
_ An Independent
Farmer's Weekly Owned
Edited in Michigan

 

 

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Actualphotogrqrhtake-Jilymdihel‘phﬂm'mﬂedotlemmlih‘dﬁ’lyo’araﬂu‘:

AN INVITATIO

E respectfully extend an 1n-
vitation ”to the business farmers. of
Michigan, their Wives and families, to
visit and inspect our plant 'and the depart-
ments nowr in operation during your visit to-the

'Michigan State Fair
Detroit, Sept. 2 to l 1

E ‘shall look forward to your coming to

A inepect the results of our sincere eﬁorts during the

past year to give the livestock growers of Michigan a

' modern, efﬁcient packing plant equal to the best in the
United States. . ' ' ~ ‘

\ COMPANY

Stock Advisor \ r J

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I I"? month of June this year
staggering total Of $169, 000, 000, and the ﬁg-I

 

 

I Famine in One-Half of Old WorIdI Insures Market for Surplus Crops of UniIed States

I " amour tells you that the exports of
American food products are dropping off,

and therefore prices must go lower, don 't be- II

“ lieve him. This caution is given because cer-
:th speculative interests who
grain prices go lower are trying to lead farm-
m to believe that the export business de-
‘év‘ehoped during the war has been shattered It
(is true that there is a slight decline in the
,3quant1ty exported this year of certain food
products as compared with those of last year,
but these are more than offset by the huge in-
crease an the exports of Wheat and corn. ‘
It IS true that exports of manufactured milk
during the month at June, for instance, were
22 million pounds less than in June of 1920,
but at the same time they were 15 million
pounds more than the exports. of May, 1921
It is also true that twice as much wheat was
_ exported in June of the current year as in
" June, 1920.

It is true that meat exports for June of
I921-Were only 155 million pounds as compar~ 7

ed with 173 million pounds for the same month
last year But it is also true that nearly four-
, toen times as much corn was exported last
June as in the same month a year ago.
4‘ . . Figured in terms of tonnage it is probable
; [that total exports for June 1921, exceeded
those for June, 1920. Figured in terms of
"I'dollars and cents they were less because of the
“lowered prices. Notwithstanding this the
' total value of agricultural exports for the
amounted to the

sires fer July and August should show an even
-?‘greater value, and a. far greater volume.
, 7 , A steady upward trend has continued in
_~. ,:_..the exports of wheat which during the month
p. ,g-Ij‘mounoed to 25 ,235, 000 bushels, a slight de-
‘ slide from the previous month but still nearly
"ldouble the volume of the wheat exports dur-
'7ng ',2Iune 1920. " p
ﬂ Exports of lard increased from
=‘_f51,307, 000 lbs. in May to 69, 893,-
‘ ,.0001Ibs.1n June, compared with
' ,173, 000 lbs exported in June,
920: Experts of pork, which have
.E‘ontinued on about the same level
during the past ﬁve months,
_ amounted to 59 015, 000 lbs., com-
' *Ipared with 90. 156, 000 exported
i5~dur1ng June, 1.920 I
Exports of corn, which amount—
ed to 11,835,000 bushels in June,
have been exceeded only once so
7 far this year, namely, in March,
”Then the exports amounted to 13,
£30,000 bushels.-. ‘
‘i-Thb Future of Agricultural
. " Products
A good deal has boon said about
: the effect of the World- wide indus-
z‘trial depression upon the ability.
Europe to make further pur-
chases of American food products.
While there is no doubt that this
make for frugality, and that
purchases will not be as
. s they Would be if Europe
”d lenty of money to- spare, it
is 83:10 , atic that peeple will spend

 

want to see-I

I . oonN.

 

Exports for June 1920 and 1921

 

1920
1921

WHEAT, . . .June,
“EAT, . . .June,

1 2.846.000 Bus.
m
25,235,000 Bus.

I

CORN, 835000 Bus. I

E H835 000 But.

June, 1 1:0 696.000 Lbs.

1921 e41iooo Lbs.

1920
1921

. . . .Junov
”11.111133,

overrun,
BUTTER, . ..June,

I

.LARD, . . . . .June,
MRI), . . . . June,

41,173,000 Lbs.
m
69,893,000 Lbs.
I‘ ‘ .. .

MAN’F MILK, June, 1920 44, 460, 000 Lbs.
MAN'Il‘ MILK, June, 1921 22 434. 000 Lbs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

vice Association of Minneapolis, which states:

“Wheat is still high in price as compared with
other cereals, but there does not seem to be
much chance that Wheat will move back to its
normal relationship as long as a large exporting
country like Russia is on the importing side of
the column. India also will import instead of
export this year. There is some reason for
thinking that com and rye prices will gain on
wheat. A record» exporting business in corn is
now being done principally to Germany for hu-
man food. It is also logical to believe that Rus-
sianﬂrelief’ will be carried on largely with corn."

Factors Aﬁecting Future Prices

‘In discussing the. future outlook for prices
on, grain certain important factors should be
taken into consideration. The only import-
ant bearish’factor which needs to be consid—
ered is the ﬁnancial depression which seems to
extend from pole to pole. All other factors
are very, very bullish. ‘

lst. Consider Europe’s needs. Two of
the most important exporting countries, In-

to feed their teeming millions.

dia and Russia, must this year import food.
Already

American food is being rushed to the'famine
stricken areas of Russia and. a great deal.
more is demanded. These purchases will be
paid for by American and European relief
organizations. As a ﬁnal authoritivc word
upon the elfects of the European drought the
following official statement from the Bureau’

of Crop Estimates is published:

“England, Scotland and Ireland have now en~
dured some 80 days of extreme heat which have
Injured crops and entirely destroyed the grass.

“The lack of grass is seriously interfering with.
the dairy and cattle industries. Present indica:
tions are that there will be very little feed for
fat cattle during the coming winter.

“The drought conditions which apply to Eng-
land seem to apply also to the Continent. It ap-
pears that the drought in Russia has added to
the gravity of the situation as Russia will not
only have no wheat to export but will be an im~
porter during the coming year if money can be
found to finance importations The condition
of the southeastern countries is also reported,--
though not officially; Ito be rather poor.

“From the foregoing it is fair to surmise that
there will be a good market here and on the
Continent for American produce during the com,—
lng winter. The present indications are that
England will provide a specially good market
for beef and mutton during the coming Winter.
Unless there is a radical change in climatic con-
dltlon farmers will be forced, in fact they are
now being forced, to place their cattle on the mar-
ket before they are ready. A cattle shortage
may, therefore, possibly develop in England in
the near future." .

2nd. Consider the new tariff bill. The
schedules on farm products seek to make up .
the difference between the cost of production
abroad and in this country. They don’t quite
do it in many cases, but they help in boost-
ing the price of foreign products laid down
on our shores and enhance the price to the
American farmer that much.

3rd. Consider the billion dol-
lar export fund which is soon to

 

 

be authorized by congress. The
purpose of this fund is to pro-
vide capital to those who wish to
engage in the exportationof farm
products. This additional credit
should greatly stimulate the (ex-1
port business as it will enable
American exporters to do business
with European ﬁrms on almost
any kind of terms. ,.

4th- Consider the decrease in
stored stocks. On Aug. 1st the
total amount of food commodities,
in cold storage was 1,659 million.»

ago. The aggravataing surplus
of milk products which accumu- ’
lated shmtly after the war is be- 5
ing gradually cleaned up which "
should make for a better demand
for cure anufactures.

5th. Conmder the small pota-
.to crop in prospect, not only in
this country but Europe as well.
Pickle of Chicago, looks upon this
as a. very bullish influence .bea
cause it will materially reduce?
the supply of starchy foods. Last
year the potato crop was so 1111'
that it acted as a bearish inﬂu—g
once upon the grain crops. This
year potatoes are likely to be so
scarce and high that people,~ " -~
be forced to eat more ~

1 .

 

 

pounds or over 400 million pounds I
less than on the same date a year” -


   

 
   

 
  
  

‘ or to the Business Farmer, “that the.
stones which farm papers are publishing
about the damage to crops in the United
States and Europe are unnecessarily exact
and gloomy. ”

It all depends upon the point of view. The

growing 'of crops. When crops are good it
3’ i the duty of the newspaper to say they are

newspaper ’s duty to say they are poor.
So it is probably true that the stories
which have been published about the damage
‘ b crops are exact, but why look upon them
Is gloomy?
Nature is a queer old dame. She may rob
mes today to reward you tomorrow. Some

ins and at other time as a wolf in sheepskin.
She snatches the sweet apple of success from
lips only to substitute a sweeter one.
visits disaster upon men to prepare them
nor greater fortunes.
Drought and storm, frost and blight, are
not always the evil things they are pictured.
Often they are blessings in disguise. .

Are Bumper Crops a Forerunner of
Prosperity?

. The ﬁnancial interests of this country keep
‘ ﬂieir eyes very closely upon the condition of
growing crops. If the acreage is large, the
condition good, and promise given of bumper
crops, they invariably hail the situation as a
forerunner of prosperity. Never having tak-
en the time to analyze the situation closely
they erroneously assume that bumper crops
mean bumper proﬁts I and poor crops no
proﬁts at all. Now that sometimes is the
ease but not often. The rule is that bumper
crops mean low prices, and losses to farmers,
while poor crops mean high prices and proﬁts

' to farmers
There are exceptions to this rule porticu-
larly With respect to crops which are in de-
mand fer ”export If the export demand does
not fluctuate too greatly from year to year,
.ﬂlen our rule as stated above applies. Sur-
plusages of grain mean a ﬁnancial loss to the
farmer and the country, while a supply some-
what short of or equal to the demand means

high prices and prosperity for everybody.

The rule we have stated is admirably proven
in and year out in the case of potatoes,
ﬁrwh hich there is little export demand, and
which must be consumed Within less than a
”after they are produced. If only 350,-
000,000 bushels of potatoes are needed to
teed the people .of the United States, it
stands to reason that a crop of 400 million
bushels is 50 million too much. And exper-
ience has demontsrated time and again that
the 25 or 50 or 100 million bushels of pota
toes in excess of the requirements of the
country absolutely. ruins the market for the

balance. ...
Consult the table on this page which is tak-
en from ofﬁcial statistics of the Department
of Agriculture. Beginning with the year

 

1897 we have shown the total production for -

each year and the farm value as of December
. lst of each year. For purposes of compari~
son we have divided these years into groups
of two For instance take the years 1897
and 1898. In the former year ,we produced
only 191 million bushels, which were worth on ,
December lst $10_,3 365, 000. The following

year the production was ever 218 million ,
bushels Which were worth on December lst

slightly over 90 million dollars. _In other

 
  
 

larger was worth nearly 13 11111h011 dollars.

' 1n the table, “the crops for every
since then. Withbut _ 1w excep

 
   

fm'in papers do not control the weather or the

good. When crops are poor it is equally the '

she appears as a lamb in wolf’ s cloth- -

words the crop that was 17 million bushels _

 

”fie/op Records Show that as _r. 7
‘6 ,T SEEMS to me”, writes a manufactur- I

 

“Do Bumper Crops Pay?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

«have simch eﬂ’ect upon? the

Worth on the corrapomhng date only

" 119111.! showing, ooxu'parison by groups of years

‘- of tux-mere" returns from their potato oropi. Note. '

that in every case but two n 3111311 011311 returned

Lthe farmer more money than _a large one. .. =
. ’ 1511111 1111 ’ ram mu. «

. Year g 1 133181301: _; ' D00. lst ..
1897 o e o e e e' of. 191,025,000 103.442.m I .y
1898 218,772,000 90.397.000"
1899 .. . 2.00.257.000 103,305,000
1900 -. ...... . 247,759,906) 104,704,000 '
1901 . .-198.020.000‘f 151,002,000 0
1902 . . . . 203,918,000 ‘: 137,730,000 ‘
1903 . . . . . . 202,053,000 1,159,020,000
1904 . .. .. 352,208,000 ,, 157.040.0011
1905 . ....... “7278;885:000 1 170,349,000:
1900, . . ...... 331.085.4100 107 {195.000
1907 ........ 322,9541000. 197,803,000
1908 ......... 302,000,000 210 .018,o_oo
1909 ........ 389,195,000 210,002,000
1910 ........ 349,032,000 194,509,000
1911 ......... 292,737,000 233,778,000“
1912 ........ 420,047,000: 212 .550,000
1913 . 331,525,000 227,903,000,
11914 ......... 409,921,000 199’ ,400,000 4‘
1915 ........ 359,721,000 221 9.92.000
1910 . 286,953,000 ‘ 419,333,000

, 1917 ........ 442,108,000 542,774,000
1918 ........ 411,800,000 478,130,000,
1919 ........ 353,773,000 033,630,000 ‘.
1920 ......... 430,458,000 451,930,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

than the crop "of 1910' and wasvvaworth about
The crop of 1917-

16 million dollars more. .
was 31 million bushels larger than the 11918
cr0p and was worth 64 million' dollars more.
In the latter case, the entrance of the United
States into the war in the fall of 1917 1111—
doubtedly had much to do with the ingreased
value of our potato crop that year as it did
with "everything else.
What About ,Other Crops?

As stated before the samie rule applies to
other crops but in a somewhat lesSer degree.
Calculations on returns from grain crops the
past six years must take into consideration
the eifect of the war and the export demand
which were really the controlling price fac-
tors. But discounting these eﬁects we ﬁnd
our rule working in nearly every case.

The production of wheat does not vary so
much from year to year as the production of

Farmers 0911080 Shlftlng of Tax Burden

F THE American farmer can prevent it
Congress will not shift the burdens of tax-
ation from the rich to the poor. Representa-
tives of the American Farm, Bureau Federa-
tion have announced emphatically that their
organization will vigorouSly oppose such pro-
visions in the pending tax bill which aim to
do this. In presenting their clainis to' Presi-
dent Harding, Whose tentative approval has
been given to the bill as it now stands, the
farmer representatives made" some pointed
references to Mr. Harding’s statement in his
ﬁrst message to congress that “the country
does not expect and will not approve a shift-
ing of burdens”.
It is claimed that the administration’s tax-
ation program abandons the theory of taxing
a man according to his ability to pay, by pro-

posing to repeal the excess proﬁts tax, lower- ‘

ing of surtaxes and other means. In short,
says the farm bureau, ,“the bill relieves the

most prosperous of the bulk of- their ﬁlms
and adds to the burden of the less properous 3
It abandons the theory of progressive taxation ‘
VWhich is acknowledged to be correct for a flat-
"tax that will produce less revenue” .
Farm Bureau’ s speciﬁc obJections to the tax}.-
are as follows: -. .
‘ . "Under the present 19.17 11:11:11 17',

The same thing was me, as “Will be oted ..

the income tax level?

ministrative features and establish local

income.

The ‘ 4.

 
   
  

   
  

 

   
 

in:g compsnsons to show the.
prodﬂciaon 119011 prices we must 1:11:11 “
utrve years which show _a wide d160,
the total yield. '
g In 1897 our total wheat crop was 818
lion bushels. 11 was wort-11 49311111111 r
lars on Dec. 131:. The “.601le you

772 million bushels were produced

   
 
  
 

  
     
  

  
      
  

  
  

  
     
 

  

1111111011 dollars :01 44 million dollars less,
the maller crop of the previous year.
Crop of 596 million bu3hels m 1904 was w

 
   
    

 
   
  

 

 
 

1905 was Worth 41 million dollars morethan
the crop of 757 millions in 1906. The 111 h
startling diiference is seen in a comparison of
the years 1915 and 1916. In the former '
over one billion bushels of wheat Were , '
duced, but they hrOught the farmers 63_mil.
lion dollars LESS than the 636 million bushel
crop of the following year. ' ‘

Another striking difference is seen in com
paring the oat crops and returns for the Years
1906 and 1907. The 1906 crop of cats was
_0ver a billion bushels yet it was not worth
within 28 million dollars of what the 1989?
crop 0f only 800 million bushels was Worth"
And the enormous crop of 1915 amounting to-
over a billion and_ a half bushels brought the.
farmer a hundred million dollars less than
the smaller crop of 1916 of 1, 251 million
bushels.

Innumerable other cases could be cited
prove the point, but it is not necessaiy
Farmers themselves know that years of largo
production are years of 10w prices, and that
years when kind dame nature keeps the
down to normal, are years when a little 1110
is put 977937 in the bank. And, so "it is
the farmer who has only a half a crop . poi
tatoes or wheat or beans or what not is for.
more likely to receive a proﬁtable price ﬁx
his labor than if his ﬁelds returned an ”ab”
dance. Of course, there is no comfort in this;
thought to the man whose total crops ha
bioen a failure, which is something that yer?
seldom happens in this country.’ »

   
   
 

  

   
   
    
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
   
  
   
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
  
  
     
   
  
   
   
   
   
  
   
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
 
  
   
   
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
   
   
 
 
   
   
  
   
 
  
  
  
  
 
   

 

be $383,126 or 60 per cent, and with tworrt if“
tax free, it is $66, 860, or is 13. 3 per cent. With
income or $1, 000, 000 taxable, it is $663 1602--
66.32 per cent, with two-thirds tax tree, it is
$181, 680 or 18 per cent. This is certainly
ting them oi! easy. And yet-4110 new. bill 11
poses to reduce their surtaxes. from 3 1111121111
of 65 per cent to 42 per cent. This should
be done until all their income is taxable.

“What does this bill do for the 90, 000, 90’
people in this country. whose incomes are 31610,

“The bill is dictated. not by the general 001'
fare, but by azmlstaken notion of political ’
pediency.” '..

k ‘ Bureau Makes Recommendations

the bill, the Farm Bureau makes the fella
recommendations:
’ 1. Economy .
2. Keep the excess profits tax; revise

of assessment and adjustment in each
Establish authority to which easos can '
red for final adjustment . ‘

3. Do NOT lower the surtaxes an

‘ _ Raise. approximate}; 76; 07110611
from». 00111001100300“ ”its


 

agement. of Geo.
W Dickinson, 1 Who ' '
“ he the‘ paste-few
e is ‘has built " up" 'i
, Michigan State\ ~
gain from One of the smallest to the p ,
“foremost in the country, its success
this year seems already asSured.
The 1921- exposition will be the
ﬁrst to be held under centrOI of the
«state and the d1rection of a board
painted :by- the governor. This ‘
board composed of twenty members
will be in attendance at the grounds
" ﬁring the entire fair and will co-
‘ {o11¢ra.te With Manager Dickinson in
*1’3161p1ng to make the occasion a pro-
" ﬁtabl‘e and enjoyable one for all who
' attend -
“j New Horse Barns of Interest
The farm folks Who visit the State
1Fair' this year will be particularly
j-ziinterested in the new horse stables
,_.and the remodeled cattle ' barn,
gViiich Were recently completed at a
5,0081; of about $40, 000. Former vis-
gitors to the fair will recall that the
fold quarters were not of the best.
Not only were exhibitors conﬁned to
dark and crowded quarters, but the
sightseeeing Visitor found no pleasure in visit-
ting these quarters even though the ﬁnest
.- specimens of horse and cattle flesh in
warld were exhibited there.
distinct pleasure to visit the new barns.
_ The interior of the old cattle barns . has
{been remodeled in eVery detail. The twenty
Ito? thirty thousand feet of floor space has
*_,_heen entirely concreted. The old hayracks
and the old stalls have been torn out and neat,
"attractive stalls of iron have taken their place.
The Whole interior has been painted white
" trimmed with flags ”and bunting. Here
I: can be 311an to "an advantage and vis-
Will enjoy passing through these light,
stables to inspect Michigan’s ﬁnest cat-
16. Although the capacity of these barns is
ﬂdhiead, they will not accommodate all the.
‘ stock which has already been entered for
61 big show. It is authoritive‘ly stated that
' "exhibit of cattle at the 1921 expOsition
W111 be the largest in the history of the Fair.

Typical scenes at the Michigan State Fair.
ies competing for the prize in the milking
which never fails to provide the crowd
laughter.
members of the aerial circus.

the _
But it will be a.

_ and tar. .

in every department, A
than it has been for
many years.

Increased Agricﬁlr
cultural Exhibits

Last year some of
the county agricul-
tural exhibits were
crowded out of the
agricultural building
by the exhibit of the
US. Department of
Agriculture T h is
year this will °not

 

O
h

Above:
contest an

Below .

Adjoining the cattle barns are the new
stables. They are built of brick and well
lighted by fenestra windows. The floor of
the great structure is. made of creosoted
wooden brick cemented together with sand
The great barn is equipped with a
double row of box stalls and a double row of
open stalls built according to the most ap-
proved ideas. Despite the size of the struct—.
ure it is likely to prove inadequate to meet the
demands of horse owners who wish to exhibit
at the fair this year.

Live Stock Exhibits Biggest Ever”
Manager Dickinson says the livestock ex-

hibits that have already been signed up for

the Fair will alone be worth coming. miles to
see. ‘Heretofore out— of-state breeders have

“copped” a majority of the prizes but a
special effort has been made this year to in-
terest Michigan breeders, with the result that
Michigan livestock will be better represented

County lass-
annual event
with a. lot of amusement and
One of the many “halr— —ralsing” stunts performed by
This year the State Fair management
announces it has upon its program of aerial events the most renown-
ed stunt aviators in the world.

happen and present indications are
that at least ﬁfteen or twenty county
farm bureaus will have a large dis-
play of fruits, grain and vegetables,
to say nothing of the more elabor-
ate displays by state organizations.
In other departments we are assur—
ed by Manager Dickinson, the ex-
hibits will be quite equal if not su-
perior to those of former years.
Entertainment Features

Last year’s aerial events proved
of such interest to state fair visitors
that they will again form an import—
ant part of the program this year.
The fair management has closed con-
tracts with several of the most spec-
tacular flyers in the world who Will
thrill and entertain the crowd every
day of the fair. Balloon ascensions
with triple parachute jumps will be
another feature While the display of
ﬁreworks will be magniﬁcent and
quite beyond description. In addi-
tion there will be horse races, auto
races, auto polo, vaudeville, circus stunts, and

other attractions quite too numerous to men-

tion.
Getting Ready for the Crowd

The fair management is planning for an-
other record crowd this year, and because of
the improvement in the roads which makes it
possible for out-of~town folks to drive in- to
the fair in the morning and back home at
night, a large increase is expected in the at-
tendanceof farmers and their families. It
will be possible, this year for farmers living
ﬁfty to seventy-ﬁve miles away from the fair
grounds to make the round trip in one day
and give the folks a merry time at Michigan’s
biggest educational exposition. This has been
a discouraging summer, but things are look~
ing better. Farm folks as well as everyone
else may well relieve the strain a little bit by,
knocking off work for a day or two and tak-
ing in the State Fair.

Mlchlgan Jersey Cow Qualifies for American Jersey Gold Medal

ACQBA’S Golden Melia Ann owned by 0.
.‘George & Son of Union City, produced
2 97 pounds cf milk, yielding 730 pounds of
. rfat; starting official year-’s test at four
” 11d eleven months. , . .

g this test she carried a living calf
day , qualifying her for a gold medal

the American Jersey Cattle Club
years and ten menths she produc-

 

ounds of milk and 554 pounds of f7; 7

' . i I est" Mr. George has given us the '1 *
W1 g ”bites history of; his “gold "edal" ‘

She Was milked
Vas a relief to

remarkable easy milker.

cent fat. She closed the year on the 12th month
giving 26 to 30 lbs. milk per day that tested from
7 to 8 per cent fat. Her total milk for the year
was 12,197 lbs. and 730.10 fat, average per cent
5.99; weight of cow 11,050 lbs. Carried living
calf 259 days during test. She bore a ﬁne large
son June 12th, 1921. Sired by a double grand-
son of Raleigh. Qualifying her for A. J. C. C.’
go‘d medal with a large margin. The record
living cow of her age in Michigan. A remark-
able feature of her test is that she was in the
50,1b. list for the entire 12 months. Jacoba's

Golden Melia Ann has a license to be a 1,000 - ’ '

Her dam was a pure Melia Ann St.

Lambert, daughter of King Melia Ann, that

wonderful milking family. Her sire, Jacoba'sh
Emminent 111111, was a double grandson of,
the world fambus Champion Jacoba Irene. .
grandsire was Emanon, a 75 per cent brother-1
to Eminent, sire of 90. Jacob’s Golden Malia.»
Ann is a cow of great scale. Very long, deep
body, level rump, straight and broad, strong
n,ack square udder with excellent large teats at,
She is simply one " '

lb. 'cow.

agreetly grand cow in every detail.

» 111ch of, test. ”—--6. E. George. Breeder and; ._

- Mfchigan.

 

His' ' 4


OME WITH me and I will
show you many strange
things about this old world 1n which
you liVe and the people who inhab-
it the other side of it. W’e will
embark up0n a great ocean liner
that is an eighth of a mile. long,'
that reaches forty feet» beneath
the surface of the sea, and ﬁfty
feet above and is so spacious that
‘every last man, woman and child
of the averagecounty seat town
could walk on board and ﬁnd roOm
in which- to sleep, eat and live in
comfort For seven days We will
plough eastward through the blue
‘Atlantic and see no sight of land
or any human being except our
lcompanions on board the boat, or
‘perehance the occupants of another
boat which we may pass on the
journey. When the tide is high we
will ride into the port of Liverpool,
not many miles from the spot
whence the Mayflower sailed upon
her eventful journey. \Ve will travel by rail
in curious little cars to the land of the
canny Scot, and hide a wee in thc‘
teresting capital city in the world.” Thence
we shall p1 oceed north and eastward across
the North Sea to a point within a few hund—
red miles of the Arctic circle. We shall sail
down one of Norway’s most picturesque fiords
and arrive at Bergen which nestles at the
foot of towering green-swarded mountains.
On our way to the capital of Norway we shall
pass through innumerable tunnels, snow-
banks’and snow sheds. We shall emerge from
‘ihe thunder—storm to enter the snow storm
and look down from dizzy heights to ice-
. bound lakes below and up to dizzier. heights
to snow- bound mountains above. From Christ-
iana we will go to Denmark, “the most con-

Cunard B.

‘most in- -

' factories, her experiment (farms,

By THE EDITOR

M. s. Caronia, one of the Chartered Boats which carried the M. B. F.

Editor and Hundreds of Other Rotarians to England.

tented and prosperous little kingdom” in the
world. We will tarry here for a while and
get‘acquainted with the Danish farmers who
have made Denmark what she is. We will visit
her farms, her dairies, her cooperative bacon
her mam-
moth seed-cleaning institutions, and other
places of interest in which the products of
Danish farms are prepared for market. We
will want to spend weeks and months in Den-
mark for her people are kind and hospitable,
but We must hasten on our way. Germany,
our late 'enemy, but now anxious for Ameri-
can friendship, will be our next stopping
place. Here we will learn something of the
effects of the war On this once proud and pros-
perous people, what they are doing to
recover from these eﬁects, wages prices, rents,

3 2 cost of clothing, oodles
‘ 5 -. .u'lt'ure will also in ‘re‘srt W est
through Belgium to Fr an .
ging from the car Windows ,
thing of the devastation o ;
“and ecuntryside wrought by
great War. From Paris to 0338118
we go through drought-stricken
ﬁelds by ferry across the 111th
Channel until the great white
cliffs of Dover loom up ahead to
tell us the joyful news that we will
soon be again inthe land of our
forefathers, the cradle of the Eng-
lish language._ Themext'stopjwillj'
be in London, the largest‘city in '
the .world, a wender_ city where '
wealth and poverty live ‘ side ‘ -_ by ,
« side _ affording a’ contrast which.
Causes the visitor .never
speculation. Back to Liverpool, an
auto drive through the beautiful,-

ested hills of North Wales. . Then
oh, happy day! back on board ship,
bound for home, better citizens than when
we left, hearts overﬂowing With love for
our country, and gladder than any tongue
can tell that We are American citizens and

dwell in peace, happiness and prOSperity’lhe- .iV

neath the protecting folds of Old Glory.
1! =1: 31: at ‘

OR A NUMBER of years the American
farmers have been impressed I with the
progress which the co- operative organizations.
of Europe seem to have made. But while the
literature which is published upon the subject "'

' describes well enough the methods of co—‘Opein' ‘

ation, it is rather indefinite upon causes and .. —
effects. Often have I asked myself these ,
questions,‘ “Why have European. farthers __fi
succeeded Where our (Continued on 11996 2‘0)

David Friday Accepts PresidenCy of the Michigan Agricultural College

Economic Expert Leaves University of Michigan to Guide Destinies of Farmers ’School

S SUGGESTED some time ago in. these

columns the Boa1d of Agriculture has
appointed David Friday, professor of Econ-
omics at the U. of M., as President of the
Michigan Agricultuial College to succeed
Frank S. Kedzie, resigned. The Board’s
choice meets with the hearty approval of all
concerned, the feeling being general that Mr.
C Friday will make an able and successful pres-
i ident. He will take ofﬁce January 1st.
" Prof. Friday’s qualiﬁcations for his new
position date back to the day of his birth
which fate kindly decreed should be in a
~Miehigan farm home. This farm home was
!near Coloma, where the boy enjoyed the usual
vicissitudes of rural life, attended the village
‘school for sixteen years and the preparatory
school at Benton Harbor for two years.

