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An independente

Hair m’e r’s , Weekly Ownedja n’d
‘EditedlimMichigan

 

 

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1921

 

’,Vol. IX, No. 1

 

 

 

 

U. S. Board Loans to Farmer Companies

War Finance Corporation Advances Money to Accredited Firms for Financing Export Sales

UPPOS‘E you had a million bushels of
wheat which you did not wish to sell

at the present time, but which you had
reason to believe you might be able to sell
later at a better price to a foreign buyer.
The chances are you would need the money
tied up in the Wheat, and the chances are
that (your local banker or any banker, for
that matter, would refuse to lend you the
money and take the wheat as collateral
In that case, no matter how badly. you
wanted to hold your wheat, you couldn‘t

. do it. You would have to sell no matter

how low or unproﬁtable the price, and if
the fellow who bought had all kinds of cash
and credit he would have no diﬂiculty in
holding the wheat for the higher price and
reap the proﬁts which should have been
yours. " . ,

That thing happens every year with
hundreds of thousands of farmers. They
don’t have a million bushels of wheat but
they may have a thousand bushels each.‘
They need their money when the wheat is
harvested, but since no banker will loan
them money on the wheat, they have to sell,
and the fellows who buy the grain make
the proﬁt.

But federal laws have been enacted
which will enable both the million-bushel
holder and the thousand-bushel holder to
secure loans on certain of their crops and
to market them in an orderly fashion.

War Finance Corporation

Junta few days ago the Business Farm-
er received the following notice from the
War Finance Corporation:

“The War Finance Corporation announces
that negotiations for advances to finance agri—
cultural products for export sale are ap-
proaching completion, as follows:

“Oklahoma Cotton Growers‘ Associa-
tion, 200,000 bales of cotton; Tens Farm
Bureau Cotton Association, 300,000 bales
of cotton; California Prune and Apricot
Growers, Inc., £5,000,000 pounds of
prunes; Washington Wheat Grorwsrs’ As-
sociation, 8,000,000 bushels of wheat;
[Idaho Wheat Growers’ Association, 2,-
000,0.00 bushels of wheat; Oregon 00—0p-
erative Grain Growers'. 2,000,000 bush-
els of wheat; Montana Wheat Growers’
Association. 1,500,000 bushels of wheat.”

By way of explanation, the War Finance
Corporation Which came into being during
the war but which expired with all war
legslation, was given a new lease of life
by the Agricultural Relief Act which was
signed by the President on Wednesday of ,
last week. " ' The corporation is given the

‘z , , authority to provide for the administra-

‘, tion of the Actwhich makes available one
:« billion dollars of government funds and
decanter loaning to‘eorporationa desiring

in the exporting of“‘.‘,sgricultur—.
’.’ Even before the not became

 

,on

  
 

 

 

Danger in the Silo

EATH LURKS in the silo. During
silo filling time many farmers are
overcome by the deadly carbon"

monoxide gases which accumulate rap-
idly above the freshly ensiled corn, and
are dead before they can be rescued. We
have warned our readers before of this
menace. We warn them again. A few
days ago two Illinois farmers were suf-
focated and a third rescued just in the
nick of time when they entered a half-
ﬂlled silo.

“Turn the machine blower on and
leave it for at least two minutes before
entering a partly filled silo,” is the ad-
,vice of the Department of Agriculture.
Perhaps you don’t want to go to such
bother but better a few moments spent
in taking precautions than sending
someone to an untimely grave.

 

 

 

 

 

 

above are but a few of the many received.
So that it is now possible for any wheat or
corn or bean growers’ marketing associa-

tion to pool their products, store them in,

a suitable warehouse and receive from the
War Finance Corporation a considerable
loan based upon the prevailing market value
of the products, providing, however, that
the products so held are intended for ex-
port.

Describing the advantages of the new
law Eugene Mayer, J r., anaging director
of the Corporatio says:

“The Agricultural Relief Act, is a measure
of great significance to our agricultural inter-
ests. It is a very constructive piece of legis-
lation, and, in my opinion, is thoroughly
workable from the administrative point of
view. It recognizes the new conditions ex-
isting in our international and domestic trade
and aims to meet these conditions by giving
the War Finance Corporation power to assist
in financing the carrying of agricultural com-
modities until they can be marketed in an
orderly way. The inability and unwillingness
of foreign merchants and manufacturers to
purchase the greater part of their equire-
ments for the year during the perio immedi-
ately following the harvesting of our crops,
as they are accustomed to do in normal times,
coupled with the failure of our own mer-
chants and manufacturers to carry normal
stocks, has brought about a situation which
makes it necemary for us to market our
staple agricultural products over a longer
period than usual.”

U. S. Bonded Warehouse Receipts

Proper ﬁnancing of the actual producer
is the first step. toward laying a permanent
foundation for orderly marketing of agri-
cultural p cts. To open the way for
the farmer ' do this is the primary pur-
pose of the bonded warehouse. Although
the ‘U. 8. Warehouse Act was passed in

1916. few tumors ire familiar with its

provisions and few warehouses have taken
advmtega 0: the .etceptional opportuni-
tim in credit which it oﬁers. Under this

 

of “agricultural products,” which include
grain, b cotton, wool and tobacco, may
become a ﬁited States bonded warehouse
which may “sue the owner of such pro-
".l...:t: a were ouse receipt of unquestion-
able worth that is acceptable to bankers
generally as security for loans, regardless
of the location of the warehouse. No esti-
mate can be made of the profit lost to
farmers of the country annually through
their being forced for one reason or an-
other, usmally the lack of ready and suﬁi-
cient money, to dispose of their crops at a
season when the supply is greater than the
demand. It is known, though, that the
amount would be considerable.

The bonded warehouse adords the pro-
ducer a safe place for storing his product.
It gives him a receipt that allows him to
borrow within a reasonable margin of the
actual value of his products. He is thus
relieved of the necessity of selling them on
glutted markets as far as the need for mon-
ey is concerned. The necessity of market-
ing within one or two months, or even a
few weeks, what is to be consumed in 12
months is avoided.

That the receipts issued by the ware-
houses are of high value as collateral for
loans is evidenced by the fact that many
banks express a decided preference for
them over the ordinary warehouse receipt.
They have the approval of the regional
Federal Reserve Banks of Richmond, At—
lanta, Kansas City, St. Louis and Dallas,
which are taking an active part in inﬂu-
encing warehousemen to become licensed
and bonded.

According to officials of the U. S. De-
partment of Agriculture, applications from
grain warehousemen are coming in stead-
ily, and indications point to a heavy de-
mand from the large grain elevator com-
panies of theirNorthwest in the near future.
Recently an application was received from
one corporation controlling a line of 63 e1-
evators in Washington and Idaho. Every
one of these is to be placed under the Act.
Another application was received from a
warehouseman operating 14 line elevators
and negotiations are now under way with
another corporation to license about 150 of
its elevators. In addition, there were re-
cently reported 19 licensed wool warehous-
es capable of handling about one—sixth of
the entire wool clip of the United States;
and applications from several other large
wool houses are pending.

It is possible, under this act, for any

’ co-operative elevator or ware-
house in Michigan to virtually finance it-
self and its members by making use of the
facilities oﬂered by this act. The time is
especially opportune, too, for such a move
as it should enable farmers to hold a por-
tion of their crops for the higher prices

which nearly , Everyone believes, will come '

before another harvest.

 

 

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that order is put on paper.

than eleven billion telephone
the lines of this system.

murmurs, some clearly stated,

last few months rs proof that

 

toward Better Service

Accuracy

From the simplest test of memory to the most elaborate
Speciﬁcations, whenever an order is to be given it is the
custom of the vast majority of people to put it in writing.

This constant writing of orders is for the purpose of
insuring accuracy. People are afraid to trust the ability
‘of the one receiving the order to get it correctly, unless

      
 
 
  
 
   
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
 
   
   
        
   

What a tribute to excepﬁonal skill and training, then. i
is the record of the Bell telephone system. Last year more

conversations were held over

Each of these billions of conversations required the
'giving of an order to a telephone employee. Not one of

these orders could be put in writing.

Some of them were given in loud voices, some spoken in

some rapidly shot out. Yet

so remarkable a standard of accuracy exists in the service of

the Bell System that more than ninety-nine per cent. of all
orders were correctly received and exeérted.

No other business is subjected to such a test as this. The

record of the average of service of the Bell System for the

the telephone has returned to

its pro-war standard of practice.
‘~..BELL {SYSTEMT‘
human Tmnmm {mourn Charm
‘ Ann‘ " Ass‘ " am i a comma
One Policy, One System, Universal Service; and all directed

 

    
 
  
 
  
 
    
  
  
       

    

BAITTERES

direct liom factoryoo and save

      
     

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EN ORDERING GIVE MAKE,

  
      
 

 

 
        
      

  

  
 
 

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and
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lost econanlcolnnd

new of
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O§ENTHAL CORN HUSKER $72.

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GOOD SEED IN DEMAND
ATE AUGUST rains were of im-

mense value to the greatest

late seeding: of auntie and
sweet clover the state has ever
known. according to J. W. Nichol-
son. manager of the state farm bur-
eau sud department. Explaining
the great acreage sown to the fore-
going crops in August and despite
the fact' that fall seeding of alfalfa
has never been recommended, Mr.
'Nicholson said that many farmers
who had good clover seeding burned
up during the recent drought took
another chance. It is his opinion
that the recent liberal rains will
give the late seedings a good start
before cold weather sets in.

Michigan has a bumper crop of

timothy this year and there is heavy
demand for the seed. according to
the farm bureau seed department
There is little high quality alsitte to
be had and the demand for good
seed exceeds the supply at this time.
Men who have good seed to sell are
having no difficulty in disposing of
it. Michigan farmers are bearing
down heavy on good farming prac-
tice by stressing certified rye and
wheat this fall, according to the
farm bureau, which reports a heavy
demand for the first class type of
seed.

 

WOOL POOL

LI'I'l‘LE Indiana wool has been
A placed in the Michigan State

Farm Bureau wool pool at the
request of wool growers in the vi-
cinity of South Bend. Ind.. where
there is a mill making farm bureau
pooled wiool into virgin wool fab-
rics. Accordingly, a grader went to
South Bend this week‘ﬂnd handled
the wool. , Pooling continues in
Michigan, both direct to state head-
quarters in Lansing and locally in
some sections where there is enough
late pooled wool coming into to
warrant the farm bureau sendin a.
grader to the local pooling cente
Graders were at Coleman and M1 ~
land this week. Farm Bureau Wool
pool men are now locating suiting,
over-coats ~and blanket distributing
points in Genesee,“Allegan and Ion-
ia counties. Last week seven local
distributing points were established
in Gratiot county. It is planned to
have several hundred such distrib-
uting points for the farmers‘ man-
ufactured wool.

NINETY MILLION POUNDS OF
COOPERATIVE BUTLER

HE MINNESOTA Dairy and Food
TCommissioner has just released

figures for 1920 which show that
the co-operative creamedes of Min-
nesota make more butter and bet-
ter butter and get better prices for
it than do the private profit cream-
erios The «so—operators prbdueed
91,716,231 pounds of butter last
year, or nearly 70 per cent of the
total output of the state for which
they received over $53,000,000. The
superior quality of this butter is at-
tested by the fact that it contained
more butterfat and less water than
profit made butter, and brought on
an average seven-tenths of a cent
more per pound.

The oo-operative creamerdes of
Minhesota are owned by 84,757 co-
operators, who possess three-quart
ers of a million cows.

EMBARGO 0N CANADIAN GRAIN

OMMISSIONER of Agriculture
Halladay. has announced a
quarantine against uninspeeted

corn from province of Ontario, Can.
The quarantine effects not only corn
but celery, beans in the pod, boots.
with tops, spinach. rhubarb, rye.
oats. wheat or other stra‘w, sedges
or rushes, whether used as such or
as packing materials; cut flowers
or entire plants of chysanthemums.
asters. cosmos, ninnia or hollyhock;
also cut ﬂowers, or entire plants of
gladiolus, canna, peony and dablin.
except the bulbs thereof without
stems. and such other herbaceous
plants and shrubs as have hollow
stem. or a large pith likely to shelt-
or the Eunnean can ~ Pro-

vided that such plants or plant pro-
ducts above mentioned except corn.
broom corn, including sweet corn.
gmay be imported from the Province
of Ontario, "Canada. only is accom-
panied by a certificate from the au-
thorities of the Canadian Depart-
ment of Agriculture to the effect
that the plants or plant products
have been inspected and found to be
free from European corn borer and
other dangerous insect pests, and
plant diseases."

 

OOUN’HES WILL EXHIBIT

IGHTEEN counties have lined up
E for the county farm crops ex-

hibits which are to be a feat-
uro of the crops show at the state
fair in Detroit, September 2-11., ac-
cording ‘ to Clark L. Brody, secre-
tary of the State Farm bureau, who
is the member of the State Fair
board in charge of the agricultural
building and its exhibits. Count!
agents are assisting counties to
make up their exhibits and county
farm bureaus are the unit through
which the counties are working up
their exhibits in many cases. Prizes
totalling $2,000 will be distributed
in the county exhibits.

Educational exhibits have been
sought by Mr. Brody. It is his idea
to make the county exhibits a new
idea at the state fair—truly rep-
resentative of agricultural progress.
The county exhibits will share the
agricul 'ral building with the Mich-
igan ' cultural College exhibit
and th regular individual exhibits.
Countie which will make county
exhibits are: Bay, Clare, Ogemaw,
Aleona, Gladwin, Oscoda, Wayne,
Alpena, Menominee, Crawford, Tus-
cola. Oakland, Ingham, Pnesque
Isle, Montmorency, Otsego and Ros-
common.

TBE FUTURE OF OATS

RMERS WHO can afford to

hang onto their cats will do well

to do so, in the opinion of the
Michigan Elevator Exchange, which
says that oats are now at a ridicu
lously low figure, lower than at any
time since 1906. The Exchange be-
lieves that prospects are good for a
much better price on oats a little
later on. Today western states are
rushing their oats to market at
ruinous prices. Notwithstanding
that fact the eastern demand for
cats continues better than it has been
for any time in the past two years,
according to the Exchange. It is
upon this sustained demand that
the Exchange sees the promise of a
brighter future for oats.

Milling demand for wheat “con-
tinues good. but rye shows no in-
clination to recover, says the Ele-
vator Exchange.

 

McGREGOR, 1A.. HAS NEW CO-OP-
ERA'IIVE GREAMEBY

RISING AS A direct outgrowth

of the McGregor Cow Testing

association, farmers in the vicinity
of McGregor, Iowa, have formed a
cooperative creamery association.
capitalized at $20,000. There are
100 stockholders owning about 1.-
200 dairy cows in the company. They
have purchased the creamery equip-
ment of a privately owned produce
company at McGregor and leased the
building now occupied by the cream- ,
ery. “ﬁlth an expert from the Iowa
State College to help them get a
right start, the farmers took over
the creamer-y last June.

MIDLAND COUNTY FAIR
dates of the Midland county
Lfair are ‘Sept. 20th to 23rd and
as long as the Farm Bureau and
American Legion are both in back
of the fair this year, we expect to.
have a good one. Farm Bureau
manager, McMurty is right on the

'Job looking after the stock. grain

and vegetable exhibits and we ex-
pect to make a good showing this
year in those departments. Tues-
day will be opening day. Wednes- :

day will be County School day. on ,'
which day all the sch 1 01111 ;.

   

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/

' HE FIRST of a series of meetings which
will be held in the vicinity of Detroit to
interest “the produce growers in the establish-

. ment of community markets in the metropolis
'4‘ was held Monday night at Franklin, Oakland
l county, when several score of farmers gave
1 their approval to the prOposition and sub-

scribed f0r stock in a marketing corporation.

The meeting was called through the instru-
mentality of the agricultural division of the
Detroit Board of Commerce, of which C. A.
Bingham, former secretary of the Michigan
i . State Farm Bureau, is director. One of the
objects which led to the creation of this divi-
sion was to encourage improved methods of
marketing farm products in the vicinity of
Detroit to the end that the city might always
be assured of a steady supply of fresh and
stable .food.

 

 

~_,._. A,‘. A ”A

, John Russell, president of the Detroit
M3 Board of Commerce, was present and explain-
, 3‘ ed to the producers the interest which he and
l the Board had in the proposition before them.

He told the farmers that the marketing prob-
lem was one of vital interest to the consumer
as well as the producer.

"The city has far outgrown the marketing
facilities which were established years ago,”
said Mr. Russell. “The eastern market has
fulﬁlled its purpose, but having been built
when the city had a population of only a few
,s thousand, it has become quite inadequate to
A meet the present demands. The western mar-
l ket has contributed very little to the situation

of our food problem. It was built without
1 .any special foresight. The establishment of
l community markets in our city should not
. only insure a higher and more stable price to
the producers and a lower price to the con-
sumer, but more important still so far as we

} i ;. American Farm Bureau Federation Opposes High Protective Tariff ?

HE AMERICAN Farm Bureau in a
recent statement before the Senate Fin-
ance Committee favored the levying of pro-
tective duties imported vegetable oils com-
» " peting with e American dairy, lard and do-
.- ‘ mestic vegetable oil industries.
The Federation is not in favor of a very
high level of duties on commodities generally.
‘ Because of the fact that there is an export-
, able surplus of the principal farm crops, it
, is impossible for the farmer to reap the ben-
eﬁts of a protective tariﬂz‘ in the same degree
' that these beneﬁts are conferred up0n manu-
' facturers. The result is that under a high
tariff policy the farmer sells his produce at
or near the world competitive market price,
and he must buy a large part of what he con-
'~ sumes in a protected market; that is, in a
market which is considerably above the world
competitive price. There are important ex-
ceptions to this general principle, but. never-
theless the general principle remains.
In general a relatively low tariff will give
. ' [the farmer as much actual production as a
' ‘I' very high tariff, where large amounts of the
goods in question are exported. As an illus—
tration, very few - wheat growers would re-
ceive any greater beneﬁt from a _70 cents a
‘ bushel duty on wheat than from 85 cents a
bushel duty. This situation is very different
from that of the maxim of the ﬁner
gradesof textile goods, in these case a duty
cf 200 per cent unthil m cost will

.‘l‘.

;’Detroit,. Commerce Board. Aids Farm Marketing;  ,

Take Initiative in Encouraging Farmers to Establish Municipal ,Markets in Metropolis .

 

 

Farmers Sign Up With U. S.

Grain Growers

' S A FITTING We to the Gran
’ Dealers’ Association which has been
spending a lot of money to discredit
the U. S. Grain Growers’. Inc., farmers
and elevators all over the country are
signing up contracts to dispose of their
grain through this corporation. Although
organization work has been in progress
only a few weeks, the membership rolls
include 277 elevators and 6,649 individu-
al growers. Work is being carried on at
the present time in Illinois, Indiana, Okla.-
homa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri and
North Dakota. It is signiﬁcant that the
farmers of the Non-Partisan League state
of North Dakota have taken the lead in
afﬁliating with the U. S. G. G.

 

 

 

 

 

 

are concerned, would insure a better and a
more dependable supply of food.”

E. J. VerDuyn of Novi, who acted as chair-
man of the meeting, expressed his approval of
community markets, and Harry Rackman of
F armington, secretary of the meeting empha-
sized the fact that prices under the
present system were very unstable and that
the farmer acting independently was quite at
the mercy of the vendors’ organization which
virtually dictated the prices. At present the
farmer who “takes produce to Detroit must
spend the better part of a day to sell it at an
advantage when he ought to be at home pro-
ducing more stuff. “Under the present sys-
tem,” said Mr. Rackman, “the farmer who
sells produce in Detroit must be an expert
salesman as well as an expert farmer.”

Other speakers were Mr. W. G. Braden,
founder and manager of the Pontiac Commun-
ity Market, who explained the workings of his

beneﬁt. much from high rates of duty on his
products, whereas it is the rule that in the
case of goods which are being imported in
large quantities the domestic manufacturer
will beneﬁt almost or quite to the full extent
of the high protective duty.

A duty of vegetable oils would constitute
an exception to the general principle for
farm products. The oils in question are co—
coanut oil, soy bean oil, cottonseed oil and
peanut oil. These oils are highly competitive
among themselves and became they are pro-
duced so much more cheaply than butter and
lard they are being substituted for these lat-
ter products in ever-increasing quantities and
compelling these producers to accept a price
dictated in the unprotected world market. In
1920 the exports of these commodities were as
follows:

Lard, pounds ................... 587,224,549
Butter, pounds 27,155,834

During the same year the vegetable oils were
imported as follows:

Cocoanut oil, pounds ............ 269,226,966
‘Cocoanut meat, pounds .......... 218,521,916
Soy bean 011, pounds ..,, ......... 195,773;594
Cottonseed 011, pounds ........... 24,164,821
Peanut oil, pounds .............. 165,482,722

‘One pound of cocoanut meat produces
proximately one-half pound of cocoanu‘t oil.

A duty on these oils sufficiently high to
prevent their entrance into the country in
considerable amount without any doubt
would have the eﬁect of making it unneces-
sary to export such large quantities of lard
anghgutter, says the farm bureau. ‘

-’ ~dai, «interesta‘are ”ro ' that two
1%. ,7 p poms  

ap-

 

   
   
 
 
   
  
  
   
 
   
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
  
   
  
  
   
  
     
   
  
     
   
    
  
  
   
  
   
    
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
   
    
   
  
   
 
 
   
     
 
 
  
   
   
   
   
  

market and announced that the second man,
ket in his city had just been established and
that this would be followed by two or three
other markets; Mr. W. Otto, secretary of the

Pontiac Board of Commerce, who told how
his Board had promoted community market-

ing and how pleased it was with the success

attained. He stated his belief that commun-

ity markets should be entirely within the cone
rol of the farmers and the consumers who

made them possible. Farm Bureau Manager

Bullock of Lapeer county, who told the aud-

ience of the diﬁ‘iculties which Lapeer county

farmers encountered when they tried to sell

their produce in Detroit, and how at present

it requires twenty-four hours or more for a

farmer to truck a load of produce to that city

and dispose of it at a decent price. He wel- ~
comed the day, he said, when community mar» 31"»:
kets in the city would receive the products of
Lapeer county farms and attend to the selling
of them. \

C. A. Bingham explained the details of the
proposed marketing corporation. It would .
have a capital of $50,000. The plan would be ‘91
to establish a central market out Woodward '
avenue somewhere in the vicinity of the junc-
tion of Detroit and Highland Park. This
would save all farmers coming into Detroit
from the north from going through the crowd-
ed thoroughfares of the down-town 6section.
Branch markets would then be established in
.various portions of the city. He said that as ,
soon as $5,000 was raised the company would
be incorporated, and upon his invitation sev- "
eral hundred dollars were subscribed before
the meeting adjourned. The sentiment of the
farmers present was strongly in favor of the
project, and the Promoters expressed their be-
lief that they would meet with little difﬁculty
in disposing of a majority of the stock to the
producers.

