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Vol. IX, No, 7

 

 

""’— "Z? ' .‘7-.=.~e‘..  A
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Farmer's Wee kl

    

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3., e . . . :  I

   

 

 

 

An Independent

Edited in lchlga n

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1921

Owned and

w

 

  

SS EAR MER

  

$1 PER YEAR

 

 

T when the;  , Plants _ f

 

 

Sunﬂower Silage Becomes a Rival of Corn-

Experiments Show that Under Certain Conditions Sunflower Silage is Most Profitable Crop

(C UNFLOWER silage is no good”, says
Tom Brown. “Tis so” says his
neighbor, who has tried it. “It’s every
bit as good as corn silage or a sight better.
There you have it. One man boosts sun-
flower s'lage and another knocks it. The
boosting and knocking are not all done by
individual farmers who milk cows for a
living, either. Experiment stations, forced
by the demands of their supporters, have
undertaken to settle the matter, and their
feeding tests are not always in perfect ac-
cord.

Along came the report from Pennsyl-
vania Experiment Station only a few
weeks ago to the effect that sunflowers
should not be considered as a silage crop
in that state. But testimony from other
experiment stations is just the reverse in
practically every case.

For common sense dictum on the mat-
ter, we must give credit to Wisconsin Ex-
periment Station for saying the right
thing and stopping when it was said. This
recent announcement gives the whole
thing in a nutshell:

“While many farmers in northern Wisconsin

are ﬁnding it prof-
itable to grow sun— .

By E. A. IURKPATRIC’K

 

 

What Is Your Experience?

RIVING through the country this

year one saw a frequent sight

which a few years ago was most
uncommon. He saw great ﬁelds of
sunflowers growing to ten and twelve
feet in height, and if he didn’t. know any
better he probably thought that most of
the farmers had gone into the business
of raising chicken feed. Many farmers
have raised sunflowers for silage the.
last year or two for the ﬁrst time, and
many more would like to raise them if
satisﬁed that they make good silage and
secure goodleeding results. The writ-
er in the accompanying article tells of
what experiments and personal experi—
ences have revealed about silaged sun-
flowers. The Business Farmer would
appreciate accounts of readers who have
used sunflowers for this purpose, with
or without satisfactory results—Editor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

were from one-ﬂourth to one-half in blossom,
or even earlier. Watch the leaves on the sun-
flowers, and when they start to dry up it is
time to think about cutting, to avoid dry,
tough stems and consequent poor silage."

It must be remembered that there are
certain localities where sunflowers ﬁt into
the general run of things, and places where
they do not. This crop hits its stride best
in regions of high altitudes where corn
does not mature enough for silage; in re-
gions of scant rainfall; in sections that
have early frosts in fall. Also, we must
giVe it to sunflowers when it comes to
yielding, for they are far ahead of corn in
that respect, even on poorer soil.

But all these puffs for sunflowers as a
silage crop would be so much hot air if
sunflower silage fell down in feeding tests.
Feeding tests, however, are overwhelming-
ly in favor of sunflowcr silage. Tests at
\Nashington Experiment Station show that
sunflower silage of only medium quality
was 92 per cent as efﬁcient as corn silage
of excellent quality, rich in grain. Thus,
conditions were altogether in favor of corn
silage, and if the two kinds of silage had
been of the same quality, the difference of
eight per cent might have been overcome
and the advantage been in favor of sun-
floWer silage. Cows on sunflower silage
put 011 more weight during the test than

did the cows on

 

flowers or sunflow-
ers and corn mixed,
for silage, others
report that sunflow~

 

to the grain,
Okla-

What Would Teddy Roosevelt Say About This? .03; gm...

Station sunflow-

 

ers do not make

er silage was test-

 

good silage, and 7
that. they‘ can not
feed the silage suc-
cessfully.

“One outstanding
reason for this dif-
ferenCe of opinion
lies in the time of
cutting and ensiling
the crop. Inspection
of a large number
of ﬁelds in [the last
two years shows
that the lower leaves
begin to dry up
about; the time the
sunflowers begin to
(blossom, and the
longer the crOp is
let stand after that
time, the more
leaves will be lost.
T h i s condition
seems to come ear-
lier' on light dry
soil than on rich,
moist ECU, and is
Somewhat worse in
thick plantings.

“Most of the poor
sunflower silage
which has come to
our attention has
been made. from a
crop out late, when
the plants are .in
full bloom or past.
In most cases where

‘the 811390 was fed - V in southerndlpena County; Michigan. Not only is this family remarkable for its rugged and intelli—
successfuuy’ t 11,9. , Kent’appearanee, but more so because of the fact that the ﬁve youngest children were all born in
r one. years time. The three infants at the right are triplet-s. born May 5, 1920, and the two little ones in

. was out “early, ~

 

~'. ,- k h .1 . u

' H-IS REMARKABLE family group is of Mr. and Mrs. Orville R

thelo’ther four" children are in the best of

 

 

D

ﬂimsayﬁtﬂ' thinp. born April 19. 1921., Since the. above picture‘was taken One of the triplets have died, but
health. We don't blame the mother for looking Proud. do you?

 

ebb and children, who live on a. farm 3‘

ed in feeding beef
calves two years
old. The results
of these tests put
the stamp of ap—
proval on sunflow—
er silage. \Vhen
in connection with
cottonseed meal,
corn and alfalfa
h a y, sunflower
silage, proved to be
a splendid feed
for beef, Calves
were a little slow
to eat the sunflow-
er silage at ﬁrst,
but once they
started, they nev-
er missed a meal.
The calves made
a remarkable ship,
shrinking only a
little over ﬁve
pounds a head, as
compared with a
shrink o f 2 1
pounds a head for
cattle fed in every
way the same ex-
cept for darso sil-
age (kaﬁr silage)
(Cont: page 11)

 

all

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 
   
 
 
 

 

  

FINAL SETTLEMENT FOR 1921
WOOL POOL.
ICHIGAN State Farm Bureau
‘ wool poolers have started to
receive checks in final settleL
ment or their 1920 wool pool. The
wool department in the ﬁrst week of
October began mailing to 18,000
wool‘ growers the checks which bring
to a. close the successful disposal of
some 3,500,000 'pounds of wool.
three-fifths of which was pooled af~
ter the wool market collapse which
came in June, 1920, says the Farm
Bureau.

Actual drawing of the checks, ﬁn~
a1 statements to growers and the
‘mailing of so large a volume of
checks may take from four to six
Weeks, it is said at the Farm Bureau
wool department. '
Michigan is among the ﬁrst of the
wool pooling states to make com—
Qlete settlement on the 1920 pool.
Iowa and other western states have
not yet completed payment on their
1920 pool and Illinois farmers are
.otill engaged in settling up their
lpool, but are also hard at work on
the 1921 proposition.
Handling costs of the Michigan
pool are below general expectations.
, At the time that the pool was start-
ed labor, rents and handling ex—
,penses of all kinds were on a war-
;time basis and continued so for a
{long time afterwards. Wool grow-
} are who brought their wool into the
central warehouses at Lansing and
‘ Grand Rapids found their handling
, charge to be three and 24-100 cents
[per pound- Those who shipped by
freight to the warehouses and had
freight, assembling and cartage
lcharges to pay in addition to the
:regular managing. ﬁnancing, insur-
lamce, warehouse rent, labor, oﬂ'lce
lmpplies, postage, etc., had a hand-
l ling charge of four and 65-100 cents
; per pound.
‘ These costs are considered quite
.low, taking into account the fact
i that they covered labor, storage, in-
‘ surance. sales work, etc., for an aver-
! age period of 14 months.

 

 

 
 

 

Statistics on hand at the Farm
Bureau show that personal market—
ing of wool through local dealers
' during the war and early post-war
period cost growers around seven
cents a pound.

Despite the tremendous slump in
wool and in face of a market that
was dead until the early spring of
1921, speculators reported buying"
wool as low as ﬁve cents a pound,
the farm bureau sold Delaine wool
for farmers at a price which averag-
ed 30 cents a pound. The compos—
ite price on fine clothing was 23.3
cents; one-half staple, 26 cents; one-
half clothing wool, 20 cents; three-
eighths combing wool 25 cents;
three—eighths clothing, 19.3 cents;
quarter combing; 24.6 cents; quarter
clothing 19.4 cents. Other grades
ranged from bucks at 11 cents up
to grades at 19 cents. The October
checks follow a previous cash ad—
vance of ten cents a pound.

Two carloads of wool were sold
from the pool daily from February
15 through August, says the Farm
Bureau. Not until February did the
wool market show what could be con-
sidered as resembling anywhere
near a reasonable price, it is claim—
ed. Most of the 1920 woo.l went to
eastern clothing mills, but a portion
was utilized by the Farm Bureau in
the manufacture of blankets and
cuttings as subsidiary outlets for
wool in the pool. Today the fabrics
manufacturing venture is consider—
ed by the farm bureau to be a flour-
ishing businett

Nearly 3,000,000 pounds of wool
were pooled in 1921, a satisfactory
portion of which has been marketed.
according to the Farm Bureau, which
declares that everything points to a
speedy disposal and closing of the
1921 pool.

Development of the wool pooling
proposition in Michigan is now de-

clared to have reached a plane which
puts it on a par With other wool mar-
.and manufacturing ﬁrms.
repre-
sent the pool to eastern mills, with ,
which the pool has established con-

keting

Able sales representatives

nections, and they look after

pool’s interests in the important wool
Farm Bureau
fabrics are shown in an up—to-date
show room at State headquarters in

markets of the east.

Lansing, reputable factories

mills make up Farm Bureau fabrics
and garments under Farm Bureau
supervision and adequate facilities
are maintained for advertising the

farmers’ product throughout

state

A recent sale of 50,000 pounds of
half—blood clothing wool from the
1921 pool at 23 cents a plmnd shows
that the pool is at work. This year
obtains,
whereas during the corrwponding
period for 1920 the market was dead.
This factor of a live market is hav-
ing an important bearing in the
ready moving of the 1921 pool, it

a ready market for wool

is claimed.

 

PROTECTING THE SEED SUPPLY
ARMERS who believe in the doc—
northern
grown seed for such climates

as that of Michigan will view with
displeasure reports from terminal
markets to the effect that certain
dealers are buying up good domes-
tic stocks of clover scgd for blend-
ing with their stocks of: questionable
imported seed for ultimate distribu-
tion to the farmer, says the State

trine of adapted

Farm Bureau.

The practice is an old one. says

the bureau, pointing out that

only effective weapon the farmer has
in protecting himself from' such seed
is to deal only with seed concerns
of highest repute or to take care of
his seed requirements himself thru

*hi own : cooperative; .
which is usually ,in-ra position to Se"- '

question.

 

 

l
l
l

L___

Has Someone in Your Home Answered

Our Own Great “S” Puzzle Picture ?

COSTS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING To TRY! Fun for the Whole Family!

$50

FIRST
PRIZE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

~7//// /'

7: f‘ /

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOW KAN! cm 0“ room 1] ml! norm! m! nan .m '3'!

 

 

 

 

one handy, make up

 

Look up last week’s (October 8th) isuc of
great $500 puzzle contest, open to anyone who '
a list of all the objects in the above picture which
‘ wee ddsun”, ‘dsquirrel”, ddslate’" limp,”
. 3» you at once complete list of prizes and names 0 j
' Our family an helcp make up the list. Address: CONTEST MANAGER, THE MICHIGAN BUSL

the Business Farmer sec ﬂu fhll announcemmt o fthis
is not an employee of this weekly.

If you haven’t
I begin 'with “S,” for in- .
~ SEND IN YOUR LIST AT ONCE and We will mail,
'udges, etc. Anyone, anywhere or all the folks in

 

 

 

 

' Lhasa FARMER Mt. Clemens, Michigan. -

cure guaranteed seeds from co-op-
erative sources that are beyond

Colleges and experiiment sta-
tions are waging relentless war on
imported French and Italiian clover
seed, broadcasting the results of
tests which show that the Southern
French and Italian grown seed will
not stand the mild winters of Vir-
ginia and failed miserable in Indi-
ana. The South Dakota Farm Bur-
eau is even seeking legislation to
forbid importation of such seed. In
1920 between sixteen and twenty
milieu pounds of unadapted south-
ern grown clover seed were dumped
on the American market by seed im-
porters,—and farmers got much of
it. The Farm Bureau seed depart—
ment is making every effort to ad-
vise Michigan farmers of worthless-
ness of unadapted seed and to assist
farmers in getting seed that is ad-
apted and true to name

Toledo receipts of clever have
been unusually light this year and
seem to bear out all forecasts that
an exceptionally light crop had been
harvested and that the market would
continue to strengthen for some time
at least, says the Farm Bureau. To-
ledo receipts of clover early in Oc-
tober had totalled 7,000 bags. this
year, compared to 21,600 bags for
the corresponding period in 1920,
and 20,000 bags for the same per-
iod in 1918. Market reports say
that the 1921 crop moved early and
it is believed that most of it has
moved from the farms.

Farm bureau members see in the
present conditions good reasons for
consigning seed, judging from the
several carioads of clover seed which
have been consigned to the farm bur-
eau warehouse at Lansing. There
the farmer is having his seed cleaned
and placed in first class market con-
dition by his own agents. The Farm
Bureau has already made seed con-
signors an advance payment which
is close to the present market value
of the seed, but is also well within
the bounds of safety. At present, ac-
cording to 'the Farm Bureau, many
of the consignors could turn their
seed and realize a good profit, with-
out consigning privileges, it is point-
ed out, many of the consignors would
have had to sell early and at a low5
or price.

A general ﬁrming of the seed mar-

ket continued early in October, said ‘

the seed department. An inferior
crop of J une clover, a continued
movement of Mammoth to strong
hands and light offerings of timothy
in face of a rising clover market
were factors that were being reflect-
ed by higher prices _

Most of Michigans vctch crop ro-
mained m the state this year, no-

_ cording to observations of the Farm

Bureau. The seed department alone
turned some 40,000 pounds of you
but to Michigan farmers and ro-
portod that Michigan demand great-
ly acceded sales to other states.

 

FOODCIIEAPKBINDOZENCITIE

ETAIL FOOD prices during Sep-
tember were found by the labor

14 cities in which it conducts inven-
tigatlom Decreases amounted to
I per cent in Milwaukee, Minneapo-
lis and Portland, Me, and 1 per cent

 

 

 

 

 

89019.1:1011. ‘

‘dl? duh-51 2 aghast: o n it

 
  
   
  
  
 

 
 

Ali-Lam---‘

\n—.A


 
   
 
 

»     sssss

 

October 15

1921

 

a.

 

 

Facts About the Michigan Fluid Milk Business

, Some Information on Prices Here and Elsewhere Which the Dairy Farmer Should Know

ROM THEE to time the Business Farmer

has published facts upon the milk business
in this and other states, in an honest desire to
keep its readers informed on what they should
know about the economic phases of this indus-
try. On occasions the veracity of these state-
ments and the justice of the conclusions have
been called into question by those who are
either ignorant of the facts themselves or be-
cause of personal interests, desire to mislead
the producers.

The Business Farmer makes no secret of the
fact that it disapproves of the sundry meth-
ods employed in the Detroit and other areas
of this state to adjudicate differences between
producers and distributors or manufacturers.
This opposition rests

By THE EDITOR

but they will be encouraged to produce goods
of higher quality which it does not pay to
produce under the present system. In an en-
deavor to support this belief the Business
Farmer has searched the country for success-
ful examples of the producer-to-consumer mar-
keting ventures. It has found many of these
and told its readers about them, hoping that
they might be induced to adopt the newer and
more eﬂicient methods. In all cases the Bus-
iness Farmer has been scrupulously fair and
has never knowingly misrepresented the situ-
ation.

It is comm0n knowledge that the present

one would be excused for thinking that they
would be interested in learning what other
associations have done in marketing and tell
their members all about it. But it seems that
the producers’ association, as ofﬁcially consti-
t4t€d at the present time, has made no effort

    
 
 

 
   
 

to inform its readers of what has been done v

rlsewhere, and they show a strange reluctance
to having anyone else tell the farmers.

The Michigan Milk Messenger, edited by
the secretary of the Association, has more than
'vnce indirectly charged the Business Farmer
with distorting facts for the purpose of de-
ceiving members of the Association.
rotary has persistently claimed that the De-
troit milk price averages higher than the price

paid in other “com-

 

 

upon the belief that !
these methods are fun-
damentally unsound,
in that. in the major-
ity of cases the pur-
chaser of milk is ﬁn-

STATE

ally left in a position YEW YORK ensign“) _. . . . . ..! 8.51T‘8i86! W 7!,7825! .!_6 64!_m7L3.776!76:19Hs.69£5.33! 6.6616,:83 reau of Markets which I"
to Virtually dictate ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘ " snow YORK. ...! 8.27! 8.27Ls.27!__7;e6! 7.26! 597A!_A5.03!__570§L67.7M.57L7.31L8.81! 13.81 ShOWS the prices paid
the price Without re_ PITTSBURGH’ ., _! 9.24! 9.37!9.87! 9.37! 8.12! 7.76! 6.86! 6.75L6.49! 5.62! 6.00! 717623 for fluid milk in the

gard to the cost of _»

was simply contrary

(‘ONNiEg'VTIf‘U'I-‘L: HARTFORD , , ,7 , w 1,, ,.
MASSACHUSETTS SPRINGFIE‘ED' ..“048110.48[110.48l10.48l 9.50I 9.00! 8.241 8.26I 7.91! 7.9971, [sill—3.9917719!)

' in s'sss'“'oi+v
“13301731 c s o - - - - - ST. LOUIS . . . . . ..! !

F. o. B. City Prices Paid Farmers PER QT. for Fluid Milk in 22 Typical American Cities

From September, 1920 to September, 1921

lSopt.| Oct! Nov I Dec I Jan I Feb I Marl Ann] ll‘laleunel July! Aug ISept.
“920! 1920' 1920' 1920' 1921' I92“ I92“ 1921!1921I1921ll921il9‘21ll921

CITY
. . . . . [10 73l10.73110.73!10.24 '10.24| 9.28! 9.28I 9.08!