“At the end of that time”, confides Prof.
Friday, “we found ourselves in the depression
of 18941 and I left school to run my mother’s
farm. It was during these years that I per-
formed the to me memorable feat of selling
corn at nineteen cents a bushel hauling it ﬁve
nﬁles to deliver it. I continued at the noble
vocation of agriculture until I was twenty-
ﬁve years of age, teaching school during the

Winter months to eke out the family income.’

.31 During these more or less hard years Mr. _

7 Friday completed his entrance requirements
1 " for the University and entered that institu-
dim: 1,11 1905 with one year ’s advance standing
" examination. “Incidentally,” he says,
»while I was at the business of count school

' 'mii from the fate that threatened me”

' 1 the evil one tempted me with” the re.-
I I spent my spare time for a year 311331;.-
it half readmg 11111.1 ﬁnally reformed and

.*Southern California Edison 00.,

DAVID 1319A! 3
“New Mailbk. ,c.‘

tracted such favorable attention that he Was . .

given the professorship of economics and ac-
counting In 1916 he left the UniverSity to

_,tal:e a position with the New York Universityﬂj . 3 3
5‘ ' id, and (Finance;

“ your;
thus engaged conducted numerous
’gations in Wall 3

and while
ﬁnancial and economic invest

work on plans for new sources of revenue. In

September, 1918, he became adviser of the .. .,

Wire administration and had charge of the

determination of just compensatibn for the

use of the telegraph and telephone lines taken .3 "
over by the government. . '

Since 1911, Prof: Friday has been engaged
in various economic investigatiohs of more Or ..
less importance. During the summer of that _
year he was in charge of statistics for he ' ‘
special commission of inquiry into matron. '
The following year he was engaged by the
Attorney General in a rate case. , In. 1913 he:
was on an investigation fer the minerity-
stockholders of the Lake Shore and Michigan
Southern Railroad, and in 1914 on the valua-
tion of the Pere Marquette Railroad for the
Michigan Railroad Commission. In 1915 he
was engaged in an investigation for the
at Los An-
gelcs, California, and since then has been on
a multitude of cases for bondholders’ commit;
tees and for government departments. .33

Prof. Friday IS an author of some note, hat..-
ing written numerous articles on taxation,
come and capital accumulation, prices an
similar subjects. Last fall he publishe f
“Proﬁts, Wages and Prices”, a little ho
dealing with these°subjects as they exist 3
during and after the war. In recent years he
has become a familiar ﬁgure 01: the Te
platform.

The new president is forty-four y '
mairied and has three children. , '

 

ceasing . ‘

magnificent, farm- dotted and for:


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thousands of the more progressive among them decided to do so this year. and they are reaping a handsome
proﬁt iron: the investment.

. Many others have not yet made this decision.
rlhey are the type who. must know deﬁnitely the proﬁt they can expect before making any investment.

We want to say a word to you farmers of this type. We can’t tell you exactly in dol-
lars and cents your proﬁt from an investment in limestone, as soil conditions. crop
conditions. and methods of Working vary so greatly that this is impossible.

my book will be promptly sent,
‘ upon return or this

 

l.‘.£_a'e'aae

10-,IQOI’OOI'

 

 

You can, however, ﬁnd cut for yourself very deﬁnitely what profits you can expect
from a limestone investment if you go to the small amout of trouble necessary to get
the results of scores of limestone tests. which have been made by YOUR Agricultural
College, by YOUR County Agents and by other reliable investigators and users in your
locality

You know that prices this year have been so close to production costs that proﬁts have

been small. With labor, seed, and overhead costs ﬁxed, the only way for you to in-
crease your proilts next year is to increase your yield. -

‘Youcanpntitdownasadefinitefactthataverylargepercentage of Michigan landissour and needs limestone.

Abo that. moat without exception, every farmer who has made his ﬁrst trial investment in Solvay Pulverized
Minutone is eontinning to buy and apply it until all his land is covered. This proves that it pays.

You will ﬁnd em: hundreds of tarmers are raising clover and alfalfa today on limed land where before they
couldn’t get a catch at all.

You will ﬁnd that 50% increase in yield is the average result secured by applying Solvay Limestone to wheat
lands. Theaveuage increaseinalfalfa, clover, beans, etc.,isashigh,andusuallyhigher.

‘niese are FACE which you can’t overlook.

We don’t ask you to accept our word for it. We merely ask you as a progressive farmer to ﬁnd out about limestone

mpare it with tests which have been made under similar conditions, then
ﬁgure the percentage of proﬁt which you will get from a limestone investment, and decide for yourself.

. Int u help yet: do this. Askus to send our book on limestone, which gives you the facts—scores of tests and def-
'inite ﬂuctuation so that you can ﬁnd out what limestone will do for YOU.

:While many county scouts" and farmers have told us that this book is one of the most valuable ever put into

farmers Mmmn’tdiargeyonforin Justdropusalinenowwhileyouthinkofitsothatyoucankuow
lianestoneandpi‘eparetoapplyitthisli'alhandreapthe proﬁtsonyonrinvestmentnextyear.

 


  
       

 
 

‘ f Freight A3366iatib-n

   
  
  

per cwt. on, export grain and 4 1- 2
cents on grain for domestic roses.
As'to how this will effect the ship—
per, the " transportation department
points out that last year the Michi-
' gun State Farm Bureau shipped
more than 900 cars of wheat and
rye to Baltimore for export. If the
same number of cars are shipped
during the coming season, the rate
reduction of 7 1-2 cents .will mean
the saving of about $30 on every
' cut of wheat and $24 on every car
of rye, or a total of $25,000 an the
exert business of the Michigan El-
evator Exchange. If 500 cars. are

utic consumption and the reduc-
tion of 4 1-2 cents is made effective
it will mean a saving of $8, 000 to
the producers of Michigan.

 

GLEAKERS ADD ELEVATORS
.T A time when business lies dor-

Ass’,n the Gleaner Clearing
House Ass’n are reaching out, build-
,‘ing and taking on more elevators
f constantly.
On July 2nd there was opened for
3 business at- Ber-rien Springs, Ber—
lrlen county, Michigan, 3 new ele-
f vator 36 x 36 with a warehouse in
connection 36 x '48. Equipped elec-
trically, the plant at this point has
a capacity of 100,000 bushels.
Situated as it is in one of the
"best known fruit sections in the
state the management at this point
expects to handle a large propor-
tion of the fruit crop of the locality
consisting of grapes, peaches, ap-
ples and berries. In addition tothe
fruit business this locality is one of
the best wheat producing territor-
ies in that section of the country so
the outlook for the future of this
new plant is bright. Starting out
late as it was this year, already
{eight carloads of the new crop of

wheat have been loaded.

In order that the elevator may
serve the farmers needs in that lo~
cality throughout the year the man-
agement is arranging to carry a
complete line of elevator supplies
such as sugar, feed; in fact any—
thing and everything the farmer
may need. ‘

Five coal sheds are being erected
at this point with a capacity of 15
cars of coal. When entirely com-
pleted the plant at this point will
represent an investment of $20,000
in buildings. One hundred and
twenty-six local farmers are stock-
holders in the elevator. .

In addition to the lumber yards
which the Gleaner Clearing House
Association own and operate at
Saranac, Mchig‘an, Which yards
dinning a $20,000 stock of lumber
”and building supplies, doing a bus-
iness of over $50,000 last year af-
ter the late opening, the stockhold—
ers have asked the Clearing House
to back them in building an elevat-
or with the result that on August
15th their new elevator 40 x 40 with
h capacity of 150,000 bushels was
ready for business.

This plant has 225 farmer stock-
holders and situated as it in a
rich farming country, it represents
ﬁn investment in land, buildings,
and equipment, etc., of $18,000. 'It

strictly modern and up—to-date

is being built by the Gleaner's
expert superintendent, Mr.

 

wn

m principal commodities that
pm be marketed by the farmers at
, ,. point will be beans, potatoes,
5 g: wheat and in the retail and of
bus inem they will sell to the

in addition to the lumber
had: building supplies. salt. sugar,

kinds of feed and all seeds

 

   

'nmnoans in Central
territory ‘ ‘ ' ‘ ‘
have reduced rates 7 1-2 cents“

shipped to eastern points for dom»

mant with nearly every other'

mmmywhohashadyearsob

they need. Prospects for this»

senate recently, pointed out how
Senator, Townsend had delayed the
passage of highway legislation for
the purpose of passing the bill that
bears Townsend’s name. He claim-

ed that the Townsend bill is unpop— "

ular “everywhere” "and dubbed it as
“a piece of Federal-Control legisla-
tion which does not embedy a co-
operative scheme between the fed—
eral government and the various
states and municipalities to the 'ex-
tent of the existing law, but it pro-
poses control by the federal govern-
ment of roads across, thru, and in
states for national purposes. “That
feature of the measure," continued
Senator Pittman, “has aroused tre-
mendous opposition in some states
and in some localities and upon the
part of certain Senators and Rep-
resentatives who are opposed to the
growth of that. character of legisla-
tion.”

It is understood that the Dowel]
bill, favored by the American Farm
Bureau Federation because it will
provide more farm-to-market roads,
and the Townsend federal highway
bill will be combined by the Senate
committee and reported soon. Sen-
ator Townsend is expected to try to
retain at least his scheme for a fed-
eral highway. commission Which will
take the administration of the work
away from the Bureau of Roads in
the Department of Agriculture.

HANG ON TO YOUR PEDIGREED
SEED

ARMERS will do well to take a
tip from the seed companies
that are now buying up old oats

of good weight and color for seed
purposes next year, says the state
farm bureau. Unfavorable weather
this year has produced a crop that
is light and the grain itself is light
weight stuff. Seed companies are
proceeding along the lines that old
seed that is in good condition will
be good stuff to have on hand next
spring. Farmers can profit ’by
hanging onto any good last year’s
oats, particularly pedigreed stock,
says the farm bureau.

South Dakota farm bureau mem-
bers are seeking national legislar
tion which will protect purchasers
of alfalfa seed from the inferior for-
eign seeds which are being mixed
with hardy western varieties and
sold as all hardy seed. Last year
America imported 18,268,000 lbs.
of alfalfa seed during the 11 months
ending May 31, 1921, more than
half the estimated alfalfa seed pro-
duction for the entire country_ in a
year. Most of the imported seed is
southern grown and almost sure to
winter kill. Mixed with hardy Am-
erican grown seed it is a menace to

good farming practice. ,.
The Michigan state farm bureau

has about 85 acres of garden wax
beans and sweet corn growing in
various parts of the state, with the
idea of being able to supply farm-
ers next spring with wax beans and
sweet corn that is true to’name and
the best of its kind. The depart-
ment has about 45 acres sown to
three varieties ‘of wax beans and
about 20 acres each of Golden Ban-
tam and Evergreen sweet corn.

PROGRESS IN WOOL EDITINGS
‘TATE FARM bureau wool pool-
ers have gone a step farther in

‘ the quick: disposition of their
1921 pool by enlargening the cut-
let for virgin wool fabrics. ‘They
have just nude arrangements for
the manufacture of standard size,
virgin wool suits of clothes, of
which a comiete stock will be
carried, in all titles and styles, says

the farm bureau wool department.» '

Prices on these suits, it is stated,
will be such that the farmer is set-

an; a splendid return on his wool .

   

' were pooled at Reed City.

the invitation of
Farm Bureau Federation to ugliest -'
3 . Commission 'ol Au-lcuiturel Inquiry
' rr’topresenteuanalysisofthefarme“,w
and tailoring, at an astoundingly finance problems '
‘ low price- . , .1 , g "

It is announced that the

grade overcoats in Miltons, Kerseys
and plaid hacks at $26 each.

Arrangements have. been made

with the Cleveland Worsted Mills of .

Cleveland, Ohio, one of the Iarges3
institutions of its kind in the coun-

'try to make farm bureau wool into
[Today the mills at South,
Bend, Ind., are making casslmer'os

wors teds.

for the farm bureau.

Wool continues to come into the
state farm bureau wool pool. Last
week 10, 000 more pounds of wool
Thous-
ands of pounds of wool yet in farm-
ers' barns will soon begin to come
into the pool, according to state
farm bureau wool pool mom.

 

DAIRYMEN ESCAPE HEAVY FED-
‘ ERAL TAXES

UTTER MADE from neutralized
cream will not be taxed ten
cents a pound, as Drapesed dur-

ing the last days of the retiring ad-
ministration, and fought for months
by the dairy interests of the nation.
The treasury ruling proposing the

tax is now dead, according to ad-
vices from Washington.

The death of the proposed' tax
averts a certain cut in the price

paid to the farmer for butterfat says
Michigan dairymen, who are rejoic-
ing. Such a tax, they declare, would
have penalized the farmer heavily,
as much of the 30, 000, 000 pounds
of butter produced annually in the
state is made from neutralized
cream. It is pointed out too that
butter substitute interests —- could
have capitalized the tax for their
own benefit by declaring butter
made from neutralized cream to be

an adulterated product and taxed

as such.

Another burden which Michigan
dairymen escaped in common with
dairymen of the nation, was a twc
cent stamp tax on all checks, reject-
ed recently by the House Waye and
Means committee as a means of
raising additional funds. Ninety-six
per cent of the Michigan creameries
replying to a questionnaire on such
a tax opposed it, declaring that the
large number of small checks they
write would make such a tax bear
heavily on them. . It was estimated
that such a tax would cost Michigan
creameries $3, 333, 000 annually on
butter transactions alone.

 

TRACTORS IN FALL' PLOWING
ATI-IER observers over the
country report that the month
of June was one of the warm-
est on record. The entire year in—
eluding the winter’months, has been
one of unusually high temperature
with the prospect that the tendency
for excessive heat will continue.

This looks rather ominous for
those who have a great deal of fall
plowing to do and who have only
horses with which to do it. No mat—
ter how enthusiastic a supporter of
the horse he may be, every farmer
will admit that summer fallowing
and fall plowing are horse-killing
jobs. He knows probably from his
own experience and that of his
neighbors that these Jobs often.
mean heavy horse fatalities. .

The sturdiness of the tractbr, its
absolute indifference to temperature
its-resistance to What would be
abuse, by overloading in a case of
horses, and its willingness to work
twenty—four hours a day if neces-
sary, make the tractor the ideal
power for fall plowing—Power

3.

mm ems A. r. s. 11.

Bernard M. Baruch has accepted
the American
We the 0011ng

crs’ credit and
Mr. Baruch has just returned

farmers
are making for themselves the best ,. 1,, A goodly number of gm“...

or for the occasion was F. F. Show .

. Secretary Hendrickson of the State

'nectlon with the new factory which

lead of beef cattle to be exhibited

its kind ever shown before. ,

 

    
 

at Adrian on 'Wednesd‘a , .

  
    

      
  

women were present, coming ._
all over the state; a picnic din
was served and a program
lag of music, declamatlon a
eta! addresses. The principal speak“

  
  
      
 
   

     
 
 
 

  
 
  
  
  

    

ers, of Carleton College, Northﬂeld
Minn, who came as a representative
of the American Jersey Cattle Club.-
Prcf. Reed, of the ILA. 0. gave a
talk on the dairy. cow and a. cow
demonstration. Pres Balden and

  
    
     
 
   
     
      
 
    
  
 

Association both made short talks,-

urging the -breeders~.present to be
more active 'supporters of the advere
tising program which had b 11,
adopted by the association. At be

suggestion of Prof. Reed, 3 resoiu- -
tion, calling for the raising of
amount of money for advertising , ,
purposes equal to 50 cents per cow -
for the total number of cows includ-
ed in the association was adopted.
A short talk was given by Helmet
Rabild on butter and cheese nick--
ing as it will be practiced in con-

 
 
    
   
 
   
   
   
 
    
  
  
 
 
   
   
   
    
   
    
  
 
 
    
     
   
 
    
   
  
   
    
  
 
 
  
    
  
  
  
  
 
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
   

 

the Michigan Milk Producers' Asso-
ciation proposes to establish in Ad-
rian. H. H. Mack, of the Michigan
Business Farmer, discussed live
stock advertising, urging the breed-
ers present, who were anxious to
advance the cause of improved live
stock breeding, to show their inter-
est in the undertaking by showing
their live stock at county fairs, and
the farm newspapers by keeping an
advertisement for their herds in the
breeders' directory, of these papers.

‘\

 

now muons COMPARED non

Y ‘ .
THE INDEX numbers for July,
‘ together with the highest index
' number reached during the boo
period and the percentage of this
advance which has been lost are
shown in the following table. (1918
equals 100)?

 

 

 

    
     
    
    
 
 

Index Highest gain :9: ,
Commodity July- ‘Index lost-by 1 ":l K
- ...~ 3 1921 1920 July * '. -3 i ‘
, , . 1921 . 3‘ ;
Farm products ”l, 115 240 90 ‘ ‘ "
Food! ........... 134 284' 82
Cloth & 0131211an 179 35G 69
Fuel 5 lighting 184 m 54
Metal! and ‘7 . .
metal products 125 . 19! 74 "
Bld’g materials 200 841 m
Chemimis and “ ' '
drug! . 163 m l _ 48'
Houses. turn’shn‘gs 235 871 60‘
Miscellaneous .... 149 241 167 -’
All commodities 148 272 31 _»73

 

 

 
 
  

FRESH mm DI CUBES .

N Holland milk is now put up and

sold in solid form, being made

into cubes which are readily
dissolved in tea, coffee or "other
fluids The milk, after removal of
the cream, is reduced by heat to
dryness, then' powdered and mixed
with the cream, the material being
pressed into blocks. These milk , .
cubes have the advantage, of pre- _
serving their freshness for a long.
time. They are recommended ‘ for
use in regions where milk is not
easily to be had, and travelers may
ﬁnd it convenient to carry a supply
of them.

   
      
 
      
      
      
   
   
     
        
    
 
    
    
       
   
    
     
  

 

       
   

  

$100 EXTRA PREMIUM! .

E DETROIT Packing Co., has
ﬂared a premium of 8100, J11
addition to the premium adored,
by the State Fair, for the best e

    
  

   
 
 
 

    
  
   
   

 

the State Fair. Indications are M
there will be some stiff coin
for this prize, as it is stated *the, (it
cattle exhibit will excel anything‘ﬂ

 
 
 

 
 

 
  

  

 
 
   
    
 
 
 
 

 
 

 

 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 

 

Ohio claims the honor‘

 
    
     
   
     
     


Deborah ‘gmeering Ca, Cleveland,"
H j , . Engineers

Bay on, Stone 00.. General
Contractors

 

. as». . ' ~ I . .~ . . . . .. _.
1m: MOST MODERN AND OOMPi'E‘IE RUBBER FACTORY s AMERICA—THE WILDMAN RUBBER 00.
‘ ' " 1 (Now Under Constriic on) ~

THE RpBBER INDUSTRY

was responsible for the phenomenal growth of In, Ohio, from 69,067 inhabitants in 1910 to 208,435 in 1920, an increase of 202%.
. a The total business of all the Akron rubber companies in 1920 totaled the enormous sum of $544,729,000.
It is claimed that Akron factories produced last year 70 per cent of all the tires made in the United States.
Last year Michigan produced at Beast 70 per cent of all the automobiles made in the United States.
' If all the manufacturersof rubber tires for motor cars in the United States were to operate up to the limit of their facilities twenty-four
U . hours per, day, the" aggregate production per year would be in the vicinity of 37,000,000 tires.
' f Not one fire company that We know of could possibly operate full facilities twenty—four hours a day, therefore the aggregate production,
under the most favorable circumstances, would not and could not be above 25,000,000 tires per year.
' There are now, according to United States statistics, approximately 10,000,000 motor cars in daily use in the United States. At a conseb
‘ntive estimate each of these cars will consume at least two new' tires annually, a total of 20,000,000 tires.
'The annual and normal production of motor cars in the United States is now about 3,000,000. Each of these cars requires five tires or a
total annually of 15,000,000 tires. ‘- ,
‘ This means a demand of 35,000,000 tires annually, not taking into consideration the constant increase in the volume of cars in use and in
annual production of motorcars.
Therefore it is certain that the making of rubber tires is and will continue to be,a profitable industry.

' j ‘ Why Shouldn’t Michigan Supply the Tires? The Wﬂdman Rubber Company is No Experiment
‘ TWO things are as sure as time itself. The motor car and the . .

motor truck are here to stay. They Must Have Tires. The Wildman t “1Tb; ﬁlldman Rgbiberegortnlpangaisulggét£irzxpeﬁnle$$ V311 6W???
Rubber Company of- Bay City, will make a necessity, therefore, under 8’ e ea are exp :- enc I e 11 :ll' t. ' d ' f 25
'. .wise management it must be a continuous money maker. man, pres1dent and general manager, has 3. hr] ian recor o

_- On our wonderful site of 63 acres is being erected the first unit years in- the tire industry. For ten years he was “finer.“ manager of "
of the most modern tire factory in the world. With our superior ad- one Of a_ well hnown tire company in Akron, 0' Wufll‘ﬁlagvtligesm
vantages including the very latest and best equipment made and, our juSt quality W111 be our motto. Under ms management e If man
, most efficient management, the Wildman Rubber ompany will be able Rubber Umpi‘a‘l’i’ ‘3 b°und t° become ”a of the m0“ “we.” “1 m'
‘ » to. producetires and tubes at the minimum cost. dustries in M10 gan.

' ‘ -- ' Our plant will have direct connection ”over our own tracks with . Reclaiming Plant

both the Michigan Central and‘Grand Trunk Railroads, whose main - -
lines 1.1-u‘n through our property. We have deep water frontage of half Another big money maker will be the Rleclzzimlidng V5573“ W12“:
a-mﬂe. on Saginaw River and willreceive the advantage of such pref- Will be built 83 30011 as the tire factory is comp stick. 1 r.f 1 man as
,erential freight rates as are accorded to seaports. A concrete pave- a patent process for recaiminbg 01d rubber Wh c 1ft“ imhore eco-
ment leads from the business center of Bay City direct to the plant. » . nomical than methods used by others. This plant W1 urn s 81 mar-
We have the benefit of low power rates and last, but not least, an ex- ket for old rubber which is now shipped to other states. In itself it
cellent‘ia’bor market. Coal mines'are within a few miles of our plant. Will be a big industry and Will give employment to a large number of

, - , Wmm’ m A E new. 8%., , THE WILDMAN SELF SEALING TUBE ,
viii-inﬁll ﬁfazyiwpm E“ T:~’°“°S' Tm?" In additiOn to regulation inner tubes, the Wildman Rubber Company will manufacture
‘Ameoweagewmn Bel 13°“ 2954 the Wildman Self Sealing Inner Tube (U. 3. Patent No. 1,217,888) which is an absolute safe-

Eirénﬂllch. guard against punctures This tube has been thoroughly tested and is guaranteed to give satis-
Accuracs moﬂﬁntioncorihii‘ggg it; awaits: faction. 0n tests recently made the Wildman Self Sealing tubes have stood up after being punct-
Hr 3,4,. (3. McCabé' Segmy 19““ 1921' ured 400 times. Demonstration at our office any time. Already there is an unlimited demand for

wndman Rubber 00.. these tubes, as they fill along felt want. It is planned to have them on the market in the very

. LB: City, Mich.
2 gm Sirt-Jl‘he demonstration recently 1183: future~

witnessed by the undersigned convinces
313 that you have perfected an inner tube OUR VICE-PRESIDENT

at Eggévgfacucany ”WWW” me V Mr. Charles A. Brownell of Detroit, one of the real big men in the advertising world has been
2;:91‘0 see an ordinary looking tire, filled elected vice-president, of The Wildman Rubber Company and will move to Bay City at once. Mr.

with compressed air. punctured. by dri’V- Brownell was advertising manager of the Ford Moto‘fi‘ Company for more than ten years. The first

. 13ng-fggkinug‘gsg‘g"an3°’§,‘{,‘§f‘;‘§f§ . Year he was with the company the sales were 18,000 cars. When he left the company on December ~31,

,thengrind nouns slightest amount of air 1920 the annual sales were 1,023,000 cars and 80,000 tractors. During Mr. Brownell’s connection with
”talent in almost beyond 126- the Ford Company he visited every state in the Union and has built strong friendships among the ag-

.. ‘ or
2:; 13,? ﬁai'omvggi‘twﬁ Sggm‘i’gg gresslve men in the automobile industry. Mr. Brownell resigned from the Ford Company and went
tion a: the: sample tubes, your-explana— to California intending to make that his home. However, our proposition looked so good to him that

don of the" action of the crude. raw gum he decided to return to Michigan and become associated with this organization. Mr. Brownell is per-

inmﬁeiﬁuﬁaﬁ?ﬁyﬁgﬁi an: BOnally acquainted with practically everyone of the 7,000 Ford dealers in the United States. That he

V ‘ck 01’ legerdemain or neoromancy 618— 'will be a. great asset to The Wildman Rubber Company goes without saying. .
t' I "nomad”we?i t3” ”if: is b? t a: it It 1 t b

ham 0 , emons 1‘3 0n 1“ “1'9- The Wildman Company is hereunder your eyes, you can see grow. 3 angi le, real. Fill

'IM‘Zmen ﬁﬁghﬂgﬁgﬁfﬁﬁnfzﬁgﬁuﬁ out the followingconpon and let us give you the information you desire about our company and its

up; their will and overcome difficulties product. '

 

i " ‘. READ THE. FOLLOWING:

 

 

 

 

heretofore urinate-n. . r 1f . Ii 1
V y 1', Nurse you W: n ‘ _.

. practical ago. 'no longer are men who. . ' WILD£§$I CfiigBlggcl; COMPANY,

perfect scientific .‘idots charged with Th ., , .