 

 

 

different rates of duty be applied to these i
oils, a higher rate for edible oils and a lower ‘
rate for oils “that are denatured and used for '
any purposes other than human food.’ ’ There
can be no objectiOn to this plan so long as the "
lower rate is high enough to be really pro- ‘
tective. Otherwise there would be a shifting ‘
of domestic vegetable oils, including the
Philippine cocoanut oil, to the edible uses and
the foreign oils would come in practically un—
limited quantities to supply the other indus-
trial purposes. The eﬁect of this would be to
nullify the duty and it would be of no prac-
tical value to the domestic producers of cot-
tonseed oil.

In the present bill cocoanut meat or copra
is on the free list. Unless a duty is placed on
copra the effect will be the same as far as the
lard and dairy interests are concerned as
placing cocoanut oil on the free list. The
duty perpound on copra should be one-half
the duty on cocoanut oil, the farm bureau
maintains.

If, therefore, the American producer of
dairy and lard products is to be given a do-
mestic market in which to sell these products,
in order to compensate him for having to buy
the manufactured goods which he consumes.
in a protected market, it will be necessary to},
place a duty on these imported vegetable oils
sufﬁciently high to exclude them. The pros "
posal to place,the duty at 10 cents a pound
for oils ma for food and 5 cents a pound-for
oils used for other industrial purposesshould
therefore new in mm at. the.

  
  

  

 
 

  
  
      
     
     
   
     
 
 
  
  

  
 

  


 
 
 

 
 
 

 

  
  
   
  
   
   
 
  
  
    
  
 
 
   
  
  
   
  
  
   
   
  
   
   
  
 
 
   
   
  
  
   
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
 
  
 
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
   
  
  
  
   
  

   

  
 
 

, I Ro’tarla

t

‘AVE YOU ever lain awake in the mid-
, —dle of the night listening to the mourn-
fuI‘Wailof a locomotive as it rushed through
the darkness with its human freight? Have
you ever stood upon a station platform and
watched a train disappear in the distance
hearing your loved ones away upon a long
journey? If you have, you are in a position"
to know just about how I felt at one .minute

' past twelve the first day of last June when

the Royal Mail Steamer Caronia weighed
anchor at the foot of West Twenty-Third

. street, New York City and moved majestical-

ly away from her pier upon her trip across
the Atlantic ocean.

Even now I recall with a shudder the hor-
rible nausea of homesiekness which swept
overOme at that moment. And the band was

laylng,_ tool I stood at the deck rail looking
gown With unseeing eyes upon the throngs of

. people that stood below waving their farewell

greetings or gently weeping. I have a

1 mcollection of a moving camera man pointing

the nose of his machine straight at my nose,

; and I have had a faint curiosity to witness
, the picture he got for I am certain that my
, visage upon that occasion was such as to

make the angels weep could they have looked
upon it.

The entire ﬁrst—class quarters of the Caron-
ia were reserved for Rotarians and their fam-
ﬂim bound for the convention at Edinburgh.
‘At an adjoining dock lay the Cameronia, also
reserved for Rotarians. The mission upon

‘ ‘ which these hundreds of people were bent was

not one entirely of pleasure. The thing that
took them away from their shops, their of—
ﬁces, their factories and their farms,—for
there were a number of farmers on board,—
was the desire to aid in the success of a great
international convention, the ultimate ob-
Ject of which was to bind the peoples of the
world in closer friendship and union. The
spirit of Rotary is the spirit of true co-oper-
ation. Not co—operation merely between the

people of one class but between the people of ‘

all classes.
The day before the departure all Rotari-

. ans were entertained at luncheon at the VVal-

dorf Hotel by the New York Rotary Club. 1
am telling you about this luncheon because I

IXTY-SEVEN more pure-bred bulls are
now housed on Michigan farms as a re-
sult of the Better Sires Special train which

. ﬁnished its three weeks tour of the state late
, in August.
placed directly from the train, while results of
' the educational work carried on by the tour

These animals were actually

are expected to increase the number greatly.

Traveling through twenty-six counties and
making forty-seven different stops, the Bet-
ter Sires Special drew crowds of interested

‘ farmers totaling about 14,000 by actual count.

The tour proved to be one of the most suc-

. cessful agricultural trains ever run in Mich-

igan, results exceeding the expectations of
the organizations planning the venture. The
Michigan Holstein-Friesian Association, the
Agricultural College, the New York Central
and Pennsylvania railroads, and other state
agricultural bodies co-operated in putting on
the train. .

The honor of turning in the “scrubbiest
scrub” taken over in exchange for a pure-
bred on the trip fell to Reed City, in Osceola.
This scrawny individual produced much mer-
riment when he was led out beside College

_ .IButter Boy, the 1,900 pound 2 year old M. A.
,C. bull who was on the train. ,_ Altogether 51
bombs were taken in on exchahﬁé‘for the pure-
:bred animals distributed. “ ‘
T Agricultural movies showing diﬂerent phas-

es of, dairy work were one of the features of
the piograms, while ideal dairy type, import-
inns of Better Sires, care and feeding, and

‘ " .. *ofmilk products in the home were "pounds, and are ﬁne pure—bred; Holstein;

  

Many Farmers Among Delégation WhiCh: Went *to Europeto Furtherﬁilrltemd‘tional Friendship Ll.“ '

When any high- 5

By m EDITOR

want you to know what Bishop Manning of
the Episcopal diocese of New York said to
the Rotarians about international friendship.
The relations between nations concern every
man, woman and child in the civiliZed world,
as we have recently learned to our sorrow,
and the future—cf the world will be one of
peace and happiness or war and suifering’ de-
pending upon the nature of the relations be-
tween nations. The Bishop said:

“I imagine I know some of the things which
you Rotarians will tell your brother Rotarians
of the British Isles when you reach the other
side. ' I imagine you will tell them you are first
of all free—born, liberty-loving, patriotic Ameri-
can citizens; that you 1ove your country more

 

 

Greatest Showing of Cattle
in History of State Fair

NFORMAT‘ION available at the close of

last week, concerning the number of cat-
tle that will probably be on exhibition at the
coming State Fair, would favor an estimate
of about 1,100 head; this is, probably, a gain
of more than 50 per cent over any exhibit of
live cattle ever held in the state. The entry
list reveals the names of seven beef breeds
and five dairy breeds.

The dairy division, alone, will include more
than 400 entries, Holsteins showing around
200, Guernseys and Jerseys about evenly rep—
resented with about 70 head each. Ayrshires
to the number'of 56 head Will be shown. The
Lenawee County Holstein Breeders’ Associa-
tion will be the largest exhibitor in this class,
showing 46 head. The names of. the other
Holstein exhibitors are as follows:

Detroit Creamery Co., John P. Hehl and Dr.
Erwin Myer of Detroit; John H. Winn, Roch-
ester, Mich.; Michigan School for the Deaf and
the State Hospital at Pontiac; John C. Buth,
Grand Rapids; J. M. Eager, HOWell, Mich.; C.
L. Hazlett & Son, Okemos, Mich.; George W.
Mott, Metamora, Mich.; C. E. Weisner, Adrian,
Mich., and the Pickering Farm, Belton, M0.

The largest exhibitor of Jerseys is the E.
W. Vasorey Farm of Detroit, with 25 head. The
other exhibitors in this (Continued on page 13)

subjects of some of the important talks giv— ,

en at each meeting.

Special help in placing bulls in communi-
ties by several city organizations of business
men along the route of the trip. Chambers
of Commerce at Gladwin, Lake City, and Os-
ceola County, the Big Rapids Exchange Club,
the Ravenna Improvement Association, and
business men of Conklin purchased bulls from
the train and then raﬁ'led them off in their
respective communities.

Special exhibits for women were carried in
a Woman’s Car on the train. Mrs. Louise M.
Campbell, state leader of Home Demonstra-
tion Work, addressed the women at all meet-
ings, while Miss Bessie Hoover, dairy spec-
ialist from the U. S. Department of Agricul-
ture, also helped in putting on exhibits and
meetings for housekeepers.

Throughout the trip, the idea was brought
out that Bull Associations are about the most
practicable means of securing good sires for
a community. In this connectiOn the college
men emphasized the fact that the resources of
the college are available to assist in placing
cattle of any breed. The recent train hap-

..pened to carry Holstein cattle, the train being

inaugurated: by the Holstein-Friesian Assoc-
iation, but the educational work carried on
applied to all breeds equally.

' One of the most interesting features of the
train prOVed to be the comparison between
“Old Red”, an average Michigan cow with a
yearly productiun record of about ” 4,000

   

.l‘
.,
a. 4
1

than any country .on earth.
brow says that. we should love all countries as
much as our own, he might as well say we should
love other men's wives as much as our own. And
it any man dares to tell me that he thinks as
much of my family as he does his own, well, I
don't want him to have very much to d3\with my
family. And so it is with'countries. ‘ It is no
disgrace to love one’s country, and the Almeria
can citizen who does not love his country better

than any other is not an American citizen at‘all. »

He is a half breed. Loving one’s country with
all one’s heart and soul gives one the capacity
for appreciating the love which other people have
for their countries, and teaches one to appreci-
ate the wérth of other countries.

“And I imagine that while you will tell the
British Rotarians that your own country is your
first love, that you have nothing but the hearti-
est good feeling and friendship for Great Britain
and the rest of our Allies. I am sure you wiIl
give Great Britain due credit for the part she
played in the great war, and I am sure you will
impress upon her citizens and the citizens of the
rest of the allied countries your earnest desire
to join with them in an international under-
standing which will make for universal friend-
ship, lovo and peace.”

0 a: o o

It was a great moment in the lives of many
on board when the Caronia steamed down the
North River passed the statute of Liberty and
nosed her way through the “Narrows” out
into the blue Atlantic. It was almost exactly
a year before that I had stood at the very peak
of the statue and looked out over the busy bay,
little dreaming that a few months later I
would pass beneath the lofty torch on my
way to a foreign land. All eyes are turned
upon the giant figure and all hearts are thrill-
ed by the thoughts of the love for country and
the liberty which the statue typifies. If one
has never felt that urging of love and patriot-
ism which should ﬁll every true American
with a feeling of personal relationship .be-
tween himself and his country, let him stand
on an ocean liner headed for foreign shores
and strain his eyes for a last glimpse of the
Statue of Liberty as it sldwly fades from the
vision in the enveloping veils of New York
smoke and‘fog. "‘ ' ’ " I

TWO hours and we have left the murky
harbor and the countless craft which dart
about like water-bugs upon its dirty bosom,
far behind us. (Conﬁrmed on page 11)

:67 Pure-Bred Bulls Exchanged for Scrubs on Dairy Demonstration Trip

an M. A. C. cow with a yearly record of
20,000 pounds of milk, andra cow owned by
H. ’D. Box, of Lansing, with a yearly record
of 21,000 pounds. The crowds at every step
enjoyed their little jokes at the expense of
“Old Red”, who really stood out as one of
the leading features of the ”train.

“- .4.

The following business farmers exchanged. .

scrub bulls for pure—breds:
Saginaw, Co.——John Schoenheit, John J. Mc-

Lean, (group of four), Ernest Fisher, (group of -

four); Tuscola—James McKenzie, Names not re-
corded, 1, 2 others ordered; Midland—Ralph F.
Little, S. F. Freeland, Herbert Baker, C. S.
Shoup, Erwin C. Smith; Bay—Felix Pingot, John
Anderson; Gladwin—-—0. J. Reid, Samuel Nash,
Mrs. Wm. Koenke; Arenac—Bert Sivier, Roy C.

Leinaar; Ogem'aw———J~ames Gallagher, Clifford
Gustafs-on, Henry Sternol; Crawford—C. H.
House, (name not recorded, 1); Otsego—J. W.

Matthews; Cheboygan—Mr. and Mrs. O. W.
Straight; Emmet—-A. W. Coors, Fred J. Bonz,
W. S. Lawrason, Wm. H. Ward, John Schnelle,
Robert Henderson; Charlevoix—T. S. Tunison;
Antrim—John A. Brown, D. W. Marsh; Kalkas-
Ira—Charles O. Rabourn, A. M. Hauenstein; Mis-

saukee—(Name not recorded), Peter DeZeeuw, "

John Marcusse, Geo. Lotan, Geo. Cooper; Wex~
ford—Albert Smith; Osceola—G. W. Hammond,
Mrs. Nettie Holmes, Stanley Stevens, Nicholas
Boeman; Mecosta—-W. H. Tompkins; Otseg'o—a
J. A. Newman, Valentine Mankowski, R. D. Bail“-
ey. John Karslake;~ Montcalm—Samuel Bird,
B. J. Sutton, H. V. Sorcnson, Hanson .Broa: Kent
—-Geo. Sinclair, Andrew Putin. Elmer Hicks, II.
J. Earl, Wilbert Mom, Harm Dozenbury; m—‘i'

' _

tswa—n. (known, I. I. Bumstrs, Wm Peters; ’

 
 

Muskegon—John ”In. w, 313,. _ Brink, Get: ‘

Dayna, J. W. m

 

    
   

host Williams;

a.

 
  
     

    
   
     
   
     
 
   
 
 

    
  

 


  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  

 

n We. own

SCHOOL FOR STUDYING STEAM
. ENGINE
Will you please tell me where there

iisa‘rchooloroollegeforstudyingsteam

engines. if there is any‘I—C. P. loco-ta
County, Michigan.

Probably the most satisfactory
thdngforyoutodowillbetotnh
a correspondence course, and I sag-
gest that you write to the hiterna-
ﬂonal Correspondence School. Scran-
ton. Pennsylvania, or to the Ameri-
can Correspondence School. Chica-
go, stating your needs and asking
for information which will be for
warded without any obligation on
your part until you are actually on-
rolled and made a payment for the
work. Ifyouwouldliketowrito
me and tell me speciﬁcally what
your needs are. it is possible that I
could make a more useful sugges-

ghdtohelpyouinanywsylcanr—
G. W. Bissell. Dean of Engineering,
ELO.

 

RIGHT OF WAY ON 'LAKE SHORE

How much right of way has the pub-
lic to the shores of the inland waters of
the.th of MichiganF—G: IL. Augusta,
Michigan.

The public may not
right of way along the shores of
lakes. If private owners have
bought the shore of the lake they
would have control of that shore as
much as they would any other land.
The public may have the right of
navigation of the body of water but
that does not include any shore-
right unless it was reserved in . the
deed or the state has condemned
shore rightse—Legal Editor.

have any

 

TELEPHONE SERVICE

We have had the phone for several
mnmdthissummertheyarebuﬂd—
a road in front of our place and in
grading they dug around the poles md
someofthemfelloverandcutoﬂall
phone service. We notified the cam—
gauy and they were to have men out
ere the next day. Now the manager
claims he will let the line go as it
would cost too much to rebuild the line.
Weliveahalfmﬂefromthemninline
and our phone , is the only one on the
half mile. Can they take the phone out?
—-F. R... Adrian,‘ Mich.

I would be of the opinion that
they could not discontinue your
phone service ’ without consulting
the Michigan Utility Commission.
Write them fully at Lansing—«Le-
gal Editor.

 

You MUST NOTIFY PUBLISHER

Ifamantakesapaperforayearand
pays ritbutcencludeihedoegmno‘:
want micngerthanteyear
Muestocomgcanthey collectpq

tortheyvear.althoughldidnotnotify
thatIdidnotwmth—ALVanm
mi .MIehigan.

Under the postal laws 9. publisher
may send a paper for one year from
the date of expiration and collect
for it. providing the subscriber does
not notify him to stop it, in which
case he cannot collect for any papers
sent after receiving such notice.
When a subscriber fails to notify a
publisher that he does not wish the
paper longer and continues to take
the paper from his mail box, his so-
ceptance of the paper obligates him
to pay for iL—Editor. ‘-

AGREEMENT SHOULD HAVE
BEEN IN WRITING

A man lost his wife, and his dau‘h'.
terandherfamilymovedintomakea
home for him. nothing being said about

 

1mm 1... mg” w
or ways 1: enough to my his
board and intending they shall have the
tax-m. After some years he finds he

As the terms between the parties
not agreed upon in advance.“

a difficult matter to deter.
' rights of both part;
W’ The

m in booths. Proﬁt“,
on osmolalnis truncation addressed to this department. We
[II- All ln’eulrhs must be accompanied by (all n ems and address. Name not used If so m

l

board will depend very much upon
the testimony and the opinion of
thecourtandinryastothesuffi-
cicncy of the compensation already
received. If they believe that she
has received sufﬁcient compensa-
donfortheservicesrenderedlt is
likely that they will give her no
more; but if they believe she has not
received inst compensation for what
services have been rendered they
are likely to give her more if you
leave any estate from which it can
be collected. When such arrange-
mentsaremadeitisbestthatdis-
tinct understanding be had and the
agreements put into VIM-118 to
cover any emergency—Legal Ed-
ttor.

i—d—-————

MUBT FURNISH BALANCE OF
FLOUR

AmragoAhiredtoBfox-oneycar
toworkonB‘sfax-m. BwastogiveA
stated amount in money also furnish A
with potatoes, flour and pork. 14 of the
eggs. 1-2 of chickens A raised and also
keepaccwforA. HeallowedAthe
other things but refused to » him have
the flour. saying hewastc veit if
raised on the farm. A harvested the
wheat, helped thresh it. but did not sow
any wheat last fall although he had the
ground. all ready but B did not furnish
themed-tyingltwasso dry. NowB
furnished A with 100 pounds of flour
on the start and said when that was
mehehadmoreforA. thmAask-
ed for more he said he didn‘t have it
until after threshing. A bought on the
average of 76 pounds of flour for a
month for 7 1—8 months for a-family of

After A took wheat and

400 pounds of flour ground, making

so pounds A has had. Now B refuses

furnish A with the other 400 pounds

or pay for it on the ground that A did

not put in any wheat—Can A collect?
-—-\A. P. Q, Walled Lake. Mich.

If B agreed to furnishwwhat flour
A needed for his family nae and did
not state that it was to be from
wheat grown on the farm he would
be liable to A for the balance of the
noun—Legal Editor.

 

MOTEERS’ PENSION LAW

How much pension does a widow get
for herself and how much for each
child? If she marries again, does she
base the pension for the children as well
as for herselfI—M. E. 8., Auburn, Mich

The Mothers’ Pension Law does
not provide any amount for the
mother, as such, but provides that
such amount as the Judge of Pro-
bate shall determine shall be paid
the mother for each‘ child but the
amount to be paid the mother shall
not exceed three dollars for each
child. It is possible that the last
legislature may have changed the
amount allowed. The law does not
provide for terminating the pension
upon the marriage of the mother. I
would 'be of the opinion that if, af-
ter the marriage of the mother, the
children were no longer dependent
children the judge may cancel the
order for paymenL—Legal Editor.

RAISING TURKEYS

I would like very much to know where

I could get information about raising

turkeys, any poultry paper that treats

ﬂy on turkey raising or would

they have any bulletins a 1:11. A .Q.

treating on turkey raising. Any mformp

ation you could give me would be very

much appreciateH. C. 8.. Sumner,
Michigan.

 

 

Feeding rations for young turk-
eys: Begin feeding at about thirty-
six hours of age and give five feeds
daily during the first week. First
two days: Feed hard boiled egg
chopped fine and mixed with dry
bread crumbs. Third day: Add
small amount of rolled cats to egg
and bread for two of the five feeds.
and crumble the cats with fingers.
After the fourth day: The slittle
poults now have learned to like the
rolled oats and give one feed daily
of them for three or four days, and
then two feeds daily, continuing
the egg and bread for other feeds.
Second and third week: Feed four
times daily, and fourth to six weeks
feed three times daily. 0n the
seventh day: Start feeding mash in
the morning made as follows:
Greens or onion tops. lettuce, dand:

 

   

siions..pig weeds. eta. chopped fine
~' W 0' Was I!) -

   

  
    

 
  
   
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
   
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
  
 
   
   
  
    
 
  
   
 
  
  
   
  
    
   
  
   
      
  
  
  
   
    
   
    
  
   
  
  
 
  
   
 
 
  
  
   
  
    
    

The Oilofa Minion Tests

Buy En-ar-oo Motor 011 by the iron drum. Save 35¢ per
gallon or $17.50 on every iron drum. Get a leak proof iron drum
package with easy ﬂowing faucet—FREE.

Figure it out for yourself. The present single gallon price of En-ar-co
Motor Oil $81.15 per gallon. The price by the iron drum is only 80¢
per gallon—a diﬁ’crence of 35¢ per gallon—or a clear cash saving
to you of $17.50.

a $17.50 is $ 17.50—lt’sYours

n1 ..

If You Act Now!

Think of it! You can now buy this
high grade. scientiﬁcall reﬁned En-
lr-co otor Oil—the 0' that isknown
to, and used by thousands of farmers
everywhere. and endorsed and recom-
mended by prominent tractor, automo-
bile and motor manufacturers. at the

titled to this big cash saying. 92 branches - ,_
and distributing centers—one near you n
rantees you quick. prompt and
c delivery.

You know the National Reﬁning Com-

any. It has been serving the public for
big cash saving of 35ceuts er gallon. or
817.50 when you buy it by e iron

This big saving is made possible only by
getting En-ar-co toyou mquantity lots
at the. lowest possible expense. You
know it costs less to handle ﬁfty gallons
of En-ar—co Motor Oil in one iron drum
than ﬁfty ' 'lﬁle gallons in ﬁfty diﬂerent
packages. e diﬂcrence in cost i335c
per gallon or $17.50 per iron drum —- and
this big cash saving is yours if you order
ﬂog-Moo Motor Oil by the iron

orty yearzand has the re utation among
everyone i making the ighest quality
Petroleum Products on the market. No-
body has ever made any better. and your
farm paper or your neighbor Will tell you
of the high standiugof the Company and
the scientiﬁcally reﬁned quality of the

that we sclL

Act Now! Order your drum of En-ar-co u,
Motor Oil today. Advise what tractor. ‘ ‘
truck. automobile or light. plant you

want to use it for. and we Will send you
‘ the groper grade and guarantee immedi-
y Nomatterwhereyouhvcyouarem- steelivery.

' If your dealer can’t supplyyouJiII out the order blank below and mail
it direct to us at Cleveland, 0., or to any of the following 92 branches:

lunar-Feta

Am .
mic-go. llL

But St'Lauh. In.
Magus.

   
 
 

lows
Center, he
, Iowa
Iowa

  
  

Isrsexllea, ill low]:
Monmouth. Hi
Peoria. Ill.
Pekln. Ill.

 

   

It: . », .
.i’ob': stylish"

_ ' :z:.~‘$.:«.:"l f

EN-AR-CO MOTOR omn'sstigﬁm ‘. , 1"“,

Per Gal. Per GaL ""-
Iron Drum 60 GaLl.......$0.80

Iron Hali-DrumsGO GaD.. .85

. own
Council Bluffs, Iowa
Dubuque. lows

   

  

5-Gallon
l-Gallon Cans.............1.15

‘3

mi: NATIONAL REFlNlNG co., emotion! aux. Clad-s. on.
NATIONAL mm 4 Modes-- W M Ma-

r—-—--Use this Order Blank---‘----

l The We! Refining Co.. G704 National Building. Cleveland. Ohio
| Bhipmoatomobytrelghtﬁonyourmdlmhuﬁngesnh

dznmcon-mcoloﬂrOﬂ. lwantntohhda-h
din-actor).