 

parable ’ ’

8.06! 7.88l 7.04! 8.49!7.92 hSh monthly the re”

 

 

 

 

 

 

FENNSYLVAm- frinsnmmnm- .! 9.46!’9.46! 9.46i 6.46T7J4's! 7.48! 7.48! 7.48! 6.58!’5.89!"Scarriso! 5.80

 

principal cities of the

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“INNEsO'l‘A-uu ﬁrsxnaror.rst...! 77.671 8.17l 7.91! 7.87! 7.33! 6.88! 6.23I 6.24! 5.88T74.40F"4.41! 5.39! 5.21

 

..! '7.92[_M7.40!17.22! 7.22! 6.45! 7.21! 6.69! 6.65! 6.43! 5.67l 6.96! 59175.39

ger. but on the in-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

?” all laws °_f econom‘ I _ T7774! 7.84! 7.24! 7.24! 5.95! 6.39W.48| 5.§8T4.86! 5.82! 5.6]
168 and busmess. “ ssx answersco‘! 9.69! 9.69! 9.69! 9.18! 8.68! 8.68! 7.75! 7.74! 7.74! 377477.44? 6.76! 6.68
The Business Farm_ CAL"’°““-----i.os' ‘Axcni.nsi..'.|’ 9.78! 9.78! 9.78i 978! 9.78! 739! 7.52! 7.53! 6.96T’752TH6L77i7.77i"6.77
a. believes produce” AYﬁERAQE . . . . . ..! 8.76! 8.77! 851! 8.08‘ 7.67! 7.78! 6.74! 6.62! 6.45! 5.79! 6.80! 6.24! 6.18 the
0f  as we“ as q“ the“ dﬁ'ﬂ 1| 1|":th lower price (lmn Indicated was paid for part of milk during surplus months.

the price was
Milk Messenger

 

 

 

was as silent as the

 

 

other products should _
establish receiving stations in the principal
stations, and either distribute these products
direct to the consumer or to dealers who care
to come to these points and pay the price
asked for the goods. In this way,- not only
Will the farmers be assured of a higher price,

dairy leaders of the state are not in sympathy
with any move to change the existing order.
The reason for this antagonism is a great mys-
tery. Inasmuch as the mission of their or-
ganization is supposed to secure for the farm-
er as nearly cost of production as possible,

tomb.
The ofﬁcial organ of the Milk Producers’

Ass’n is not the‘only agency which attacks ,
truth '
The milk dealers v

the Business Farmer for telling the
about the milk business.
themselves, strange as it may seem, are not at
all friendly to our (Continued on page 15)

Brody Appointment Completes Farmer Control of Board of Agriculture

WO YEARS ago the farmers swore they

would control the Board of Agriculture
and the policies of the M. A. C. They have
made good their thmt Today every member
of the Board is a farmer. This has been made
possible by the control of two political con-
ventions and the voluntary resignation of Mr.
W. E. Wallace, the sugar manufacturer, and
John W. Beamorrt, Detroit attorney. ' Gov.
Groes’beck appointexl John Doelle to ﬁll out
Wallace’s term, and last week Clark Brody,
cometary of the Michigan State Farm Bureau
was named to ﬁll the Beaumont nomich The
Board now consists of the following persons:
Jason Woodman, Dora H. Stockman, L. Whit-
ney Watkins, John Doelle, Malcolm Mac-
Pherson, Clark Brody.

Mr. Brody was appointed secretary of the
farm bureau last January, succeeding Mr,
Chas. Bingham, and has made a splendid
record for econom7 and eﬂ‘iciency. It is said
that as a result of his administrttian the over.
head espenses of the Bureau have been reduc-
edsopercent. Brodyopcntclsfannin St.
Joseph county and prior to his 
to the-2m bin-em VII 00W W in Sh,

 - ~ehvsguiet46opoblzmdﬁb

  

 

able man and will render the people of the
state good service on the Board of Agriculture.
.The appointment of. Brody brings up the
question of he future connection with the
Farm Bureau. The Farm Bureau’s constitu-
tion provides that no ofﬁcer shall accept an
elective or appointive political position. The
question was brought up once before when
Brody was named on the State Fair Board,
but at that time the Farm Bureau directors
decided that he not an ofﬁcial but an em-
ploye of the Bureau, inasmuch as he is hired
and not elected. That seems to be a reason-
able interpretation, and will probably have
the approval of the membership.

Largest M. A. C. Attendance

HE MICHIGAN Agricultural College

opened its 64th year on October 4 with
the largest enrollment in the history of the
institution. At noon Thursday 1771 were
enrolled. in the four-year courses and more
were yet to register.. Probably the total will
pass the 1800 mark, This enrollment surpas-
ses by more than 200 any previous year's en-
rollment, In 1916 the banner year before

 

only 1550 regular four-year students were
entered. Since then the greatest enrollment
uas 1,484 in 1920. The number this repre-
sents an increase of more than 20 per cent.

The number in the different divisions on
Wednesday afternoon were as follows: Agri-
culture, 514; Engineering, 548; Home Econ-
omics, 378; Applied Science, 108. Of this
number more than 675 are ﬁrst-year students,

which is 100 more than in any previous year. .

Announcement has just been made that Dr.
Eben W. Mumford, leader of the county
agents, has resigned his ofﬁce, the resignation
to take effect October 1, Hale Tenant, former-
ly extension specialist in marketin has been
appointed assistant to R. J. Baldwin, director

The sec- ,

areas, but i
it is a signiﬁcant fact :
that the Milk Messen- .
ger has failed to pub- :

port of the U. S. Bu- ‘

. . INDIANAPOLIS 6.26 6.67 6.40 6.23 5.83l 5.65 5.08 4.90 4.52 3.76 8.76 4.15 4.15 .
pch‘tion- .The mﬂk INDIANA - - - - - - -- ici's’RiserLn  7.87i 7.37i 7.16i 6.7ii_6292! 5.67: 3.57i 5.14i 5.11i 4.71: i 5.13i 5.69 Umted States- on
0011111113810" 18 an 611- w BALTIMORE’. 9.37! 9.87!__9.18!_ﬁ7.8:1!‘77.*87| nail—7A4! 6.88{isﬁwoiul—éilﬁieso[176.11 SllCh Tare 0003550113
ample. The Business MARYLAND - ‘ ° - -- noxrn‘mms_n_..!m 32!10.32ii'o.62!10.62!1o£2!10.82! 9.67! 9.68I 8.49!71.50!__9.18|_ |__8_.43 when the price in the }
_ Farmer said the 'milk “mung—— PETan  3"" 3-‘7' 317'- 9-4“ lE-37,'_-_5-39_'.. 5-331 4°95LE£§L§~32LE§M§2 Detroit area was high- =
mulission p 1 a. n ..... .. gékusloo ....| 8.60! 860!_8.6o! 8.60! 6.83! 6.83! 6.83l 6.84! 11.2“;qu r !__6.85!__§_.§5_!i85 9,, than in other areas,
,  . . .VELAND ....| 9.00I 9.00! 8.38! 7.99! 7.84! 6.98! 6.77! 6.67! 6.66! 5.96! 6.02! 6.00! 5.96

would fall down in a 0H10 - - - - - - ~ o - . .- Foixmnué‘  741! 7.41! 7.41iT'52! ! 6.35! ! 5.89! !'4.62!I4.73l“5.33l‘5.42 a great Splurge W35 ’
611518. It did. Not be riging Firil‘ﬁao‘  8.89! 8.95T‘i.70!_6.73! 6.51! 6.29!T36! 6.24! 5.50! 57541”6.08T5.99!W7424§ made of the fact L
cause we said so, of WISpONSYﬁ‘TT: innuxxuxiiiihnnl 8.06! 8.06! 5.91!_5.91TZ.94<T_£.9414.95!:§§1E113[410!:4.13['5.56[i.34 through the columns ‘
m but because it  sr__1:A_QI- __..!_7 67! 8.17! 7.91! 7.87! 7.3§!_6;88!"9.23I 6.24! 5.38! 4.40! 4.41! 5.39! 5.21 of the Milk Messen_

numerably more fre- I
quent occasions when I
lower,

of the extension service of the Michigan Ag- .,
ricultural College, and will take over the dut- '

ies of the leader of county agents.

Mr. Tenant is well known throughout the
state through his efforts while extension peo-
ialist in marketing, to organize co-operative
associations among the farmers, V

Dr. Mumford has been with the county
agent service since its organization six years
ago, He has not announced his future plans.
-—-By 0. E. John-en, M. A. 0. Representative.

 

 

_,__...-. .._..__ . ..-

   


  

   
   
     
  
     
    
 
  
   

 
 
 
    
 

 

        

m’iﬁé’s‘mR

 up»  An inucpendenl } . ,.
* Farmer‘s Wuuw Owned ma , 
[dlitdln‘lirhtznn Ms“;

 

 

Published every Saturday by
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14 lines to

 

 

 

Co-operation on Trial

HE RECENT chnrgc of a speaker for

the grain dealers that, thc pooling scheme
of the United Grain Growers" inc, has fallen
through, coupled with the undoubted fact lhnt
the plan has not [not with tihc cordial rcsponsc
which its sponsors hopcd for, brings into
question the prcscnt, status of the co-opcra-
tive movement in this country, and what its
ultimate fate may be expcclcd to be.

It is folly to deny the truth. A lot of
farmers have lost faith in cooperation and a
lot more are wavering ’twixt hope and doubt.
The reasons for this are many. One of them
is they expected too much in a short period
of time. illillly farn'icrs wcre induced to join
co-operative organizations upon the strength of
glittering promises by glib salesmen who were
more concerned about hanging up a salesman-
ship record than in the permanency of results.
Some of those farmers are not co-operators at
heart and become impnlicnt if results are not
immediately forthcoming. '

A part of the blninc for existing dissatis-
faction can be laid at, the door of farm org-(in-
ization leaders. In many instances they have
voted themselves salaries which appear to
farmers to be exhorbitantly high. As an
actual fact few of these salaries are out of
line with the magnitude of the work being
undertaken but it was a psychological mistake
to place salaries so high during the formative
stages of organization, before anything con-
crete had been accomplished. Morcvcr, some
very bad mistakes of judgement have been
made which have cost the farmers heavily.
But the leaders are not to be entirely blamed
for that because most of us have made the
same mistakes the last two years.

The failure of co-opcration to come up to“

the expectations of the farmers is largely the
fault of the times. The period through which
We have passed the last three years has not
been conducive to the success of any busi-
ness. It has been particularly disastrous to
the co—operatives because in many instances
the managers were inexperienced men who
could not be expected to know what course to
take when men long years in the business
were themselves at a loss. Most of the co—op—
crativcs haVe lost money. Some of them have
‘failed, costing their members heavily. Coin-
cidentally prices of farm products have drop-
ped and thoughtless farmers have either laid
the blame at the door of their organizations
or criticized them for doing so little to steady
the markets, when as a motto? of fact no
human power could have cut ely prevented
the collapse. The farm organizations have
succeeded in securing legislation which has
helped materially to stem the downward
_  movement and stabilize prices. What they
 have done along this line is alone worth their
' cost to the farmers. \
“ *- Had the present co-operative movement, the

       

 
 

   

 

 
 

 

    

611‘? Marie

. an   i keen.
tempted just before the war all’would have
been different. Prices were steadily rising
and co—operative managers would have had a
larger margin to work on. There would have
been no losses and farmers Would have been
satisﬁed. Co-operation would have received a
large measure of the credit for higher prices
and larger prosperity even though it might
have had nothing at all to do with the situa-
tion. It was co-operation’s misfortune that
it should have been presented to the American
former at the most inopportune time in the
last ﬁfty years. But cooperation is in nowise
to blame for falling prices. On the contrary
it has had an indirect influence in the ﬁnal
steadying of the market, and through the sav-
ings it has made in purchasing and the bene-
ﬁts it has secured for agriculture through log
islation has been of incalculable value to the
farmers. '

What will be the outcome? There are
countries,——Denmark, for instance,——Where no
one would think of asking such an absurd
question. Cooperation has been tried for
generations, and it has stood the test. And
co-operation will stand the test in the United
States if given a chance. But farmers must
not become too impatient of results. The nig-
gcst business enterprises in the world did not
always return d'vidcnds the ﬁrst ﬁve years of
their existence, and that may be the case with
the co—opcrative business. Co—opcration is on
trial but we believe the verdict will be a favor-
able one.

 

greatest in

 

“That Insane Prohibition Amendment”

\T lip-STATE reader discoutinucs his

subscription to the Buisncss Farmer be-
came it “upholds that insane prohibition
amendment which is ﬁlling our prisons, etc”.
Good-bye, dcar subscriber. “’9 hate to lose
you. But we would rather lose you than our
convictions and our sense of obligation to the
generations who will live upon this earth
after your bones and ours are rotting in the
grave.

How short the memory of man when it
comes to remembering things which he doesn’t
want to remember! The law of the majority
is the law of this Republic. The law of the
majority put the booze business out of Mich-
igan in 19M, and the law of a biggcr major—
ity prevented the adoption of a light wine
and beer amendment a few months later. The
law of the majority ousted the saloon in pop-
ular elections in something over thirty states
and the law of the majority put the ban of
the federal government upon it at a time
when personal efﬁciency was absolutely neces-
sary to the very life of the nation. The law of
the majority is putting the criminals who
are violating the liquor laWs behind the bars
where they belong with the violators of the
murder laws, burglary laws, forgery laws and
.all the other laws which are necessary to the
protectiou of civilized nations.

The men and women who are against booze
are not to blame because the prisons are full.
They are trying to do all they can to teach
the lawless minority that illicit whiskey mak-
ing and selling does not pay. and “as they
sow they shall also reap”. No, good friends,
it is our ex-subscr’bcr and a few paltry thous-
ands like him who either break the law them-
selves, or by their very attitude encourage
others to break it, and become subject to im-
prisonmcnt.

The prohibition amendment is the law of the
United States of America. That ought to be
enough to compel every American citizen to
observe it. Were we deadly opposed to pro-
hibition we would obey that law because we
believe in law enforcement and we know that
contempt of one law leads eventually to con-

tempt of all law. Violations of the prohibi-.

tion law have reached their crest. From now
011 they will decline. The conscience of the
people is be’ng awakened and the law‘cnforc-
ing bodies have at last bccome organized to
do efﬁcient business. All citizens of Michigan
should realize that legal'zed booze is gone for-
ever and do their duty to help put down that
vicious and dangerous element which persists
in the illicit manufacture and sale of, alcohol.

 

 

2.

  «A ~  me Items rm . _,. ..
 somemouth medics whom

foolish enough to say that almost every
disease to which the human system is a prey

   

Y can be traced to defective teeth. Rheumatism

and rickets, corns and carbuncles, mumps and
measles, itch and in-growing toenails, and a
thousand other ailments get their start from
bad molars, so they say.. The moral is, “get
your teeth ﬁxed”.

Now whether or no the teeth are responsi-
ble for all the crimes with which they are
charged against the human body, doesn’t mat—
ter at all. But it does matter that poor teeth
cause poor health in some form or other, and
it does matter that good health can often be
regained by cleansing the teeth of their put-
refactions and ﬁlling up the holes where the
germs have their hiding places.

In recent years chronic invalids and people
suffering from maladies which have ba ed
physicians have been miraculously returned .to
health by the removal of diseased molar roots
which the thoughtless patients or bungling
dentists had left to decay. These roots had
given no pain but had been insidiously and un—
suspectingly poisoning the system until it
could no longer resist.

Dr. Kenneth Gibson, director of Michigan’s
newly organized bureau of dentistry and oral
hygiene, estimates that there are a million
cavities,——in the mouths,——of Michigan school
children which are causing them annoyance
and sickness, and ought to be ﬁlled. Of
course, someone is going to get up at this point
and say that the doctor is speaking once for
the poor school children of Michigan and twice
for the poor dental profession, which he prob-
ably isn’t and it doesn’t matter if he is. All
of us have enough common sense to know that
a. child or a grown person cannot be at their
best with their teeth rotting and aching. We
also know that about ninety per cent of us do
not give our teeth the attention they deserve.
So we are inclined to second the advice given
by Dr. Gibson when he says: “Take your
child to the dentist at least once a year”. If
that advice were rel‘giously followed out by
all we would raise healthier boys and girls.

 

Still Flirting

NFORMATION comes to the Business Farm-
cr from an apparently reliable source that
the Michigan State Farm Bureau, through one
of its directors, is still flirting with the notor-
ious “Coalition Committee”, which wasrorgan-
izcd in Michigan a couple of years ago “to
combat agricultural unrest,” and has made
several attempts to get its ﬁngers on the poli-
cies of Michigan farm organizations. The
chief exhorter for this bunch of super propa-
gandists is one Dr. Perry, who appears fre-
quently at meetings of farmers and business
men and pleads with them to uphold the Con-
stitution and not become bolshevists. How a
farmer can sit through one of Perry’s meefr
ings and listen to the insinuations that he and
his neighbors are not good Americans is more
than we can understand. But that’s another
matter. So far as the Farm Bureau is con-
cerned, we don’t believe it is in any position to
flirt with an organization of this kind. The
Bureau is not invulnerable to outside influ-
ences by any means and it cannot afford to
open the door for anyone to charge that its pol—
icies are subject to outside dictation. The
Farm Bureau should break away from the
Coalition Committee or the Coalition Commit-

tee may break the Farm Bureau.

