth in Michigan and damage
; to Wheat is not as serious as was ﬁrst believ-
! ed. Threshing returns from Tuscola county
3 show wheat yielding nearly 40 bushels to the
. acre.

- Reports gathered from all over the United
1 States by the ﬁeld statisticians of the Bureau
f of Markets and Crop Estimates of the United
. States Department of Agriculture show that
y' the corn crop is generally making good growth
‘ and the cendition is reported to be favorable.
‘ .7 However, rain is needed in many sections and
‘ serious damage will result if the drought con-
' tinues‘much longer. Local showers have
, greatly beneﬁted the crop in many districts
and ﬁelds» are generally clean and we‘ll culti-
vated. The crop is tasseling throughout the
central and northern states.

The harvesting of Winter wheat is nearing
completion in the central statesand making
good progress in the northern tier of states.
Threshing is in full progress and varying
yields are reported, ranging from poor to
good. Small, poorly ﬁlled heads 1 and much
shriveled grain are reported from many sec-
tions. From some states there are more fav-
orable reports, for instance, in Nebraska the
threshing returns continue to show higher
yields than were expected, and in western and
northwestern Oklahoma some good yields are
reported ' - ’

The spring wheat crop' shows considerable
deterioration due to heat drought and rust.
The crop is doing fairly well in Washington
although more moisture is needed. ,

The harvesting of the cat crop has begun in

" . 1‘ Shortage at Beef Cattle to Cause Rise in Prices by Next Spring  

US. Department of Agriculture Warns Consumers that They must Curb Appetite for Veal '” Y

H IGHER BEEF prices by next spring is
. i the deduction to be drawn from a study
ofdata on beef production collected by the
Department of Agriculture.
Three factors are seen by government mar—
" kct experts as evidence of an approaching beef
shortage. These arei Eirst, a marked decline
in the number of native cattle on the western
rangesﬁ second, the 30 per cent ad valorem im-
port dutyon beef cattle carried in the emer—
gency tariff; and, third, the mildness of the
winter and the early spring of 1920-21. _ \
.. That there should begin to crop up at this
time evidences of a deﬁcient supply of beef
”“* cattle is not—surprising when it is considered
that from 1914 to 1918 the United States was
milking her, own resources dry in the tremend-
ous tgsk of "feeding .Eunope” While agricul-
tural production on that continent was prac-
,ti’cally at a standstill. _ ‘ »
’ . _,Decrease In Receipts _ . .
- / There is much signiﬁcance, as a recent bul-
letin of the Department, of Agriculture says »
“in thefact thatduring eachof, the last '11
’4 months receipts at ‘68”, live stock markets have

I ‘beeniléss than during the'corresPonding month
”a yes? previous”, _The total‘decrease‘gof re-

eeipts from last year ’s ﬁgures for the: ﬁrst. ﬁve
'thspf .1921 ailments , to approximately

remnants, a

v

 

ftheﬁfiéti'th

: ‘ liNatiOn-Wide Survey of Crop Conditions

. * Comparison of Crop Outlook in Other States Compared with Michigan

"the, central belt of states and is progressing
northward. The crop shows considerable de-
teriOration due to heat and drought, and light
yields are expected in some states. Many
ﬁelds have headed short, and recent rains have
'been too -late to beneﬁt the crop greatly. _
The Irish potato crop, especially the early
one, has been damaged by the heat and drought
1Where recent rains have broken the drought
the late crop shows improvement. The outlook
in South Dakota, Ohio, Montana and Washing-
. ton is quite favorable.
The continued heat and drought are still

1mnI"munmImiInImmmnummmmmtzxm5uummnnmmnuummmlmimmnnmumunmnnmmlmumummmmumlmm

Farm Bureau, Wants 2-Cent

Tariff on Beans

ECLARING that the proposed permanent
tariff of 1 1-4 cents per pound on beans,
as suggested under the terms of the perma-
nent‘ tariff, now before Congress, is not suﬁ‘ic-
ient to protect American farmers against J ap-
anese competition, the State Farm Bureau ex-
ecutive committee at its meeting of July 12,
addressed a letter to Joseph W. Fordney, of
Michigan, chairman of the House Ways and
Means Committee, and to the other Michigan
members of the House and Senate, asking them
to work for the retention of the present emerg-
ency tariif of two cents per pound. The two
cent rate, invthe opinion of the farm bureau,
is equitable and affords ample protection for
American bean growers. '
Lower labor costs and a lower standard of
living in Japan would enable Japanese ex—
porters to break theAmerican farmer’s mar-
ket, said the farm bureau, which addressed its
letter to the Congressmen in behalf of 100,000
Michigan farmers, many of whom are heavily
interested in beans. '

yearly crop. This year’s shortage can not be
made. up by increased production the follow-
ing season, as from two to four years must
elapse between the birth of a calf and its ap-
pearance on the censumers’ dinner tables. Ab-
normal depletion of the beef supply of a coun-
try, consequently, means more than temporary
incenvenience of a single season’s stringency,
as might be the case with a, failure of the wheat
crop.
. Will Curtail Imports ’

Fortunately the emergency tariif permits
widelatitude in the importation of cattle for
breeding purposes, not limiting the privilege
of duty free imports to pure-bredh registered
stock, as was the real intention of framers of
the act. It will, however, during the term of
its operation very seriously curtail imports of
beef cattle for immediate consumption and
will contribute largely to the impending short-
‘age in the spring of 1922.

In 1920 imports from Canada, America’s

-.principal foreign source of supply, amounted

to about 300,000 head. These cattle were al-
most entirely “feeders;” that is, lean range

.cmlejint’endedinot for breeding purposes but
£918,318 teem:- beltffannens who would fat-
. ten the!!! for the‘proﬁt to”be derived from the

increased "Weight; that results
feeding, ‘

from proper
It is’zes’titnated by competent au-
atjh'ejl? er cent duty of the emer-

   

  

. this supply until it becomes inoperative in the

that the proportion to the total stock slaughti

  

  
  

further reducing the prospect for tree fruits;
The blackberry and raspberry crops are excel-
lent in some localities, but are being dried up
in others. Plums, prunes and apricots have
been damaged by sunburn in California and
considerable loss is also reported from the high
winds, especially to pears. Early cherries are
being picked in Wisconsin. -"‘

All classes of livestock are generally in g00d
condition although suffering somewhat from
poor pastures in the drouth sections. Some
stall—feeding is being reported to in W'iscon-
sin. Some sporadic cases of hog cholera are re-
ported in Georgia. .

Hay and pasture lands are suffering from
drouth, except in districts where local show-
ers have fallen. Conditions are especially un-
favorable to spring seeded clover. Ranges and
hay crops in the far western states aresatis—
factory. .

The condition of the main crops in the lead-
ing states are reported as follows:

Corn

Illinois: Growth forced rapidly by hot weather,

tasselmg in north. Moisture generally needed.

Indiana: Unless a general rain occurs within a
few days much of the crop will be seriously dam-
aged.

lowa: Crop growing“ rapidly; outlook promis—
ing. Considerable corn tasseled and shooting
the ear.

Michigan: Growth unusually rapid and crop,
well advanced. Outlook more promising than'
any other crop.

Texas: Cultivation well advanced.

Wisconsin: Condition continues excellent but
soil too dry in some localities. Early planted
corn is in tassel. Corn root lice have appeared
in the southwestern counties.

“linter Wheat
Illinois: Threshing progressing rapidly and
yields generally lower than expectations. Some
reports of small, poorly ﬁlled heads and shrivel-
ed grain. (Continued on page 11)

         
        
      
        
   
   
    
 
 
    
  
   
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
    
  
  
   
      
   
    
   
   
      
       
    
    
   
  

gency act will cut off almost 75 per cent of

 

summer of 1922.
Natural Feed a Factor

Another factor that may produce higher
prices is the abundance of natural feed that
grew on the ranges last winter and this spring
as a result of the Unusuallly mild season. Cattle
coming in from the .west this summer and fall,
the expertssay, will be so fat and well condi-i
tioncd that most oftlum Will be bought by the
packing companies and thus enter directly
into consumption. The result will be, it is
claimed that “feeder” cattle will be scarce
and the corn belt farmer who ordinarily would
fatten several beeves for the Winter and spring
market will sell his grain instead of feeding it
'3 h0g8. ‘ o

The Department of; Agriculture, in a recent _
bulletin warns the consuming public that if it ‘
wants sirloin it-must curb its appetite for vault;
Enormous inroads, it is claimed, have been
made of late on the calves of the count“ ’
There is at present apparent, however, a ten
ency toward conservatism in the slaughter :«i’ﬁ
young stock, the number killed this year bemg
considerably less than those slaughtered dur—
ing the same period in 1920, though it is true

  
      
 
      
     
     
   
    
     
     
     
    
      
    
    
      
      
 
      
   
   
       
  

  

  

  

  
  

  

   
     
  
  

  

  
 
    
 
  
   
  

  
 
   
 

cred is still very large. , <5-

\

  

  


      

x

        

 

'i‘LAsT‘ FALL the fruit growers of Doni-_
phan county, Kansas, found themselves

.with a fair crop of apples on their hands and :

no place to market them at a proﬁt. The crop
' was not large but market men had speculated
in storage apples the year before and had lost
meney so they were backward about making
purchases for fear of losing still more. Un-
settled ﬁnancial conditions also helped to ’dc~
pressthe market and make dealers careful.
,But these‘growers were not to be discouraged ,
and the took the matter up with their farm
bureau of which they were members. The
ocunty agent of Doniphan county and the
agent froma nearby county set the farm
bureau machinery in action to market the
fruit in the ‘two counties at a proﬁt to the
growers. As other sections of the state and
adjoining states had suffered a heavy loss of
their fruits the agents thought other bureaus
might be glad to help the Doniphan county
growers dispose of the apples by taking or-
iders' from their members and an investigation
proved them only too glad to do this.

The orchardmen had previously marketed
small fruits cooperatively and they looked up-‘
on the new project with favor and conﬁdence.
About the time the growers had made their
decision the annual state orchard tour ar-
rived in‘ Doniphan county and it was thought
that this would be a good opportunity to get
the ideas of growers from other parts of the
state. The plan was discussed during the
tour and it was decided that they ask the as-
sistance of the state farm bureau and state
agricultural college. Both of these promised
their hearty cooperation when approached
upon the subject and the growers prepared
themselves for business, .

First they decided to determine the quantity
of apples they would haverto sell. In order
to get this information each member of the as-
sociation was required to sign a contract in
which they bound themselves to sell all of

.1

.until the later varieties
.quently, the bulk ofthe Jonathan crop Was

  
  

  

Farm Bureau‘Assis’ts Farmers toMarkettheerpple Cropa’t'a' Good Profit . .

 

 

 

 

. BEE ORCHARDMEN..01.1\ﬁchigaudo not '
' need {Bo-worry about a market for their
apples this year because, a survey by
the U. S. Department of Agriculture shows
there will be a great shortage in the United
States but if they wish to dispose of their i
product at a better proﬂtthey will ﬁnd this
article of great interest to them. It should
prove of interest to all farmers whether
, they are fruit growers 'or not. It shews
what brother producers in another state“
have done to make farming ' a proﬁtable
business—Managing Editor. _ ,

 

 

 

 

 

 

their apples through this Organization. Then
they established grades that must be con-
formed to before the association would handle
the fruit. Following this, prices were set for
the different varieties and grades. They were
then ready for business and sent out reports

individuals. About 12.5 inquiries were re-
ceived from Kansas, New Mexico, Minnesota,
Illinois, Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, Texas,
Missouri, South Dakota, Oklahoma and Iowa.

“Our survey indicated that we had at
least 100,000 barrels to sell,” said the county

'to papers, farm bureaus, farmers’ unions and_

agent in explaining their plan of marketing.

“A large percentage of these were Ben Davis,
which added to the ‘selling problem. We also

tity orders it Was necessary to sell the Jona-
thans as they readyzto m0ve, and we had" no
storage facilities so that they could be held
matured. Conse-

sold to local buyers. This was unfortunate

.for us, as they would have been a very valua-

ble asset in moving less popular varieties.
Could we have held/them we. could have ﬁlled
quite a number of orders that 'wefwere unable
to accept becaUSe We lacked varieties. We also
made another very graye mistake, and that

discovered that before we could handle quan- . ‘

was, ,tohrequire‘a deposit of 0' one-half 36f the?
purchase price with the order, This,_was;lat.
er corrected, but not until it had“ lost us the _.;;

 

sale of a numbertof cars. ' ’ '

-5‘Picking time fer other varieties was rap?

idly approaching, and, not enough . orders had

been received to handle the crop. Gfowérsﬂé.
, cided to send the county agent out .38 8. sales...

man. ‘Thc agent spent a week on the road and
soldseveral cars. Here another mistake was
,made. The trip' should have been made in” a
car so that more territory could have been
cOvered during the week. We , also 1 3 over-7

looked one of our best markets .by failing to
canvass the adjoining counties and they plac- .

ed Orders elsewhere-
“By cooperatiOn betWeen the growers’ as;
sociation and the local farm bureau; 24 cars"

were sold at a much better price than the “ _

growers would otherwise have been able to 05--
tain, and the local market Was «improved to
quite an extent by disposal of that. quantity.
The expense was not as high as might be ex-
pected. The cost was prorated aCcOrding to
the number of cars handled and amounted to
$3.40 per car. Owing to. conditions this was
considerably lower than an organization .exs
elusively devoted to marketing could handle“
them. On the other bands better'organizw
tion devoted to this w0rk'could handle many
more apples and still do. so at every nominal
cost. ‘ _VVe were fortunate in having very few
cars refused and in being able to rtsell those
that were. Rejections could be minimized in
the future by more, careful inSpeCtion while
loading. Likewise, a, contract should be Sign,-
ed both by the shipper and consignee. Only
one buyer was inclined to take advantage of us.
and he did so because he knew it would cost
us more to force adjustment.thangtheainount‘
involved and We didnot push the matter.»
Fortunately ‘we had but little difﬁculty insthis
way and in the future we believe such' diﬂicul--

ties can be eliminated. (Continued on page 10)_

Better Sires Specialto Tour Twenty-Five Counties ingMiChigan

Train Leaves M. A. C. on August 1 for Twenty Day Trip to Interest Farmers in Improved Dairying V.

DAIRY demonstration train, to be
known as the Better Sires Special, will
tour some twenty odd counties in Michigan
during the month of August in the interests
of improved dairying in the state. The
train, which is being handled cooperatively
by several agricultural bodies, will start from
the Michigan Agricultural College at Lansing
.. on Monday, August 1, and swing up through
the eastern half of the “state, over the lines of
the Michigan Central Railroad. The return
will bring the train down the West Shore,

- over the G. R. and I. route. -
“ Cooperative groups putting on the train
‘ include the Michigan Agricultural College,
the Michigan Holstein-Friesian: Association,
the North-East Michigan Development Bu-
reau, the New York Central and Pennsylvan-
ia Railroads; and local county farm bureaus.
Exhibit and demonstration features are to
be combined in the make—up of the special.
One car will display exhibits bearing on
dairying in general and its allied industries.
Dairy feeds and feeding rations, methods of
handling and cooling milk on the farm, soil
treatments-to insure good stands of alfalfa

    
     
  
  
 
 
   
    
 
    
  
 
  
   
  
  
    
  

and alfalfa on the dairy farm, ' and dairy
barn construction, all phases of agriculture
bearing upon the development of a perma-
nent, successful dairyin‘g industry, will be
included in the general exhibit car. ' g
. 1 Another car will carry exhibits especially
‘i' »_ .‘i'prepared~:for thehouse‘wife. These will cover
"livaluepf milkandits use, care of milk, and
milk products on the farm. '
I;TW0 carioads of purebred

  

 
 

   
   
   
   
 

 

Holstein . cattle

.1929 A «a meal 1°15” 9

and sweet clover, cultural methods for clover,

ll be on display. A grand champion at the
' .5 anime Fair, ,_ Johanna Mutual : ., ..

lbs. of milk and 28.011 lbs. of butter in seven
"days as a Jr. 4 year old and a mature yearly
record of 891 pounds of butter in 20,2887
pounds of milk, will be among the animals on
the train. '

College Butter Boy, 293508, ﬁrst prize bull‘
in his, class at the 1920 State Fair, will also
make the tour. Other outstanding individ-
uals will include a royally bred cow with a
high record, furnished by H. D. Box, of
Lansing, and a cow representing the average
Michigan cow. This individual .‘has a record,
established by cow, testing association records,
of 4,305 lbs. of milk and 153.2 lbs. of butter
fat. 7 '

Pure-bred Holstein bulls for exchange,
gift, and sale; according to the different plans
of the tour, will make up the majority of the
animals on the special. A lecture car seating
125 people and a flat car for. demonstration
purposes will complete ”the line—up of the
train. I ' ’

One or more pure-bred Holstein bulls are
to be given away in each of the 25 counties the
train touches, according to the plans of the
Holstein-Friesian Association. In addition,

.various plans whereby bulls will be exchanged
.for scrub stock. in the local communities have

been worked- out. A premium of a cent a
pound above current Detroit market prices
will ‘be allowed on all scrub stock brought in,
and the purebred animals are to be. priced
low. "yin: some cases localchambers of com:
mercearcfperfectingplans to aid in the ﬁn-

-ancing»,of'the pureliase 0f ,- bulls from the
* - train. "As, a resultgitfis :a‘safe bet that there
1118 011' Mickie P. M.

"Willi“:bé mare; Purebréd 599*” - b

_ farms than ever store af

  

  
  

 

 

\

M.; Thursday; ‘ Aug. ~18,LJIM9::1er :11

The itinerary W-illcover 25 counties, as men:
tioned above: ’ -

Leave Lansing, Monday morning, Aug. 1—-—
Chesaning' 12:00 to 2:30, Saginaw 3:30 to,
6:00, move to Rochester in evening; Tuesday, ,
Aug. 2~—Rochester 8:00 to 10:30, ~ Oxford,
11:30 to 2:00, Lapeej‘ 3:00 to 5:30; :Wednes-
day, August 3——Ottcr Lake 8:00 to 11:00,
Millington 11 :30 to 2 :00, Vassar 2 :30 to 6:00;
Thursday, Aug. 4—Caro 8:30 to 12 :00, Reese
2:00 to 6:00; Friday, Aug. 5—Midland 8:00
to ”11:00, Mt. Forrest 2:00 to 5:00; Saturday,
Aug. 6—G1adwin 8:00 to >10 :30, Standish:
1 :00 to 4:00; Monday, Aug. 8—Alger 8:30 to
10:30, West Branch 11 :00to 2:30, Roscom-i
men 3:30 to 5:30; Tuesday,
ling 8:00 to 10 :30, Johannesburg 11:30 to
1:30, Gaylord 2:30 to 6:00; Wednesday,
Aug. 10—Vanderbilt 8:30 to 10:30, Wolver-
ine 11:30 to 1:30, Cheboygan 3:00 to 6:00.

Leaving Mackinaw City at 8:45 A. M on
Thursday, Aug. 11, the train will arrive at
the following places at the hours given: AIL-g.
rive Levering 9:15A. M., Alanson 12:10 P.
M., Harbor Springs 4:40 P. M.; Friday, Aug,
12 Petoskey 9:30'A. M., Beyne City 11. :40 P.
M., Alba 5 :45 P. M.; Saturday, Aug. .13 Man-

celona 9:30 A, M Kalkaska 1:40 P. M., Mm. -. (A ' ‘

ton 4:50P. M.; Monday, Aug. . 15, Cadillac
1 :10 P. M.; Tue'sday,.Aug. 16, Merritt 93045.

M., Falmouth 1:10. P. M., LakeCity' 54:20 P

M.; Wédnesday,’ Aug. ; 17, Tustin .9300 AIM
Reed' City 12:20, P. M., Big- Rapidsj4e

HoWard“ City 4:30 ,P-‘eMef Efr

  

  
  

  

Aug.” '9—Gray- .-

 
      
          
         
  
  
   
  

.. J -

.r..__h.a..

 

     
      
    
     
      
      
          
      
   
     
  
     
 
         
  
  
  
 
  
 

 

 


   
   
   
  

    
     
   
  
   
  
   
 
   
  
  
  
     
  
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
    
  
  
 
  
   
   
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
  
   
  
   
    

  

 

    
  

    
 
   
  

 

' ': 330mg itime

. ansuy pomp ere the course before

»

'vvestments?—S. A

'double in/four years. To- doable in

' garde‘d with rayon—Legal Editor.

. (it mﬂtﬂg lithium; ’fo'rfu'ﬁnég'
ilflnqulrrealmmt be agoniglql 591m

 
  

  

_ Prompamful attention jinn a
to this department. We are here to

 

‘Rnannnsonn iron slaw

 

the A. W. I. ,calledxatfmy school to get
me to (enroll as a student to take a home

' : course; in book keeping‘ and accounting-

In his» Conversation with me he did not

-:-.M'mention any of the conditions whateVer.

. ,e, told me I was toolislnto teach school
' when 1 could'get so much "more

Sock-keepui‘. *He also said that I could
my
schoo1~:was .outw. “I wrote to the presi-

'{dentofv‘th'efInstitute and asked that my

enrollmentbe cancelled. In reply to‘
.myletter he stated thatit would be im-
possible for- him to cancel my enroll~
. merit as it would be an injustice to the

“other students. He also said that he had ,

d "a. conversation with the agent con-
..cerninﬁ my enrollment and the agent
said t at he had made all the conditions
.plain to me. Especially that my enroll—.
*ment was not subject to cancellation and
that the course would have to be paid

for regardless 01.. circumstances or con—"

ditions. The. agent said nothing what—
‘ever about these. I started the course
and have it partly» ﬁnished but 1 find

i i that I can not stand the work. s The com-

ete course costs $185 and I have paid
100. If I do‘ not complete the course
Would I have to ﬁnish. paying for it.?-—-
‘IVIiss A. McG., Lucas, Michigan. .

:The .terms of 'your contract with
the company will control your lia-
bility.‘ _The“law presumes you knew
the terms or thecontract if you

signed it andyou were very‘unwise ‘

if you signed ' a, contract without

knowing the terms of it and making-

sure you understood. All "glib-
tongued agents know that all oral
promises are merged into the writ—

ing if=one is afterwards signed. I~
' can not tell the liability you are sub-

ject to without the writing you sign-‘
. a. -

ed. Neyer sign any paper for
stranger unless you are sure you un-
derstand the terms and that the
terms are satisfactory to you. Re-
quire a copy, of any paper signed be-
fore you sign and carefully keep it
for reference.—-Legal Editor.