 

 

(Remains-swam“.
thrwhlchyoumhchargsmﬂunhperMLahmmsMppingmﬂcn.

1

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”wwhwmhmmwsmuMmMmmmul
5

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I '..‘hU INTES‘ER’

 

”W t” I
mwfnﬂc a.“ .‘j" w . igﬁ’n‘
SATURDAY. mm 3. 1921

Published every Saturday by
THE RURAL PUBLISHING com-m. lno.
Mt. 01m Ilohloan
MmMYork. Chicago.8t. Inﬁnndmwnl”
he Associated Farm Pom boom

 

 

 

GEORGE u. sLOCUM ...................... S
mnmcsr A. LORD “Kgsbénn... .........EDITOB
IATES:

Frank R. Schick ................ In“ Home!
1!. 3. Walker ........................ anal-na- mm
M. Ill-Lou's: ................................... am:
I Imk .h! oooooooooooooooooooo 1 mt 8","th in
mm: Grlnnel ........................... Baum Editor
GM News Jenner .................... F‘u- Home Editor
H. H. .................. w and mu sud: Editor
William E. ........................... to:

 

l __

on: van (5: Issues) .31; TWO vac 1o4 Inn!!!) 81-50
THREE YRs. (158 Issues) 82: FIVE VII. $230 Inn“) 33-00
Thodnte foWyourmmoonthood‘n-hhdmﬁm
mecdbhonm “Mammal-hire!“
§'°m.”ti.€,f;k: gems by check. draft. ”my? or “ﬁrm
. an currencysrostymﬁ- ‘m"
by ﬁrst-class mail even dollar received.

“WNW Rates: lib -ﬂ cost: “has.
themlumninch. ”ditto N

 

1‘ HD- to
pan. l'ht noel.
Live Stock and Auction 8an Adm. We do: week! 1"
nhshrepmnhlobreedenofllvoltocklﬂm:'dhn

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS
We will not knowingly accept the advertising of
any Dunn 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 publ'nhu would “predate an
hmnodinto letter bringing all facts to light. T111:

 

Enteredummammmwmch.

The State Fair Is On
IGHT MILES north of the Detro" city

 

 

A.“

ball a wonderful exposition is being
staged. It is the seventysecond annual Mich-
igan State Fair. Here within the narrow con-
ﬁnes of a few hundred acres, are gathered the
products of Michigan’s farms and factories.
They are the best products which the ingenu-
ity of the twentieth century can produce.
They are the result of generations of applied
science, invention and industry. They reﬂect

ythecharacteroftheprogressivofarmers of

the state, the ﬁnancial captains who have
built her great factories, and the men who
workwithintheirwalls. Younwdnotgoto
thefarcornersoftheearthtoﬁndthemarv-
elsoftheunim-sc. For atthe Michigan
State Fair the “mountain has actually been
brought to Mohammet,” and there in a single
half day you may view the cholpest products
of soil and labor brought together at inﬁnite
labor and expense from every section of the
dear old State.

 

England and the United States

PUT THAT man down as an enemy of hu-
manity who breathes a word to weaken

l the traditional ties of friendship between the

United States and Great Britain. He is no
better than the Kaiser and a ﬁtting punish~
ment would be to exile him to the opposite
end of the saw which the deposed German war-
lord is plying so assiduously in Holland to
kcephismindoﬁ‘theheinouscrimeshehas
committed.

, A war between the two greatest English
speaking nations of the world would be a far
greater calamity to civilizatiomthan the great
war through which We have so recently
passed. That anyone should even THINK of
the possibility, let alone suggesting the prob-
ability of such a war ﬁlls one with apprehen-
sion. And. yet, there are those who seriously
argue that war between these two nations is
bound to come. Even such a statemt ‘could
belaidasidoasthevaporingsof a crooked
mind, but when men of inﬂuence and great
'daily newspapers make statements intended to
arouse the prejudices of the American people
againsttheBritishitistimo to pause and
look whither we are going.

 

w..._.—.—'

A great daily newspaper published in this

f state had the audacity-to insinuate that the
“ Brit‘nh naval authorities were responsible for

"the ZRZ disaster in which seventeen Amen.-
ca'ns lost their lives; This paper quoted a
a“nineteen year old boy as saying that the Brit-
ish authorities knew the giant dirigible was

detective and that it was likely to collapse at

any. tune. Over-zealous patriots might ao-

 
 

  

espt this statement as true, sadly overlooking .

l. M that more Britishenj were 1min that

 

   

 
   
  
   

  

m Qty than Amman ~ In new nab

sure that. the deadly shafts Of suspicion might
lodge in the minds of its readers, this "same
newspaper told of the “antipathy and indig-
nities” heaped upon American naval oﬁicers
in England. A few days before the NRZ
disaster this same newsPaper Quoted a speaker
who had been in England as saying that tho
English were a “cold, clammy, inhospitable
crowd”, a statement which the speaker later
denied having made.

Most of us have learned the terrible lessons
inflicted by war so well that we will never
forget them, and we will employ the last ves-
tige of our might to prevent another war.
But inereditable as it seems there are animals
who call themselves men, in the United States,
Great Britain and Japan, who are spreading
the poison of propaganda to arouse the envy
and the passions of the peopr of these coun-
tries against one another. Whenever youmeet
one of these creatures step on it. It isn’t ﬁt
Eliseociate with the rest of the snakes of the

e

 

'A Senator Speaks

N THE old Roman days a. Senator was just
I about the “whole cheese.” When he
spoke the foundations of the buildings quiv-
ercd and the people trembled. We find it
hard to believe that senators are divinely en-
(lowed with special wisdom. But in Roman
days Senators were as grave and digniﬁed
and weighed their words with as much solem-
nity as the proudest school director who ever
mounted a platform to charge future gener-
ations with their responsibilities of life. They
acted as if they knew everything that was
worth knowing even if they didn‘t. But now-
adays a Senator seems to have no hesitancy in
revealing to his constituency 'What a paucity
of intellect he has. In recent years we have
had several spectacles of our law-makers de-
scending from their lofty positions to engage
in abusive controversies unworthy of high
school boys. Take Senator Reed of Missouri,
for instance This gentleman astounded the
country with his powers of vituperation when
during the peace conference he heaped such
abuse upon Pres. Wilson that it brought about
the condemnation of many of the President’s
worst enemies. In the debates that took place
upon the ﬂoor of the Senate over anti-liquor
legislation, the" Senator’s tongue wahbled at
both ends and the things he called everybody
who were in favor of such legislation would
have done credit to a drunken street rowdy
but hardly to a United States Senator. Only
a couple weeks ago the Senator attacked Rep.
Volstead, author of the Volstead enforcement
act, in words that brought a blush of shame to
the checks of every listener. Indeed, so
harsh and insulting were his remarks that
the Senate, in order to maintain its dignity,
passed a resolution with only three dissent-
ing votes to expunge the remarks of Sen. Reed
from, the record, an actiOn without precedent
in the history of the Senate. We envy not
our sister state the possession of Sen. Reed.
She is welcome to him. But for the sake of
the rest of the country who must witness his
shameful tantrums, she ought to recall him
long enough to instruct him in parliamentary
manners with an old-fashioned barrel stave.

The Man for the Job

UR OLD friend, Milo Campbell, has

been endorsed for appointment to the
federal trade commission by the executive
committee of the American Farm Bureau fed-
eration. This is ' a fine tribute to
the character and ability of Mr. Campbell.
The Business Farmer knows of few men in
the eniire United States Who have fought
more consistently and aggressively to secure
a. square deal for agriculture than be. It
would be a fitting reward for his services to
agriculture and a distinct advantage to the
nation to name him on that commission. ' It
is the dual hope Jof Mr. Campbell’s admirers
in his own native state that congress may see
the wisdom of putting a man of an agricul-
tural bent on the common. and that that
manmaybeMiloCamp‘bdl. ‘ 1

  

Nor Ar ALL» ‘
, the legislature to submit an amendment _

 
 

' .by the Masai of

mg county government, the etroit (Etizons
League is circulating petitio to submit the
matter to a vote of the people at the general
election in 1922. W. P. Lovett, secretary of
the League, tells. the Business Farmer that the
proposal 18 meeting’with a favorable reception
all over the state and that he anticipates no
cm In getting the required signatures or
in securing the adoption of the amendment.
He informs us that Governor Groesbock is
stronglyinfsvorofoommisdonfomofgcv-
cranes: in the counties, and that the majority
of the . was in favor of submitting
the amendment, although the house committee
failed in report out the amendment after the
863 had passed it with only ﬁve dissenting
vo

. Quite contrary to general belief it is not the
intention of the county government reformers
to My the mstitution of supervisor. The
proposed commission would only take cm the
supervmors’ “constitutional” ow the du-
ties of the board of auditorsp wedgthe poor
board. The supervisors would retain all of
their duties as tax assessing and equalization
oﬁicars. But they would have nothing what-
ever to do With shaping county aﬂairs ,or
spending county money. That would all be
done by the Commission which would be held
stnoﬂy to account for every cent expended.
In an early issue the Business Farmer will
publish an article upon this subject from the
pen of Mr. Lovett when further suggestions
and criticisms wlll be invited from the readers.

to the constitution~to pavfmﬁggvay for reform-

 

Woodruﬂ On Taxation

sPlZ'LAKING of Senators reminds us of the
good work which Congressman Woodruﬁ!
of the tenth district is doing at the present
session of Congress. Woodruﬁ‘ was one of
the .few congressmen who came out flat-footed
against the pending tax bill which, in its. or-
iginal form, not only repealed the excess prof-
118 tax but made it retroactive to January lst,
last. It may be assumed that Congressman
Woodruﬂ was partially responsible for the
amendment of the bill to make the repeal ef-
fective the ﬁrst of ”the coming January. Wood-
ruﬂ is opposed to the repeal of the excess
proﬁts tax and so stated on the floor of the
House when he charged that the repeal of
high proﬁts taxes would transfer the burden
of paying the greater proportion of the war
debts upon the shoulders of peOple in moder-
ate circumstances. Furthermore,

“I: is ridiculous to argue that the excess prof-
its tax is responsible for high prices and business
depression. Under this law profits up to 8 per
cent are exempt. Eight per cent profit was con-
sldered a reasonable income on investment be-
fore the war. Why shouldn’t it be now? Even
where the profits aro'such that the tax has to
be paid they may go up as high as 29 per cent
before more than 20 per cent or the proﬁts is
taken by the government, or $1 out of every $5.
Surely this is not an exorbitant price to pay for

the privilege or doing business in a country where
such proﬁts are possible."

 

The Bankers and the Farm Bureau

WE HOPE no reader has overlooked nor
failed to appreciate the full significance
of the recent endorsement of the work of the
Michigan State Farm Bureau by the agricul-
tural committee of the Michigan Bankers’
Ass’n. Coningatatimewhensinisterinter-
estsaretryingtotesrdownthefarmers’and
the public’s conﬁdence in the farm bureeuv ‘
movement by likening it to the Non-Partisan
League and Russian sovietism, the b ’
approval is not only encouraging but decid -
1y helpful. Bankers are a pretty conservative
sort. They don‘t easily fall for schemes that
are visionary and impractical. They will have
nothing to do with anything that smacks of
Socialism. The program of the Farm Bureau
has been called both visionary’and 80013.58-
ﬁebutthebankersdonokﬁnditso. The
best proof so far available that the pooling
methods and other ' and manufact-
uring ventures of the State rm Bureau are

dictatedby businem um and foundedon x}, ,
sound business'primiphak mmwm I

 

 
    
    
 
  
   
  
 
  
   
   
    
   
  
   
   
 
    
    
  
  
  
    
   
   
   
  
   
 
  
  
    
      
   
    
  
   
  
 
  
     
   
   
  
   
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
    
     
         
    
     
     
         
 

       

 

_4.-._a-._.__4

AHAJ L. l

A.

“a

     
  


 

J
I
.

HE FARMERS of the’wiheat belt
L of the United States have been

exhausting their soils raiding
wheat to ship to Liverpool, London
and other foreign countries in order
to supply the starving millions of
other countries. , ,

Our wheat is sold" to the local el-
evator for about $1 per bushel. The
local elevator men ship this wheat
to Minneapolis, Chicago, Teledo,
New York and other large elevator
centers 'with about five cents per
bushel charges or profits added.

These larger elevator companies
add to the price of the wheat, larg-
er freight rate profits and express
charges, including interest on in-
vestment, etc, and then turn this
great volume of the farmers wheat
into the hands of the grain gamblers
or so—called Board of Trade. This
great volume of wheat is usually
kept in the hands of and under the
control of these grain gamblers for
six or eight months until they can
pound down the price of this grain
to the farmers and get the larger
per centoi it into these terminal e1-
evators. Then these grain gamblers
commence bulling the price of wheat.

These grain gamblers, after sell-
ing through the Board of Trade,
about one hundred bushels of this,
the farmers” wheat, for every bush-
el they originally bought and fleec-
ing the people out of millions of
dollars through their wicked and
diabolical way of operating their
whdat gambling business, are about
ready to offer some of this wheat for
sale on the Liverpool market.

After this grain goes onto the
Liverpool market, it is again man-
ipulated or handled by another lot
of grain gamblers and speculators
and by the time the millers and bak-
ers get their profits added and the
railroads and transportation com-
panies add about fifty cents per
bushel for freight, the ultimate con-
sumer across the pond has to pay
about four times as much for a
loaf of bread as he should have to
pay and the farmers who produced
the wheat are swindled out of over
one-half its value.

Now, Brother Farmers, how much
longer are we going to go on pro-
ducing wheat in the United States
for less than half of the actual cost
of production and allow it to be

' handled by a lot of gamblers and

speculators who are robbing and de-
frauding us out of one-half of the
value of our wheat. The only rem-
edy in sight is through co—operation
and the Farm Burean.—-—-J. A. P.,
Hillsdale County, Michigan.

Whether or not the situation is exact»

1y as you have described it does not
greatly matter. The fact is that the
prices of the world’s grain crops are
dictated to a certain extent by men who
have no dinect interest in agriculture.
This ought not to be and will not be
when the farmers are in control of the

, marketing machinery—Editor.

 

MR. PICKELL AND THE GRAIN .
EXCHANGES

ROM TIME to time you have

written me your opinions relative

‘ to prohibition. In a personal
way I want to call your attention to
the editorial appearing in your pub-
lication which I am enclosing here-
with. (The Grain Exchanges.)

It just goes to show you how
dangerous it is for one who is ig-
norant of the facts to discuss bus-
iness propositions.

The Grain Exchange bill as orig-
inally introduced into Congress
~would have put the grain exchanges
out of business, and the grain ex-
changes admitted it would.

The Capper—Tincher bill, however
was amended so that all reasonably
minded men favored it, including
this writer, and I have laid in the
columns at the Round-Up. it was
even a better bill than could he
logically expected under as ou-
cumstances. -
There is nothing in {II

which to

 

gotten more than they expected, but
you have conveyed in your editorial
an entirely different opinion. I see
absolutely no difference between
printing such a statement as you
have and getting violently drunk,
either morally, spiritually or com-
mercially.

Second—You do not know that
the exchanges are spending “for-
tunes” to stem the Grain Growers.
There has been a lot of talk about
a quarter of a million fund, but I
actually know the sum is less than
$25,000. That is the sort of in-
temperance I hate, and I am sur-
prised that you are departing from
the truth .when the facts are avail-
able—J. Ralph Pickell, Editor and
Publisher, the Round—Up, Chicago.

Mr. Pickell is the publisher of a lit-
tle paper which circulates largely among
men engaged in the grain trade. He is
independent and fearless, and his views

A

  

  

m.~_._.._.-_

late at night.

’ 30c a week.

   
  

touch of a button?

itself.

  

~———————-____—____

 

———__—_._‘

_.____._____._._—_._~___________

Detroit, Michigan.

amodelforeverysizeoffazm
work. Prices start at $250.

DISTRIBUTORS
M. L. LASLEY, 49E. Elizabeth Street.

PRINGLE MATTHEWS 00., 18 Fulton .83.,
West, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Delco—Light has the famous aircoolad four-cycle, valve—in»
head motor. It is self-cranking, has only one place to
oil, and requires little attention. It will
liable service. Dela—Ugh comeszidzs diferent maids——

Easy payments if dosing

DEPENDABLE

igtnal term would have

minim-admit!
atterthebillhadboenamendedin a

ing that the bill must be further amend-
ed it the exchanges were to surviv Yet
the bill passed both houses of Co gross
and the exchanges are mighty eager to
continue to do business under it. While
Mr. Pickell may be entirely sincere in his
opposition to the regulation of grain ex-
changes and the movement among farm-
ers to do their own marketing. it may
be asked whether or not the nature of
his clientele may not have some inﬂu-
ence upon his opinions—Editor.

RAILROAD CROSSING
N YOUR issue of Aug. 13th you
have an article on crossing ac—
cidents. Now a' lot of such things
could be avoided if the road com-
missioners would see that brush and
weeds did not obscure the approach.
This not only applies to railroads
but to public highways as well. A

now a a nu
That Works for 30¢ a‘Week :7

WE KNOW a farm hand that never sleeps?
that never cats, that never tires nor coma
plains. He IS ready, now, to come to your farm
and work for you from early morning until

He will milk the cows, separate the cream and
churn the butter. He will wash the clothes and
turn the wringer. He will sweep the ﬂoors,
grind the tools and shell the corn. And for all
this service you will have to pay him only about

This farm hand is Delco-Light.

Do you realize how much money Delco—Light
will save and earn for you? Do you realize the
happiness and comfort it will bring—the con-
venience of bright, clean electric light, at the

You can now buy Delco—Light on easy terms
and enjoy its beneﬁts While it is paying for

If you will mail the Coupon we Will send you
the Delco—Light catalog with full details as to
prices and terms. Mail it now.

DELCO-LIGHT COMPANY:
DAYTON, OHIO

 

   

farm buildings where they will hide
mashmycausoanautoae—
ddent. ‘

Then, too, the public is in too big
a hurry to take proper precaution.
The tool auto driver is a twin broth-
er to me man that rocks the boats

and the innocent bystander is al- :

ways the man that gets hurt the
worsL—C. B., Fremont, Indiana.

You are right A few more precam
tions would mean a few less accidents.
The so-called "fool” driver is not the»

one as a rule who meets with crossint' ,

accidents. More frequently it is a can-
tions, careful farmer, who in an
guarded moment crosses the pathway of
death. All of us are afflicted more or
less with those "lapses of memory” and.

ﬂashes of forgetfulness which put us in .

reach of the reaper’s scythe. Otherwise.
we would need no safeguards to keep 11‘
mm danger—Editor.

Any farmer who takes this paper ‘
months and lets it stop should have ‘
guardian—H. L. Washburn,
County, Michigan.

    

,'

 

 

   

m. .~~...___.._ ..
..__..__.._..._. .___...... . _. _ ,

MM...

  
  

--—.—_.________
_—.-——————______.

 

     
 
  

 

 

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Llama“

   
   
  
  

  

  
   
  
  

  

   
   
  
 
   
  
  
  
 
    
   
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
     
  
 
  

 

 

 
       
         
     
    
      
       
   
     
     
      
         
      
     
       
  
    
  
     

   

     

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'1 , PINION” " ‘ 4 _
‘ .1 ELATI'VE to the' song poem on-
, J titled “The Bird With a Brok-
.‘ en Pinion" printed in your pa-
per recently, and in the article of
__'Ang. 20th, requesting others to
comment upon it, permit me to say
I take your paper Weekly, and scan
its pages. New I will say that you
'are correct in your acceptance and
belief of the apostle’s teaching
where he speaks of there being a
natural body, and also there being
a spiritual body. Paul plainly teach-
es us that each individual shall live
again in the hereafter in a separate
and conscious existence. Jesus
Christ stands squarely with Paul in
this belief and plainly teaches the
same truth in Luke 16, verses «19 to
81. This is Christ's own parable of
the hereafter and it is descriptive of
a reality. It is high time for a lot
of people today to learn once and
forever that all the parables taught
by Christ are descriptive of some-
thing very real. If this is not so,
then there is no sense in parables,
and no need whatsoever of them.

' Next, I will confess that the song
about the bird with the broken pin-
ion, has deceived a mighty lot of
people. It has made them believe
there is no more in grace than in
nature. And they have gone to wor-
shiping nature as their God, in-
stead of the true God who made
nature, and controls it by his power.
I contend there is a vast difference
between the two. None of us are
real Christians by nature. By that,
we are all sinners. The Bible and
human experience mightily prove
this, but by grace we can all be
made new creatures in Christ

“I am what I am," Paul said, "by
the grace of God." The only ma-
terial the Almighty can put his
hand up to make saints of, are sin—
ners, and it matters now how bad
they are, or have ever been. In so
speaking about grace, Paul was
speaking of the wonderful change
grace had made in and through him.
Many are making the sad mistake
of magnifying sin, and the power of
Satan so much, that unbelief has
filled their hearts and they have
uribly belittled God's grace and
power, and the virtue of the aton-
ing blood of Christ. Without the
shedding of blood there is no remis-
sion of sin. This is new testament
teaching throughout. Too many
have made the mistake of basing
their hopes of eternal life on what
they do.

No one can be justified by human
works. I am a firm believer in the
blood atonement of the Son of
God and preach it constantly. If
Christ shed not his blood to atone
for the sins and shortcoming of
mankind, what, I seriously ask.
what did he spill it for? Again, I
most positively disagree with the
lady who signs her name at the
bottom of the article in which she
affirms that water baptism was in-
stituted as a sacrament to wash
away our sins. I take exception to
this kind of theory. This is untrue
and a false interpretation of the
word of God. It cannot stand the
investigation of many other Scrip-
tures. There is a place for water
baptism in the plan of God, but it is
a scout: Iiace and not first, and so
important as many make it out to
be. Paul and Peter and John :11-
ways kept it in a second place and
spoke of it as a sign or figure of
the Holy Spirit, and his work of
grace. Many places in Scripture,
water is so used as a type or symbol
of the spirit as seen in John, 3rd
chapter, where Christ had the con—
versation with Nicodemous, when
he told him except a man be born
again of water and the Spirit, he
couldn‘t see the kingdom of heav-
en. In another verse he didn’t even
mention the water at all, but just be-
ing born again of the Spirit.

Also in the fourth chapter of John,
,Christ, in his conversation with the
woman of Samaria, asked her for a
drink. He then grasped held of his
opportunity to talk about her soul,
and it being saved, He turned his
mind from the literal water she
~ came out to draw, and He theamdo
,spirlﬂtn'al application to her salva-
. on. representing his salvation un-

I

 

    
   

. .l'f“
.. W _

The

  

 
 

for writing it.

loot. So, come on!
Drudgery horn Work.”

 

Fermi
A Department for the Women

Edited by MRS. GRACE NELLIs JENNEI

EAR FRIENDS: What u interesting time we are having ova
D “The Bird With the Men Pinion.”