. , _ ” . . Without any obligation on my part, , i
“Mgégrz‘nd put»;gud°:h%‘ma 3332:?qu . . , . . , . please send full particulars. ' - - ‘
“mmmwm » ~ ~ man u er 0 ~ ' .
benefactors of the-age; , , - 7‘ '. __ 1., ‘ , _ . Name ....-.-....._....................I '

. :

 

 

. recommend your-new tithe. JiE.‘ .
L Sis-Pd. you 'c-‘aeay '_ give
wag storm ~

3‘ WW’WIImMAN,P1-esident 0A, BRQWN‘ELL, Vice—Pres, Address ...v.........................a..,._._

i :JAs-: o. MGCABE’ Secretary . I I I C ".'O .‘0 O I O 0.”. U I O O C O O I O .W?* L,

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" contraction keeps silage in most nutritious
condition; no waste. Kalamazoo Cutters
m the‘world’s standard. None better 111‘

any way. ‘

If rahmaioo
Facts FREE. Write TODAY ‘ , .
Sendfértheseeiloandcutterbooks. Theyer’e

an education in such matters. Don’t buy a silo
‘ WWW“

d \Read bout
the matchless A

 

 

,v ,ngg‘l.v.;ggv,_‘gs; 1,»; ;,v./ ...-,1

r-DCC) if ©ltl Kim©W~
That in‘ this big department store of
used cars you can always ﬁnd a selection
of over 100 cars. Fords, all models;

Maxwell, Chevrolet, Dodge Brothers and
undersell in both price and easy terms.

v'eiiini-Jhxnm .'::m\‘.n‘e\1~‘}a\'z;.rm

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Detroit’ 3 Used (Car Department Store
THOMAS J. DOYLE
3922 Woodward Detroit, Mich.

r ’ .iir‘m“/.\1rzaii‘la\:;

nmwmwmmmmwmmmmmwwmmwmm

Tumummmmmmwnmmmmmmmmmm

3 " e-Z‘. ifs?) 7i? frail Wolf-“e“. ”I V f’aﬁii’ii’; $237.1.‘YKCT7R{KY—aSilt—(£1{76%rfe‘ﬂi'fa‘ﬁtfﬁifeiimmi’feﬁife‘lﬁa

 

THE .eAUTO-OILED AERMOT R
A Real Self-011mg Windmill g, giggly at ‘
l Oil an Aermotor once a year and it is always c
oiled. Every moving part is completely and fully

oiled.“ A constant stream of oil ﬂows on every

heath; Theshafts run in oil. The double gearsrun in

d] in a tightly enclosed gear case. Friction and wear

a Wally I . , m

3' Asa windmill which does not have the gears runningin oil isonly

half oiled. A modern windmill, like a modern automobile, must have

I: gears enclosed and run in oil. Dry gears. exposed to dust, wear rapidly. -
”bearings and dry gears cause friction and loss of power. The Aermotor
mxin the lightest breeze because it is correctly designed and well
ﬂed. To get everlasting windmill satisfaction, buy the Aermotor.

rm. ’ AERMOTOR co. airmen,

 

 

BREEDERS ATTENTION!

If you are planning on a sale this year, write us now-and

CLAIM THE DATE! ‘
This service is free to the live stock industry in Michig
to avoid conflicting sale dates

LET “THE BUSINESS FARMCER" CLAIM YOUR DATE 1

 

 

Make Your Money Buy More!

MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER, 1 year ' $
McCall’s Magazine ........ . . . . . 1 year All for 2.00
Today’s Housewife, . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 year "VALUE $3.00

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

THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER, 1 year and any of the
following, each one year ~. ‘
WITH American Magazine
WITH Breeder's Gazette
W Christian Herald
Delineator
Everybody’s
ﬂu Fatigue Magazine
Modern ‘

”
unwrap»?

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Collier Weekly .......... . «. . '. . .
Designer and Woman‘s Magazine . . .

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money on ‘yourhdreading‘matter send all or onto

 

 

 

 

 

 

in a recent school '1

werehppomted to take
chai _

hallo the .
himself. In 'it a "

“on? In blasting out an-‘e’ld bridge has

a contractor the right to haul the brok—
en pieces into a farmer's yard--and let
them iayf—«A. F. 3., Coleman. Mich.

If the school meeting was held at ’

the right time and other things
were legal the non appointment of
tellers and the counting of ballots

by the chairman was legal andr‘pror.

or. If the meeting desired tellers,
some one should move for the ap-
pointment and the chair wouldthus‘

’be relieved from duty; but if the

meeting fails to have them appoint-
ed the chair must receive and count.

and declare the result. It would be

a trespass "for the contractor to put
any material in a farmer’s yard
without his consent and he is liable
for any damage done or costs made
him.—Legal Editor. '

STARTING ROSE BUSHES
Is there any way to start rose bushes
(mecially Ramblers) and other shrubs
bery? If so, how, and what time of the
yuan—«Mrs. F. L. M.. Amadore, Mich

I' would say that layering is the
most convenient method on the
home grounds where but a few
plants are desired. To propagate
new ramblers or other vines by this
method a long shoot of the previous
year’s growth is buried under the
soil at a leaf joint with the tip of
the shoot protruding above the soil.
This shoot will then root durihg the
growing season and may be separ-
ated from the parent plant at the
end of the summer. Shrubbery may
often be propagated in a similar
way athough it is usually easier to
simply divide the clumps into two
or more parts—C. P. Halligan, De—
partment of. Horticulture, M. A. C.

MUST BE A CITIZEN TO‘HOLDJ
OFFICE
Is it lawful for a man who is not a
citizen and got his first papers out in
October 1920 to'hold the office of Jus-
tice of the Peace?—-A Subscriber, Brown
City, Mich.

First papers do not qualify a
man to hold office of Justice of the
Peace. He must be a citizen—Lo.
gal Editor.

DISPOSING OF REAUl‘OR

On May 20th we had our herd of cab-
tle tested by a state veterinarian for
tuberculosis and found one of our herd
was afﬂicted. He promised to come
back in three weeks and take the cow
and dispose of her for us but has not yet
returned. -'To whom could we write
about this maitter and what can be‘
done about it? The cow is a registered
Shorthorn.—-—E. W., Boyne City, Mich.

It is my belief that you misunder~
stood the veterinarian who conduct»-
ed the test. When a_ test chart is
received at this office, showing “that
a reactor has been found as the
result of the test, the herd owner is
sent a form letter containing in-
structions relative to the handling
and disposition of reacting animals.
If *an error has been made in this
instance, we shall be glad to rectify

it, if you will furnish us the date of.

the test and full information.é~B.
J. .Kl'llham, Chief Veterinarian, De-
partment of Agriculture, Lansing.

LAW DOES NOT APPLY TO OLD
SLEIGHS
Is there a law that compels a man to
widen out his sleighs to 4 ft. 8 in. that
is. to standard width, if so, what is the
ﬁne for not doing it?—-—C. B. L., Vander-
bilt. Mich. - ‘ ’

Act 73 of the Public Acts of 1919
provides that it shall be unlawful
to use, sell or offer for sale,’ any
vehicle for use on any of the pub-

lic highways, except those used for",
extraordinary purposes ' such I , as

motor‘ttrucks, moving vans, logging

weighs, cutters and light delivery.
sleighs. But the actwdoesmotfnpply; ,

 

_ sates ,f

' I : than raiders. when
gimprwohmehffin £1126 , .. ..

“‘9 wart-42°82“ Eaton '

' ' doom. ham: '3 f 5-3
you advisg me regarding A

The following list'of ﬁrms believ-
to be, reputable is submittedzg“:1~ler
York Coin and Stamp Q0a11Wefst
80th St., New York; Thomas “ Eld-
er, 32 East‘23rd~8t., 2-stng ,. ,
Theopolie E. Leon, 148‘Nort'h Dear-
born St” «Chicago, 111.: Numismatic,”
Bank of Texas, Fort worth, Texas.
-—-Lucille B. Seed, Chief. Departs)
ment of Fine Arts, Detroit, Public
Library. . ‘ 3 i '- '

moms os'rsnmrns.‘ .. no mass
If A lets B .a farm for 1 year-Tani!!!

farm another year if 'wants ,

"B puts in wheat this fail. can 133}! 14%-}
time being up in' March. An 13 W

work all the land would A‘have“a”',right_' ,f’;
to let other parties not it in by. j
crops—A. W. Gs Swarts Creek, mean
The agreement contained in the ..
lease would govern the rights anthem.
parties to, it. If no provisionwas
made in the lease for a longer term- '
than one year and no subsequent ._
agreement was made the lesee’ could; '
only hold the premises one year.» If
the lessee failed to'work tha‘farih‘

according to contract he would be ,

liable to damage but'the‘” lessor ,.
would have no right. to again rent '
to another unless he reserved. that
right in the lease—Legal Editor. 5

ALL CITIZENS MAY You: on ”
VBONDING ﬂ ‘. V .
'Who is entitled to vote on bonding a 3
small village? Has every voter the 'right i- ‘
or just the taxpayers?——'J. W.*H..‘ Grant.
Michigan. * ‘ “

Every qualiﬁed voter whether .‘he '_' r
owns property or not, may, legally}
vote on bonding prop0'81tions-:,:jgn” ,:
town, county and state- In!”
to vote on school matters a ,citizeif‘
must also be a taxpayeré—Edi-té’ii

MAY COUNTERMAND ORDER. 7

I am enclosing a contract and letters, '
regarding a. lighting plant. I signed ~I'
contract June. 14th. and went”‘to‘ the
agent on June 16th'and askedfh'im to.
cancel it. He said it was impossible; .I ,
wrote the company June 11th. “ Ass

- will note they refuse to cancel. althoulgh; _.

they have not been put to, any expense .
as the plant was not to be shipped natal
75 days after the contract was, signed. '7
I would like to :know if the contract is
as binding as the agent tried'to make
ouL—S‘ ubscribcr, Memphis. -Mich.

The Supreme Court of Michigan.
in a case in which this company wu ‘
a party held “An order for “theypuré ‘
chase of goodscontaining the wards >4.)va
‘not subjectto countermand'e may ‘
nevertheless be countermandedi‘ got"
any time before acceptance, for,_f gin-:7
til accepted by the saiesman's‘prizi
cipal it issimply an odor tor/pure.
chase and in no way creates it binds]
ing agreement.-—Legal Editor. ’ "

CHATTEL MORTGAGE GIVEN BY
' , HUSBAND ,
Can you tell me through .your‘colsf,

‘umn if a chattle mortgage given bygn‘

man and not signed by his wife is legal“,
and can be collected 'I—A Reader,~ Gray-T,
ling. Mich. . ” , . "

A chattel mortgage given by
band alone. is. good except, «on
small amount of exempt material
such as two cows, etc—Legal

itor. . .

Parsons comma
. Kindly, give me the financial
ense-


 

~E'1IP0IItmaste "
__n. _.

. ”tin your papehand oblige-
meaders..—s. 'M.. ed. Rapids:

a. _/ F. in

tithe _;nn‘- a . considerable , nor-

, ‘ neis‘sue'r It measly found

; one £81th to the extent of
. . "I'tijisjon page 1817M

tion’ of all the highway

97‘. It is: section,” 4671 of

.. amend-

. Write .’ the ,

of. State for a copy—7140'-

. ,n-mnsof. where I "would be
0 purchase“ a full-blooded or
red Irat‘terr‘ier dog (male pre-

emd).;,The”y readily take the place ‘

of-Icats'in' huntingvdown mice and
certainly outdo them when it comes

ntingdown rats, letc. If any- '

. can put .Imein touch of where
IiIget one,- will greatly appre—"
.t -.J. CL., Ingham County.

, Ann on nmnorons Drsrosu
' OF STOCKHOLDRER'S
Would you» please inform me as to
whether an organized stock company’s
. has any right to sell or dispose
13.33.11; . way the property belonging
., the ockholders without the stock-
. ers’ consent? The ppoperty I have
a! mind is '_eituate.d in Arizona, but the
‘Wpfhfd-‘Oﬂloej is in New.».Tersey. «It
“I ** boomerated under“ the laws of Ari-
13., 13., Central Lake, “Mich.

roan Iot'te’ll from the letter-I what

nth . the board ofdirectoss has

sale __of-property. without ex-

n of-Jthe'cb‘arter. and by-

,_ sually' the, board of direct-
‘geould d9; s_o.—~Legal Editor..

WWI BARUCH .AND' GRAIN .
,- enemies .~
the “‘D'e'arbom Independent" and
they Baruch is connected with a
92.0.00 ‘mm; buying pool or talk—
Mﬁonet anyga‘g. IsI'this tinge same
I_..'ngow Weareasdto
do tribute £13: In? lett lets: a1;h ’quit.
:. , :exp'a .. ’ or ran the
r.-.--'F.v,H_.,‘ ‘GladWin." Michigan.

. Jeanna): steamer. nothing-teas»

’ __ '8, Grain Growers; Inc»

nth understand they tried to.

ﬁzEditor. ff
LimSTRoimo WILL

mekesa will to children to be
rI youngest child is 21. Made.

ceof the Peace. signed by '

two other witnesses; Father,
rd. Mother died tWo
‘ made. ‘ .Fether

wit-

o?—c_. .. Newport. . Mich. ' ,

her would have no right to
will of the mother of

. unlessIIIjIhe. was author-
IIIId‘o “o bythe mother. You
‘ . . Z I t‘. .mgiolfowr the’»'require~
manta ot'ithe‘ statute tor: probed-us a

a...

Olen tor j suppressed , wins; 2
th

Iii text'of'the CovertROSd
» t1!» its. .gmendmems 1.37 I- “W0 “
' ‘ in? a newspaper; It ’

' clover, seeded on a‘ well
. seed ‘bed as early as possible. A

<

‘ General, 'Washin‘gton,

sunbeam: If‘bwslft‘ 301“ “my at 9"“
. ., a

mutual: uthe .' text", of ﬁction we

I prom ed‘ to remove .ﬂie,
”a woekhand‘on the sixth day,
, , tourteams and went after it. It
was:;a‘bo‘ut~tm» milesfrom where I live

and when we tthere we found that

the-manlied ,. tithe 'hay to another
W Cén. 1;: _ pa me for
E01118 after the hay‘I—r-AIa" '1‘.. 'Sturgis,
Michigan; ‘ »

" If you-bought the hay at an auc-
tion..sale'and, complied with the
“tonne of the. sale the re-sale was
_. unlawful and you cancollect all of
the damage naturally growing out
of the unlawful re-salea—aLegaI Ed.
itor. ' .- . . ,

sunnmaf son 1922 HAY CROP

I seeded I. piece of land this spring

fwd it did not catch. What time would
be favorable to sow this fall to make
hayx next year?——Reader.

Under favorable conditions of
soil fertility, lime content and the
use of winter hardy seed, August
seedings of red clover are some-
times successful, usually- however
they are not to b°.. recommended.
Alsike is more frequently success-
ful than» red. August and Septem—
her: are favorable months for seed-
ing timothy. If you are anxious to
try a fall seeding, would suggest a
mixture of timothy, alsike and red
prepared

mixture of one bushel of rye and
twenty pounds of hairy vetch seed,
saw about the middle of August
and cut for hay when the rye is in
the milk .or early dough stage,
makes a ~fairly reliable hay' crop.
The vetch seed should be inoculat—

“ed if vetch has not been grown' on

the land previously.—C. R. Megee,
Associate in Farm Crops, M. A. C.

OWNER LIABLE FOR DAMA
BY CATTLE ‘

Are farmers obliged to build road
fences to protect their crops? My neigh-
‘b'or drives his cattle along road to get
to- pasture and they have damaged my
crops. Is be liable (for damage they have
done? I have. no road fence—J. E. B.,
Gregory. .' Mich.

One who drives cattle along the
highway is bound to keep them
within the highway. He would be
liable for any damage caused by
them outside of thehighway. The
farmer is not Obliged to fence the
highway to keep out stock—Legal
Editor._ ‘ I_ _ - _. I

T. N. '1‘. FOR BLASTING
Could you inform me as to where- it
w0uld» be possible to purchase some T.
N. '1‘. and also blasting supplies—C. A.
F., Fife Lake. R 1. Michigan. '

The U.- 8. Department of Agri-

culture has available for free distri--

bution to farmers1 some 12 million
pounds Iof picric acid for blasting
purposes. Full information on how

. to” secure this explosive will be pub-

lished in an early issue of the Bus-
iness Farmer.-———Editor.

OONFJNE HENS TO _OWN
’ ' PROPERTY _

If Mr. A owned a farm directly across
the road from Mr, B and if Mi‘. A. was
to.raiseI100,,chickens and let them run
0085 so that -I ey could run all over

.Ithere‘rany. way or any-

in thqgslaw-that Mr- B can do to

’prdtecté his crop? v If so what course

ovel.}ehd .- take. .

endsgputgit» oni anoth. -
*t ‘W‘agkg-ﬂire rods rung:
bl'~ in, ' Iln-_

,,would:;;I;Mr..;-QB‘ have to tak‘e?—-Subscriber,
.‘Wﬂliaxnsbnrs.M10hisan~ . . L; .- -’

The owner of fowls muStiw'keepl

the .upong-his own premises.‘ If

, ,,IthieyI/tresp,ass”'upon his neighobr’s

:«he. is tliable. for the'._ tres-

.r

all ;.d§m=§8~9 they. 4 sis-:4!

. 3‘." M n
ogw. A‘éting-YFOurth Assistant ‘

a.

 

 

 

lNSVRANCB COMPANY I
t _ The Farmer's omnfcomnaw . } ~
U. '4 " e MU] UALF“
HIS Fricticlm Need
The average farmer, owning a car, classes himself with
the careful driver. He knows he is cautious and alert.
But, like a certain well known Michigan farmer, he also

knows the other fellow has—to be reckoned with and that he
is constantly subjected to liability for injury to persons.

$1,500 Damages '

The farmer referred to had driven cars for years with-
out mishap, until the other day. He was touring, with
his family, through the East, and they were leaving one
town to get to a larger one for the night. It had been
raining all day and the pavements were slippery and trav-
eling generally bad... But, comfortable in their Sedan,
they journeyed on as usual. All went well until they
reached an outskirt street corner. A street car stop ed
at this particular corner, discharging a passenger. ghe

' farmer slammed on the emergency but to no avail, the wet

pavement lproving his Waterloo. The passenger was
thrown and badly injured about the head and limbs. Suit
was later ﬁled and the farmer compelled to pay $1,500
damages. Fortunately, however, his U. S. FIVE POINT

POLICY saved him.

You Never Know Your Luck

Like this farmer, you never know your luck. Perhaps
you too have already fortiﬁed yourself and car against the
unexpected. In the event that you haven’t—don’t wait.
Driving is too risky these days. You can POSITIVELY
and ECONOMICALLY protect your car against:

l.--=-‘Fire .
2.—Tlieft
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.1 ; Grand Ra

 

. BayClty

‘U. S. Mutual Automobile Insurance
" Company

V Executive Office .
ids, . . , , Michigan
Collin C. Lillie, Pres. ' “

Hom'e‘Office; .. . «.5
‘ ~ Michigan

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F” MchmsSec

 

Madeira .,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

, 611M
1‘: Wee
. ”6:12;.“ ..

SATURDAY. snousT 27,1921 ‘

Published every Saturday by
THE RURAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. Inc.
» ' Mt. Clemens. Michigan
1 Represented in eNew York, Chicago. St. Louis and Mnneepolis M
societal Form Papers. Incorporated

GEORGE M. .SLOCUM ...................... PUBLISHER

NRR REST A. LORD HASSC ............... . ..... ITOB
CIATES:

Fronlr R Assistant Business

' Circular lotion

t I
1:11.31!”

 

 

 

Menager
Auditor
Plant Superintendn
. ..... .......... ............ Managinz If)?
. Grace Nick“: Jenney . .F‘srm Home Alter
gel Editor

.H. H.

W. Austin Ewell; .................. - . . . . . . Editor
ONE YEAR (52 Issues) .:$1 TWO YRS (104 Issues) 51-50
THREE vns. (158 Issues) 52; FIVE vas. (260 Issues) 58- 00
, The date following your name on the address label shows when
.your subscription expires. In renewing kindly send this label to
mid mistakes. Remit by check. draft. money-order or registered
letter; stamps and currency are at you: We acknowledge
by ﬁrst—class mail every.- dollor received.

AdVeP‘MM Rates: Forty-ﬁve cents per agate line.

' the column inch, 772 11an to the page. Flat races.

Live Stock and Auction Sale Advertising: We offer specnl 10'
*0 “bubble breeders of live stock and poultry; W155! ‘1

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS

We will not knowingly accept the advertising of
any person or ﬁrm who we do not believe to be
thoroughly honest and reliable. Should any reader
have any cause for complaint against .any advertiser
in these columns, the publisher would appreciate an

‘ immediate letter bringing all facts to light. In
every-case when writing say: "I saw your advertisement in The
Michigan Business Farmer!” It will guarantee honest dealinz._

- Entered as second-class matter

14 lines to

 

 

at posiroﬁice. Mt. Clemens. Mich.

’Pres. Howard on_Runal Credits
ARMERS object to the McFadden
r111 .11 credit bill”, is what Pres. How-
ard of the A. F. B. F., has been telling con-
gress and the press. Believing that the bfarm—
ers do not know enough about this bill to re-
alize what it contains, let alone having an
opinion as to its merits the Business Farmer
asked Mr. Howard upon what grounds he
based such a positive statement. Mr. How-
ard replied that this decision had been arrived

(6

1' at after a careful examination of the bill by

the executive committee of the Farm Bureau.
The purpose of the McFadden bill is to
provide a system of rural credits which will
take into consideration the integrity of the
borrower in making loans. It 18 not designed
to help the large and prosperous farmer
Whose wants are amply cared for by the
existing banking machinery but to offer a
source of money to the small struggling farmer
whose security may not be of the best but who
is nevertheless strictly honest and will take
care of his obl1gations if given enough time.
The bill authorizes congress to designate some
existing life insurance company to provide
the funds and the machinery to put the bill
into effect.
I, That none of our existing banking and
rural credit systems are designed to take care

of the needs of the small type of farmer is an ,

established fact, and every year thousands of
them quit in despair simply for the want of a
little money to tide them over an unproﬁtable
season. A committee of farm paper editors,
including the editor of the Business Farmer,
made a study of this bill over a year ago and
unanimously agreed that it ﬁlled a long felt
want. While objections were raised to minor
features of the bill it was not felt that these
would oﬁer an insurmountable obstacle to its
adoption.

But now along comes Pres. Howard, saying,
“Farmers object to the McFadden bill. The
Farm Bureau Federation has given careful
consideration to the question of insuring farm
credit, and the principle was endorsed, but
.. not the McFadden bill.” It will be such a com-
. ' fort to the farmers to know that the Farm
VBurcau has “endorsed the principle” of bet-
. ter farm credits even if that’ s as for as it
- ever gets.

The Pot Calls the Kettle" Black
HE FARMER is beth two mill

stones. One is the high freight notes.
The other is the extortionote middleman.

"T 1 Twin the tire he is as helpless as a worm”
. h .

Managers-

’ 'v -_”Birds 11 their-little nests agree.
."A’n'd ’tis a shamefuf.sight.1 "
“When children of one family
Fall out, and chide and ﬁght}?

C C C. C.

The Railway Agé attempts a defense of the

[railway rates and incidentally throws some,
light on how the consumer ’13 dollar is divided
up between the father, the railways and the -

commission merchant. It says:

“Recently much propaganda has been spread
among the producers of vegetables in Texas,
Florida, and other southern states, and also in
California, regarding the present freight rates.
It is time that a few cold-facts regarding these
matters should be told.

producer for cabbage in Texas was $7.00 per ton.

The cost of transporting it to Chicago was $26.30 1

per ton. This includes not only the freight rate,
but also the cost of icing the refrigerator car and
the federal tax on freight charges. The total

amount that the producer received for produc-‘

ing it, and that the railroad received for hauling
it about 1,300 miles, was 1.67 cents a pound, or
$33.30 a ton. On the same date cabbage retail-
ed in Chicago for ~7 cents a pound, or $140.00
a ton, or $106. 70 per ton more than the total
amount that the producer received for produc-
ing it, and that the railroad received for bring—
ing it to Chicago. .

“0n the same date the producer in Texas was
paid $5.00 a ton for spinach. The cost of trans-
portation to Chicago was $30.36 per ton, making
a total of $35.36 per ton, or 1.77 cents a pound,
that the producer and the railroad together re-
ceived. At the same time the retail price of
spinach in Chicago was 15 cents a pound, or
$300.00 per ton, or $264.64 per ton more than
both the producer and the railroad received.

“It has long been known that the commission
merchants dealing in fruits and vegetables have
been among the most remorseless proﬁteers in
this country. A Congressional investigation of
the railroad situatidn is soon ,-to be held. In
view of. the fact that these commission people
are showing such earnest interest in the subject
of freight rates, we suggest to the Congression-
al Committee the propriety and expediency of as-
certaining not only the 'eﬁect of the present
freight rates upon the movement of perishable
commodities, but also the effect upon the wel-
fare of both the producer and the consumer of
the exorbitant toll taken from them by the com-
mission merchant and the retail dealer, especial-
ly the former.”

Thus, you see while the railroads only

charge from four to seven times as much for.

hauhng food products to market as the farm-
cr receives for growing them, the wicked
commission merchant gets twenty to sixty
times as much. Who can blame the railroads
for complaining?

, A Farm Bureau Fails _
HE ALPENA County Farm Bpreau has

“gone to the wall.” Assets, sixteen.
thousand dollars; liabilities, twenty—six thous~
and. “A case of poor management,” was the
coroner’s verdict.

This failure will be hailed by Some as seem-
ing to prove their contention that “farmers
don’t know enough to market their 0Wn pro-
ducts.” If the thought gives them any pleas-
ure let ’em chuckle. But so far as proving
anything except that the last year has been a
hard one for even a good manager to buckle
up against, and that poOr management no mat-
ter how cheap never, never pays, the failure
has no significance whatever.

The present calendar year is a year of fail-
ures. Thousands of commercial ﬁrms have
gone into bankruptcy since the beginning of
the year, leaving unpaid debts of millions of
dollars Among them were scores, at least, of
commission merchants and grain dealers, and
so far as we know, —-.one lone farm bureziui

And if the truth were known probably many” ’

more grain dealers have survived only by
dipping who their hprofits of other years.
011311: up a big White credit mark for any

1 sequent lessening of competition;

EVER SINCE Upton Sinclair, the .3,

ist mad 9 his ﬁrst sensational (he or

of conditions, in the Chicago stOcky ‘
packing house's there has been a growing p11 ‘
lic demand for strict govﬁrn3ncntal regulah n
of the industry. The conditions complained.
of by Smclair have long since been remedied
and one may now eat packing house produclss'”
with a. reasonable certainty that they are as

, clean and wholesome as it is possible to make

them. But just as the government found it

, - , necemary in earlier years to take the packers --
“On April 16 the average price paid to the,

to task in the consumers’ interest, so has it

found it necessary to regulate the industry in .
the producers’ interest. The Houg'en bill .
which has passed congress and only awaits tip“,

signature of the President to become a law:

gives the Secretary of Agriculture certain, ‘
broad powers over the packers,

commission men, traders, buyers and sellers

in the Stockyards. Briefly the law prohibits if '1
the following practices and authorizes the__ . 2??

Secretary of Agriculture to prosecute viola-
tions: '

“(9.) engaging in or using unfair or deceptive
practices or devices in interstate or foreign com-
merce; (b) giving undue or unreasonable pref-e

erence or advantages in such commerce; (c) buy-

ing and selling (among packers) with intent to
apportion, or have the eﬁect of apportiOning, the
supply in a monopolistic manner, or with a con-

selling with the intent or effect of manipulating

prices or creating monOpoly in restraint of com- ~- .
(e) or conspiring to- apportion purchase _» ’-

merce;
es or sales, or to manipulate prices in commerce.