DETROIT MORTGAGE CORP’N
hat can you say for the stability.
and personality of the officials of the
Detroit Mortgage Corporation? 'Would
.xyou, consider-it a safe n‘aCe to. make in-
D., Van Buren Coun-

 

tag, [Michigan

 

.The above corporation was ﬁrst
approved by the commission in 1917.
At that time it was capitalized at
$5,000,000, $2,500,000 common and
$2,500,000- preferred. 1

In 1919 the company was reor--
ganized and capitalized at 250,000
shares of common, no par and 3,-
500,000 shares of preferred $10 par.
.11; was approved by the Commission
August *1, 1919. 60,000 shares of
common stock is escrowed with the
State Treasurer under the usual
agreement. . W .

"Thercompalny seems -to be success-
fulwand we have had no complaints
concerning it. This Commission
does- not recommend the purchaSe
ofgany security and its approval
should‘not be construed by investors
as an endorsement of value—Mich-
igan Securities Commission.

 

' TERMS OF SHEEP ' CONTRACT

What are the terms on letting sheep
out on shares? Some claim it is three
years to double and others say it is four
years. Can you tell me which is right?
My sheep are all good young breeding
ewes except one which is a last spring
ewe lamb.——Mrs.' L. J., Mt Pleasant,
Michigan. '

The terms of a sheep contract are
as parties can agree. The owner to V
make it as short “as possible and the,
borrower a: long. If I was a bor-
rower I would,‘ not take“ sheep to

four yearsmeansﬂd percent price
now ‘and then being the same but. if
the .price in, four years should raise
it WDuld greatly increase the rate"!

and 25 per cent interest'is not re!

 

.EXEMPTION FROM TAXATION; '

"Is? "a “widow exempt from taxes,~ who '

has—1201a“ Orland par. 1y cleared. 10 f
’ ' head of stock . 5 cow's-~42“ earlin 3' team 2
ran ‘ ' \u_dingsf“
buildint.

  

ago an agent reprehenting

bY'

" , able to" contribute tOWards the pub-

lic charges.” Also “All real estate

to the value of one thousand dollars.

used and OWIled‘as a "homestead by
any soldier or sailor of the‘federal
government ‘who served

Americanwar, Civil War or Mexican
war "(or widow of. such soldier or
sailor) subject to conditions _and
:limitations pointed 'out in the tax
‘law. ~The following personal prop-
erty is exempt from taxation: The
library, pictures, wearing apparel,
etc., householdfurniture up to $500
the tools of amechanic up to $100,
all mules, horses and cattle not over
one year old, all sheep and swine
not over‘six months old, and all do-
mesticated birds, and personal prop-
erty owned and ‘used by any house-
holder in connection with his bus-
iness of theyalue of $200. The

'mother’s pension law provides that

the mother “is poor and unable to
properly care and provide for the
child (neglected by statute) then
the court may make an order. From
your own statement I. would be of
the opinion that you could not make
the affidavit required—Legal. Ed-
itor. » '

 

COLLECTING PAY' FOR MAKING
IMPROVEMENTS

I am on a rented place of 80 acres.
I paid cash rent. There was a large
stone wall‘ cellar on top the ground but

 

 

 

 

trio'fond oddlfen. Name not used if so} raj .) ..

. _ three‘
months or more during the Spanish-~‘

 

   

t mrge -, out rm;
, ,‘tazllsa-anduﬂrepairing 1, before . I
could use the collar. ,1“ -~bought‘ nails,
hinges and latches for it.
intentions to ‘do this free of charge but
they refused to pay for .‘fixing fence.
There» was -80' rods of woven wire and
around 150 rods of barbed wire fence to
put up. They told me to get a. certain
party to help me but he lives so far
away and I had no means of going there
to see him that 1 got another man and
paid him out of my own pocket. The
bill this man had against them was $40
including $11.25 for board and they re-

  

 

fused to pay more than $10, so in order-

to keep on good terms with them I
agreed to pay this man $15.00 if they
, would pay the balance. and I would also
drop the board bill. They'said that they
would do this. But still they called me
different names and now I would like to

get paid‘ for fixing those stables if I
can. Do you think I can? My bill is
$30. 1 sowed clover seed for them one-

half day which will do me no good. Can
I collect the wages for that? I sowed
18 acres into oats with a hand seeder.—
H. M., Stanton, Michigan.

 

The terms of the settlement must
be according to the agreement. If
they rented you the place for money
rent you took “it just as it was and
any changes made by you unless the

landlord agreed to pay for you must-

stand yourself. 11“ your landlord
agreed expressly to pay for the work
you could recover a judgment against
him in a suit. The improvements
were for your beneﬁt—Legal Ed-
itor. \

 

FALSE IMPRISON MEN T

The last part of last year someone
went into a man’s barn and led a year—
ling heifer out in the barnyard and kill-
ed and dressed her right 'there, leaving
the head and inwards there where they
had killed her, and took the rest away.
Just about that time my son-in-law
killed two 2-year-olds for me and my
,son took the hides and sold them. In
the meantime this man who’ (had lost the
heifer had notiﬁed anyone buying hides

r .
l
l

days: A

-.It was my__

him put in"
:jail and kept him there two days and!
nights and when my son—in—law and .
went to get him. out they would not ac
cept our bonds, but threatened to kce
him there under $500 bonds. We tri ' y
to get him to put him in the juvenile» ~
home instead of the jail but they would
not and when We went to the jail to see
him they told us that the plaintiffhad
just been there and had withdrawn the
case and they let the boy come home with,
us. Can I collect damages? 1 went to
a lawyer but he said he would have to
have $25 to start it and I did not have

  

it. He would not take the case for half. '
What can I do?—-Mrs. A. C., Sterling“
.Mlchigan.

The person who made the ~com-
plaint is probably liable for false im-
prisonment or malicious prosecution.
'You’ will need to consult a good law-
yer as to your rights and damages.
—Legal Editor.

 

PUTTING TENANT OFF LAND
A sells farm to B on a contract and ,
B leases same to C for one year for
half of the crops. B! does not live- up
to contract between B and What
course. if any, does A take to put B off
place and can B hold half of crops? Or
can B hold farm on contract the same as
on mortgn.ge?——C, H., Ingham Coun-
ty—, Michigan.

B, the vendee in the land contract
can not give C, the tenant any great-
er right than he had.’ The'termin-
ation of the land contract and the
regaining possession by A and what
crops C can hold and how long he
can hold will depend upon the con-
tract made by A to B for the sale
of the farm. If the contract does not
contain a waiver of notice to quit
A must give a notice to quit. The
terms for forfeiture of the contract
provided in the contract must be
followed—Legal Editor. -

 

 

“Talk of the Town”

\

A GOOD INVESTMENT

  
 
  

    
 
 

 

WILLYS

“Did you ever ride so comfortably?"
“Could you tell when you crossed the
tracks?” “I looked at'thc oil gauge at 200
miles—apparently we didn’t use any.”
“I averaged over 27 miles to the gallon
that last trip—Sand and mud most of the
way.”—-Y0u hear it everywhere. All
America istalking of this astonishing

Overland—and Amm'ca it proud of It tool

  

N.W$695 ’

America’s low cost car now 3200 nduced/ Add to

its low com its gasoline, oil and tire economy and

its low upkeep—and you get a .rmice per 72217: that
never has been (qua/led or‘approachcd. Then add
its amazing comfort on T rip/ex Spring, plus its
quality. Its baked enamel ﬁnish! Its curtains that
‘opcn with the doors! Its complete convenience!

s—Thcn 'rush your

a

Toledo,» Ohio.

.o‘vERLAND, Inc.

order in for Summer use.

A Turing,;flo.b.Tol¢do----¢im,3595----u-w,3695
‘ Roadmr,_ﬂo.‘.foledc----Ium, " 89 —---W, 695
Coupe, ﬁe. b.Taledo----euu, 1425-----o-w, [M
Ma, ﬂab.Tolcdo,—---‘wa, 1475----u-w, 1275 ~~

Ash AboufExtnnmb'
Easy Payments

 
 

 

 

 

  
 
 
 
 
    

» ' errant. for , ,

       
   
  

     
         
  
     
        
          
 
  
 


.. I/

. your subscription expires.

\

' THREE vns.

 

hm meg-u 0°
. nod
» . tuned in tanking-n”.

SATURDAY, JULY 28,1921

Published every Saturday by
THE RUML P‘UB’LISHING COMPANY, Inc.
Mt. Clemens. Michigan

 

 

 

5 Raprcsented in New York Chicago, St. Louis and Minneapolis b!

the Associated Form Papers, Incorporated

GEORGE, M. SLOCUM
FORE RREST A. LOR . .

‘ ASSOCIATES.
"I“? R Schalck ................ Assistant Business Manager
R Walker Circulation Manager
. . 7. . . ................ Auditor
M. Weber ...................... Plant Superintendent
aMan-aginc Editor
Editor

M.
Drank-M
Milan Grinnell

William E. Brown .... \ ........... Legal Editor
W. Austin Ewell: ........... - ....... ‘ .’ ..... Veterinary Editor

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Entered as second-class matter, at post-office. Mt. Clemens, Mich.

 

Henry Ford’s Latest Scheme
N THE front cover of this issue will be
found thecomplcte story frOm our special
Washington Correspondent of Henry Ford’s
offer to buy the gigantic nitrate plant at
Muscle Shoals, Alamaba, from the war depart-

} ment of the United States government.

Here is a great plant built during the war
and intended for the production of nitrates
used in the production of gun powder, which
was never completed or put into operation be-
cause with the signing of the armistice, cer-

‘1 tain senators and representatives, saw in it

'1' the possibility of making it a glaring example
‘ of political war-time waste and shouted from
. the house tops during the recent presidential
- campaign of its impracticalness.

Now, our own well—known and apparently
practical and successful business man and

, manufacturer, Mr. Henry Ford, comes for-
. ward with an offer which fairly jolted these
‘self-satisﬁcd politicians
. horses.
' offered to take this “white—elephant” off from

off their hobby-
For none other than Mr. Ford, has

Uncle Sam’s hands, with a payment of some

, $5,000,000 down and the balance of $80,000,-

000 over a period of one hundred years.
Mr. Ford, it is said, proposes to operate this

, nitrate plant as it was originally planned and

intended, but instead of its product going into
the destructive channels of war, to divert it

‘ into the productive channel of agricultural

‘ fertilizer.

practical. plant out
have told us was a gigantic fraud, the Amer»,

"can pee 10 are quite apt to take ~the proposi-

The surplus power created by the
great Wilson dam to operate his own and per-
haps other manufacturing plants which would
be built nearby.

Today the farmers of this country are al—
most entirely dependent on foreign sources
for their ever-increasing demand for nitrates.

'It is easy to imagine where the opposition to

the completion of this nitrate plant in Amor-
ica has come from. There are powerful and
immensely’wcslthy syndicates which are in
absolute control of. the importation of this ma-
terial no“ and they will doubtless ﬁght any
attempt to complete this n1trate plant to a
ﬁmsh.

Mr. Ford’s proposition thus brings right
out in tho limclic‘ht. a matter which the farm
organization heads at "Washington have bat-
tied to 'cvcn not considcrcd. Now the Whole
American public are waiting for the answer
from Mr. Hording’ s cabinet. M12. Ford has
been called many things by his enemies, of
who1n,likc most men who do things he has

his full share: but we do not recall ever hav; ..

ing heard him accused of bluffing. Most peo-
ple would be perfectly willing to cash his
check for $5, 000, 000 if they could!
he comes for-Ward with on offer to make
of what the

”Ber: qurte comply

So Who]: .

politicians -

not dare to refuse the offer, but-1f. they do, it

will only mean that they Will. be forced to

complete and operate the, plant as a govern» _
ment venture 0r sell it to a higher bidder Who

will do so. In any even-t, it Would appear that
the sponsors of the Muscle Shoals nitrate plant
have been vindicated in their plans and that
the farmers of America are certain of an
available supply of nitrates‘ ‘made .in Am-
erica.’ '

x

9

Tim» Days.Work; Twenty Days Pay "
OU- KNOW of course, that the legislature
of the state ,of Michigan was called back
to Lansing the early part of this month by
Governor Groesbeck to go through the formal-
ity of changing the Soldiers’ Bonus Enabling

Bill, so that the bonds issued, would be salei‘

able.
The legislators tore themselves away from

their several tasks, hurried to Lansing and

out of the two days they were in actual session.

they spent, at least a few hours, at their weary
desks in. the house and senate.

It was warm in Lansing, we will admit
that! It was trying to be recalled to the cap-
itol, even for so pressing a matter as reward—
ing the boys who went to France; So the
legislature voted its members or the members
voted themselves TWENTY DAYS PAYFOR
THE TWO DAY’S THEY WERE IN LANS-
ING AMOUNTING TO $100 EACH! In ad-
dition, of course, to their traveling expenses.

If you don’t believe it and we would not ex-
pect you to at ﬁrst reading, look into the rec-

_ ords of the special session and sec for yourself.

Remember, kind friends it was warm in Lans-
ingl

Now comes this (July 18th) morning ’3 dis-
patches with the reassuring news that the sec-
retary of the senate has not presented to the
state treasurer any claim for the payroll, cov-
cring this special bonus It is hinted in many
quarters that the weather has cooled off in
Lansing and that several legislators who told
their wives in glee about their $100 grab, have
been taken to the woodshcd by their more
sane spouses and warned never to do it again.

As we understdnd it, no member of either
house or senate has had the “nerve” to demand
of the state treasurer the $100 which he vot-

ed to himself for the two days he was away 1

from- home. In our opinion the ﬁrst one who
does ought to have an equestrian statue of
himself astride a longearcd jackass, set on the
capitol lawn at Lansing.

Future historians however in explaining

’ this piece of patriotic legislation should not
warm in Lans- ,

fail to mention that‘ ‘it was

ingl” »

Railway President Cuts Rates, But—
E HATE to talk so much about what
Henry, our near-neighbor at Dearborn
'is doing, but if he will insist on doing the

things which we all like to hear about, well, '

then We must add to his fame, because—

The Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Railway, of
which Henry Ford is President and owner,
ﬁled with the railway commissioners of Ohio
a. voluntary reduction in freight rates to the
public of twenty per cent, effective August
20th. This is believed to be the ﬁrst railway
in America to announce a voluntary reduc-
tion in *rates. ‘

If 'you will recall that no man
by this railway [is paid less than $6 per day,
you will ﬁnd some further food for reflection,
especially if you have had the temerity to

even question the statements recently put out
such ,

by the poor railroads which follow
Wholly unproﬁtable routes of travel as ' be-
tween New York Detroit and Chicago. Please
remember that the D. T. & 1.1151,, has been a
money-loser, a joke-railway for years, because

it runs for nearly four hundred miles from -

Detroit to the Ohio river, without passing?
through a large city. If Mr. Ford, 3 “fliv-
or” manufacturer as all the other railWay
presidents admit, can lower the rates on 3.
“skim milk” railWay and at the same time
mm. at :36 per day to his

them!

employed,

anyWay, he’ 8 always upsettm their‘ pet
stories just as they get the public to behemg

1

Shipping Board Lost Money

n DO NOT believe that those of us; a...

have sponsored the idea that the United

States of America should have an adequate

merchant marine to carry the, products of this

Thank heaven-s he didn’t get in the; .
senate, think what he might have done there!

great producing country to the. far ports of ‘

the world will be especially wrought up over

~the announcement just made by the new chair—

of

man, Mr. Lasker, that there was a loss '
$380,000,000 last year instead of $99,000,000
as previously reported. ,

Not that this is not a great amount of
money when considered from an individual
standpoint, but because it is really a very
small amount when measured by the re-
sources of that country and 111 the light of the
greater beneﬁt whichds to. some from this step
towards transportation independence. , ‘

5 No one expects, until the government puts

the Shipping Board on a solid business basis,

that the ships will ever make money. The

’ ,.

'I

\

plan is not a money¢making scheme and the _. ‘

proﬁts are to be found in the lowered cost
of delivering the American farmers’, as well
as the American manufacturers’
the foreign-market in competition with other
countries, who have for years, operated a
merchant marine under subsidy.

And then, those of us who watched the

mismanagement of the railroads under gov-

ernment control, so long as. the old regime

output to"

was left in power, Will not be surprised at,

anything that happens, either to .the ships

which are guided by these patriots or by the
statements of loss which they prepare to in- .

fluenCe public opinion.
Mr Lasker, we hope, is made of the stuff
that will ﬁght out this destructive element

in the shipping board. He is a business man .

who has made an enviable record in a busy

"lifetime and if he has, as we hope, the success

of the United States merchant marine as his '

single goal, he will only smile at the ineiﬁo
icncy which piled up a Idss last year of nearly
four hundred millions of dollars, and go in to
reduce it before the next public statement

Shortage of' Beechming ,
HE DEPARTMENT of Agrimlture is
warning the country that we can look
forward to a shortage of marketable cattle and
set Ithe time for this period as the spring of
1922. Their reasons for this conclusion based
on a recent survey are seemingly sound and
are published in full on page 3 of this issue.
The importance of this announcement ought
to strike home to every real business farmer,
for it is the man who looks further than his
neighbors fence who proﬁts in the long run.
Michigan has never been far famed as a
“feeding” state, but there are undoubtedly
sections of this state where it could be carried
on in a large way and practically every farm-
er in our state could well afford to be feeding
a few extra steers and thus carry on this
proﬁtable farm operation in, at least, a small
Way.

We don’t care to hear any thrift talks from a
government that goes on building $40 000 000
battleships for the junkman .—Columbia {S C )

,Record. , . a.

‘4 \

Dr.
minded people in the UnitedSta‘t’es. Well, well;
it isn’t as bad as we thought—Passaic News. ,

Congress started in to whale the “tar” Out of

tariff, but the “if” seems .to have slowed up pro- 7

comings—Seattle Post-Jhtﬂligencer.
. Railroad rates remind us robberies arch
conﬁned to names: k—Nm -1 _
sociation. ' -

Adler says there are 10,000,000 1.1.1.1.;

 


 

going at reform in county
government, as I have said in a
previous letter there certainly is a
change necemry.. For instance, the
three counties of Cass, Berrien and
Van Buro'n- have been robbed of

, Ir CERTAIN‘UY is use the ya you
are

around $109,009 by an antiquated.

system of drainage laws. There is
nothing to hinder any county with
a large drainage district from wak-
~ing up some fine morning and dis-
covering that they too have been
tieeced to the same amount or more.
We certainly have too. many office
holders 'in both county and _‘tOWH'
ships. You say, “11? commission gov-
ernment is a good thing we want it.
if it is no better the. we have now,
We don’t want it.” w I claim that
the chief good in changing any form
of government, township, county,
state or national comes from the
fact that change is possible. Our
national constitution is constantly in
process of amendment, our state
constitution is recast at least during
every generation.

I think the people of the counties
and townships should have a chance
to pry loose their political harnacles.
aThecitizens or townships and coun-
ties can certainly be trusted to try
out any form of government they
like whether “commission” or some
other form. I am not saying that
« the people of Kalkaska or Ingham
or You Boron want any change but
they ought to have to assume the
responsibility of voting upon the
subject once in a while.

Someone has said that “Constant
vigilance is the price of liberty,’.’
which is the same as saying that any
form of government depreciates with
age and has to be repaired or
amended and sometimes built en-
tirely new. The new house general-
ly has some improvements on the
old one .and I believe the people of
the .townships and counties can
build a better form of town and
county government than we have
now. If we are given the liberty to
vote ,on these proposed changes I
have no fear but that conditions will
be battered. _

Let’s have achange at least and
let’s be intelligent enough about it
so that there will be no jumping
from the “drying pan into the ﬁre.”

The main point being that we are.

certainly in the “drying pan” now
[let’s get out. Let’s have a change
of some sort and trust to the interl~
ligemce of the voters to make con-
ditions better. -—John C. Stafford,
- Van Buren County, Mich.

We get accused mm in awhile of be-
ing radical, but we -oau'mot remember
ever, having sponsored a change, "just
to have one", There is somewhere un-
doubtedly a sane, practical» plan for an
improvement in the present method of
county, administration. We are looking
for it and when we ﬁnd it we will pre-
sent it to our readers with the idea. of
discussing it pro and can in these col-
unms ' .

«BEGIBES To QUIT FARMING
NCBOSED ﬁnd :61 to pay for our
Paper.’ I :eniey the paper very
much, and am sure you have
the interest of the farmer at heart
and wish you success.

Last fall we had an auction sale,
disposing of livestock and toads and
spent the winter ‘ “in; Morida.
_ Well, when we got back your
paper was right on the job, but be-
ing a little “sprung” from our trip
neglected to send your dollar. Right
, here I wish to thank you :for wait-

ing and not only that "but being pa— -

tien’t.
_ I partially restocked the farm,
and went back to work but my feet
have dragged and I have not enter-
ed into ”the gamewith the old time
~feeling, prices and conditions
being very inspiring. Have
‘iarming three seasons and this far
11 the tourth, and a man who has
nevcr ﬁrmed before came along dis-

. games with his om. straight sal- ‘

position, bought me but, turn,
to is, crops, as everything.
~ ’35 has.

’ mittedly, a. trifle

‘winter, by all means go,

in“ -
been '

farm and this is the lccond term I

hava Owned and sold at aﬂproﬂt I
There is a. little independence that

goes with farm life that I enjoy, but ‘
I think that the man that takes the

knocks on 'a hundred acre farm. must ,
love hard work and be afraid to car-

ry moneys—C. M. H., Kalamazoo

County, Mich. .

Thanks! Also congratulations! When
a teller can come back from Florida, ad-
“sprung” and sell his
farm, which he admits he is 'tired of ‘
taming to a. city feller who is tired of
his salaried job, he deserves our, admira-
tion. Bet yOu a. hat, neighbor, that you
will own another farm right here in
Michigan before the year is out! The
oat—that-cune—back had nothing on the
farmers of this state. who go to sunnier
climes with the proﬁts from the sale of
their farms up north. If you are set on
going to Florida or California for the .
but take our

advice and keep the old farm up here to

come back to. Remember what the re-

turning prodigal added to the sign “Cal-

ifornia—the Golden State i”, “—but take

your own gold with you 1"
________,.____

“IT NEVER PAYS TO DO WRONG"

WAS MUCH interested in the
lIarticle in this department en-
* titled, “It never Pays to Do
Wrong,” by 3. T. Daniels. The zeal
of the author in having three thous- ,
and little pink motto cards printed
bearing the plain, true words, “It
Pays Always to Do Right and It
Never Pays to D0 Wrong,” isicerr
tainly commendable, but I question
its truth or that it will do any last-
ing good. To a thinking person- the
query at once arises, are they- plain,
true words? I claim not, for what
one person calls right another per-
son calls wrong, and paradoxical as
it may seem, both are right. It all
depends upon the viewpoint.