Rev. Shupeon’s lettu- this week. I want to hereby thank him
There is certainly much difference of opinion among
usand whﬂenholdomownubo'dghuwewantadsotorespectthc
opinion of the other fellow. There is more to be said and if confes-
sion is good for the soul, than a lively argument sharpens the intel-
In the meantime we will not forget “Taking

  

‘ Horne

 
 
  

You will enjoy the

 

to water springing up into everlast—
ing life. Elsewhere in the Bible the
same truths are taught, that literal
water is a type, figure or symbol of
the Holy Spirit. The world is
ﬂooded with false notions today,
and many are deceived thereby. Let
any sinner sincerely repent of their
sins, accept the Lord Jesus as their
present Savious, and trust fully his
shed blood to atone for their sins,
and the Spirit of God will soon bear
witness with their spirit that they
have been born again. No need for
people to be groping in darkness in
this day and age of gospel light.
They can have all God requires them
to have, yes, all they need, and can
say with the apostles of old, “We
know we have passed from death
unrto life.” In genuine religion
thank God there is assurance.
Thanking the editor for the privilege
of writing so much, I am sincerely
yours—Rev. Geo. H. Simpson.

N0 SET RULE FOR TAKING
DRUDGERY OUT OF FARM WORK

UST A WORD of appreciation for
“our page," and it is with great
interest that I am watching for

answers to "Taking Drudgery from
Farm Work,” but it is my opinion
that the rule that suits one home
will not fit another, and I know
many who have everything so con-
venient (with money to buy more)
and no family, do more complaining
than those who have to do twice the
work and make the best of what they

 

have, so I think it is all in one’s '

own point of view. If your work is
drudging, just change your viewh
point and it won’t cost a cent. if
you want to be miserable, just feel
sorry for yourself. I so often wish
that people would stop saying to
me, “My! You must have your hands
full with your little ones.” Haven’t
you often heard it, or perhaps said
it yourself? But a cheerful word
would help lighten the load. I know
there are many modern things that
make work easier but it is not every
one that has the money to buy them,
but their lives and family need a
little cheerful-ness and need NOT be
all drudgery if we look at it from

 

the bright side—Mrs. C. B. V.,
Barry County, Michigan. ,
CORRESPONDENT’S COLUMN

I am a reader of the M. B. F. and like
“our page” very much. and I am coming
to you for help, as you seem to be a
very friendly and neighborly person, al-
though I have no help to offer in ex;-
change this time. First, I would like to
see printed as soon as possible a recipe
for Chicken, a la King. such as we get
in first class restaurantsealso a recipe
to make‘good dill pickles in a crock. All
the recipes I can find calls for a barrel
to be headed up. I have heard there is
a way to make dill pickles and pack in
crock as gathered—a few each day-—
also, I wonder if any of the readers have
copies of the Woman's World' from Jan-
uary, 1920 to end of story “'Til the
Clock Stops.” I would like to. borrow
them or exchange book for them. If
you will ask for this. please ask them
to send a post card first as I want only
one set. Also, I would like to know how
to make cider vinegar quickly from hard
cider. Also recipes for using sour cream

 

 

 

 

Aids for Good Dressing

for
Comfort, Appearance and Economy

 

 

 

 

 

MERICAN designs for American
women is the present slogan.
Long may it wave; . We have

followed too long in the path of
Paris.

At a convention of National Hair-
dressers this summer it was decided
that car muffs must go. Ears will
be swathed with hair no longer but
will come boldly out in pairs and
hair will be dressed high on the
head, regardless, I suppose, of pro-
file. Let us be“ independent and
place it where it is most becoming.
Bobbed hair is for flappers only. '

 

Popular Goat Style for Mother’s Girl
This little coat is so simple and
easy to cut that father’s or big sis»
ter's old one may be used to make
a coat for “the littlest girl.” A
cloth or narrow belt of leather may
be worn with it. In that case put
stays at the under arm seams. Make
the stays of heavy crochet silk. Take
a stitch the proper length for the
width of the belt and then button-
hole the stitch very closely. This is
.. the newest thing

in stays.

Pattern 371 4
is here illustrated.
It is cut in 4 siz-
es: 6, 8, 10 and
12 years. A 10-
year size will re-
quire 2 6-! yards
of 46 inch mater-
ial, taﬂeta, vel-
vet. serge, poplin.
satin, polo cloth,
bolina. velour s
and broadcloth are
good for this style.
Pattern. 120 in

 

    

 

ﬂowing sleeve or non. atoll. m
waist he is to' remain ,

   

My Lady In Her Fall Suit

When you come right down to
the perfect truth, nothing in the
world looks so well on the street as
a suit. In the Eastern cities wo-
men do not appear on the down
town streets without neck and arms
being well covered, that is, the bet-
ter class of women do not, and it is
the better class of women to whom
I am writing. We are more free
here in the middle west and in the
rural districts but your editor does
not like to see a very low neck and
very short sleeves for the public
gaze in any place. Such dressing
in moderation is very appropriate
for the home and for social gather-
tings among one’s friends. Just
notice the skirt of this suit. It is
particularly pretty and a model be

becoming to almost any figure.
Comprising Coat
pattern 3690 and
Skirt 3696. The
Coat is cut in 6
sizes: 34, 36, 88,
40, 42 and 44 in—
ches bust meas-
ure. The Skirt in
7 sizes: «2 26,
28, 30, 32. 3 and
36 inches waist
measure. The
width of the skirt
alt the foot is 1
3-8 yards. To
make this suit for
a medium size will

terial. This Illus-
stratlon calls for
TWO separate pat-
terns‘ which will
be mailed to any
address on receipt
of 120 M BACK
pattern in silver
or stamps. Ad-
dress Pattern De-

emng Mich.

 

partment. M. B. m. Mt. Cl

 

Skirts cannot well get shorter. and we
are promised that they may be a little
longer, but as a. whole the short Skirt
promises to remain with us. The general
line is to be very straight and sung:

the new tailored suits we have so- a

far have coats coming most to m
knees, very snug. with no flu-o at to
hip. Flowing sleeves appear on

of the dresses; there is eitherwalﬁ

 

    
  

. .10
Au

 
  

ra’ny‘, _-"
The other recipes

I] .

that you",

will 1). published next went. I n so

you enjoy “our page." ’

 

Verso

' am. Last - , ,
If Mrs. Lillian Howell, o! 11:31:;

County. will send me her address, I
givoherthestoryofthehstverseto
the song. ‘The Bird With a Broken
Pinion.” It is very mteresting. as told
bythowriteroftholastversee—QB.
' Tusoola County. Mulligan.
*—

not send the story for lice-
6°th would all be interested labs”

r.

WMM:ed-—-A Recipe for Pickling Tomatoes

Sometimeagoarecipewasglmb'!
asubsmdberintheMRF.forpickling
smaligreen tomstoeatoserveasasub—
stitute for olives. I out out this red).
beaveandinspitgofanlhaveloetn
or else misplaced it. I now havie the
nonnatoes on, hand and don’t know how
bprepare. Couldlaskthisfavorof

 

 

I have looked through many issues for
this recipe but do not find it. Will some
one else try?

Iamareaderofyourpageanden-
ﬂy it. Hope we will have many helpful

one on taking drudgery from work. I
have four children, oldest nine years
thus far We have very few conveniences
on our farm as we have just been on it
two years. I have had a question to
ask of you for some time. It is this!
Can you find a can Opener that will suc-
cessfully open glass top fruit jars with-
out rulning the rubber—I can not open
them only with a pointed paper cutter
and that makes a hole in the rubber.
The rubbers could be used two or three
times over if I could get the glass tog
off without pressing on tho rubber.
know one can open the jars by immers-
ing them in hot water but one does not
always have hot water ready nor the
time to leave it in the water. I shall
be very pleased to send you the price if
you could purchase such an opener as
need, if you will write me. I put "all my
fruit in glass top jars. *Just one more
question: Do you know whether the
Wonder Wickless oil stoves are pro
satisfactory. Do they last very long.
Are they any more expensive to use
than the Perfection Oil Stove. Perhaps
some of the ladies can answer this and
I will very much appreciate lL—Mra. H.
M W., Fennvllle, Michigan.

 

I have wanted just such an opener for
a long time. Next time I am in the city
I will go to a large hardware supply
store and inquire and purchase two, if
there are any to‘be found. One for you.
Let me hear from some user of the
Wonder Wickless stove.

 

I have received a great many helpful
ideas from the woman’s page of the M.
B. F. There is one thing I would like to
ask you, that is, do you have a catalog
of patterns, if so, will you tell me the
price and I will send you the money for
one. Patterns at the stores are so very
high and We farmers are having to look
at the pennies and dimes these days. ,I
will send you two recipes which you may
publish if you like. My husband thinks
I am giving him lemon pie when I make
after this recipe: 2-3 cup sugar, yolk of
one egg. 2 tablespoons ﬂour. 1 tablespoon
vinegar. 2 teaspoons lemon extract. 1
1-2 cups water, fill a baked crust and
put beaten white on top. Cookies—«1 cup
sugar, 1 cup molasses, 2 eggs, salt, nut-
meg and ginger. 1 teaspoon vinegar, 1
tablespoon soda dissolved in water. Mix
the night before baking; are cod and
keep for a long time—«Mrs. S. R.
Milford. Michigan.

.__,__..

Dear Readers: A number of you have
sent for patterns 2939 and 3312 thinking
they came as one pattern and sending
120 for both. You will now read-
ing over the description that dress and
waist are sold separately. each one be-
ing 120 or 12c apiece. I will-hold your
orders for a further remittance or will
send for the jumper alone as it can be
worn over any white waist. Please let
me know what you wish done.

 

Mrs. U. S. R.: I am sending for pat-
tern catalogues and will be able to mail
you the fall and winter one in a few
days. It contains a splendid article on
home dressmaking.

In

 

I have received an order for pattern
No. 3613. 4 year size and remittance
but no name. The address given is Lake
City, Michigan. Will the lady please
send me her name? The pattern will
then be ordered.

RECIPES REQUESTED
Easy Dill Pickles

Fill a two quart jar with cucumbers
which have been well washed in cold
water. tut in some dill. 1 tablespoon
salt. 1 cup vinegar, 2 cups of cold we»
ter. which has been boiled and allowed
to get perfectly cold. Ice cold if M
siblaFillthejaa-andsealtight. ,

 

  
 
   
 

  
   
    
 
 
   

 

 

  
 
  

   
     
  


   

H’- 9.: 53373-3! E?

33.

“unarmcnauvvalnl'ua‘r

L'HMN-wmﬂ‘

ll; N‘V'I

 
 
 
  

silssil

i
i
i

   

  
 

enough to Walk through and then they
Jame to .the‘ other world again.

/ ‘ ed rom strawberry stain.

hildre
EAR CHILDREN: Here I am,
back at my desk again, and.
while I had a fine time during
my vacation, I am glad towreturn to
my work, where I receive letters
every day from manytsf my nieces
and nephews throughout Michigan.
While I was away from the office I
missed your letters but when I came
back you should have seen the pile
of them on my‘desk waiting for me.

I suppose you would like to know
where and how I spent my vacation.
Well, I am going to tell you. I took
an auto trip to the scenes of my
childhood in the central part of
Michigan, where I was born and
lived until I was 20 years of age.
While there I visited the farm Where
I spent the greater part of those 20
years—It is owned by strangers now
and many changes have taken place
since I» last saw it. I passed by the
schoolhouse where I went to school
'when a small boy and I went swim-
ming in the old swimming hole. I
cut a fishing pole in the woods and
tried to catch some fish in one of my
old favorite fishing nooks along the
river bank but I guess I am out of
practice or else I didn’t use the
right kind of bait because I didn't
catch any. Altogether I had a wond-
erful time doing all these things,
visiting old friends and going on
picnics but after a couple of weeks
we began to get homesick so we re-
turned to Mt. Clemens and were
very glad when we drove up in front
of our home. Anyone never ap-
preciates What a fine place their
home is or what wonderful times
they have there until they go away
to visit and get homesick. Isn’t that
true?—UNCLE NED.

.‘x'

 

 

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS

Dear Uncle Ned——As I have nothing
more to do for a while I though I would
drop you a line to let you know I am
feeling line. How are you? I think
the New York girl is right about the
letters of the boys and girls, so I arr
going to try and please her. My sister
was 9 years old Sunday, June 5th. We
had a. little party for her at Sunday
school. Mama made a cake and the
teacher had nine candles to put on the
cake. We have started a contest in
Sunday school and the girls have 500
or more points. I don’t know how many
the boys have. We have been having
(rite bad luck this year. My sister just
got out of the hospital. and was so she
could run around again and our house
burned, then that could not be enough
our house we are living in now has been
on ﬁre and if it had not of been for the
school boys who were out for recess We
would never have saved it. We are very
thankful that it was saved. Say Unclr
Ned why not print your picture in onae
corner of our page so that we can take a
good look at you. I am sending a'story
that I wrote. Oh, say, won't someone
write to me? I got letters from three
of the children but lost the addresses of
them in our ﬁrst ﬁre—Marjorie Clark,
Ravenna, Michigan.

A Mammoth Strawberry

Once upon a time there was a man
who raised very ﬁne strawberries. One
year his strawberries were very big, and
long was very, very big. so big that it
covered the whole patch and the roac’
which went past the patch. Now there
was a tribe of very small people who
were traveling from the north and hap—
pened to come on this road. When they
came to this big strawberry they wond—
ered what it was. Some of the bravest
men went up to it, and punched it. with
their ﬁsts, they said "It is very soft,
maybe we can dig through it." Somr
of the women thought that they might
ﬁnd a gold mine there. So the men
started to dig a path, and the women
followed. When they had dug a little
Ways it began to smell quite good, as if
it were good to eat. And one of the
men said “I have heard of some big red
things called strawberries and it was
said that they were good to eat and I
think this is a strawberry. “It smells
awful good anyhow," said a. little boy
“I wish I had a spoon:” So his mother
gave him one so he could taste it. "My
but thatVdoes taste good, I could eat a
peck of it.” he said. Then the others
got spoons and tasted of it and they all
liked it and they ate and ate until i‘
was all cleaned out on the inside and
the boy who thought it would taste good
wentytO take one more bite and his
spoori went right through it and he said
“Oh. Oh, my spoon has some clear thru
this thing." and it was clear to the outp
side. and the .men then dug a hole large

Their
cesj and hands and clothes were _. all
’ . ' They soon
some water: to wash in and when
Gel Magnesia they

11: W '

b

    
  

e
ll

.with two and a half million customers

’two years. The prices in the Philipsborn

1.76

  

'8

65-51,: “its" . . *1 -i '
Dear Uncle Ned—I wrote to you once
before and described myself so I'll tell
you about a. picnic I was to. It was a
farm bureau picnic but there were a. lot
of people from town. We started around
eight o’clock and I tell you we hac’
quite a. lot of trouble with our car. But
we got there at last and then I went
in swimming with one of my chums and
stayed there until dinner time, then we
had our dinner. There was a. ball game
between Newberry and Lakefield. We
had a dance after that and there was
some people giving away lemonade and
candy and ice cream. I went swimming
again and stayed in about two hours.
There was a man that made a speech
and I’ll tell you a joke I heard there:
Two boys going along the road and one
of them stuttered. They were going to
shoot a crow, so the boy that stuttered
missed it and after they got a little
further the other moving his gun al‘
over shot and got it. The boy that
stuttered stid "You oughta got it, you
sh—sh-shot at the whole tree." Well, I
will say goodbye and hope some of the
boys and girls will write to me.—Win-
ifred Roberts, Box 46, Newberry, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned———We are little girls.
ten years old, we are twins and will be
in the 6th grade when school begins. Our
father takes the M. B. F. and we like
it very much especially the Children’s
Hour, and the D00 Dads. They are
funny little men and sometimes very mis-
chevious. We live just outside of _ the
city limits in a big white house; the
roof of the house is green. It was just
built last year. For pets we have a
brown pony, his name is Bob. and a
canary bird named Nellie. We hope
Uncle Ned will have a very pleasant va-
cation for he sure is a nice man. WV;
Were to Spring Lake on our vacation
and had a very nice time. We forgot
to tell you our names. They are Betty
and June Bright. have an older
sister; her name is Ann.““._She is away
to school and we miss her very much. I
hope all of the other children are as anx-
ious for school to begin as we are.—
B. and J. Bright, Grand Rapids, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—I think the D00 Dads
are funny little fellows. I am going to
tell you about our picnic that we had
the 24th of July. We had church in
the morning and in the afternoon the
picnic. We played games and we also
fished. I fished and won an umbrella
and a bottle of perfume. The school
children sang and the band played.—
Pauline Weber, Freeland, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a girl 12 years
old and in the 7th grade. Today is my
birthday. A girl friend of mine is at
our place. We went after some black-
berries yesterday. We got about 50
quarts. My girl friend, my sister and 3
went across the road on my uncle’s farm
and picked 2 quarts of blackberries and
2 of ’gooseberriesr—Theresa Lamb, Lake
City, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a girl 11 years
old and would like to join this merry
circle for little folks. We live on a
farm of 148 acres. I have a little Kew-
pie doll. I am in the 8th grade next
fall. Uncle Ned don’t you think it
Would be nice to put in your letter what
you can make in crochet work. I can
make lingerie clasps for keeping the
straps up on the shoulders and I will
send directions to any girl who would
like to know how. I will close with best
wishes to Uncle Ned and the M. B. F.—
Mary M. Johnson. Palms, Michigan.

, Dear Uncle Ned—I now live on a farm
but we have rented it so we are going
to move to Big Rapids and I am going
to take college preparatory at the Ferris
Institute. I have one sister and one
brother who will teach school at Lever-
ing., She will teach rimary grades and
ray brother will teach ninth and tenth
grades. Wish some of the boys and
girls would write to me. My sister
wrote to a young man at Lapeer and I
wrote to a lady at Custer, both of them
had written to the Children’s Hour.—
Dora Dee Carpenter, Woodville, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a farmer boy,
age 13 years, and in the ninth grade at
school. I live on a 280 acre farm. We
have 2 horses, 3 cows, 28 lambs, 20 old
sheep, 2 hogs and about 60 young
chickens. For pets I have one cat, a
kitten and about 30 doves. I have four
brothers. Last year we had 60 acres of
rye and harvested 609 bushels of rye.
We have 16 acres of buckwheat and 20
acres of corn. We also have about 22
acres plowed for rye and we expect to
plow 11 more—lean Lyons, Middleville,
Michigan.

A NEW STYLE BOOK

UST AT the time when everybody is

on tiptoe to know all about the new

.,.styles for Fall and Winter comes the
news that Philipsborn’s 312 page style
and shopping guide is ready for free dis
tribution. The announcement appears
on this page.

Philipsborn's is a national institution

 

and a; record of service covering thirty-

book are sensationally low on wearing
apparel for the entire family. A copy of
this reliable style and shopping guide
may be obtained without " charge by
simply sending your name and , dress

 
  
    
     
   
  
 
   
 
  
   
 
  
 
  

_ ,. . Philipsborn’s

My big free Style and
1/ Shopping Guide for Fall
and Winter slashes prices as
they never have been slashed be-
fore. It’s the season’s biggest sen-
sation from every standpoint—style,
.price, etc. Send Coupon or Postal for your copy right
this minute! It's FREE—postpaid. ‘

W Georgette Dress

8X-14010X—A wonderful dress at a truly
sensational price! This beautiful Georgette silk

    
      
  
  
 
  
 

dress is elegantly embroidered in black and gold
beads in newest design.

  

Kimono sleeve, elbow

 
 

length, ﬁnished with picoted rufﬂes.
~ Invisible fastenings at center back.

 
   

Silk ﬁnished

   

£03391: 131mg (secomysillk)a (iOLORS:I Na 2 blua
PRE’ gn‘ﬁh :33? as: mania? ° m” 87‘” ”

  
 

Price. PREPAID to your

 

  
 
 
 

 

ZXMOZSX
All-Woul'
Serge
Suit

 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
    

   
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
 

 

semmnservativo

lines and appro-
* to for men of ‘

laces. Slightly

ii n coat

           
   
   
   
  
   

  

stand two fin pocketl. Fine unit al-
aca llnin . grouse” with plan oycuﬂ
ms. {Statewhichs is desired). 6-but-
ton counties vest. S S: 84 to 44 chest; ,
so to 44 waist: 80 to 34 inseam. Price, PRI-
' PAID $14.75.

. Philipsborn's ~ANational ,
Insutuu .on ~32Years M‘J‘ermca
This business, established 32 years ago, has become
a national institution with 2% million customers.

“Consider the Customer First” is the keynote of
Philipsborn’s success.

iowssr PRICES in the [12th

Comparison will prove—it." If you can buy goods of equal
quality elsewhere for less money, we guarantee to
make good the difference!

We Prepay Itzght to your Door

This liberal policy costs us from $500,000 to $750,000 a
year. It’s an entirely separate and added saving. Saves
our customers a tremendous amount of bother.

MONEY ~BACK GUARANTEE l.

Your money back if you are not pleased with purchase.
We take the risk. Our guarantee makes you the sole judge.

PHILIPSBORN'S

erratum 176 CHICAGO

I PHILIPSBORN’SJIeptl'Zé. Chicago . ,
- - ' Fall.
‘ , maltose saggw Style and Shopping Guidef‘or :
Sign and mu Nm ' ..........l
“the coupon for I ~ . WMMMM . . MM >

  
    

 

’o

 

 

 

 

on a post card to Philipsborn'sngept.

 

      

"0.0....”OOIWMIOOIOOOQmouoo. ._sm.u...'...u -
“ I’

I

   

   


  
  
   

‘5

was.

  
  
  
 
  

"Hill“ illi.,ii| H "I I‘ll" "i .7. ‘. I " ”.il'llii' ill .

(CPE'O
will

mywsproofondiolly‘ouwlutn
ofﬂoroopyosenenosyouwloh.
Iroedors’ Auction Soles ed deodvortl

 

 

 

To ovoid conflicting detos we will witholl
list tho date of soy Iivo stool solo ll
1 you ore considering s selo ‘-
ao in st once end we will claim the
II. Address. leo Stock Editor. I...
IL. Clemons.

 

But. kshi Hogs. Michigan Berk- ‘
tire “’11, 11:14, 111511: Gmundl. Detroit.
Sept. 15 Cattle on Eon. GM!“

Wins.
Jet-8m 25.1um Poland Chins; Chss. Wetael
8. Poland mm F. W. Hart.
Mich.

&
7. Poland Chime. E. 11. Leonard.
a» Mich.
Oct. 28 Poland China. P. P. Pepe.
3. Please Mich.

 

 

LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEERC
Adams, Litchﬂeld, Mich.
Bowers. South Whitley, Ind
rtcr Colostoch, Eston Rapids. Mich.

chn Hoffman, Hudson, Mich.
L. Perry. Columbus. Ohio.

. i Post, Hillsdsle. Mich.
Ruppert, Perry, Mich.
Robinson, Plymouth, Mich.

m. Waffle, Goldwater Mich.

LP Hutton, busing, Mich.
Rasmussen, Greenville. Mich.

ﬂ CATTLE ]

HOLSTEIN- FBIESIAN

 

 

 

 

 

 

SHOW BULL

Aired by s Pontiac Augie Iorndyke-Bonger-

void 01 bull from I nearly 19 lb. show
eew rst prize innior colt, Jscksou Fair.
”20.11.11? in color and good individual

adv-n months ed. Price. 8125 to Isle

room. Hur ryl
Herd under Federsl Supervision.