“The stockyards owners, commission .men,
traders, buyers and sellers of the stockyards am
required to register with the Secretary of Agri—
culture, and the act makes it the duty 0,! every _
stockyards owner and commission man' and oth-'..
ers furnishingservice at the stockyards. to turn
nish reasonable stockyards services at just, roam
sonable, and non-discriminatory rates;
ther provides for the ﬁling of schedules of all
rates and charges and prohibits rany «person,
charging or collecting different rate than the one"
speciﬁed in the schedule. Rebates and refunds
are prohibited, exciept that in the case of co-oper-~
ative commission ﬁrms 3 patronage » dividend
shall not be considered as a refund. ”

It should not be thought that this bill”
meets with "the approval of all. The A. F.
B F. looks upon its adoption in a rather phil—
osophical light and Pres. Howard states that :-
1t is acceptable at this time, though not all the
Farm Bureau asks 'for. Mr. Howard pleads“
for harmony between producer and packer.
“Let by- -gones be by- genes”, he says, “The ,
act makes possible a new era of good- will be-
tween producer, packer and consumer.” ‘ ' '

But the National Board of Farm organiza-
tions and others do not view the bill in any
such light Indeed, all of the farm organiza-
tions represented at Washington, with the ex-
ception of 0116, joined with representatives of
the women’s and labor organizations. in o’
mighty protest against the adoption of the
amended bill, but without avail. In a. state—
issued by these organizations, congress
charged with having played into the hands
the packers by virtually destrOying the) ' 1'
diction of the federal trade commission 6161*
the industry, and Hoover’s Washington ,
ald is quoted as saying that the ‘approval
the packer bill is held the ﬁrst step in i
abolishment of the cemmission If this
true the farmers have lost more thsii . .

have gained by the adaption ofthe billi

“IF ” savage ,/
bulletin,

farm bureau or any ne‘er small business for _. ,

 

stockyards,‘ " ‘

((1) buying or ...- "'1

and fur-. _ ~-


. a w . .

il"

2

.2» ‘

"banks or railroad companies

child " who? wants I to . wor
.;.Iteady ; eniplogme'nt at a good... liberal

tfrom six.to ten dollars per

1'3.

£95.19on wages. » for actuolvservices

rendered? ~sA very'~ large‘maiority of

. £1,179! the men and women of, the '
,"United Stat-es. belong: to this great"
or those‘ who

”my at; laborers.
for]: fer a living, . .
Some of them 9 are presidents of
.v’vho
are drawing exceedingly/«large sal-
aries anywhere from twenty-ﬁve to
'8150 per day for their services;

.many of“ them are, officers of the
government or banking institutions,

or manufacturing industries who
arepaid $15 to‘ $30 per day for
their' «services. A very large per
cent, of these people are working in
our ' sheps and factories making
from $6 to $12 per day. 'Many of‘

e‘men and women are working for

They are getting anywhere
day.
Then we have the great army of
farm laborers at. tWO or three dol-
lars per day. . .

./' Then comes the farm owners and
landlords owning their farms or
renting them.-. This class of men
and women have to be Johnnie on
the Spot, 365 days out of the year

Mines.

"and about fourteen hours per day.

Their horses, hogs and poultry
must be fed and cared for and their

‘ cows fed and, milked 365 days every

year. This last class of laborers
have to take all of the chances of
the elements. They have to con—
tend with excessive rains and with
drouths and ﬁght the potato bugs,
grasshoppers, chinch bugs and every
'other kind of, bug, even thebed bug,
and for all of their extra time and

‘ labor they actually receive’for their

services about one-third as much
as the ordinary mechanics get. The
above-mentioned conditions are as
they now' exist. All of these differ-
ent 'OCCupations are, not Only work-'
ing for themselves, but-are working
largely for the public and they ex-
pect to exchange the products of
their labor for their bread and
"meat. Now the great secret or the
great problem to be solved is, how

r and Where canrthe farmers of this

, .‘entitled‘ tale to have all those out-

' . /

“ -, lite.
.good. times and bad. throughpanie as ‘

“described
.Iaiariea are too high.
"too‘groat. During the war ﬁrms found

'der to get men;

- [heal-'1: day.-—-Editox_ 1

country exchange the products of
their labor based.on fourteen hours
per day and get in return the pro-
ducts of the city man’s labor of

. eight 'hours without getting skinned
.to a frazzle in the trade. ‘

'What‘ the farmers want and are

rageous salaries out three times in

‘two and the surplus placed to the

farmers credit thus bringing or
raising the. farmers proﬁts up to a
point equal to other classes of in-
dustry—J. A. Palmer, Hillsdale

County, Michigan.

The situation is largely. as you have
it but not exactly. Some
Some proﬁts are

It necessary to pay high salaries in or-
But the industrial de-
’mon has ,Jlevelled most salaries and
destroyed many proﬁts. Commercial
ﬁrms are failing every day. Go into
my large “city and ,you will ﬁnd the
parks and the streets ﬁlled with the un-
employed—men who during the'war per-
haps drew $5 to $12 or even :§20'per day,

'b'nt now “broke.’.’_ out of a. 1013. and their
Viz-mines suffering fel\£:.e necessaries of

The farmer’s o: is.“ hard—who

. e? But through

null as prosperity. he usually has a.
loot over his head. and three square

, _ d’v'operhtionsf (the, physicians giv-
Ins ltfheir‘timeﬂfor children whose"

"Sparen‘ts could not bear theexpense.

‘ M. C.,fof, Genesee county said in
a recent issue that they believed

, charity? should begin at home. My

publishers, of newspapers and mag--

friend; that is” Why we have the

county-nurses to properly "care for
the sickT-and collect clothing for the

l'desti‘tute in our own county. There

are-"many children in our public
schools who are dullards because of
some defect; perha'ps‘the teacher
has spoken to the parents and they
are either indifferent, hr feel they
can not bear‘the” expense of medical
or surgical attention. These unfor-
tunates are often a menace to
themselves and to society because
help was not forthcoming before
the results handicapped their whole

' lives.

‘ Frbm a ﬁnancial standpoint,‘ to
support the county nurses is econ-
omy. This may sound strange to
those not acquainted with the situ-
ation. Suppose the father or moth-
er of a large family has ‘a long
siege of sickness. If it is the wife,
the husband will be required to eith-

~ er leaVe his work to care for her, or

1 through

‘as it applies to

trust her to the, care of busy neigh-
bors, who mean‘well, but often err
ignorance. If it happens
to be the husband who is ii], there
is the fact that the means of sup-
port is cut off for the entire family.
besides the expense of sickness. It
is'true that neighbors used to go in
and 'care for the sick, never think~
ing of skilled help. But all condi-
tions of living are Changed since old
Dobbin carried Doc around. It will
never be known how many people
died in those days because of ne-
glect or ignorance. Attention from
a trained unrse often does more
than the attending physician can do.
We will suppose this family can not
afford to pay $7 per day for a
nurse from the hospital, even if life
itself was sacriﬁced. In this coun-
ty at least, there are thousands of
such homes.

Which is the better way, to hire
a trained nurse from the hospital
at township expense, or pay a very
small per cent to support a county
nurse who gives her entire time car-

" ing" for the needy, b‘y 'taiationﬁaaso,

is it not economy to start children

out into the world with their teeth,

eyes, throats and general condition
in health? They will be better able
to support themselves and "their
families as they grow to maturity.

Many of us are suffering today from

poisons thrown into the sYstem from
decayed teeth, decayed tonsils or
adenoids, which should have-been
attended to in childhood; but there

were no free clinics in our day.

It may seem to some that the
nurse has a glorious time as she
rides over all kinds of roads, get-
ting into mud holes in the early
spring, and simply waiting until a
helping hand or a stout pair of
horses happen along to get her start—
ed on her way again. Then hurry-
ing from house to house in village
or country, wherever the physicians
of the district where she is employ—
ed may direct, or where her servic—

‘es are required, in hovel or mansion,

there she may be found. I have
seen the nurse in our district so
worn from travel, she could scarce—
ly wait for a few hours rest.

If a great many pebple who have
no children to educate, had a
chance to vote for the county nurse,
and in fact for a lot of things, I am
afraid the kiddies and grown—ups
too, would not fare very well some—
times. I believe sincerly in econ-
omy in the home and in national of—
fairs. It is my earnest conviction
that the county nurses are not un-
necessary expenses. Let us be will-
ing to help the other fellow with his
load. Is not the ,memory of what
our soldiers did for France a pleas-
ant one? Shall we not “carry on”
what they so generously died for, or
as disabled and crippled, keep ever
before us as long as life shall last,
thekreason why they fought in the
last great war? “Service for oth-
ers” should be our battle cry ’as it
was theirs—C. L. S., Kent County,
Michigan.

The evidence multiplies that the coun-
ty nurse is a good investment. Really,
I (lid not know that the county nurse
had so many friends in Michigan, but
I am glad she has—Editor;

 

 

 

@Wek'slﬂditori

 

 

 

 

THE BUSINESS ENGINE

USINESS.men extol the law of
supply and demand, but they
want the law suspended so far
their particular,
business. The farmer is howling
for lower priced labor, but wants a
ﬁxed minimum price for his wheat
and com; the railroads are working
for lower prices for rails, and yet
want to keep the cost of transporta—
tion ﬁxed; the labor leaders are
clamoring for a reduction in the
cost of living and at the same time
are ﬁghting all wage reductions.
As a result, business is like the
donkey, midway between the hay-
stack and the bag of cats, who was
so undecided as to which to eat that

he‘ stood still and starved to death.

Take the railroads, for instance.
Perhaps they would be better off
with lower rates; perhaps they would
be better off with higher rates. But
surely, if I owned all the railroads
ef'thecount‘ry, I Would not continue

I to play the part of the donkey while

.mOre than four hundred thousand

freight cars were idle.‘ I would
either raise or lower rates—or do
bathe-to 'see— if something could be
done to induce prosperity to ,re—
turn. ‘ ‘This—mbnsiness _ of arguing

about ratesrle a trial" is . a
780ml. '

11kg:’;;n,rgning , about " . the

ittoﬁmbﬂs,‘ has
1'. 1s:- ' the"

' 3.331, "83%
M 730’s
h‘ﬂ‘ '

eagernepgrora‘ ﬁle"

it with gasoline. Now we are about
ready to start up again. But when
the car stopped we were in high
gear and we have not yet shifted.
In starting the car again, it is ad-
visable to attempt to start on high
gear, or is it better to put the our
ﬁrst into low gear? Surely, the
sensible way is to start low, move
to second, and then into high. At-
tempting to start on high will in-
evitably stall the engine.

Yet we are trying to start busi-
ness on “high,” just where it stop—
ped. The railroads want to get bus—
iness back at the old high rates, or
have no business at all; labor pre-
fers to be idle for months rather
than have wages out; while retail-
ers are holding up prices “until bus-
iness revives.” The result is that
all business is. at a standstill.

Unless something radical is done
it will be two or three years before
we again have prosperity. With
railroad rates up, wages up, and ev—
erything else up, it is impossible to

.start automobile prosperity without

stalling the engine. If, however,
the, railroads would reduce rates,
wage Workers would reduce wages,
and retailers reduce prices until the
four hundred thousand idle cars
were ﬁlled and moving, them we
could get started. Then the rail-

.jroads could gradually put back their

rates, the wage workers put back

’.their_ wages, and so on along «the
ié’line‘; moving, “gradually from low:

ear into” second and {ram second

‘ make up their production

‘pleasure we have on the farms-

. is to it.

5, could we get up f
881‘ " 90ft;

as well as a great‘m nyrﬁt, :1 »

‘ this vicinity in regards-{to £113

you have taken regarding it
situation of the Detroit area;

There are a ‘number off, @9131,

this vicinity who believe-7

ought to be marketing Von" 1.11, n
But we are told by the officers/7
of our Milk Producers’ Asst)"~ ..
that the time is not ripe, of an
we think they are mistaken."

sion was acting we received so
thing near the price ofproducti
and I have been unable to ﬁnd .,

Can you give me this info’rmati
There are a large number of, p
ducers in this locality who are,
pressed with milk producers" org
iza’tions being established in ‘.
comb and other counties being“
ganized by Mr. Gideon Bryce
Romeo, and a great many here " _
thinking strongly of co-operati'
with them. Can you give me a
information regarding Mr. Bryt:
honesty and ability—«Producer, 1H;
ingston County, Michigan. '

The decisions of the Milk Commis.
Were fair, but unenforceable. so ion
as both farmers and dealers were willing;
to abide by the judgment of the Co
mission, all was well, but there W:
nothing but a “gnnllt-mcn’s agrecmcn
to bind them. The Business Farmer}!
objection to the Commission ‘plan w
its belief that the dealers would tre
this agreement as a “scrap of
and break faith with the
Wlumevor it was to thnir advantage
do so. That is precisely what happen
0d,, .‘hcl'o come :1 time when the deal.
ers l't'tfllSOd to accept the decisions o
the Commission. So the Commission
quit, and the farmers Wore right back
whence they started from. It must not
be thought, homwcr,‘tl1ut oven with t1
Commission still in existence prices
would still be at their femur high, level.
as the surplus of canned milk
lower prices incyitnble. The point the.
the Business Farmer has made is that
during this era of low, unprofitale
prices the farmers 5‘ .1
ing their own- milk and thereby help
losses 9._
the profits of marketing. Gideon Bryce
of Romeo is, in the writer’s opinionn'wf,
square, level—headed farmer, who has'a
big and good idea which he can' put,“
across with the farmers’ help. The _
sociation‘s popular alibi is that .v‘v‘t,
time is not ripe.” But its creditabl."
though belated efforts, to solve the 811'
plus problem through farmer—own
choc-so factories seems like ,an} add!
sion that the time is ripe for some mo
in the manufacturing and marketin‘
end.~—Editor. '

opposns AUTO LICENsEQ

S IT possible you cando so ”a“

thing to help more taxes be

put on autos. We now pay a.
cense, an insurance policy and
much extra expense that if they out
a $10 tax on cars under $1,000 Val;
uation, we will have towlay the;
up and use our horses." We for
ers can only use the cars in en
mar months and pay heavily for-.1:
cs as it is and if they put ano
burden on us we cannot use the ca
and then they will lose the nae,
money and all the money We
them for gasoline and insurance.
repair bills. Every farmer her
wild over it and declares they.
not use their cars if another tax,
levied. Well we certainly won’t~ 3‘?"
one—and now I must close._ I .-
there something you can do to he?
out from letting" the ways ‘
means committee put the tax
their revenue bill and ﬁght it
on the house floor. It is a tort:
burden to us farmers and one .
cannot pay. . The car is the

’ .

if it is going to be so expensl
have to cut it out, that is as:
You have done so
the past for the farmers?-
sincerely believe you can!
this.-——Mrs. Chas, Glover”
County. ,Michigan. ~ ‘

n unreported that ; i
., initely rejected W

,. Sadr,
tion of ‘a. tax on among ‘
to: ‘

amt tor * t
m :57”;

 


. Wmfortable

size, :5ure lines and ﬁne
snake one pause and be coxitent to
:1

architecture as even the
‘ ight have been proud of. The in-
terior is no less imposing, with large
'ooms lined with books and well
ﬁtted with chairs and tables for
reading, which were
.,.cry well ﬁlled on the afternoon I
eves there. One room is given up
‘ books of fiction; another-to music,
one to technical works, one to art
, and the drama and so on.
r The building is admitted to be
the ﬁnest public library in the Unit-
, ed States not even excepting the
_. Boston library which has held ﬁrst
place. It was completed only thru
"the generosity of Mr'. Carnegie, as
.- long before the building was ﬁnish-
, ed the public funds had given out.
A few striking sayings are found
upon the walls of the distributing
room on the second floor.
Cass Gilbert, the architect, which
runs thus, “Books are the most en-
during monument of man’s achieve-
ments, through them civilization
, becomes cumulative."
One by Mr. Strohm, chief librari-
_ an: “To promote self- development
by ample facilities for wide reading
in an atmosphere of freedom and
morality." And the one which I
liked best of all by Thomas Carlyle,
“Read not to contradict and con-
fute, nor to believe and take for
granted, but to weigh and consider.”
If it is true that every ﬁne piece
of architecture expresses some idea,
then I would say that this building
is expressive of peace and quiet dig-
nity and stands as a refuge and a
haven for, the mind confused and
harrassed by life’s perplexities say-
ing, “Here is knowledge and knowl-
edge is power." .

“SPOTLIGHT” OFFICIAL ORGAN
OF MISSOURI L. W. V.

HE MISSOURI League of Women

Voters is to resume publication

of “The Spotlight," a bulletin

which during the legislative session
last spring, not only gave League
'news, but was used to unite the we-
manhood of the state in a definite
legislative campaign. The meas-
ures comprising the program of the
Missouri Woman's Legislative Com—
mittee: were fully explained in the
Spotlight, and each week a resume
of the Legislature's work and the
status of ’the bills in which women
were particularly interested was
printed.

The Spotlight is to be published
fortnightly by the Missouri League
of Women Voters as its official or-
gan, and will print national, state,
and city League news.
ﬁnd in it the news items you need
to keep yourself informed, the in-
spiration to keep your energies ﬁr-
e,d" reads the announcement. “It
is to be national in scope, yet will
carry the neighborly sort of news
we need to keep in touch with what
is happening in our own midst.”

The Spotlight is one of many
printed "official organs" which the
growing needs of the state Leagues
have made necessary.

AN ANGLO-AMERICAN SONG

T IS QUITE a remarkable fact in
these days, when we are all hop-
ing for 'a still closer». friendship

between the United States and
Britain, that the na ional anthem
of the States “My untry, ’Tis of
Thee,” is sung to the same tune as
“God Save Our Gracious King.”

But, although this is a fact, it
has not the signiﬁcance of the ori-
gin 0’: that song which reaches the
heart of every English-speaking
man and woman, ,1 "Home, Sweet
Home."

The miraculous thing is that it
wes rmiﬁcn by an Am lohn

setting _

One by .

“You will ,

 

big news of renewed prosperity.

helps another.

 

Editedbym GBAOENEBIJSJENNEY

Dear Friends: From almost every quarter we receive enccul‘ag-T",
share were less business failuréb. 11’1””. '
July than in any month since last November. I read that the 11.1.1, ;
factOry has been very busy since May and has something like 100,000 ' ‘
orders ahead. These indications m for better times, for one industry
We are all interdependent and renewed conﬁdence is
-aboutallweneedTalkbptimismandthinkit.too.1hesurestway._
to prolong hard times is to hide what money we have and look glum.
We women can help and where we can help we have ever been found
eager and willing to do it .—-er0 Nellie Jenney. .

 

 

u.

some beautiful soul to produce so
lovely a flower of song. ‘

There is another striking thing
about this . song—~the ‘ man who
wrote the words never had a home
to call his own, in a sense.
a wanderer on the earth, a rolling
stone. . ‘

“Home, Sweet Home,” is truly
the national anthem of the English-
speaking race. Next to it comes an-
other heart—binding song carried
into every continent by the ubiqui-
tous Scot, “Auld Lang Syne." When
songs of hate are all buried in the
deepest pit of oblivion these songs
of love and friendship will remain.—
From London Answers. '

DRESS FORM POPULAR IN WASH-
INGTON SEWING CLUBS ‘

N THE clothing work in Thurs-
ton Oounty, Washington, the
home demonstration agent, rep-
resenting the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture and the state

He was ;

- which prospers.‘

I r. / U".

Sketches of well-known Englishmen'

by one who knew them personally.
—1Anonymous.

“Star Points."
of inspiring thought and for the
qualities that make poetry loved.—

'Mrs. Gertrude M. Richards.

“Growth of the Soil " by Knut
Hamsun, translated from the
wegian by W. W. Worter.

“Felling trees, dislodging boulders,
breeding cattle and ﬁlling the soil, a
primitive man and woman win from the
mountain wilds of Norway 11. holding
inevitably becoming the
nucleus of‘a group of farms. For their
lives are keyed to the serenity of the
hills, and in spite of emotional crises and
mental perturbation they live on pene-
trated by the spiritcf the soil in calm-
ness and triumphant productivity."

BEADERS’ WANTS
Can you tell me where I can pur-
chase the old fashioned small screen
fly traps such as our grandmothers
used? I am having a medium large
one made at the hardware store but

 

 

The Prize
By Sarah R. Bolton

PRIZE WAS oﬂred for noblest deed,
No matter the station or race or creed,

One came who was stately and rich and great:
“I have given my miIHOns to church and state,”
And one, who had written with brilliant pen,
And thoughts are mighty to uplift men.
Another was lovely and sweet and fair
With her laughing eyes and her golden hair.
“I brighten my home and my circle wide."
And beauty and grace are the nation’s pride.

NE CAME who wastagged, whose feet were bare
A girl of the slums, with a timid air.
it c e

“I was hungry often and faint," she said
“But every night when I go to bed,
A part of my crust I put outside
For a hungry dog or cat that cried,
"].‘is little, I know, but God will see,
‘If done for the least ye have done it for me. ' "
The prize is won by the outcast child,
For pure religion and undefiled.

O t

 

agricultural college, spent 10 days

with three groups of interested wo-
men. After ﬁnding that the price
quoted on commercial dress forms
was $2. 75, it was agreed to discon-
tinue their use and substitute the
gummed paper form, at a cost of $1
to each maker. Eight forms were
ﬁnished at Grand Mound, 14 women
were enrolled at the Spurgeon Creek
community fair, and the same plan
was presented at the
fair, with an enrollment of 12.

In Pierce County, Wash. the home
demonstration agent reports 68 pa-
per dress forms made. A commer-
cial device was purchased for moist-
ening the paper, the cost of which
the women propose to meet by pay-

ing 10 cents extra for the ﬁrst 4.0 ‘

forms. One woman said the fun of
making a form is worth the $_1

costs. The women have been do- ,
ing this work themselves after see- . _

ing one demonstration.

317 ST BOOK-S

Useful for. debating clubs and for"

the teacher.

”What‘s on the WorkerséMjnd”

by one who -went to live;-
themed-Whiting Williams. ‘
"In the Garret 1

South Ba!

“ the neareﬁt carding mill. and th

would like to secure several of the
smaller ones if possible.
think I saw recently on our page a
letter from a sister who offered to
furnish a recipe for a fruit cake. and
directions for making imitation
“candied citron" to use in same
from ripe cucumber rinds. I hope
her oﬁer will be accepted for I am
interested in the recipes:

the helpful hints found on our page.
—-—-Mrs. Chas. Voorhees, Calhoun
County. ' -

UORRESPONDENT‘S COLUMN

Mrs. Vallie: The pattern ‘will reach
you in a few days. I had to send east,
for it. It will be sent to general de-
livery, Romeo. . ,

Will Mrs. Copeland o‘f Emmet please
send us the recipes mentioned in her
letter? One of our readers asks for them
in this issue.

Reader: The ﬂeeces should be washed
and then carded before being made up
into comforters. ~» Suppose you ﬁnd out
on send
your career and have made ready

. You will have splendid
therein nothing much W!

A book of poems.

Nor- -

Also, ...I

With all ,
good wishes and many thanks for

’ grape leaves in kettle.
.pickies, alternate layers. add
‘~ alum and cover

.mer two hours and drain.

m7 reeveral minutes.

336 ,
Bird With: r “ g
beautiful song, and the author, .; .;

ea ,
, ‘_ page in the-M B..- F. and am am
.Mrs. Jenna makes a .g-very able
._editor.:
xent of “Sister- Sue,"-

Have inst mama a prob-
by Eleanor
H. Porter and wonder how many or.
the sisters have "read it I was I
m‘ight hand my copy around .We

,get tired sometimes Just

'taters but guess this year we will

like the late Mrs. Porter who gives
one the inspiration to even peel
’taters as Well as 'we can. _' ~
Thanks, Mrs. Jenney, for
words of encouragement, also the
editor «of M. B. F. We all need
courage now if ever and above all

ourself. -——Mrs. Y. H. Evans, Paw.

Paw, Mich.

“But the
Never so red 86 high again."

The words were kindly written.
They have oftentimes been sung; .
To the heart of the penitent sinner
Has their dreary message rung. '

Yet fear not the words they have spoi-
Though thy pinions broken be,

For Christ in His love and mercy «
Has room for even thee.

Broken aye! and shattered!
Yet return to His love once men
And the pinion thou hast- broken
Shall onward and upward soar.

0 life that hath lost thy bearings
And dipped in the way of sin,
The angels shall reach 0’ er the
And bid thee enter in.

Higher and closer they’ll draw them
And thou shalt stand vcry near,
Because of the broken pinion

That has been repented bores—King." "

WOMEN REQUEST PLACE AT"
DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE!

HE APPOINTMENT of a wom4n
Ton the Armament Conference,
mittees which may be formed, will
be requested by a delegation from
the National League of Women
Voters which has asked President
Harding for an opportunity to pro.-
sent a resolution adopted by the
Executive Board at its meeting in

_ July.

The National League of Women
Voters, which was the ﬁrst national
women’s organization to take "‘01-
ficial action. on reduction cf Dormer-
ment, followed this by adoptinga
resolution asking that the .
dent
tegral part of government and a
contributing power for the better-
ment of humanity by the appoint-a
ment of women on all boards and
commissions dealing with or law-i;
gating internatidnal relatiOns." »

A committee on the Reduction ‘01
Armament by International A .
ment was created with Miss Ellie.-
beth Hauser as its chairman.
committee has net only organized
branches throughout the United
States, but has secured the .co-op‘er-
ation of leading women all over the
world for reduction of armament. H

RECIPES TRIED AND TED! .
Cold Pickles .1 j. > ‘

One cup salt, 1 cup sugar. 1 cup mur-
tard Dissolve in one gallon vinegar

Put in a crock and ﬁll with members.
Stir well each day for three days‘ -« ' -

Chunk Pickles ; ’

100 pickles. out across in thick
Soak for three days in brine (1
three days in .clear water. t ayes“

then laye'

with Weak vu‘ie

of one ounce auspice. acumen "’5

t or \_ lot celery- seed. three pounds

sugar. three pintsof vine
.- a

heat thrgllgh

and of women on advisory coins -

.‘to love God and our neighbor fun ‘5

1m with the 111-6an pinh- 7'3

“recOgnize women as an ind...;'

rthe :5 '-

 

 


ind place in, the

 

' ted. zl‘ind and juices, but- cans with-t1!
m tablespo

. on

.4, eggs (whites and yolks

Mix all together except the

add 3 cups milk than Whites.

alast, with the crust and b-ake
GIN. . .,

., ,An Easy. and Delicious Cake

J. 14 cups sugar, 3 eggs beat wellto—

gig” 11101:“!ng minutes and add 1 1-2

ﬂour, _1

‘ en hot
oh ﬁrst mixture: beat well, add

.,aioa1’ or

wt and ﬂavoring and bakein
, layers— —-E_ditor.
..

PICKLE RECIPES

that a 3 wife”
for a pickle recipe. Here are some
thinkare' good ones, that will keep in-

Recipe No. 1
r.- Putl gallon vinegar,1-2 cup mustard,
» 2“" can each of salt and sugar, 1 large
; en black' pepper in a jar and mix
We’ll. Wash the cucumbers, wipe dry
_, vinegar. This is
enough for 3 gallons of :cucumbers.

pick]; » are
and a tow whole

. while heating it and you hcllave
a dell‘c us sweet pickle.
sum Ouemnbere for Winter Use

Peel and slice large cucumbers. Place}
'in a weak brine of cold water and salt

'1'0r 4 or. 5 hours. Drain 'and ﬁll glass
eslices nearly to the top;
cover with cold cider vinegar and seal.
I! vinegar is very strong weaken with
a littlews

,A- Queuinber Relish

Pare and slice three quarts of medi-
um sized (not seedy) cucumbers, 3
onto 2 red or green peppers and 8
larggniablespoons of grated horse radish,
3 cups of brown sugar and enough vine-
gar to cover. Heat the vinegar and su-
gar. and pour over the uncooked vege-
table andseal ”NHL- A.W., Osceola Co.