To impress the question of right
and wrong upon children in this
manner is erroneous, because no
one knows for sure What is right or
what is wrong.'

some one else. What I was taught.
to be “truth and right” when I was
a boy, I have since became a man‘
discarded as being false. Why? Be-
cause I‘lcarned- as Lgrew older that
the “truth” and "right” was based
on error, and that my father and my
teachers were mistaken in their be-
liefs, which were not true at all.
Every one has had experiences of!
this kind

Let me tell \ou something. True
education comes tram within out
and not 1mm without in. I venture
to say' that Mr. Daniels will take ex-
ception tot-his statement, and de-
nounce it as erroneous. So there
you are. Who shall decide? Why
the individual himself and not
some one else. If Mr._, Daniels had
taken the words of the Great Teach—
er, f‘Do unto others as ye would
that others should do unto you,” in-
stead of the ones he did use, then
he would have set an example worthy
of greater praise and emulation,
because this precept faithfully liv-
ed up to by old and young, would in
a few years wipe Off all the laws on
our statute books.

Training children in the way they
should go, according to some one
else’s idea, as the wrong transla-
tion in the Bible admonis‘hes us to
do, is "decidedly wrong. The orig—
inal text does not so teach. It should
read: “Train up a youth in the di-
rection of his own duty, even when
he becometh old he will not depart
from it. " Fihd out what the child s'
inclination is, and then train him
accordingly, even if it is contrary to
what you would like to have him
’be, Then we will not have so many
misﬁts in life, and we will have no
use for jails: Imisons or peniten-
thrice—+0. Dell/Yes, Ottawa County,
Mich. ’

You present a we str meat
against Mr. Damian’s-ymottoongutasrgtuicking

to the right and wrong of matter would
your substitutiOn work any better?

/' W

‘Isurodolnxsyourm-raadlthlnk-l'
‘that every farmer should have the 31:.

BF.1n.hishomeaswoallneed help.“
fhe present time. 1 for one would;
356 than it; “GM

What may be right ‘ I
{or one person may be wrong for

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

 

-u‘--

 

8,122

 

“.b‘ziﬁfIﬁ‘“

~1- --saeo"-- I
h
w I I)
‘
I

l4"?! f‘l'ﬁ

r~_‘1I/\ ’2‘ I»; IS: ,

Two Bﬂllon Dollars Per Year!
LEADINGragricultural expert estimates
. that this enormous sum would be added
annually to our agricultural production if our
swamp lands were properly drained.
This state has thousands of acres of rich soil
lying under water—you probably have some
Wet spots on your Own farm, waiting for the
mighty force of _

NITROGLYCERIN DYNAIVIITE
to drain it and put it in shape to bear crops.

Ditching with dynamite is the accepted
method all over this state because it is easy,
ouick and quite inexpensive. N o machinery~
1ust a few sticks of dynamite. It does not
require expert knowledge to handle explosives
on the farm successfully,‘but if your project
requires it we will send_ a Du Pont ﬁeld
representative to help you.

First write for our Famers’ Hand Book
of Explosives, which has complete in-
structions, then see our 100a] dealer.

E. I. DU FONT DE NEMOURS 6: (30., Inc.

Chicago, I". Duluda, Minn.
McCunmek‘ ' ' Hard :1 Buildmg‘ '

 

w

Going

to hold an ?

AUCTION SALE-

they are not the best buyers; place your «mum

Don’t depend on just the “homo-folks",
worth-while tum:- within n hm“

merit in The Business Far-er, which nacho. all
allies of your ulna.

SEND US COMPLETE DESCRIPTION

and remember your copy mull: reach us one week in advance 0'! the date-atrium. m

A Advertising Dept, The Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens

 

Will You Introduce a Friend or Neighbor?

HERE’S AN INTRODUCTORY COUPON—Tear it out and bandit

Is

to a friend or neighbor who is not a Subscriber. It is worth just
250 to him, because we will send The Business Farmer on trial'to
any new name for six months, for this coupon ands. quarter (25¢);

in coin or stamps.

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW

5 This Coupon is worth twenty-ﬁve cents to any NEW
:2 C subscriber introduced by an old subscriber. .. ..
The Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clem-ens, Mich.
Friends:

I want to introduce a NEW subscriber and for a quarter

(25c) enclosed in coin or stamps you are to send our weekly
every week for six months.

To

Address
Introduced by your reader.-

U. C.

. IIIIIIIIIIIIIII]

 

 

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Address

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aﬁd 1951 that they. are
general interest so Will go into
~ -- tall. I have eaten corn prepared
‘ in this way? and #1111111 it delicious.

The following vegetables may be
prepared by this method Beet tops,
chard, cabbage, string beans, green
‘ peas and corn. The beans should be
cut in 2 in. pieces, the cabbage shred-
ed and the peas shelled. Husk the
ears of corn and remove the silk.
Gook in boiling water for 10 minutes
to set the milk. Cut the corn from
'the cob with a sharp knife.

Baiting [Without Fermentation

In this method the vegetables are
packed with enough salt to prevent
fermentation or the growth of yeasts
or molds. The following directions
should be followed in- salting vege-
tables: 4

Wash the vegetables, drain off the
water, and then weigh them. For
each 100 pounds of vegetables weigh
out'25 pounds of salt. For smaller
quantities use the sameproportion
of salt (one-fourth of the weight of
the vegetables). Spread :1 layer of
the vegetables about 1 inch deep on
the bottom of a clean keg, tub or
crock and sprinkle heavily with
some of the salt. Try to distribute
the salt evenly among the different
layers packed so that the quantity
weighed out will be just enough to
pack the vegetables. Continue add-
ing layers of vegetables and salt un—
til the container is nearly full and
then cover with the clean cloth,
board and weight, as in the case of
fermentation with dry salting. The
keg or other container should then
be set aside in a cool place. If the
salt and pressure of the weight have
not extracted sufficient brine to cov-
er the vegetables, after 24 hours,
prepare a strong brine by dissolving
,1 pound of salt in 2 quarts of wa-
fter and pour enough of this over
the vegetables to come up to the
round wooden cover. There will be
a small amount of bubbling at the
start, as in the case. of the ferment-
ed vegetables, but this will not con-
tinue for long. Just as soon as the
bubbling has stopped, the surface of
'the liquid should be protected by
one of the methods following. No
scum should be allowed to form on
the surface of the brine to prevent
use paraffin very hot so that the
brine jwill boil when the paraffin is
poured on.
tight seal.

Paraffin may be used over and
over again so the expense.is small.
If the paraffin becomes dirty it may
be meltedand strained through sev-
eral thicknesses of cheesecloth.

Cottou seed oil may be used to
coverethe surface of the brine—-
should he’d-4 inch thick and it will
keep indeﬁnitely. The only objec—
tion to liquid oils is the difficulty
of getting at the vegetables without
getting them covered with oil which
is difficult to remove. Before the
vegetables are to be removed the
oil should be skimmed or. siphoned
off.

Adjustthe weights on the cover so
that the brine cemes up to but not

over the ,cover,.only the brine exposJ

_ed between the cover and the sides
of the Crock need be paraffined or

mummmwmmmmmunmummmmmmmmimnuummmmm

A Popular Apron

is cut in 4 .
Small "34-36;
ium 38-40; Large,
4244; Extra large
46-48 inches bust
measure. -A med-
ium. size will re—
quire 4 1-4 yards
of 36 inch mater-
ial. 120.

siz‘e's :
Med-

A very simple
and pretty house
dress or apron.

. 'No button holes to
try your ,eyes. No
sleeves to sew in.

; " ’It can be made of
lawn. pereale or

Ngingham, even or
factory cotton, us.
ing flowered» cre-

, tonne for _ cellar

 

slime [
l’this time

This will make an air-

Style. Patter-n.3596
is here shown, 'It '

 

 
  
 

Edited by. MRS GRACE NELLIS JENNE‘!’
Dear Friends: We all need to alarm Ourselves occasionally. mu it the place to do li..v

Lot on talk over “6111- work. our pleasures. who I

tomilloe. i feel that
when I write it is not '30 I

down with you on your own doorstep and
.doorstep. Now please?
subscription to America

letter of Mrs.

hevo- many new friends made thru the column "to
cold-blooded Women's Home Wmub 13,111“:

Lthlnk of you all In your homes and among your families and wish I ooul

we read and our2 b‘roblenuin “brﬁﬂ?m° up :ur.
M09

lhue a very oloIo all“ use to",
loot ‘Iii
abut we will have to call this one our

not M me do all the talking. I shall be glad to offer. a “on"
Cookery for the men
P. w.. “'i'sllnu Drudoory From

“no?" letter on tho Iub cot auctioned in the
"—MrI. Glace Neils Jenner.

 

oiled thus saving covering material._
Dandelions, Spinach, Kale and 0th-

er Greens

The salted greens, after they have
been soaked to remove the salt,
may be boiled with fat meat or boil—
ed plain and served with a cream
sauce and garnished with hard- boil-
etL eggs. When so prepared they
taste much like the fresh greens, al—
through naturally, they lose some
of their flavor during the salting
and freshening processes. '

Beets
Rinse the beets and boil in the
same manner as fresh beets When
thus prepared they have, a flavor
which is not unlike the common
pickled beets and may be served as

ing country. As you know,. the
soil of Emmett county-is very fer-
tile in spots, and sterile” in patches.
This is one of the spots. Heretor
fore we-have‘existed on one 'of the
patches. We are very close to Lit-
tle Traverse Bay, of which many re—
scrters sing their praises. Bay View
about 5 miles away is the center of
culture and reﬁnement for the ped-
ple who flock each year to North-
ern Michigan. But we farmers are
so busy raising food for their bodies
that wehardly have time to inquire
from them the much needed food
for our souls and minds. Also there
is a money question, .

Speaking of food,- I have a pretty
good recipe for fruit cake. The

 

 

The doors have no latches.

And mended with hay wire.

The hope of the Nation.

 

“Please, Mister”

UR FLAGSTAFF and pulley, through sunshine and rain-

0 Cry aloud for Old Glory. Their cry is in vain.

The steps of our school house are falling away.
'The boards of the well curb huge sunk in decay.
A shutter’s lone hinge lets it dismally creak ,_ .
While the wind through the plaster plays hide-and-go-seek. ‘ '
The hooks from the cloak rooms were gone years ago,
The roof lets in raindrops and beautiful snow.
They' re battered and worn,
The old seats are shattered, stained, three-legged, torn,
“Deserted.” you say?
No! Forty-eight children meet here every day.
They crowd to their places like little sardines,
From wee girls of ﬁve to boys in their teens.
The salt of the earth;
The brave boys and girls from a farmer's warm hearth.
Yet they sit in this stable six hours every day,
If they don’t pass their grade then who is to pay?

I

 

—-—Mrs. Copeland.

 

 

 

 

a pickle, with butter, or used in the
preparation of salads, vegetable
hashes. etc.
String Beans -

The salted string beans should be
soaked to remove the salt and then
cooked in any of the ways in which
fresh string beans are prepared.

Corn

To prepare salted corn for. the
table, rinse it thoroughly and soak
it for four to ﬁve hours, changing
the water frequently. “After soak—
ing, place the corn in cold water and
bring to boil, pour off the water, add
fresh cold water. bring to boil again
and cook until tender.»

 

JUST A REAL CHATTY LETTER
INCE READING Mrs. F. M. B's
letter will try to do my share as

‘ nobly. . ‘
en wing never soared so hlgh again,
but no doubt he learned .to sing
more ’sweetly.
of manycf our best loved writers.

Those whose lives the finger of pain, i

sin or sorrow has touched seem to
possess a charm which we cannot
resist For instance,_ Burns, Byron,
Longfellow and others. ,. Do you
know that Hezekiah Butterworth is

.the author of a very interesting book

called “In the Boyhood of Lincoln?”
It is a very intimate picture of early
pioneer life. 'Any‘ one over 10 can
enjoy it.

My young hopefuls are reading
the Dec, Dads so I can’t refer to our
department fer new ideas just now.
We all enjoy allot thei‘paper. We
have taken" it over a year now. I
used it in my civil government and
agricultural classes last
Dear Mrs. Jenney.yo11’d»never guess

‘from my penmanshizp. that l wag a
school 1119. ’a-m new. Would you? Last

yea-1" 3 school was my fourth exper-

,ience. A one-room school, ‘48 ‘éhil'd:
‘ren on the run, agcs from

 

8 grades and a chart class Does
this excuse my _’ ts?
l - ‘ - "

  

 
  

  

The bird with the brok- ‘

We know it is true,

winter '

to 16 , fed summer school at Bay View.-

plain base can be baked without the
fruit if you haven’t any. ..It can be
baked in layers and various ﬁllers
used (my folks prefer cocoanut) or
it can be used for drop cakes, or
buns. 'So you see it is quite adapt-
able. Besides it costs little, and if
you ruin it a few times the loss
should not prevent you from trying
again. So if you like I Will send it
soon.

'I never buy citron for my fruit
cake, but make my cwn (don’t
laugh!) but of ripe cucumbers. No
one knows the difference unless you
tell them. If you would like to
know that, too, will send it with
the cake recipe.

The birds and squirrels run things
their owu way here. We never keep
a cat or dog as their songs do not
appeal to us, and they could not kill

a worm or ﬁght a hawk successfully

if they tried.
both. The most objectionable bird
inx this vicinity is the crow.
is a rookery half a mile from here,
and the clamor at sunrise and sun»-
set is something unearthly. If I
write too much leave some or all of
it out. I wish some more school
ma’am-hcusekeepers would write, I
know there are hundreds of them in
Michigan. They will probably have
more time to write after the teach-
ers training law goes into effect. By

The king bird does

There .

the way, TheodoreRoosevelthad a‘

ﬁne motto for teachers: “Speak
softly, but carry a big stick.”—
Mrs. Julia Copeland, Emmet County,
Michigan.

Your letter is a treat and your pen-

manshlp easy reading. In every way it
is an improvement on mine, but then

editors are really not expected to know .

how to write legibility. They are no-
toriously poor writers and thus far. at
least I run true to form

I know your county, having been up
there several times and having attend-
It is

indeed a lovely country. Please send

. us the recipes as we would be very glad
. to have them

 

its: edge;

 

. with the"

   

.personal-i '
riculture is t’hé‘ba
perity \ Until

  

make them the, complaint of the com
ipebple is well founded ,1
311st. The commimlty school is, .1
Ileve,a
thougha there are many who will not
agree With me.

 
  

have a perfectly ﬁne- equipment.

REFOOTING STOCKINGS
O REFOOT a stocking, fold
stocking the same as when
bought, then out -just back» 7 .‘of

where worn in toe, down thru cent» ,

er of foot until required length of

foot, then cut straight across above,

the heel. Have cut in foot extend

about 1 1-2 inches longer than low, 7

er. part of heel. Then sew Tacross heel
and spread foot of ~‘stocking, and sew

straight piece of another stocking ~~

across heel part and then all around
foot.

A recipe which is very- good and
to be used at this time of year is:

“re-4 quarts'of rhubarb, diced, add

1 pineapple ground, and boil; sweet—
on to taste. This is very good.

I also noticed a short time‘ ago
that a lady was having trouble»
when churning; the cream wouldn't
turn into butter. ..._I also had the
same trouble and a neighbor advis-
ed me to heat the milk through—-

(not boil) as soon as milked—then

srai‘to cool, and I had' no trouble
Whatever in getting butter. Hoping
this may help some one. - I remain——

Mrs. J. A., L'aSalle, Mich.

 

.“THE BIRD WITH THE BROKEN
. WING"

HE POEM,

Broken Wing," which was pub-

lished last week, has a verse
added whiCh makes i‘t as ﬁne a poem
as was ever written. I have this
with the notes, a beautiful song:
but I have never learned Who com-
pcsed the last verse. 1‘ am sending
you a copy of the last stanza.

But the soul that comes to Jesus.

Is saved from every sin,

And the heart that fully trusts
Him as '

Shall a crown of glory win;
Then come to the dear Redeemer.
He’ll cleanse you from every stain,
By His wonderful love and mercy,

You shall surely rise again—'—
‘Mrs. Lillian Lowell, In‘gham Coun-
ty, Mich.

I like the faith and the brave opti-
mism expressed in this verse and think
the poem incomplete without it. I very
mery appreciate your interest ' ..

.__._._..__,_____.
CANADIAN SOLDIERS BECOMEI
FARMERS

WENTY thousand young Canad-

ians who fought in the war have
L-‘taken up in dead earnest the
Dominion government's land settle~
ment scheme. . Every soldier is en-
titled to a grant of 160 acres. Every
"settler is required to take up act-
ual residence and make farming his-
vocation. Each soldier may go to a
training center for a month’s in-
struction. That seems to be a very
short training period but it helps.

Illillll|iiili|illlllillllilllillllilillillililililiililmilillil!IiliMilli!Ilillllliiliiilllillllllilliliililiiilllllill‘llll

A Pretty S‘er-
viceable Apron —-
Pattern 3605 is‘
shown here, It is
‘cut in 4 sizes: _
”Small, 34-36; med—
ium, 38- 40; large,
42- 44: Extra large,
46 48 inches bust
measure. ‘, A rhed-‘
ium siXe requires
3 1- 2 yards of 88;
inch material.

Here is an apron
that is Just‘ an ap-
ron but it is 1:12?» ‘
tainly neat and be.-
coming. Dotted 0r
{ism-ed ‘ pere‘ale
edged 3‘.

.1 .

 

v

   

      

embroidered

  
   
 
 

   
  
 
   

step in the right. direction. Al:

Ohio is making the ex-_j,
periment and: the people of that state '
are. well satisﬁed. Their country schools .-
are as modern as any city schools and.

 
 
  
 
 
   
     
 
  
    
   
   

  
  
 
  
 
  
  
 
  
 
   
    
  

 

 

 

“The Bird with a‘

 

 

 

   
      
   
 
   
   
    
  
 
  
 
 
 

   
   
    
    
   
   
   
       
   
   
     
      
       
     
    
     
 
      
     
   
     
     
  

 
 
         
   
  
   
 

      
   
 

  

 

 

 


  
   
  
  
     
  

  
   
  

   
   

    
 

      
   
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
   
 
 
   
 

 

   
      
    
     

 

 

 

 

 

 
     
   

' Duke oniLnnENa:

{had a Wonderful time.
“ , members oi? the Children’s » Hour

» out of place.

a

.. carom.

   

 

clam . .
' Michigan ’Busmes‘s Farther

 

Howamany of

youwerejlucky enough to be
.v .among the county champions in
Boys” and Girls? Club work who met
, at (the ~Michigan 'Agricultural Col-

“Erlege '«from 'July 6 ~ to ’9? ' I believe
lag: many of} my nieces

. and nephews
were theree-and each and every one
I wish all

"who attended this. annual club week

_‘wouid write me a long letter telling"

of what they did, “what they saw and
what they learned while at the ag-
ricultural college. ' ”
’_ Also send me a' story on how you
won, the championship of. your coun-
ty, what you have learned through
club work'and What you expect to
(do along this line/ next year. I
would ‘be pleased to receive a picture
.ofeaoh one'ot you and if we can
ﬁnd space ‘I will' publish it With your

1 story. Don't youthink these stories

Would be interesting, boys and girls?
I am sure if‘you county champions
would'do this that you would cause
many ”more girls and boys to become
interested in club work. Who will
be the ﬁrst‘one to write me sending
in theirstory and photograph?—
UNCLE "NED. ‘ '

 

OUR BOXS AND GIRLS

My dear Uncle Nah—For, .many,
months I have been immensely inter-
ested in that small corner called “The
Children's Hour," but I have never had
Courage enough to write. The majority
of children that write are so much
younger than myself that I feel rather
Perhaps I am at least
welcome to a small corner for once, and

. my trip?

  
   
  

if I am not welcome I am sure that Mr.
Waste" Basket has a place for. me in his
big heart. NeVertheiess I will write for
the 'old saying 'is “Nothing ventured.
nothing gained." ‘Am I really too old to
join your happy circle? I am only 16
years old: Nothing but a happy. school
girl. I go to’ the Stockbridge high
school and will be a junior next year. I
like to go to school and a. good educa-
tion is myhighest‘ ambition. Are any
oi! you boys and girls going to college
after you get through high school? I

think it is necessary for everyone to get

the best education they can for one will
never regret it: Don’t you agree with
me. Uncle Ned? Our M. B. F. just
came today; and as I was reading about
the differentcluhs that the boys and
girls of Michigan belong to. I thought
whats wonderful thing it was to be
able to do as those. boys and girls do.
I regret to say that there is nothing of
that sort around‘here, for I think it is
educational as well as entertaining.
What are you boys and girls going to do
this vacation?> And Uncle Ned what
are you going to do? I should very.
much like tto go to Niagara Falls this
summer and perhaps I will. If I do
would you like to have me tell you about
would you like to have me tell about,
I should be very glad to do
so. Have any'of you ever been to the
Falls? I never have although my par-
ents have been there several times. We
are having a rather hard storm just
how. It has not rained for so long that
I am glad it is raining. I"l tell you
what I will do so my letter will not 2‘0
into the'waste basket! Tf Uncle Ned
doesn’tput-my letter in print I will stop
at his ofﬁon when I go to Mt. Clemens
and take his picture with my camera.
then I will have his picture. so if you
want one just write to me and I will
send you one. It‘ you don't put your
picture on the children’s page that is
what I will do. Can vou imagine "in
(ﬂu-aging Uncle Ned around his ofﬁce
with my earners? I am afraid that my
letter is trotting rather long for when
I 'g-ot started I don't know when to stop.
I will be glad to answer any letters that
I receive for I want you all to write to
me As ever. a well wisher Luella M.
Moeckel. Stockbridge, Michigan.

 

Dear Uncle Ned;—I would like to join
your merry circle. I am a girl twelve
years old. Have light hair and blue eyes

 

Hour *

15E.