BOARDMAI FARMS

JACKSON. MIOH.

Hoisteln Breeders Since 190'

 

 

 

 

SIRED BY SEGIS FLINT
BULL OALVES new“ I“ T...
cords of his four nearest dams up
and 730 lbs. milk in seven
0. dams representing the lead-
the breed with record: up to 29

Flint. Mich. “1'

 

OLVERINE STOCK FARM REPORTS 0000

lulu from their herd We are well pleased with
tho calves from our Junior Herd Sire "King POI-
tloo [undo Korndyko Segis” who is e son of
‘Iing of tho ontiscs” from s daughter of Pen-
tiac "Clothlldo e 01 2nd. A few bull oslvoo fol
sis. lkspr guo R 2. Battle Creek.

 

I AM OFFERING LIGHT COLORED
stein-Friction bull 1 year old from 21. 51 05
dam and sire whose six nearest dams are 88
lbs. butter Herd under state and federal

ervision n.
Oscar Wellin, Wiscogln Form. Unionvilie. “

REGISTERED HOL’STEIII BULL

ired by son from King One. and from s so
18b. cow. :90 delivered your station. Writo lu-

EARL PETERS, North Bradley, Mich.

 

 

TUEBOR STOOK FARM

Breeder of Registered Holstein
cattle and Berkshire Hogs.

Everything guaranteed, write
me your wants or come and see

them.
ROY F. FICKIES

Chesaning, Mich.

 

 

 

 

SOME GOOD YOUNG REGISTERED HOL-
stein cows. F‘sir sine, good color. bred to
good bulls and due from July to December. Most-
ly from A. R. 0. stock, prices reasonable and
every one guaranteed to be exactly so reps.

Plnckney. Mich.

E1 manna BULL BARGAINS

Sired b Se is Korndyke De Nijlsnder, s 82
1b. of. tﬁvice Michigan ribbon winner .hor
dam. 29 1- 2 lbs. Dams are daughters of ﬂu.

T Segis routine. e. 87 lb. son of King Segis. Boo-
ordsldlheto 30 lbs. Priced at value.
3100 up. Federally tested June 10. With

”sneer e. wast. wmu Macon. lich-

SOLD AOAII

Bull ml! int sdvsrtisod sold m h
ﬁrst ore mostly white. They no nice

iovis

ll71h2 .oldWssnsndtho 3b.
is s-

ﬁnd {1.3%.14m‘iﬁ'ge-Ha

sues Henson an-..“ mull-eel C

 

:iri

fl! I.!‘1|llla‘il‘ Ill 'llliil.l1||l| Ili'iii'lii‘ii|||I1i'”i|lillt.

AL ADVERTIBIIO RATES end-- this hostile. to most breeders or two moss-l
”m tor still III. out
will cost for 18. 28 or 52 times. You no
or

whot you hove to ﬁler. us pot is

M

esmustborecelvodonewookbotoroﬂo

wretos: utter-them. Writs todsyl)
loom

Albee. scopeolel lo
IIEEOIRS’ DIRECTORY .THE MICHIGAN IUOIIESS FAR-ER. It. Clemons. I

Gladwin County Pure- 7
Bred Livestock

Association
ANNOUNCES AN

AUCTION SALE

of REGISTERED CATTLE & HOGS
at the Giadwin County Fair

‘ Thursday, Sept. 15,1921

CONSISTING OF
HE eronos \
4mm cows and Remains—1 to 4 uyesrs 0

Led. Beau Donald, and
has? in calf to DON EB-
N Q828iiti'l’,8thwin11cr at the 1919
k. bred to high

1 YEARLING BULL —— Boon Donald—Per!»

Ian breeding
Consigned‘ by Harold Detweilsr. Glsdwin.

SHORTHORNS
1 BULL—8 months old. Roan. Scotch hmd—

BULL—41 months old, red, milking strain.
nsigned by 11F. Woods, GladWin. Mich..
W. 8. Huber oGlsEdwin, Mich
sTER WHITES
1 SO W—wioth Elittcr.
‘ SPRING GILTS.

Coniigned by Elsor‘i‘I gclch. Gledwin. Mich.

5 SOWS and gilts, bred for tell litter.
Egﬁgg} $111,318 litte
_ ETC 1'.

Consigned by Harley Foot dz Sons. Gladwin,
Mich., David B. Mote, Beaverton, Mich.

All cattle tuberculin tested.

Gelsdwin County has never had L case of hog

rs.

Flor catalog sud particulars address

C. E. Atwater, Sec’y.

GLADWIN MICE.

A ROYALLY BRED BULL

Mostly white.
Pontiac“
. 2 yr. old granddaughter of Pontiac Do
der, whose records of 35. 43 st 5 1-2 yrs.
83.78 at 4 1—2 years and 30.11 at 8 1-2 m
pd her in the ﬁrst ranks as a producer.
M315 0 gets him. Herd Federally Supervised.

BRANDOHHILL FARM

Ortonvlllo, Mic h.
John P. Hohi.1205 Griswold 81... Detroit. lids.

 

Sired
dsm

F airiawn Herd—Holstein:

Hire Slro. Embieggeord Lilith Champion 108073

His sire’s darn ols nths 4’ths Johanna. not
ﬁrst 35 lb. cow, and world’s ﬁrst 1.200 lb.
The only cow that ever held all worlds butter
wly milk record ot the same time. B]: _
records from one day to one year. and die worlds
Lilith Piebe De K01 No. 93710,
of butter from 20, 599.4 pounds of milk in s
you. World's 2nd highest milk record when
made and Michigan state record for 6 years. Only
one Michigan cow with higher milk record today.
His two nearest dams average:

Butter, one year

Milk
Champ's sons from choice A. B. 0
odd prestige to your herd and money to

m .1. F. 1111111111

or
Mich. ‘I

iris

Own
Fil nt.

# A PROVEN BLOOD 1.111s

“KIN trsnmitted to his sons the powor
G B{L‘thos daughters the of
notion towrmm gonads. Itteigthis oﬂsprin:
h 11 ms o e tree you poo-
Eonuexyidmmed of. 37. 3814 po 0!

f sale at moderate prices‘hee beautiful
We mhave or KING

hdi wtype SE GIS bulls.
viduals ”0"; RIVER STOCK FARMS
111 E agsln

Corey J. Sponsor. Owner

aciuon. MI c.h
Under State sud Foderol Supervision
R BALE—TWO BULL “Lilith: 20:;-

tsin end Durham shout 3 men 0 o
hsvo heavy lking dams. Not registered. “0

if taken st once.

CHASE STOOK FARM. Iloh.

ﬁ

Mel-lotto.

BEREFORDS

REGISTERED HEREFORD CATTLE —- KIN.
REPEATER 713941, end Been Perfectio-
827899 head our herd. Bulls home sold: have
some very lino heifers for sale. ”i or opened,
bred to our herd bulls. Come and e them;thoy

wil pleaseF you.
Prop" Henry Oehrholz, Hordsmon.

Tony
MARIONo xSTOCK FARM. Marlon Miohilln

HEREFORD OATTLE "3“,; “”3"“-

We can furnish resistered bill from 12
months and older best of brce g and gt .
very low price, haves some extra. good

headers We have also A largo lino
o! registered Wammhiro Hogs. Gilts, ﬂows
Ami Boers.

Write us. tell us what you went end I“
arr prices.

In FAYETTE STOCK FARM. Ls Foyotto. Ind.
J. Crouch A Son. Pros.

LAKEWOOD HEREFORDStu‘x’luiLe.Tl.“§3

good ones. High class females, sll
But of blood. Com
I. J. TAYLOR, eeMich.

e an nd
Fremont.
VIEW HEREFORDS taggers:

of 810 39500 3111110114 Also o

 

 

  

 

  

C. ’IOKIH. m IIOII.

\Day and there will be a tug of war

 

MIDLAND OOUNT! mm
(Continued no» page 8) J ,
Midland county will be
free. Also Oddfellew end K. of .

 
 
  
  
 
 

between the two lodges. Thursday
’will be Merchant's Day and Bay
City Day.» Friday will be Farm Bu-
reau and Masonic Day, and there
will be a tug of war on this day
also, between the Masons and the
winners of the contest of Wednes-
day. Friday is also Saginaw Day.
There being a new gravel road be-
tween Ssginaw and Midland a. big
crowd is expected from Saginaw
winch” will bring the Masonic drill
team that is so well known thruout
the state as being one of the best
Masonic drill teams in the state.

The American Legion is taking an

active part and on one of the above
days will give a drill before the
grand stand which will be interest-
ing to all people of Midland county.
We will also have a nice attrac-
tive midway, cutting out all the
strong arm joints such as the old
army games and the dice games.
But other amusements will be al-
lowed. A nice lot of free attractions
will be secured along with the races.
——Arthur G. Beden, Secretary.

FARMERS TO ESTABLISH CO-OP.
COMMISSION HOUSE AT
ST. LOUIS
PRODUCER—OWNED and con-
trolled co—operative live stock
commission company will be
established at National Stock Yards,
.111.* at once. The Farmers’ Live
Stock Marketing Committee of 15

has appointed a. special committee.

and empowered it with authority to
select the first board of directors of
a terminal live stock commission as—
sociation at East St. Louis. The
committee is authorized to proceed
in the organization of the St. Louis
co—opera 've commission company in
accordaNth the co—operative
marketing p n of the Committee of
15. The first terminal board will
consist of seven directors. The com-
mittee chosen to-select the board
and set up the commission house is
as follows: John G. Brown of Indi-
ana; E. H. Cunningham of Iowa; C.
E. Collins of Colorado; J. E. Boog-
Scott of Texas and H. W. Mumford
of Illinois.

 

FARMERS FAST SIGNING UP
U. S. GRAIN GROWEBS

Membership in the U. S. Grain
Growers, Inc., passed the 5,000
mark, according to a summary of
organization work issued by the na-
tional headquarters of the ‘new
farmer—owned grain company. Re-
capitulation of reports from the
various states shows that field so-
licitors obtained 974 grower con-
tracts during the previous six days,
bringing the total to 5,135. Ele-
vator contracts reported total 277,
an-increase of 25 during the week.

 

CO-OPERATIVE SHIPPING ASSO-
CIATIONS BASIS F LIVE
STOCK PLAN

HE FARMERS’ Live Stock Mar-

keting Committee of 15 has

agreed on the essentials of a
co—operative live stock marketing
plan.
erative marketing is still working
on details of the plan, but the es—
sential features to be submitted to
a nation—wide ratification confer-
ence of producers are as follows:

A. Co-operetive live stock ship-
ping associati-ons will hold member-
ship in the terminal live stock com-
mission association’s, which in turn
will hold membership in a national
associatiOn of live stock producers
Individual stock growers may also
secure members-hip in the terminal
association.

B. The terminal live stock com-
mission associations provide for the
est blishment of producer-owned
“Nil controlled co—Operative live
stocr commission companies at the
markets Where needed. The demand
for the terminal co-operative com-
mission companies must come truth
the producers themselves, who will
thereby pledge their support in ad-
vance. Subsidiary to each co-opera-
tive commission company will be a

stacker and feeder company from

member.

The sub-committee on co-op-.

boot
The eonmhsion
tions at the terminal who
be Governed by boards of dim

  

sio association will select the not
hire employee and deal.

mission charge will be levied ill

angingfromstoiinnumber.mv
11 rd of directors of the com.

of policy. The usual m ‘

selling live stock, but earnings wﬂ ’
be pro-rated back to the members 9

on the patronage dividend plan. Th

directors of the terminal 'pssoo'b? '

tions will be elected by delegates II
annual convention. Votdng deb-

gates will be apportioned on in V

basis of shipments consigned to th

terminal association, and not I]
state lines. ‘
C. The various terminal eased-

ations will federate into at 11311011
organization, governed by a

of not less than 7 nor more than g
directors. The national board

he supported by the terminal com-
mission associations.

 

AGRICUIII'URAL BRIEFS

Milo D. Campbell of Coldwatu
Mich., president of the Natio
Milk Producers' Federation,
been named by President James I.
Howard of the American Farm Bus-
eau Federation as Michigan’s rd-
resentatlve on the National Data
Marketing Committee of Elem,

hos 1

charged with investigating the M 5

us of the dairy industry and pr.-
posing measures for improving mar-
keting conditions in that phase of
agriculture. The committee is to
meet soon, organize and begin It
investigations. Dairy interest!
from Atlantic to the Pacific and
from Gulf of Mexico to the Canadin

border are represented on the Com- '

mittee of Eleven.

 

The American Farm Bureau Fed- ,

eration song book of some 36 farm
bureau songs is 011' the press. All till
songs were written by farm bureau

members and the book is said tobI’

deservedly popular. Copies are bo-
ing distributed by the American
Farm Bureau Federation beeﬁ-
qu-arters, 58 E. Washington street,
Chicago, 111., at 25 cents each.

Arkansas has organized a perm
nent farm bureau organization with
31 county farm bureaus joining the
state organization. The orgasms.-
tion of the Louisiana Farm Bureaa
Federation was completed in An-
gust.

Japan’s enormous exportation of
beans and peas to this country 5
rapidly dropping. During the first
six months of the current year’tho
exports of these products decllnd
82 per cent. No wonder there is a
better feeling in Michigan beans.

 

The value of the wool imported
by the United States from London
was two and a half times greater
during the first six months of 1921
than the same period last year.

During the seven months ending
July 31st, 1921, the exports ct
wheat, corn, and barley showed 1
large increase over the quantity ex-
ported during the same period «last
year.

 

In twelve years the membership
of the co—operative societies of
Czecho—Slovakia has increased from
14,000 to 574,020. Total busineu
from 7,180,309 crowns to 984 mil-

lion crowns, and net profits from
172,568 crowns to 13,510,581
crowns.

Portugal is one of the numerous
European countries which does not
produce enough grain to feed its in-
habitants. The wheat requirements
alone of this little country are esti-
mated at 200, 000 tons for the cur
rent year.

I have lifted down In turn
public-Adm: to the MQiSEarquer I
best. The

u-tieies appearing than.
straw-forward. right to

 

 

  
      
    
  
  

  
  
  
     
   
   
      
        
      
 
      
  
 
 
 
   
   
    
  
    
    
   
    
    
 
 
   
  
    
  
  
 
  
  
   
   
 
  
   
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
   
 
  
     
 
   
  
 
   
   
  
 
  
 
  
 
  
  
   
   
   
  
 
   
     
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
  
   
    
 
  
   
  
  
    
   
  
 

’.

“4 r‘.

c; r

   

 


  
       

   

Moo—Crops looldns "1'! “11‘-
Iverythlng has done fine since the rains.
M is a sure thing now. Potatoes

be good if not too early frost. No

t in Genesee county to Speak 0H
.Graham~

Anegan (N. W.)—Hsve had several

Threshing finished in this locality.

8 many farms are for rent this year.

fine apple crops near here. Some

ers have begun plowing for wheat.

Lthink nearly all are planning to at-

d the Allegau Co Fair
at least—L B. M. unty one day
; candor—Farmers are humng seed.
8 grain and plowing for fall

cops. Oats a very poor crop. Clover
seed is averaging about one bushel per
acre. Corn is extra good. The silo fill-
er has started to hum. Twaity-four silos
. are being built in this vicinity this fall.
‘. I Inough apples for home demand: many

. hve made apple batten—40. C. K.

lunar—Everything doing fine.

Had
; ”me good rains

which will h late
potatoes. Everyone attended 119:: fair
if gr tugs. d ha eral are! cutting clover
- e an Va 0 o l d

. E. L p owing one.

x . st. Joseph—Warm here, looks some-
‘ ting like rain. ers are cutting
i , .1 Many have ground ready for'
. .4 (rain. Bushels of black elderberries
tround the marshes. Many city people
. 3’ In driving out gathering them for pro—
” Potatoes looking better since
; gunning-l,“ no early pgtatoesmto speak of.
‘ era ven’ any r their own
. - ‘ Mrs. H. C. H.
-, . Missaukoo—Thrmhing' is in order. all
) gin turnin out very poorly.
lit 10 els to the acre and oats
tiresome. Cornisgoodandsome
, to cut. Potatoes are doing better
”w and if frost holds off until Sept. 15
will be one-half crop. Ground in good
tion for plowing and fall seeding.
cattle being sold, the best bringing
jl cam-H. E, Nowitn.
, mallard—Recent rains have helped
; . ”toes and corn. Early corn is fast
: later varieties have excellent
It is hoped that frost will
oﬂ until early September at least.
_ neighborhood has not threshed oats
but a machine is expected in here
‘ the end of this week or the first of
”at. Early pears have ripened and
grapes will soon be ready to harvest.
} Eaton—Threshing nearly finished.
. ~tsandbsrleypoor. Wheat not upto
x ‘ "drags crop. Some smut and shrunken
, 2:“: average 55 to 68 lbs. to bushel.
» U corn being cut. Late corn wants
f weeks of good weather
, a failure: late beans‘flne. are
padded. Early potatoes a fail-

‘ H ,- no. late potatoes doing fine and will
‘ P 1: fair croplif frost holds om—

ahiawsoseo—Heavy local rain every

.8 of 27th. Corn being cut. Early

bun harvest begun. Harrowing down

ground. Late beans are not set-

N as many pods as early ones with

exceptions. Shiawassee county put

nthebcstlineofstockatitsfairsince

Isﬂrstonaonlyaiackoffruitand

. potatoes to show. The Canadian north-

1 west hadafine exhibit ofgraininthe
. shave—V. G. W.

Moeosta (s.)—-—Farmers all busy cut-
Ung corn, filling silos and putting in fall

grain. Some rye already sown. The
ruins have saved the late potatoes. Beans
and buckwheat looking fair A small

cap of clover seed to out. Some spring
ueding looking good: some a failure.

:rly potatoes a very light mp. But-

. cream and eggs about the only pro-

hoe going to market. All kinds of live‘

: 'Inckarewaydown. Creamhastaken
‘ adroiialso rye. whichisSOcper bushel.

done. Some are filling silos. Buck,-

gat nearly ready to harvest and look-
good. We had another all night rain

it has not cleared up yet. Th2 soil

in good condition to work. The

or: are neither b or buying only

" just what is necessary. The farm resi-

' IIEYI LII! BURIS

' . 9 4 0/, A I n
BEATS EIECIMCHTY OR GAS
» ‘ Anew oil lamp that gives an
, unasingly brilliant, soft, white
light, even better than gas or elec-
, ' triaity,hasbeentestodbytheU.8.
~ Government and 35 leading univer-
“ " attics and found to be superior to 10
‘ ~ ordinary oil lamps. It burns with-
out odor, smoke or noise—no pump-
ing up, is simple, clean, safe. Burns
ogpercentair and 0 percent com-

mon kerosene (coal-oil.)

The inventor, A. R. Johnson, 600
. W. Lake St., Chicago, 111.. Is offering
,b and a lamp on 10 days' FREE
‘ trial. or even to give one FREE to
ﬁe first user 'in each locality‘l who
will help him introduce it. Write
him today for full particulars. Also
at him to explain how you can get
'.ﬁo agency. .ud'witbou‘ t experience
or .m and; and”;

 

/

cw

   

 
 
 

 

 
 

.' principle, as the reader will admit,

 

«a .- ~. HST-Preparing to Fill Silos .
Ruins are of Much Beneﬁt to ﬂue Late Potato Crop '

dance of S. Strang burned to the ground
Monday. The family being away at the
un-
known. Neighbors saved part of the
This

time. The origin of the fire is
househOld goods on first floor.
same farmer had his silo blown down in
a wind storm a. short time agar—Geo. B.
Wilson.
Wexford—Jl'hreshing all done;’ grain
very poor. Farmers are plowing and
fall grain. Plenty of heavy
rains and too many cool nights. Some
corn is ready for cutting. Pickles are
rather slow. Joe Hubbard drives a new
Ford and John Barman a new Chevro-
let. Second cutting of alfalfa pretty
good. Late planted potatoes looking bet-
ter than earlier ones. Buckwheat and
millet looks good. Cream and eggir
coming down—W. A J.
Livingston (E.)—-Threshing about al‘
completed. Oats light: about 10 to 18
bushels to the acre. Silo filling started,
Some new silos being put up. Late po-
tatoes on the gain; late rains has been
a benefit to them. Quite a lot of road
work being done for this time of the
years Farmers are getting their fall
plowing nearly all done. Quite a lot of
wheat and rye are going to be sown
this falll—J. W. C.
St. Clair—Farmers are preparing their
land for wheat and rye. Quite an acre-
age of wheat is going to be sown this
fall. The soil is in fine condition, there
having been plenty of rain through Au-
gust. Lots of fall feed. Meadows are
taking on a fine second growth. Thresh-
ing is well under way. Wheat is going
about 20 bushels to the acre; oats 10
to 20. Corn is a. fine crop but potatoes
are almost a failure. Not much produce
mg to market yet. Lots of good roads
ﬂing built in St. Clair county this year.
-—~Isaao Justin.
Oakland—We are having fine weather
and getting plenty of rain and not so
hot. Corn is coming along nicely. Some
silos are being ﬁlled. Potatoes are not
doing much; the lightest cm in years
'l‘hreshlngisgoing onasf aspossip
ble. Not many farms can keep a. ma»-
chine a half day. Oats a very, light
crop and the same with rye. But very
small acreage planted to beans. Stock
of all kinds doing well. Prospects for
good fall feed. Not much demand for
stock and very low prices. Not much
building going on. Plenw of help if you
have the pricey—E. Foster.
Kantian—Plenty of rain and nice
weather. Corn cutting and silo filling
has begun. and the corn trap is above
the average. The condition of late po-
tatoes has improved materially in the
county as a. result of copious rains but
will not be able to recover entirely from
the drought damage and the yield how-
ever will be much less than normal: the
early potatoes are nearly a complete
failure and there has been but a. very
few offered for sale. Farmers here have
not much to sell but eggs and cream.

the frost holds off a little will be an ex-
cellent crop—W. A. B.

.._.____....__.4

2,000 ROTARIANS ON MISSION
OF COOPERATION
(Continued from page 4)
Another hour and the land of lib-
ert beckons us no more. Seventy-
fiv‘ miles of salt and fresh water
are between us and New York and

we turn our eyes oceanward.

Nearly every trade or profession
and all but three states of the
Union and one province of Canada
were represented upon board the
Caronia. My stateroom companions
consisted of a lumber merchant from
Atlantic City and the secretary of
a mercantile warehouse concern in
the city of Toronto. Both were
splendid chaps whose companion—
ship contributed much to the pleas—
ure of the voyage.

‘ O O C

It is not likely that a detailed ao-
account of life on board an ocean
steamer would be of interest to M.
B. F. reader's. 0n the particular
occasion of. which I write portions
of every day were reserved for bus-
iness and social sessions in which
nearly all the men and many times
the women participated. At these
sessions stress was laid upon Ro-
tary principles of friendship, follow-
ship, morality, charity, generosity,
and above all service. Oftentimes
speakers emphasised the belief that

no man had a right to saga in
business of any kind for sole
purpose of making a profit. If he

could not really serve a community
better than it was being served be-
fore he should not enter into busi-
ness. Which was rather a startling

for a group of business men to in-
ﬂict upon themselves. .