P.“ S.—-I think the Business Farmer

ever.”

Keep salt cellars setting on or near

3 Wow in July 30th number of the Bus- the stove and the salt will keep dry and

r 59""

shake easily.

Mildred, a small city girl, was daunt-

.' ed by nothing. On her first visit to the

country. contrary to the expectations of
all her friends she displayed not the
least tear when a huge turkey gobbler
came strutting toward her with every
feather spread, but calmly exclaimed:
“Oh. you great big chicken! Put down

‘ your clothes 1"

 

 

. Fall Fashion Hints dond Patterns

 

 

 

" 1' . LACK Is.a reigning favorite
‘5 ‘ this" tall. It is said that the

women of New York look as it
they were all in- mourning.

Last week's slip-over or Jumper
*‘ Drass pattern could -be developed in
tricotine and have the neck out
rounding instead of pointed. I saw
3- several very pretty ones in a very
kgood shop in Detroit.

The little slip-over sweaters
mohair wool are to be much worn
all winter over dainty net or mus-
lin jumper waists. If any one wish-
es thorn I will send or publish. di-
residents for making the sweater.
They are soft, light and very warm.

HIS IS A very becoming

practical gown for the young
. matron. It may be made in
contrasting colors as Shown here or
at one color and material.

and

A A New and. rash-
,lonnble‘
' Empire 8.4310
Pattern- 3707

It
34. 36,

40. 42 and 44 in-
ches bust measure.
A 38 inch size will
require 2 1- 2 yards
of 44 inch material
-tor Bolero and. Pan-
els, and-3 yards for
waist and skirt.

Velveteen, serge.
satin. taﬂe’ta, pon-

gee, shantung. 'lin-,

en, crepe or crepe
de China are at!
tractive for this de-
sign. Patterns 12c
in stamps or silver.
. Order- from Pattern
Depantment, M. B.
;_.:, F. Mt. Clemens.
' . hen—ﬁ—
A Smart and Popular ~.Dress Style
- .. 7 Pattern 3683 was
_ , , used to ~make this
k“. ' stylish" “one-Piece"
' ' Dress » It is cut
.6 sizes: 34, ,86 33,
- 40, 42 and 44 inches
bust measure. A on”
inch size will
4 7-3 yardsv of 42
- inch material For
,_nanel._ ‘ coils and
- cuffs sting

‘ 5: ”is required.

Checked ’tor ’ plaid

of'

Gown in‘,

3 8 yards -

mitt Would be EFw

ve .m- this style
he: '

.,‘ " ...... cents f hi
all {Wm petites-nest lgogﬁ

' in stamps or

‘ broadcloth.

:ﬁ ' t. ‘Olexeens.'£liich..f

HIS DRESS made up with the

short sleeve is a most useful

style for home wear. Oh, the
comfort of a short skirt and a
short sleeve! We will never be
slaves to a bedraggled skirt and a.
soiled cuff again. Skirts are now
made eight to ten inches from the
ﬂoor.

A Comfortable
Patterns 3691 is
here illustrated.’ It
is cut in 7 sizes: 34,
36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and
46 inches buSt meas-
ure.‘ A 38 inch size
will require. 4 7- 8’
yards of 36 inch ma-
terial.
Gingham,
seersucker. lawn, sat-
een, linen, calico and
elette are good
for this model. The
width at the foot is
about 2 yards. The.
sleeve may be in
wrist or elbow length.
If made of contrast-
ing material, collar
belt, out! and pocket
racing require 33-401
a, yard. Patterns 12c
silver
Address Pattern De—

Work Dress

memale,

‘ William, M. B. m, Mt. Clemens, Mich.

A Pleasing Model for Home or Business
Wear
In this. style, shirt
waist 3694 and skirt
3700 are combined.
The skirt, a new
seven gore model,
is cut in 7 sizes:
24. 28, 28, 30. 32
34 and 36 inches
waist measure. The
waist in 7 sizes: 34.
36, 38, 40‘. 42, 44
and 46 inches bust
measure The waist
will require 3 yards
8,5127Rlirltch material
e s r es 8
1- 2 yards omlnch
material 11' without
nap. and 3 1- 8 yds
of 44 inch material
with nap. The width
of the skirt at the
foot is 2 5- 8 yards
Crepe, linen. satin
taﬂeta', crepe do
chine. ﬂannel and
madras are attrac-
ﬁve for the waist
The skirt may be of
washable materials, or of tatteta, satin,
serge or velours. Patterns
13c '41: stamps or silver. Address Pat-
Department, M. B. F.. Mt. Clemens.

euloeeooe-DsgsosealO

Pottem- Deportation

813d
Bias

aegeelgeeoeee else--

cooeeeese-eee "lip-o.

COO._C¢’IbOIse .'.-.'.'.
v . .

:eeeoos‘e‘e‘oefe’}.ease-en‘s..-

Ominous-own
believethet

smelly

.nm——w'

.M‘ (1 .1? e.

»-mm—-—_w

(3.00 t! ”

4295

ﬁg roomy

car.

HEREetElkhartwehavebeen_buildingELK- -HART *‘

for over 14 years, and we

{bur cylinder, ﬁve pas-

unguteormgcaristhegreateetvsloewehave offered

inollthst

atthsrlahtpri

ce for

convince anymxghatitmberelieduponfor de-

(tableau-vice.

pen ,
qualitfés
cleanest

FREE !

Ifyou would 10:92:!

It more about
ELK-HARTMotor
Cars. write for this
catalos which illus-
tratesandgivescam-
plate speciﬁcation
on all models. We
wx’llaladlymaﬂ its
you free and posh-
paid for theaskina.

WWesssndeesyr-iding
will mess thaw the ladies. Audits

stylish W is sure to win the instant
approval ofthiyounbfoh

ELK HART

MOT OR CARS

Drop in on the ELK— HART dealer in your locality and
look this ﬁne cerover. Every feature of ﬁnish, equip-
ment and reﬁnanent usually found only on much more
expensive cars, you will ﬁnd on this model. 117 inch

wheel base, double lamp headlights. ventilator on cowl,
motormeter on radiator, door opening curtains, plate
glass' in rear window, and ﬁnished' in your choice of 10
attractive color combinations without extra charge. ,

Where else can you get as much for the money?

sure to see the ELK— ART before you buy.

 

 

6-cylinder5

 

 

 

 

 

Be

CROW—ELKHART MOTOR CORPORATION

ELKHART. INDIANA

 

l—cylinder, 5-passenger Tour-i113 Car. was $1495 -- now $129!
passenger Touring Car, was $1745— now 31545
We also build Roadsters, Sport Mode Sedans

lsand

 

When Writing to Advertisers, Please Mention the Fact that You Saw
It will Help Both of Us.

it in The Michigan Business Farmer.

\

 

 

 

— Berry .3418 It eta

‘ Creama operator
:- o

 

 

‘ CAddreu
A :Till MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER. Buyoﬂ' lumen. Mt. clumps, Miehioen,

 

WHAT ARE YOU III THE MARKET FOB ?

M. B. P. will be In need of one or more of

Ev very render of
spring. Check below the Item: you are
on your D
Automobiles Dali-y Feed
Dynamite
Ensllaoe Cutter
Fannlng Mill
Fertilizer
Fur Buyers L
Farm Land: ,
Ford Attachment!
Furniture
Feed Cutter
Furnace
Gee Enolne

Guns
Graln Drlll
Horse Collars

Bulldlnn Supplies

Ghemlcsl' Closets
Oultlv

 

Hos
I ncubawre
Lumber
Lighting Plants
Lightning Rode

USE THIS coupon!

the following

Items this

In In. mail It to us and we will ask dependable
manufacturers to send you their literature and lowest prices free and without any obligation

Feeders

lmeetone. Pulverlzed
Spreader

Nursery Stock
Olls and Lubricants

Supplles

Machinery
”Machinery

Shoes

Stoves

Stump PulleiI
eeds

gﬁrsyel‘s
Spray aMater-Isle
Tanner
Thresher
Truck

Tra crto

Tank Heaters
Veterinary Remedies
Wagons

Water System
Washing Machlne
Windmill

Wire Fencing

Wool ﬂuyers

(Write on Immin- below anything you ere Interested In not listed above.)

iv

Home .

n no.

econsole...Innocence-onsets.see-sensesees-enocurses-sessestsoseseeeue
.

.‘u‘. OOIDIIEOIIIIICtidﬂl‘

 

 

 


not speak Enxlish {very well,

bathe was so aniline to please, and

acted so sorry when so: could not
j make out what I was saying to him.
- In order to- reach his home we had
to take a. ferry boat and go acréss’
a. bay. That evening the water was

as 'smooth and clear as crystal and
just covered with " little sail-boats..-

Norway is a land of sailors, and
nearly everyone, it seems, owns a
canoe, a gasoline launch or a sail-
boat. In the long summer evenings
and on Sunday most Of the people
go “sailing." It must be lots of
fun, don’t you think? And you Can
imagine that ‘the- hundreds or sail
v'boats skimming along the water
,‘make a very pretty sight.

After reaching the other side of
'the bay we walked a short distance
to my friend's home which was
. perched on top of a little hill and
ji‘alm‘ost hidden by vines and trees
and, what do you think?—the most
beautiful, roses I have ever seen.
Red roses, white roses, pink roses,
roses of every hue and color and
oh, so fragrant! And running
among the rose bushes were straw—
berry vines with berries on them
. almost as big as your fist.

When we reached the house three
little boys came out to meet us. The
oldest could say a.few words in
English because they teach it in
the school, but the others spoke only
in Norwegian. They were all po-
lite. and shook hands with me just
like grown—ups. They were dressed
something like American boys. One
of them had onla sweater that had
: as many colors in it as the rainbow.
You know in the olden times the

people or Norway'dressed in very

funny clothes of bright l'nolorsH but

now most of them dress like Ameri- " .

cans except in the country places far
away from the cities where some of
the native dresses may still be seen.

After dinner the boys showed me
all through the garden, and I took
their pictures standing among the
roses. When I ‘show you the picture
of the little girl from Brazil I will
also show the picture of the little
Norwegian boys. Next week I will
‘tlell you about the little boy from In-
is.

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS-

Dear Uncle Ned—I thought I would
write to you about my trip to California.
'My aunt was going to’ California and
didn' t want to leave me behind. We left
here at 11 o’clock at night. It was the
day after Christmas. When we readied
Chicago we changed trains. It was
11:30 when we'left Chicago. In a. day
or two We were in the mountains. There
Were a. great many tunnels to go through
and when we come out of mile long tun—
nel we saw a great lake. It was called
Lost Lake because it was on top of a
great mountain. The trees grew around
it.‘ There were canoes on it and some
of the pines bending over were reflected.
in the lake. It was very beautiful. As
we went around the lake there was a
shadow and I asked my aunt what it
was. She said it was a. platform or roof
so when the rocks came loose they would
not damage the tracks. But I told her
that the roof was useless if any of the
boulders tell on it. When we were go-
ing around a bend we saw a bridge. It
was over a small river but was up more
than two thousand feet. This isn't all
of the trip but will write more about it
later as it is a. long story of our trip.
-—Lyle Reinhardt. Bay City. Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am another girl
who would like to join your merry circle
but can write only one letter seeing this
is the only one I an write and would

. f
'to school 1 mile and -z.
200 chickens and some hens to come off

We have over

this week which will make us Dyer 2‘50
I have one sister, her. name is Jean”
Ruth Elizabeth Hamménd. Dexter, Ira.

.V Michigan ,
Dear Uncle Ned-41ers I am. anxi6us

to join your merry circle. I am going
to describe myself. I have a. dark com-
plexion and dark brown eyes. My hair
is brown and curly. I am five, feet ‘tall
and weigh eighty-four pounds. I am go-
ing to let you guess my age, it is between
eleven and fifteen. My middle name
commences with L. I am going to let
you guess that also. I will write to the
person who guesses one of these and
send my picture to the one who guesses
both my name and age. I live on an 84
acre farm and we have four cows and
have two teams and three colts. I have
one sister and three brothers. I wish
same of the -girls would write to me.—
Thelma L Ransom, Ionia, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a girl.15 years

of age and have gone to the Dunbar Ag-
ricultural school for one year. We
have 12 cows, 4 calves, 4 horses, 8 pigs
35 hens and 10 little chickens. My
father takes the M. B. F. and likes it
line. I like to, read the Children's Hour.
We live on a 160 acre farm. For pets
We have 4 cats and 8 rabbits. .,We have
an Overland car. I have 4 brothers and
4 sisters. I will closa With -a_ riddle:
Why is the letter “t” like an‘ island?
Answer: Becaluse it is in the middle of
water.—-Vlna Harbron, Fibre, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—'4 am going to join
your merry circle of boys and girls. I
wonder if all your nephews and nieces
took hold of hands how large a circle
it would make? I am in the 7th grade
and go to the Mixwell school and am 12
years old. I have three brothers and
three sisters. My ‘older sister Leona is
17 years old and can write good stories
and poems. I have 2 cats, 20 little
chicks and a rabbit. Well I must close

"about in pigs. 1 wish
girls would write to mar—Eltht‘
V ’Kellgﬂ'x. Rockford ,Mieh. '

Q 11 years old and in the ﬁfth grade ‘

2- s 9.1111ng

Illve on a. 160 acre farm.
horses. '9 cows, 10V calves
' or the

L and
Dear Uncle Ned———I afarme’r boy
j school I-

cat. I will answer all girls and
who write to me f-Glenn Abbott.
well, R 2, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—Iain a b01211
old and in the 4th grade. I have .
brothers. My name is Robert. We It”

on a 120 acre farm. My father “15:7 ’3

the M. B. F. and I like to‘r-end
Children’s Hour. Welhave 3 horses and
5 cows, 3 yearlings and 1 com
no pets—Robert Illner, Brant,

u,

at.
grind all our’teed. For a. 4pet I haveJ/‘e'

til!“ ' ‘

. I, have. '-

Dear Uncle Ned—Another former as

who would like to join your merry circle.
I have been reading the Children’s Hour
and think it is very nice for the chili?
ran to get interested in. I enjoy read“
it anyway. I am 13 years old. I 11:15
no sisters nor brothers so you see I :1
very lonesome. For pets I hays sevill
little Buff Bantam chicks, they have
feathers clear to their little toes. um
little kitties, a dog named Fred. a. little
colt and a pair of twin calves. They are
both as white as snow. I am five

feet four inches 'tall. I wish son.

. of the boys and girls would write to n.

and you, too. Uncle Ned. My letter h.l

getting long so will close with a. riddle;
What is smaller than an ants mou
Ans. —-—Wha.t he eats—Margery Noggin
R 7, Clare, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—a1 am a boy tJ-q
years old and I am going in the sixth
grade next year. I go to the Cham-
pion school. We take the M. B. F. and
I like to read the letters and to see the
pictures of the funny Doo Dads—Nona
.man Thompson, Ravenna, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

"HIT ALL happeneded like this:

picture show came to Dooville coin-

 

 

 

 

Siege F rightfulness

feet lg the smell of the mule's breath _. ».

that liniment just makes his brea

blue. Rely and Poly elected ﬂannel

 

ed “The Bandits Bravado.” It was

ull of exciting scenes which W I "feet to be the sheriﬁ of the play. Eve

though the main street is paved with
rubber, the brave old cop “will base
bumpy ride. Sleepy Sam was d921liliv

nother bullet out Old Man Grouch's pipe
in two. Ita'itoo toobad that bullet didn’t
go into the bowl of the pipe. down the
stem and round and round inside Old
Man Grouch. because he is one of ainst a gate when the bullet
those people who would never be . ‘ning lies in his hat like ag~h

.ed Doc SaWben’es—Doc Sewb‘ones who . ‘ ~
bearded the son and captured thr A

.Wﬁ- completely EWept ed 1355'

kinked liken ‘ insulted cat, he is war-
ing up anddowh the streets of

 

 

gun fusilade‘

.making blood~ourdling yells: that would
terrify anyone but a. D06 Dad. Look.
how well they shoot! .

hat was ruined at the ﬁrst shot.

tam at n ponies. hi4
«Ii-Ink ofl 1mm with;

' He. didn‘t need an!
may use no

shoot'un “the town in imitation 1 m

 


 
    

(‘5
H
'-'-" g
—.} 77 1
pp
—

O

5

# pera 1113 C0 sts ‘ :
Friction is thedaadly eneniy which destroys farm machinery. Bearings, not correctly lubri- ; ' ”
mted, ww quickly and too much power is wasted overcommg this fnction. Tractor manu- "f
facturers, recognizing the Importance of usm : the er lubricating oil in the machines they ,

manufacture, are coming more and more to 1e.use o Polarine. On test blocks, and in actual
ﬁeldopeiauon ‘

   

 

     
  

 

  
     
   
     
    

1

 

i g f i has proved its worth in competition with all One of these grades or our Stanolind Tractor

l 1. others. It 18 made in four des, each of um- 011 will correctly lubricate your tractor. Con-

l i . formly high ahty, but d gffering 111 body. or sult the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) trac-

3, i 3 viscosity—Pagnne, Polarme Heavy, Polarme tor chartbelow.Itshows you exactlywhichoil

.; _ I. 3; Medium Heavy, and Polanne Extra Heavy. you should use. Use itandcut operating costs.
4

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 
          

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

l E .
.’ ’; Tidal-no “0| MN” Mi“ TI-loII-o MOI Trick. MOI Tnduﬂuu mmon
" ' Ann. ——P. H. Case 12-25—P. E. H. Hun Caterpillar 5 ton -——P. H Nikon ‘—P. H. mun rues. T. (x .,
AW o-m—P. H Cue 5-27—P. H Halt Caterpillar 10 Tu ——P. E. Noble ‘—P. H Triumph —a T. o. -
- ' ”Jo—8.120. Guy sue—anti. HHbuIA'chtFour —-8.T.0. 'l‘rundaar —P.H. .
3 All Work -—P. R. Centipede -—P. HH. 3 Hunt: . nus—P. H H Thrust Simplicity -—P. E. H.
A?“ —P. H. as.” -—a T. 0. Dan —P. E. H mm: nu- cuuim—P. g, Twin my xm—r. H.
1. Au -—P.H. 0.0.D. —&T.O. “.11. Putin -—P. H. TIinCity Tun—HE.
Aultmn- rim—T. H. Calm ‘ IMO—P. E. H. Lie—P. H. 5...: ao-P. E. H . Tuin City ans—r. H H
’ Arman-Twit: _ 23-35-1’. E. H. Mum hi. —8. T. 0. 846—}! Pianos P. R H. ' mos—P. E. H.
Aultmn- aa-so—rHH. Gui; 3 1584.110. edema -r.H. 1’10quthan —8.T.0. '1'ma woo—run.
Adam -P. E. H. m GED --P. H. Plow-Mn —P. E. H. '
s m m. H 1m T. a. Pontiac man—PH H Old. San mo—s. T. o.
i Ami: WREE Datum: —r.H. Patna-a mas—3.30. -Univer-l 144.3.
; ; Automotive .. 15-5—9. H. Dali. No. 2 ——p. H. —8. T. 0. Prairie Dog —P. Universal Cultivator -—P. H
» 3 , 3 in! Note: 0m 53-1- ;5. E. Dark Blue '1". —-P. E. H 3.29:: T‘- 0 PM ha mac—mew. Utilitor -r. H
, ‘ ‘ Away: s—m—P. E. H. nu. ma. T. o. ——P. H Reed -s. T. a 17m man—s. 1-. o.
' . Avery 12.25—11.13. H. Eagle nan—s. T. o. -—8. T. o. Baum 40-85—P. E. H v.5. man—s T. 0.
Ave: W. E. H. w —-r. H. rum—P. E. H R. a P. 12-20-——P. H Victory -——P.M.H.
‘ ' . Am awn-P. E. H. n. nan—P. H. Reliahh lO—ZO—P. E. H.
. . E. B. Mm Cultivator ——P. .H. ——s T. 0. Rex 12-25—P. H wani- -—p. H.
~ ' mac sum 4. H. E. B. cue—P. H. —s T. o. m Oil—Pull 12-20—P. E. H. wan; Gab 4. g.
,: , Hm. Sud Mal. —-s. T. o.__ Ins—H T. o. Rmnlcy 16-30—P. H H Waterloo Boy —s. . o.
‘ ; Hm. Steal Mnh -s. T. 0. MM. —P.H. H. 12—“ T. 0. name, 01min Mam—P. E. H Waterloo Boy mes—s T. o.
, i x 3 All-Stool 3—K T. 0. Fun Ham WP. E. E. and: C lNO—P. E. H. m ' 30-50—P. E. H. Wetmnu —P. H. r; .
”I ‘ B Guam 71:15:11. W 15.53%: Libcty 4' I:lhm§.%n Emma. 12. P'&H mm; 38.3% V “
' ‘ m -— . , . . — . . .
l l . Hanan —P. H. mun was—s. T. o. 14.5w To. o—r. H Bum Model “14- —P.M.H. W' 3" ——P. E. H. 3
g 3 not —a I. a Flour on: Junt- . -—s. T 0; Ba. 15-30—P. H sham, —s. T. 0. World Auto Tina —P. H. .
- l ‘ MW - m—P.H.H. mam a: —P.H (Hm -—P.H. emu -—-P.H. u -—P.E.E
l‘ Bat'l‘nckhyc 754.1111. hmm‘M—P.RE ——P.H. 3;me —8.T.0.
; ~ \ Bight- auo—THH. run-kn. ' 3 -—P.H. MsryGardanOulﬁ- Sqm'l‘un man—“Min. Yankee mes—s T. o.
5 ' rm mas-Hm H. Prick 12-25-13. T. o. —P. H W —P. H rub. Ball-ﬁend —P. H
3 i r h -—I'. EH. “dwelt -——P. E. H. Stimon —-S. T. 0. _...__
, . ' -—-r. H. can: —-P. HH. 3 -P. H. Btnit -—P. H
=1 Brillia- —-P.H. an. —-S.T.Q nae-amp. KEY
3' ; Emma -—P.E.H. as. 4.110. UnivmlD 9—18-—P.B. mm —-P.H.
, ., ~ - - Bun 1am T. o. 6-0 mas—P. H Memo-kink: -—P. H Tm 1547—1). H PPM-rhe-
- g , mdllﬂ. Guiana use-g. g. N a 1 -—s T 0. Tan man—s. g. a r. l-L—Polulna Heavy.
6w ' —" . t on . n m . H “I“. C."-
‘l I V 833” ' 12 "Trig. mun- uao—P an. W N“ nd’ii‘ﬂ‘ gm] h ' 33%;“ "2““ M
; i H CueAtB 1 .& Binder -—P.H. 1%.um —-P.E.B. TaoCuw ——P.H. P-Eﬂ-Pomln-Exhﬂm-
l ; . CunA . Hollis-ll --P. H. Niobium —s. T. o. Townsend 12-25—1113. i. r. Or-SW 1mm 01L
4 \ t I
J L
i I

   

To get the utmost from your tractor, use

30d Crown Gasoline or‘ '

       

on Kerosene

Mﬁmmmmdemmthem willbemaﬂedmyouwithmtchar eifyoumake
WCOEMYW)MWWQWY. -hmw'ltkam,%mm,

y ((1.3. rm); sles‘mmeingan‘amf

            
       
 


     
   

3 II. I i138}
' 2 mm wm be sent on new

  
  
 
  

show you a proof endu tell you whetlt
wish. deny or

must
have It We] low fut“:
IgOHIﬂIN BUSINESS FIHIER.

or yes“ «lacy
Br eoder's' on Sales
DRIEDEIS’ DIREG‘I’ORY .Tl-ll

I ”“35 CLAIM” YOUR.

3??

Te evele oenlllotlne doses we will mm
lls t the dies

  

Ilve

  

Ilel’llee'n.
2 will e

endwe

  

P" t. Clemens.

ATE?

steel III.“
If you :re cellular-llama“. eele el-

e
'u. I'ddreee, Live Stock Idl oer, “I. «I.

Tee nudes thls‘ needing is honest breeders
still Mrlie
will cost ten- 1

 

 

Hogs.

soghl’ure-BrgdI

Oct. 21,
Howell. Mich.

Gladwln
Livestock Ass'n. Gledwin.

Bohl'dns. Howell In]. 00..

 

 

Aliens,“ Mich.
ﬁanowere, South mWhitley, Ind

Elm Badman, Hudson, Mic
L. Perry, Columbus Ohio.
I. Iil. Post

Kenning, ' Mich.
ussen, Greenville,

 

LIVE ITOOK MIUOTIONEIRS

Porter Ooleetock.‘ Eleton Baillie. Mich.

Mich. ‘

 

 

 

CATTLE

HOLSTEI‘N-FRIESIAN

 

 

 

SIIOW BULL

aired

void DeKol
cow. First
1020. Lithtpin
Seven months ed. 8125 to
~ non. Hurry!

‘ Herd under Federal Supervision.

BOAIIOMAII FAIIIIS

JIOKOON. NIIOH.
Hoktdn Breeders Since

Price,

by e Pontiac Aeggie Korndyke-Henger-
bull from e nearly 19 lb. show

prise junior celf, Jackson Fair,
color end good individual

1000

make.

 

 

 

 

BULL OALVES new"...

average records of his
83.12 lbs. butter and 730
days from A. B. 0.
ing of the breed wi
pounds seven days. Priced to sell.
c. KETZLER
Flint, Mich.

lbs.

SIRED IV SEGIS FLINT
Led.

The

four nearest dams are
milk
dams representing the lead-

in seven

 

OLVERINE STOCK FIRM REPORTS 8000

Isles from their herd. We are well pleased with
the celvee from our Junior Herd Sire “King Pon<

Ilse Lunde Korndyke Segis" who is e

emu“

son of

the Pontiece' ' from e daughter of Pon-

(:eo Clothilde De Kol 2nd. A few bull oeivee for
T. W. B

pregue. R 2. Bettie

IM OFFERING LIGHT COLORED
ll 1 year old from 21. 51 lb.

stein-Medan bu

Creek. Mich.

HOL-

{gin and sire whose six nearest dams are 33. 34

bower. Herd under state end

ervisinn.
Oscar Wallln. Msooaln Farm,

Unlonvllle.

federal sup-

Illch.

REGISTERED IIOLSTEII BULL

Siredbyeeonfmmxing
lb.cow.$90deliveredyour elation.

One end from e
Write for

22

EIRI. PETERS, North Bradley, Iluh.

 

‘ them.
9 ROY F. FICKlF-B

Chesaning, Mich.

 

TUEBOIl STOOK EARN

Breeder of Registered Holstein
cattle and Berkshire Hogs.

Everything guaranteed, wnite

me your wants or come and see

 

 

 

II. .I. 300 oons
Hockney. Iloh.

IE GOOD YOUNG REGISTERED

so“ good 1:.
godmhulls enddue from Julyto toDeoem
fun ““3. 0. prices
one guaranteed to be
.ted.

HOL-

T IEABLIIOW BULL BAIIOAIIS ”

ﬁlls?"

SOLO AEAII

June 10. Write
O. WIDE. White Ploeon. lluh.

Bull nil lest advertised sold but heve 2 more
The t fel3

en
dem.sheis

greet b
JIIIIH

    
   
 

From solve-ﬁts

lot-Jo. full-HM}
F. 3. , OOODI Richmond.

by e3 see of
Hengerveld De [oi Butter Boy. one of

%wlan-mliehuﬂl.

MIIEOISTEBEO IIOLSTEII OATTLE

It“

 

 

out whet gen” have to offer,
or“ times.

km mm ted!!!)
It. Clement. Ilolllllen.