    
 
 

We take the M. B, F. and like it very
much., I like to read the letters in the
Children's Hour. We live on a farm 0nd
have 3 horses and 7 cowsand a calf. For
'pets I have six cats. Their names-are
Tipsy, Tiger, Teddy, Spotty." Nigger and

TommY- I have a sister three years old
and a brother four years old. Their
names are Violet- and Lloyd. Ishope

some’of the boys and girls will write to
‘ me.——Lulu Maye Clawson, Allegan, Mich.,
Route 6, Box 17A

Dear Uncle Nedz—Here is another boy
who wants to join your merry circle. I
am ten years old._ We live on a farm of
100 acres. I have one sister and two
brothers. For pets I have a dog, 3 cats
and 3,rabbits. I am in the, sixth grade
at school. My teacher is Mr. Hewett
and like him ﬁne. He took us down to
Lake Huron for a picnic the last day of
school. Our parents went with us and
tok our dinners and had ice cream. We
had a good time. After dinner we had
a swim in the lake. Although it rained
a little we school boys played a game of
base ball with our fathers which they
,won by a large score—Kit Blatt, Brown
City, Michigan, Route 2.

Dear Uncle Ned:—.My father takes the
I. , F. and like it very much, espec-
ially the Children's Hour. I~ am twelve
years old and in the sixth grade at our
school. -We live on an 80 acre farm
and have 9 head of cattle. about 70 hens
and '60 young chickens For pets I have
four cats and a pig. My cats names are
Jimmy, George. Goldbug and Shorty. The
pig is‘named Jennie. We have two old
hogs and 22 little pigs. I got a piano
two years ago and have taken music les-
sons ever since. I hope to hear from
some of the other girls—Velma Berg, St,
Johns, Mich., Route 3, Box 124.

 

Dear Uncle Ned:——I am a little girl 9
years old and would like to join your
morrv circle~ Thave three sisters and two
brothers. I will be in the fourth grade
of school this fall. I like the Child—
ron's Hour and also the Doc Dads. Thev
nrn such funny little fellows. We live
on an eighty acre farm and also have
a forty acre farm a half mile from
our home. I have a cat or a pet and
we have lots of little chickens. I VVlSh
some of the girls and boys would write
to men—Imogene Allen, Lake, Michigan,
Route 1. Box 107.

years. old and fin-~"thgxetghth 1' --

 
 
  
  

 
  

      
  
   
 

 

ufni Ned" mug-gingth‘irt "r.

. . . . , ., e . a.
.schooit, There will only be, our girls
and eleven boys at- ourv'rsahool next: year
unless son! others mpye into our dis.‘ ‘
trict. My'brother Hugh is in the 9th
grage and my sister Norma is in the 4th '
gra e.

‘ten, five rabbits and some little chickens»
We have ﬁve calves, two cows, three hor-
ses, ten little pigs and two large pigs.

I go to Sunday school at Michigan Gen- _ .L

ter and Napoleon. My rather takes the
B. F. andl like the D00 Dads very .2-
much. I wish some of the girls would _

write to me.‘ I will anSWer' all letters.
Helen Isham, Napoleon, Mich., Route 1.

 

Dear Uncle Nedz—May I join your
merry circle? I 'wrote once before but
my letter was not in print so thought I
would try again. Next year 1 will be
in the seventh grade at school. I am
twelve years old and have been going to
the Halsey school but expect to go to
Grand Blanc next year because most all
of the schools in Genesee have consoli-
dated. We had a picnic the last day of
our school. The parents all came to the
school and we served refreshments. I
wish some of the girls would write to

me. I will answer all their letters.—
Marjorie Embury, Grand Blanc, Mich.,
Route 3

 

Dear Uncle Nedz—Please may ‘I join
your merry circle? I am a girl, 15
years old and just passed the 8th grade.
I live on a farm of 80 acres, and we

have 3 horses, 3 cows, a pig. a sheep.
and a calf. I have 4 sisters and

brothers. My oldest sister is married.
We take the M. B. F. and like it very
much. I like rto read the children's
page. I Wish some oi." the boys and

girls would write to me, I would gladly
answer their letters, —— Z111a Conklin,
Shepherd, Michigan, Route 3.

 

Dear Uncle Ned:——-r[ have been greatly
interested in the letters from the boys
and girls in the past few weeks. I am a
girl eleven years of age and will be in
the seventh grade next year. I always
want the Business Farmer ﬁrst when it
comes so I can See if there are any Doo.
Dads, for I think they are such cunning
little fellows. I have no- brothers nor
Sisters. 1 will gladly answer any letters
that come from the boys and girls—Vera.

3 June Martin, Highland, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Nedz—I am a girl 12 years
old and in the seventh grade. I have one
Sister and no brothers, We live on a 180
acre farm and have S cows and a calf, 4
horses. For pets I have a cat and two
kittens and a pony. We have 101 little
chickens and 50 hens.——Ella. Fero, Beld-
ing, Michigan.

 

 

\

 

  
 

       
  

 

‘-

ii) 1

 

  

 

 

 

 

. Taﬁvvéuuuhiuzfa... h . I
/ 0’7." . ‘. ’
j .i if . _. . ‘

I‘ , '\

\.

lilllallhlnnul

  

”‘I‘m

1

    
 
   
  
     

 

   

  

  

l - 93%;. x
;‘ "1" 5%
allllllmi'mrun .

   

 

 

. E

 

 

 
 

e .« ‘0
held a Tﬁubl

       
 

 

_, intha [center-of, the village and there i ‘
-' , everyone ' gatheredltd ‘ 1
119011611. "Old-Dom

see, what was \ to

* tread in a; fancy redis&w 3“ very
with: cold braid. tampon! the 1m: 01,,
oﬂenses. Th seemed " t

dreadi'uily ion;- lia‘t and

     

w ~; _j : :_...-sad. Tintein .Dooville
rigill have. ﬁnished reading it,

.,t unishment the villa e crier ill
amt ‘ l”

, ,or.. e aunesto‘ .
~13’on leakages wig beat . the drum to get everyone’s

   

 

he were Wondering whenever Doc
When

Doc ‘<is ﬁnished and has pronounced

about the streets

telling the
the people oi! Dooville.

He

  

'cm, m lw-ymcmwssw Acacia (Pang.

attention and then he will shout the
news. . But even
locked up,
chief 'in Dooviile for just} see, than I
little fellows ready with rotten e l
and juicy-ripe tomatoes. . ‘
Grouch looks about as pleased as Cw ,
have ever seen him look. Maybe he '
thinks that he is even now with
J ..

with ;Roly_ and Poly
there is going to be mm.

C Old 3,

y

    

    

I live on,a. .farm oi? 48 acres . W
and for pets 'we have four cats, 13,- kit-f“,

     
 

   
     
  
  
 
 
 
  
    
    
 
   
 


  
  
 

'ii‘i.

venom. hover-nouns) n

    

3:0. one y

- - shoved. or my.» ohm or

    
   

  

    
  
 

 

   
 

Few CLAIM YOUR.
4,343,, SALE DATE
to “old conﬂicting dates We will vmnom

0'“. list the duo of any live stock solo ll
Mlchlosn. If you are considering s solo

 

' W ,
fissile:

I... ..

 

 

 

Mu us at, once end we will claim the an
luv you. Address. Live Stock mm. ll. I.
7‘1. 0m. clolneno.
\.
00¢. 21. Holsteins. ‘Howoll Sales 00..

Howell. Mich.

 

 

 

LIVE STOOK AUOTIONEERS
Andy Adams, Litchﬂeld, Mich.
Ed. Bowers, South Whitley, Ind
Porter Colesbock, Eaton Rapids, Mich.
John Hoffman, Hudson, Mich.
D. L. Perry Columbus, Ohio.
J. 1. Post, llillsdalegMich.
J. E. Rubbert, Perry, Mich.
‘ Harry Robinson. Plymouth, Mich.
\Vm. \Vs'il’le, Goldwater, Mich.
John P. Hutton, Lansing, Mich.
O. A. Rasmussen, Greenville, Mich.

' CATTLE

HOLS'I‘Em-MIESIAN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SHOW BULL

Sired by s Pontiac Augie Korndyke-Honger—
veld DeKol bull from o. nearly 19 lb. show
cow. First prize junior calf, Jschon Fair,
1920. Light in color and Rood individual
Seven months 0d. Price, $125 to make
room. Hurry l

Herd under Federal Supervision.

4 BOARDMAI FARMS

JACKSON. MICH.
Holstein Breeders Since

 

1906

 

 

 

SIRED 8V SEGIS FLINT

. BULL GALVES

lricngerveid Lad. The
average records of his four nearest dams are
33.12 lbs. 730 lbs. milk in' seven

butter and
days from A. R. . dams representing the lead-
ing families of the breed with records up to 29
pounds in seven days. Priced to sell.
“ L. 0. KETZLER
Flint. Mich.

' WOLVERINE STOCK FARM REPORTS GOOD
sales from their herd. We ore well plused with
the calves from our Junior Herd Sire ”King Pon-
« the Lunds Korndyke Segis" who is 1 son of
‘ 'King of .the Pontiscs” from s daughter of Pon-
tiac Clothilde De Kol 2nd: A few bull mlvos to!
l sis. T. W. Spretuo. R 2. Battle Creek. Mich.
|
l

 

I AM OFFERiNG LIGHT COLORED HOL.

stein-Fﬁesian bull 1 year old from 21.51 lb.
dam and sire whose six nearest dams are 83.34
lbs. butter. Herd under state and federal sup-

ervision.
Oscar Wailin. Wiscogin Form. unlonvllio. Mich.

Registered HoleteinlBull

Bired by a son from King 0112, and from s 22
lb. cow. $90 delivered your station. Write for
pedigree.
EARL PETERS. Nov-ch Bradley. Mich.

I

 

i‘ I '1'. ‘i'llil
. , , ms? under
< mum-y will be sent on Mount. 'lottor still win out out.
‘ w you a‘ proof and tell you,’whlt lb will cost for 1

or me. . More Auction on» «vol-cm horses special in min
onnosasv DIRECTORY ,ru: MIGHIOAN Business seamen,

 

.I. m» 4 "trilliliHJ .v mun m. i .

mmmammnoitmlimorm'

    

have to often In ll m
. 28 or Blames. You'm m
or changes must be received one week before dots
. for them. Write today”
It. clemens. Michigan.

W“‘
”I.

A ROVALLY [RED BULL
Born Nov. 13. 1920. Mostly white. Shed
by s 85 lb. son of King of the Penman: dim
s _16 lb. 2 yr. old granddaughter of Pontiac De
NiJhnder. whose records at 35.48 st 5 1-2 we-
82373 at 4 LS years sud 80.11 at 3 1-2 oars
put her in the ﬁrst ranks es s producer. _ rat
check 3150 gets him. Herd Federally Supervrsed.
IRANDONHILL FIRM, Ortonvlllo, Mich.
John P. Hshl. 1205 Griswold 8L. Detroll, Mich.
LADWII COUNTY PURE BRE‘D LIVESTOCK
Association. Holstein. Jersey, Shorthorn and
Hereford cattle; Dulce-Jersey. Poland Chins. snd'
'Illasmpshlre hoes; Oxford. Shropshire. Hampshire
eep. . . -
A place to buy good breeding stock at reason-
able prices.
FRED B. SWINEHART. c. E. ATVVATER,
P Secretary.

resident. ,
Giodwin. Mich.

 

Fairlawn Herd—Holstein:

Hire Sire, Em‘hlaggaard Lilith Champion 10807?

His site’s dam Colantha 4th’s Johanna, Worlds
ﬁrst 35 lb. cow, and world's ﬁrst 1,200 lb. cow.
The only cow that ever held all World’sjutter
yearly milk record at the same time. His dam
records from one day to one year, and the world’s
Lilith Piebe De Re] No. 93710. over 1,150 lbs.
of butter from 20,599.! pounds of milk in a
year. \Vorld’s 2nd highest milk record when
made and Michigan state record for 8 years. Only
one Michigan cow with higher milk record today.
His two nearest dams average: 1 199 22

Butter. one year
Milk ....... ........... 28,515.9
Ohmp’s sons from choice A. R. 0. dams will
add prestige to your herd and money to your
purse. '
J. F. RlEMAN. Owner
Flint. Mich.

 

LAKEVIEW DAIRY FIRM HOLSTElN-FRIES-
inns. Herd sire Paul Pieterje Wane Prince.
Two nearest dams average 31.9 lbs. butter. 672
‘ lbs milk in 7 days. Dam milked 117 lbs. in one
day; 3,218 lbs. in 30 days; 122.37 lbs. butter
in 30 days. His bull calves for sale. One from
o. 22 lb. two-year—old. Good individuals. Prices
reasonable. Age from 2 to 5 months.
E. E. BUWERS. Goldwater. Mich.

A PROVEN BLOOD LINE

KING SEGIS tranmitted to his sons the powar
to transmit to their daughters the greatest _of
production over long periods. It is his offspring
that has recently made the greatest yearly pro-
duction ever dreamed of. 37.3814 pounds of
milk in a year. . .

“’e have for sale at moderate prices beautiful
individuals of show type KING SEGIS bulls.

GRAND RIVER STOCK F
111 E Main Corey J. Spencer, Owner
Jackson. Mich.
Under State and Federal

 

Supe rvision

TWO BULL GALVES

Registered Holstein—Frioslanpsired by 39.87 lb.
lull end from heavy producing young cows. The-o
oilvol ere very nice end will be priced sheep it

cold coon.
HARRY T. ‘I'Ulls. Elwoll. Mich.

REGISTERED HOLSTEIN GATTLE

for sale. From calves to full-aged cows.
F. . BOODAR, Richmond, Mich.

 

 

 

0R “LE—2 REG. HOLSTEIN IULLS
ready for service from 19 1-2 and 24 1-2 lb.
dams. Price $100 and $125. Herd on so-
credited list

Mich.

“Um. ORTFFIN. Howell.

 

 

HERE FORDS

 

¥ h

Tureen 'srocx Finn

Breeder of Registered Holstein
cattle and Berkshire Hogs.

Everything guaranteed, write
me your wants or come and see
them.

ROY F. FICKIES
Chesam‘ng, Mich.

-.

 

 

 

OME GOOD YOUNG REGISTERED HOL-

stein cowa. Fair size, good color, bred to
good bulls and due from July to December. Most-

  

ly from A. . stock, prices reasonable and
every one guaranteed to be exactly as repro
» sented.
M. J. ROCHE
Pinckney. Mich.

 

1 meme BULL Binaillls

Sired by Seals Kormiyke De Nijlsnder, s 82
lb. son of a twice Michigan ribbon winner .her
dam. 29 1-2 lbs. Dams up daughters of King
Segis Pontiac, 3. 37 lb. son of King Se . Rec-
ords 16 lbs. to 80 lbs. Priced at he? value.
1.510?- tup. Federally tested June 10. . Write
or is. ,

ALBERT G. WADE, White Pigeon, Mich.

 

NOTICE!

Springwell Stock Farm offers for sale Six

Registered Holstein females, three two-year-old

heifers due this fall. two cows six and seven due

this fall. Bred to a. 27 12 lb. bull; one year-

ling heifer; $1.000 takes the bunch. Semi for

pedigrees and photo or come and see them. Herd
under federal supervision. ‘

. W, C. HENDEE & SON. Fincknoy, Mich.

 

 

BEGSSTERED HEREFORD CATTLE —— KING
REPEATER 713941. Ind Benn Perfection
327899 bgad rang} her-(fl. thbsrg ”MW
some very no es ers or u . 1 or

bred to our herd Bulls. Come” undue them; they
wil pious you. ‘

Tony 8. Fox, Pmp., Henry Gehrholz, Herdsman,
MARION STOCK FARM. Marion Mlchisan

HEREFORD CATTLE "3:; “”3““

We can furnish registered bulls from 12
months snd older, best of breeding and at a
very low price, have also some extra good
Herd headers We have also is large lino

 

of registered Hampshire Hon. Gilts, Sows
and Beers .

Wribs us. tell us what you went and get
our prices.

1.. FAYETTE svocu FARM. Lo rum... lad,
J. Grouch A Son. Pron.

150 HEREFORD HEIFERS. ALSO KNOW
of 10 or 15 iced: fancy quality Shortshorns end
Angus steers 5 to 1,000 lbs,. aners anxious
to sell. Will help buy 50c co union. .

c. F. BALL. Folﬂ'iold. lows

LAKEWOOD HEnEronns..i"§l..Jll2

Tiey 'are good ones. ’High class females. all
ages. Best of blood. Come and see.,
E. TAYLOR. Fremont, Mich.
“‘ﬁ

 

 

 

 

BiVEﬂVlEW HEREFORDS .53."..13525

a grandson of the $9,500 Bullion 4th. Also I
few females. ' 7
‘ Wm. c. DICKEN, Smyrna. Mich.

 

EREFORDS FOR.SALE. WE HAVE IEEN
breeders of Herefords for 60 years. Wyom-
ing 9th. 1920 International prize Winner heads
our herd. lave choice yearling bulls. 8
yearlingkheiiers and agew choice com for sale.
Let us now your wan .

GRAPO FARM. Sm amok. Mich.

 

 

SOLD ,ﬂﬁiﬂ

> null aslf ls‘lt advertised sold'but bus 2 more
, {ht are mostly white. Thor ere ‘ﬂoo might Isl-

lo'ws. sired so 11; On. Gas is (non
s I.“ lb. 3 r. old dun god to pthor 111m 5
20 b. Jr. 5 yr. old ﬁlm. ,1 is by o oo- of
Island Hen-gmold D, .91 Butler Boy. on o!

1 _ , wrenches 9...an mes.
WkEﬂv‘Tmyml mum. I not-
"llin nil ‘

    

 

  
   

enonrrnonn ,

ongexrns soon 1: mos.
mannerisms: boll more. a

 

FOB SAL.

 

head pure bred herd, Also several cows and
sum...» www- “serious...“ 22? no.1“:-
to was as ' V .

' up. om._m. m. ‘

a “M. romeo" ouch-moans
rand Dom 3mg». also. , or set: two
‘ 331k one Ill-n the! b months 31d.
eve hate-1:“ f * " ‘2 yous 1d.

 

Not mittens; .‘1'9

   

Wﬁro‘uonm old: m,
t. ._‘ L. .

 

.the opinion of Mrs. Wager.

. velopedvlor the farm child, sold Mrs.

     

  

    

  

 

    

,. , . "some . . lawns: . .. ’
1:0,. bi. ‘“1.‘““,'t.”, Ban 4 . rt communities Would hematite,
hmmﬂ; no. aﬁmuﬁnddtmty the exhibit details; tor their. ifair._,‘_
as thevshoaia be,” said Mr. Clarke, ‘ ' v " ‘ ‘
adding, "These big wages, short
hours and excess-iv" profits have
made the younger generation dissat-
isﬁed with the long hears and small-
er protits of the farm. ‘They are
looking for the dollar in the hand
and present enjoyment rather than
,the development of a businesssnd
an income for old age” ‘

Clyde Stewart and R. W. Peters
said that high freight rates were
holding back the farmer’s business.
Stewart declared. it cost as much to
ship'his hay to Detroit as he got
for it. Peters declared that the
farmer could not compete with ex—
orbitant prices for labor and that the
railroads and coal mines should not
be forced to pay war time prices for
men.

Herbert Vincent, general farmer,
said that last fall he could hardly
close his granary doors on a. bump-
er crop, but he lost hundreds of dol-
lars on his crop investment because
of high labor costs and a low mar—
ket for farm products. He favored
extension of credit to needy foreign
countries as a means for enabling

 

, parts of ’Michigan are expects
to gather at East Lansing on
Friday; July 29, for the Fourth An-
nual Farmers’ Day at the Michigan
Agricultural College. More than a
thousand attended the event
summer, and indications are that
nearly double the number will be on
hand for the round~up on the 29th,

mental p10tsond livestock is schodr
uled for the morning. Following
the basket picnic lunch at noom‘tho
visitors will gather for a. short out-
door meeting, addressed by one or~
two of the country’s leading agri-
cultural authorities., Music and on-.
tertainment features are also listed
for the afternoon meeting.

(The 142 acres of farm crops ax—I
perimental plots on the college farm
this year are by far ~the largest
acreage of the kind ever planted in
Michigan, and are said to contain
interesting information on all craps
grown in the state. Bldoded cattle
and livestock, including many blue

them to buy American farm pro_ _ribb0n Winners at State and nation-
ducts. Mr. Vincent also! declares :1 shows, W111 be, on display in the
arns- ' . ’

against present i'r’eight rates.

George Bergtold said he was get-
ting 7 cents a pound for pork and
pork chops at .the butcher shop cost
him 35 cents a pound. Beans he
sold .at $3.50 'a hundredweight were
planted and harvested. with $5 a
day labor.

James E. Major, dairy. farmer,
testiﬁed that milk he got 3 1—2 cents
a quart for was‘relailed in Midland,
Mich., with no transportation cost
involved. at ten cents a quart.

Charging that business men and
speculators could get plenty of long
time money to finance their affairs
and that the farmer, Who could not
turn his money over in less than
eight months, was forced to take 30
to 90 day loans and often had to
pay bonuses which make for an ex-

, Topics of immediate and vital in.-
terest to the tanning industrY\are
to be emphasised during the gath-
ering, s'ccording to announcement of
the committee in charge of arrange-
ments. Timely subjects are to be
the order of the day.— Special ox-
hibits of interest for the women are
to be arranged at the college wo-
man's building, While R. A. Turner,
state leader of Boys’ and Girls'
Clubs, is planning a program for the
boys and girls who come along with
the family—H.

 

MARKETING. APPLES CO-OPEB-
ATIVELY IN KANSAS
(Continued from page 4)

“We did not conduct this market-

orbitant rate of interest. Frank lug eccord‘ing to the best business
Lundy, general farmer, declared principles, as we tOOk 9-“ number 01
that agriculture is not adequately chances that we should “Gt have
ﬁnanced; Mr. Lundy declared that taken, but they were really neces-

sary to move the fruit in time. For
a cooperative association to accom-
plish its objects, among other things,
it must standardise the. pack and
then be very careful to observe the
standard; a trade—mark or brand
should be adopted and registered.
This will assist in‘the sale of the
product, as it‘ will not take long {or
the brand to bécomo known for
quality if the pack‘lives up to the
brand. Storage should be provided
to permit a. longer selling period
and to give the buyers o wider;
choice of varieties in the cars. his
would be advantageous to both sell-
er and buyer and Would materially
. increase sales. Many buyers could.