The New Assistant Secretary of Agriculture
NOTHER GOOD man has gone to wash-
ington to represent the farmers in the
Department of Agriculture. ’He is Chas. W.
Pugsley, former editor of the Nebraska Farm-
er. Pugsley isn’t a radical, but he is a pro-
gressiVe. He has rubbed elbows with farmers
all his life, either by actual contact or through
positions of an agricultural nature which he
has held with the press and the college. A
sympathetic nature coupled up with a broad
understanding of farm problems should make
Mr. Pugsley a. valuable representativeffor the

 

farmers in particular andthe 

public injgeneralg" , 

   

 

 

 

.4

 

 

 
  

  

         
     

    
  
 

rogddﬁﬁf’HmHMF-IﬁHMHuJQI—‘AHRHAH-I—n


WV! \urrl

  

 

 

 

(amassed  last week) I
' '1' THAT Neewa gathered his fat

legs under his belly and was oi!

like a shot. Not before in his
life had he run as he ran now. In-
stinct told him that at last he had
met something which was not afraid
of him, and that he was in deadly
peril.
tion, for now that he had made this
mistake he had no idea where he
would ﬁnd his mother. He could
hear Makoos coming after him. and
as he ran he set up a bawling that
was ﬁlled with a wild and agonizing
prayer for help. That cry reached the
faithful old Noozak. In an instant
she was on her feet—and just in
time. Like a round black ball shot
out of a gun Neewa sped past ,the
rock where she had been sleeping,
and ten jumps behind him came
Makoos. Out of the corner of his
eye he saw his mother, but his mo-
mentum carried him past her. In
that moment Noozak leapt into ac-
tion. .As a football player makes a
tackle she rushed out just in time
to catch old Makoos with all her
weight full broadside in the ribs,
and the two old bears rolled over and
over in what to Neewa was an excit-
ing and glorious mix-up.

He had stopped and his eyes bulg-
ed out like shining little onions as
he took in the scene of battle. He
had'longed for a ﬁght but what he
saw now fairly paralyzed him. The
two bears were at it, rearing and
tearing each other's hides and throw-
ing up showers of gravel and earth
in their deadly clinch. In the ﬁrst

round Noozak had the best of it. She v

had butted the wind out of Makoos
in her ﬁrst dynamic assault, and
new with her dulled and broken

. teeth at his throat she was lashing

him with her sharp hind claws until
the blood streamed from the old
barbarian's sides and he bellowed
like a. choking bull. Neewa knew
that it was his pursuer who was
getting the worst of it, and with a
squeaky cry for his mother to lam-
bast the very devil out of Makoos
he ran back to the edge of the arena,
his nose crinkled and. his teeth
gleaming in a ferocious snarl. He
danced about excitedly a dozen feet
from the ﬁghters, Soominitik’s blood
ﬁlling him with a yearning for the
fray and yet he was afraid.

Then something happened that sud~
<1me and totally upset the madden-
ing joy of his mother’s triumph.
Makeos, being a lie-bear, was of ne-
cessity skilled in ﬁghting, and all
at once he freed himself from Noo-
zak's jaws, wallowed her under him,
and in turn began ripping the hide
of! old Noozak's carcass in such
quantities that she let out an agon-
ised bawling that turned Neewa’s
little heart into stone.

It is a matter of most exciting
conjecture what a email boy will do
when he sees his father getting
licked. If there is an axe handy he
is liable to use it. The most cata-
clysmic catastrophe that can come
into his life is to have a father whom
some other boy’s father has given a
walleping. Next to being president
of the United States the average
small boy treasures the desire to
possess a parent who can whip any
twoalegged creature that wears
trousers. And there were a lot of
human things about Neewa. The
lender his mother bawled the more
distinctly he felt the shock of his
world falling about him. If Noo-
zak had lost a part of her strength
in her old age her voice, at least,
was still unimpaired, and such a
spasm of outcry as she emitted could
have been heard at least half a mile
away. \

Neewa could stand no more.
Blind with rage, he darted in. It
was chance that closed his vicious
little jaws on a" toe that belonged
to Makoos, and his teeth sank into
Hm "ash like two rows of ivory
needles. Makoos gave a tug, but
Neewa .held on, and bit deeper.
. . sinuous drew up his leg and
sent it out like a catapult, and in
spite of his determinatiion to hang on
Neewa found himself sailing thru
the air. He landed against a rock
twenty feet from the ﬁghters with
a force that knocked the wind out
unmanatoumwerumn
often   he wobbles

 

He made no choice of direc- ~

open.
Flaming Forest, etc.

 

 

Nomads of the North

By JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD

America’s foremost writer of animal life stories and romance in the
Author of Kazan, Grizzly King, Back to God’s Country, the

(Copyright by Doubleday, Page & Co.)

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then his vision and his senses re-
turned and he gazed on a scene
that brought all the blood pounding
back into his body again.

Makoos was no longer ﬁghting,
but was running away——-and there
was a decided limp in his gait!

Poor old Noozak was standing on
her feet, facing the retreating en-
emy. She was panting like a wind-
ed calf. Her jaws were agape. Her
tongue lolled' out, and.blood was
dripping in little trickles from her
body to the ground. She had been
thoroughly and eﬁiciently mauled.
She was beyond the shadow of a
doubt a whipped bear. Yet in that
glorious flight of the enemy Neewa.

saw nothing of Noozak’s defeat.
Their enemy was running away!
Therefore, he was whipped. And

with excited little squeaks of joy
Neewa ran to his mother.

CHAPTER THREE

S THEY stood in the warm sun-
shine of this ﬁrst day of June,
watching the last of Makoos as

he fled across the creek bottom, Nee-
wa felt very much like an old and
seasoned warrior instead of a pot-
bellied, round-faced cub of four
months who weighed nine pounds and
not four hundred. '

It was many minutes after Neewa
had sunk his ferocious little teeth
deep into the tenderest part of the
)ld he~bear’s toe before Noozak could
get her wind sufﬁciently to grunt. Her
sides were pumping like a pair of bel-
lows, and after Makoos had disap-
peared beyond the creek Neewa sat
down on his chubby bottom, perked
his funny ears forward, and eyed his
mother with round and glistening
‘eyes that were ﬁlled with uneasy
speculation. With a wheezing groan
Noozak turned and made her way
slowly toward the big rock alongside
which she had been sleeping when
Neewa’s fearful cries for help had
awakened her. Every bone ianer
aged body seemed broken or dislocat-
ed. She limped and sagged and
moaned as she walked, and behind
her were left little red trails of blood
In the green grass. Makooe had given
her a ﬁne pummeling.

She lay down, gave a ﬁnal groan
and looked at Neewa, as if to say:

“If you hadn't gone oﬁ‘ on some
deviltry and upset that old viper’s
temper this wouldn’t have happened.
An: now—look at me!"

young bear would have ral'li
quickly from the effects of the bi:E
tie, but Noozak lay without moving

 

all the rest of that afternoon, and
the night that followed. And that
night was by all odds the ﬁnest that
Neewa had ever seen. Now that the
nights were warm, he had come to
love the moon even more than the
sun, for by birth and instinct he was
more a prowler in darkness than a
hunter of the day. The moon rose
out of the east in a glory of golden
ﬁre. The spruce and balsam forests
stood out like islands in a yellow sea
of light, and the creek shimmered
and quivered like a living thing as
it wound its way through the glow-
ing valley. But Neewa had learned
his lesson, and though the moon and
the stars called to him he hung close
to his mother, listening to the carniv-
al of night sound that came to him,
but never moving away from her side.

With the morning Noozak rose to
her feet, and with a grunting com—
mand for Neewa to follow she slowly
climbed the sun-capped ridge. She
was in no mood for travel, but away
back in her head was an unexpressed
fear that villainous old Makoos might
return, and she knew that another
ﬁght would do her up entirely, in
which event Makoos would make a
breakfast of Neewa. So she urged
herself down the other side of the
ridge, across a new valley, and thru
a cut that opened like a wide door
into a rolling plain that was made up
of meadows and lakes and great
sweeps of spruce and cedar forest.
For a week Noozak had been making
for a certain creek in this plain, and
now that the presence of Makoos
threatened behind she kept at her
journeying until Neewa’s short, fat
legs could scarcely hold up his body.

It was mid—afternoon when they
reached the creek, and Neewa was
so exhausted that he had difﬁculty in
climbing the spruce up which his
mother sent him to take a nap. Find-
ing a comfortable crotch he quickly
fell asleep-—-while Noozak went ﬁsh-
ing.

The creek was alive with suckers,
trapped in the shallow pools after
spawning, and within an, hour she had
the shore strewn with them. When
Neewa came down out of his cradle,
just at the edge of dusk, it was to a
feast at which Noozak had already
stuffed herself until she looked like
a barrel. This was his ﬁrst meal of
ﬁsh, and for a week thereafter he
lived in a ;aradise of ﬁsh. He ate
them morning, noon and night, and
when he was too full to eat be rolled
in them. And Noozak stuffed her-
self until l't seemed her hide would
burst. Wherever they moved they

 

 

 

 

   

 

Corn Huskin’

By LeRoy W. Snell

M NOT not so all-ﬁred eager when the plowing’s‘ to be done.
An' cultivatin‘ aint no job for me.
The mjlkjn's kinder putterin’ an' I can’t see no fun
In squirtin’ stuff upon an apple tree.

But ’long in late October, when the yellow pumkins gleam
air that’s like stiff cider in yer chest,

Then huskin’ corn by daylight er a lantern's smokey beam

'8 the kind 0’ heavy labor I like best.

It’s then the breeze of autumn an’ the frost at night and mom'
Just sort 0’ fit in right with huskin’ pegs, '
And the rustlings of the rusty husks yer ripping from the corn
Makes you forget the crikles in yer legs.

There's rows 0’ shocks before you there. like Indian’s tepees,
An’ sun a glinting’ warm upon yer back.

As huntin‘ fer the nubblns in the bundle on yer knees
Ypu’re throwing lumps 0' gold upon the stack.

With barkin‘s, yips and Id-yi-yis, a sprintin’ off goes Bide,

A chasin' of a rabbit down the lot,

That's some all scared and scoodn' from the shock that you’ve untied-
] don’t remember any that he’s caught.

Some appetite ye carry, too, when huskin’ day is done! I
An’ how the rituals ﬁt beneath yer vest!
Oh you can do the plowin' if you think it’s any fun.
But bushin‘ oorn’s theisbor I like best.

 

 

  

(109‘) 75

carried with them a ﬁshy smell that
grew older day by day, and the older
it became the more delicious it was
to Neewa and his mother. And Nee-
wa grew like. a swelling pod. In that
week he gained three pounds. He had
given up nursing entirely now, for
Noozak—being an old bear—had
dried up to a point where she was
hopelessly disappointing.

It was early in the evening of the
eighth day that Neewa and his moth-
er lay down in the edge of a grassy
knoll to sleep after their day's feast-
ing. Noozak was by all odds the
happiest old bear in all that part of
the uorthland. Food was no longer
a problem for her. In the creek,
penned up in the pool, were unlimit-
ed quantities of it, and she had en-
countered no other bear to challenge
her possession of it. She looked
ahead to uninterrupted bliss in their
happy hunting grounds until mid-
summer storms emptied the pools, or
the berries ripened. And Neewa, a
happy little gourmand, dreamed with
her.

It was this day, just as the sun
was setting, that a man on his hands
and knees was examining a damp
patch of sand ﬁve or six miles down
the creek. His sleeves were rolled
up, baring his brown arms halfway
to the shoulders and he were no hat,
so that the evening breeze ruffled a
ragged head of blond hair that for a
matter of eight or nine months had
been cut with a hunting knife.

Close on one side of this individ-
ual was a tin pail, and on the other,
eyeing him with the keenest interest,
one of the nomeliest and yet one of
the most companionable—looking dog-
pups ever born of a Mackenzie hound
father and a mother half Airedale
and half Spitz.

With this tragedy of blood in his
veins nothing in the world could
have made the pup anything more
than “just dog.” His tail, stretched
out straight on the sand, was long
and lean, with a knot at every joint:
his paws. like an overgrown boy’s
feet, looked like small boxing-gloves:
his head was three sizes too big for
his body. and accident has assisted
Nature in the perfection of her mas-
terpiece by robbing him of a half of
one of his ears. As he watched his
master this half of an ear stood up
like a galvanized stub, while the
other—twice as long—was perked
forward in the deepest and most in-
terested enquiry. Head, feet, and tail
were Mackenzie bound, but the ears
and his lank, skinny body was a
battle royal between Spitz and Aire-
dale. At bis present inharmonious
'stage of development he was the dog-
giest dog-pup outside the alleys of
a big city

For the first time in several min-
utes his master spoke, and Miki wig-
gled from stem to stem in apprecia-
tion of the fact that it was directly
to him the words were uttered.

“It’s a mother and a cub, as sure
as you’re a week old, Mikl," he said.
‘fAnd if I know anything about bears
they were here some time to—day!"

He rose to his feet. made note of
the deepening shadows in the edge
of the timber. and filled his pail with
water. For a few moments the last
rays of the sun lit up his face. It was
a strong. hopeful face. In it was the
10y of life. And now it was lighted
up with a sudden inspiration, and a
glow that was not of the forest alone
came into his eyes, as he added:

"Miki, I'm lugging your homely
carcass down to the Girl because
you’re an unpolished gem of good

nature and beauty—and for these
two things I know she’ll love you. She
is my sister, you know. Now, if I
could only take that cub along with
 II

He began to whistle as he turned
with his pail of water in the direction
of a thin fringe of balsams a bum
dred yards away-

Close at his heels followed Miki.

(Continued um week)

 

Taking No Chances

Tommy was being examined in the
Catechism.

"What is meant by regeneration?"

“Why, it's just being born again."
replied the victim

"And wouldn't you like to be born
again?" .

in desperation the truth can. “I
ain‘t taking any chances on ing a
glri."——Lnndon Till-Bits.

 

   
   
   
  
    
  
  
   
   
 
   
   
  
  
    
    
   
 

 

 

    
   
    
   
 
 
    
  
  
  
  
 
     
 
   
   
   
     
   
   
      
       
    
      
   
 


 
     
      

  
  
     
 

_ (no; 5

To; TRAPPERS

Wonderful .
Animal Bail \

Send postal for free sam-
ple of our Wonder Bait—
worke where others fail-
holds under snow or water.
Nothing else like this. Also

   
   
 

   

  

 

 
 
 
  
      
     
      
  
     
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
   
 
   
       
 
  
 
   
   
   
    
  
  
   
  
  
    
  
   
  
    
  
   
  
    

  

get particulars of how you can get your
lures —increeee your end
pléoﬁfl without IIei £33,311...

ilbe not as an payemore,
but helm mwmﬂﬁ. U. Help You

Gum’s/(Irwin’s

——— -—-—-

and [unease Your (‘atdz

Fifty-ﬁve years in the for business and twa .
million dollars cepth make us the best
house for you to do business with. Paying
big prices. square grading and prompt
pay has built this wonderful business.
 Don’t fail to send for the Free

* Bait Sample. Spech Proposi-
tion, latest Fur Price List and Trappere'
Supply Bargains. A poem] brings them all.

S. SILBERMAN &

129 Silbennnn Bldg. Chicago. m.

 
 

  
    
     
       
   
   
   
      
      

 

; G‘TTVAWA'”1

> Fastest cutting Log Saw. 310 strokes a minute.
‘ Light Weight. Most, powerful. Easy to move from out
toeut and lo to log. Friction clutch controls saw
. blade w ile motor runs. Saws anysize logs.Wben
;_ not sawing use as portable engine for pumping,
“my.” $33 "$135.33 #333343 3.3.32?

5 . e PS
10' mengwith cross-cut eaws."--D. Kinsey, Ohio.

[92.9. SA. "at:

ll trees' Limb Saw cuts branches.
Tree saw h B d armandahop engines from
. Log

 
 
 
   
   
 

low Selling
Ii

 

 

 

 

 
   
 

w, 30 a
 DAY SALE V
; if. 9’rl’c'esSIashed 1

GET BROWN‘S FACTORY PRICES

Den 1! cent til et my
Y  “Inhenyggquom

- The'greeeeet
.» Eva: Ieh‘ke
" murmur Prices
-yourneneoeooetaI-dmell€0

    
 
 
 
 
   

heard 02. Prices cut to the beacon Fences.
Steel Pods, Rooﬁng and Paint.

othmlmnemhclpeyfreigbt selleab
Whammy“.

se—nes soon
0? BIG BARGAINS

Mmcm
non .

momentary
. lb Brown,“

 

  

men-Your Own

Horse or Cow Hlde.
'- Wemekethiecoettemeaeune
from the hide you send. Write
; safer special lowprice‘.

All! Kind of Skin
We make up any kind of skin to
a suit your needs.

Also Ladlee' Coats and
Fore, Robee. etc.
new mass: 2:. me...

e
tee satisfaction.
fstylee If '
 msgomen‘egfurnm'
Wn‘tefor it today
Beading Babe 5 Tanning Co.
ltd Eat a. Reedlnl. Itch.

A FINE FUR COAT

 

 

book. It describes
the benefits of
Agricultural Gyp-
sum. Try some
this {all on your
alfalfa, clover and
other legumes.
Watch the result.
Gypsum industries Association
Dept. 31 lc‘ll:i W. Weehinm Sheet

Illinois

 

 

 

 

 

 

l
l
l
3
l

 

“.0.
Your local dealer Insoles W Gypsum"

 

 

 

 What Would You 13:

With $500?

; Someone who reeds the Business
4Farmerisgoiogtogot”iteoon..8eo

   
 

 '_ 

 

 

 

A DEADLY PARALLEL

AVING dropped an imaginary

tear for the imaginary woes of

the imaginary farmer so pa-
thetically pictured by the railroad
managers, let me another tale un-
fold which may present a closer par-
allel.

Mr. Penn Rhoades inherited a
good farm which he worked for
proﬁt only- His hired man worked
sixteen hours a day.,._and on Sunday
did chores and tinkered tools while
the boss exercised his. Buick Six.
For some reason he was generally
short of help and weeds flourished.
He didn’t believe in commercial fen-
tilizer and his land needed phos-
phate badly, but he always banked
6 per cent on capital invested even
if he had to borrow money to pay
taxes. 80 when the government
took over his farm it was in much
worse shape than his bank account.

The government tiled a big open
ditch for him and put up a lot of
new fence, but did not repaint the
buildings or replace all his wornout
tools. By paying better wages and
cutting out unnecessary Sunday
work it was able to keep help enough
to control the weeds. but did not
exterminate thistles and quack from
the fence rows. It also used acid
phosphate and raised good wheat.