(The next article to be published
in an early issue will complete our

  

  

poultry will be mention request.
t ohowlyou a proof and to" you what It
or copy as often as you wish.

of ad.
of issue. Breeder-3' Auction 8 ice «1
IAIEDERS' DIRECTORY ‘ . "rm“

SHORTHORN

SHOBTHGRIIS F GE SALE

As Lhavo sold my Cattle Ranch near
City. Michigan, I am offering for sale my
(1 50 registered Shorthorns headed by one
ﬁshedScotchbullsin the Sta
lode! 570147. Thlixbcrd of cattle are pd:-
mans Terms can be arranged. Time
be given on approved notes.
I. I. PARKHURST. Reed City, Mich.

FOB SALE OgERSXTS'BA GOOD 18 M00.

0 cotch bull suimblo b
bend pure bred herd. several cows and
heifer: carrying the service of a son of Imp.
Lom- who was twice grand Michigan

champion of
L. P. OTTO. Charlotte, Mich.
BALE—REGISTERED

GEOROENIAI? ARNOLD .IAAiglEE). AR
. or
Mlliamsburo. II 1. lllchlsan "OLD

SHOBTHOBHS COWS. HEIFERS, sum
Ho

offered at attractive uric.
re January first. Will trade for good had.
Wm. J. BELL. loco City. Mich.

 

r._ ;..‘.....
u

h!” .141. .l‘ilnll‘h

ml - A“ II ”.114

Rotter still write out what

,THE MICHIGAN IUSINE88 FARMER, Mt. Clemens. Mlohimr‘

    
 
 

l
_._..._.._.-..v

  

. ., “~11,

17er v-u-m l ‘

COPY

   
 

x
n .i :. IJII mlN'llllIIII‘irlU Hi‘lllli NilIHIIIIIIIIII‘Illllllllllllivl '1”III'IHI-v

(”EOIAL ADVERTISING RATES unit this

heading to honest breeders of live 1 and!
you have to oﬂor. lot us It In

will cost for 18, 28 or 52 times. You can
or chanson must be received one wool: before date
at special low rates: ask for them. Write today!)

 

YoHng Man-
A-Hoy!

What is it?

STOP breeding those scrubs.
GET 8. pure bred sire.

JERSEY BULLS are noted ‘for

their prepotency.

JERSEY GOWS For their

maturity,
economical production.

early
long
life,

Write Secretary Hendrickson of

 

 

 

 

 

 

HIGHLAND SHOHTHGHIIS

Hard bulls for quick sale. Fair Acres Good
and Collynie Cullen 5th. Both roan live you
3;?“ dildos"? nd aho maps a
0 0 ass A
Both quiet to haudla ' p c
A real Domain.
Write for particulars. .
C. H. Prescott & Sons
Tawas City, Michigan
Snonruonu CATTLE sup oxroso om

sheep. Both sex for sale.
J. A. DoGARMO, Mulr. Mich.

 

 

ENTHAL MICHIGAN SHORTHORN [REID-
on‘ Association odor for sale 75 head; II
It? both milk and beef breeding. Send for I.
M. E. MILLER. Mich.

too’y, Granville.

 

BUY SHORTHORNS NOW, 4TH ANNUAL

 

 

 

mvsu sunsn co. anon-menu onus. Shelby. Mich, 101' free Jersey
and buAfnggggi have stock for sale, both III! Literature. DO it now.
Write the secretary.
FRANK BAILEY. Hli’tIOl‘d. "IIII.
EXTRA GOOD BULL CALVE‘ FOR 8‘ GUERNSEYS
3m 01:) llidagle. Risdget beg: 01:956.“. BBL:
ave 1n ep em 1" . 7 MONTHS
a. a. nuswsu. Mason, Michlaln. GU HHSEY BULL GAL OLD. SIRE.
Langwater Prince Charms 4 A.

to. A. B.
1!. daughters average 416 lbs. fat 2 1-2 yrs.
Dam: Iawton's Lady Lu. A. R. 410 lb. fat class
A. A. (farmers class) 1 A. R." daughter. 409
lba fat D. D. Writ ‘

e
MORGAN BROS-
Allocan. R 1. Mlchlgan

GUERNSEYS

ROSE AND GLENWOOD BREEDING
n, clean federal inspec Their
made 19,460.20 milk. 909.05 tat.
Their mother's aire’s dam made 15,109.10 milk
77880 int. Can spare 3 cows, 2 haters and a

lot of young bulls.
HICKS, R 1, Battle Creek. Mich.
GUERNSEY BULLS, SERVICE-

Fon SALE able age. and calves. Dams now
on test making splendid A. B. records. I have
t you want in type breeding and production
Have never had abortion nor tuberculosia Herd
federally accredited. Prices 8100 up. Write
r rticulsra.
to m A. M. SMITH. Lake City, Mich.

 

0' MAY
no she

 

 

 

 

 

The Worlds’ Greatest
BREEDING BULL

Blue Bell, Supreme Champion at the
Bmithﬂeld Show, 1919. and the Birming-
ham Show, 1920, is a daughter of Edgar
of Dalmeny.

The Junior Champion Bull, Junior
Champion Female, Champion Calf Hard
and First Prize Junior Heifer Cali, Mich-
igan State Fair, 1920, were also the get
a! Edgar oi Dalmeny.

A very choice lot of
by Edgar of Dalmony
stored Ior sale.

Send for Illustrated Cohloguo.

WILDWOOD FARMS
Orion, Mich.

w. E. Sol-Ins. Propq Sidney Smith. lust.

young bulls—ﬂint]
ars. at this time,

 

 

 

 

BARTLEnsn-unl snap ssznnssu-
. ANOUI CATTLE AND 0.5.0.
Swine are right and are priced right. rm
nondenco solicited and inspection invited.
CARL IARTLETT. Lawton. Mlch.

 

herd test without a reactor. Some bargains “f ~
in
Jbgiilu seminar a son. Rood cm. Mich. & SWINE M
ANGUS POLAND CHINA
alL'l’s ALL soul. spams Piss amen
b Jumbo Ind. in 800 1r. boat. 0- line
The Home of hard, boar by Big Bob Mastodon.
I Der'l'T o. PIER. Evan-t, Inca
mP- Edgar 0f Da'meny HERE'S somnmnu soon
Probably rua LAROEIT am TYPE P. o. In men.

Got a bigger and better bred boar pig from my
hard, at a reasonable price. Come and see them.
Expenses paid if not as represented. Th
in service: L’I Big a, Lord Classman,
Orange Price and Us .ong Prospect.

w. E. LIVINGSTON. Farms. Mich.

ENE l8 SOMETHING GOOD. IIO TYPE
Poland Ch One extra good lam 10nd
big boned smooth gilt bred to Howloy's Clans-
$3.00 Price 8100. Also younger an: 830 to

HOWLEY BROS.. Merrill. Mich.

FAHYIELL LAKE FARMS "a TV" P'

five a
line lot 0! spring pigs. Come and see Boats
in service. Clansman's Imago 2nd. W. Out-
t and Smooth Wonder. Don’t for“ the
vember sale.

W. I. RAMSDELL
Hanover. Mich.

 

 

 

 

FOR SALE, LARGE TYPE——

iroLAnn oHIIA

boar pigs. Sircd by F‘s Clansmsn 391211,
Michigan's 1920 Gr. Champion boar. and
by Smooth Buster 395823, Michigan's
1920 1st Jr. Yearling Boar. Immune by
double treatment. Priced in selL Write
or see them. Free livery to visitors.

A.R FELDKAMP

Manchester. R. No. 2 HIGH.

 

 

 

“solo-rams!) AIERDEEN - suave—sofa.
Heifers and cows for sale.

 

 

cod to move. Inspection invited.
RUSSELL BIOS» "OM". IIGMgsn
JERSEY!

 

uoowwsw' use“ nan—assuran-

od Jersey cattle.

J. a. name a son. Farmlmn. men.

“a. JERSEYS "turns 1 vs. OLD—-
0x: a 3312‘s idol“: 1.. ""

, I.
bullsby W.” howlic’l Master Pods 1770 3 a
grandson of Posis 99a. m1 Sophie loan Tho-

nsntor.twogroatbullsofthebrsod Writs!-

ﬂeas and pedigree.
GUY o. WILIUR. R 1. Ioldlnd. lloh.

 

 

I THE BULL I8 HA‘Lgo;Hﬂg9ml-IE%:.R.H80WI
uch would u o 's
Jmoopoic'gncmoodasopm 19th.
worﬁtoyomur ’1“er andp on In]
on see rises
solvu 133:. this gull uninsophie Tor-mentor coil
FRED HAYWARD

 

I OF OUR IAJESTY IULLS WOULD IL
prove your herd. '
FRANK P. HORIINGTOI. lash. IIoII.

 

ammo ﬂ

 

IOR CALHIIIOTIRID 1 mos ‘
Idle we boll solves. hols- ”Ell-.1“; solved

 

 

journey acre-stirs Atlantis and lend
um mum ‘

   
 

   

m, WﬁYYsm a I. Veneer.» sue. .

 

BIG BOB MASTODON

Is sired by Caldwell Bi Bob. champion of
the world. m. dam'l sire is A’s Mastodon,
gland champion at Iowa State Fair, some brood-
ing. IhavotsowsbrodforSept. Afallboar
and spun: boars that are corkero. Write for
prices. guaranteed please

0. I. GARNANT
Eaton Rapids. "MI.

 

'T. P. c. A FEW TOP GILT. INID TO

M Ghnt, the $500 boar. Others bred

to Wiley's Perfection. Weight. 700 at 18 months.
JOHN D. WILEY, Oohoolﬂ'lﬂ. ”It“.

L. 'I'. P. O. DOES YOUR NERVI SAY IUY
IVoteyessndotderofoodono. Fan

' 8 I; to 88A. Too ‘
rts Block Prior

hon
g: 830 to :50 odng
March 2431: t 53% to
s.
F. 'l'. HART. 8L louis. Itch.

EONARD’S BIG 1'le P. 0. IOAI PIGS
at weaning time. from on... 5.3} .'
O

Swithm
:rzwrito ILLEONARD.BA. thtlloh.

wuuu‘r ALLEY

 

  

"$9M?"

      

waitresses... ..

 
     
       
      
    
  
  
   
     
  
      
      
  
  
     
     
 
  
   
  
    
   
   
   
       
    
     
   
   
    
    
     
   
     
     
    
  
   
   
 
  
   
     
   
   
   
   
  
  
    
  
   
  
   
  
 
   
  
  
  
 
   
  
  
   
   
   

 

 

 

 

       
      
 
 
 
  

  
 


    

 

 

 

.1 Dealt-I1 will he eon: on request. letter oti _
.t ehbw you e proof and tell you what It will out for 1

‘VBIE “”1.va POUNDS—8pm. m both

' ‘Gretiot Co.

325%” m... u...

" (SPEOIA‘L ADVERTISING RATES

 

of III. .er copy as often as you wish. Oo
roedore‘ Auction Seiee advertised

 

I I. s P c—e some av OLANSMAN’S lu-

AGE end lBig Defender. Ont an
ext-I‘Igood. rodent: ell sold.
. o. SWARTZ. Schooloreft. Michigan.

and
Beet of blood lines represented Writ
or call. W. Oeidwoii A Son. Sprinuport. Mich:

BIG TYPE P. 0. SPRING PIGS EITHER SEX

from large Timmy dams and sired by choice

boars. me and see our stock. prices
reesoanble.

L. W. IARNES a SON, Byron, Mich.

"- PAYS BIG" TOO muss YPouuub ‘E‘HINZA

on can

undo: at Butler‘s Stock
mm t m. you
over 1» head on Iran d. m “m“
one. o. BUTLER, Prop.

Bell Phone. Portland. Mich.

| m Stinging 0|:ree Type Polandl chine Cows.
e an e reasonabe prices. Also

ten ’18!- Write or call.

FI,SHER R 8. St. Louis, Mich.

DUROCB

FOR SALE—FINE MARCH AND APRIL PIGS
mm M Ghdihl 001. 188995. Write In

what.
HARLEY POOR A SONS. R 1. Giedwln. Mich.

I

 

sows-um; IRED TO MICHIGANA ORION SEN-

. great non of Greet Orion'e
Sensation) end Dem onltmtor (one
of been in state) for sale et consens-

lergat
hue-lose. Ahohiamwthowrlnghoenend

EEGHIGANA FARM, Pavilion, Mich
Kalamazoo County

Dunne Bomso SPRING FARROW,

Mostly Colo Lo
Wonder end Sense breeding. M “
oussusu nouns, Northviiie. Mich.

UROO JERSEY BOARS. Boers of the large,
heavy-boned type, et reasonable prices. Write,
or better, come and
F. J. DRODT, ”R 1. Monroe. Mich.

 

 

Duroo Jersey Bred Buick ell Sold. Orders taken
forJ wsentling pigs. 00 poll and herd boar.
S. SOHUELLEIR. Weidman. Migg.

 

FOR“ SALES—DUROO FALL GILTS AND BRED
Boar from Brookwstsr
Choice springp

breeding. pigs.
Louie R. Eisentrager, R 1, Linden, Mich.

BEACH HILL FARM

MED cows and gills bred to or sired by Peach
Hill Orion King 152489. Satisfaction guar-
anteed. me look 'em over.
Also I few open gilts.
INWOOD BROTHERS
Romeo. Mich.

 

 

EADOWVIEW FARM—A FEW CHOICE
spring female III! for sale.
J. E. MORRIS l: SON. Pennington. Mich.

 

AM OFFERING SOME HIGH GLASS

SPRING BURGG BEARS

t reasonable prices . A few gills bred (or 8°9-
L-ber (arrow at bargain prices.
W. O. TAYLOR
Milan. Mich.

Fen SALE—REG. DUROOJERSEY SPRING
is bred to Rambler of Senamn
sired our winners at Michigan
State 1m:- end National Swine Show.
I. "El-S e SON, Davieen, Itch.

onLIIIns pussies cmzr
Herd Boob—Reference only—Ne. 129210

1919 Chicago International
4th Prize .Ir. Yearling

BOOKING ORDERS FALL PIGS AT S85
BLANK A POTTER
Petterviiie. Mich.

ANYTHING YOU WANT AT.
I”Farmer’s prices.
LPOW

nunbc
ER, Jerome. Mich.

Fan SALE REG. DUROO SPRING BOARS.
good breeding, prices ﬁght.
JESSE BLISS a SON
Henderson. Mich.

‘ a
DURDG JERSElmrif'lﬁiiz. 333..

King 15 tiefeeti
‘ LucALKINB. Ann Arbor. Mich.

R BALE: one: ounce eosn noel
Breakwater breeding stock. Choice spring Dill.
JOHN cnoumwm. Carleton. Iioh.

 

 

 

 

 

 

no”: seen one elite bred to “faith King .2040
has sired more2 prise winning at the

late fairs h the last: Duo
boar. Newton

 

ureog. Hill Greet Farmumzre; and 12:" hmoad.

end Beers end so gs.
limn [lmm must a of momma. [ch,,
Newton 5 Blank, Perrlnton. Inch.

 

, ITY
nunoc sun was Al's. cm...
omen-rm King and Proud “Colonel bmding.
SIM“ ran.beed
ROGER“ GRUIER. AM Michigan
I OFFER A FEW WRLL-IRID SILIm

ed eerie Dune Deere. else bred eewe
Gilblueeuon. '

“ , vacuums e FOROVGI. et. Louie. men.

 

. o. I. o.
0 I II All) GIIESTEII WRITE

a S-
Prominent Bloodlinee.
. OLARS I. DORIAN. Snorer. M ‘

ft" 0.3. SERVICE BOARS, SPRING PIGS

under mu m... to inn.“ we... is
II write out what eu have te offer, “1

“Icon at special Ions
IREEDERS' DIRECTORY .THE IIOHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER. Mt. Oiemene. Iohi

HON
retouukfoml Wl'lrtedlll)

O. l. G. SWINE—MY HERD CONTAINS ‘I'I‘II
bleed llneee nest noted herd. Gen furnish
you eteeh J“ “live and let live" prices.

A. J. GORDEN. Iorr. Mioh.. R S.

 

CHESTER W‘IIITES

 

ONE
also mus assassins...
young pigs. Wri me your wants. rices dlhﬁ

RALPH OOSENS. R 1. LOVSHM. Mlch.

HAMPSHIRES

 

 

 

 

HAMPSHIRE [RED GILT8 NOW READY T.
sAhip. bargain In fall and bear pin
JOHN W. SNYDER. R 4. St. Johns. Mich.

An Opportunity-To Buy
Hampshh'cs Right

 

e1
GUS THOMAS. New Leuu'e'. Mich.

& SHEEP E

SHnoPSI‘IInE nsnucao rnIcEs

FOR 80 DAYS
DAN BOOHER, R 4. Evert. Mich.

OXFORIIS - M20 YRS. BREEDING

from NEW beet Both sexes for sale.
at? station.
WM. VAN S OKLE; Docket-ville. Mich.

FOR" SHROPSHI’RE YEARLING RAMS THAT
and type. Cell write
Armstrong Bros.. R.R. No. S. oFowler-ville. Mich.
ERINO RAMS FOR SALE. GOOD BIG-
boued. heavy sheererl.
HOUSEMAN BROS. R A, Albion. Mich.

BETTER BREEDING STUCK

 

 

 

 

the best in SHROPSHIRE and RAMP-J
v SHIRYE rams write or

KOPE- NON FARMS

S. I... WING, Prom. Goldwater. Mich.
See our exhibit at the Ohio and Michigan
State Fairs.

 

so Read Registened Shropshie Ewe and Ram
lambs, also yearling rams e ﬁlmy
slams." given satisfaction since 01890. cod

c. LEMEN, Dexter. Mich.

TO INCREASE YOUR RETURNS

from gimp lgreed Registered Bambouillets.

For
REE AN a SON
P O F M Lowell, Mich.

 

Phone 54-8 or 240

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

A few good yearling runs and some rem
lambs left to offer. 25 ewes all ages for eels
for fall delivery. Everything guaranteed as
represented.

lCLARKE U. HAIRI. West Branch. Iloh.

 

 

HAMPSHIBES. mvggfluLéisMBs sun

Make your than now for tea shipment.
WI"A were a £22” good
We! M. WILLIAMS, North Adams. Mich.

AUCTION SALE

BERKSHIRES

September 6th
STATE FAIR GROUNDS
Col. L. W. Lovewell, Auctioneer
On above date, immediately fol-
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-
uculars write
J. W. (ILAPP, Secretary
516 Murphy Bldg” Detroit

HORSES E

Two-vun-ou: monsoon me. can.
b honed. high eo
25:00 ' ' 1' so I

s ' sale. no. BUTLER. Portland. Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

RSALE, FLEMISH GIAN'I' RAB-ITS. DOES.
E breeding age.“ Three months old pair.
tered‘ does 812 each. Stock pedigreed

mE.’ MIME-AUG". Goldwater. IIOII.

 

   

AIREIALE PUPSML m’" (1‘53. .1 a.

tcbdoeeforpoultry
end ﬁrm homes. Ln furnished. Melee

5. . ,
R. Irbz', R 1. EM LlntIM. UNI.

Iuenoem Its-um ones no en.-
3 ohobe am. a a... Scotch Gallic Paroles.

ween. owe. ﬁles.

STEREO

 

a. mixed with bread crumbs slid
At first .

 
  

egg, rolled oats end bran. ‘
the greens should constitute about
1-4 of the mash and should be in-
creased until at four weeks it is
nearly 1- 2 greens. Gradually in-
crease the amount of rolled oats and
bran, leaving out the egg and bread.
The moisture from the chopped
greens is usually enough to make
the mash just crumbly but if more
moisture is needed use a very little

sour milk. Seventh to Ninth day:
At about this time start feeding
chick grain. A very little at first

and gradually increase the amount
until you are feeding daily as fol-
lows: In the morning as first feed,

mash; second food, chick gra‘ln;
third feed, rolled oats and fourth
feed. Continue in this way until

fifth week, adding cracked wheat to
the ration and also an occasional
feed of curd. Give good clean sour
miIk to drink from the first day un-
til the last—~water also. ‘It is a
good plan to take each little poult
and see that he gets one “sip" of
water from a spoon before his first
food.

Keep dry bran in boxes before
them, also charcoal, grit and oyster
shell in shallow boxes where they
can reach them at all times. A lit-
tle ground charcoal may be added
to mash about twice a week. After
four Weeks feed the following dry
mash:
wheat and 50 pounds barley and all
ground fine, then add 200 pounds
bran, 15 pounds meal and 35
pounds bone meal and mix well—
fced in boxes or feeders. Continue
rolled oats, cracked wheat and
chick feed until you can begin us-
ing whole grain, then feed wheat,
oats and barley and continue the
dry mash. If they are having
plenty of good range after sii
weeks, feed but twice daily in the
morning and at nightF-Pouitry De-
partment, M. A. C.

._

 

PAYING WATER TAX

Can a village that is bonded for water
and lights make one pay a water tax
when you are not furnished? The near-
est hydrant is more than 40 rods from
my house. Have no fire protection.—
A Reader of M. B. F., Cass Gonna.
Michigan. «

I am of the opinion that the city
could make all taxable property pay
whatever tax is levied for construc-
tion and general maintenance but
not the water rate where no water
is furnished—Legal Editor.

 

 

INTEREST DUE ON MORTGAGE

In 1917 we bought 40 acres of land
and agreed to pay one thousand dollars.
Five hundred “dollars in cash and to pay
e mortgagee! five lnmdred dollars of
thirteen months standing, the party of
thefiretpartsgreelngtopayinterest
up to the date of the transfer Mortgage
wuheldbytfhebank. Themshler, a
short form
warranty deed in which the party of
part agrees to defend us against
all claims. We alwayem paid our inter-
. after we
bought the land the bank notified us
that there was one year's ﬁlter-est not
aid“ by the thparty of the first part. The

dates the land is free of all encumber-
ence except a. mortgage of five hundred
dollars held by the bank. The bank

they are not responsible for mis-
takes in conveying the money and that
the mortgage will collect the back in-
terem and we claim that they should
have taken their interest out of the five
hundred dollars we paid them Will

youpleau given: opinion who is
right‘i—J. & G. Semen Mich.
I-—-—-—,—-——-

I am of the opinion that ﬁle
whole amount due on the mortgage
will have to be paid. As a matter
of precaution you should have seen
to it that the interest was endorsed
on the mortgage up to the time it
was agreed it should have been paid.
Your remedy is against the man who
gave you the warranty deed—«Lo-
gal Editor.

10 KILL POTATO man
Could you tell me how to kill the
potato lies that are bothering the
now. Some. say that nicotine
wﬂldolt. Howmuchdoeeittaketo
the barrel is there anything else
that Will killm themT—F‘. Venn. Gerald

Traverse County, Michigan.

P—nn—nF-e .

The most suecessul spray for the

green lice on potatoes tornadoes

tom: one plate:

  

100 pounds oats, 50 pounds ’

  

, in:
so much .. in getting

they are on the undersides of the
leaves it is necessary to rig to. spray-
er so as to shoot upwards from un-
derneath.