OLAOVIIII OOUIITT PURE Oll-
‘ LIVESTOOK ASS’I '

~Announce second consignment
sale of Hereford, Shorthorn, Red
Poll and Holstein.’

Dunc-Jersey and 0.1. 0 's

Gladwin. Sept. 15th. 1921

Third day of Gladwin County
Fair.

Write for sale list.

' 0. E. ATWATER

Secretary

Fairlawn Herd—Holstein; :

Rm em, Embleu cord leh cam... 108018.
His slre’s m8... the’dthl Johanna. world ’s

on: so lb. cow. end world’s first 1,200
cow that ever held ell tin‘imﬂd {m but

Champ'seonsfromcholoeA. 0
odd prestige to your herd and money to

.I. F. IIIENAII

Owner
Fllnt. lllloh.

A PROVEN BLOOD LINE

toKDIC} SEGIS tnnmitted ttedto Iris sons the point

i

nsmit to their daughters the cutest of
production over tlylong u“gnarled; It is offspring
has recently greatest yearly DIX-f

ducdoﬁi‘ ever dreamed of, 37, 881. 4 pounds
*1.“ inch...“ ”adrenals.

Individua RIOND RIVER STOCK FIRMS

111 I GIeln Gorey J. Spencer, Owner

Jo
Under State

or. BALE—TWO BULL OILVES. I HOL-
Ftein end Durham ebout 8 months old. Both
have heavy milkingm dams. Not registered. 850

nah if mkeu eto
OHISE STOCK mMil-'IRM. Mich.

HEREFORDS

REGISTERED HEREFORD OITTLE — KING
REPEATER 713941.51!!! Been Perfection

okeon. Ilo
end Federal Supervision

Mel-lotto.

 

 

327899 head our herd. Bulk ere sold: have
some very fine heifers for sale. bad or opened,
Come end them;th

bred to our herd bulls.
wil

pleese you.
Tony I. Fox. Prom. Henry Oehrholz. Herdsman,

MARION STOCK FIRM. Isl-Ion Michigan

Hrnrrons OATTLE .82.. “mm"-

We can furnish registered bulls from 1
months end older best of breeding end A
very low price. Ineve
Herd headers We have e large line
of re red to Bogs. Grits,

Write us. tell us whet you west end get
our prices.

Le FAYETTE STOCK FIRM, 'Le Fayette. lad.
J. crouch I loo.

LAKEWOOD IIEIlEFOIlO

They are Bestgood ones. High.”l
egos. Bestof b.lood Come
3. J. TAYLOR. Fremont,“ Iioh.

BIVEIIVIEIV HEIIEFOIIBS ”R 3““

four bulls. one
Lgrtudson of the 89. 500 Bullion 4th. I

Wm. o. DIOKEII. Imyrne. Ileh.
SHORTHOBN

SIIOIITIIOIIIIS FOR SALE

calves left.
“females. ell

 

 

 

Modal

 

mE—Rsmmaln
Joule! Illa.
maul one 11 months one 5 months
tch Topen at?“ shred. :43:
“one! W. ARNOLD or Inn Lo
Mlllemeburu. n' 1. Ilohlun Inuo

“I’M".nus oogmend’ ﬁlm" prio-
heferu January ﬁrst. Will trade to good lend.
Wm. a. nu. lees Om.“

I III IUBIN 00.. BHON'HIONN [REID-
"If Amulet!“ have stock for eele. beth I13

 

 

 

FRI-K lIll-IY. Hartford. lleh. ‘
IXTII GOOD IULL 0w wags"? CALI.
mm 19

\I- 3.: TINMI-ln M. Iielllue

”OUT-AID SIIOBTIIOIIIS
613:...“ so.“

be was one has min- «to [of {two-year-olds and

  

'of the cattle show this year.

JUST TWO

resistive mm

 

tries in pens and “singles.

prime beef produced and consumed

in the state, will be on hand, Tuesn
day, September 6"to see this splen- ;
did display of Michigan made cattle ‘
judged and sold. '

Lenawee county will send fnear-
ly- six carioads of show stock to
the State Fair this year; the Boys
and Girls club will show .e. load 0f
Hereford yearlings in the rat class-
6 and a load of Holstein yearlings
in the dairy division. These "kid-
d1es"cut a wide swath at .the Buf-
falo Fat Stock Show last year and
the competition, at Detroit, this
year, will'have to be mighty strong
to keep them out of the'money.

A record exhibit of breeding cat‘-
t'le is assured for this year’s fair,
the Holsteins leading in numbers in
the” dairy division and the Short-
horns in the beef department. Pres-
ent indications uvor asmailer line-
up 011811361) than usual. The hog
show bids fair to be about the same
size as last year, “with the Durocs
somewhat in the lead on the entry
list.

Wildwood Farms, Orion, Mich.,
will be represented at the fair with
an Angus and Guernsey herd; the
get of Edgar of Dalm‘eny is begin-
ning to dominate the Wildwood
Angus herd and they are certainly
a handsome lot of youngsters. There
is grave danger that the “color
line" will be drawn at the fair this
year and if [Sidney Smith, the
Scripps manager, has his way about
it, the black beauties will carry
away the honors of the show in the
beef department.

Jay Lessiter will be in full charge
The
annals of live stock breeding, in
Michigan, reveal the names of very
few men who have been as faithful
to their calling as the Lessiter
Brothers, Frank and Jay. They are
good sportsmen, modest when they
win and mighty game losers; their
splendid .Shorthorn herd has be-
come a fixture at the State Fair and
is familiarly known throughout the
state.

——-—-l-—.
The indomitable Minty, with his
Woodcote herd of ‘blackcoats will
be out after a share of the blue rib-
bons, again this year; the show in
the Angusring promises to be a
battle royal from start to finish. A
judge must have a profound knowl-
edge of beef type to properly class-
ify the splendid young things that
show up in the beef-bred classes at
Detail. ‘

The Prescotts are coming down
from Tawas City this year with s
wonderful showing of the “reds, the
whites and the mans.” With a com-
plete exhibit in the Shot-thorn
breeding classes, three earloads of
fat yearling steers ﬁnd a carioad of
scrubs for contrast, this firm will

 

 

. furnish an educational exhibit that

is worth going a long way to see.

 

mmom SELL WELL .
, .- N AUCTION sale of pun-bred
A Duroc hogs was held on Thursday
. - afternoon. August 18. at thetair
grounds in Nor-thunk. mm

 
 

  
 
 
 
 
 

  
 

to be helped that every man in Micki;
igan. who is anxious to see more:

‘to either collect the money, pref!
that is impossible to expose

‘ got no reply
times and no reply. and ﬁnally told him '

.We turned the case over

‘the money if he could‘ not ﬁll

   

whom they have had unsatisfac
dealings. Any paid-119’

u
may submit claims of- this am to

us, which are not more the‘ six
manths' old, and we will endeam

   

prosecute the defrauders. Naturil

ly we save our subscribers a ‘good

deal of money through this service.

Not only that but we says thousands "
of others from the clutches 'of die:
to defraud them were it not for the

 
     

honest firms who would be to

watChful eye of the Collection 80:.

Although this service feature was _

inaugurated only a little over , e
year ago, we have received 731 com-
plaints,
which - we have adjusted 451.
amounting to S5, 528. '

 

STANLEY CLAIMS ”mam '

"I saw in your paper an ad tram 0.

H. Stanley of Paw Paw, Mich.. saying '

he would send ',1000 Senator

_strawben-y plants for 88. 60, so I sent *'

him an order I received a card news
he had received the order and along
and would ship in May. I waited an
the ﬁrst of Jung and they hadn't come
and the grommd was ready. so I wrote
him and asked him to Send them on, but
Have written him

if he couldn't send the plants to 1:01:qu
the money. On June 30th received a
card saying he could not fill the end"
but would do so held year. I
wrote him to return the money but
not had any reply to date, so am

ing to see if you can do anythingm abd’u't '

it.”-—Mrs. G. W., 111ng Gotmty,‘M

The above letter was one of
eighteen telling exactly the same
story.
ceive a’ complaint against an M. B.»
F. advertiser, and
claims up with Mr. Stanley at once,
We met with the same kind of -

cold reception as our readers. ,
reply to our letters. We Wrote and
wrote, and finally a relative

would attend to the

able to do so. We sympathised

with Mr. Stanley in his illness, but
when we discovered upon receipt ofy

other complaints. that he was. still
accepting money without delivering
the goods we wrote him again, with
the same result,—n-‘o reply.

are it became necessary to warn

Mr. Stanley that the claims would.
be put into the hands of the postpt-

fice authorities, much as we re-

gretted to take such action, if he

did not fill the orders or return the
money.
there was only one thing left to do.
to the
postoffice authorities on the grounds

that Mr. Stanley had used the mails‘
‘ for fraudulent purposes, and it is:
still pending in their hands. Since.

this action was taken, however, Mr

Stanley has returned some of the

money, as evidenced by 'the'followé' ‘

ing letter from Mrs. W.: ,

"Thanks for taking up our M I:
against Mr. C. H. Stanley. .. I received
my money by return mail Again-1' ,

thank you for your promptness,
couldn’t get along without the M. B. F.“
We have also since received a let-

.ter from Mr. Stanley under date u! 3
Aug. 4, in which he makes no ax-
planation of his strange failure In
lob

adjust the claims or reply to'
ters concerning them, in which lie

alleges that he has either shippodf

the plants or adjusted all claims.

Here is a case in which the Buo-
iness Farmer tried to give a men"
the full beneﬁt of a doubt, but he.
insisted on abusing that confidence. '
. 8. We do not know to this day why

Mr. Stanley failed to deliver
plants for which he accepted
money, or why he failed to

order, or why he should’eveu

his patrons to ”SW?“ “3%

involving over $10, 000, of

ye

It is not often “that were»
we took the"

No, . 3
re- "

plied that Mr. Stanley was ill and"?
claims when,

Final— I -
ly, in order to protect our subscrib- .

He ignored this letter, be: “

Won

 
 

   

   
    
  
  
   
 
  
 
  
   

   
 
       
  

 
 

  

    
  

   
     
        
          
       
 
 
 
  
  
 
   
    
  
   
   
    
    
 
 
  
   
   
      
    
   
     
      
 
   
           
      
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
     
   
   
  
   
   
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
 
  
    
    
 

 

 

.'l<.

         
    

 

     
 
     
    
       
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
    

  

 


... . ranac. ,,
-Ha'sItIings and U 152 gnﬁlee north and

or as r took’ a: '1. can: on»
.‘Belding. rennin ’ Lowell.

and» came hm very M

l satisfied. with his own port at the coun-

time is here. -.Evcr¥ one
the Farm Bureau that know
about its work: We expect to

let- ot plate acid blasunl,.stmnpl
'2. Hill. -

och-Ir -(s.)—'—we have memo light
3:11 butn‘ot enough to wet the ground
lion than 27 or 3 inches, The, tumors

'1! no plowing tor wheat where they can.
Il~mﬂ1ns“'co ' ﬁlling silos, pulling beans
,, m last year’s bean

:*::"_ ~ 'mﬁ battling to ’market ,

i'_ m ”33,“? kept oven—G. L.

v

V‘ ,. m lump—Good rains havelm-

", crop 81mm especially pota-

,‘

St.
Quite

.1.

‘ with peaches. .

. NOW. Will be large

A .230th exchanged for pure bred sires.

:, ; 3:"

.3391!
u I to - ‘ tr:
33:3.- B-mnmgtgm of EXeeLsior. town-‘

”I " I. the ”cu-Its): one: being .gsomewhat .

“:5“-qu Potato crop. with.
m‘mo betore trust to allow de—
anapment, will possibly reach 40 per
cent in our comty. Some ﬁelds abso-
’ ' yataw good.——J.,P.H.

Mun-Plowing for" wheat is
~ It”! good shape; dorms past ten
’ M rain thathas gone .
wills. depth. «$me ,corn being cut
and sons silos~wﬂl betllled soon. Heavy
who and.» rain thatdld damage in south
rm .u county Tuesday nighL——=A.. R. G.
. Valiant—Plenty of rain: the past
\ ms. Will help out late potatoes and
cam. Farmers are plowing for wheat.
.meshing nearly done. Groin, not very
good. - No farm products being sold ex—
cuoumbers which sell at $2 per

wt. ’Old hens 200'; young chickens,

ﬁat—(L E. omey akin 1
I ——«Had another so g ran.
V ﬁghwlnd. blew down trees and,
”habitats, also blew down some peach
hoes for one farmer,

ain. Corn is fine. Potatoes
3 5:21:15; ‘better since the rains—Mrs.
._B. C. Helm ,
‘ .Huen—Ihd a nice rain the. .16th;
could stand more. Corn and late potatoes
good. Everybody busy . gettmg
m room. in wheat and rye; a large
some will he put in this fall. Thresh-
ettm . ret . weu along; all spring
gin“ turning out; poorly. 'Some pressing
Borne lifting beans which are a
7: lenty“ of rain now. Everybody
. / especiall rye. New seedings
V zone andtarrnirs are putting back to
' grain. com ready mom in ten days.
Plait: oi stalk but lots of short ears.
Beans ready In. 10 days to two weeks.
'Pods not well ﬁlled. Late potatoes do-
ingw‘welk Bugs have been quite bad.—
Q'A— ‘

11W , 'm‘mmas aid: dolnig re;
pair 'which should he no away
more is a. lull such as we have at
.mt. Some faramem have all then"
can in: done and a. good. many of
them are nearly through. We have
' ‘hvmd this summer with suﬁicent‘
we. had a. very nice rain last-
Wk- Sellins butter, eggs an cream-
'~this a. Mly good-price. 45¢ per
we at" week.’ —-Ren‘ o .1. Fast. -_ ~
M Son-Cool, weather and re-
sauna 113m been a benefit to late
" ' ‘ Fall plowing tor wheat and.
wiﬂ be a less sure-
Corn almost ready
aims: own not as good as ex-
most all done. Silo
Threshing The ”Better fires”
m y . Murray. Aug. 18th. st
mus ' present enjoyed the lectures
m warned to be interested in. pure bred
,c’ettleé—H. L. »
MDBkW—‘Henty rain and cool weath-
' a-«which is splendid for the potatoes. and
” ‘ t. Corn and beans never bet—
tut " A large number (ﬁaﬁarngrs vagina
' ' th red at as on e
wives gs. 9M. A- C. demonstration

’zm regain: on not
on than last year»

$11. ind Charles Rayburn of. Kalkasks,

Threshmgfs nearl-y- done and all grain

ﬁght, I formers are

, Mgon the roads.--- . .

nuance (3.)-—.—Ths rains have saved
1 the corn. been and. sugar beet crops.
s“°°mm..‘~....m‘ will“ to” salute;
' drﬂ n ' _ ,
“ thee-nesthatmshowinzup

' mm by- bembg sodry. Cumin rerun

under ’
. enclosing

acreage of tall.-

»about 3 weeks before it “banks. I ha
' _ creased 7 ,_ u m

ME. Foss-nth, Ha

'17. Found no crops looking better than
at. hpmgg‘ Anfoldaploncer. Irving just
north of Hontcalm died at. her home at
Rustford. "Her husband. Mr

had beenéthe mmer~7there for over '

"e‘aranowne is into. criticalconditlon
:35, g! has .s'rhsd. stroke or paralysis
ingmhismsnytrlends,mhopingtwms
reoOVery undue ,mournlng over his
faithful wife for their lite has been well

mgr-G. 3.5 We

H ‘

WHEN UNCLE norm mam A

.. ,corrornnr.

Bear in M. B. in: Why didn’t m
visit my home last week! I looked ter
you Friday an’ I Samrday—kept open.
house feryou Bonday 'l‘nesdawan' Wed—
nesday an’ still you didnt come.
W'ouldn't, yer .ﬂolkl. let you com, or how
is it! I miss you so much. when you fall
to appear.‘ Please tell your manager
about. it noises 11 he will not send you
alongwtth this-Week’s» issue. Bear of
friend. I want‘you l—Uncle Rube.

You may send M. B. F. to Mr. 3..
Rockford, Mich. one year tree. I an
t. I want to see as
many farmers reading your paper a:
possible. It has stood and fought for a
square deal for the farmer in the past
and I hope it will continue to use its
heavy artillery in their behalL—D. C.
E, Kent County, Michigan.

Your paper 15 a real farmer‘s papa;
and should be taken by every wide
awake farmer. It is the only farm pa-
per I have ever seen that did anything
but give the farmers 19. line of needless
advice every year. Your paper n01
only gives the most practical advice but
helps the farmer -‘ to carry lt out.—
H. C.‘ 8.. Osceola County, Mich. '

 

 

 

’ The Experience Pool

 

 

Bring your .over’yday problems In and not -
the experience or other farmers. Questions ad- -
dressed to this department unpublished here ‘
and answered by you. our readers, who. are

not“ of theﬁehoot of Hard Knocks end

who base their diplomas from the College of

Experience. If you don't want our editor’s

advice or on men's advice. but just plain.

everyday buslnase farmers? send In

your question here. We > one

[each week. If you can answer the other
fellow’e question. please do so. he may ans-

wer one of yours some day! Address Exper-

Ience Farmer. ls.

 

 

 

{nun EVER SET SPARROW TRAP

,1 saw a. letter of. inquiry about Ever
Set sparrow traps. I bought one last
May and started it on May 26, and the
ﬁrst day caught eight and the most I

caught in one day was thirteen. but the '

least I mught was ﬁve in one day. We

kept it out until the gram in the fields :
began to ripen then the birds went to-

ﬁelds to feed but we caught mar!

than 150 while using it and are going .

to start it now again. We are satisﬁed
with it—Mrs. G. E." Alto, Michigan.

HAVE. you USED THE 'AUTo
KNITTER .

Can you send me the address at some—
one who. has used. the Auto-Knitter and
made. a. success of it? I wish to buy one
but would first l'ﬂte to correspond with
someone who, has; used one—Mrs M.,
HillsdaJe CountY. Michigan.

(Editor's note: Wise woman!
have had so many inquiries about the
Auto-Knitter we wish with our sub—
scriber that everyone who has used one

We

, will write us their experience with it, to

be published in the “Experience 13901.")

' FOB SALE

_ ‘ J,“ It
s! . . x , whit
IRIIDIII' '_DIRI¢'I'OBY\ Jill

Sues-rum cum: no oxrono' no"!
sheep. Both sex for sale. ,
J. A. omnmo, Him. M ,

cENTRAL MICHIGAN SHORTHORN INSID-
ers Anmn’atlon can tor sale 75 head;
"at“. both milk And beef .breedin‘.

m. s. MILLER. Bec'y. ore-mun. man.

BUY SHORTHORNS NOW.
1nherd

 

bulls test without a. reactor. Some“
JOHN sou-um- ; sou. no,“ cm; M

:x

Mm; '

ﬁscal“! we

m.
Bond for not

an menu. V'
'barnhl

 

ANGUS

 

The mm. of

Imp. Edgar of Dalmeny

~ waably‘

. The Worlds’ Greatest
BREEDING BULL

Blue Bell. anymore Champion at he
Bmltbﬂeld Show, 1919, and the Birming-
ham Show. 1920. h a daughter of Edgar
of Dolmeny.

The Junior Champion Bull,
Champion F‘s-ole, Champion Cal! Hard
and First Prize Junior Heifer Call, Mich-
igan State Fair, 1920. were also the at
of Edgar of Dahneny.

A very choice lot 0! young bullswsfred

Edzuol Dalmen re. t 1' trma,’
offered for sale. I ‘ I. m

Send tor Illustrated Catalogue.

WILDWOOD FARMS
Orion. Mich.

w. E. Sorlpps. Prop" Bldney Smith. Supt

 

 

 

 

BARTLETTS’PURE swan ABERDEEﬂo
. ANGUS CATTLE AND 0.LU.
mee are right and are priced Couc-
Ipopdance solicited and inspection invited. ‘
CARL BARTLETT. Lawton. Mich.

 

REGISTERED ABERDEEN - ANGUS—BULLS.
Heifers and cows for sale.
Priced to move. Inspection invited.
~RUSSELL BROS" Merrm. Michigan

 

JERSEYS

MEADOWVIEW JERSEY FARM—REGISTER-
. cd lersey mttle.

a. s. MORRIS a. son. Farmlnnto'n. Mich.
BEG. JERSEY 1{IEIFERS 1 YR. OLD-—
> . 01mg cows in milk sired
by Majesty’s Oxford Shyloch 156,692 also young
bulls sired by Frolic’s Master Pogls 177683. I
grandson o: Pozjs 99th and Sophie 19th’s Tor-
mentor, two great bulls of the breed. Write for
prices and pedigree. ‘

GUY 0. WLBUR, R 1. Balding. Mlch.

 

 

 

lF THE BULL ls HALF THE HERB, HOW
much would a son of Pogis 99th’s Duke 8th,
who has 60 per cent blood at Sophie 19th. be
worth to your herdlr
Let me send you prlzgtees and prices on bull
calves from this bull um] SnDhie Tormentor cows.
HAYWFR
Buetts. Mich.

 

ONE OF OUR MAJESTY BULLS WOULD ll.
prove your herd.
FRANK P. NORMINGTON. lonla. Mlph.

 

GUERNSEYS

GUERNSEY BULL GALF 7 MOS. OLD. SIRE.
Lana-water Prince Charmantc. A. R. 4 A.
R. daughters average 416 lbs. fat 2 1-2 .
Dam: Lawton's Lady Ll. A. R. 418 In {at class
A. (farmers 3.1.3“) 1 A. R. daughter. 409

A.
lbs. fat D. D. n
MORGAN BROS" .
Allegan. R 1. Michigan '

 

 

GUERNSEY BULLS,
able age, and calves. Dams now
on test making splendrd A. records. I' have
what you. want in. type breeding and production.
Have never had abortion nor tuberculosis. Herd
federally accredited. Prices $100 up. Write
for partials".
A. M. SMITH. Lake City. Mich.

SERVICE-

 

 

‘ veterinary Dep’t

Dr. W. Austin Ewell, editor

 

 

REMOVE CAUSE OF ABSCESS
I have a horse 4 years old. Twa years

ago .she cut a gash in her foreleg just

below the shoulder on a barbed wire. It

swellsup, in a? big hard. hunch. like a

hr yen-y sore. gathers and breaks,

runs very badly and then heals up and
leg loofsmery natural." In shot. tour
monthslt will begin gathering again for
we

.gwd‘nll aims. ‘-. me what
1 town! it. ﬁne is a valuable
yen. W.

 

AYBSHIPAES

FOR mE—JEQISYERED IYRSH‘IRE
bulls and bull calves. heifers and heifer ca

some at“ cows. ‘
FINDLAY BROS., R 5. Vassar. Mich.

‘ SWINE ﬁ]

POLAND CHINA

 

 

 

Mme... use
so. rlmn. m.

1

. HERE'S SBHETIIIIE 6000.;
'rnl ts'n’om mo 1‘er I. e. [I no" ;
Get Jhixxerand better bred boar Pill 30‘. ', ,.._ '.
herd. . 1. reasonable price. Come an new“,
WW: we: 32s....» w “mum: ..
O .W. 3 {LIMESTONt Penns- Il‘. ' ‘

ERBJS soins‘rmuo coon." ,
Poland can... One extn large 13'!
bizboned month an land to unwieldy
mesa MLPauu‘ 3100. m younur am- no to
Rom.“ 3:03.. mun. mu.

FABWELLLAKE FAIL-S "° "N '
ﬁmhtdmpiqaCome endsumm
m 2:001:11 Wonder. Don’t

forget
W. B. RA-ODELL '
Inner-5 lick.

 

 

l’

 

‘-—-——FOB SALE, LARGE TYPE————-—'; 5‘

POLAND GBHIA.’

boar pin sired by B’s Chm ”13%
Michigan’- 1920 Gr. Champﬁmbotr.
Burn 395823.‘ W's
1920 ht J’r. Yearling Boar. Imnmni by
doable treatment Pn‘eed b eel WIND
or see them. Free livery to visitor:
A. A. FELDKAMP
Manchester. R. R. No. 2

 

 

 

 

II sired by Caldwell Big Bob.
the world. _ dam’s sire is A's Mastodon.
grand champion at Iowa State Fuir. same I)
log. I have 3 sows bred for SPDt. A fall
and spring boats that are authors. Write for
prices. Everything guaranteed to plan. ‘
C. E. GARNANT
Eaton Rapids. Mich.

 

.T. P. O. A FEW TOP GILTS BHED TO' '
Highland Giant, the 5:190 boar. Others bred
to VVlley’s Perfection. Weight, 700 at: 18 mam
JOHN D. UJILEY. Schoolcraft. .Mk'h. ‘

 

. T. P. GLDOES’YOUR HERVE SAY BUY

hogs? Vote yes and order 21 good one. Full

gilts $130 to 3150: spring boars, $15 to 925. Two

Prospect Ian}: slits bred to Hart‘s Block Pn’oe

March 24th at $50 each. ' ,
F. T. HART. St. Louis. Mich.

 

EONARD’S BIG TYPE“ P. 0.. BOAR PIGS
zit weaning time. from Mich. Champion herd
$25 With pedig Satis 'n. guaranteed. Call
or write E. R. uis. Mm

ree. Sacha

LEONARD. B 3. 8L L0
Big Type Poland Chhms. boars amt '1?! now
ready. The kind that has made for ﬁlo

A. D. GREGORY
Ionia, Michigan

 

 

L s P 6—4 BOABS BY CLAMMAI'S I“!
ASE and Big Defender. tint on

Bred Hilts all sold.

SWARTZ. Schoolcran. Michigan.

356 TYPE pomeriszu ”5.1:. “l

gmwthy. Best of blood lines represented.“ Wri
or cm W. Caldwell & Son. Sorlngport. Itch.

extra good.
H. O.

 

lo TYPE P. c. spams Pass Isl-imam out.
from large growth-y dams and sired by choice
herd poets. Come and see our stock ptioei
s bk ‘ > "

L. w. BARNES a son, emu, lich-

n ms a: W m. m... ma: _

H0138. You can not the;

best at the lowest price at Butler’s M
Farms. We can furnish just what you' mt};
over 100 head on hand. J. .
M. 0. BUTLER, Prop. 2 ~ ‘

Bell Phone. Portland. men;

‘ Am Morin. Large Type Poland. Chins gout,
bred to 'F'e Orange at reasonable price... lie
(all pigs. Write or call. :
GLYDF FISHER. n e, 3:. Louis. llch. Y

 

 

 

 

DUROCS

 

0R SALE—FINE MARCH AND AFR-IL
Sired by Gladwin Co]. 188995.

 

sow BR!!! To RIOHLQANA m m
sation (a great son oi Great‘ Orion"

Sensation) and \3 Michigan Demonstrator

of largest boars in state) for sale. at

the prices. Also big. '3; spring ‘

guts. ._ ,
MICHIGANA FARM, Pavilion.“ ,
Kalamazoo County

 

GILTS ALL. SOLD. SPRING PIGS SI'IEII
by Jumbo IAd.‘an 800 1b. boar. 0m ﬁns
herd boar by Big Bob Mastodon.

mm PIER. Ewart, list.

» THIS LITTLE no

UROG JERSEY BOARO. Bear: 01 the"
bury-boned. type. at reasonable prices. ' .
or better, come a me.

E I. anonoo‘r, R 1. Monroe. men.

 

 

I. asa.mrgiro:s~§ummlg
r : 1W '0 '
Wm. 1:. ”5mm my _ _ lick; _

 

,,,
4

r “t *7.

c

an more than pleased

 

with 7‘ that 1 II. .B, ‘ F.