On returning the farm to its own-
er the government presented its
bill of $1,144 for cash cost of ditch-
ing and fencing, and oﬂ'ered to guar-
antee proﬁts another year if he
would continue its policy towards
hired help, but long before the year
was up Mr. Rhoades declared he
must cut wages at once or go bank-
rupt. His bill for damages includ-
ed $1,000 for permanent injury to
the soil by over-stimulation with
commercial fertilizer, and investi-
gation showed he had paid exhorbi-
taut prices for repair work that
could have been done quicker as well
as cheaper at home, in order to
show a big deficit in profits for the
government to make up under its
guarantee And he insisted that the
government pay his entire bill in cash
and take his note for ten years for
what he owed the government’—
Stacy Brown, Ionia County, Mich.

Ifyeurfactsarecorrectthisisesr—
tainly a “deadly parallel." None of us
know as much about the railway situa—
tion as we ought to know. We have to
take the railway's word that they have
been imposed upon. The government
makes no effort to defend its control of
the roads during the war. Whether be—
cause it is indefensible or because the
government considers it should not en-
gage in propaganda is not known. We
are, however, trying to get some of the
real facts on the situation from the
Interstate Commerce Commission. If
we succeed they will be laid before our
realism—«Editor.

 

THE LIFE or FARM TOOLS
HE LIFE of farm tools should

which they have done, but in too
many cases where they are left out
of doors in all kinds of weather. it
depends upon the ability of steel and
wood and iron to resist the elements.
It may be interesting to know what
the average life of farm tools is.

A manure spreader is useful on
an average of eight years. The
sulky plow is good for twelve, as is
also the mowing machine, side de—
livery rakes, gas engines and hay
tedders.

If a person will take the ﬁrst cost
and then add to it the interest on
the investment and annual depre-
ciation, taxes, etc, then divide this
sum by the number of acres he has
used it over, in most cases he will
ﬁnd that he has a pretty high acre
charge on most of the tools he
keeps. Grain and corn binders will
show an acreage charge of about 60
cents, grain drills 26 cents, corn
planters 22 cents, hay loaders 75
cents and disk barrows. 45 cents-
Thls may seem quite a high estimate,
but at the present prices of farm
machinery it is not much out of
line.

If some farmers were told to hang
a hundred dollar bill out on a fence
post and leave it there all winter

 

 

 

depend upon the amount of work-

But what difference is there between
doing that and leaving highvpriced
tools out exposed to the elements
year after year to rust and decay,
causing much delay in the busy
season and often many trips to the
repair shop and much needless er:-
pense?—D. H. M., Shiawassee Coun-
ty, Mich.

The argument is all on your side. It
is so much easier to leave tools out in
all sorts of weather. and say. “01:. It
won't hurt them much to leave them out
today”, than it is to provide a. place for
them and take the time to run them in-
side. It never pays to leave tools out in
the open. They wear out quickly enough
without turning them loose to the whims
of the elmnents.—Editor.

 

“STAND BY THE EDITOR.”
S A READER of the M. B. F»
I beg leave to submit the fol-

lowing. I bave read the two articles
under the headings of “England and
the United States" in paper dated
Sept. 3rd and 24th. As an unpreju-
diced person I voiced my sentiments
with the editor’s article in Sept. 3rd
paper. I am deeply in sympathy
with his spirit and position. I
heartily agree with the editor, that
there is too much of the ﬁghting
spirit in some today, who by their
spirit, their voice, their pen or pro-
paganda seem to take great delight
in fermenting trouble between peo-
ple and even nations. Too bad that
such a country as we have, is infested
with so many trouble breeders to-
day. England and America can't
afford to fall out. It won't help any
one to be better or feel better. Things
are hard enough now, God knows.
Let us seek peace and good will with
all men. Let us stand for the great
principles of truth and right that
must underlie all true. and good
government. And anything of a
sour, selfish nature, we ﬁnd within
us that would stir up strife and di-
vision let us destroy it root and
branch. Personally, I am of the
opinion that if Ireland will behave
herself as the other colonies do, she
won’t have any trouble with the
British Government. Suppose she
tries this plan for the future, to see
the truth of my statement, and of
the editor's position also—A Week-
ly Reader, Boyne City, Mich.

Thank you, good friend. When the
editor displeases he hears about it from
all sides. When he leaSes he hears
about itf—eometimes. e like to have
the opinions of our readers whether they
are favorable or not. An unfavorable
criticism isn’t always pleasant. but it‘s
usually of value. But, oh boy, what an
appetite for supper a friendly slap on the
back does give nit—Editor.

PINK TEA POLICIES
AY I congratulate and thank
you for giving Michigan read-
ers an independent, outspoken,
progressive paper which serves the
farmers, rather than mislead them,
which so many farm papers (so—call—
ed) are doing. If we, as farmers,
could learn to discriminate between
the truly progressive paper that
serves the farmers' interests rather
than corporations or profiteers, then
weed them out as we would quack
grass or Canada thistles, better con-
ditions for the farmer would not
be so far 01!. Since January last we
have heard and read much of the
slump in prices of farm products,
since August. 1920, ranging in a
year to approximately ten billions
of dollars, not including real estate.
I have listened to the highest oﬂlcers
in our state of two largest farm
organizations, and the master of the
National Change, and none of them
except one pretended to give the
cause of the slump in prices, nor
a remedy, except to say, “the farm-
er must organize and save." The
exception mentioned was C. H-
Bramble, overseer of Michigan State
Grange, ‘ who gave a splendid ' ad-
dress at a picnic of the Grangers and
farmers in general at Hillsdale in
August. If the farmers could hear
Mr. Bramble on the cause of changed
economic conditions which have tak-

  

 

1 co the past 14 months, before

would be doing in our state and na-
tional membership. and at the polls.
Listening to state stories of wba' the
Grange or other organizations have
done, advise economy, etc, does not
create enthusiasm and never will.
People want to know what new
things we have to offer for new con-
ditions, new abuses of economic jus-
tice, which saps the many for the
few, which compels the farmer and
the wage—earner to skimp and save
while the few can flaunt their un-
Just accumulations in the face of
toilers and poverty.

The opportunity of our state and
national Grange is being fritted
away in rehearsing past records,
while stemming the tide of prog-
ress. Both are largely reactionary.
The national has been for more than
twenty years, and our state is fol-
lowing in its footsteps-

I commend the giving of base balls
to granges for organizing bail] teams,
but why not the Grange executive
committee oﬂer prizes, lst, 2nd. 3rd
and 4th, for the best papers on the
cause of the depression of agricul-
ture and the cure. The cause of the
depression following the war of the
Rebellion was the same as the cause
of our late depression, also of the
short, spasmodic panic in 1907, while
Roosevelt was president.

It is possible that a very few men
will always be given power by legis-
lation to deprive wealth producers of
billIOns u-pon billions of-hard—earn-
ed wealth and transfer it to the DOCK!»
ets of the few who toil not, neither
do they spin, but are the lords of
wealth and legislation Yours for
better co-operation at the ballot box.
——H. E. K., Hillsdale County, Mich.

(especially
about the Business Farmer). but can’t
'zactly follow you on the Michigan State
Grange. To my mind this Grange is the
most progressive east of the M

Mebbe that isn’t saying much, but con-
sider the reactionary inﬂuences of its
namby-pamby neighbors to the eastward.
Yes, we ought to know more about the
economic forces which control price;
etc. But we are making progress in that
direction. We have named an economist
for M. A. C. president. and our farm or-u
ganizations are doing something is a
gagith way. So let's .be patient:—

1'.

Agree with most you say

CRIMES OF VARIOUS SORTS

HE WORLD is oil on a big crime
; jamboree, says Beck, but be

omits some offenders. In what
he described as a “discussion of the
moral psychology of the present re-
volt against the spirit of authority,”
James M. Beck, Solicitor General of
the United States, painted a gloomy
picture of the situation that exists
in this country and throughout the
world. The members of the Amer-
ican Bar Association who listened,
must have been impressed with the
thought that the world is literally
going headlong to the damnation
bow-wows. Here are some of the
high lights of the Beck speech:

Criminal cases pending in the
federal courts have increased from
9.513 in 1912 to 70.000 in 1921;
burglaries reported by casualty com-t
panics have grown in amount from
886,000 in 1914 to 10,000,000 in
1920. Murder is increasing in U.
S. In two years there were 457 with
164 convictions in Chicago. In one
year there were 336 murders and
44 convictions. The annual profits
from violation of the prohibition
law are estimated at $300,000,000.
This does not take into account the
graft paid to revenue agents.

Beck did not catalogue the crimes
of the 23,000 new millionaires, the
graftsrs among dollar-a-year men,
war contract grafters, Shipping
Board crooks, airplane construction
grafters. Evidently he considered
them too numerous to mention.—
Copied from “Labor,” by S. H.
Slagle, Wexford County, Mich.

Statistics are interesting things. The!
will prove almost anything. I am curi-
ous to know how the hand!“  title

the “p a of  '

 
 

 

    
     
 

Mﬂouhmnuamnuuum_ - ..

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(Dn‘neianu-

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-

GENO

7

aPasaasﬁss

is
n.
lg
in
ad

 

 

(A Ole-in. Department for fumere'

/

d troubles. Prom careful attention given h
u m" here to son.

em
Iii complaint: or requests for Information addressed to this department. We are
I00. “87 Inquiries must be uooompanled by full I! ame and address. Name not used If I. requested.)

GEESE FOB BREEDING STOCK

Are ‘ female geese that hatched. this
spring old enough to use for breeders
this coming spring? Would three be too
many to use with one male? Gray Tou-
louse is the breed if that should make
any diﬂerence. About what month
should I feed for eggs?—4L M., Kendall,
Michigan.

 

It would be unwise to use them
for breeders until they are two years
old. On the other hand ganders at
one year of age may be used as
breeders with good results. In rais-
ing geese for future breeding stock.
you will find it more advisable to
mate them in pairs, keeping them
conﬁned in pairs until the breeding
season is over. For a commercial
ﬂock three geese and one gander
maybe mated with success. I
should begin feeding for egg pro-
duction sometime after the ﬁrst of
January. You will iind that the
Toulouse geese will lay from nine
to twelve eggs before wanting to
set—W. E. Newlon, Acting Head ‘of
Poultry Husbandry Dept" M. A. C.

 

MUST REMOVE TIMBER

I bought a piece of land from a com-
pany 10 years ago. They reserved the
timber. There was no time set when
they should get it off. They do not
pay any taxes on it. How long do they
have to get it off? Can i make them re-
move it?——P. H. ’T.. Vanderbilt, Mich.

 

The supreme court has held that
“where one sells land reserving the
timber thereon, the reservation is of
trees then suitable for use as tim-
ber. Where, in such case, nothing
is said as to time of removal, the
timber must be removed in a rea-
sonable time. But failure to re-
move the timber will not defeat the
reservation and give title to the
grantee unless the grantor has had
notice to remove and a reasonable
time to comply—Legal Editor.

 

CORN ALONE NOT GOOD FOR
muons

We hatched out two hundred young
mickens and many of them became sick
and died in a few hours. Some are very
near full grown. They are nice and fat.
We fed them corn all summer. Is rye
good for chickens? Some of those
chickens get some rye inthe bans—A.
W., Pinconning, Mich.

 

I am at a loss just how to answer
your inquiry. You state very few
symptoms from which to diagnose
your case It is as objectionable to
feed chicks on one grain alone as
it is with human beings. If the
chicks were fed rye alone, there
would be a reason for the death of
your chicks. First they might
starve to death if given nothing else,
because chickens must be forced to
eat rye. Second, if there were any
ergot in the rye it would be fatal to
the birds—W. E. Newlon, Acting
Head of Poultry Husbandry De-
partment, M. A. C.

 

TANNING HARNESS LEATHER

Where can I get harness leather tan-
ned and what will be the cost?——Reader.

The Reading Robe and Tanning
00., of Reading, Michigan, are gen-
eral tanners. Their price for tan-
ning harness leather is 40 cents per
pound, leather weight. For this
grade of leather they advise, hides
weighing from 40 pounds and up
should be needs—Editor.

 

 

NEED NOT PAY ACCOUNT

If a man and Wife hold a- joint deed
on 40 acres of land and the husband
notifies a merchant not to let his wife
or children have any goods from his
store and charge to him, unless he makes
arrangements with the merchant be-
forehand for them. and the merchant dis-
regards the notice can the merchant
sue the husband for the amount and col-
lect or will the merchant have to lose the
account?—~F. L. N.. Harietta, Michigan.

The mere fact that a husband and
wife own land in their Joint names
does not aﬂect liability, on contracts.
If the husband provides sufficient

for his wife and family according to'
their station in life and his income
and ability, he is not liable .tcr'

goods sold the wife supposedly non

 He is especially not I-

, 5

  

 

use
‘ *  was «as

‘M

 

and purchases. In the contrary, if
the husband does not provide suffi-
cient for his wife or family and the
wife purchases upon his credit he is
legally liable for the claim. The
mere fact that the real estate is in
the joint names means, only, that
such land can not be taken to satis-
fy a judgment against either hus-
band or wife or both unless the ob-
ligation was incurred in writing.—
Legal Editor.

LOGATES BROTHER THROUGH
SERVICE BUREAU

The service rendered by this do-
partment is almost unlimited in its
scope Thousands of questions have
been received upon as many differ
ent subjects. Not long since a
woman reader in Eaton county de-
sired to learn the address of her
brother, who had gone west some
years ago, but returned to Michigan
a couple of years back. The request
was published in these columns, and
within a week, two letters were re-
ceived. one from the brother him-
self and another from a man who
knew his whereabouts. Moral:
When in need call on the Service
Bureau.

LEGA LITY OF WILL

Will you please tell me throua‘h your
valuable paper when a person makes a
will does it have to he recorded with the
county clerk to make it legal?——~R. G..
Emmet County, Michigan

A will properly and lawfully ex—
ecuted does not need to be record-
ed anywhere to make it legal. It
may be left among one's papers, left
with a third person or left with the
judge of probate for safe keeping.—
Legal Editor. '

BEST m TD TRANSPLANT
BERRY BIYSHES
Wth is ill“ lwst time to transplant
berry bushes?——G. E. B.. Goodells. Mich.

It can be done in late fall just
after the foliage drops or early in
the spring as soon as soil condi—

'tions are favorable—C. P. Halligan,

Dept. of Horticulture, M. A. C.

 

TO STOP HUNTING ON FARMS

Most of us farmers are tired of the
city hunters swarming our farms for
game we have raised. tearing down our
fences and causing other damages. I
would like to raise a few turkeys but
feel it uselese with so many hunters
running our woods and ﬁelds. In what
way can~we stop hunting in this town-
ship?——-E 8., Vicksburg, Mich.

It is unlawful for any one to
hunt on what is commonly called
“posted” lands as provided in sec-
tion 3, on page 790 of the Public
Acts of l 9 1 7 .——Legal Editor.

TO FATTEN DUCKS.

What is the best ration to feed a
flock of ducks to fatten them for mar-
ket ?—Rea d er.

We can recommend the following
ration for feeding old ducks, that is
ducks over eight weeks of ago.
Three parts corn meal, one part low
grade flour, 3-4 part beef scrap, 1
part green feed, green feed consist-
ing of alfalfa or clover. Feed three
times daily. Mix to a doughy con-
sistency. If free range is bad, the
green feed may be cut down to
some extent. Beef scrap may be
eliminated is one desired—George
F. Davis, Assistant in Poultry Hus-
bandry, M. A. C.

 

HORSE OLDER THAN REPRE-
SENTED

Last summer a neighbor hired my son
to work for him. My son is 17 years
old and my consent was not given as I
was not home at the time of hiring. My
son worked fer him and while there one
of the owners sold him a horse claimed
to be three years old but i discovered it
was older and would not let my son
keep it. He had pa.d $20 on the horse

 

The son'- wages» holes! to the
30' unless the son has been eman-
dpatol by the father. If you sign-
ed  one-non it would bind you for

 

 

 

 

 

“I’ve been thinking of becoming interested in your company, but
youseemsoslowingettingstartedthatI’veheldba “saidacitizen
who recently visited our oﬂices.

We are glad, in a way, that this remark was made. It doubtlea
reﬂects the objections held by many others. It opens the way for an
explanatory answer.

In the ﬁrst place, we are building a great industry in Michigan,
one of the largest ever attempted. It requires much capital, much plan-
ning, much work. It is not a business that can be started in a small
building and then grow to large dimensions.

We must begin big and then grow bigger.

When everything is taken into consideration, we are making rapid

headway. The only mistake we have made was in starting to build last
fall. Before the foundations were all in, we discovered the mistake,
and quit, for the time, further building eﬁorts, as we found the low
mark in building costs had not been reached.

That we used Wise discretion at that time is evidenced in the fact
that we have since let contracts at a saving of more than $600,000—six
hundred thousand dollars. Say this over, for it sounds more impressive
than does a glance at the bare ﬁgures: Saved “SIX HUNDRED
THOUSAND DOLLARS.”

This money belongs to our stockholders, and we know they will ap-
preciate our going a little slow to make such and similar savings. You
can trust this kind of management. We have been going slow, because
we have made money by so doing.

It takes time to build big things—to put great industries into action.
Ford is not complete, and he has been building eighteen years, after having
fallen down on his ﬁrst two attempts.

But we are coming through successfully just as Ford did, and we be-
lieve we are going to make money for our stockholders just as Ford has
made money for his stockholders.

Get away from the pessimistic “bogy” of doubt and come in with us.
Think What it means to you to have a big group of workmen steadily em-
ployed at good wages—think What it means to merchants, to farmers, to
mechanics, to everybody.

Get the signiﬁcance of what it will mean when our factory gets going
and we are doing from ten to ﬁfteen million dollars worth of business a
year,——bringing all this money and scattering much of it in generous div-
idends to our stockholders.

No. we are not going SLOW, we are growing SURE. We can grow
more rapidly if you join in with us, become a part of us. We have no
secrets. Our cards are on the table, face up, all the time. Investigate our
plans and you will endorse them. Don’t wait for us to complete our fac-
tory and begin operations.