. handle mixed cars when it would be
FAIRS SHOULD MAKE SPEOIAL impractical for them to buy a car of
APPEAL T0 WOMEN AND one variety. ’The'producers could
CHILDREN make their most desirable varieties
DUCATIONAL exhibits 01' SDeC- sell the less_ desirable and in the ag-
lal interest to Women and child- gregate a better price would be to.

‘ ren on the farm should be an

alized. Storsge would also permit
important part of every county fair handling small orders to a much bet-
in Michigan this year, according to

. ter advantage, and those with a lit-
MI’S- Edith Wager, member 0f the tie cultivation would amount to sov-
state farm bureau executive com- eral cars a year_ Small orders
mittee, who is interested in a move— would also materially assist in ad-
ment of t-hatykind. MI‘S- Wa-garv . is vertising the product and would
looking forward to the time when likely result in additional carload
farm women as a group Will have orders. An _ association should
an important part in shaping some handle bulk, barreied, and boxed sp-
of the agricultural policies of the pies as part of the trade calls £01“
state. - each pack and the seller must apply
Exhibits of the various labor Sav- what the consumer wants. The assbe
lng devices. just out and available iciation should place an inspector at
to the farm home, beautiful fur- each shipping point to examine care-
nishings for the home and new ideas fully all the apples that go into the
in home arrangement could be pre- cars. This would avoid many com-
sented ably by the county fairs, in plaints. {if the inspector is hiredby
She the association. and is responsible to
believes that the county fairs could

it he will be free to rejoctmr accept,
present all new conveniencesdor the according to the quality lot-the prog ,
home‘in the best light and is cer- ' '

duct offered.
teln‘ that such an exhibit could very
well become the most interesting
part of the fair. ,
Scores of exhibit ideas maybe de~

banking law's should be changed so
that the farmer should have the
same chance that other forms of
business enjoy.

The Midland county returns were
ﬁled with the American Farm Bur-
eau federation which is gathering
county returns on the status of ag-
riculture from 47 states. They are
to be tabulated and the results will
be placed before the Congressional
Commission of Agricultural Inquiry,
now sitting at Washington to deter-
mine the causes and legislative rem-
edies for the present condition of
agriculture, says the state farm bur-
eau. »

 

or great help in marketing. ll!-it,:il. -:
. properly organized {and .~ mun ‘
A but otherwise, it; will _. be .11!
doubtful nine. It
Wager. Possibilities range tram
lieu) that will nppeol to the child

 

ozone: w..s ,

1- 'ﬂ' JARED IINOLD

  

 

st?

himseltw ..l°,..t.l19§§_ c corned, with his .

last .

Inspection of the college expel-1n;

musings DAY n M. A. 0.,
, UNDREDS of farmers from all

“A cooperative 'association' con ‘bo' “

     
 
     
   
    
    
      
 
    
 
          
       
        
          
     
     
    
     
  
  
    
   
   
  
       
    
   
   
     
     
  
  
    
   
   
    
  
   
  
    
   
    
  
     
     
 
    
   
     
   
  
  
   
    
  
 
  
      
    
 
   
  
 
   
   
   
       
      
     
   
   
  
        
   

 

      
       
    
   
   
   
   
       
         
     
 

   
       
         
 
    
       
   
   
    
   
   
   
   
     
 
 
   
  


   

o of" the surplus power develop»
Id; it is presumed that he expects to
» make parts, of. his automobiles,

 
 
 

littering the proximity of this loca-
tion to the big iron, coke and lime-
stone supplies of Alabama and Ten-
5nessee, and the river navigation
” that will be made available by the
proper handling of the waters of the
Tennessee, there is reason to believe
-that this may all eventually mean
further material reductions
cost of these machines. The farm—
' or would therefore beneﬁt from this
source as well as through cheaper
' fertilizers.

Located‘ as it is, within thirty-ﬁve
miles of the largest phosphate mines
in the United States, and in view of
the recent experiments which show
it to be entirely feasible to make
phosphate fertilizers at greatly re-
duced costs by electric methods,
there is strong probability
should Mr. Ford’s proposal be ac-
cepted by the government, we will
before manyyears be getting our
phosphate fertilizers from Muscle
Shoal or similar water power de-
velop ents. It is understood that
, Mr. Ford would expect to devote
. considerable effort and expense to
' . ‘ the perfecting of improved process-
' " es. In fact nitrate plant number
~ , one might well be made an experi-
“ mental plant. This plant was de-/
° 9 . signed to make nitrate by a modi-
fied German (Haber) process but
has never proved an economical. pro-
ducer. The possibilities of develop-
- ,' . ‘ ment along these lines are limitless,
" and knowing Mr. Ford’s love for the
new and the original, and also his
oft-expressed desire to help agricul-
~ ' ‘ ture, it is not too much to predict
that under Mr Ford’ s control rapid
and revolutionary changes in
. fertilizing methods and materials
, would follow.

‘ In order to make contain that all
beneﬁts derived from the cheap
power, the salvaging of government
pronerty, and the advance of science
shall go direct to the farmer. Mr.

~ Ford’s proposal arranges for an in-

dependent board consisting of rep—

, resentatiVes of the American Farm

5 Bureau Federation, the Farmers’

Union, and"the Grangepto meet with

a lesser number of representatives

’of the Ford company and determine

by examination of the books that

the maximum proﬁt of 8 per. cent set

in the proposal, is not exceeded.

Under this arrangement it will be

seen that it is decidedly to the farm-

_ ers advantage for the plant and the

I}, ' equipment to be turned over to Mr.

Ford at as low a price as possible.

”Interest on the investment and the

cost of power are the two biggest

factors in the making of nitrates.

None but a very large company hav—

' . ing use for large amounts of power

-« ' ' could handle this proposition, since

‘» 3 L _ ‘ it is only by the full utilization

5"? I . ' the water power that the cost per
. unit used can be kept down.

. The ﬁnal determination as to the

' ' acceptance or rejection of this offer

lies with congress. Authorization

must be given the War Department

and the money must be appropriat-

_.. .ed, to complete the dams. The re-

commendation of Mr. Weeks, Sec-~

retary of”War, may have"something

to do with the case, but not a great

deal. So thoroughly did this matter

become mixed up in politics last

winter that it is now practically an

,administration matter and the ac-

tions of the leaders in congress will

be taken only after careful party

caucus. The desire of the leaders

is, still, to protect certain corpora...

tions which would like to. keep oth-

ers, and especially Mr. 'Ford, out of

the fertilizer and water power ﬁeld.

_, But so tight has the pressure he-

come that it is difficult to see how
they can still carry out this plan in
the face of the honest desire of the.

  

  

 

‘1'

 

 

 

 

 

 

tricts to do what is .hest for all.
' When the farmers were
(evernment operation last winter,
these leaders said‘: "Why net get
private concern to lease or buy
ﬁg ant and Operate it. " ’ Little did
Mk than t t the farmers

/ to , ’But now

 

trucks and tractors there, and 9911-.

in the .

that ’

0111‘.

of-

‘ completion except

members from the agricultural dis- ,
urging

the plants from all the world, but

. all others interested said they were ,
not prepared to make an offer. They

hoped ’to get it eventually for noth—
ing. Now that Mr. Ford has hid it
is likely that other bids will
made but it is safe to predict that
none will be so careful of the farm-
ers interests, or in the end so fav-
orable to the interests of the people
as a whole.

 

NATION-WIDE SURVEY OF CROP
CONDITIONS
(Continued from pace 3)

Indiana: Threshing will practical-
ly be completed in another week.
Yields deappointing and the’quality
will not average better than No. 3.

Iowa: Crop as a Whole is good as
to yield and quality though some
light yields are reported. Harvest-
ing of greater portion of crop prac-
tically completed.

Michigan: Harvesting nearing
completion over lower peninsula ex-
cept in east central and northeast-
ern counties and threshing has be;

gun.
Minnesota; Harvesting in ’ prog-
ress. Yield generally fair. Some

heat and rust damage.

Wisconsin: Harvest begun in the
south and west. Yield will be be-
low average due to drouth and rust.

Spring Wheat

Illinois: Deterioration reported
and condition low. Maturing rap-
idly; scattered ﬁelds in central sec-
tion ready to cut. Rust prevalent.

Indiana: Cinch bugsdoing much
damage. Crop nearly a failure.

'Minnesota: Rains beneﬁcial. Needs
cool weather. Some heat injury

'and danger of rust damage.

Wisconsin: Yield will be very
light due to drouth and rust.
\Washington: Doing quite
needs moisture.

Oats

Illinois: Suffering from heat and
drouth. Cbndition low. Early crop
being cut in central and northern
areas.

Indiana: Cutting completed in
south and in general progress in
north. Little threshing done. Low
yields predicted.

Iowa’: Fair crop indicated.

Michigan: Ripening and. will soon
be ready to cut. Straw generally
short, and crop poor in western and
northwestern districts. Rains in
central and eastern districts bene-

well;

ﬁcial.
Minnesota: Condition improved
by rains. Some heat damage. Early

crop will soon be ready for harvest.

Wisconsin: Harvest has begun in
south. Yield will be very light due
to drouth and rust damage. Live-
stock have been turned into the
ﬁelds in the southeastern and north-
eastern counties.

Rye
Illinois: Harvest almost complet-
ed. Threshing in progress. Yields

generally fairly good.
Indiana: Many fields will not be
cut. Yields disappointing where

‘threshing has been done.

Harvesting nearing
in east-central
and northeastern counties and the
threshing has commenced.
Potatoes

Illinois: Irish potatoes suffering
from drought. Sweet potatoes do—
ing fairly well but need rain.

Indiana: Crop deteriorating
to drought. Insects very bad.

Michigan: A rather poor stand of
Irish potatoes reported in the north-

Michigan:

due

west due to drought. Acreage
about the same as laSt year.
Minnesota: Yield of early crop

probably reduced by drought. Late
crop in satisfactory condition.

New England States: Quite good
growth made but suffering badly
in the drought areas, Stand not

'~ ve‘ry gobd.

New Jersey; Early crop of Irish'
potatoes being as: and poor yields
reported. Late crop improved by
rains. Sweet potato growth back-
wart but improved by. rains. _

Wisconsin: Condition doclini’ng.
Fields spotted in many places as
seed rotted in the ground. , m1
rains beneﬁted both late and early

. varieties in’scme districts.

be

 

 

mime. show you a proof and tell you what It
:fz'l‘sggoad. or copy as often as you wish. Copy

 

o u(S PEGML ADVERTISING RATES under
9 U ry‘ will be sent on request. Better still write out what you have to offer. let us put it I;

Bleedem' Auction Sales advertised here at special low rates: ask for them. Write today”

 
    
 

this heading to honest We of live stock an;

   
   
   

/

will cost for 18. 28 or 52 times.
or changes must be received one week before data-

You can charm

   

3.. .

    
 

 

1

IREEDERS' omncrosv ,THE woman: BUSINESS FARMER. Mt. Clemens. Mich’m. i - '
> I
. cows, HEIFERS, suns '
iﬂgﬁlagbﬁg§ ”gill-fat Tit 1attractive pica! GLERNSEYS '
l‘ " I‘S. T I
Wm J_ “U" Rm‘cﬁufcmﬁggfl 11“ unnuesv 3111.1. OALF 1 M08. 01.1). 8111:. .

 

From the Maple Ridge herd of Bates Shorts
l‘alved in September 19‘0.
TANSWELL. Michigan.

SHORTHORN CATTLE AND OXFORD DOWN
shock Both sex for sale
A. DeGARMO, Mulr.

35XTRA GOOD BULL CALVES FOR SALE. '

horns
E. Mason.

 

Mich.

 

cENTRAL MICHIGAN SHORTHORN BREED“

era Assocmtlon offer for sale 75 head: I
“to, both milk and beef breeding Send for. 11ng
M. E. MILLER. 890' y, Greenvllle, Mlch.

 
    
   
   
   

 

        

Prince Charmante, A. 2K. 4 A. 1‘

Langwater
fat 1 ~2 yrs. .

It. daughters average 416 lbs

       
     

 

   

Dani: Lawton’s Lady Lu, A. It. 416 lb. fut class i
A. A. (Dfarmers class) 1 A. R. daughter, 409 '
lbs. fatD D. Write
”(SEGAN BROS"
Allooan. R 1, Michigan
GUERNSEY BULLS. SERVIOE— '

 
   
 

Fan 8"- able age. and calves. Dams now ;

on test making splendid A. R. records. I have
what you want in type breeding and DI‘OGDCtiOD- ‘1
Have never had abortion nor tuberculosis. Herd
federally accredited. Prices $100 up Write f
for particulars . :-
A. M. SMITH. Lake Mich. l

    
   
         

City.

  

 

   

\

 

 

 

 

 

THE VAN BUREN co. WORTHORN BREED
' REG. GUERNSEY BULL 8
or: A s '
and biersgggﬂg. hue “oak for “I?" bow milk 52“ ,ISAL 1.9333“ old. ready for heavy scr-
’r1 c c secretary, ‘ B‘ ' '
FRANK BAILEY Hartford. Mich. c. BUCK. Williamsburg. Mich.
AYIlSHIRES

RIGHLAIIII SIIOIITIIDRIIS

Herd bulls for quick
and Collynie Cullen 5th.
oldls3 agid ftried sires.

es 0 blood lines and uh

Both quiet to handle. 0' prospects

A real bargain.

Write for particulars.

. H. Prescott & Sons

Fair Acres Good!
Both roan ﬁve year

mic.

 

 

 

 

FOR SALE—REGISTERED AVRSHIRE
bulls and bull calves, boilers and heifer on)?“
Also some choice cows.

Mich.

FINDLAY BROS" R 5. Ulnar,

 

 

BROWN SWISS

 

.~__.W_.-.~._v~ . — m-.- N

   
   
  
  

 

   

 

 

Tawas City. Mlch. EGISTEHED BROWN SWISS BULL, 30"“

A . ,. 2 ‘ . , . ._
BUY SHORTHORNS NOW 4TH ANNUAL he“??? 1.1. 19 1 Guaranteed entirely cutie i
111113313 test without a reactor. Some bargains ARL 0- WH'TLOOK- St. Johns. M'Ch- ,
JOHN SCHMIDT & SON. Reed City. ”MR. 3
ANGUS SWINE l
l
POLAND CIHNA ’
- The Home of i
I‘IEHES SOMETHING GOOD '
Imp- Edgar 0f DaImeny TgeEt LAbRGEsT daLotrvm-idemc. 1111 ‘11111011. I
I t b 1| '
PrObably herd. at aigrgﬁolnzble 211151;. t C ome lh1g1““loo-them! ’

The Worlds’ Greatest
BREEDING BULL

, Blue Bell, Supreme Champion t th

XSinithgf‘irclﬂd Shgw, 1919,11nd the Bilrminge—

mm 1 ow, 1 r’0, is a (11111 liter f

of Dahneny. g 0 Edgar
The Junior Champion Bull, Junior

Champion Female, Champion Calf Herd

inn! PSI-8:31??? Junior Heifer Calf, Miclr

gall a ﬁr,1920,werc ls

of Edgar of Dalmeny. a o the get

A very choice lot of young hulls—~—l
by Edgar of Dalmeny are, at this 1511;?
offered for sale. '

Send for Illustrated Catalogue.

WILDWOOD FARMS
Orion, Mich.

W. E. Scrlpps. Prop.. Sidney Smith, Supt.

 

 

 

BARTLETTS’PURE 1:111:11 ABERDEEN.
ANGUS CATTLE AND 0. I C.
Swine are right and are priced right. Corro-
spondence 111 hated and Inspection Invitad.

CA ARL BARTLETT. Lawton. Mich.

 

REGISTERED ABERDEEN a ANGUS—~BULLS,
Heifers 1nd cows for sale.

 

 

Priced to move. Inspection invited.
RUSSELL BROS., Merrlll. Michigan
JERSEYS

 

MEADOWVIEW JERSEY FA I‘M—REGIME R-

ch Jersey cattle.
E. MORRIS a. SON. Farmlnoton. Mich.
HEIFERS 1 YR.

REG JERSEY Young cows in milk sired

by \Iajestv’s Oxford Shylook 156, 692 also 11
11113 sired by Frolic's Master Pogis 17738323111;I
grandson of Pogis 99th and Sophie I9th’s Tor~

 

OLD——

   
 
 
 
  
    
 
  
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
  
 
 
  
   
  
 
 
   
  
  
    
  
 
  
   
   
 
  
   
  
   
  
   
   
   

 

Expenses paid if not as represented. These boar! '
In service: L's Big Orange, Lord Cinnamon, ,
Orange Price and L’s Long Prospect. 1

W. E. LIVINGSTON. Parma.MIch.1

BIG BOB MASTODON

Is sired by Caldwell Big Bob,
the world. His dam’s sire is A‘s Mastodon,
grand champion at Iowa State Icair, some breed-
ing. have 3 sows bred for Sept. A fall boar l
and spring boars that are corkcrs. Write for ,
prices. Everything guaranteed to please. 1

C E. GARNANT

Rapids. Mlch.

champion of _'

Eaton

 

 

ERE IS SOMETHING GOOD. BIG TYPI 2
Poland Chinas. One extra good largo long
big boned smooth gilt bred to Howley's
man. Price 8100. Also younger gilt: $30 to I
l
I

$50.00.
HOWLEY BROS.. Morrlll, Mlch.

 

11111111511. LAKE 1111111 “till: '1; '
fine lot_oi' spring pigs. (‘onie and see them. Boats 1
1n senice, Clansman’s Image 2nd, W. B. 011t-
post and Smooth Wonder. Don’t forget the

November sale.
W. B. RAMSDELL
Hanover. Mich. .

A FEW TOP GIL\TS BRED T0
ngblnnd Giant. the $1100 boar. Others bred 1

to Wiley 11 Perfection Weight, 700 at 18 month;
JOHN D. WILEY, Schooicraft. Mlch. . ,

T.P..C

 

'- T. P. G. DOES YOUR NERVE SAY BUY 1
hogs? Vote yes and order a good one. Fm
gins $30 to 350; spring boars. $15 to 525. Two
Prospect Yank gilts bred to Hart’s Block Price

March 24th at $50 each.
F. T. St. Louis. Mlch.

HART.
LEONARQ’S BIG TYPE P. c. BOAR PIGS g, >
at weanling time from Mich. Chamrﬂon herd
$2!" .Wltll pedigree. Satisfaction g11a1n11teed.CaI.I
or wrlte E. R. LEONARD. R 3. St. Louis. Mich. '

 

 

ILTS ALLISOLD. SPRING PIGS SIRED

 

mentor, two great bulls of the breed. Write for by Jumbo Lad, can 900 lb. boar. One ﬁne
priceguand pedigree. herd hour by Big Bob Mastodon.
c. WILBUR. R 1. Beldlnn. Mich. DeWITT c. PIER, Evert, Mich.
HERD, HOW

'r '71:): BULL ls HALF THEV
muc would a son of I’ogis 99tli’s Duke 8th
who has 60 per cent b1 d (

worth to your herd? on of Sophie 10th. be

   
 
  
  
  
 

BIG TYPE P.
LE (1. One gilt for
sale with pig by

the Grand (‘hzmipion boar of Detroit 1920.d110

 

 

Let me send you pedigrees and prices M y Stl I‘i st 1 l( f $7 t k s h " .
calves £10m this bull and Sophie Tormentogncggg.‘ i5 uTight-150 lsrtheclﬁgc" 01‘ D u e er (ﬁn
ARD . .oneeonv ,
3.4m“. Mich. lonla. Mich. ' .
, l .
0:32.201??? “ENE-WY BULLS WOULD Illl- ARGE {va POLAND CHINAS. spnmo §
pigs either sex shed by \Vonder Bob, h b :
ANK P NORMINGTON Ionla. Mich. King of Giants The bigboned goodbaeckecyi
kind. Priced to sell. :
JERSEYS F0“ PﬂﬂFIT WALTER MCCAUGHEY. R 4. CPOSWOII, MIGI’).
WHY? L S P —-4 eonns ev OLANSMAN’S IM- ’ .._
vt‘ 0] BAGIE rigid Big Defender, that ar- ‘
Because they consume less feed 6‘ $96: 311J§(R'1$]z.~s§;111§>012rart Michigan I}
fﬁr amount of products produced. *
t an any other breed “’sp'mg Pig" hm“ '
gvavthyTYBPeEt‘. opfol%AdN?s sooxs. good and
_ . .. on 1. '1. '
JERSEY products always bring or call. w. Caldwell .11 ‘éﬁl‘t’ii‘st‘gttﬂt W33“
h1ghest market prlce. .
. IG rvp . .
JERSEYS _ commence returnlng from izifgepgrgwtﬁrlmg 2:385:15: 1580118153; ’
money early 1n Ilfe, at tWO years Of herd blofirs. Come and see our stock, prices
. 8 I1 8. .
are or even younger and contmue re“ 01?. 111. "Runs a son. Byron/ouch. .

returning proﬁts until twelve to ﬁf-
teen and even until twenty years of
age.

An investment in JERSEYS
sures proﬁtable dairying.

Buy a JERSEY.-

in-

Write ' , I ‘
SEC’Y HENDMOKSON
, ' Shelby Mich.

for net literature.

  
   
  
  
  
    
  
    
 
      

 

 

    
      
       
    
    

 

     
        
    
    
     
       
   

 

    
    
   

“3 TYPE POLAND CHINA GILTS BRED ,
for summer and fall farrow from $25.00 to

$40.00. Boats ready for service, $25. 0. '
J . G. BUTLER. Portland. MIGh.

   
   
   
   
   
   
   

I Am Offering Large Type Poland chm lam.
bred to F's Oregon“ III reasonable prion. Ah.

fall gig. Writ:
Qt. ”SHEER 3. 8L Lou“, llloII.
DUROCB “j...

n sun—m: mum" AND APRIL ”a!
”“8130de by Gladwin Col. 188905 Write *
1'

11113132311001- a sane. I 1. we

    
   
   

 

         

 

 

    

  

   
   
 

 

  

    

  

 

 

   
     


'1‘, O WI" 3. A I
13mm ; 'eu, no '1:
sin or“ ' "

EOIAL ADVERTISING, ne‘rte under this heading to hon
. , t (sh-request. letter still write out what you have
, _ nd to“ you mt it, will cost lei-"18.229 ”‘82, tiniest. , 4 ,
_ - Off“!!! or often "It you 'wlsh.' copy or changes must be received“ one Week. before ht! ,
1 issue. Breeders’ Auction Sales edvertlsed here in special low rates: It“: for them. Write ,todeyl).
naeosne' DIREGTORY ,THE mciuoeiiibusmzss 'FARMER. Mt. Oiemens. Michignn, 1

ii In
(It. PIN II In

ganglia ’
l‘ .
' ' on one” cliche.