5' ' 7 . '- . ' Y‘New 3mm, mongsﬁau

.Y .. ads have been bringing. ”good We “do

 

 

0- HI". 3..


 
 

 

 

 

 

 

Anteed. Come look 'em over.
' Also A few. open gnu. -
NWOOD BROTHERS

— Henderson.

OP

dunmmstbe

(Winnie... no.4 miA‘ comm new» :9qu nos >. /
“scour monorail"? ,rnE' MICHIGAN coolness FARMER. Au. clone ii‘da loin

1;!“ “rag! Aged “11030:" cold. Orders hit-II
or wen ng gs 0 and h (1 boot.
J08. ecnusthlﬁ. w3i’amm. eIsiah n. .

w v,

lERlNO RAM! FOR SALE. 9009 Ni9n
boned, heavy shooters. ‘
HOUSE AN EROS. R 4. Albion. .MIPI"

 

FOR“ SALE—DUROO FALL BIL-Ts AND BRED ,r
one Diuroe- Boer from Brookwstar .,
Choice spring
Lindon. Elioh.

b.3331: R. Eisen Ohm».
PEAGII HILL FARM

TRIED cow- and gum bred to or sired by Peach
Hill Orion King 152489. mustactionjusr-

p1R 1.

 

Romeo. Mich.

MEADOMIEW FARM—A FEW OHOIOI
spring female pins for sale. ’
MORRIS' A SON, Forminoton. Mich.

 

AMY OFFERING some men cuss

SPRING IIIIIIOG BOAIIS

at reasonable prices . A few giltA bxed for Bop:
umber futon At bcrnin 11‘1ch '
Milan. Mich.

 

FOR BALE—REG. DUROO-JERSEY SPRING
gilt: bred to Rambler of Sangsmo let. The
boot thst sired our winners at Michigan State
E‘nir and National Swine Show.
F. HEIMS A: SON
Davison. Mich.

- oAKLAIms pnrmm ems?

Herd Bosh—Reference coir—No. 129219
1919 Chicago International
4th Prize .Ir. Yearling

BOOKING ORUERS FALL PIGS A'I‘ $25
ANK A: POTTE
Ili’ottel‘vlile. Mich.n

 

 

ANYTHING YOU

WAN A'l'
nunocs W. T

0. L. POWER.‘ Jerome, Mich.

' G. S N BOAR
run so: 25.. 32.2.2.2, pros. 8-
JESSE BLISSMﬁmBO

 

 

DUIIOG JERSEprJig'ﬁiiﬁ. 513?:

 

:15 “DO Satisfaction guaranteed
E. E. ALKINS. Ann Arbor. Mich.
on eALi. our ouno’o soAn mom

Brookwnter breeding stock. Choice spring pigs.
JOHN ORONENWETT. OArleton. Mich.

 

um sows one elite bred to war. King .2949
who hudred more price winning pigs At the
out. felts huh the int 2 you: thAn Any other Du-
bocr. Newton Bernhart. St. Johns Mich.

 

uroce. Hill_.creet Farms.
And gilts. Bonn And spring pigs. 100 head.
Iii-n14 miles straight S. of Middleton, Mich"
Gntiot Co. ' Newton & Blank. Perrintou. Mich.
TYPE, QUALITY

”"800, 80‘“ PEG and size Pathﬁnder.

Orion 3:11:38:in King “said Proud Colonel breeding.
ROGER GRUBER, Oapac. Michigan

I orrnn Aw rm wen-sass encor-
ed spring DuraonBoArs.u Also bred sows All
SENAUOIHTON A FORDYOE. 8%. Louis. Mich.

o. I. o.
0 I II AIIII GHESTEII WHITE

t reasonable Price;-
i tt‘ialbeolshi‘iped hits _
ks old. Prom non 00 mos rite
10- weéL LARE \Ib DORMAN, Shaver, Mich.

Bred and open cowl

 

 

 

 

 

0. I. O. SWINE—MY HERD CONTAINS THE
blood lines of [the moat Inst-iii berdﬂ Elsi: furnish
tok t"lv on at ve'pce. ‘\
you I Ac. J: OORGDEN. Oerr. Mich.. R I.

 

. I. mess. SERVICE BOARS, SPRING PIGS
rm'ers prices

CLOVER LEAF STOCK FARM. Monroe. men.

 

 

CHESTER WHITES-

BIIED GILTS son JUNE FARROW. on:

service boar 9 mos. old. Also

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

 

c

HAMPSIIIRES '

 

HAMPSHIRE BRED GILTS NOW READY To
sign A bargain in {All and spring boar pigs
HN W. SNYDE RgR 4, St. Johns. Mich.

An Opportunity To Buy .
Hsgnpshires Right

We Are adoring some mod now- And gilts, bred
for March one! April furowinc Also 5
choice (All pigs. either sex. Write or- call

sun menu. New Lethren. Nieh.

 

 

tenant-3mg“ nongoin /
DAN not: an, I} . amt. Alicia.

 

 

SHEEP -

 

BETTER BREEDING STEM

lbr the best in Shropshire ind Hampshire rAms ,

write or visit

KOPE- «on smile. A. 1:. Wine. Iii-op. ”I
Ohio And IlichitsA-r

oidmr.
See our exhibit" At
State Flirt.

.o' .!

hlsmbs Also yeerling rams of
have g'iv

A us‘llty ‘
on satisfaction since 1890. Priced ‘

O. LEMEN'. Dexter. Mich.

Til IIIGIIEASE YOUR IIETIIIIIIS

from rsheepby breed Registered Rambouiilets. '
sale
P. O. FREEMAN I 80

Phone 544 or 240 Lowell, Mich.

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

few good yen-ling ram: and some rem
lambs left to oﬂer.
for fall delivery
represented.

lOLAI’fKE U. HAIRE. West lunch,

 

Everything guArA‘nteAd AA

Mich.

 

 

 

AMPSHIRE’S, BUCK LAMBS AND YEARLF.

inss. Make your selection now for later ship-
ment. Will spare s~ few good ewes .
J. M. WILLI iAMS
North Adams. Mich.

HORSES

3 GOLTS FOR SALE

mine 3 years old
Ohns. E. Kelley, R 5, Flint, Mioh. Phone 1004.14

 

 

 

 

WO-YEAR- OLD PEROHERON STUD, GREY,
big boned. high class colt. from ton more and
impoorted stud weighing ‘ 1,160 pounds. Price

$250
OfNO. O. IUTLER.,Portland. Mich.

m PET STOCK :,

 

 

 

 

Shepherd Puppy
Sale

Teen days only—$8. 00 for either a male

or a spayed female, three months
from farm trained stock that are natural
gee-lore with plant of grit. Send check or,

order in rat Iette
Mt. clement,

old, bred

Dr. W. Austin Ewalt.

Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

Fiﬁ E‘jALE, FLEsN‘IISI-I GIANT KAI-ITS. DOES,
ree ng Age. Three months old 1,
Registered does 312 esch. Stock pedigreed. routi-
ty KunrAlnteed

E. HIMEIAUGH. Ooidwster. Mich.

Anson: HIPS 1“!" 35.3375“th

Oomng strain. Make ﬁne watchdogs for poultry

 

and farm Iomes Pedigrees furnish ed. Males
5 Females 8 ' '
. 9. Kirby, R 1. East Lansing, Mich.

 

SILVEROREST KENNELS OFFER FOR SALE
a choice little of Reg. Scotch Collie Puppies,

Stable and white.
W. 8.IHUBER. Gledwin. Mich.

. 8%—_if your money is
» bringing less write

the. publisher for full partic-W

“iii-g

   
    
 
  

ulars regarding the S‘per
cent preferredstock in The
Rural Publishing Company,

 
  

ﬁg: iiimmiulmml

 

Armor. ‘5

   

You eon invest as

60 m Mil “mum Em “a“ m 1, V'first—hand knowledge of

25 ewe; All ages for Isle P f

Which pays 4 per cent twice-v

Ijhisve the Opportunity to vial
countries and discbver the answers
. to those questions by perconal in-
vestigation. When I was elected
delegate to the International Rotary
conv‘ention it was decided that the

1b-opportunlty thus afforded to- secure

7 for the benefit of M. B. F readers
European
co-opera'tion should be taken ,
vantage of despite the unbertaiuty
of the times. -

And so 1 went. During my’ trav-
els I visted such towns and rural
sections as my limited time would
permit in the countries of Scotland,

v

and England. During ‘my seven
weeks’ absence I travelled a total
of nearly ten thousand miles. Three
of these Weeks were spent upon the
water; a fourth in Edinburgh, and
the other three in traveling by rail
or automobile to the principal points
of interest where I might secure the
best information for M. B. F. read-
ers. Everywhere I went I met with
uniform courtesy and hospitality,
which was particularly marked in
Norway and Denmark.

As stated before I saw no rain
from the time I left Michigan un-
til I was on my way home again.
A hundred miles or so off the Grand
Banks of Newfoundland we passed
through a rain storm and three
nights later, we docked at Quebec
during a terrific thunderstorm. All
but perhaps 'a week of my entire
trip it was quite too cold far com-
fort without an overcoat or other
heavy wrap. This is nearly always
true on 'the ocean whether there are
storms or not as the passage of the
boat through the water at a high
rate of speed sets' up air currents
which ﬁnd their way into ‘ every
nook and crevice of the boat if
doors and port holes arei left open
But during all of my stay in Scot-
land and Norway and most or my
stay in Denmark and Germany, I
found it necessary to wear an over-
coat out of doors. , Remember,
please, that this was during a time
when the United States were swelt-
ering in heat. In England the peo-
ple were complaining a good deal

ature was rarely above 80 degrees
Fahrenheit. As for myself I found
the English climate at that particu»
lar time quite to my liking
comfort.

It is a prevailing opinion in this.
country among people who
never visited Europe that the peo-
ple over there are radicaly differ-
ent in their appearance, beliefs,
habits, aspirations, etc. But it is
not so. Language, ‘as, some great
philosopher has said, and as I have
discovered by experience, ., is the
only great barrier between nations.
In most'of the countries I visited
the people look, dress and act much
like Americans. Certain classes of
the people enjOy virtually the same
comforts and conveniences as, we
do. Thevareconfronted by much
the same problems, domestic, .fin.
ancial, social, political. They‘ have
the same hopes; they meet with the
same failures. So far as I could
see they have the same love for
their childrenrtheir business ethics
are quite as high as ours; and in'
molly cases they shave-Ra far more
settled and h‘armoniouSdhome life
than ’the‘hverage American. . .
V ‘ My time in each country was so
short, unfertun‘ately, that I did not
.have an oppOrtunity to secure an
exhaustive knowledge of the meth-
ods of farming empldyed, but I
pjud'ged that in many of those coun-
tries agriculture was quite as ad-

 

 

 

 

a'd- ’

.Norway, Denmark, Germany, France ‘

' the country to sell stock. If th

over the heat although the temper-1

and . f

have,

" this prologue is reactedﬁn this «no

drama, and We hope, more.

pectsf to take up a new busiiiiess,

   

   
     
       
 
         
   

 
 

 
  
 

 
 

icles tiresome,‘
say so, and HEY .

 
 

 
 
      
 
         
        
 
   
   
    
 

 

  
          
      
    
  

. EHALL It-INVESTf’,

What is known of the A '
Music Company? I was asked to
some sto'ck in the abova companf',
Weeks-ago, by a. salesman whom ;
company paid 1 per cent dividend ' ‘
month I cannot understand Why
should be any need for them to

  
 

          
    
 
   
   
  
 
 
  
     
    
  
 
 
    
   
  
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
    
   
   
  
 
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
 
  
    
    
   
   
 
 
 
  
 
  
    
  
  
   
   
  
    
     
  
 
 
    
   
  
  
 
   
      
  
   
   
  
  
   
  
 
  
  
   
   
  
  
 
 
   

pany is paying as high an interest~~ as
that, they would find all the buyers
need in their home city. It is n
to say that I did not buy—LA. H...-= ragi-
tiot County, Michigan. ‘- .

We have never heard of the Ann;
tomatic Music Company, , but yc'
have heard the same story their
glib stock salesmen was telling our
friend up at Elm Hall so madly;
times that we already feel Well it}-
quainted. “One per cent a m6nth”..-
sounds so much better than fight

 

game is being worked once
,even here in Michigan, f‘the :
the motor—wise!” When they stort
talking about big dividends it
pretty good time to get the

open and see that nothing you
much about is on the poi-clip
when you shove, you won’t do
anything valuable.

STAY ON THE F ' -
I am writing wanting to know it m,
know of any smal mall hnsi nose ' -
could trade a. .good form for. ‘ we ha
a. farm Which We hold at $5,000
would like to get in some -s’ms.ll,- .
paying business in some ggod places.
am losing my eyesight, also have other
afflictions which causes me to quit
farming. If you know of any pboo.
would you be kind enough to write liar-w
S. 0.. Iosco County, Michigan. -
There are probably hundreds or
men who would be guilty of trs‘ .
our friend a Questionable ,-
nose for the good, sound was
of fertile -Michigan~- laind‘ And .,
homo and equipment which ’hn
values at ﬁve thOusand dollsrs;-
eryday the drama which begins witIr

 

9

  

every other farming state. A
for a “paying”-husmess- in tow
handful of precious pearls
mess of porridge! ‘

who has accumulated at V
farm, buildipgs and equipment-f ,
He l
ing, (:40 he says!) and yet it sit
make money out of it! '
have no doubt but what i _ .
ter had fallen into Some hand "35$
Would already have effected thf”

Friend and 11913th
by the old farm And it '-
yOu. You cannot go 1111
out A place to lay you

is

famed as in“ ours and thst scien- 7.;

  
     


11d teller my directions,
m~’nbout to give, an' you

the millionaire class 111-.

_ didn't existr—she ain't good
enough for you now that you ’ve got
1111011 an! you'll need somebody

sit by doin’ like Jake Hamon,
‘0! cannons: 941' like hundreds of
:millionaires are doin’ every

" t {a "‘vainp"-.—of course we"

at a “vamp” ls—If you

_ " ' “temp” is a. female bird of the
, W species that lives an’ gits
g clothes an ﬁne jeWels an’ such

, gn men that accumulated lots of
one: an’ 'cause of a soft spot in
eitheads or loose wheels in the
do of their craniums—the thing
know that is supposed to hold

1:11 r'brains which they ain't got.
,WelL when such men gits a million
aqua... or so, they think they got to
discard the faithful wife an’ so
I , 1191' has easy pickin’s. ' They
:1 right in an’ make sev ’ral kinds
”DI: 0151s out of such men an’ come
”two? it“ as movie actresses or with
ugh money an’ the likes, -

' , don't have to do anything for
test of their lives. 01 course
«git some danger c nected with

. 3pm!) business, 'cause some times
in .u dcr- to gain a little more notori-
an! git a bigger salary as a movie

r ‘3 evens" takes it into her head
"ghoul: the poor ﬁsh that has been
11'. her 111 lux’ ry en’- of course

I Iroperly d-:one he ain’t much
cod: afterwards, ’cause he's most
' rely numbered with the dead.

’ But don't let this discourage you.

In the lenst—the shootin’ don’t us-
nail! take place ’til your mcIney is
’bou‘t all gone an not ’tll you've ab-
bed so mu booze. that, as a
on ain' m‘uch accountany

. 11, after you’ ve got the million
, ' got the “vamp," you got to have
“place to keep her. A ﬁrst class
nothin’ cheap. will do
W- ’causle they’ re sellin’ them-
”selves for cash or its equlv' lent an'
they most gen 'rally come middlin’

h

remit reason for the high class
tments is that your own home

. geod enough for a vamp,—-I—-it' s
ht for the wife you 've sworn

get to keep ,the Withe is a neces-
i ausé she gives you a sort of an

havin’ your affinity-revamps ‘ .
become affinities after they :.
' ‘vuas ﬁshin in a 11d (1 h

'by t e noes or any other 3 p0 one M w en a

choose, 1111’ good true,

in , 4the1r

-.~ wife;
Janey” is the main squee'z I

'mi'llionaire class,

, an” then set right

803_

for ‘

" asked

or you, or ever will, of course there--

are some minor details to be looked
after in: connection with bein a
full-fledged millionaire of the vamp
infested serif—you’ve got to lose all
your selL respect—self respect an’
vamps don‘t mix no more than 011
an Water 0r politics an" religion.
Lpse your. self respect, discard your
children an' self respectin’
friends, keep well boozed up most of
the time, spend money freely on
your affinity, disgrace yourself an'
your home—do all the damnable
things you can think of an’ at the
end of ﬁve years, if you aint been
shot an' have sense enough left to
think, stop an’ ask yourself if bein’
a millionaire of the 1921 type pays?
Just ask yourself if a million dol-

late or a hundred __m11li'on dollars or

any other sum, counted in millions,
can buy .one day of real- happiness?
Money does not mean happiness an’
a million dollars to the majority of
men, is a million dollars too much.
I am not sayin’ that all million-
alres are bad—I know quite a few
who ,are good citizens—law abidin',

. s'elf'respectin' an’ desirable men to

have in any community, but I am
sayin’that more often money, or
wealth, in large amounts, is a curse
tothe owner, to his family an’ to the
country at large. An’ this is more
especially true where wealth has
come“ suddenly or'a fortune been ac—

,cum'ulated in a short time.

To prove this just scan the daily
papers, read of the divorce cases
brought by men an’ women of the
read the charges
put forth in the majority of cases
down an' ask
yourselfif you really want to be a
millionaire an’ take a_chance on
what goes with a million dollars.

At the present time there is small
chance of farmers ever . becomin’

‘ millionaires an’ while I would like

to- see them makin’ more money
than they are makin' now—makin’
money ’stead of workin’ at a loss,
still an' all, I am not sure but they

would be less happy if things should '

change an’ money should come to
them so freely they would be tempt—
ed to cut"too v'vide a Swath an’ go
out after vamps an’ such themselves.

A happy home an’ a contented
spirit is more to be sought than
great wealth. an'.m011'ey enough to

bring the comforts of life is all we

can useexcept as we save a little
ag’in the time when age shall tell us

*tot’ake' thingsreasy for the rest of

our days. An' so I ask in all sin-
cerity—who wants to be a million-
aire? Cordially yours—UNCLE

 

SENSE AND
NONSﬁgSFA'

Can't Blame the Farmer

Mrs" Smith—Really. Mr. Giles,
prices are getting exhorbitant.

Farmer~ Giles—Well, mum, it's this,
way: Whenqa chap ’as to know the bot—
anical names of what 'e grows an’ the
zoological name of the hinsect wot eats

your

it. an' the ch mical name of." wot kills.

the hlnsect someone’s got to pay for it.

' -—London Passing Show. .

Fishing
A returned vacationist tells us that he

country boy who had been watching him
from a distance approached him and

yer ain’t doin' so bad,” said
“I know a teller what
as ed here for two weeks an’ he didn't

“Well,

"get teary more than you got in half an

jrBoston Transcript. ,
Fir—m“

,sins'. said at s din-
too high. The only
cred J3 '

This '

‘ seh ds,
than half cash,- easy

'. “How many ﬁsh yer got, mister?"
1.. 1"None yet.” he was told. ~
. OIWn'U 1
led. .110 the apartmentsfl ”1 ‘YOWSStel‘

' acres plowed, fair

lall under cultivati l

to protest [8

 

 

 

 

 

 

manna IIllslls '

and Brown and 1 AW .
0.13101“: number “11110114613 week! 3

Barred Rock 15111123“

Ooookorolh—erlt: Boga, White window}

Racing. 2. and 11.10. Brown and“! Id
nconas; pair we
no Geese. Write for deters-.3}:-
STATE FARMS ASSOCIATION

Desk 2. Kalamazoo. Mlchluan

MUD WAY-AUSH-KA FARM
oifers young stock and a few mature breeders ll
IWhiIte ChineseIIMGeese 'AI‘Vh-ift: Bung" Ducks a
“' few an 1. spring 8““
Write today for prices on what you need. .
DI IKE G. MILLER. Dryden. Mich.

ORPINGTONS AND LEGHORNS

 

Two great breeds for proﬁt. Write today for.
hints and

free catalogue of hatching eggs. baby 0

breeding stock.

cch: HATOHEIEIOIOMIPANV, 1“ Phil. Illa.
m ra.

QUALITW CHICKS, BLACK MINOROA, LIGHT
188(13h11u,ch25c each. Barred Rock. B. 1 Rd
TVRONEC hPOULTRV FARM. Fenton, Mich.

:3

RHODE ISLAND REDS ‘

HITTAKER'S R. . REDS.
greatest Color an Ex!
sold. r150 seed cockk
gain 1) ces or ouic sale. Cats! 2 Free.
INTERLAKES FARM. Box 4. 0

ORPINGTONS

“RPIIGTONS COOKERELI AND PULLETO
for sale. BUR, Whi
Black Cockarels at $7, $8, and 810. Pulletl
$3 and 55.1.1110 yearling hens 83 .1nd $4.
Hatching eggs, $6 per setting of 15.

RAB OWSKE BROS. R 4. Merrill. Mich.

LANGSHAN

DR. SIMPSQN'S LANGBHANS OF QUALITY
Bred for type and color since 1912. Winter
hying strain of both Black and White. Have
some cockerels for sale. Eggs in season.
R OHAS. W. SIMP80N
Wobbcrvllle. Mich.

 

 

 

Mich.

#2

Lawrence.

 

 

 

 

 

 

memes“;

Strain.
birds. either Comb. at bar'-

 

W IAN DO'I'JIE

s‘lILv'En L%CEosgI%3bEu AND WHITE wv-l
' dottas. mu r 15, 4.50 so.
0. w. IRowume. 392 2. {Dosh-nu. f$1.111. , \

WHITE WYAIIBDTTES

A few good breeders for
ﬁle. No more tiara.” chicks this year. Order .
cooker-ell Pric-

 

 

now for arty fall delivery.

co. * w. neurones!
Big Rapids, Mich.

 

 

LEGHORNS

I

ﬁnbolnke’s a. O. White Leghorns, Oockerelq
cocks and yearling born for sale.

LEO GRAIOWSKE. R 4. Merrill.

 

Mloh.

 

 

WehsvosﬂnolotofEnglishand
inn Leghorn Cookers]: for sale at ran-lol- .
able prices. Let us know your wants. we
ship on approval and guarantee Batista faction.

LORING & MARTIN C0.

East eauoatuck. Mich.

 

 

 

INGLE COMB RUFF LEGHORN COOKER-
els, April and May batched. Heavy layinl
Mlch. ‘

J. W. WEBSTER, Bath,

HATCHING EGGS

ANOONA COOKERELS, 4 MONTHS OLD. ‘a
2 for $3: 8 weeks. $1.00
EU I Mich.

TR VON, Jero‘me.

 

. 0. BR. LEO-HORN EGGS, $1. 50 FOR 15.
Pekin duck $1. 50 for 8. W. Chinese goose
eggs 40¢ each. Mrs. Claudia Betta, Hillednl e, ch.

 

B. I. RED HATOHING EGGS. THOMPKIN’I
strain, 3.110 per 100; baby chicks. 25¢ each.
Wm. H. FRO HM. New Baltimore. Mlch

 

for less than 3 tlmen.
m‘ent. Oash should accompany all orders.
urea. both lnbody of ad. and in address.

dated following week.

 

 

PRODUCTIVE 190-AORE FARM WITH
horse, crops, 10 cows and calves, machinery.
tools, vehicles. harnesses. etc, everything wait,
ing yield big returns near R ‘R town, advan—
tages ; dark loamy ﬁelds; Watered pas-
ture 20 head; 500 cards 50, 000 feet
timber; 50 apple trees; lpears, cherries;
2—story house w1th runnn spring mwater, de—
lightful view; fine 15- ~cow arn ge, tenant
house; owner retiring $3, 500 takesm ever thing,

3 terms. Details page 17 Illns. atalog
1100 Bar g.a_ins FREE. STROUT RM
AGENCY, g814 B E Ford Bldg, Detroit, Mich.

174 ACRES WITH NEW BUILDINGS,
horses mtg, mdairy cows. crops,
sow, too , idles, .m ach nery equipment,
included if you act quickly; in famous
and general farming section, mil
high school town, advantages, .easy drive
Syracuse 185 acres rich amy tillage, 22
acres alfalfa; 35- -cow spring watered, wire
fenced pasture. woodiand, apples, plums, sugar
maples, fine 2 sytor 8 room house overlooking
sparkling ].ake, delightful maple shad e , 6-cow
concrete basement A-l con ndition, silo.
To settle sﬂairs all 312, 0000, less
rms. Substantial in-
come and increasing independencee await you
Don’t delay. Catalog
WOLCO'I‘T, 201 Merchants Bank eBldl.
cuss, New Yor .

FARM FOR SALE—830
soil, cod house and bam, 160 acres clear.
Will sell for $3 35 per acre. For particulars
write to . E. BRUDER. Ocqueoc, Presque Isle
County, Mich.

FOR SALE—FINE
Well fenced with good
‘rLAWlll, Ocqueoc P. 0., Mick.
County.

DANDY 60 .AORE FARM
County. Timber fruit, everythin
health, must se.l Wri te
HOWARD, Petersburg, Mich.

barn.

Syn:

ACRES, GOOD

160 ACRE "
buildings.

FARM.
FRANK

m MONROE
At? Failing
ENCE

FOR SALE—160 ACRES. SUGAR BEET
land. Will exchange for city property. Pan.
ticu'lars upon request. MORLEY WIEDER-
HOLD, Turner. Mich.

FOR SALE—~80 none FARM. eo aches
improved; with or without personal. Write or
come quickly. I". S. BO,YD Ellsworth Mich,

125 ACRE FARM, 85 ACRES CLEARED.
well fenced, house and barns, fine orchard, 1-2
mile can cstonc aroad. pawnul 1asell a“ may terms.

write owners.
SCHAIBERGERn BROS” lﬁAuh1 Gres, Mich.

‘FOR SALE on RENT—40 noses. ‘5
buildings. Good gang:
c

Easy terms. JOHN LODER. St. Charles,

FOR SALE—8Q OAORE FARM, NO. 1 SOIL.
2 room house with
Good or-

basement.1 All outside buildings.
town.

21611b to railroadti station, 5_ to

:Prlcc 892 For pa il'sclila mic to B.

CIHULTIZ. oPlnconning, Michigan.

POR 8ALE:-—-‘0 ACRE FARM IN MIOHI-
n. One of the ﬁnest farms in Clover
d m, 710 cows. 50

a

$111" orincad” to
2647 ii Halstapd 31.. cum».

.7

‘ nan- our use as"
.W) b81331” cm 07.20'

50 A WORD PER ISSUE—ﬁ Insertions for 100 per word.

Twenty words I: the mlnlmum accepted for any ad.
Count as one word each lnltlal and each group of ﬂu-
copy must be In our hands before Saturday for
The Iuslness Farmer Adv.

200d .

Presque Isle -

 

, 90.0
are

BUSINESS FARMERS’ EXCHANGE

Farm for sale .ads. not accepted
In this depart-

Issue

[3ch, Mt. Clemens. Mich.

FOR SALE—NICE HOME ON MARSHALL
St... Goldwater, Mich. Good house, furnace,
gas, plenty water, good barn, extra good hen
house; mom for 500 hens. Excellent place for
chlcken farm. 1 2 acres, very productive land.
Small fruit, young orchard, grove of maple
trees around buildings. rice for quick sale.
Address owner, E. HIMLBAUGH. Goldwater,
Michigan.

FOR SALE—A FIRST CLASS FARM. 8
Good buildings, all newly
panitcd. so..hool 122 acres for
$18.50!). HEMPY. R. 7. Dancing,
Michigan.