Don’t say it can’t be done, for it will be done. What we have done
calls for your faith of what we will do, and do it fast enough to bring
success.

Fill out the coupon. Let us help you to investigate and analyze the
soiidity of our proposition.

l
WTLDMAN RUBBER COMI’ANY, I
Bay City, Mich.
Without any obligation on my part, please send full particulars of I
your company. i
l
I
I

Address

uOOOOOOOOOUOO'OOOOIOOOOCOOOIOCOOCDUOIIOOI00...

I
l
l
I Name 
I
l
l

_____._.______..——____—._————

The Wildman Rubber Co.

W. W. WILDMAN, President 0. R. TVVYNHAM. Treasurer
C. A. BROWNELL, Vice-President JAS. C. M‘CABE. Secretary
Oﬂloos: 302-313-314 Phoenix Blork, BAY CITY, liﬂCHlGAN.

 

  

Don’t Send a Penny

Bargains Like These Make
New Customers
9 5

And Postage
on Arrival

  
       

FREE wool socks with these erotics.

 Here is s ﬁrst quality all rubber ﬂour buckle arm,
' Greatest bargain of it: kind in Amerim, boom

it is impossible to manufacture these aria for the
price we oﬂer them to you. Guaranteed Govern-
'ment first quality artica If you are not plasmid
after you have carefully examined your purchase.
you may return than and we will refund your
money plus postage. Don't fall to order early.
they are going to sel] fast. Your chance to an
. money. Bush your order. Every pair is water proof.

CHASE SHOE CO.

MINNEAPOLIS. MINNESOTA

         
      
       

  
 
 
  

        
  
   

Orde- by
No.
“HEP”?! 20
Blue

   
  

 
 

0‘018

     

 

 

BREEDERS ATTENTION!

nyonareplanningonaealethisym.wdteunowand
CLAIM THE DATE!

ﬁleserdceisfree mmounommmhmm
tonvoid conflicungenledata

LET‘THE BUSINESS PAW CLAIM MBA“! .

 

 

 

Te Ea]; “th” 

 

  
    

 


  
      

m NATURAL AND THE SPIRIT-
E HAVE a natural
we have a spiritual

‘ these words of St.
take literally.

He does not say we have a natur-
ml body and some day we shall have
a spiritual body. Evidently then
we are in possession of both at the
present time.

The ﬁrst, the visible
covering of the second, the invis-
ible part. The glove that protects
and covers the hand. When the
glove is worn out it is cast aside,
and the hand, the real member.
emerges.

The spiritual, or ethereal body,
is ,the permanent and enduring one,
and upon death it emerges. whole,
well and beautiful, if we have lived

     
  

body and
body."
Paul I

  

 
 

  
   
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
    
  
     
   
    
  
  
    
   
    
  
    
   
 
     
    
  
    
    
  
    
   
  
  
    
  
   
  
  
    
   
      
   
     
     
    
   
 
   
   
     
     
   
 
 
 
  
  
   
 
   
   
  
   
   
    
   
  
 
  
  
    
   
    
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
   
 
 
 
  

part, the

right- Our appearance depending
somewhat if not entirely upon our
character.

There is no death; the dead have
never died. Death, so-called, is
‘transition and transition does not
change character. We enter the
next life as we leave this one—the
same person and ever we must pro—
gress thru all the ages; must learn
wisdom and strive for perfection.

I have read many books upon the
subject. none in opposition to the
doctrines of Christ; the more I read
the more convinced I become of the
truth of the theory.

One person at twenty has had
some experience that goes to show
that we are possession of an ether-

eal body.
Read “The Unknown." by Fam-
ille Flamerion, or “The Adventure

Beautiful," by Lillian Whiting.

There is much to be seen which
our eyes do not see, many things to
be heard, to which our ears are
deaf. None the less they are very
real, very true and very enduring.
Our ears can hear only a certain
gamut of vibrations or octaves. but
there are vibrations of both light
and sound to which we are not
sensible. Instruments record them,
our senses do not. Ask your physi—
cian friend if at some death—beds he
has not seen the ethereal body leave
the material one. I believe he will
say as others have that he has.

rl‘he other world is here. I know
not how far or near. It is peopled
with those who have gone on. who
no doubt may watch us, love us
and perhaps long to tell us of their
very real existence.

I am asking no one to believe as
I do, but will say to those who are
horriﬁed at new facts or ideas that
there is no new truth or fact—all
truth has always existed. We are
sometimes slow in discovering it.
-——Edjtor.

 

WATCH OUT

0U ALL know that the wet forc-

es are trying to have made

legal the manufacture and sale
of beers and light wines. They are
going to work hard to upset the Vol-
sted act which themajority of the
people approved of.

It means money in their pockets,
and out of the pockets of the people.
It means wine on the tables of the
rich and poverty in the homes of the
many who are now..comfortable.

A beer drunk is more besotted
than a whiskey drunk.

We can get along without either.
Let Fatty Arbuckle and his kind
procure their liquor at an enormous
price—they pay the price in two
ways and the lesson is one a whole
world can learn. Let us protect
our boys and girls and stand pat as
the majority of us voted. We stand
by the majority in this country.
What a blessing it is we women can
vote.

 

: WOMEN‘S VOTES DO COUNT
I’I‘H ONLY a year since the
federal amendment became ac-

L -tive, women disproved the ar-
gument that “they would only double

the electorate without changing
conditions."
Missouri, Texas. Indiana—them,

 

' are a few of the states which have
felt the power of women's opinion
in thelast few Weeks. Activediwork

“on the part of the Missouri League

of ‘Women Voters was responsible

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

          

 

        

   
    
    
  

      
 
   
    

ii

  
       
 
  
 
  
  
 

 

ll 
"I  1.

i

-
it, o “a
l": 
g .

ll

    

   
   
    

       

      
 

 

more inviting and artistic;

YOUR help—Editor.

 

         

e For‘ How
A Department for the Women _

EAR F‘RIENDS:—This department exists that our tables shall
have upon them well-cooked and well-chosen food.—that our
clothes may be attractive and practical; that. our homes may be
that our' minds shall be informed on
some of the news of the day. and that we shall stand united for all
good as against any evil. This is no small undertaking and I need

 

 

 

/.
o

 

  

 

 
 
  

e

 
      

 

for the enactment of the state con-
stitutional amendment enabling wo—
men to hold any state oiﬁce and per-
mitting women to serve as delegates
to the convention to revise and to
amend the state constitution. A
special election was held Aug. 2nd.

At the election held in Texas on
July 23 it was admittedly the wo-
men's vote which carried the two
most important amendment—and
the only ones which were not de-
feated. The first abolishes the right
of aliens to vote and amends the
constitution to conform to the 19th
amendment; the second provides a
soldier bonus.

Thirteen amendments to the state
constitution of Indiana were voted
upon at a special election on Septem-
ber 6th. Twelve of these were de-
feated——the one for which the
League of Women Voters made an
active state-Wide campaign carried
almost ﬁve to one. This amendment
provides that all foreign born resi-
dents of the state shall be fully nat-
uralized before they vote. Women's
votes outnumbered the men’s three
to one.

The nation is learning What the
few early suffrage states found out
long ago. Senator Carey of Wyom-
lng, summed it up twenty-seven
years ago when he told Dr. Anna

Howard Shaw, “I attribute the bet.-
ter character of our public officials
almost entirely to the votes of the
women."

 

RECIPES TRIED AND TRUE

Fudge Cake

Half cup sour cream. cup sugar. 4
squares chocolate diSs 'ved in half on:
hot water. 1 1-2 cups flour, teaspoon
soda, teaspoon vanilla. pinch salt. yoke.
of 2 eggs and white of one egg. beaten
into sugar. Dissolve chocolate and H
cool before using. Mix soda. in cream
and add to sugar and eggs. Add choco-
late. ﬂour. salt and vanilla. Bake in
slow oven.

Cold Chocolate Filling

'l‘wo squares chocolate. melted, m
tablespoons butter. melted, 4 tablespoons
milk. 2 cups pulverized sugar, stir and]
smooth and cream.

Devil's Food

Two scant cups sugar, half cup butter
creamed, three onus well beaten, half cup
milk, 1 cup flour, mix well. scald half
cup milk put in half cup grated choco-
late (bitter), cook until thick and stir
into cake. Add 1 cup of flour, mixed
with 1 teaspoon <oda, vanilla and salt.
Bake in two layers.

- Filling

One and one—third cups sugar. half cup
milk, butter Size of egg. 2 squares grat-
ed chocolate. Roll 10 minutw then take
off ﬁre and stir until thick. Add nuts
and vanilla.

Mrs. ill-rtler sends“ 'for two""patterns
but has forgotten to put in her stamps.
Will hold her order for remittance.

 

 

 

 

Aids to Good Dressing

for
Comfort, Appearance and Economy

 

 

 

 

“Neither be the ﬁrst in a fashion
nor the last out of it.”

 

(‘atulogue Notice

Send 150 in silver or stamps for our

up-to—date full and Winter 19214922
catalogue, Containing Over 500 designs
of ladies'. misses' and children‘s put-

8 concise and comprehensive ar-
also some points
30 of the

terns,
ticle on dressmaking,

for the needle (illustrating
various stitches.) all valuable to the
home dressmaker.

 

DR’ESSMAKER friend of mine,
A on looking over my number of

this catalogue. exclaimed with
delight, “I have not seen so many
pretty and stylish designs in my
fashion magazine this fall as i ﬁnd
in this one. I want the catalogue
and several patterns." I believe
you will feel the same way about it.

The prices of book and patterns are
less than half the price you would
pay anywhere else.

Here are the coat—dresses I prom-
ised last week. They are lovely and
the big stores in the cities are show-
ing just such models among their
most expensive dresses.

Velveteen is much used this sea-
son to make cute little basques. like
our grandmothers used to wear.
They are warm with plaited skirts
oflheavy plaid or stripped mater-
ials. We have a number of designs
for them in our catalog.

 

, embroidered,

Velveteen is also used for jump-
er-frocks with waists for silk and
satin. It is also popular for little
girls' dresses. such as were shown
a few weeks ago.

If you wish patterns for braid-
ing and hand stitching I can pro—
cure them for you, or in- fact, any
pattern you wish or samples of ma»
terials for hangings, curtains or
clothing.

A Practical “Easy to Make" Apron

Pattern 3497 is here depicted. It is
cut in 4 sizes: Small. 32—34: medium,
36—38; large. 40-42; extra large. 44-46
inches bust measure. A medium size
requiros 4 5-8 yards~ of 36 inch material.
Gingham, drill. alpaca, sateen, lawn,
pt-rcale, chambrey and jean may be used
for this style.

A Smart and Attractive Dress

Pattern 3306 is portrayed in this
model. It is cut in 7 sizes: 34, 36. 38,
40. 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure.
A 38 inch size will require 6 yards of
36 inch material. The width of the skirt
at the lower edge is 2 yards with plaits
extended. Black taffeta. braided or
also linen, serge, gaban—
dine. tricolette or duvetyn could be used
for this model.

A Pretty Dress for Afternoon or Calling

Pattern 3471 is shown in this model.
It is cut in 6 sizes: 34, '36. 38. 40. 42
and 44 inches bust measure. The width
of the skirt .at lower edge is 2 yards.
Embroidered serge, duvetyn, broadcloth.
veIVei. gabardine and satin could be used
for this style. A 38 inch size will re-
quire 4 5—8 yards of 44 inch materiiai.
Popular Dress Style for Slender Figure.

Pattern 3407 is here illustrated. It is
cut in 3 siizes: 16, 18 and 20 years. An
18 year size will require 3 §;8 yards of
64 inch material. Duvety’n, velveteen,
serge, jersey cloth, linen, taffeta and
satin could be used for this style. It
is good for plaid suiting and serge or
satin and serge combined. The width of
the skirt at the lower edge is about

1 3-4 yards.

 

 

  

 

E. TOO. eni’ the M. B. F", .I
W always turn Farm Home page
ﬁrst because I get so many help-
ful ideas from there but I like the en-
tire paper. Would like your up-to-date
catalogue no I do my own sewing and
Would like all the helpful hints I can
set I have two boys and a little girl
to sew for and they keep me pretty
busy with the work on the farm. I nun
sending you a cookie recipe as I have
never seen anything like it in your de-
pertinent.
Cookies Without Shortening
1-: cup sugar, 1-: cup molasses. 1
teaspoon vinegar, 1 soda. 1-: salt, 1-3
ginger, 1-2 cup water (hot), 1 egg.
enough flour to make a soft dough.
These are especially nice for children.
—Mrs. E. E. McM.

I have been a much interested reader
of this department for some time. I
have found a good many helpful hints.
I have been watching for some good re-
lies on “Taking Drudgery from Work."

think the most of us farm girls knew
how we were to have it before we were
caught in the net. I rather enjoy the
most of my work. altho there are a great
many things I'd really like. I am like
the majority. I make the best of What
I have and live in’ hopes that by doing
so I may havo more some day. I have
3 power washer and vacuum cleaner so
I have more than many. We have four
little girls, all under seven years. '
How many have tried Mrs. Copeland's
cake recipe? It‘s ﬁne. I also found all
the pickle recipes good, too. Could some
one give me a good recipe for tomato
pickles. and for macaroni ﬁxed with ba-
con? Mrs Jenney, have you in your
pattern book a pattern for little girl's
coat with yoke and large collar? Also
some good patterns for “fat ladies'"
dresses and aprons? Will take up a lit-
tle more room with recipes.

Chili Sauce

Thirty—six ripe tomatoes. 4 large on-
ions, 2 red and 2 green peppers (remove
seeds.) 2 cups vinegar, 10 tablespoons
sugar, 4 of salt, 4 of cinnamon, 2 of
cloves and ginger. Peel tomatoes, chop
onions and cook one hour.

Pepper Relish

Twelve green and ~12 ripe peppers, 16
onions, 3 cups vinegar, 1 1-2 cups sugar.
Remove seeds from peppers. chop with
onions. scald and then drain. Turn on
cold water and bring to boil, drain. Add
other ingredients and boil twenty min-
utes.

Cucumber Relish

One dozen cucumbers, 1 head of cab-
baage (red if you have it) 8 large on-
ions. Chop. salt and let stand one hour.
Drain through coarse towel; throw away
liquid. Add 2 tablespoons cinnamon,
celery and mustard seed to taste, 1 1-2
cups sugar. Put on enough cold vine-
gar to cover well and can: Mrs. Philip S.

I would like some more letters on
“Taking Drudgery from Work." We
have had some good ones, let us
have a few more. We have a large
selection of designs in our catalogue
of aprons and pretty dresses for
plump ladies. I believe you would
enjoy it. There are several lovely
coats and a stylish cape for little
girls. I will choose for you if you
wish.

I saw some time ago in the M. B. F
that you had lost a letter of a woman
that had asked for the explanation of a.
mitred corner. I wrote last spring to
you and that was one of the questions
I asked. It might be it was my letter
for I never got a reply. Would still
like to know how to make the corner.
Would like to have the address of the
Old Trusty Incubator Co., and if any
of the readers have had experience with
the Old Trusty will they please write
and tell how they liked it, or of any
they like better? Have never had an
incubator and want one that will do the
best work for the least care. Will close
with a recipe that I think is extra nice.

Cucumber Relish

large cucumbers and 6 large
onions through food chopper; sprinkle
with salt and let stand over night. In
the morning drain and add: 1 pt. vin-
egar, 2 1-2 cups sugar, 1—2 cup grated
horse radish. 3 tablespoons white mus-
tard seed. 1 tablespoon each celery seed
and flour. Cook about 20 minutes, stir§
ring frequently. I put mine in Jell
glasses and seal with paraﬁne.——-Mrs. R.

Put 12

. W.
Glad to have your address and
will write a. personal letter.

Will you please tell me through your
department how a letter should be ad-
dressed to the Children’s Home at Cold-
water and also what they do about let-
ting people take little ones? Do they
let them out for a while to see if they
are all right or does a person have to
adopt them at the start? Would like
to know all about it as soon as possible
as we are thinking of taking a, little
one to adopt. .We take the M. B. .
and the ﬁrst thing I always look at is
your page, and then the boy has me
read the D00 Dads to him. He is four.

write to the State
School for Girls at Goldwater or to
the Michigan Children's Home So-
ciety at St. Joseph, Mich., for par-
ticulars. It is a rule of most insti—
tutions to place a child on trial for.
I few months to ascertain whether
there in satisfaction for foster-par-
ents and for the child. It is surely
o splendid thing to give a. good home
Ind loving care to one of those litr-

tle unfortunate; " :, _ ‘s

 

 


 
 
    

 
  

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ff

Retail Selling

$450.00 Reported Cost of
I Coverage For Sedan in
f , w New York

Of all problems confronting
the automobile industry, partica
nlxarly those engaged in the sell-
ing end of the business, none
is of greater importance and
none presents a more difﬁcult
proposition than the stolen car
in the matter of automobile in-
surance. The old line rates
have become prohibitive. The
cost of insuring the average
sedan in the old line company
in the East is $450.

The congestion of trafﬁc,
leading to frequent accidents.
careless driving and the auto
thief increases the cost of in-
surance. The careful automo-
bile owner by careful driving,
putting a proper lock on his
car and placing same in a gar-
age when visiting the large
cities, helps to keep down the
cost.

The Citizens’ Mutual Auto-
mobile Insurance Company of
Howell, has saved its members
many million dollars since or-
ganization. It insures in the
smaller cities and country
districts of the state. The rates
are very reasonable. It has paid
out in claims over $850,000.-
00, carrying a surplus of

$125,000.00 in addition to the
ofﬁce building and equipment.
If your car is not insurml see
the lodai agent or write the Citi~
zens' Mutual Automobile Insurance
Company. Howell, Michigan.

   
   
   

   

tiireci from inciOIy and save

50%

6V0lT "or 13 P1691592

07 arremtgy

12 VOLT 7ptatei2099

an}, amend?

5187/ 5015‘er comb; a 0211?
year €U0fdﬂ/C’c’

 

WHEN ORDERING GIVE MAKE
OF CAR AND YEAR MADE.
A’Sa0 DEPOSIT MUST ACCOM—
PANY ALL ORDERS.