 

 

from-one of the largest herds of registered Durocs
in the state. Open fall gilts at $25. Sows and
gllts bred for ‘summer and (all furrow. Booking
orders for spring pigs. Will accept a few sous

-. to be bred to good sons of Great Orion Sensation
and Duration. Write or visit us

Mlchlgehe sci-m, Pavilion. Mich; Knlemszoo co. _

 

Burbs Jersey Bred Stock ell Sold. Orders taken
for w'entling pigs. 1.000 pound herd bear.
, ‘ J03. SCHUELLER, Mich.

. DUROO JERSEY BOARS. Boers of the large.
heavy-boned type. at reasonable prices. Write.
or better, come and see.
. F. J. DRODT. R 1. Monroe. Mloh.

PEAOH IIILL FARM

sows and gilts bred to or sired by Peach
Hill Orion King 152489. Satisfaction guar-
enteed. Come look 'em over.
Also a few open g‘ilte.
INWOOD BROTHERS
‘ Romeo. Mich.

FINE.LOT OF SPRING ,DUROO JERSEY

pigs. either leex. Brookwuter breeding at rea-
eoneble prices.

SOHAFFER BROS.. R 1, Leonard, Mich.

Weidmen.

 

 

 

 

FOR suitor-sump: vseano .nems Tue-r
have sire and type. 'Call or write.
Armstrong Bros...R.R. No. 8. Fowlervliie. Mich.

 

MERINO RAMS FOR SALE. noon eio- ._
I') vied. heavy shearers. ‘
nonsense once. a 4.. Albion. Mich.

AMPSHIRE‘S, BOOK LAMBS AND YEARL-
ings. Make your selection now for later ship-
ment. Will spare a few good ewes. - -
J. M. WILLIAMS
North Adams. Mich.‘

HAMPSHIRE sussr.

A few good yearling rams and some rem
lsmbe left to offer. 25 ewes all ages for ‘saie
for tell delivery. Everything guaranteed. es
represented. .

CLARKE 0., HAIRE. West Branch. Mich.

 

 

AM OFFERING SOME HIGH CLASS

SPRING DUROO BOARS

reeeonebie prices . A few gilts bred for Sex»
amber ferrow at bargain prices.
, . . . TAYLOR
‘ ' Mllen, Mich.

EADOWVIEW FARM—A FEW CHOICE
spring female pigs for sale.
J. E. MORRIS a. SON. Ferminoton. Mich.

FOR SALE—REG. DUROG-JERSEY SPRING
gilts bred to Rambler of Sangsmo 1st. The
beer that sired our winners et Michigsn State
Felt end Nations] Swine Show.
F. HEIMS l: SON
Devlson. Mich.

. oAKLAiins PREMIER cmrr

Herd Boer—Reference only—No. 129219
' 1919 Chicago international
4th Prize .Ir. Yearling

BOOKING ORDERS FALL PIGS AT 325
BLANK A POTTER
Potter-ville. Mich.

 

 

 

 

ANYTHING YOU

nunocs Farmer’s prices. WANT AT

c. L. POWER. Jerome. Mich.

 

FOR SALE—OUROC FALL GILTS. WE ARE
‘0 booking orders for choice spring pigs. :15. 8

10 weeks. old.
' JESSE BLISS a SON. Henderson. Mich.

”"300 JERSEY...."€3'%E§.Z§3-. 313?:
King $15 up. Satisfaction guaranteed.
E. E. OALKINS. Ann Arbor, Mich.

ON SALE: ONE DUROC. IOAR FROM
Breakwater breeding stock. Choice spring pigs.
JOHN CRONENWETT. Oerleten. MIoII.

 

 

nuroe sews ene ellts .iree to Weit's King 12949
who her eired more prize winning pigs st the
etete fem in the lest 2 yeers then eny other Du-

boar. Newton Bernbert. Rt. Johns, Mich.

 

urecs. Hlli‘ crest Farms. Bred end open sows
end gilts. Boers and spring pigs. 100 heed.
rm 4 miles strsight S. of Middleton, Mich.,
_ Gretiot 00. Newton & Blank. Perrinton. Mich.

DUROO BOAR PIGS TVPE. QUALITY

. and size. Pathfinder,
Orion Cherry King imd Proud Colonel breeding.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Address

ROGER GRUBER. capac, Michigan

WE OFFER A FEW WELL-BREE CELIOTn
ed spring Duroc Boers, eleo bred eowe end
Gilts in see n. Us" or write

MoNAUONT N A FOROYOE. Ct. Leuls.

O. I. C.

O l O, AIID OHESTER WHITE

Bred sows for August furrow. March pigs that
will please. ,Prominent bloodlines. Write
‘_ CLARE V. DORMAN, Snover, Mich.

 

 

Mich.

 

 

0. I. C. SWINE—MY HERD CONTAINS 1'"!
blood lines of the most no'egi herd. Cen furnish
you stock et "live end let live" prices.

A. J. GORDEN. Dorr. Mich.. R 8.

 

. I. O.'s. SERVICE BOARS, SPRING PIGS
'et Farmer’s prices '

OLOVER LEAF sr'ocK FARM. Monroe. Mich.
CHESTER WHITES .

naow. one

BBED GILTS Fgai‘viriugcir FQA mos. old. Also

young pigs. Write me your wants. Prices right.
RALPH COSENS. R 1, Levering, Mich.

HAMPSHIRES

I
HAMPSHIRE BRED GILTS NOW READY TO
ship. A bargain in fall and spring boar pigs.
JOHN W. SNYDER, R 4, St. Johns. Mich.

 

 

 

 

An Opportunity To Buy
:Hamp‘shires Right

We ere offering some good' sows end giits, bred

for Merci: end April fen-owing. Also e in!

choice fell pigs. either sex, Write or cell
‘ . one THOMAS. N2: Lethrop. Mich.

.uunxs‘ﬁinns . '
rises users-"..ii,ow:. ; I

 

" dressmsstiiicicu scores

' ‘ for 01-5.. or'e'.ilue'...is.rgey;lined;ﬁe0 1b b0“

' “19:61., W i"‘£hg'enii .enybody‘ in

T u for min 2 . ,qW-weﬁbis-sv

’ ”I" a 565%. 'i'e‘ii‘uarelirimmii‘; m. .~»'
1 ..U 7.5.

 

ruin

whet $40 '

 

 

BETTER siiEisniiie snioK

For the best in Shropshire and Hampshire reme
write‘nr visit

Kore-iron. reams. s. -L. 'Wing. Prop. I

Goldwater. Mich. .4

See our exhibit It the Ohio end Michigan

State Fairs.

r“.

[is HORSES
WO-YEAR-OLD PERCHERON STUD. GREY,
big boned, high class colt. from ton mare and

imported stud weighing 1,160 pounds. Price

$250.00.
JNO. c. BUTLER. Portland. Mich.

PET STOCK

 

 

.~.‘I'-
« '
\i
+-

 

 

 

FOR SALE, FLEMISH GIANT RABBITS. DOES,

breeding age, 36. Three months old pair, 85. ,
Registered does 812 each. Stock pedigreed. Qualn
ty guaranteed.

E. HIMEBAUGH. Goldweter. Mich.

 

0R SALE—THOROUGHBRED WHITE COL-
lie puppies. ' '
CHAS. KEPNER. Carson City. Mfch.

 

ILVIERCREST KENNELS OFFER FOR SALE
.‘l cioice little of Re . Scotch 11' P i .
Sable and white. 2 CO is “pp es

w. 8. HUBER, Gladwin, Mich.

 

Little Livestock Ads.
in M. B. F.
Do the Trick

SAVE MONEY!

. renewing the BUSINESS,
FARMER in combination with your
favorite daily.

THEv MICHIGAN BUSINESS
FARMER and any one of the daily
newspapers listed befow WILL
BOTH BE SENT FOR ONE FULL
YEAR for amount shown. -

DETROIT

 

Free Pres

 

GRAIID RAPIDS
TOLEDO

 

Blade .........
News-Bee ......
Times ,

 

Hera?" .d Examiner.
Drovers' dour-nah.

ciiiciiso
Jicxsou ~
BATTLE GREEK.
SAGIIIAW
uiisuiii
ﬁuuiizo‘o .

 

Citizen’ “Patriot

 

EnquiWews .
Moon—Journal . . . 4 50

 

News-Courier ' .
ems Journal .. 5.56

' Gazette

leeeeeee

 

Journal .. . . . . . . 5.50

Pioneer 4.50

BIO RAPIDS . .
PORTIIIIIIDH ‘ I‘mﬂmld- use:

b.

'YPSILIIII , [mew-n, "i” ,8...

lion: 0 ll report es the shove combustion
rete see "melTe: to 3.; E. holdings_.‘-'only.\ln In"
"‘ 2“ w . ,. .m’:
tenuous rem ,, , 4!"!!! Milli! he;
the stete’ _ , , 4 ~_.

=fou'ndvb'y multiplying the length of

 

 

‘ June. 4th

. . :ﬁim..i,~
L. , . ~. , her" outbuildings. Few
know honEto .'measure_ surfaces to be
Pointed undesitim-ete the, amount of

"paint needed for a given job.

”A few simple rules given, below
may be of service ‘to you and possi-

bly. save you some money on paint: .

To find the square feet in flat or
nearly flat‘r’oofs, multiply the length,
by\ the width.’ ‘ '1 . , .

If the roof is irregular in shape,-
as many are, the square feet are

the comb (A to B) by distancebe-
tween the eaves and comb,.‘(D to B.)
Then measure from A to C and mul-
tiply by the distance from E to C,
then divide ’the result by 2.

Add the results of, the two'calcu-u

lation .

If here are gables .in the roof‘

multiply the length of the rafters by
one half the distance from the cor-

nice to.the peak; then multiply this -

result by the number of gables; that
is if the gables are all the samesize.
If different each must be calculated

‘ separately. . :

1To get' the square feet in the ex-

~terior walls, multiply the length all

around the house by the height of
the wall. If there are any gables
add the area of each and then add
one-fifth of the entire result for
trimmings. '

For example:5 Measurements are

.wanted for a house which is '30 ft.

wide by 50 feet long by 20ft high
to cornice. It has two gables 10 ft.
high and 30 feet wide. Answer: 2

ends 30 ft. wide equal 60 ft; 2’ sides

 

The purpose of this department is to pro-
tect our subscribers from fraudulent deellngs
or unfair treatment by persons or concerns at
a distance. . -

In every case we will do our best to make
a setlsfectory settlement or force action. for
which no charge for our services will ever be
made, providing:

1.—-The claim is made by e peldnup sub-
scriber to The Business. Farmer.

2.—The cleim Is not more then 6 mos.~old.

3.-—The claim is not locel or between peo-
p'e within easy distance of one. another.
These shoIIId be settled at first bend and not
attempted by mail. ' ’

Address ell letters. giving full perticulers,
amounts, detes, eto.,' enclosing also your ed-
dress label from the front cover of any Issue
to prove that you are e paid-up subscriber.
THE BUSINESS FARMER. Collection Box

Mt. Clemens. Mich. '

 

 

 

MAXWELL-JAMES BANKRUPT'

On Jan. 5th I sent an order to Max-
well James Inc.‘, of New York for $5.67
but made .9. .mistake in footing up and
sent check for $4.28. Heard from them
a few days later saying I did not send
enough money- I then sent them an-
other check of $1.39 for balance of ac-
count but did not receiveﬁhe goods. I

have, written them three or four times ,

but they ignore my letters and I have
been unable to get any reply whatever
from them. The checks have been re-
turned to my local banK showmg that
they received their money.
service departmnet of your paper where
you have collected several such accounts
so thought I would send thisone to you
for collection.——,F.» . . . ' .

Upon writing Maxwell-James, Inc.,
we received a letter. from Harold A:
Content, receiver, informing us that
the order referred to could not be
ﬁlled because i petition in bank»
ruptcy was ﬁled against this concern
March 17, 1921. Heaven knows how

much money for unﬁlled orders the‘

Maxwell-James gathered in between
Jan. 5th and March 17th. A bit of
irony is lent to the affair by the fact
that on the company’s .letter head
which'the receiver. used to notify us
of the bankruptCy appears a pretty
little fac-simile of an engraved bond
with ribbon andseal and the conﬁ-
dence inspiring Words “Your gold
bond . guaranteeing absolute satis-
faction—or your money promptly re-
funded, Maxwell, Trees.” . . .
‘ NOTBER .VICTIM’S STORYQ

I "saw‘. a,‘ piece in yodr'yei‘y valuable
page}? concerning 171. H; ' Mason, and his
chicken fraud. Inmy dealings with him
*1 Tound oome_stra.nge winger-{bought

or
barns ‘

‘they really had a. hatchery

I see in the .,

. . , r'Waub‘i-o. ‘.
and this Will g‘hlvfe. you 3,26
or .‘total , number ; of grsquare ., feet hi
four walls, of house, Now ﬁgure.
the gables 10 ft. .by-,30 ft. wide.'Di ”

, vide the height --.1'0~ ft. 5by' ,2'"w‘hich.

equals ’5 ft; multiply this bythq
width of. 3-0 ft. which. equals the pdlhtw‘ .

surface ofvcne'ga‘bie or 150 sq. .-ft.':~. ‘

For '2 gables multiply by 2'and'the --
result is 300 sq. ft; add the cred,

of the walls, 3,290. sq. ft. to the ares.

of the‘geb'lee 3040 sq. ft and you. t

3,500 sq.’ ft.
total fortrlmm'lngs or 709

you get 4,200 sq.—ft. ‘ \

Hence you will need enough paint V.
to cover 4,290 square- feet .01. 3111.11...

f-ace. . ,

'Now add 1-5 of t is";
sq. ft. and?"

To estimate the quantity \of ‘paint 7

required for'any‘ job divide the numv'

ber of square feet to be .chered by Z

the covering capacity of the paint;

Of course, .the spread- of 'paint- Will“:

vary somewhat according to the our-ﬂ
face on which "it is applied. .A-

rough surfaCe will! absorb more then 3

‘a‘ smooth surface, vs. under average
conditions"‘high “grade house paint
will» cover 350 to ; 100 sq. ft...t'v'v*o
coats.
paint Will 'coVer' 20.0 to 300 sq. ft.
two coats. ~‘ ,

Shingle stain'wi'l-I cover 125 sq.
ft. '2 coats, brushed on, 2 1-2 gallons
will dip 1,000 shingles.
old shingles require .more material
than smooth new ones. .

Paint should not be looked upon
as‘an expense. It prevents decay;
and replacements 'ofdecayed parts
of buildings are more costly than
“the ounce of prevention” paint.

send chicks as he had bad luck with his
hatch but he‘ pledged his honor that all
claims would be settled within 60119.3”, :
and that he was going to Kansas Cty
to work but he could not give his ad-
dress as he had not decided on his res- -
idence. I wrote him‘ but the letter was '
returned. Later I wrote the postmaster
asking him who was cashing the money
orders of the Quality‘ Chix. Co.’ and, it
giving . the
street and number. ' Alsoeent the num-
ber of my money order. He never ene-
wered my question. Simply said that he
could not find anything. of "
order but would refer the case to t e
postcﬂice inspector. I' then ’wnote 0
justice of the peace at Des Molnes and:
sent a. self addressed .stsunped envelope
but never. got any answer. Then came
another letter from a" postoﬂ‘lce inspec-
tor demanding all mail received from the
Quality Chick C‘o. His addrss was Des
Moines. Since then I have been unable“
.to hear from postofﬁce inSpector or H.
H. Mason and his Quality. Chicken Co.
nor has he ever sent. my money back has
he agreed to. So it looks to meals if '
a. pretty smooth hamd was played. NOW,

Best grades of barn androof -

my ' money , '

le‘y orj

this year he comes out and does busl- » ,

ness under another namer It 8691113138"
though there should be some .way iof ‘
stopping such a low lived ~scpiindrel
from such trickery. . I never heard from ~
them till I saw his doings in your pap— .
or last week. ‘The Jimerican Poultry
Journal is where I saw the bogusad.
T dropped this paper as éoon as I could. _
Rest wishes to your paper and may it
live long;——-W. W.. . -
VWe learn that efforts are really
being made to bring this fellow Me.-
son to justice—but the conveyance
that’s bringing him- apparently has

3 nothing on the shell for speed.

, EXIT, NORTH STAR SALVAGE '

\ . COMPANY -

I sent to the North Star Salvage C'o.,
of St. Paul, Minn, for three army'ghirts
as they hadadvertised for $5.25. I sent
them a check. Did not hear from them.
and went to the bank 'to stop payment"
of the some but it had already been
cas‘hed. M11. Clark, the banker gave me
the date that it was cashed, and am
sending the same to you. Will you~

please do what you can for":me?—e—L.. L.__

The ﬁrst letter we‘ wrote to the}

North Star Salvage'Cq..'ln'L. L’s bee ~'

half was neither answered nor re-E'

turned. _ A second letter Wes retur -
' ' ed and‘bro‘ught the information from
'-the"pcst'office that” 5 '

could notrberfound in t; jean; ‘

' was am???

200..-Brown'L.ee'horn chickenswblch were .,
' '1’}! 29030111 ‘

‘ never delivered iorrsent.

wre' bought M Y. .1929. giro,

k _ own . so ‘theaIQuﬂity . Chick .53
.ey .d wed

swou'ldibe ee

' he

 

 


I I .» Giernsey

 

" e sluggish than t~ ‘
p0 , to; uncertainty concerning the
future of the fist cattle demand and
"ht money are 'maihly. responsible
the canditio'ns described above.
Feeders insist upon .a Wider margin
than usual, between the feeder and
th' ﬁnished 'produét. High freight
e's are also acting 'as a deterrent
tofhe feeding business; should rates
antinue high, throughout the year,
armors will prefer to feed their pro-'

‘ducts rather than to sell them.

It now seems probable that the
“eunuch-dollar pool for live stock
loaning purposes will scan be avail-
aable.‘ It is understood that the
original notes will be issued for
shert periods but that the paper can
be reneWed. from time- to time, as
"the occasion requires.

The members of the Michigan-
Breeders’ Association
seem to. be leading the procession
in this state when it comes to the
_. matter of cheerful optimism con-
coining the future of the dairy cow.
The present outlook indicates that
the Guernsey representation at the
, coming state fair will be the largest
' ever sent forward by the breed.

’A decline of about $40 per head
‘in the value of fat bullocks in the
VLondon and Liverpool markets is
taking the life out of the export de-
,mand for cattle which it was hoped
would increase in volume as the sea-
son advanced; an increase of $10
per head, freight rates and ocean
passage; is another discouraging in-
fluence which exporters must con-
tend with from this time on. If the
carriers, both at home and abroad,
continue to demand as their share
all or the proﬁts the undertaking
yields, the business or cattle raising
' can hardly be continued advantages

ously.‘ .-~

NATIONAL SWIHE SHOW TO
-- ~ " PEIORIA .
HE RECENT session 'of the Illi-
. nIois Legislature appropriated
» “ﬁfteen thousand dolars per- year
for two years to the National Swine
5 Growers Ascociation, provided- the
'Na'tion'al Swine Show is held in Illi-‘
»,nois. Two thousand ﬁve hundred
dollars of the yearly amOunt is for
managerial purposes and twelve

thousand five hundred is to, be used

to pay premiums.

This makes it practically certain
_that the National Swine Show p for
'~ 1921 Will be held at Peoria,‘ which
”of course, has the very best of facil-

ities to properly take care of the ex-
hibits and visitors. ' ,

 

 

 

The Experience Pool

 

 

Bring your everyday problems In and M
the experience of other farmers. Questions ad-
dressed to this bdcpsrtmont are published here
_ and answered by you, our readers. who are
' Alrsdglsto's of the School of Hard Knocks and
‘who have their diplomas from the College oi"
. nos. 1 you don't want our editor's
Idvloo or an expert’s advice. but Just plain,
OVOIsty bpslness farmers' advice, send
.your question here. We will publish one
each w.ook If you can answer the other
follvw's question. please so. he may ans-
wer o o: yours some‘dayl Address Expor-

lonoe ool. cars The Business Former, Mt.
Clemens. Mich. ~

..I;‘-.

 

 

 

- ' »( ) Can any larsner tell me how' to
on; a horse of bulkingY—e-It is a long
“story to fully describe how this can be
done but 1' have never failed. to get a.
b‘al-ker to pull it I used the methods de-
scribed in Prof. Stock -.Book The
method he used that I have been most

successful with is to tie the halter hstraip -_

to th horse’s tail with a “half. -hitc

the 5 tap short enough to pull the horse’ 13
head around so he will have to run in
11. c1 rc e

is nearly exhausted Then if'he will

spull tie his head around on thgy' othg
an :malte him r1111 in s. acircus"

u tithe .mhr y

hon- hitched up then

11 thel‘e is in iii in: Chhe
her! in: thi

 

.cmcxs

~ .s 1 1——-1 00; Angcenas.

ways 2. 000 on hand

Let him run in a circle until"

 

.19th

on": what you have to ‘oﬂor and send it in.

“reﬁnement! Insoytod IIIIIIdOI‘ "III heading at 30 cents per line. per Isiue. Special rates for 18 times or longer
We will put It In typo, send proof and quote rates by return mail

ddron The Michigan Business Farmer, Advertising Department, Mt. Clemens. Michigan.

 

 

‘—,

POULTRY ,

PULLBTS

If you want some odelfhtme weeks old Pullcts.
write us for descripigon o and Brown
Leghorns- ma alsoI yearling Hen

limited 1th
Punch—White nand Sliver
Wysndott'es.‘ White hlteand Barred Rocks. s. G
and‘ Butt Leghorns. . Also Cookerels.

Let us make you a price on what you want.

STATE FARMS ASSOCIATION
Desk 2. Kalamazoo. Mlchlpan

Three
Laced
. Reds

 

. ' MUD-WAY-AUIH- KA FARM

oﬂers young stock and s. low mature breeders in

White Chinese Geese. White Runner Ducks and

White Wysndottes. Also 0. l. 0. spring gllts.