 

FOR SALE—120 AOSREn e.F'ARM 5 MILES
south of Williamston roads, tiled and
1k ebuildinii'nd
any
payment. CHARLES HODGEo f6: SON,
ville. Michigan, R 2.

FOR cSALE—120 ACRES WITH CROPS,
machinery, stoc,10—room house 40x60,
mien}? bﬁm. 1 Write C. COLTON, Luther, Mich"

Eh ISCELLANEOU§§E
' MACHINEH]. ‘

MACHINERY. PORTABLI
mills for farmers' use. Make your own lumber.
Bend for new catalog. HILL—CURTIS 00.. 1501
No. Pitcher Sf... Kalamazoo, Mich.

 

 

SAW MILL

CORN HARVESTER OUTS AND FILES ON
harvester or winrows. Man and horse cuts and
shocks equal Corn Binder. Sold in every state.
Only $28 with fodder tieing attachment. Testi-
monials and mtalog FREE showing picture 0!
harvester PROCESS HARVESTER 00.. Sa-

lim, Kansas.

SEEDS

VETGH SEED—BY GROWER. $7.00 PER
ushel. Bags free. A. A. LAMBL‘li’l‘SUA,
Sand Lake, Michigan.

FENCE POSTS

suv FENCE POSTS emscv FROM Fon-
est. All .kinds. Delivered prices. .Address "M. >
M,” care Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clcm- .

 

ions Mich.

a

GENERAL

OLD KENTUCKY ISMOKING TOBAOCO-w
:esgrx old leaf, :1 ed in buld nature cured, 1 ,
lbs. 2.00 postpai. S. ROSENBLATT. Humane ..'

 

 

TRUNKS, BAGS. SUITCASES. WHY PAY».
two middlemen proﬂizl Buy from factory «i
root. Send for free catalog GEM TB UNI .
3A9 FACTOBI; Spring Valley. 111.

IGHTHIM ROOS EXCLUSIVE AOFIw$
quick “1.3% vs lers selling

“‘th WdhforAcu
Hum .Marsbllc mka'im

run mEnua-n “FROM"
‘ Box 808.

 

 

 


TRADE AM) m REVIEW

«DURING as past Webk {he

“slap-stick” crowd of

ulsters have been doing their
level host to produce a dark-blue at~
mosphere in the business World in
order to cut the foundation from
. under the legitimte investor in
stocks, grains and provisions. These
ghouls, in human form, have made
much out of the report, sent out re-
cently from the office of U. S. L. -
bor Secretary, Davis, estimating the
.numbeu- of the unemployed, in Am-
erica, at 5,750,000.13113 gang of
news mongers, that hash up the
dope for the Big 5 and the leading
min manipulators, made it their
business to ascribe every little fluc-
bastion in stocks or grain to the
discouraging business outlook, when
really, that outlook was not dis-
couraging but, according to the best
authorities, was improving every
day. It is the unscrupulous work of
men, who are Willing to ruin the
country to make a dollar for them-
selves, that is holding: back pros-
perity and ln'ing'ing about a feeling
of uncertainty that makes for busi-
ness stagnation when exactly the
opposite condition should prevail.
If the United Statcs government (le-
sires to do something worth while,
to stabilize business conditions, it
could not do better than to suppress
the professional crepe. hanger who

operates on the New York Stock Ex-L

change and the Chicago Board of
Trade.
An inmasing activity in the
wholesale buying of staple lines of
manufactured goods. that are suit.-
able for the fall and winter retail
trade, is noted on every hand. The
articles incudcd in the list for which
there is a more active demand than
at any preceding time since this
date, last fall, are cotton and wool-
en cloth, Nady-made clothing, silk
goods, shoes, boots and othcr‘ foot
wear, canned goods of all kinds, pig
iron and set up iron, raw wool, com-
mon black iron and structural steel.
The feeling in connection with all
of these various lines, is not only
much more optimistic and hopeful
than it was at this time last month
but recent sales have been made in
larger quantities and at hisrlwr pric-
es than on any preceding: (late dur-
ing the current year. Snlcsincn are
beginning: to feel more confidence in
the strength of their position, being
convinced that stocks on the Shelves
of the retail trade arc smaller than
on any preceding (late in twenty
. years. The general downward slant
'of the commodity list sccms to be
checked for the present although
slight decreases, in some lines, have
been notml ,during the past week;
these have been adequately oﬂ'set
by slight gains in other lines, prov-
ing that the process of readjustment
has about run its course.

The foreign exchange market con-
tinues to harden, showing that the
periodical crisis which, during the
past year, has been of regular re-
currence, has about run its conrse.
The inter- allied ﬁnance congress
will undertake the job of perma-
nently stabilizing exchange values
but it looks like. a big undertaking.
The New York stock market rhas
passed thr ugh another neutral and
colorless week, the bulk of the bus-
iness transacted being of a strictly
professional nature, with the bear

-.clique, for the most part, getting the

best of the bargain. Call money
"has ranged from 3 1-2 to e per
“cent and long and short time bor-
rowan have found it somewhat eas-
ter- to get mono-31.1111: weekly bank
clearings were $5,809 {905,000.

1171125111

111 the farmer. Up to

7 arcing We? in: ,.
his ass mwm.._ 1m : to

ten _ ,
this marketseve every- lnw 7’ ;

Edited by E H

 

 

GENERAL MARKET SUMMARY

 

 

less demoralized.

DETROIT—Potatoes, beans and grains ﬁrm. Hogs and cat-
the weak and pricw again loWer. '

CHICAGO—Potatoes and beans ﬁrm and higher. Grains are
stronger after last week’ 3 decline.

Live stock market more or -

1.

 

(lots: The
he: page ls set in two.
IOIM to brass-41“

 

above summarized Information was received nFTER the balance of the mar-
It contain: last minute information up to with":

one-half hour of

 

 

 

 

upon the market. and there is lit-
tle in the situation which gives
promise of improvement in the im-
mediate future. Last week’s de-
clines in the wheat market, were
partially recovered at the opening
of the current week. Farmers per—

 

WHEAT PRID’ES PER 31)., AUG. 24. 1921
Ends [Detroit [Chicagol N. V.

be preferred to wheat as a bread-
stuff because of its lower cost. In-
vestigation at corn fields 111 the

 

CORN PRICES PER .11., AUG. 24, 182i

 

" the grain. *

. 7‘ v 3m “‘1. ‘1‘“
Rye is down to $1 per bushel

- Detroit where there has been

paratively little demand of late ‘ ,
Such demand as M
shown itself has been quickly sati, -‘
ﬂed “‘11 With 9. 15111151157 on the
part of the tanner-s to part wt
their rye at prevailing prices, little»
hope is held forth 101- an humanism“ ‘
improvement. However, we mint
repeat that the crop being ”short;
andﬂurope being in need of breath
stuffs, rye must surely come into
its own as the season advances.

BEANS

.

 

am. mama ,chmgol I. V.
No. 8 Yellow ... .59 .54 .77 '
No. 2 Vellaw . 3.1 .58 .
No. 4 Yellow .. . 56

PRIQES DIE VEA‘R m

“9.2 YdtJ “08 Yoan No.4 You.

 

 

 

 

 

 

lo. 2 led 1.21. 1.10 1.29%
No. 2 Wm. 1.11
No. 2 Mixed 1.10 1.30
muses on: YEAR 1150
no.2 M I02 wane] m2 mm
2.52 1 2.50 I 2.5%?“

 

 

 

 

Detroit |

sist in their marketing at prices
which in some cases are below the
dollar mark, and even though the
financial situation in general were
such as to encourage higher prices

it Would be difﬁcult to put them up .

in the face of such heavy receipts
It appears as though the farmers,
having been caught once, have made
up their minds not to get caught
again but in marketing their wheat
now in such huge quantities they
are but springing the trap which
will enmesh them in still lower
prices“. The world situation has not
changed since our last report:
Threshing returns Continue to show
large quantities of shrunken grain
and the drought in Europe has vir-
tually ruined the crops of many
countries. Germany and Russia
which have never before been buy-
ers of American wheat are in the
market along with our big custom-
ers, the United Kingdom 'and
France, Basing our opinion on the
present outlook, we can see no hope
for an early advance of any conse-
quence in wheat, although we can-
not possibly see how prices can sink
much lower in the face of positive
information that every bushel of
our crop will be needed.

CORN

Corn is holding up fairly well.

considering the improvement in the
condition and the promise of an-
other huge crop. or course, this
grain is going to be needed in many
European countries where the
drought wiped out the
grains, and in some instances, will

feeding

 

Detroit ..J 1.61 J .J

 

 

 

central corn belt are reported to

have shown much undeveloped
grain. How Widespread the damage
has been is not known but it is cer-
tain that no one is worrying now
over the future of the crop. Here
in Michigan late August rains came
in time to insure one of the finest
corn crops in the history of the
state.

oars

 

(new) au.. AUG. 24. 1921
Grade lDetron [Chicago] N. V.
White ...; .31 35% any:
wan. 34']: .81
White .32
Primes 0mg wean neo
JNO.2 wmm No.8 White! No.4 White
.98 J .971 I .98
Cats have been showing inde-
pendent strength of late, and some
markets report an advance of a
cent or two a bushel. The reader
will recall that the Business Farm-
er has been especially bullish on
oats, basing our opinion entirely

'OAT PRICES

 

No.2
It»:

7‘.

 

 

Detroit I

 

 

: upon the shortness of the new crop

which is nearly a half billion bush-
els less than the 1920 crop. While
we did not expect this market to
revive so soon because of the weak-
ness of other grains,
speaks eloquently of the potential
strength in this market and gives
promise of much better prices later
on. We would by all means advise
readers who must buy cats to make
their purchases now, as we do not
expect to see them return to their
former low. Again, we caution,
however, not to" expect any radical
price gains in this market. The
general financial situation will not
permit of it, but the reader may
safely look forward to a steady up-

 

 

F-slu’c What-ﬂan (can. 1921

M ”ﬂight

WASHINGTON, D. 0., Aug. 25th,
1921.. ——Durl.ug early part of the week
centering on Sept. 1 a high temper-
ature wave will {cover Alaska, all the
northern Paciﬁc slope, northern
Rockies and northern plains sections,
including British Columbia Alberta.
Saskatchewan and Manitoba. carry-
ing with it the warmest weather of

»-September. ~ Following it will come
one of the "two most severe stems of
the month with more than the average
rainfall. The other severe storms of
the" menifh will hover around Sept.
‘13.- That first stem at September
. will pass eastward in about four

m

 

 

1 and {reaching Atlantic states about
. ' tit expect frosts near Supti

ﬁlm of Rockies in Canada. and they
31.13% mm W and

1!
THE WEATHER FOR NEXT WEEK 7
”As Forecasted by W. '1‘. Foster for The Michigan Business Farmer

». east of Rockies.

days,- crossing meridian 9:0 near Sept .

A week of severe storms and at
least an average rainfall will begin
near Sept. 8 and continue to at least
include 15. These conditions promise
good cropweather to large parts of
this continent and will be hwreble
to at least two—thirds of the best
Winter grain sections of America and
Canadai’ No great change of rain 10-
cations Is expected. but a minor
change will take effect not far from
September 2 that will be most favor-
able to the Paciﬁc slope and will in-
crease the rainfall to a less extent

Dangerous storms are expected'
during the week centering on Sept
13 and not far from Aug 31. It will
be well to be on the lookout for bad
storms during the first half of Sep»
tember and 1ifelan your outdoors work ’
for last half of the month Canada
probably WT!l get killing frosts dur-
ing the week centering on Sept.17
and our northern states during the
Week centering on, Sept. 22. Severe
storms and bad weather are £136 in-
dicated for weeks centering on Oct,
85.111124." Nev. 118111128. 33911.29

 

 

the advance

BEA“ "(GI-:8 PER W11. AUG. 24.182!

letn'ﬂi Jemima! II 1;. -
1111515.? '

 

 

 

emcee on: Venn AGO . '
_ K}. H. B. l ,.
. Bern-Mt .................... _. .I 5.25

 

 

 

Having been a firm believer in
eventually higher bean prices we
would like to hail the recent
strength .in this market- as 3011118
and permanent but we are frankly
afraid to do so. Beans are up to
$4. 75 per cwt. on the Detroit mar-
ket, an advance of ten cents over
last week. This market would look
more encouraging if other primary
markets would follow suit, but they
don't. ’ The Chicago market has re-
corded Some advances the past 1'3"
weeks but nothing in keeping with-
the Detroit market.

Ordinarily the Clhicago’ market--
will show a margin over the Dev

troit market of from 25 to 50 cenm \' 7.: ‘

per cwt., but as we go to press the
two markets are exactly on a par.
New York paces ordinarily are 1m.
75 cents to $1 over the Detroit
market but today the spread is only7‘
about 50 cents. This looks as if the '
Detroit market were in the hands
of the manipulators and might do
almost anything the next few weeks.-
So watch it closely! Keep in tench
with this market through your co:
operative elevator. If you musttsell
this fall.you will want to guess as
nearly as possible to the high peak-
When you make the deal. Reports
from New York and California ver-
ify previous estimates of the candl-
tion of beans. Both states show
the crop in rather ‘poor condition.
particularly New York. The pres:
ent estimate of the total U. S. yield
is over the eight and a half million
mark, but WE would not be surpris-
ed if actual threshing should reduce
this to below eight million bushels;

POTATOES

After substantial gains the 1m
half of last week the potato market
eased up a bit only to strengthen
again at higher prices. The Bureau"
of Markets looks amen 1115,er
strength as discounting the promise-
01' a short yield 0‘! the fall crop. We
see nothing discouraging in the po-
tato deal. Final estimates are like-
ly to bring the crop below the 868
million bushel mark, and it the!
do nothing can prevent potatoes go-
ing much higher by spring. 1 In
some of the potato sections wh '
harvesting is already- nn-der w,
prices are being altered mum
from $2. 50 to $3 per cwt. We»,
should not expect that the tall deal
will open that 11121.11; will do v“
if it 11pr around a dollar, but it?
enough farmers refuse to unload
their "entire crop at that range‘ ’
prices, the dealers will soon; ‘
to come higher. '-Detro‘it job
nprlees on potatoes are .

36 per 15041)“ has £11 *
oyer theme 6113 week. .

 


 

“ . ’ ”lutely no takers.

 

 

iglgbbserﬂllx. A
.8: 2 “saga;
801.3 .3: 8.0061 1!.

" 4i" unless A rsAn aeo
- ino.1-rlm.lmnom“‘”“

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

mg no "skeet upon the market. The

‘ ‘ majority of the receipts at

«automate is of very poor quality and
fills small amount of high quality

ﬂuff is in good deniand. The Aug
1st estimate forecasts a crop of 97
will]! tons, which is 11 nﬂliion
has than last year and 5 million
{lass than the five year average. This
i in!!! one of the reasons why hay
values should rule steady to higher.

'i CAME-VALUE DECLINE _
-, Many untoward conditions are
‘5 working againstprice levels in the
{ﬁve stock markets of the country:
.‘ a: connection with the commoner
. grades of sheep and cattle there is
very little encouragement to offer
‘ the shipper and feeder. Excessive
: receipts of common cattle and a re-
T. stricted demand for dressed beef in
- seaboard markets have at last re-
~ united in causing an accumulation
;' that hangs like a pail over the mar-
': hot and makes it impossible for
shippers oi dressed beef, from west-
‘ on points, to find a place to uu~
had. Chicago packers are loaded
“to, the muzzle with common and me-
din'm quality carcasses which they
are oﬂertng, locally and in the east,
it values far below cost and with eb-
The Chicago
Live Stock Exchange is sending out
_ unappeal to cattle shippers to cut
down ‘consignments until the glut
' 0!. common stud can be moved and
ﬁle situation clarified. ~
Cattle receipts for last week show-

f3 :. ed a gain over those for the week

fbetore, of 3, 700, a triﬂing increase
tor a‘ strong market, but a stunner
when a- universal ovempply is re-
ported from every point on the map.
Early last week, a goodly number of
long-fed steers came to hand and

sold -i.'or the high point of the sea?

son: toward the end of the week,
the demand, even for the best,
weakened and the close was dull and
lifeless. Eastern dressed beef mar—
tots were dull and weak and, tow—
1rd the close of the :,week showed
declines of from $1 to $3 per cwt.
High- grade yearlings sold well, all
ﬁle week, with a high top of $10. 86.
5pm! Monday and Wednesday;
Tell gra of yearling cattle, below
the best, were dull and sharply low-
Ir, in Chicago, last week, butchers
stock and common she stuff leading
in the decline while cows, selling
V above $7 per cwt., showed very lit-
‘ﬂe change in price.
{coders started off, last week, on de-
cidedly higher levels but only 25
.mts per cwt. was left of the gain
‘ when the week was over.

‘ Sheep and Lamb Trade

“’In spite of the fact that Chicago
» got 6,600 more sheep and lambs
Gian during the week before, values
were well sustained and the close
was tally steady with that of the

J wok hetero for everything, except

:beding‘lambs which were 25 to 35

dents pea: cwt., higher. Breeding

were in more active demand
m on any preceding date, this
«the call coming mainly from

' ,w'Mason Dixon's line.

“ “ The Hog Market '

Li whegs had allied time oi it,
won the average for the en-
pariod being only $8. 70. From

amt of prices paid, hogs
owe .
. organ highs: than

. below the live—year average.

Stockers and ‘

than the recent high ,

‘ _.»~were out probably be.

:cents‘ per pound, leafg‘,
4 cents . and pickled.

' ‘ at
. hero's; at 27 cents per pound a turth-

enhreak in live hogs does not look

1;; probable, The weakest element in
"the hog market situation and out-

look is the tremendous glut of
cheap beef which is developing. The
speculative provision market is re-
ﬂeeting the desire of weak holders
to even up with the September op-
tion which is rapidly approaching
maturity. ~

‘ W118 MARKET
NOTES

The butter market after ruling
fairly steady the last of July and
lore part of August, has become
rather unsettled the past two
weeks. ProductiOn has dropped on.
some due to poor pasturage, and as
a consequence we have been obliged
to dip into reserve stocks. Butter
in storage on Aug. lot was 19 mil-
lion pounds less than on the same
date last year. and 13 milieu pouﬁs

e
Detroit market quotes creamery
butter this week at 38 cents per
pound.

Eggs are holding their own, the
market having been ﬁrm and steady
for a number of weeks. Egg ex-
ports are holding up well in compar-
ison with last year’s, but the im-
portation has increased tremendous-
ly, the imports for the ﬁrst six'
months of this year exceeding those
for the same period last year by
185 per cent. Judging from stor-
age reports most of these imported
eggs are going into warehouses to
supply the winter trade, as storage
supplies are nearly three quarter
of a million cases larger than last
year at‘ this time. This fact does
not augur well for. fanCy egg prices
the coming winter. Detroit jobbers
are offering 30 cents per dozen for
strictly fresh eggs.

Demand for plums is good and
growers have been getting as high
as $2.75 per bushel for the best va-
rieties. , .

The honey crop wil be far below
that of last year‘s, according to
present estimates. Michigan is one
or the leading states in honey pro-
duction. Comb honey has been
selling recently on the Chicago
market at better than $6.60 per
24-section case.

The poultry market is looking up
a little as the result of cool weath-
er and prices on the Detroit market
are slightly higher than a week ago.
as follows: Spring chickens, 28@
30c:"“‘Legho‘rn springs, 23@25c;
large hens, 28@30c; medium hens,
26@27c; small hens, 22@23c;. old
masters, 17c; ducks, 22@24c geese
16c; turkeys, 30c lb.

Advices from Chicago state that
there is little activity in peaches.
the trade waiting for the bulk oi
Michigan shipments to arive when
lower prices are expected. Michigan
Carmans brought $4 per bushel last
week on the Chicago market; El-
bertas, $3.00 and $4 and St. John
freestones, $4. Detroit prices are
somewhat lower, best grades going
for $3. 75 per bushel.

Apples are not in much greater
demand Just new than peaches, and
prices have eased up a bit. Chica-
go ‘.quotes Michigan Duchess at $7
per bbl;- Wealthies, $7@$7. 50;

. Michigan Alexander, $2®$2. 50 pe

bushel.

The Weller Company of Rich-
mend, Michigan, against whom the
Business Farmer received some com-
plaints last year \for alleged viola-
tion of centracts, has gone into the
hands of. a receiver.

, mchigen reads most or the east-
ern and central states in the condi-
tion of tomatoes. Present prices

are censiderably better than they '

were last year, ranging between $1

. land. $1 25 per bushel in DetrOit.

‘in England again this year

 

pies from these sourcés E1131

apples begin to be marketed: ans; 2. WM

ing the last two weeks of July. From, 7

the middle to the end of september
early varieties arive from Nova
Scotia, followed a little later by
early varieties from the Paciﬁc
coast. Next, Ontario and eastern
States of America send consign—

ments, and ﬁnally the main cromv '

of the United States and Canada
are drawn upon until April.

The apple crop of: the United
States was excellent lastsyear; but
this year’s crop has been cut to
less than one-half of last year‘s
The states of New York, Michigan.
Wisconsin, New Jersey, Pennsyl-
vania, Virginia, and Ohio, as well
as others in the South and Middle
West, have suffered severely in
consequence of freezes last spring.
The Pacific Coast states, however,
wil have a normal crop and heavy
consignments wil probably leave for
European markets in the late au-
tumn.

DEPENDS ON THE KIND OF OATS

Saturday, August 13th, sample
grade oats sold on the Chicago
Board of Trade at 19 cents per
bushel. It is calculated that the
grower received a net of 3 cents per
bushel for his oats after freight and
other charges were paid. Contrast
that with the news of the Chicago
Stock Exchange .for the same week
as quoted from a Chicago daily:
V“Qnaker Oats advanced 5 points and
offset most of the decline elsewhere,
as the general list has shown a
slightly easier tendency. "

FROM THE M. B. F.’S MAINE
CORRESPONDENT

Conditions throughout the season
have been as unfavorable for potato
crop as I ever saw. The early plant-
ed potatoes are very poor, and those
who are digging now report about
75 (165 pound bbls.) per acre and
that is a very poor crop for early
digging. Ordinarily the yield is
over 100 bbls. Those who planted
the middle or ‘May and later are
rather more promising. However
they won’t yield over 90 bbls. when
they are mature, taking the county
as a whole. The dry weather that
extended to about 10 days ago,- is
the probable cause of conditions
that exist. Now that it has started
to rain we have had plenty and no
doubt there will be plenty late blight
appear and cut the yield.

Farmers through the county are
confident the price will be good. The
buyers are paying $3 to $3.50 per
bbl., at leading points now, and
many are digging. However, the
yield is small, about 40 to 70 bbls.
per acre. There is reported that
very little disease is showing up this
season. '

The Michigan Business Farmer is
keeping the farmer informed and I
enjoy reading the splendid articles.
—-—Roy D. Hews, Master Pomona
Grange, Aroostook County, Maine.

HIPPERS who are making every
eﬁort to get their freight ship-
ments under way as rapidly as

possible are pursuing a wise policy.
according to the Michigan State
Farm Bureau traffic department.
That‘office declares that there is in-
creasing evidence that there will be
an insufficient number of freight
cars to meet the heavy demands for
grain shipment out of the north-
west. It is also deemed certain
that with the return ‘0! normal con-
ditions in other lines the carriers
are going to ﬁnd it extremely dim»-
cult to meet all demands promptly.

 

 

mi; ﬁts of. .

KEGS,
APPLE BARRELS,
' and TANKS
in Michigan.
WealsodealinUsedBarrelsfor
all Purposes. '
Mail Orders Solicited

SAUER COOPERAGE (:0.

2810-2856 Benson Ave”
Detroit, Mich.

WWW

 

 

 

 

Best Wire Fence 0n the Market
Lowest Price—Direct to User
Not hundreds of styles
' Nor millions of miles,
. But satisﬁed smiles

1 From every
’ customer.

Bond Steel Poet co.
5! limes Siren Adrian. Hiclligll

 

 

 

 

airmA nanwmco
ulil mam onAwA Kansas-

 

. TO PAY
$44 3.3“ the New hues, Jr. N. 2% “-‘

new sunssnvm “W'- ".-
lifsdme tdehctsin materialm and. w

mil-1:0“ Edi-halalgmhrzerlhuwh «3‘
30 0138' FREE TRIA’

 

AUCTION SALE

BERKSHIRES

September 5th

STATE FAIR GROUNDS

001. L. W. Lovewell, Auctioneer
On above date, immediately fol-ﬂ

lowing judging of Berkshires, the
Michigan Berkshire Association will
sell to the high bidder, no reserve,
a useful lot, including boars fit for
service, bred sows, open sows and
gills. This will not be show stuff
but off from pasture, ready to make
money for purchaser. No high
prices expected. Terms cash; if
time is wanted, arrangements must
be made previous to sale. For par-
ticulars write

J. W. CLAP‘P, Secretary

518 Murphy Bldg., Detroit

 

BARN PAINT $l.35 PER GALLOI

Get factory prices on all paints. We guarantee
quality. We pay the freight.
Franklin Color Works, Dept. B. Franklin. Ind.

The Best BreedersJﬂ

advertise in The Michigan Bus~
iness Farmer. It will be worth
your while to read the livestock
advertisements in every issue
to keep posted on what they
have to offer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

$2.25 Take Your Choice

Each

‘5'“: "3'-

i ' save ﬁdeliuretime2

Wilders. 3"“ “m" MStanchims
At Low Prices

 

 


r-

 

ues in our history ,

' dise' will be advertised and

. every item‘ has been selected ‘

" Give us a. careful desbription r of theathinigs Which you désir'é and permit '0"

.. .' -~,

0 ic_el‘ebratte~x§th?ese two '

’ store a y ears Of store
keeping, We shall ofier some
of. the most remarkable val—

1

Everyday of this 'Eo‘rtiﬁe’t’h
Anniversary Sale will "be a ‘ '
memorable ”0116-, because
everyday different merehan-'

every day‘new opportunities

Wlll be presented._ Each and
with the greatest Care and i
will be of seasonable,serv1ce-

able merchandise—all Ham’-

rbﬂ slam/21rd.

 

 

 

» V V ,i

To. Those, W110 ’ ill Come i To The State Farr

we earnestly advise that you make plans to reserve ‘for your shopping a gerierOus .portioiﬁéoftheir",
time you vvill spend in Detroit. « The savings you Will make w’illimo're than justify this. ' i'

‘k

T e Thbse‘ m i iIlNat : rm rm  

we beg ”to advise that this 'Fortieth Anniversary ”Sale?offersas’i’mimhloryou as it Willis:

Who will .shop’iﬁ” person; ' Read the daily newspap'r advertisementsjyanid an'ilitté‘l‘atﬁtéfthat may

come to youfe-then s‘e—‘ndiin your order by mailior telephone, and ‘ ‘ - 5; x . T p r . ‘ vi -

7 .‘. i , , , ‘ 3»

i Let-1 The . Personal ‘  'rviee Departmént _<:

i , , “r-‘STXPETT shoppers to
8616“ them" SC; that 5’0“ may ,ﬁOt only secure th4t1Whi9h‘Y0u ‘n'Qedzi’gbut -;'.en’ib‘y the purchase “all; ‘
the mérc b€Cause Ofithc unusually low price-you W111 PQYIID’ZEh‘ls’F 9_rt1€‘th; AanersarySale‘.‘,f“,.,.

I
O

j Every Department mtheStoreiii.l,;l\,Rairticipate;

‘.:; “a; ‘ *ﬁ- ,

,,>
i'v‘ "iv!—
-

1:730 that you inlay beaSSuredofobtalnmg i" it . _ f " youanucipatedi 1

sale Will's-1145'

.545 ’2, 3" Z, A ,7 '1
on, Satyr

, wk

 