ALL BATTERIES SHIPPED EXPRESS
coo. SUBJECT To INSPECTION
A "19 DISCOUNT WILL BE AI;
LOWED IF THIS ADVERTISEMENT
IS RETURNED WITH ORDER.

,STcTrage Balléry Service Co.

6432 E. JEFFERSON AVE.

   

 

 

 

" I'lnsurance Hits

:44
EAR CHILDRENz—I suppose
that you have all noticed that
in the front part of last week’s
M. B. F. we began publishing a story
entitled “Nomads of the North," by
a famous author who was born and
raised in Michigan and lives here at
the present time. How many of
you have begun reading this story
some of which will be published each
week until it is completed? Not
very many. I’ll bet. I can hear some
of you saying when you noticed
it. "Oh dear, M. B. F. publishes a
story for grown-ups but none for
us!” You are mistaken. boys and
girls, because you will ﬁnd this lust
as interesting as your papa and
mamma will and you should look up
last week's issue and read the be-
ginning. !I‘he more you read of it
the more interesting it gets. The
entire family will want to read it at
the same time and the only way all
can be satisﬁed will be for the fam-
ily to all get together and let mam-
ma or papa read it out loud to the
others- Of course. many of you are
too small to pronounce all of the
words or understand their meaning.
so you coax mamma. papa, big sis-
ter or brother to read it to you.
The happiest moments of my child-
hood were the evenings that after
the supper dishes were washed.
mother would sit down and read
out loud from a book for an hour
or so I can remember how I was
anxious to have supper early and
get my lessons for school so that she
might read an extra chapter or two.
Just received a letter from Doc.
Sawbones and he writes that all the
D00 Dads are as busy as bees.
Eve-n Old Man Grouch forgets to be
crabby at times he is so interested
in Doc’s plans. However. Sleepy

 

Sam is unable to keep his eyes open
for very long and he is missing all
the fun. Doc says "We sure will
surprise the girls and boys when
we get back.” He will too.—
UNCLE NED.

 

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS

Dear Uncle Nodt~—I ama girl 10 years
old and am in the. fifth grade For pets
I have two kittens. We live on an 80
acre farm. We have 9 head of cattle
We take the M. B. F and like it fine
I have one brother and three sisters. I
am the oldest girl in the family. Loa-
tha McLaren, Kingston, Michigan

 

Dear Uncle Ned—Our school started
the 6th of this month. I am in the sixth
grade at school. I have seen letters from
a number of different places. but none
from Hastings, so I thought I would'
write. I lave to read the Children‘s
Hour and most of all the D00 Dads. Will
not some of the girls or boys write to
me?—Nellie Moyer, Hastings. Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—This is the second
letter I have written to the Children’s
Hour. I am 11 years old and in the
5th grade. I go to school every day. l
have two Shetland ponies. My father
would buy me one more if I could find

one. If any of you boys know Where
there is any for sale I would like you to
address.—-—

write me and give me the
Philip Watts, Tawas City, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—J am another farm-
er boy who would like to Join your mer—
I am 12 years old and in the

17 circle.
7th grade at school. We have 4 her»

S cows, 34 pigs. For pets I have 4

cats and a dog. I wish some of th
girls and boys would Write to me. I wil

close with a riddle: What goes up bu‘
ynamite.

never comes down? Answer: D
-—-Royal Kleinhart. Clare, Michigan.

\ Dear Uncle Ned—I am a girl 14 years
old and in the 8th grade. I have three

brothers and two sisters. My brothet
takes the M. B F, I like to read thr
girls' and boys’ letters very much. WI
have two horses and one hundred chick
ens. also a couple of pigeons. Our pet
pigeon died a month ago. Hoping to
hear from some of my cousins—Iris Ar-
nold, R 4, Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

 

Dear Uncle Nedz—May I join your
merry circle? I am a girl 13 years old
and am in the 7th grade. We take the
M. B. F. and like it ﬁne. I enjoy read-
ing the Children's Hour. I hope that
the Doc Dads will be here this week as
I look for them in every paper. We
live on a farm of 240 acres. and have 21
head of cattle, 3 horses, 2 pigs and M
chickens. For pets I have 2 cats and a
dog. I go to school every day as the
weather is very nice. On Fridays We
have spelling and arithmentic matches.
We have a Chevrolet car and like it
ﬁne—Anna Linck. Engadine. Michigan.
Box 24.

 

Dear Uncle Ned:——I am 14 years of
age. My birthday is the l9th of Febru—
ary. I am “Bob of Michigan's" twin.
I guess “Rob of Michigan” is a boy. I
would like to have his address for I
would like to write to him. I have four
brothors and no sisters. I am in the
7th grade at school. I am 5 feet 2 in.
tall and havo brown hair. blue eyes I d
a fair cornploximn—Jloldie Glee. Bellin—
gar. Mt. Pleasant, Mich, It 2.

Dear Uncle Nedt—We live on a small
farm. For pets I have two old cats
three, kittens and one rabbit. I am 12
years old. 5 feet and 1 inch tall. My
father takes the M. B. F. and likes it
very much. — Lucile Rogers. Sparta.
Mich.. R 2.

 

Dear Uncle Ned:———I was just reading
the children‘s page and thought I would
write a lt-tter. I am it} years old and
am in the 8th grade at school. I live on
a farm of 70 ut‘t‘uﬁ. I have a brother;
his name is George and be is 7 years
old. For pets we have 15 rabbits. 3
little kittens and four big cats. We, also
have 5 ducks. My brother and I like to
watch them swim. I like the D00 Dads
very much—Carolyn Ann Miller. Ada~
Michigan. R 4.

Dear Uncle Nedt—I am six years old.
I go one—fourth mile to school and am
in the is! grade. We have a nice teach-
er so I like to go. I have 2 pet ducks
named Waddle and Toddle and 2 pet
kittens. Tommie and Bud. When I
learn to write more and spell more words
I will write again and tell you about
the beautiful hills and lakes and streams
here in northern Michigan. Come to see
us sometime.———Artltu_r Sturgis. Onaway.
Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned:—I am a little boy 7
years old. I go to school and am in the
ﬁrst grade. I have 3 brothers and 3
sisters. For pets I have 3 cats and a
pig. I carry in wood and get the eggs.
-——Willis R. Brown. Cass City, Mich.. R 1.

 

 

 

      
 

DETROIT MICH.

-—if our mone is
835 y y

 

. bringing less write
=2the publisher for full partic-
ulars regarding the 8 per
cent preferred stock in The
Rural Publishing Company.
which pays 4 per cent twice-
a-year. You can invest as
little as $100 for ten shares!
If you have some spare
money earning less than 8'
per cent write. Publisher,
Michigan Business .Farmcr,

 

 

WALT E? R

.J!!L.l!ég;§§1E!i£.25§.][;4 ’EITSZE:.3E;IIE§L.

WELLMAN

 

 

 

,

\ in ,.

{1. fl! '3 It
Film“Iliiilillililﬁtutmﬂtu

W
“a

—V-

 

W

 

   

S51- “

 

mals. Can you make them out?

 

'lllllllﬂlllﬂllllﬂﬂlﬂllll

Mt. 01mm Mich.

 

 

 

 

 
            

 
  

In the picture are represented the sounds made by four ani-

“.,.n-|nlu“l

   
  
   
       

    
  
     
  
  
   
   
   
  
   
  
    
   
    
     
   
      
  
   
       
   
    
    
    
  
   
 
  
 
  
    
  
  
  
    
   
  

1

 

Beware! Unless you see the name
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you:
are not getting genuine Aspirin Dre“
scribed by physicians for twenty-Omit
Years and proved safe by millions. Take ,
Aspirin only as told in the Bayer pack-é,
are. for Colds, Headache. Neurals'la-g
Rheumatiszn, Ear-ache, Toothache. 11mg".
bago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes d j‘
twelve Bayer Tablets a: Aspirin cost few 
cents. Drugglsts also sell larger pack-l
ages. Aspirin is the trade mark d‘
Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticsddp
ester of Salicylicacid. v

LT us AN
Ylbhihaé.

Horseor Cow hide. Calf or other Linus
with hair or fur on. and make them
into coatonr men and women), ruln‘a.
rugs or gloves when so ordered. Your
fur goods will cost you less than to buy
them and be worth more.
Our Illusﬂ'IIEd catalog tells how to
take oil and care for hides; how and
when we pay the freight both ways:
about our safe dyeing process on cow
and horse hide, (Hut antlo .Icr skins;
about; the fur goods and game trophies
we soil,tandermy. etc.
Thou we have recently got out an.
other we call our Fashion Book, wholly
devoted to fashion plutt-s of muffs,
neckwoar and other ﬁne fur garments.
with tanning and making charges. Also
fur garments l't‘llltltivlt'tl anti mustn‘t-d.
For Fox. Raccoon and smaller sinus.
the Fashion hoot: is all you need.
Catan v is for big stu .
Youtan have citlwr book by sending your cor-rec. .
address naming which. or both books If you need
both. Address - .
The Crosby Fmsnan Fur Com ny. ;
571 Lyell. Ave” Rochester, . Y .

 

   
 
 
   
   
  
  
   

 

 

  
  

ROSE NTHAL
Corn Husker
and
Shredder

 

 
   
 
  
  
 
 
 

  

Most economical and antip'actory way of handling

your corn crop. Nodelay. no extra. help“ .Do It in

your own spare time. Twong for indimdual-uso. ‘

6 to 15 h. p. Also make two larger sIz_es for custom '

work. Over 25 years in the ﬁeld. Write for catalog

and prices. also useful Souvenir  State
. P. of your engine.

Sold on trial. You take no risk.
ROSENTHAL CORN HUSKER co.
Box 5 mme.

Also Matters of Ensilege Cutters and Silo Flue:

 

 

 
 
  
        

gusranteed a “ '
lifvtimeniralunt deft-stain material antlwork- ’ "
mooning Mada also in four larger Isms up
No. 3 shown here; sold on

30 DAYS' FREE Th. 'l
and on a plan whereby they earn tlIeIrluu , , gust ‘
and more by what they save. Foetal brums 14 rec ‘
Liatnloz {told-tr. Buy from the manufacturer
anti bilVB money.

( ) ‘ﬂ
MUCH-DOVER CO- 2260 Marshallﬂl. Chlsuo

 

 

Best Wire Fence 0n the Market

Lowest Price—-Direct to User

"' Not hundreds of styles

Nor millions of miles, a .
  But satisﬁed smiles}

  From every ‘

5 customer.

 
   
  
  

‘  Bond Steel Post Co.
58 Maumoe Street Adrian, Michigan

 

 

 

  
  

 

 
 

__=> x'S-éﬁ

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

BARN PAlNl_$l.ll 5:5“;

Get factory prices on all paints. 'W ,

Dept. B

“P. of H. FLOUR— PURE BRA

3. WW - »
ooueuuzn' IIIILuno cot. 

  
  
    
  
 
   
      
 

guarantee quality. We pay the.

freight. 5 ,
FRANKLIN COLOR WORKS w
Franklin, Ind.

‘L.

307 planet In anon cuts on ‘Ioal

  

  


 10 no
- out. list the date of any live stool: solo ll
 Iiohilsn.

‘5  Address. Live ltook Editor. I. I.
, Us 



. (IPIOIAL ADVERTISING RATE! under this needing to honest hroodoee of live steel end
M 700 s Drool one tell you who! it will out lot 18. 20 or 52 times. Vou eon ehsnos sin e!

Iroodoro’ Auction Solos advertised hon II woeisi low rates: on for them. Write tedsy l)
-' IREEDEHS' DIRECTORV. THE MICHIGAN .UOIIE“ 'IIIEI. "I. om monies».

 

 

   
 
 

 

at: ' CLAIM YOUR.
ﬁgs! SALE «2. .
I .u \avuIIIDUIIQ cases we will withom

If you on oonsldorin s solo el-
us or. once end we will olsm the sets

 

Ooh 13—30mm. than a. unis-.3.
an. 1 Grounds, Detroit, Mich. G“

0% 9—61: 11. State on-

ernooys. Mic ' E.“

out. 21. Holstein. Bowel] Sales 0....
Ins-n Ines.

on. IL—Holstdn. Darwin 3. Hana.
led-s1. Inch.

20. Polsnd Chin“. F. W. Hen.
.- h mch. n- mm
7. P land China. R.
nu mail

a. 88. Poland Chime. P. P. POO.
-. Pie-n3. Mich.

.Ios. Helend (mines. Wells! Elle.
‘. lien.

lov. 8—Poisnd China. W. Brewbekor
O Ills. Elsie. Mich.

I". 9—Poland Chinss. William Buse-
IolL Bsnover, Mich.

luv. lo—Pohnd Chins!» Young Bret.

In
‘ Nov. 16. Holstein. w Volley Ecl-
l'reisisn Breeders Sale Au‘nﬁRMw

M Felt rounds. Segiusw,

M 2 —- Humpshire Swine, Leuswoo
m Hampshire Swine Breeders' Ann.
mu. Mich.

 

 

LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEERO
Andy Adsms. Litchneld, Mich.
Id. lowers, South Whitley, Ind
Porter Colestoch Eaton Rspids, moi.
John Hoffmsn. Hudson, Mich
John 1’. Button. Lansing, Mich.
' . St. Johns, Midi.
W Invewall. Bo. Lyons, Mich.
L Perry, Columbus, Ohio.
I. Post, Hillsdsle. Hich.
A. Rasmussen, Greenville. Mich.
I. Rupport. Perry, Mich.
Kerry Robinson. Plymouth, Mich.
WI. Weﬁle, Coldwster, Mich.

 

 

 

HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN

 

 

SHOW BULL

lire! by s routine Asggio Korndyko-Hongor-
void DeKol bull from s nearly 19 lb. show
cow. First prize iuuier coll, Jsckson hit,
192.. Light in color sud good individusl
Seven months old. Price $125 to nuke
roe-I. Burryi

Bord under Fodersl Supervision.

BOAROMAH FARMS

JACKSON. MIOH.

Kelstdn Breeders Since 190.

 

 

 

 

'. OLVININE 5100K FARM REPORTS GOOD

. also from their hord. We no well piessed with

  alvos Inns our Junior Herd Biro "King Pon-

’. ,.

"lee ﬁiotmde De Kol 2nd.

   

[Aldo Korndyko aegis" who is s son of
of e Pou cs” from s dslshter of Pon—
A few bull esives (or

I). 1' W SPF-ﬁle R 2 Ram. Freak Ilich

 

DUE GOOD YOUNG REGISTERED HOL-

ouin cows. F‘slr size, good color, bred to

I bulb end due from July to December.

Iran A. R. 0. stock, prices reuohsblo o
my one guoranteod to be exactly on repro-

"""" M. .i. ROOHE

Pinclmey. Mich.

 

illiilliIliIiiIiiiiIiiIIIiiiIIIIliIiiiiIIIIIilIéiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiif

Mﬂhmiﬂ

semest-
.oreosyssoftonssyouw|sh. Genet

letter will write out who! you love ﬂee ll
'ohsnoso mm ho ind,“ wool u n

 

_ TIiEBOil stock rm

Breeders of Registered Holstein
cattle and Berkshire Hogs.

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

ROY F. F‘ICKJES
Ming. Mich.

 

 

 

 

SOLD AGAII

Bull self lost sdvortisod sold but hove 2 more
list on mostly white They sro Isles strs fol-
low? sired by s son d Kins One he.
s] lb.2n.olddo-sudthoatherbro-s
301). Jr.8yr.olddsn.shohbysoon:
Mend lengorvold Do Io] Butter Icy. one
‘Ioo greet bulls.

JAMES HOPOON JN.. Moose. men- I I.

REGISTERED HOLSTEII GAT'I'LE

for sale. From coins to full-110d cows.
F E. GOODAR. Richmond. llioh.

REGISTERED HBLSTEIII BULLS

sired by s son of Ons end from good
producing cows. Write for photos snd prices.
EARL PETERS. North Dudley. Mich.

 

 

F airlawn Herd—Hoisteins

Hire 8m, Embisggesrd Lilith Champion 10301.8

His mre’s dsm Coisnths 4th’s Johanns. worlds
ﬁrst 35 1h. cow. snd world's ﬁrst 1,200 lb. eow.
The only cow that ever held all world's butter
records Imm one dsy to one yesr, end the worlds
,osrly milk record st the some time. His dull
hich Piebe Do Kol No. 93710. over 1,150 lbs.
oi butter from 20.5914 pounds of milk in A
year. World's 2nd highest milk record when
mule end Michigan state record for 6 years. Only
one Michigan cow with higher milk record todsy.
His two nearest dnms ovorsge:

Butter, one year .. . . . . . . . .  1,199.22

Mi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28.5l5.9
Champ‘s sons from choice A. B. 0. demo will
sdd prestige to your herd sud money to you:

m .i. r. mam

OwneF
Flint. Mich.

 

| All! OFFERING LIGHT COLORED
stein-Friesisn bull 1 year old from $1.51 lb.
dam and sire whose six nearest demo on 83.34
lbs. butter. Herd under ststo sud fedeni sup-

ervision.
Oscar- Waliln. Wiscogin Form. Unionvliio. Mich.

OR SALE—TWO IULL CALVES, A HOL-
tein snu iiurhnm shout 8 months old. Both
hove hosvy milking dens. Not registered. 850
such if token st once.
CHASE STOCK FARM. Merlotto. Rich

1 YEARLIIIG BULL BARGAIIIS

Sired by Segis Korndyko De Nijisnder. s 82
lb. son of u twice Michigan ribbon winner .her
Dams sro daughters of Kim

. 87 lb. son of King Se Rec—
ords 18 lb. to 80 lb; Priced st.h.slf value.
. Fedorslly tinted June 10. Write

list.
ALBERT O. WADE. INth Pimn. Mich.