There are other sprays which will

kill the lies but the nicotine spray is
safest and cheapest all things con-
sidered.

I believe kerosene emulsion would
would do it but it is nasty stuff to
make and very destructive to rubber
hose, pump valves and clothing and
there would be very little, if any-
thing saved by substituting this
emulsion for the nicotine.

Whale oil soap would do it if
used at the rate of one pound to five
or six gallon of water but it is not
so effective as the nicotine and in
any considerable amount costs more.
Therefore the nicotine is the favor-
ite spray both, because of its ef-
fectiveness and because of its cheap-
ness. To repeat: Success depends

more on the thoroughness of the
application than on anything else.
:——R. H. Pettit, Professor of Entour-
ology, M. A. O.

 

ESSENKAY PROMISES TO SETTLE

URING THE past several months

the Collection Box has received

a number of claims against the
Essenkay Products 00., makers of
automobile tires, Chicago.
cases cited the Essenkay Products
Company had failed to make good
its guarantee of refunding money on
tires which were returned to them
as unsatisfactory. The claims ag-
gregated upwards of $200. A good
deal of correspondence has passed
between us and the Essenkay peo-

ple in our efforts to securean im- ‘

mediate settlement of these claims,
but without result. The firm main-
tains that it has the very best of
intentions of adjusting the claims,
but asserts that it has met with ser-
ious financial reverses as a result
of the business depression which
made it necessary for them to re-
organize. They declare that the
claims will be paid in full just as
soon as possible or, they hope, in
about ninety days. The following
letter from the sales manager of the
company explains the position in
which the firm is alleged to be at
the present time:

"It would be an immense relief to us

if we were able to make the long delayed .-

settlement wlth Mr. (3.. which you have
again called to our attention and it is
with regret that we must
further extension of time.

disturbing conditions which fell

1y heavy on the automotive man

lng industry. Every factory so engaged
was hard hit and many driven
bankruptcy. You cannot run shrin-
dustry and keep up the output without
sales and consumers for a long

per-led.
of tlrne have only been buying what they

absolutely Such conditions
were entirely beyond our control.

"We kept up the fight however, tech
in: sure that the tide would turn and
we were not disappointed Business is
Improving. It is coming our way slowly
but surely and the refinancing of our
company is going to make it le
for us to meet pressing obli one as
soon as our business affairs have been
adjudicated.

"We would appreciate it as a special
favor if you would advise Mr. O. that
his claim is in the hands of our audit-
ing department for refund where A: will
Imentalren care of at our earliest conven-

ce

Letters also received from the
president and secretary repeat
what the sales manager has said.
Feeling that under the circumstanc-
es nothing would be gained by prese-
ing the claims at this time. the Col-
lection Box advised the firm that it
would defer taking any action. for
the time being but would be duty
bound to advise its readers of the
facts in the case that other pron!a

pective customers among our may

ers might be governed accordingly.

It is the belief of the Collection

Box that the Esseahay -people have
every intention of adjusting the”
claims if y can.
mission of those holding the W
we will deter «ties until Ne

Which was

effective as in hitting the the. All
' lice must be hit to be killed and "as

In the,

ask fer a ‘
"You are undoubtedly aware of the '

”With the per:

 

(r

 

5'3

BEESES

c.-
E

5TH.

  
   
 


   

 
 
  

. 11.7 *l-l. <

' , Gladwin, Mich.,

‘I

' ‘ Robt. A. Holmes,
Mich., will show 14 and W. T. Bar-

. Louis,

 

.mgtOn. Mich.; Arthur P. Edison,

‘ Grand Rapids; Brennan, Fitzgerald

& Sink. Detroit; Jessie A. Kline,
and Eardly Bro3..
Grand Rapids, Mich.

5——

Leadlng in the number of Guern-
soy exhibits, the John Endicott
,Birmingham, Mich., will show

15 head that for substance, contour
and finish will be very hard to beat.
Grand Rapids,

hour, Birmingham, will show the
same number. The other exhibitors
in this class are John Ebels, How-
ell, Mich., and W. J. Brown of De-
troit. Ayrshires will be shown by
Shuttleworth Bros., Ypsilanti and
W. H. Murphy, Birmingham, Mich.

A battle royal is looked for in the
Sher-thorn classes when the premier
herds of Carpenter '& Ross, Rosen-
berg & Son and S. H. Prescott and

Buckland Hall come together. Over
at Springfield, Illinois, last week,
the Massilion entries, Maxwilton

Monarch and Maxwilton Lochinvar
captured the blue in the aged and
junior yearling bull classes but Ros-
enberger carried off senim- and
grand championship honors with his
two-year—old heifer, Cloverleaf Darl-
111;.
h——-—-‘

The number of Hereford entries
will be much larger than ever be-
fore in the history of the fair. The
names of the'following breeders are
included in the Hereford entry list:
Smith Bros., Ligonier, Ind.; F. H.
Sanders, Eaton Rapids, Mich.; Har-
old Detwiler, Gladwin, Mich.; Cal-
houn Bros., Bronson, Mich.; Michi-
gan Agricultural College, Lansing.
Mich.; James V. Hill, Randall, 0.;
James Engle & Son, Sheridan, Mo.;

,J. L. Priddy & Son, Warren, Ind.;
‘H. E. Schmidt 174,

Son, Columbus,
0.; and the Pickering Farm, Belton,

. Missouri.

When the returns are all in, it is
probable that the Shorthorns will
lead all other beef breeds in the
number of entries for the 1921 fair

 

'but the margin between them and

the Herefords will be very small.
Carpenter & Ross, Mansfield, Ohio,

will show the greatest number of ,,

cattle in the Shorthorn division.
their entries numbering 42. The
Shorthorn list also includes the
names of John Lessiter's Sons,
Clarkston, Mich.; S. H. Pangborn
and Carr Bros., Bad Axe, Mich.; M.
Wagner, Frem»ont,‘0hio; M. & J.
Schaffer, Erie, ,Pa.; Buckland Hall
Farm, Nokesville, Va; E. Rosen-
berger & Son, Tiffin, Ohio and C. T.
Prescott, Tawas City, Mich.

 

Several new names will appear on
this years Angus entry list. Besides
the Wildwood and Woodcote herds
the breeders following will com-
pete for the honors in this de-
partment: Eldred A. Clark, St.
Mich.; Dr. G. R. Martin.
Croswell, Mich.; Thomas Barnett &
Sons, Pontiac, Mich.; Michigan Ag-
ricultural College, Lansing, Mich.;
Frank Perry, Davidson, Mich., and
Carpenter & Ross, Mansfield, Ohio.
Added to the list of black cattle are
the entries for 36 Galloways to be
shown by James Frantz, Bluffton;
Frantz Bros., Mt. Cony, Ohio, and
W. M; Vines, Howell, Mich.

The Red Polled entries were
about equally divided between West-
brook Bros., Ionia, Mich.; ,. Walter
Luckhardt, Manchester, Mich., and
A. S. Bolen & Son, Fremont, Ohio.
Polled Durhams will be shown by
Stumps & Eetzler, Convoy, Ohio and

.the K‘elleys of Plymouth, Mich. A.

11.8; A. 0. Bower and L. S. Marshall

56, Sons will show Brown Swiss!

cattle.

 

{Recently the writer has spent sev-

oral days at the fair grounds, as-

olating. in the make-ready process

7 j and. during that period many of the .

leading cattle growers and horse
1

when... wash;

\demonstrate the canning of various
soup mixtures.

”A. Brown, B. A. Seyrtour and Oscar

"theory that Detroit wants the best

, 7%

m “ expressions‘ of delight and
.«gehuinb appreciation made by these
visitors when they are shown the
splendid cattle barn, made by refur-
nishing the old horse barn and the
fine new building which has been
erected for the comfort of the
horsemen. Michigan live stock
breeders have long been in need of
better quarters for their exhibits at
the State Fair; it is to be hoped that
the time is not far distant when a
new pavilion forthe sheep and hogs
can be erected.

One of the old original cattle
barns has been remodeled and di-
vided into pens to house and hold
the carload exhibits, of fat steers
during the fair. W. H. Pew, the
judge of beef cattle, will be assist-
ed in making his selections of win-
ners, in the fat stock division, by
two experienced butchers.

 

Appearances, at present writing,
‘seem to indicate the probable neces-
sity of using every inch of space
available on the grounds to prop-
erly house the cattle exhibit: when
it is remembered that the new cat-
tle barn accommodates 464 full-
grown cattle, the increase in the
number of show animals, this year
over last, becomes apparent.

The Michigan Agricultural Col-
lege will put on a cow testing dem-
onstration; the college will also
show a herd of cattle in which near-
ly all of the leading beef and dairy
breeds will be represented. The M.
A. C. will be represented in the
poultry department and will fur-
nish an educational exhibit of bees:
samples of foul breed and other dis—
eases, that bees are heir to, will be
on exhibition in this department.

 

One of the most interesting ex-
hibits at the coming State Fair will
be the canning demonstration.
There are 62 garden clubs in De-
troit composed of boys' and girls’,
operating under the auspices of the
Recreation Club; these clubs have
been organized into a federation
with a full quota of administration
officials and a board of managers.
The federation described above, will
send a team of three to compete for
the prizes offered by the fair in
connection with the canning con-
test; one of the members of this
team, a boy of thirteen, has put up
210 cans of vegetables, so far this
year, all of which he grew in his
own garden. The name and address
of this ambitious young gardener,
is Elvis Alford, 67 Goldsmith avenue,
Detroit; the team will undertake to

 

DETROIT BOARD OF COMMERCE
AIDS BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ CLUBS

URING the Michigan State Fair,

the agricultural division of the

Detroit Board of Commerce
will announce a series of prizes of-
fered by business men of Detroit,
who also are farm operators, for
the best products of boys' and girls’
displayed at the fair next year.
These prizes will be supplementary
to those offered by the fair manage-
ment and are intended as a special
incentive for development of pro—
duction club work, particularly in
nearby counties.

In its efforts to promote higher
standards of farm production in the
counties around Detroit the agri-
cultural division of the Detroit
Board of Commerce has brought ‘to—
gether a group of business men in
the city and leaders in rural boys
and girls club work.

Among the Detroit business men
who are interested ‘w development
of club work are John F. O’,Hara
Sidney Ferries, John Endicott, John

H. Webber. Their interest in en-
couragement of club work in Mich-
igan and particularly in the adja-
cent area is based in the words 0
Mr. Webber, a member of the State
Fair Commission, "simply: on othe

grades of farm products obtainable
on its markets and naturally wants

buildings, 2

 

 

 
 
   

rotoo for 13 tlmoo or longer. erto out

'Advort ling Department, Mt. Olomonl.

 

POULTRY BREEDERS DIRECTORY

Advormomonu Inoortod under this hoodlum of so oonto poo Ono“

what you hovo to odor and und It In. we wIIl no

It In typo, sond proof and quoto rotor by rituals. moll. Addms Tho Mlehlgon Iuslnoso Fol-moo.
e on.

Iln no. nor quo.

 

P0 U III‘RY

 

MYEABLIIIG HEIIS
also a number till m 13 weeks
Pul ulletl. B. 81:11:11 numb. of White
Barred Rock
White Wyandoth

10. Brown and
Leghorns. and Anco consult an two year old
Gray Toulouse Geese. er for

description
and pm
STATE FARMS ASSOCIATION
Desk 2. Kalamazoo. Mlchlcan

C. and

 

MUD WAY AUSH- KA FAIIM

0"“ young stock and a few maturo breederl h
Wh hito Chinese Geese, White lﬁunnor Ducks oi

White Wyandottes. Also 0. spring I‘ll
Writ tpodsy for prices on tyou eed.
DIKE c. MILLER. Drydon. Mloh.

 

ORPINGTONS AND LEGHORNS

Two great broods for proﬁt. Write today ‘3
[no catalogue“ of hatching oggs, baby chicks

brooding
CYCLE HATOHER COMPANY, 140 Fhllo Ildl.
llmlro. N. Y.

 

OF QUALITY OOCKERELS—MINORCAﬁ
Houdsns, Ro c,ks Reds O rplngtons Spa 111‘
TYRONE POULTRY FARM. Fenton. Mlch.

RHODE ISLAND REDS

HITTAKER'S R. l. REDS. MICHIGAN‘.

Krestest Color and Egg Strain. Chicks all
sold. 50 good cock birds. either comb. at bar
gain prices for quick sale. Catalog Free.
INTERLAKES FARM. Box 4. Lawrence. Mloia

ORPINGTONS

ORPIIGTONS COOKERELI AND PULL!"
for sale. Buff, Whi
Black Cookerols at 37,38,1nd 310.
$3 and 86. Also yearling hens 83
Hatching eggs, :6 per setting of 15.
ORADOWSKE BROS” R 4. MorrIII. MIclL

 

 

 

 

 

LANGSHAN

DR. CIMPSON'S LANOSHANS OF QUALITY
Bred for type and color since 1912. Winto!
laying strain of both Black and Whito. Ho"
somo oockerels for sale. Eggs in season.
,DR CHAS. W. SIMPSON
WohborvIIIo. Mlch.

 

 

l

 

WYANDOTTE

SILVER LACED GOLDEN AND WHITE WYQ
ondottes. Eggs $2. 50 per 15: $4. 50 for 30.
0. W. BROWNING, R 2. Portland. Mlch.

WHITE WYAIIDOTTES

n Foundation. is
‘19. No more baby this
cochrelsh-now for oorb fall delivery.

0. W. HElMBACH
Big Rapids. Mich. O

LEGHORNS

 

 

 

 

Graham“. 8. O. Whlto Leonel-no. Cookequ
cocks and yearling hens for sale.
LEO GRABOWSKE. R A. Merrill, Mich.

BREEDERS

We have 3 ﬁne lot of English and Amer»
icon Leghorn Cookerels for min at reason-
sblo prices. Let us know your wants. We
on approval and guarantee satisfaction.

LORING & MARTIN CO.

East Souootuck. Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

SINGLE COMB BUFF LEGHORN COOKER-
613. April and May hatched. Heavy Inﬁll!

.1. w. wessrsn, Bath,
HATCHING EGGS
Ancona COCKERELS, 4 mourns OLD, $2;

2 for $3: 8 Weeks, $1..00
EVA TRYON, Jerome.

Mlch.

 

 

 

Mich.

 

 

C. BR. LEGHORN EGGS, $1.50 FOR 15.
Pekin duck $1.50 for 8. W. Chineso goose
oggs 40c each. Mrs. Claudia Betta, Hillsdale, Mich.

 

n. l. RED HATCHINO EGGS, THOMPKIN‘S
strain, $10 per 100; baby chicks. 250 each.
Wm. H. FROHM. New Baltimore. Mlch

 

BUSINESS FARMERS’ EXCHANGE

 

for Ier than 3 times.
mont.
ureo. both In body of ad. and In address.

 

0 A WORD PER ISSUE—3 Insertions for 10o per word.
Twenty words In tho mlnlmum accepted for any ad.
Cash should accompany all ordors.Coun1 as one word each Initial and each group of ﬁg-
Copy must be In our hands before Saturday for Issuo

Farm for salo ads. not accepted
In thl: depart-

 

 

  

pleasant self—supporting hom steady i
an bright futuresl You will reg: on page 1
how $350 secures 80 acre farm on improv
road. good 7- room house. barns for 20 com

311 Kult , horse sows, poultry, I10, imnir
:11ng P39 23 describes 125 acres 'pairm d
horses, 5 cows, vehicles, implements, 100

house. 30-cow barn, etc.
825532..to any $500 down. See page 26 for
acres with horses, 1

”2’1"!

available: get yours day. ST
FARM AGENCY, 814 B E Ford Bldg“ Detroit.
Mich

 

WESTERN MICHIGAN FARMS—IMPROV-
ed and unimproved:

£125“? c “f"
r colonization tracts. 0 m1 rego
gains; farming dai rying, etc. Exceptioni]
marke ng, social and transportation facilities
Illustrated booklets free so. WESTERN CHI-
GA N DEVELOPMFNT BUREAU, Dept. 88.
Grand Rapids, Michigan.

 

GOOD

i1FARM FOR SALE—330 ACRES,
clear.

good house and been). 160 acres
Will sell F'for $35 per Fe 1' particulars
write to E. BRUDER, cOcqueoc, Presque Isle
County, Mich.

160 ACRE FARM
buildings. FRAN N1!
Presquo Islo

FOR SALEEFINE d
fence W1 goo

GIIIAWEE. Ocqueoc P. .. Mich.,

County.

FARM IN MONROE
everything.

AC R E
Failing
CLARENCE L

DANDY 60
County. Timber, fruit,
health, must sell. \Vrite
IIOVVAIID, Pctersburg, Mich.

125 ACRE FARM 85 ACRES CLEARED
well fenced, house and barns, ﬁne orchard, 1—

mile off stone road. Will sell on easy terms.
For pric and particulars Wl‘ite owners.
SCHAIBERSGER BROS” Au Gres, Mich.

 

120 ACRE FARM, CLAY AND SANDY
loam. 40 acres improved, balance out over,fs,1r
wells, 0well fenced, 1 mile from
town, 80 rods sc.hool P as $40 pol
acre. RAYMON D OGAR RI DY, Alger, Mich.

 

FOR SALE—A FIRST CLASS FARM. 8
miles from Lansing. Good Ibuildings, all newly
painted. 40 rods to hl.oo 122 acres for
$18.05 0. S. W. HEMPY, R. 7, min].
Michigan.

 

F0 E—NIOE HOME ON MARSHAL.-
SL, Col8 water, Mich. Good 1

 

. len water, cod extrs pod
ma? mg: for 503 bone. at
chicken farm. 7 1- 2 acres. nryp
Small fruit, mly’oung orcho r of
ees round
Arddreo: owner, E. 3“ lbl- AUGH.
Mich: higan.

no sonnz “non. woven

 

 

those products at the least expense.“

tnrin‘g creek; 33mg?”

 

 

 

dated following week. Tho Business Former Adv. Dept... Mt. Clemens. Mich.
,
a
ﬁgISCELLANEOIlgg
h N MACHINEHI
0113. USED AUTO PARTS SAVE 50 PER CENT
equipped bargains now offered by our Brent °"' on ranteed par ts. \Veh have used rt: for
ganimtion throughout Ohio. Mich., Indiana. F9 Dodge Buicks Chevrole Mfrhnd'
Pennsylvania. 26 other states and Canada, farms 8»me aker,J Maxwell hm kl..'1mi
on easy terms with stock, tools and crops 03°" ndersk J,sckson 'Metx, Detmiter and most
m m e of car. We have

springs. wheels,
front and rear axles, gears. motor perm. high

318181011 tension magnttog3 magnetos part3. 2815‘
mammm tires,° d size tires. reﬁners.
top

 

excellent condition. If its auto parts
Write us today. E. HERMAN a. SON uIthaca.
Michigan.

SAW MILL MACHINERY. PORTABLE

mills for farmers’ use. Mal: 0 your own lumber
Send for new catalog. HILL—CURTIS 00.. 150‘!
No. Pitcher Sf... Kalamazoo. Mich.

 

CORN HARVESTER CUTS AND FILES ON
harvester or winrows. Man and horse cuts and
equal Corn Binder. Sold in every state.

FR Testi-
monials and catalog

harvester. PROCESS HARVES 00.. So-
lina. Kansas.

 

 

FENCE POSTS

 

IUY FENCE POSTS DIRECT FROM FOR-
oot. All kinds. Delivered prices. Address “)1.
I," care Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clam-
ons. Mich.

 

GENERAL

 

8 year old leaf, aged in bulk, natu
lbs. $2.00 postpsid. 8.

OLD KENTUCKY SMOKING TOBACCO—-
re cured. 1°

ROSENBLATT, Haww

ville, Ky

 

two middlemen proﬁts?
reef.

TRUNKS, BAGS. SUITCASES. WHY PAY

Buy from factory di-
Send for free mtalog. GEM TRUNK &

BAG FACTORY, Spring Valley, ILL

 

and quick sales to Livo

hdie New plcr list
MUSKE(xe0N LEATHER 00..

aro right. L.

LIGHTNING RODS, EXCLUSIVE AGENCY

Dealers selling "DID-
DIE—BLITZEN RODS. ” Our copper tests
99. 96 per cent PURE. Write for Agency. Prices
M. Diddio Co, Marshﬂeld, Wis.

 

USE LEATHER TANNED FROM YOUR
just no blisbed.——

Box 303, Mus-

kegon, Michigan.

 

with small family
or year.
kinds of .
PRITCHARD &

WANTED AT ONCE MARRIED
. to work on farm by
Must be able to

worl

MAN
month
go ahead with oil

references
SON. Elwell. Mich.

 

FOR BAIIIE—A PAIR OF IORV GunEI-DINGS : ‘

smashes mm;

 

 

   
 
   

Warn-menu
, In W?

 

 

         
     
       
    
        
       
    
   
  
  
   
    
   
 
 
 
   
   
    
  
   
   
  
  
    
     
  
   
 
    
 
 
   
   
 
  
    
    
  
    
  
   
    
     
    
   
  
    
   
  
   
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
    
  
    
      
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
   
     
      
       
     
        
     
        
      
   

      
 
   
   
 


     
 

TRADE AND MARKET REVIEW
HE. BUSINESS and general
trade outlook is steadily improv-
ing along many lines; indeed, so

great has been the activity in the
general demand for certain staple
commodities as to command atten-
tion from a class among us who have
"done very little of late except to talk
about impending calamities and pre-
lidict dire financial distress for the
coming winter. Production is in-
creasing, in all textile lines, in fact,
. cases have been reported during the
‘. past week where manufacturers of
‘ certain popular brands of cloth have
, been unable to secure the expert
I help that they needed to run their
I machinery up to the capacity limit.
. The entire cloth and clothing mar-
ketissaidtobeonafirm basiswith
: a better outlook than on any pre-
; ceding date, this year. Wool and
' hides are in active demand at grad-
; ually hardening prices and there
. are many indications that values, in
, all commodity lines, have touched
f bottom and that any future change
will be toward higher price levels.
Past experience, in connection
with a real industrial revival in this
1 country, has taught us that steel and
iron are the commodities that, by
‘ their movements up or down, fore-
' shadow future industrial prosperity
or adversity. For many weeks pro-
fessional pit traders on the New
York Stock Exchange have been
soiling steel common short in the
effort to break the market but with
little success. A recent sudden rise
of $2 per ton in pig iron shows
- which way the wind is blowing in
this division of the trade.
Traveling salesmen, the country
j over, report a rapid increase in the
average size of the orders they are
taking, an unmistakable proof that
, retail dealers are beginning to an-
ticipate future needs. A general re-
. laxation is noticeable in the credit
situation throughout the country
and many plans for future business
activities are being made. Among
the farmers, ready cash is, of course.
not plentiful but the‘sale of certain
cash crops has loosened up the rural
credit situation, to a marked de-
gree, in nearly all parts of the state.
The market for farm products is
fairly active and the present out-
look decidedly favorable.