Writs today for prices on wh'st you used.
DIKE C. MILLER. Dryden. Mloh.

ORPlNGl‘ONS AND LEGHORNS

. Two grsst broods (or profit. Writs todsy for
Ires cstslo'gus of latching sus. baby chicks sud

brosdin gstock.
OYOLI'NATOHIR'OOMPANY.149 Phil. Ill].
ml“. I. Y.

 

 

QUALITY CHICKS. BLACK MINORCA. LIGHT
Brahms. 250 each. Barred Rock. R. I. lied
18 cents ea c.h

TYRONE POULTRY FARM.

Fonton, Mich.

 

 

‘ WYANDOTTE

 

ILVEH LAOED GOLDEN AND WHITE WY-
undottes.B Eggs $2. 50 per 15; $4.50 for 30.
0. W. BROWNING, N 2. Portland. Mich.

 

WHITE WYAIDDTTBS

Martin Foundation. A few good breeders for
sale. No more baby chicks this year. Order
cocks rels now for early fall delivc ry. Prices

reasonable. -
C. .W. HEDIBACH
Big Rapids. Mich.

 

 

LEGHORNS

Grabowskos s. c. IWhlto Leghorns.
cocks and yearling hens for sale
LEO GRABOWSKE. R 4. Merrlll, Mich.

 

Cocksrels.

 

 

RHODE ISLAND REDS '

v

HITTAKER'S R. I. REDS.
greatest Color and E22 -Strain.
231% pgcoesmfmd cockkbiriis.eitCtl11erlcomh. at bar-
or (11110 sae tao Fee.
INTERLAKES FARM. Box 4. Lasvrcnroe. Mich

 

MICHIGAN'IS

 

 

LAN GSHAN

DR. SIMPSION'S LANGSIHANS OF QUALITY
Bred for type and color since 1912. Winter
lsying strain of both Black and White. Have
some cocksrels for sale. Eggs in sesson.
D HAS. W. SIMPSON
Wehbsrvlllo. Mich. , '

 

 

 

ORPING'roNs

ONPIIGTON.cg°ofKER1E“ Ang_PULI-ET.
see 11 W
Black Cockcrels at $7. $8. sud 810.?ullet212t
$3 and $5. ilso‘ yearling hens $3 and $4.
Hatchins as". $6 per setting of 15.
RAIOWSKE EROS" R 4. Merrill. Mich.

A

 

BABY onions .

GREAT PRICE CUT‘ FOR JULY
delivery to real barggion price. LOOK

Pure S. C. W Leghorns 50

Pure Barron Eng. Leg. .3: 22
Pure . . Anconas SI 0 0
Pug t 1;. P. 11ch l- f' or

a c every uesday in July. Order

from ad. Prompt shipment by Parcel «111%?
Full count strong lively chicks on arriva. 1 R
yours reliable dealings. Fine instructive catalog

W: van APPLEDORN. n 1. Holland. Mich.

lax-1111 coon cmcxs —

Plan now on more eggs next winte
hatched chicks lay when eggs are high.
White Leghorns, S 1 1—-- 100 ;_ Brown

where.Cata‘12_100

Ire
MONARCH POULTRY FARMS
Iceland. Mloh.

DANGER Itftbifmaéia‘ldrl 9": hm Chix llc Up

100. 000 best bloodedc hicks ever produl ed Al-

5 to 15 days old. 20 vari<

otles. Hatching eggs. Ducklings. Catalog. Early

booking svoitsls Edisﬁlpointm ’
AN HATCHERY /

20 E Lyon St" Grand Rapids. Mich.

 

 

Juno
Eng.
Leghorns,
Postpaid any-

& HATCHERY

 

 

VSJNOLE OOMBI BUFF LEGHORN HENS 'AND

0&8. and early hatched cockcrels and pullet‘s.
ESTER

J. ,

. Beth. Mich.

 

 

0- BR. LEGHORN Enamw 81. ‘0 FOR 18.

n Pekin duck $1. 50 for 8.

eggs 40c each. Mrs. Claudia. .Betts, Hillsdsle.m:1l€h-

R. I._ RED HATCUING EGGS. TNOMPKIN'S
strain 510 per 100: baby chicks, 250 each.
Wm.” FR OHM. New Baltimore. Mlch'

 

1 311111111 nocxsptfc'sz'J3'EJmJiié‘i

In the blood of Park's best pedigreed pens. $2
per 15. $6 per 50, $12 per 100. Prepaid by
parcel post in non-bresksbls containers.

R. G. KIRBY, R 1 East Lsnslns. Mich.

MAKE MORE MONEY!

POULTRY CULLING AND SELECTION
Determine Your Poultry Profits

But ﬁrst you must Fnow how. IRead the greatest culling article of the season by the foremost

culling expert in the world.

1"‘Ernie” Foreman the Culling Wizard

published In the June number of the Modem Poultry Breeder.

illustrated with 17 halftones

and engravings. We have saved a few hundred June copies for new subscribers, and while

they last will include one with your subscrn tion.

Only 50¢ a year. 3 years for 81.

If you' want this great June article send subscription at once to

MODERN POULTRY BREEDER,

Battle Creek, Mich.

Established 1885——Seoond only to one in age—second to none in quality.

 

Chicks all .

. 1)ELONG.Fai1-grove R 2.

. in crops;

Vhou'se. ﬁbrin
9 $1. 500 down.
, “3:.

 

 

 

Business Farmers’ Exchange

 

for lsr than 3 times.
merit. Cash should accompany all orders.
uros. both in body of ad. and in address.
dated following week. The

50 A WORD PER ISSUE—3 Insertions ior 100 per word.
Twenty words Is the minimum accepted for any ad.

Count as one word each initial and each group of ﬁg-
Copy must be
Business Farmer Adv.

Form for sale. ads. not accepted
In thls depart-
In our hands before Saturday for Issue

Dept. Mt. Clemens. Mich.

 

 

 

HOW TO FIGURE nos. UNDER 'rms HEAD
Words 1 time 3 times Words 1 time 3 times
20 . 0 $2.00 3180‘
21 2.10
22

W
4::
GO

uswm4cwwaamﬁwm
occcoaaooooaoo

uwmwwwmunw.
quw~owm4muow
u
Herrrrrrrrrrrrw~
qqaamuhhwwnwwuoo
woucmoaomauomom
rewrrrwwswwwww
mahmomwmpoowmww
osmqaaewwuowmﬂm
rosewowrwswrrw.
mhwwawmwwoowww
omowomouomouo;1
«
socrrrcrrccuw w
ocmaammwmucmm
OOOOOGOOOOOOO

WWW

 

ﬁrms 8. LAN§£§

\__

FARM WITH 300 APPLE TREES. HORSE
crops, 6 cows and heifers. vehicles. implements
dairy utensils. tools. etc. thrown in: happiness
and prosperity yours in delightful section big
fruit farms: 112 acres on good road l l-‘..
miles village, advantages; machiue- worked ﬁelds
spring watered pasture abundance wood. timber
ﬁne orchard 300 apples; pears. plums. cherries
gmpcs,5 etc; good 6- room house magnificent out
look; 0-ft. basement barn 2 poultry houses. ice
house. 5.etc To settle owner's affairs all only
$2 800 easy terms. See page 9 lllus. Catalog
1,100 Bargains. FREE. STR 0U FARM
AGENCY. 814 BE Ford Bldg, Detroit Mich.

 

ACRES or N0. 1

FOR SALE—MY 4O
cultivation. 7 room

sell well tiled all under
house. small outside buildings. orchard, 2 miles
to Fairgrove or Akron. good roads. actual value
of land buys. on account of poor health. HENRY
Michigan.

 

FOR SALE—80 ACRE FARM. 80 ACREOS
horses, machinery. Price $8, 00

Particulars upon request. Wm. BAUM, Au
Gres. Mich.

 

FOR SALE—200 ACRE FARM. 12 ROOM
house, large woodshed 40 x 60 burn. large cow-
stable attaached. 22 x 36 driving shed
buildings, good well and flowing spring,
acres tillable. good heavy soil acres of
orchards, apples. peaches. and sweet cherries 1
mile from trunk line. 4 miles from shinning
station. $10,000 part down and easy terms.
JAMES R. RICE. Benzonia. Michigan.

 

ACRES LAND IN ALCONA
county. Two good springs some building timber
also. no improvements. Will sell cheap. Ml: S.
SUSAN MOFFETT, Applegate, 1i 2. Michigan X

I HAVE 320

 

240 ACRES CLAY AND SANDY LOAM
soil some improvement. for sale. In Presque
Isl o. I“ or particulars write LEONARD
FleWELLING, Ocqueoc, Mich. »

 

FOR SALE—IMPROVED 60- ACRE MASON
Co. farm on hard road.Writ1e J. A. WEAVER,
1t 2, Scottville. Mich.

 

S1. 500 SECURES 80-ACRE FARM WITH
horses. crops. 5 cows and calves. sow. 2 shouts
9 pigs, flock poultry, cream separator tools
vehicles. harnesses, full equipment; splendid op—
portunity establish self in this high class {arming
section; good living. future security yours for
small investment; near village, easy drive city
50 acres productive tillage; creek- watered wire-
fenced pasture; apple orcbar d: 2-8tory 7- -roo_m

2 water; 48 ft. barn. poultry house
etc; called away. will sell all $4475,
easy terms, immediate pos-
Take the ﬁrst mm A. O. HEINE,

Saginaw, Mich. ~ '

 

 

 

' 20-32

 

 

ﬂlscuL'Lmnom

MACHINEHI

 

 

_ MACHINERY. PORTABLE
mills for farmers' use. \al kc V'lOll' own lumber
Send for new catalog. IIILL-i UIi’l‘IS CO..1507
No l’licller St.. Kalamazoo, Mich. ‘

SAW MILL

 

$1 00.00 PUTS A HIGH GRADE TRACTOR
011 your farm. How? Address Box 113 1, In—
dianapolis. Indiana. I '

 

FOR SALE—~10-20 TITAN TRACTOR AND
New Racine Separator. (.‘lieap if taken
at once. Inquire MARTIN J. HEUSSNER. Mar-
lette. Mich.

 

FOR SALE—AVERY 12-25 TRACTOR.
needs some overhauling. P. & 0. level lift. 3 .
and 4 bottom plow fair shape. Dick’s Auto-

matic knife sharpener for silo ﬁller. good as new.

Bargains for quick sale. HARVEY POWERS.

Fremont. Mich.

 

CORN HARVESTER CUTS' AND FILES ON ,
harvester or winrows. Man and horse cutsIand
shocks equal Corn Binder Sold in every state.
Only $28 with fodder tieing attachment. Testi-
monials and catalog FREF showing picture of
harvester. PROCESS HARVESTER (20.. So.-
llna. Kansas.

 

 

GENERAL

 

EXPERIENCED MAN AND WIFE WANT
job on big farm as foreman. No small children.
Reference. L. IIICKSON. Columblarille Mich

SITUATION as
good home, small
MYRON

YOUNG MAN DESIRES
helper on farm. cares for a
wrc rk and small wages. Apply to
SMAGULAR. Gen. Del.. Decatur, Mich.

 

A NATIONAL MANUFACTURER ' OF
staple products indispensable to concrete indus.
try has unallotcd territory namilable for sales-
men who can appreciate digniﬁed staple line giv-
ing permanently good returns for proper effort. *
‘Use of car desirable but not essential. S.
liY-PROIHYCT (‘llLOliIDES COMPANY. 12020
Clifton Blvd. Cleveland. Ohio.

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY
nd quick mics to live Dealers selling "DID-
DIE- BI ITZEN RODS. " Our copper tests
99. 96 per cent PURF. Write for Agency. Prices
are right. L. M. Diddle Co. Msrshﬁeld. Wis.

LIGHTNING RODS.

 

 

SEED

 

SALE—IMPROVED RED KIDNEY

FOR
Hand picked and graded. Yielded
HBO '.1‘ RE

seed beans.
24 bus. per acre. 1920. AV 1
& SON. Caro, P. 1 Michigan. X

 

 

FENCE POSTSI

BUY FENCE POSTS DIRECT FROM FOR-
est. All kinds. Delivered prices. Address "M.
M,” cure Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clem-
s‘ns Mich '

IS YOUEFARM FOR SALE?

Write out a plain description and
ﬁgure 10c for each word, intial ,
group at ﬁgures for three insertions.
There is no cheaper or better way of '
selling a. farm in Michigan and you"
deal direct with the buyer. N
agents or commissions. It you we '
to sell or trade yoursiarm send in
your so. today Don’ t“. just talk;
about it. , nest Business ‘ Farm

 

 

' Exchange Igets "results."
M

Address: the

 


   

TRADE ANE MARCKET REVIEW
ENERAL trade and business

  

my little change of late and
no change is looked for until more
deﬁnite conclusions, relative to the
damage which the crops of the coun-
try have sustained as a result of the
freak summer which is rapidly
drawing to an end. All kinds of
grain are sntfcring from an excess-
ive heat and lack of moisture and
. present indications favor greatly re-
. ' duced yields; while the conditions
’ referred to have a direct bearing
upon the prosperity of the farmer
indirectly, they effect every depart-
ment of human endeavor. There
are certain products of the farmer’s
(soil that have completely changed
front in the. last six weeks; they
have gone. from dullness and appar-
ently overstocked markets to ,a
marked scarcity and a pressing de-
mand. The entire live stock liSt is
headed toward higher prices, the
cause being the prospect of a great
fallino' otl‘ in supplies during: the
next ﬁve years; extremely low pric-
es and bad markets have combined
to make many growers completely
discouraged and they have sent for-
ward their flocks and herds until it
is now apparent. that a scarcity im-
pends that may eventually trans-
form and modify the entire breeding
program.

Natural basic products such as
wool hides, cotton. iron, steel and
copper are dull with very little hope
of a. revival this side of the Winter
season. .Tbc textile industry is pros-
pering‘ and the demand for automo-
biles is the wonder of the hour. The
labor situation, while still decided-
ly bad in many localities; in Detroit
and the district. immediately sur-
rounding, conditions are improving.
steadily. in spite of the hot weather
and mﬁlions of calamity bowlers
who have no other interest in the
matter in hand except the opportun-
ity to purchase table supplies at very
low prices. Detroit and its environs
are giving: employment. to nearly
114,000 men and an-angements are
being made that will result in the
employment. of many more.

Very little improvement in busi-
ness conditions on the other side of
the water has been noted of late and
no change for the better is looked
for before next year. The ram‘d in-
crease in the export demand for our
products would be decidedly encour-
aging were. it not for the fact that
this demand is evidently anticipat-
ing a. decrease in supplies. .Foreian
exchange is dull and working lower
as a. natural result of the tremendous
trade balance in our favor.

Business on the New York Stock
Exchanirc is drll and quiet with 1110-
tors and rails taking the lead; the
sport. of demand for pleasure cars.
whichthe automobile factories have
enjoyed since prices were shaded.
has increased the. investment call for
the former stock issues and many
favorable developments of recent
date have given tone to the market
for both railroad stocks and equip-
ments. The dimmraging element,
‘in the. present railroad outlook, is
the possible decrease in the crop

  
  
    
     
 
   
   
 
   
  
    
 
   
    
 
    
    
  
   
  
   
    
  
   
  
   
  
    
  
   
  
  
    
    
    
    
       
    
 

 

 

 

movement.
“’HEAT
LIHEAT Pstggsrsn 911:; 9.9,LV 19.1921 l
_ Gradc Matron. ICMcagoI N.
612:. 2 Rod .‘. .I 1.29 I 1.28 I 1.421
No. 2 wave . I .
No. 2 Mlxcd . .I 1.24 I I I!"

PRICES ONE YEAE AGO
. INa.2 RodI No.2 Whltel No.2 Mixed
’ Damn I 2. 82 I 2.30 I 2.80

 

 

 

 

Last Wrek was a. bullish period'-
in the. wheat market and prices av-
'eraged higher. Chief among the
«several causes that brought this

strength was reports by experts tell-
*' 111g of the severe damage in the
northwestern wheat ﬁelds from hot
.. ind dry weather that has prevailed
- the past Weeks. There were also re-
ports that cohtradi .d those of. crop

 
   
  
    

. I '

conditions have undergone "

  
  
  

"IL‘Imagegbut these“ 'ere not numer-‘y

; , Edited byH. H. MAcK

 

 

GENERAL MARKET SUMMARY

 

 

 

Hogs higher. Potatoes active.

II DETROIT—Heavy receipts have bearish eﬁect on. Wheat. Corn
and oats steady. Beans dull. Hay ﬁrm. .

CHICAGO-Wheat and corn easy. Oats ﬁrm. Beans steady.

 

 

 

 

\

 

 

wing to mess ——Edltor.

(Note: The above summarized Information we: received AFTER the balance a? the unr-
ket page Is set. In type. It contains last mlnuto Inﬁomtton up to within Malt hour of

 

 

ous enough to change the bullish
tone of the market. Black rust“is
said to be ruining the grain in many
sections. Data on daily export bus-
iness remains asillusive as ever but
grain is going out of this country
and in no small quantities. Europe
must come to us for some of her
supply as the European crop is
small and it is believed there will bé
a great shortage there. Canadian
Wheat has been damaged quite bad-
ly by rust according to experts from
the United States who have visited
that country which will cut down
their exportable supply and increase
the demand for our grain. Trading
in Wheat is increasing but receipts
continue so large that there is plenty
of grain to supply demands. Many
farmers are hauling their grain to
market direct from the threshing
machine; in fact, so many are doing
this that the farmer who holds his
wheat will proﬁt by it before anoth-
er harvest from all indications.
The opening of the present week
saw wheat receipts so large at Chi-
cago that prices made sharp de-
clines but before the day was over
a rally was staged and prices gain-
ed back some of the loss. Chicago
received 1,250 cars of Wheat. the
largest number received in a. long
time. News of rust damage in Can-
ada continue to come in but it is
reported that the crop-is 10 days
early and can be harvested before
any serious loss appears. Foreig-m
ers continue to take winter Wheat as
fast as it is placed on the market, ac-
cording to reliable information.

CORN

Corn was dull last week but pric?

es advanced in sympathy with wheat.
Commission houses were bullish and
ready buyers but shipping demand

5_

 

We Weller Ch“ («Alli 1921

[or mummy». than nnlxh! below

 

WASHINGTON, D. 0., July 23,
1921.——-During early part of the week
centering on July 24 a. great high
temperature wave will cover Alaska
and all the northern Rockies. It
will be the ﬁrst or front disturbance
of the last storm of July and will
cross Michigan not far from July .20,
as it moves 'southeazstward, reaching
the Atlantic coast two or three days
later. That storm will street the
whole continent and its forces will be
a littl less than i_n the storms just
proceeding it Not much change in

will end the July rain locations.

August will be an unusually quiet
weather mouth; extremes of heat are

.1 not expected to be so great as in June

and July but the general average
temperature of the month is expected
be as much above normal as were
I'the tempemures of June and July.
«Not any great change in rainfall is
expected for August. but the small
changes are expected to result in a.
'better distribution of moisture on
this continent I can see no relief
,for the dry conditions of northwest-
. mm but there are indications
of relief for the dry spots on this
continent during August For mid-

 

 

 

THE WEATHER FOR NEXT WEEK
As Forecastod by W.‘T. Foster for The Mjchigan Business Farmer,

~grain the prospects are generally

the amount of rain but this storm -

.young man I Iwould go back to the

die latitudes west of AlleghanieS‘
warmest weather is expected from’

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

' . BYE/ . -‘

Rye followed the" trend of wheat
and corn the greater part of last
week at Detroit. 011 the opening
day of the present week the price

    
       
      
       
  

 

 
 
    
     

 

  
  

 

 
 
  

 

   
  

 

    
 

 

      
 

 

 

   

 

 

   
      
     
      
    
   
     
  
  
   
   
 
 
    
   
   
  
   
    
 
    
 
 
   
   
   
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

INo.2 wane! No.8 wand No.4 White
Detroit I 1.06 I 1.05 l 1.04

 

 

 

Discouraging reports of the grow-
ing crop is holding out prices ﬁrm.
Most of the trade is bullish and mar-
ket students say the present. re-
serve on farms is not as large as we
have been inclined to believe. Good
sales for shipment were reported at,
Chicago, the greater portion con-
sisting of heavyweight old oats as
there was a_particular demand for
this kind. Gets were unchanged in
price or‘ market tone on Monday of
the current week at both Chicago
and Detroit. The supply was light
and news bullish.

Aug. 5 to 17, coolest. from 18 to 31.
For sections west. of great lakes cool—
est during weeks centering on I) and
24. For east of longitude 85, north
of Potomac, warmest during ‘.week
centering on 7 and coolest centering
on 25.