OHOIOE IOUIIG BULL
READY FOR SERVICE
Sire 35.8!) lb. son of King Korndyke Sadie
Vole. Dam 3 . . 3 neorest dams sversgo
over 86 “N. (‘vll'lli individual. Price $500.
ANDON'HTLL ARM
Ortonviile, Michigan
JOHN P. HEHL

1205 Griswold St... Detroit, Michigan

 

 

 

 

STATE FAIR GROUNDS

: CONSIGNMENT SALE

70 Head of High-Class Registered Hoisteins
at State Fair Grounds, Detroit, Mich.,

Tuesday, October 18, 1921

Among them are a large number of very high class heifers
ready to breed. These heifers will make strong foundation animals.
Also some ﬁne cows bred to the wry best herd sires in Eastern Mich.
Igan. Some of the reference sires are Maplecrest De K01, full broth-
er to Daisy Grace De K01. whose daughters are making fine records,
Korndyke Geiske Baymondale, a grandson of May Echo Sylvia. and
Pelleiier Pontiac [(13 Dora De K01, son of a 85 lb. cow.
lb. show cow. and a number of high class young bulls, one from a 83
lb. cow and nearly 100 lbs. of milk per day.

‘ lug bull.
f

 

 

 

Nearly ell ore from

Wrinkler

  I E. A. HARDY

Federal tested herds. Allwﬂl be
reoldwithoomoomgummmberwloeis.

‘  'o V

Also a 26

Also s high record yearl-

 

 

 

KICK.

 

OCT. 21

‘ *

fall and winter.
from 30 to 45 pounds.
ready Oct. 10th.

Auctioneer, J. E. MACK.

WILLIAM

Friday, Oct. let ~

at 10 o’clock

HOWELL SALES CO.

«www.mddmmmdmmvm
holdﬂseir

I 8th Annual Sale

(—0?

90 Head of Registered

HOLSTEIN CATTLE

ottheSa-IePsvﬂiononthe

Fair Grounds at Howell, Michigan"

This sale consists of young cows and heifers due to freshen thh
Siredbyendbredtobullsn'omdamswithrecords
Several with good A. R. 0. records. .(htdogs

II

EEMnck.ﬂeldmsnfonM.B-F.

GRIFFIN,
Howell, Michigan

  
   

l. T. WOOD tn the box.
ec’y.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

IULL

A BLUE RIBBOH Vlng

on the 1921 Show Che-.1

YOUNG

ssloetslew

priesOutofsnABOgnnddsuthterol

Pontiac Korndyko.

Sired by our SENIOR IEEOW BULL Model

Kins Begin Glis‘h 82,87

GRAHO RIVER STOOK FARMS
Owner

COREY J. SPENCER.

111 E. Main Street,

Jackson, Mich.

Herd under State and Federsl Supervision.

 

SIRED IV OEGIG FLINT
svorsgo records 01 his four nos dome sro
83.12 lbs. butter end 780 lbs. in seven
due from A. R 0. demo roprosen the lad-

of the breed ID to 29

in: .. .
pounds in seven dsys. Pnced to
L. 0. KETILEI
Flint. Mich.

 

If your loality needs :1

undo
unto82ymmdtoot;no

A. II. GRAHAM

Flint, Mich.

rogistorodhoktoi
bull,for neighborhood oervleolaahmisl
onofor sci-orthonde
esshroquirod

n

 

 

LAADsVsigg' IRED LIVESTOOI
. e ord, Shorth , J
end Holstein cattle; Dunc-Jersey. Poisrhd GM
end Hampshire hogs; Oxford. Bhropshirocno:

Hsmpshire can
Apiscetobuygoodbnodincstockstrum-

bio prices.
FRED B. GHQNEHAITI' O. E. ATWATII
nos Secret-1
Giodwin. Mich.

 

€-

 

SHORTHORN

SHOR'I'HORHS

We sre now oﬂ’erinz two splendid bulls.

monthsold.thekindtbtishudbfind.out
our great breeding hull Perfection Heir; she
few heifers. some of
Winboprhodwoeththononoy. Wdtoyoc
wsntaorbottereonoondpiekthenoutwm

(“mates broaden.
S. H. PAIGBORII & SOH

8 Miles East. Ind All. MI‘

SHORTHORIIS FOR SALE

As l have sold my Dottie Enrich noor

City, Michigan, I m oleﬁn; for an ray

of 60 tered Shorthorus headed by one
the best catch bulb in the tote,

lode] 676141. This herd of atti- sro prin-
dpslly mono. 'l‘ernn con be srrsns TI-
will bo given on approved n

. I. II. PARKHURBT‘. Reed City. Mien.

 

 

 

 

dams and King Ono. breeding.

Ona snd Moydecrost.

daughters.

 

 

 

We Must Have Type; We~Must Have Production

I have several young bull calves, royally bred from high producing
Breeders can raise these calves cheaper
than 1 cm, and If they will buy them as eslves they will ilnd it more
proﬁtable than to pay the prices when they are old enough for service.
These youngsters are from a combination of the long distunco funnies of

My senior herd sire, Mspleeroet londyko Hm with . am
and grand dun each with better thou 1200 lbs. ol house o poor, I. .5 .nt—
standing ﬁgure in Holstein breeding.
The sires ore mo of King 0-. whose a.- “ 13.. I... of
’ butter in 3 year, old who eomoo fro- Io‘nr gm of m m 100.

lbs. in a your end with exceptional typo. ~ .

D. D. AITKEN. FLINT. MICH.

i
Those eolvoo ere mostly from his i
i
i
i

 

 

  
 
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

    


 
   

      
 

. y I ' Tomahawk m; ; Am; '1) I I
' Instead of sunflower silage.‘ For
feeding dairy cows. several ex-

periment- stations have tested sun'-
flcwer silage and found it good. A
year ago the West Virginia Experi-
ment Station gave out results on a
feeding test that was conducted in
a way that satisﬁed the most exact-
hg feeding experts. Two groups
of ﬁve cows each were balanced
against each other. One group was
given corn silage in its ration. and
the other sun-flower silage. There
was a preliminary feeding period of
seven days. to get the cows used to
feed. then the test extended twenty-
one days; At the end of that time
the silage rations were reversed:
the cows receiving corn silage were
given sunflower silage, and the cows
1 getting sunflower silage were chang-

ed to corn silage. After another
I seven days to get the cows used to
feed. the test was carried on for
twenty-one days more.

When the ﬁrst group of cows was
changed from sunflower silage to
corn silage, a decrease of 6.9 per
cent in milk and of 7.4 per cent in
fat was noted. When the second
group of cows was changed from corn
silage to sunflower silage a sharper
decrease of 13.5 per cent in milk
and 8.2 per cent in fat was noted.

No difference in weight was shown
by the cows during the feeding per-
lode Cowsate the sunflower sil-
age practically as well as the corn
', silage. after the preliminary week
' of feeding. In no way was the sun-

flower milk objected to as objection-
‘ able.

At the time of the test. corn silage
averaged 38 a ton, and the acre

old of 8.5 tons of corn was worth

68. Sunflower silage produced 77
per cent less milk, so it should be
'worth $7.38 a ton. On an acre
gold of 18 tons of sunflowers the

me per acre. compared with the
corn, would be $132.84. The dif-
ference of $64.84 would be the ad-
vantage for sunflowers per acre. If
the fat producing value of sunﬂower
silage is considered. this advantage
would make the difference in favor
of sunflower silage still greater.

MACK’S NOTES

TRICK H. WEDGE will not exhibit

his clever whippot dogs a the Mich-
Inn State Fair next year, in fact
gt troun of wonderfully intelligent an-
will never see their master again

on earth. Mr. Welch and his dogs have
Dem at the fair regularly for several
years. and those who have seen them
remember the ﬁnal act when they
their Jolly master down the track,

hing an old n sack. which he

d aloft. and )0 ing with him in one
of the wildest rough-and-tumbles ever
witnessed. It was while staging this last
set that Mr. Welch met his death. The
dogs and their master went to Cadillac
from Detroit. and it was in one of the
performances at the fair that Mr. Welch
apparently stumbled. fell and breathed
his last with his dogs jumping all over
him. little knowing that their master. to
whom they were so intensely devoted.
had entered upon his last great adven-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The writer had the pleasure recently
of witnessing an exhibition of the moving
matures takm at the State Fair by the

Motion Picture Co. of Detroit. The
reels shown were made for the delega-
tion of Polish statesmen and notables.
who were present at the fair on several

nsa A portion of one of the reels
was taken from an aeroplane. The dele-
gation has already left Detroit for
Poland and the pictures will be shown.
ﬁrst. in the halls of the Polish parlia-
“t In Warsaw.
._'.___.

Sidney Smith. who guides me breeding
operations for W. E. Scrlppe at Wild-
wood Farms. Orion. has been showing

cattle in Michigan for the last nine years

hutitisduringtheourrent showseoson
tint he has scored his greatest

Mr. Smith brought 82 head of cattle to

the recent State Fair' an Angus herd

and a Guernsey. all of than showing a

high degree of finish and showyard bloom.

The cattle gave a good account of
~ themselves In the show rin . winning
ﬁrstmznlzes and champion in

s

 

  
 
 
 
 

shin honors of the drew.
. bull does. the blue went to
EarlofRossb_ nimaworthysonefmdgar

 

  
   
  

 

 

 

 

and eight

JONES. out of dams by
1917 grand champion.)

service will be provided.

 

 

HILLCREST FARM WILL SELL

BIG TYPE POLAND CHINAS
Tuesday,'Nov. lst, 1921

at the far-Io. two miles southwest of HOPKINS. MICE.
miles northeast of ALLEGAN, MICK.

The offering consists of tried sows. fall yearlings. 85 spring gilts
and a few choice hours that will make extra largo herd sires.

As a special attraction, we are listing for sale the great sow
OLD FASHION by HILLCBEST BOB by BIG BOB (one of the
greatest progenitors of the his ﬁve breed);
MASTER. (the ﬁrst hear shown octaoily weighing over
lbs.) and the grandsire of a $50,000 boot. and a 817,000 sow.

We will also sell a few choice fall yearlings by BIG SMOOTH
MABTODON
To oceomodate those coming hy train or interurban,

PUT DOWN THE DATE, AND 3‘! SUB]! TO BE AT THE SALE.
Write Hillcrest Farm, Kalamazoo, Mich. for free catalog.

F. B. LAY, Kalamazoo, Mich.
ﬂ Den Bleyker Bros., AIIegan, Mich.

HEAD

dim by ORA ND
1100

WONDER (sire of the

free auto

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

R SALE—REGISTERED SHORTHORNS
and Dame Jersey spring pigs. either sex; two
red bullsl.1 one 11 months and one 6 months OIlL

Several on from 6 months to years old.
Scotch Top and Bates bred. Address
GEORGE W. ARNOLD or JARED ARNOLD

Wllllamsbura. R 1. Mlchloan
COWS, HEIFERB. IULLI

 oil'ered at attractive prices
before January ﬁrst. Will trade for good laud.
Wm. J. BELL. Rose City. Mlch.

 

HE VAN IUREN 00. BHORTHORN BREED-
crs‘ Association have stock for sale. both milk
and beef breeding.
the secretary,
FRANK BAILEY. Hartford. Mich.

 

EXTRA GOOD BULL CALVES FOR SALE.
From the Maple Ridge herd of Batu Short-
horua Calved in September 1920.

J. E. TANDWELL. Mason. Michigan-

'HORTHORN
3 sheep- 30
J- A.

OATTLE AND OXFORD DOWN
sex for sale.
DeOARMO. Muir. Mich.

ENTRAL MICHIGAN BHOHTI‘IORN BREED-
cers' Annotation oﬂar for sale 75 head: all
m. both milk and beef breeding. Send for new

t. .
M. E. IILLER. .00’1.

NILKIIIG STRAII SHORTHORIIS

Registered stock of all ages and both sex. Herd
headed the imported bull, Kelmscott Vis-
count 25th, 048.563. Prices reasonable.
LUNDY I”... R4. Devlson. M'ch.
Bull! old

mmuc snomonus   ....

vice. tuberculin tested and at bargain prices.
W. 8. HUBER. Gladwin. Mlch.

Granville. Mich.

 

mcuuln snomonus

Herd bulk for quick sale. Fair Acres Goods
and Ogdﬂynic Cullen 5th. Both roan ﬁve year

olds a
Best of blood lines and show prospects.
Both quiet to handle.
A real heroin.

- Write for particular:

C. H. Prescott & Sons

Towns City, Michigan

 

4TH ANNUAL

tut without a reactor. Some bargains

BUY SHORTHORNS NOW.

herd

In bulls.

JOHN OOHMIDT A SON. Reed om. Mich.

 

GUERNSEYB _
GUERNSEY BULL Issa- mad?

Perfectly gentle. Has not served more than
twenty cows during a season. Price reasonable.
II- E. CURTIS, Big Rapids. MICh.

 

GUERNSEY BULLS. SERVICE-

FOR SALE

 

 

WORLD’S RECORD
MADE BY JERSEY

A new world’s record for all
breeds for cows under two years of
age has just been made by the Jer-
sey heifer St. Mawes Lad’s Lady No.
451568, owned in Oregon. She be
gan her test 1 year, 11 mos, 28 days
of age and produced in one year
11,756 lbs. of milk, 829.09 lbs. of
butterfat, 975.29 lbs. of 85 per cent
butter. This is the second time the
world's record for all breeds for a
heifer under two years of age has
been made by a Jersey in Oregon.

Jerseys are winners. Jerseys are
ideal dairy cows. A pure bred
Jersey bull is a money making in-

vestment. Think! Act!
Write
SEC’Y HENDRICKSON
Shelby, Mich.

for free literature.

 

 BULLS AND BULL CALVES sired
by a son of Sophia 19th Tonnentor.
J. E. MORRIS A SON. Farmington. Mich.

 

I THE BULL l8 HALF THE HERD, HOW

much would a son of Pogis 99th’s Duke 8th,
who has 80 per cent blood of Sophie 19th. be
worth to your herdl

Let me send you Marcos end prices on bull
calves from this bull and Sophie Tormentor cows.

FRED HAYWARD
Seem. Mich.

HEREFORDS

 

 

-'k115)

  
     

BARTLms-rro m amuse snow
‘NIICUII' ﬁll. a

Swine are ht and‘ are priced right nu

Ipondenoc solicited! and Inspection Invited. -
CARL BARTLETT. Lawton. Mich.

3
‘

       
 
  
  
   
 
 
  
   
   
  
   
  
   
   
  
    
    
   
  
   
   
    
    
   
   
   
   
 
  
  
   
 
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
 

 

ODDIE FARMS ANGUS of both to: for solo, »_
Herd headed by Bardell 319l0, 1920 Inter-
national Jr. Champion 
Dr. G. R. Martln A Son, North Street. Mich-

 

REGISTERED ABERDEEN - ANOUS—IULLQ
Heifers and cows for sale.
Priced to

move. napectlon invited.
RUSSELL IRON... MINI".

Michigan

 

  TWO REGISTERED ABERDEEN-y
auoua BULLS. one six month
old and the other 8 yarn. They are full the
beat herds in the country. Addrms
GEORGE D. BTUOK. Oteeoo. Mloh.

 

 

L RED POLLED
RAVEIISWOOD STOOK FARN

Is now oﬂerlng to deliver anywhere in

 

 

a few splendid young Red Pulled bull a!" {It
865 each. Some ready for service. fur-
in purchaser's name.
W. B. SHEPPARD. Prop.
West Branch. R 1. Mich.
:: '

 

A Y RSHIRES

FOR SALE—REGISTERED ‘AYRSHIRI
bulls and bull calves. heifers and heifer

Also some choice cowa
FINDLAY BROS..

 

R 5. Vassar. IIIIL

 

GALLOWAY

 

REGISTERED GALLOWAYS. The beef,
and robe breed. Stock of all ages for sale.
JAMES FRANTI .a sous. alumna. Ohio

ﬂ

 

BROWN SWISS

BROWN SWISS CATTLE

I now offer one yearling heifer and one fine
young bull at reasonable prices for quick ale.
M. D. HARTLEY, Mancsiona. Mich.

SWINE 
h POLAND CHINA
POLAND cHIuA

boar Digs. Bired F‘s Clansman 391211

 

 

 

 

 

Michigan's 1920 r. Champion boar. and
by Smooth Buster 895823, ' ‘s
1920 let Jr. Yearling Boar. Immune II:
double trealanont Priced to sell. With

or see them. Free livery to visitoll.
A. A. FELDKAMP
R. R. No. 2

Manchester, I“

 

 

 

 

GILTS ALL SOLD. SPRING PIGS CINE.
by Jumbo Tad. an 800 lb. boar. One Ina
herd boar by Big Bob Mastodon.

DeWITT c. PIER, Evan. Mich.

HERE’S SOAIETHIII GOOD

THE LARGE" Ila TYPE P. c. IN MIOH.
Get a bigger and better bred boar pig from my
herd. at a reasonable price. Come and hue than.

 

 

Orange Price and Us Long
W.

ro
E. LIVINGSTON. Farms. IIeII.

 

JUST TWO

LAKEWOOD HEREFORDS..1,V..,.., 1.3]

High class females.
Come and sec.
Mich.

Tl ey are good ones.
ages. Best of blood
E. J. TAYLOR, Fremont.

HEREFORIIS 8: DUROOS

Yearling bulls and bull calves. Beau Donald
breeding. Also Duroc boars and ta.
. c. THOMSON a SON. Parma. Mich.

HEREFORD OATTLE "3'33.

We can furnish registered bulls from 12
months and older. best of breeding and at .
very low price, have a some extra good
Herd headers. We have also a large line
of registered Hampshln Hon. ' Gills. Bows
and Boers.

Write us. tell us what you want and get
our prices.

La FAYETTE DTOCK FARM. La Fayette. Ind.