  
     
 
   
 
 
   
   
  
    
   
 
 
   
   
 
    
     
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
   
    
    
   
   
    
   
   
 
    
  
  
    
  
   
    
   
     
  
   
   
  
  
   
    
  

 

WHEAT

WHEATLFICES Psgwsu" AUG. 31, 1921

 

 

 

 

(trade mom's renew N- Y-
mDTred 1l’26“—1T23I""'T“i"
! No. 2 wnm 1.23 i A “A
No. 2 Mlxed 1.22
PRICES on: YEARALQQ
; [No.2 Redl No.2_WhlteI No.2 vim—d
, Dotrolt I 2.51 I 2.49 I 2.49

 

I a
( Developments in the wheat mar-
ket the last few days has strength-
’ ened our belief in higher prices. Last
‘ week we were considerably disturb-
: ed over the decline in prices, and
yet it was only natural. We said we
could not see any immediate im-
provement of any consequence, al-
,though neither could. we see how
,prices could go much lower. Since
wthen No. 2 red wheat has gained
nearly 10 cents per bushel at Chi-
cago and five cents at Detroit, and
there is a better tone to the market
than has been in evidence for some
time. The export demand is tak-
ing an astonishingly large amounI
of wheat just now, and licking up
the major part of the astonishingly
“large receipts. It looks to us as if
the wheat price for the next ‘thirty
or sixty days will fluctuate very
largely in sympathy with the daily
export sales. But when the crest
of’thwheat movement is over, no
power on the face of the earth, ex-
‘ cept world bankruptcy can keep the
’ ‘ prices of wheat down to their pres-
ent level. The reader should not
,‘ fail to observe the adoption of the
Agricultural Emergency Relief [Act
which is going to enable furthers
‘ and elevator companies to borrow
meney on stored grain. This one
factor, we believe, will exert a large

  
   
  
  

   
 
   

audited by n. n. MACK

    
 

 

 

ﬁl
w

 

 

kGENERAL MARKET SUMMARY;

DETROIT—Wheat active owing to heavy export demand.
Oats, corn and hay quiet. Beans steady and demand active.

CHICAGO—Bullish news sends wheat prices up. Corn is
quiet. Oats dull. Beans active. Cattle and hogs higher.

 

 

tot page Is set In typo.
|olng to press—Edltor.

 

 

(Note: The above summer-Izod lnformotlon was received AFTER the balanc m
It oontalm last minute lnformatlon up to within one-hail: trum- of

 

 

 

 

influence in keeping the surplus oi!
the markets until it is needed and
stabilizing prices. We want to im-
press upon our readers at this time
that we are bullish on wheat. That
does not mean that we do not expect
to see occasional price declines. We
do. But it does mean that we ex-
pect to see even greater price ad-
vances, with a persistent, though
possibly irregular upward tendency.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CORN

CORN PRICES PRE BU.. AUG. 81, 19271

6:55,: IbltroIt fl ﬁloadoilfl‘f Y.
No. 2 Yellow . . . F .61 V2 .5054 .777:
No. 8 Yellow ... .60 V2
No. 4 Yellow . .ﬂ_.577'/z Aﬁ

13 unfit) NE. '15 as} 10“ M" " “
ﬁne-2. "Ill £2313!” Jail-ll-
Detroit ..I 1.19 I I

 

 

In spite of the facts that reports
she wwe will have a bumper crop of
corn this fall and the market at
present is dull, Detroit corn prices
advanced 2 cents last week. The
Chicago market was fairly active.
Receipts at that point amounted to
3,176 cars for the week, against 298
a year ago. Most of the sales were
made to shippers who took 2,000,-
000 bushels out of Chicago last
week.’ At the opening of the cur-
rent week the Detroit market ruled
qoiet and dull but the price staged
an advance of 1-2 cent. The market
at Chicago was steady with trade
moderate and receipts large.

RYE
There is very little doing in the
Detroit rye market and the price
remains at $1 per bushel. Farmers
should not get anxious over this
fact because Russia, Germany and
other rye—consuming countries of

Europe are very much in need of
the American supply and, if neces-
sary we believe they will pay a much
higher price than the present one.

 

OATS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

on rmoes (new) Bu. sun. 31. 1921
Grade IDotroIt IGhlcaaol N. Y.
No. 2 Whlto .83 .367" .49”-
No. a White .. 35% .335:
No. 4 mm... .. .81
PRICES om: YEAR AGO
[No.2 Vllhltel No.3rVV7hltol No.47WhIto
Detroit. I .7151. I .10 | .319?

 

a

We rejoice to announce that the
cat market is taking exactly the
course which we have been predict-
ing it would. While the gains have
not been of great importance, the
tone of the market for the past two
Weeks has been consistently strong,
and new cats are quoted on the De-
troit market‘at three or four cents
per bushel above the record low
point established some weeks ago.
Oats are quite likely to move up in
sympathy with corn and wheat, but
it is less likely to sympathize with
them in downward movements. The
simple facts are that the ,crop will
be far below requirements which
can only mean considerably higher
prices than now prevail. Our opin-
ion has not changed since our last
issue. We expect to see jobbin-g
prices on oats close to the 50 cent
mark by or before the first of the
year. And again, let us warn the
farmer who must buy cats, that
there is no time like the present to
make his purchases. Prices might ”
go a cent or two lower, which we
doubt, but neither we nor the farm-
er will recognize the low when it is
reached, and he would be wiser to

 

 

Fool-{o Weather Chart for SEP'L 1921

 

for ﬂavor-tutor. above sud-M Ibo. "n. blow

WASHINGTON, D. 0., September,
8, 1921.—Near Sept. 5 a cool wave
will be in northern part of Michigan
and it is expected to bring frosts to
northwestern sections east of Rockies'
crest. Severe storms are expected on
that part of the continent not far
from Sept. 3. Thl will be the begin-
ning of a two weeks period of stormy
weather that will reach most parts of
the continent and the rains of the

’first half of September will put the
soil in good condition for the sowing
and growing of winter grain. Near
Sept. 7 anhigh temperature wave will
cover the northern Rockies and the
valleys east and west 0 fthem. Near—
ly all storms move southeastward
from that section and they with the
storm and cool wave cross the con-
tinent from there in about four days.
Another warm wave will cover those
sections near Sept. 10 and the move-
ment eastward of all the storm feat-
ureswill be similar to those preced-
ing. For a week following this last
warm wave a great and rapid down-
ward movement of temperature is
expected, resulting in unusually cold
weather and killing frosts further
south than usual. The week center-
ing,on Sept. 19 will be unusually cold
and a large amount of rain, well dis-
tributed, is expected during the ten
days beginning Sept. 14.

“ Great danger awaits the crops of

 

 

Australia for their cropseason begin-

THE WEATHER FOR NEXT WEEK
As Forecastcd by W. T. Foster for The Michigan Business Farmer

ning during our fall of 1922. All
countries will be affected by the dis-
aster that ls sure to come to that
great continent of the southern hem—
jSphere. As an average for all Aus-
tralia less than half crops will be
made and a famine equally disastrous
as the present Russian famlne will
result. Don’t forget that ‘I gave
warning of that great European
drouth. The Australian cropseas-m
is just now beginning and I urge the
Australians to hold all the grain they
produce this year and sell their live
stock so as to save the grain they
produce. I have successfully located
the drouths for the past three years
and I have no doubts about the Aus-
tralian drouth of 1922. Of course
that great drouth will affect the val-
ues of all the crops of all other coun-
tries,

Speculators are now depressing the
value of cotton and grain in order to
buy at low prices. Farmers should
never sell their production in the 'fall
season. They should prepare perma-*
nent places to store their grain and
cotton for winter sales. Dealers
should buy grain and cotton during
the fall and not sell till during the
Winter.

I am receiving many letters from
those who have had a bad cropseason
asking about good locations. My re-
ply is that no permanentchange of
crops will occur on this continent antl
that the crops for the next twenty-
five years~ will average as good as
they did for the past quarter of a
century. If you move you wt be li-
able to hit the bad crops of the ew
country. Every family should
and hold at least a little farm.

,_ I
i ' Wrap-2:3.

 

 

 

\ .

1

      

buy at 88 con-ts, for instance, than
to wait and pay 50 cents a few '
weeks later.

'———-——“——q
BEANS
nun Pnlcss PER ownauo. a1. 1021
aria. [Detroit IOhIcacol I. v. ,
0- H. P. 4.30 5.88 3-70
Rod Kldnm ....l in.” i
PRICES one run no

IO. N. P.
8.00

 

 

....... ,.............I

Last week we were doubtful 'of
the ability of the Detroit bean mar-
ket to maintain the advances it

Doirolt

 

had made the previous week. Our
fears were well founded. The mar-
ket began to slip the last of the

week and prices have‘now dropped
from $4.75 to _‘$4.50. But despite
the decline inwathis particular mar-
ket the condition the country over is
much healthier than it was a week
ago. We stated in the Aug. 27th is-
sue that the Detroit market “would
look more encouraging if other pri-
mary markets followed suit, but
they don’t.” Since that was w1‘dt-.
ten they have. While prices were
slipping in Detroit they were mak—
ing substantial gains‘ at other
points, Chicago quoting $5.35 per
cwt., and New York, $5.70, which
have been the highest prices at these
markets for many a month. In
view of the response which these
markets have made we are now jus-
tified in looking for a. steady and
upward tone in this market from

' this point on. , Havesting of the new

crop may prove a temporarily bear-
ish factor, but price declines of any
consequence are .not in sight.

 

POTATOES

Heavy receipts are weakening the
potato market all over the country.
The early part Of last week the New
York market was steady owing to
large demand from the lake region
and Canada but by the close of the
week demand had fallen off and
prices declined. Both the Detroit.
and Chicago markets received more
potatoes than they could find sale
for and prices went down. It is
felt that this weakness is only tem-
porary owing to the poor quality of
goods coming to market which vers-
ifies statements that the present crop
is poor and good potatoes will be
scarce. Our crop correspondents re-
port recent rains have helped the
crop in this state and if frosts hold
off we will have about half a. crop.
The Detroit market is easy at the
present time and there is not much
trading going on. The Detroit job—

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

bing price is $6 @ 6.50 per 150-
pound sack.
BAY

| No. 1 Tlm.l Stan. TIW'LNZLELE
Detroit . 20.00@21 19.00@20 18.00@19
Chicago . 20.00@23 19.00G20 17.00ﬁ18
New York 29.00 @ 32 26.00 @ 29
Plttsburg . 22.00 @ 28 21 .00 Q 22 1 9.00 G 20

‘ No.1 l No.1 l No.1

nght Illx. IOIovor MIX. I “WE-
Detroit . . 1 9.00@ 2 15.00 918 14.00 0 1B
cnIcago . . 19.00@20 11.00619 12.00@16
New York 21.00 @ 30 24.00 Q 21
Plttsbum . 18@19.50 18.00@19 18.00619

HAY PRICES A YEAB AGO

I No. 1 Tlm.I Stan. Tlm.l No. 2 Tlm.

Detmlt . 33.50 @ 84182.50 6 ”I31 .50 O 82
No. 1 I No. 1 l lgo. 1

nghLIVlIx. IOlover MIX. I lover

Detrolt . . [82.50 @ 83I31 .50 @ 32I29.00 @ 30

 

 

 

Prices are holding steady, de-
mand is good and receipts are large
on most of the country’s large hay
markets. Most of present receipts
consist of new hay as farmers ap-
pear to be reluctant sellers of their
old hay believing they shall receive

higher prices before next spring. "As

you all know we are bullish“ on the
future of Michigan hay because of
tho high freight rates which elim-
inates the western grower as a come

, petitor on the .eastern markets. Th'o'

editor of a largo and well-known“
grain tradoiournal appears to have
the same opinion. “The west 13,,
fun of hay which unless freight ratio
as named-V33! mgr M used." {a

     

 
   

 
    
   

 

 

E ..F ..-? ,r j J II .37 sis-g ea. ..

 

  


.1

  
 

yaw. ‘

l farmﬁaﬂitaﬁon
tell you how to prevent
disease among livestock

and. poultry and describe
in detail the many uses of

’ KRESO DIP No.1

(srwnaanrzan)

_ siticide and Disinfectant

   

 

 

 

—
r

l hie. 151—FIRM SANITATION. Describes and

tells how to prevent diseases common to ,

livestock.

i No. 157.006 snout-r. Tells howtoridthe
dog of ﬂeas and to help prevent disease.

i No. 160—IIOO BOOKLET. Covers the com-
mon hog diseases.

No. 18S—IIOG WALLOWS. Gives complete

directions for the construction of a con- .

crete hog wallow.
Ne. Mil—POULTRY. How to get rid of lice
and mites, also to prevent disease.

Write for these booklets.
‘ Anlmﬂlndmw
- PARKE, DAVIS 8: CO.
DETROIT, MICHIGAN

"ES. DIP No. 1 IS SOLD IN ORIGINAL
MCKAGES AT ALL DRUG STORES

 

 

 

We are the largest manufacturers of

WIIIE KEGS
APPLE BAIIIIELS
AIII TANKS

in Michigan
We also deal in Used Barrels for
all Purposes.

MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED

SAUER COOPERAGE C0.

2810-2856 Benson Ave“
Detroit, Mich.
HIGHEST QUALITY BABEELS

 

 

 

  
 

 

 

writes. "In Oklahoma, Kansas and
Nebraska, the great producers of
prairie and tame hays, the farmers
have ‘hay to burn,’ both baled and
in the stack, for which under cur—
rent conditions there is no demand
at a price which will warrant a
farmer delivering his hay to the
station.”

 

DETROIT PRODUCE MARKET

The butter market weakened dur-
ing the past week and the price de-
clined. Creamery butter is quoted
at 34 1-2@35 1-2¢ per pound. The
market is active at the present time.

Eggs continue steady and active
with no change in price. Jobbers
are paying 30c for strictly fresh
0888— .,

Peaches are firm and the supply
light with prices averaging around
$8.85 per bushel. Other fruits are
Iteady. Plums are from $2.50 to
82.76; huckleberriies $9.50@:10;
pears, $2632.50 per bu.; grapes, 8
@100. per 1b.; home grown toma-
toes. 76c5§$1.25 per bu.

 

LIVE STOCK MARKETS

The live cattle trade seems to be
gradually, recovering its equilibrium
after the glut and stagnation that
has been gripping the trade for the
last ten days” In Chicago the aver-
age quality of the offerings was so
poor. last week. that it was hard to
estimatk what highly finished ani-
mals would sell for if they were of-
feted. - Eastern dressed beef mar-
kets have been dull and draggy all
the week. and order buyers, at Chi-
cago hivs looked at" nothing but the

 

‘ age quality improves.

 

mighty poor sellers so far and no
improvement is possible until aver-
St-ockers and
feeders are dull and slow, partly ow-
ing. to the extremely poor quality of
the offerings. The outlook for high-
ly finished dry-fed cattle is ,good at
this writ-lug but dullness will be the
rule for some time to come in con-
nection with all grades of grass-fed
cattle.

Chicago and the west are getting
big runs of sheep and lambs of late
and values are lower and rather
weak at the decline. Last week’s
Chicago arrivals were almost 40,-
000 above the showing of the week
before, a fact, that makes it seem
remarkable that the market held so
well. Wyoming and Washington
sheep are beginning to show up in
Chicago and buyers are taking them
at satisfactory prices. The demand
for feeding sheep and lambs is de-
cidedly active but very few are‘com-
ing in this department of the trade.
The call for breeding ewes is strong
and active but arrivals are small in
volume. _ '

The hog market is gradually
working higher under a strong ship-

ping demand in Chicago and western,
still

markets; while receipts are
moderate they are larger than was
expected for this season of the
year. The speculative provision sit-
uation is gaining strength every
day, influenced by decreasing sup-
plies of cured meats and lard. Ex-
port trade continues strong and
active and current domestic demand
is stronger and more active than at
any preceding date this year.

WOOL NOTES

MARKED improvement is noted

in the wool market at Eastern

points. The principal demand
is at present for the finer grades.
Present quotations are. graded Ohio
1-4 blood combing, 21c; 3-8 blood
combing, 25c; fine clothing, 26c;
territory 3-8 blood, 20c to 22c; 1-4
blood 17c to 18 1-2c. Woolen mills
have shown considerably activity
during the past ten days. An ad-
vance of 5c per pound on fine
scoured wools was recorded in the
latest sales.

Wool imports during 'the fistcal
year ending June 30, 1921, show a
decrease of 25.6 per cent in quan-
tity, and of 63.4 per cent in value
as compared with those of a year
ago, according to figures compiled
by the United States Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce.
Imports of wool during the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1921, amount—
ed to 318,235,874 pounds, valued at
$77,902,393. During the previous
year imports amounted to 427,578,-
038 pounds having a valuation of
$212,848,568.

 

SANILAO FARM BUREAU PICNIC
BOUT 3,500 people attended the
ﬁrst annual farm bureau picnic
held at the County Park, north
of Forester, last Friday, August 26.
Hon. Louis C. Cramton, our con-
gressman, James Nicol. president of
the Michigan State Farm Bureau,
Miss Elba Morse, county nurse,

were the principal speakers. Mr.
Cramton discussed at length the
great need of economical appro-

priations. The farmers were great-
ly interested in what Mr. Nicol had
to say of the great developments of
the Michigan State Farm Bureau,
both from the ﬁnancial and business
standpoint. The information as
given out by Miss Elba .Morse about
the great need for the betterment
of child welfare in this county at-
tracted much attention.

Much interest was created among
the members of the different farm
bureau locals as to who would ob-
tain the prizes as oirered to the 10-
cals having the largest attendance.
Thiebronght out about 650 auto-

/mobiles from different parts of the

county, with Croswell in the lead
represented by about 100 automo-
biles. The [awarding of the second
prize has been left to a committee
for decision for Minden City, Deck-
erville, Carsonville, Sandusky and
Snover were also in large attend-
ance. , '

my‘bestkange cattle have been ‘

 

-—-

1

my, _ , r p ‘

 

' TO THE FARMERS OF MICHIGAN
We offer to you as a sound and substantial investment, the
8% preferred stock and common stock Without part value, of the

Petoskey Transportation Co.,

Petoskey, Michigan

Why it is a Good Investment

Guaranteed Capacity Tonnage

The Petoskey Transportation Company is under contract to
deliver cement and crushed limestone by boat for the Petoskey
Portland Cement Company to all Great Lakes markets, and to
haul coal by boat from Toledo and Cleveland to the plant of the
Petoskey Portland Cement Company. This tonnage guarantees
that the boats of the Petoskey Transportation Company will al-
ways be operated at full capacity. In other words, they need to
look for no further business than they are already guaranteed.

 

Already Earning and Paying Dividends

The Petoskey Transportation Company paid a 4% pro-rate
dividend on all outstanding preferred stock on July 1, 1921, be-
sides showing a substantial earning on the common stock. Div-
idends on the preferred stock are paid at the rate of 4% every
six months. The next dividend date is January 1, 1922.

THE PETOSKEY TRANSPORTATION COMPANY is now
as firmly and well established in business as if it had been in op-
eration for a number of years. An investment in an enterprise
like this guarantees the safety of your principal and that should
always be the ﬁrst consideration in making any investment.

Not only will the holder of the preferred stock in this Com-
pany always get his 4% every six months, but in a short time he
will receive returns on his common stock that will make it at the
present price an exceptional investment.

With every ten shares of preferred stock at $10.00 per share
will be sold five shares of the common stock at $5.00 per share.

We want you to investigate. We advise against investment
in any enterprise until you are thoroughly satisﬁed that the en-
terprise is Sound, has a future, and Will be able to pay regular and
substantial dividends.

Write for full information.

 

 

[— Gentlemen:

Without any obligation on my
part, send me full particulars re-
garding the Petoskey Transpor-
tation Company.

I am interested in an invest-
ment in this Company.

Yours truly,

F. A. Sawall Company,
313-314-315 Murray Building

Grand Rapids, Michigan

_—-—————-I—

r._..-.._..-_-__

.....................
—_—__—_——_———_——_—___——

ONLY $6 for 20 Yards

PERFECT UNBLEACHED TURKISH
TOWELING

Dlrect From Mill to Consumer

Beet heavy grade, 36 inches wide. 8 oz. polI
yard. By parcel post paid anywhere in Mich-
igan.’ Larger lots same rate per yd. Order-
filled promptly and accurately.

This price is very~iow so stock up now
make towels. bath robs and bath sheets.
member this towelinz is let quality

FEDERAL TEXTILE CO.

1918 GRATIOT AVENUE.
DETROIT. MICHIGAN

 

 

Best Wire Fence On the Market
Lowest Price—Direct to User
,; Not hundreds of styles
- Nor millions of miles,
a" . But satisﬁed smiles
From every
customer.

   
    

Ben" Steel Post Co.
50 Hanna- Stmt ,~ Adrian.

 

 

 

kw:

 

 

{2:25 Take Your Choice $2.15

Each
Chain. open

0 . Each
Wilder 33313.53: Stanclnons
' At Low Prices

save feed, save time. save bedding. Can be opened or
closed without removing mittens; lock in place when open
—most convenient for you. Swing freely when closed; have
smooth hardwood uprights—no splinters——without the
rust and chill of steel—most comfortable for the cows.

In two styles, chain or pin. Both pu-ongly made of best grade
hardwood, strong. tough and sound, With rigid, blind~bolted joints.

Limited supply oﬁ'ered now at these low prices. Write today to
Department s-m for catalogue.

Wilder-Strong Implement Co.,

Pin, closed

    

Monroe, Mich.

 

 

BREEDERS ATTENTION! ,

If you are planning on a sale this year, write us now and 4
CLAIM THE DATE!
This service is free to the 11°76 stock industry in Michigan
to avoid conflicting sale dates

LET “THE BUSINESS FARMER" CLAIM YOUR DATE !

 

 

andl
Ro-

 
 
  
    
  
    

 

 

  
   
  
 
   
  
    
    
  
    
     
  
    
     
   
  
  
   
   
 
    
 
  
  
   
    
  

   


 
 

RN 1

Do Not Drive Your Automobile
to the Fairs

  
 
 
  
   
   
   
 
   
     
      
  

 

 

 

Unless it is insured against Fire, Theft, Liability and Collision
in the Citizens’ Mutual Auto Insurance Company. ' ' .1
\ ‘
When full protection against the risk of What may prove a large l i '
financial loss may be had at so small cost. '

 

Do Not Park Your Car on City Streets

Take 1t to a garage where you will be sure to ﬁnd 1t on your return. Thieves
watch for unsuspecting Visitors and pick out their cars as easy prey. The small
amount you pay for storage will be well earned.

Drive Carefully; Take No Chances

Most accidents can be avoided. Watch out for loose gravel at the new 35 mile

speed limit. Stop at one side of the road when the glaring headlight fool refus—

es to dim his lights. Don’t take a chance at the railway crossings—“Stop, Look
' and Listen!” will save you if you do it ALWAYS.

 

 

Before you start for the Fairs—call up the Citizen’s Mutual agent in your local-
ity—don’ t be satisﬁed with any other company—make them show their state-
ments; your insurance is only as good as the company that writes it.

0 ’-

Almost any auto owner can tell you who your local Citizen’s Mutual agent is—
or write, phone or wire us and we will have our agent call AT ONCE, before
you start for the fair. .

W. E. ROBB, Secretary

 