As to advice for sowing winter“

favorable but as there are large ex—
ceptions the advice cannot be given
in a general forecast ,~The general
prospects for winter grain for 1922
look good, both in market values and
amount of production. but conditions .
in some large sections must be dealt
with more in detail;

Agriculture is now at its lowest as
a business but for the near future
it is the surest of successes. Never
has there been a t e when agricul-
ture’s immediatefi ure looked so
bad as now. and never was there a.
time when prospects just a little
ahead promised so muchin America.
and Canada. Europe is in a chaos,
its people are discouraged. it Is next
to impossible for them to pay their
debts Their agriculture is in decay
and whatever of its debts it can pay
will come to this country in gold
leaving 11 basis for sound ﬁnancial
conditions in Europe. Millions of the
best classes of Europe are coming
to this country and agriculture will
soon ﬁnd good markets for its pro—
ducts at. home The farmers are
thorougnlv organized as they never
Were before and the proﬁteers can no
longer control them If I were a

farm. where! struggled for a. mere
existence in all the early years. -'

      

 

 

 

price reducio’ns that have vtollowed'

f $93167

 

 

 

 

 

supply is .ﬁrm and receipts light. Re- . ,~
ports come in that the growing crop
is suffering from the hot, dry weath-
er and that the yield will be small.-

declined 4 cents bringing Numbor 2 I
down to $1. 26. 3,
_ BEAN§ " y I
can nxossrsn cum. 4111.1! 10. 102.1: 4 I
I, p and. 11191101110111” in. v. I
.c. 11. P. ......itas 14.25 44.00» ‘ .
Red mamas .. .. 9.25 I
\ PRJOES om: YEAR Aao ".
'- - I0. 11. P__. .1
‘. non-on ............... ..... I 1.011— . w; »- ..
conu PRICES PER 30.. JULY 19. 1921 The strength in the grain mar- “ y' -_
.o_ 2 v5.11”: ”fog: I‘°"";'°I"_'Jsa ' kets last week did not seem to help A.
No. a renew ...I .38 ‘ beans at Detroit as the price suffer- '
"°' 4 V°"°‘" "" '65 I ed a dechne of 5 cents. The mar-
PR'EELQIFE "5‘“ 5°°_'__‘ 'ket has been steady 2nd trading was
D No.2 Yell.I No.3 —Yoll.I No.4 Yell. reported to ‘be light. Monday,‘July
"m" "" 1'82 I I 18, beans gained’ the EC ‘back but__
both ~ , _ the market was claimed dull. It 13
- _domest.1c and export was slow the opinion of the writer that de-
Rece1pts were moderate on nearly mand is better than Michigan deal- I.
all Of the larger markets-the entire , .ers care to let the farmer know.
week and country oifermgs were New York or Chicago prices have - \
light- Heavy lake shipments of not made the changes that have tale '
corn out of Chicago are expected 'en place at Detroit; in fact, prices. .~ ,
within the next few days. Saturday ‘011 these tWO markets have not
of last week corn advanced 3 conts changed more than 20 cents either ; '
on the Detroit market but on Mon- “p or down since the ﬁt“ Of ”“5
day, July 18, turned-downward With year. ‘ "
wheat and lost 1 cent. The Chicago , I ‘
market also declined. The outlook POTATOES 2
for the growing crop ._ is good but, SPUDS PER cum. any 19. 1921
rain is needed in many sections. . I “0"“ ““I ‘
our-on ...............I1.cs I .-
‘ ggygng11112 I! ,, .. .
OATS m I 1:00 I
on emcee PER 311.. 3111.1! 19, 1921 ”mm“ 0": "2‘“ “9° ' "
Grade 10mm 11:111me 141. 1.— ”m‘ " """"""" f" I 7‘25 ' '
1:; 3111:: ::: 2/21 3:. I .011 ......e. ... so ......u... - I
'No. 4 White .40 I With the consumer that pnces are - --
Pmcss on: ya“: IOO not quoted any more. The. new ‘
I

 

 

 

HAY FIRM .
I No. 1 'l'lrnJ 8tan.1’lm.l No. 211m. f j .
petrol}. I.21. 001122120. 00@21 I19. comm ' - A .‘-~
ammo 424.00 9; 26122.00 cam-21.00 s 22 ~ . .,.
Nu Vork I21. 00@ 30! 0@28 - -

Pittsburg .II22. 50 @ 28I20. 00 @ 2111118430 Q19

 

I
I "0.1.0.1 5 I . A
Inght le. Intent- Mhi. I ”.9...” I

ban-on . 42100921115 .ooe1eliT.cﬁa1s ,
chucaao .I22.00@24'I21.00@22|19. 0061022 '
New York [26. 00® I2 001926

Plusbprg .I18.0D@19I16. 00@17|15 00@1€

HAY rules: A van Ace I

a 11115.1 1'1m.lsun._'r1_m_ Ian. 2 Tim. I
Boa-o1: ..Iée’ooos1lsa00@amsa oooas .- ,
‘ I No. I 110.1- isg ' I'
IUght Ile. ICIover III. I clover 1

1581mm . . I35. 00 @ 39133.00 «1 3‘4I32. 00“"? Q38

‘LIVE STOCK MARKETS ‘- . I ,
Live stock has been making his-
tory at a. rapid rate of late, market . : .
quotations in all departments hav—_ ﬂ;
ing been marked up, day after day- -‘
until conservative operators begin .. ,
to fear that the bulge is being over~ . , . -, - .
done and express apprehension lost . ;{j
shippers, eager to get a little old-r ‘ "
fashioned proﬁt, ﬁll the‘market hop- , .
per until it slope over. Cattle have “-5 ,
advanced from 50 cents to $2 per . 1'
cwt. from the recent low point.» Veal .
calves are selling 75 cents to '31 per '
cwt. higher than July 1. ,Handy
weight hogs have gained $2.50 per
cwt. from bottom quotations and _
that the recent sheepand lamb at; 5 y . .
et went up too fast is attested by '

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
     
    
    
   
    

increased receipts.

Slurp advances, in the quoted vol-
no of allgrades of she stock, is the
marvel of the sbasbn and the prices .
paid for yearling steers, in many”; '
the leading markets of the country, _
proves just how ﬁne the big killers"

  
      
    
          
 

 

 
 
    
    
     
 
 
         
    
      
  

 
 
   
    
    
 
 

  
 
  

  

run of cat/ﬁle sees packer buyers:- .
aftEr the stat! with 11111112111271.1111;
clothes" 911.. Choice heifers; -1122

       
   
   
 
  

 
    

    

   
 

a top Her Angina Venting, steer

  


 
 
   

  
  
     
    
  
    
  

 

__....._ _._.i._-- ‘AMA. .__.-

 

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-- weak grain market,

1
4'
l
i
l
i
. ~hog meat haVe been enormous.
{

>-|rket. but have

early

‘ _ conditions
"wkich'resulted in scaling down of

best ~ western lambs from $11.75,

during the ﬁrst week in July, to

. 310 on Monday of this week. The
' ﬁrst ten days in July, the big pack

are were kept mighty busy getting
{at lambs enough to provide

ing markets were conﬁned almost
inclusively to shipment-s direct to

.pnckinghouses of stock purchased
A change has

in western markets.
come to hand and the trade is fair—
ly well supplied with common lambs
at $6 per cwt. that cost $7 earlier
in the current month. --

,The hog market has been decid-
edly bullish of late, everyone, except
the provision “shorts," helping to
boostthe game toward higher price
levels. Lard has been going out of
the country, of late, at an average
of 15,000,000 pounds per week and
the sales of English sides and other
A
‘on Monday,
July 18th, gave the speculative pro-
vhion market the first setback it
had for more than a. month. Ex-
porters of lard, from Nov. 1 to July
'2. exceeded the showing for the
some period last year by 115,000,-
600 pounds. Hogs made another
new high on Monday of this week,

selling in Chicago for $10.85 per,

ewt.; these prices look high enough
for the present and it would not be
surprising if value: eased oﬂ', ma-
terially, both in the commodity and
the hog markets. In the opinion of
the writer, when the market dips it
will “letting go to get a. better
hold” and still higher prices than
have been registered may be conﬁ-
dently expected befOre Sept. 15.

m “9):”
U5 MARKET EDITORQ
253’. - MAIL BOX

HORSE MARKET

I have been watchmg the colunins of
the M.. B. F. for some news of the horse
not seen anything
there for months. I have a 3,000 lb.
horn in Michigan that 1 want to sell.’ I
paid ($460 for the team in the spring.
Had I' better sell the team now for
whatever I can get, or hold for higher
prices later? When is the best time to
ad! forcity trade? How can I get in
touch with city buyers? I assure you
ﬁt I shall appreciate any help or sug-
gestions that you may be able to give
Ina—F. Vasku, Iowa City, Iowa.

The reason the. horse market has

not been quoted in the M. B. F. of“

hte, is because no reliable demand
has existed; not enough sales have

for.
' Cheneeds of their current trade;
- day after day, receipts in the lead-

,50 to“ $2 pert-.cwt. are 50' to- 75 ».
, tsﬂand? the some is true ofcut-e-
.. s. The stocker and feeder trade
“been dull andv‘draggy e’ven
.k-Ioking prices-were higher, the ap-
"rn’rent cause being tight money; now
‘ . thatthe $50,000,000 to, loan to cat-
., ﬂe growers is available an
"improvement is looked for.
. l T_As intimated in the introduction
’ .136 this article, soaring prices in the
{sheep and lamb“ division of the mar-
ket led to top heavy

hen _

I

been .made 'here- in Michigan to es-.

tablish a scale of values: auction
sales in the Chicago horse ,market
have been suspended .for the pres-
ent owing 7 to the lack‘of ’ demand
for the general run of stock offered

and every little. demand is looked

for during the next 60 days. ~111an-
trial ﬁrms,. who were in the market

for horses, on this.date, last year,

have horses turned out that. they,
ore not using. A few heavy horses
are going to Belgium;. these horses
are purchased by Germany as a
port of the indemnity. program. .Coal
Ind ,ice dealers are using fewer
horses, than‘usual this. year but the

‘ '_Tnost.potent influence‘in connection
with the sale of horses for trucking

ed, that, demand forhorses' will
are,» somewhat, later.

l

01: u?

"when the lack, of building activr
;ﬁag, the country over. ,-,It is be-

_,E_aér1y~
is considered theibest timer
_,-.'I?he best, way tox‘getw
city . horse buyers; is c
t... d— . .1 .

cutting their oats.

rWe need a good rain now..

' secured

’ fair.

  

~..-Potatoes
Barry-Harvesting and ' (haying
are almost over with. Many. farm-
ers are getting ready for the thresh-
ing machine. Light crops of fruit-
are reported due to lack of rainiall-
Corn withers in ﬁeld and light crops
of-potatoes are expected in many
sections of the county. Scarcity of
good farm hands is complained of.
Mr. ‘Tobius of Bowling is building
anew hip roof barn. A Barry Co.
farmers? picnic will be held at Ce-
dar Creek, July 28.—M. M. D. .

.Midland—The farmers are busy
‘Rye is all'cut
in this locality. Lots of bean hoeingt
\The
ground is dry. Threshing machines
have started out, you can hear the
whistles touting. Rye and oats are
fairly good—J. H. Macey. .

Oakland—We have a change in
the weather; we have a good shower
every day and sometimeotwo. Hay-
ing about all done and most of the
wheat out and some in the barns.

  

Earl-y sowed oats. about ready to cut.

Corn: doing well. A very pood show
for potatoes; slow coming up and
a good deal of the seed rotted in the
ground. No early potatoes‘to dig
yet. Clover sowed in the‘wheat is
killed by drouth. Fruit of all kinds
scarce. Very few apples—E. F‘Z
Shiawassee—A ﬁerce storm pass-
ed thru this county going in streaks:
hig wind did some damage to build-
ings and some orchards almost ruin-
ed-by the storm, barns destroyed
and windows smashed in dwelling
houses. The storm was accompan-
ied by hail. Wheat all cut and a
number of farmers have threshed,
drawing the grain from the ﬁeld to
the machine. Oats are about ready
to harvest but are badly lodged by
the late storm and com is in bad
condition from the same cause.
Beans promise to be a ﬁne crop. Po—
tatoes will be a short crop. Not
many sugar beets are being raised
owing to price conditions offered by
the sugar beet companies. Hay is
hardly up to the average, but was
in ﬁne cendtion. A large
acreage of wheat will be sown this
fall on bean ground after the beans
have been harvested.—~—D. H. M.
Missaukee—Cooler but still very

dry, a few small showers but not
enough to help. Haying. is ﬁnished
and farmers are busy hauling in

grain. Oats is very short, much of
it can not be cut, it will also be light.
About two weeks and they will be
ready to cut—Jeff.

Montcalm—The farmers around

‘ here are very buSy with harvesting
are very .

and potato bugs which
numerous. Weather hot and soil
dry. A good many acres of potatoes
rotted in the ground. Fruit is very
scarce except berries and grapes.
Thresher's have commenced their
work. The new seeding is killed on
account of dry weather and heat.
While I am writing this we are hav-
ing a regular deluge of rain with
thunder, lightning and wind and the
ground covered with water.—Geo.
B. Wilson.

Crawford—Our showers‘are more

[frequent and all crops look good.

Oats are all headed now and rye is
cut ‘or being cut in most parts of the
county. Potato bugs are the worst
they have been for "years and every-
one “is ﬁghting them. The berry crop
is ripening fast. Raspberries are
at their best now and the yield is
There are no huckleberries
but prospects for blackberries are
good.-+A. H. ’

{ manna ',(G.)-——We have been
having a great deal of vBry warm
weather during the past‘two weeks.
It has been“ wonderful growing
weather and «nearly “all at the crops
routine’oetndon'utappeartohe
a: nice “they might .ho,”but moot.

~ of the early‘ones will be. ready to cut
.' s f ' ’ '

”scenes in. wt aujcet. Corn?
is lookingirbetter-Zthan" it has ' "or

many years. i”'.‘_'.1‘fllat ;C,Which'—g‘ms in .
. ear-1y is now tassélin‘gout. and set-
ting for cars. ‘ Qf'oourseit’is 'rath?

er'dry,‘ a rain» would do iimmeasur—

able goods—1b L._H.
,ﬁ. , . ._

  

omises * Bump

Rotting—Mung Sections Need Rain .

‘of average season.—‘—E. E.

_ ., tomes.

tatoes rotted in ground. Prospects
for crop 10 to 60 per cent, mostly
less than 40 per cent. Whole po-
tato planted as seed give best prom-
ise for crop. Oats about as last re-
port. Cherries 85 percent picked,
crop 40 to 60 per cent. Average not
over 50 per cent—I. P. Houston.
Hillsdalc—The farmers in this vi-
cinity are engaged in the threshing
of wheat and rye. Haymaking is
about at an end, except alfalfa which
is being cut for the second crop.
Farmers here have been beneﬁtted
by ﬁne weather. Oats are a poor
crop; many farmers cutting them for
hay. Soil is in ﬁne condition. Young
poultry, some fowls, a small quan-
tity of butter, cream and eggs are
selling quite well.——-R. J. Fast.
Branch—Threshing is going on
rapidly after the reins of the 8th
and 10th. Rye is somewhat shrunk-
en and yielding about 20 bu. per
acre. Rye prices raising and major—
ity of farmers selling. Although a
co—op. elevator is operating sucdess-
fully here many farmers are selling
to a new buyer who has just started

.a small flour mill. Corn is largest

ever known at this point of the sea-
son-

ing the hot dry weather. Oats are

about half out and on sandy lands -‘

are a poor crop.~—F. Adolph.
lamb—'Wcather is ﬁne only all crops
are in nwd of a good rain. Corn
looking ﬁme. Tomato Worms trying to
dean up on late potatoes in some places.
Some mm are being out while the rest
will scum be ready—Seymour Lyons.
Ramiro—We had a long, drouth
which: was broken a week :31) by“ the
heavy rains. There were some. bad ﬁres
in: the. county which the rain put out.
There has been quite a. large acreage of

late potatoes planted but. that stand is '

very poor as a large percentage did not
come up. Rye is all out and the straw
is light and not ﬁlled on amount of
the dry weather. Corn is looking fine and
is two weeks in advance of what it us-
ually is a this time—William Burnham.

Saginaw—Beans and corn suffering for
lack of raiur—crop will be cut into un—
less rain comes within a very short time.
Damage in several localities by several
storms. Most grains harvested, very lit—
tle threshing, not enough to determine
what average yields will be. Expect
cats to be light Second mm; of alfalfa
being harvested—4A. G. Bovay, County
Agricultural Agent.

Kalamazoo—It is very hot and getting
dry. The'potatoes do not look as good
as they‘did two weeks ago, Oat ha:-
vest commenced in some places. Thresh-
ing started, Lots of corn tasseling. Hay
all made—Anarry A. Barnes.

l—Iuron—Haying about two-thirds done-
Most hay heavy. Wheat and rye being
out. good crop. All spring crops look
fairly good but need rain badly. Potato
bugs bad on early potatoes. Com is do.
ing ﬁne but everything needs rain. The
weather is extremely warm. — James
Keay. - .

Livingston—The weather has been hot
and sultry all week. Haying lS bemg
ﬁnished and harvesting is in progress.
Corn is the farthest advanced-that it has
been for several seasons. Bean acreage
is small but is looking good. Second
cutting of alfalfa is being gathered. .Had
a good rain the 14th: will help Silage

'and late corn. Oats getting ripe: some

being harvested which were in early.
Had a high wind followed by heavy ram
on evening of the Nth—Geo. Coleman.

Montcalm—Corn looks very good. Hayv

very short and poor. Late potatoes will
be a very‘ short crop and are rotting
very badly in the ground. Wheat is an
average crop. Oats are very short. and
poor. Rye is an average crop._Beans
are drying up. All crops suffering for
lack. of rain—B. E. Shaffer, County Ag—
ricultura1 Agent.

Calhoun—No rain for Fthgge weelrrgt;
ever thin dryin up. 1e corn
silkirsig g Lagte potatoes do not look
good. Cats are nearly all out. Hay all
in. Everything is a. short crop here.
Threshing commenced yield small, Farm-
ers are discouraged. Not much stock is
going to market—G, B. S .

Algeria—Potatoes and corn domg ﬁne.
Haymaking in process with 60 per cent
normal. Grain ripening, expect to bar-
vest it beginning nent week—C. 0. T, S.

Tuscolar—Wheat threshing is all the
go- The yield is fair. running around
38 bushels to the acre. Oats and bar-
ley are being cut. It is very dry. .‘

Kalkaslm—Rains quite general. =Ev-
erything looking up. Corn in advance

T

Kent—Wheat“ and rye all .harvested
and threaten. busy. Crop lair. Sane
attend-gut. yieldwmbelight. Chm
is won advanced but coloring from heat
and dry weather Early potatoes poor
for some reason, ‘late potatoes only a
half .. stand, as seed rotted badly.
Showers in some sections—C. A. .
' Mosh—Grain most all cut, except.
Oats which is a Very poor and short crop.
Rye,‘is'..a’fair crop. Hay is very poOr.
Corn looking fine. Potatoes, large acre-
age planted, but some rotted and Were
replante‘dl late, Toao1 hot and drnyor (1130-
cans sm 1 acreage. oo ry
and hot by ‘ I!!!”

 

  
 
 

   

3 . . hing
p; . .Gran not, turning out

Poor stands ofpotatoes are 5
reported by those who planted dur— .

iS'

  
  
 

   
   
 
  
 

 
 
  
 

 
     

u. Newlulterily if.“ 2%
"Es-W'Eiii'w’” a?“
.. as"... ﬂames...

“one” Dig-18’ FREE TRIM"
....'.:.'...-:;.. ° WWW"

running, my I: can EAS
ton
guaranteed I
.’ o. 8 u but IO d
eby they .1: that-ow t J
mmgrgrht gag Iflnv’: lé'hoohl bdngi'lggge

l) rm"

VII 00. 3330 WI II. cum

      
     

 

    
      
    
    
     
    
   
    
    
    
     
   
  
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
   
 
  
 
  
   
  
       
  
   
 
  
   
    
   
    
    
   
  
  
  
   
 
   
   
         
      
       
   

 

 

rOur Best Offer i‘ "

We will renew your subscrip— 3
tion for 5 years for only $3.00.

This is not only a substantial
saving of money but also saves 1
you the annoyance of renewing _
frequently and the possibility of j
missing a copy.

Better send your renewal order
today before you forget it. ,

MOIIIGAN BUSINESS FARMEB f
Mt. Clemens, Michigan ;

 

 

 

 

vﬁ

7—H your money is
.2 bringing less write

§

the publisher for full partic-
ulars regarding the 8 per .
cent preferred stock in The _ ;,
Rural Publishing Company,
which pays 4 per cent twice—
a-year. You can invest as 1‘
little as $100 for ten shares!
If you have some spare
money earning less than 8
per cent write, Publisher,
Michigan Business Former, . ff
Mt. Clemens Mich. '

 

llllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllll

 

 

 

 

Holstein Breeder ‘ ; , .-
gets “splendid , E,
results!” ,

mmnmmmmmm-ummInmumnmmlumll

 

Michigan Business Farmer, ' 1
Mt. Clemens, Mich,

Dear Sirs: July 8, 1921
I don’t like to have my ad

discontinued so if possible

would like to have the ad as

,follows and will run it the

year around. I have gotten

splendid results from my
space in the Business Farm-
er.

ROY F. FICKIES,
Chesaning, Mich.

WillllﬂﬂlﬂmllﬂﬂllllﬂmﬂllIllllIllIHIllllllllllllllilllllllll

Breeders, whose business
may be a “little slow” just
now, can speed it up a lot by
gdvizc‘rtising regularly in M.

     
      
         
    
    
    
   
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ARE YOU’GOING TO THE Fm

If so we have a proposition that
will enable you to go each day and
combine proﬁt with pleasure. I
_ If you want to attend your home .

county fair and at the same time ,
make a tidy sum of money write
for our liberal proposition and tell
us which fairs you would like to at;
tend. Do it today before somejother '.
fellow beats you to it. ' .. “

THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS " j,- ‘

' , FARMER -. ».

   
  

   
    
   
   
      
   

 
 

  
  
  
  
  
        
   
 
 
 

 

 


 

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*******

4. «EDEN! It‘s

FOOD»
raooucrs

Ii i

SERVICE i *wxm'swkt TREATMENT

mummmmmmmw V

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America’s Fourth City Appreciates this
Quality Brand of Meat-Products

We believe that the business farmers of Michigan are interested in and have a right to be kept informed of the
progress of this independent packing company, which was organized over a year ago and now has a small section of its
great plant in actual, pfoﬁtable operation. . . , ~ _, - ~

 

 

 

We are anxious, too, that you should know of the progress we are making not only in“ the building operations
which speak for themselves, but in the report of the business which is actually being donein Detroit and nearby markets.
‘ So far, selling the Detroit Star Brand meat products has been the easiest part of our undertaking. Detroit deal-

ers have been quick to see the superior quality of our goods and have not hesitated to recommend them to their cus—
tomers, who after a trial have come back enthusiastically for more. . y . , , c ,_ - - ‘

This means that when we begin actual slaughtering in the great plantmow. nearing completion, the brand will be
well established, the trade actually waiting for our increased volume and the market ﬁrmly established. ‘ -

We are already produ cing in our sausage and smoke d meat departments a quality of product Which' 18 new to the
Detroit markets- Heretofore the greater percentage of this class of meats has all come from Chicago or other distant '
points. Think of our advantage in being able to..deliver with motor trucks, (of which we already have in daily opera-
tion a ﬂeet of ten) directly from the packing house to the dealer! . . , , ,

We feel certain that the business farmers of Michigan will mark this satisfactory p regress of our company with
as much interest and satisfaction as we do ourselves, whether or not they have availed themselves of the opportunity of ‘
owning a share in the company. . . ..

BE SURE TO PLAN TO VISIT OUR PLANT WHEN YOU COME TO DETROIT FOR THE MICHIGAN
STATE FAIR, September 2nd to September 11th. . V 1--.... V. , V __

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Detront Packing Company

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DETROIT

 

 

 

 

 

 