 

 

HAMPSHIRE

 

 

 

 

 

 

able age. and calves. Dams now J. Crouch A Sen. Pros. -
on test making splendid A. R. records. I have
what you want in type b a and production. EDISTERED HEREFORD CATTLE —- KING
HAY. never hld abortion [101’ tuberculosis.  n   Ind m Perfection
w  m ‘100 “n Wm“ 327899 heteied plug hertfi. Bulk bor; sold; have
some very ne 3 on or me. re or opened,
" M' SMITH' L.“ c'ty' Mlch‘ bred to our herd bulls. Come and see them; they
wil please you.
  7°“ SALE— Tony 3. Fox. Prop" Henry Gehrholz. Herdsman.
l two—year old; 1 MARION STOCK FARM. Marlon Michlgan

under 1 ﬁve months old: 1 three months old,
.1] the May Rose strain advanced registry. Write

a. v. saved. Romeo. Mich. ANGUS
nuanusav sun. on 7 Wm ‘

La te Prl on to. LOLIE' '4'"? V
ngws r nee arman
1:. daughters avenue 410 .‘bs. m 2 1-2 m The Home 01
 Ioétoa's I )mlLLkndlahtgt c4113:
rmers cs. nth .
In tot D. W ‘
mm" m," Imp. Edgar of Dalmeny
Alleean. R 1. Michigan Probably

 

SUERASEYS

OF MAY N08! AND OLENWOOD BREEDING.
No abortion, clean federal ted. Their
sins mode 10,400.20 milk. 900.05 fat.
Their mother's site‘s dam mode 15,109.10 milk
778.80 tat. Can spare O cows. 2 half

lot of young bulls.
T. Y. HIOKO,  'I, “We creel, Mich.

JERSEYS

JERSEY BULL DALI!“ Oboe type. From "0'
encore. 850 and up according to age. MILO
H. EDISON I CON. R2. Grand Rapids. Mich.

It or OUR IMKU‘I'Y IULLO WOULD II.
prove your hard.
FRANK P. »NORIINOTON. lonla. llah.

stands

 

—L
.7

 

 

 

 

  
  

“CAFE” 9 YR. OLD—

  

REG JERSEYS .... mm .3, M
 

 

The Worlds’ Greatest
BREEDING BULL

Blue sin, Supreme Champion It the
Smithﬁald Show, 1919. and the Birminr
ham Show. 1920, is a daughter of Edgar
of Dalmeny.

The Junior Champion Bull. Junior
Champion Female. Champion Calf Herd
and First Prize Junior Heifer Calf. Mich-
igan State Fair. 1020. were also the get
of Edgar of Dalmeny.

A very duties lot of young bulls—aired
Munrofbaimanymatthisﬂma,
elated for asls.

Band for Illustrated Catalogue.

WHDWOOD FARMS
Orion. Mich.

I. a. we... PM. «no: small. a...

 

 

 

 

     
  
   
  
   
    
  
      
  
     
   
    
  
    
 
   
    
   
   
  
  
 
     

WALNUT ALLEY

Big Type Poland Chime. boars and in; now ’
ready. The kind that has made goodg for the
past ten years.

A. II. GREGORY

lonla. Michigan

BIG BOB MASTODON

ls sired by Caldwell Big Bob. champion of
the world. dam’s sire is A's Mastodon.
grand champion at Iowa State Fair some breed-
ing. Peter A Pan is my new boar ﬁred by Peter
Pa_n, he by Peter the Great. Glover & Mk D.
Wlnn herd. Kansas City. Mo. Some choice
boars left sired by Big Bob. Priced low and
guaranteed. 30 choice fall pigs, either sex.

0. E. GARNANT. Eaton Rapids. Mich.

 

 

. T. P. c. DOES YOUR NERVE SAY BUY
hogs? Vote yes and order a good one. Fall
gilts $30 to 50; spring boars. $15 to 825. Two

Prospect Ya nits bred to Hart‘s Block Price
March 24th at $50 each.
F. T. HART. St. Louis. Mich.

 

EONARD'S BIC TYPE P. 0. BORN PIG.
at weanlmz time. from Mich. Champion 11013
825 w1th pedigree. Satisfaction guaranteed. Ca
or write E. R. LEONARD. R 8. St. Louis. Mich.

 

IG TYPE POLAND CHINAS. Fall pin for
sale sired by the 1200 lb. boar Monster Bi:
Bob 327,623 and Clansman. Giant Buster
and Yankee breeding. Ready to ship now. All
hogs double treated. Priced right for quick sale.
rite or come and see them. ,

CHAS. WETZEL & SONS. Ithaca. Mich.

FARWELL LAKE FAllIIS “.22.! '2'
Bears

ﬁna lot of spring pigs Come and no
' lansman's Image 2nd. 0:11:- ‘
a

 

in service. W 3.
post and Smooth Wonder. Don't forget
November sale. "
W. I. RAISDELL

Hanover. lien.

L s P cw—d BOAR. BY OLANOMAN'. I.-
‘ ADI and gig Defender. tut am

good. Bred gilts acid.
H. O. DWARTZ. “hoolme Mlehlsan.

me TYPE POUIDS“"£22 :2: rs

Irowthy. Beat of blood lines revrceenhd. Write
or call. w. Caldwell A Son. SWIM lich-

BIO TYPE P. 0. SPRING PIGS EITNIN “X ‘
from largegmwthydamsandaisedhym
held boars. Come and see our stock. pried.
reasonable. .

L. w. saunas a col. Byron. lies.

BOARS AT HALF PRIO
bred the III!!! M

in purple.
A Giant Butler‘s :3 sub.

 

 

          
       
   

 

 
    
  

     
  

 

III "PI ,
Poland cum

 

 

and
AW

    

 

  


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

mostly by Orange Clansman,

 

 Sale at farm. Cholera-immune.

Pope Bros,

 

 Olan and out of dams by Moors
113111 Jumbo Lad, Harrisons Gersdale,

'logue write P. P. Pope.

before advertised.

 

 ;;."Central Michigan sale Circuit
1. I Wednesday, October 26th

HART, FULCHER and CLINE sell 40 head at the feed barn at St.
,Louis, Mich, sired by Harts Black Price,
'Yank, Cline's Bob and Leonard's Big Bob.
.‘CEIECKERS. For catalogue write F. T. Hart, St. Louis, Micih.

Thursday, October 27th

E. R. Leonard. at his farm near St. Louis, Mich., sells 50 head sired
Grand Champion at Bay City Fair 1921,
1st at West Mich. State Fair and 2nd at Detroit.
sell with breeding privilege to LEONARD’S LIBERATOR, the tallest.
longest and heaviest boned pig in Michigan-

Friday, October 28th

at Francisco Farm, Mt Pleasant, sell 50 head sired by

'MICH. MASTODON, MICH. CLANSMAN, Orange Clansman, Hill Den
Great Giant, Gersdale 'l‘imm. Black

Hill Den Clan.
{I Mich. Mastodon, Harts Black Price and Leonards G-iant. For Cata-

NOTICE

Chas. Wetzel and Sons will not hold their sale in this circuit as

WM. WAFFLE. AUCTIONEER.

Right Kind Clan, Mich.
A June gilt sired by

Many of these gilts

Write for catalogue.

Smooth Half Ton,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

—' . Am Ot'lerlng Large Type Poland Chine Sewe.
- bred to F's Orange st reasonable prices.

[Ill 1 Write or cell.
CPL‘V..0E FISHER. R 3. St. Louis. Mich.

large Type Spotted Poland Chinas
Some ring pigs at $15 end $20. aired by

Pdde of eoosta. Satisfaction guaranteed. Ah

with pigs. Phone or write

J. I. FULLER. R 2, Reed City. Mich.

LARGE m: POLAllD ennui?

 For sale boars and gilts sired by B's Clans-
,' ~ rnen. grand champion .39129021 Mich. sum Fair,

5- by F's Clansman
reasomblo. Visitors welcome.
, "a f in Parma. Correspondence cheerfully

N. F. BORNOR. R 1. Mich.

 

i

 

 

Pei-ma.

 FBAIlclSG-o FARM POLAIID ciiiiiis

Bile—Qualitr—Popnlar Breeding. THAT'S US.
, A square rial—addacﬂon. THAT'S YOURS.
Publlo Sale—60 Head—Oct. 28. 1821

POPE BROS. 00..
Mt. Pleasant. Mich.

 

ERE I8 SOMETHING GOOD. BIG TVPE
Poland Chlnas. One extra good Ia’rge
big boned smooth gilt bred to Howlcyl
Price 8100. Also younger gilts S

Clans-
.rnsn. 30
‘ "o'oo'uowuv enos.. Merrill. Mich.

to

 

WILMAII FARMS UURUGS

.sort our stock very closely on market
everything not up to standard. Our p es are
bw and enable the beginner or farmer raising
market bags to secure choice foundation stock
e1 slightly more than grade prices.

NOW OFFERING: Fall pigs either sex $15.
Gillie. open or bred for spring furrow, these
are straight. high quality gills, the pick of our
orlng litters.

sows one and two years old, gentle.
good mothers and all heavy producers. Open or
will breed to our great Pathﬁnder herd boar.

One extra good 600 lb. Pathﬁnder boar over
three feet high and six feet long, heavy boned
end a good breeder am selling to prevent In—
breeding. At the extremely low price 875.00
this boar will soon go.

One Orion Cherry King boar of ﬁne quality
sbo priced very cheaply at 845.00

The above stock is guaranteed to please and
normally would be priced '5 higher and would
be well worth it. If you are not quite ready
for any of the above, a small payment will hold
urns subjed to your order.

WILMAG FARMS

FOR sALE—BROOKWATER PRINCIPAL 83rd

2% years old. right in every way,
J. E. MORRIS A SON. Farmingwn. Mich.

FENNVILLE,
MICHIGAN

 

IOHLV—BRED DUROOS. YOUNG BOARS
and gilts sired by Breakwater Demonstrator
27, 2nd prize aged boar. State Fair 1921.

H. E.‘ LIVERMORE a SON. Romeo. Mich.

 

' ooaoos

sows M

IRED To MICHIGANA ORION BEN-
Sensation)

ti :1 (s great son of Great Orion's

I‘eliid Michimna Demonstrator (one
of largest boars
tlve p Also

In state) for sale It conserva-
nﬁ'fCBIGANA FARM. Pavilion. Mich

 
 
  
     
  

big. growl-hr spring boars
Kalamazoo County
PEAGII IllLL FARM

manendglltsbredtoorsiredbyl’eeeh
162489. Satisfaction guar-
'em over.

open gills.
INWOOD BROTHERS
Rom”. Mich.

AM OFFERING SOME HIGH CLASS

SPRIIIS DUROG BOARS

It. reeeoneble prices . A few gilt: bred for Sep-
hmber ferrow shines-in prices.

OR SALE—FINE MARCH AND APRIL PIG.
Failed In Glad-in 001 188995. Write us

{IOAHRLEV FOO" A SONS. R 1. Oledwln. Mica.

DUROG JERSEY MARS-BIG OIIESI

P move them quick.
VIROIL DAVIS. Ashley. Mich.

  sano narrow,

Mostly Colonel. Long
Wonder and Sensation hr
OHAS

.eed 
LEN FARMS, Non. ville. Mich.
IOARS. loan of the lam

 

BUROC JERSEY

or better, come snd see.

 

 

 

hens-boned type. at rsuonshle prices. Writg

ANYTHING vou
Farmer’s prices.
c. L. POWER. Jerome. Mich.

  REG. DUROC SPRING BCARC.
20nd breeding. prices right.
JESSE BLISS A SON
Henderson. Mich.

D u  WANT AT

 

uree sews one elm If“ to Welt's King 3294.
who has sired more prise winning pigs at the
naminhtbehst2yeenthane otherDI-
pee boar. Newton Bernhan It. Jo Mich.

 

urea. Hm Greet Farms. Iced and open sows
snd gilt; Boers and spring pigs. 100 head.
[em 4 miles straight S. of Middleton, Mich.
Outlet 00. Newton & Blank. Perrlntnn. Mich.

E OFFER A FEW WELL-BRED IlLICTe
ad spring Duroc Boers. else bred sews end
Gilts in season. Call or write
McNAUGI-ITON A FORDVOE. Mini.

3 FIRE SPRIIG BEARS

BROOKWATER BREEDING
will go 150 lbs. $25.00 each. Registered.
SCHAFFER BR08., R1. Leonard. Mich.

St. Lenin.

0R SALE: OR! IUROC BOAR FROM
Brookmtcr breeding stock Choice spring pigs.
JOHN CRONENWET‘I‘. Carleton. 'Mloh.

V—i

'o. i. o.
v o l i: Aiin ciii-zsnaii wmrr

 

swine. Spring boars at reasonable prion.
Choice Aug. & Sept. Pigs to be shipped at 8-
Pmmlnent Blmdlines. Write

10 weeks old.
CLARE V. DCRMAN. Snover. Mich.

 

. I. C.'s. SERVICE BOARS. SPRING PIC.
st Farmer’s prices.
CLOVER LEAF STOCK FARM. Monroe. Mich.

 

 

 

 

  
    
  
    
  
 

 

DUROC JERSEY SWINE.

F—n SALE:—REO.
and sow pigs by Michignn

pilon Beer and from prise winning
gag-ya a few tel] pigs either est. sired by
‘  beer newer: and 2nd I. suinsw.
1w  double lmmrmed except fall pigs.
' TIM.
MQRII'M‘ISRA SON. Devleon. Mich.

 

'gixuiins pussies cine:
.nerd Deer—Reference only—No. 180,11!
'7. 1919 Chicago Beneﬁcial
ﬁll Prise .Ir. Yearling

o   in

{R‘- 4“

   

 

 

 

 

I. J. DRODT. R 1. Monroe. Mleh.
o. I. C. SWINE—MY HERD CONTAINS TH.
“m m, .m .W "I 80'6' W  Mood lines of the most not herd. Oen furnish
for wean Plﬂ- 1.000 “Dd Md 5°"?- yeI stock at "live end let ve" prices.
‘ J08. SOWELLER. Idmiln. Mich. A. J. CONDEN. DO". Mlch.. R 8.
L H on SALE—DUROC FALL GILTS AND IRE“
' F sows. e Danae Bmoar from Breakwater HAMPSHIRES
b Lat“: l.  #1. Linden. Mleh. HAMPSHIRE H968 ARE THE MOST POPU-

hr hogs of today. Spring and fell beer pigl-
et s bargain. A few open gins. 9th year.
JOHN W. SNYDER. R A. St. Johns. Mich.

 

An Opportunity To Buy
Hampshire: Right

We are offering some good lows and gilts. bred

larch and April fen-owing. Also e fed
choice fell pigs, either sex, Writs or cell
90’ THOMAS. New Lethrop. Mich.

 

a SHEEP E.

‘ V M CF GALA ITV LAMB.
m”“'¥.§...-a s.»- m
I an“ MINI. . . V

 

.’.’“.' VL-ei‘I‘r‘.“ :W‘TT‘XI": . V' '. Hf": ..,' ' «I -'
A’_,l-{Q.I. . ‘\ ... ,«   ‘

 

      

“sugary? «some: ' 
usuiiil‘ns’ir ﬁ'imtgfdbu'fmw'xgnillim'mm
EWWINLIJW SHADE SHRUI‘SI‘IIIIES

and rams of the best breeding. Pris-
seesanable.

 

O. W. SOBER
Fowler-ville. Mich.
 A FEW WOOLY RAM
LAMBS PRICED 'TO SELL
DAN ROO1'ER. R 4. Evan. Mich.
0R SALE REGISTERED BHRCPSHIRE
ewes brel to lamb in March or April.
ARMSTRONG BROS.. R8. Fowlervllle. Mich.
60 Head Registered Shropshle Ewe and Run
lambs. also yearling ruins of s (your:
an: lIli‘eve given satisfaction since 1890. rlc
se
C. LEMEN. Dexter. Mich.

 

 

 

 

GRAND VIEW FARM MERINOS. B A C
type Prices right. R1, ibichnneilsville. O.
H. H. A J. E. RICHARDSON.

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

A few good yearling rams and some .rern
lambs left to oﬂer. 25 ewes ell ages for sale
for fall delivery. live ‘ guaranteed as

 

 

 

 

 

  
    
 
     

   
 
   

  

represented
lCLARKE U. HAIRE, West Drench. Mich.
IT PAYS TOBUY PUREBRED SHEEP
or PARSONS 
~  . is. ..rbm
  
 ...... w
PARSONS. Grand Ledge Minsk... ’ a

 

 

 

 

REGISTERED RAMBUUILLET RAM

Breeding and individuality. Ranging from one

to four years old.
ROBERT J. NOON. Jackson. Mlch., R S.

MIGH. AGRIGULTURAL COLLEGE

offers for sale nuns sni ewes of the Shropshire.
Hammhiro. Oxford and Rambouillet breeds of
. For information write
DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL HUSBANDRY.
‘ East Lansing. Michigan.

 

 

All
reg-

EOISTERED HAMPSHIRE RAM8.. .
ages. Bred and priced right. Alla

toured ewes all ages.
W. . CASLER. Ovid. Mich.

 

T BARGAINS, REGISTERED HAMPSHIRE
lambs, yenrlings, tWo-year—old rams, ewes all
ages Suckling, two-year—old Shetland ponies.
HARRY GARMAN & SONS
Route 8. Mendon. Michigan.

FOR SALE

BLACK TOP OELAINE RAMS.
FRANK ROHRABACHER, Lelngsburg.

T0 IIIGREASE YOUR RETURNS

from sheep, breed Registered Rambonlllets.

For sale by
P. O. FREEMAN A SON
Phone 54-8 or 240 Lowell.

REGISTERED B & Ii TYPE

American Delaine Sheep both sexes for sale. at
fsrmers’ prices.
F. H. CONLEV A SON

Maple Rapids, Mich.
 BUCK LAMBS AND
7 VEARLINGS
Make your selection now for later shipment.
Will spare ii few good ewes.
J. M. WILLIAMS. North Adams. Mich.

 

Mich.

Mich.

 

 

MAPLE LAWN FARM. Shrepelrli-es. ram:
mm lambs of choice breeding. Wooled from
nose to tm‘ﬁ. W. Recon & “on. Sheridan, mph.
OR SALE.
at the 192i
OTTO C. "NAB A

FOR SALE - HAMPSHIRE EWES

REG. HAMPSHIRE RAMS shown
Michigan State Fair.

RON Monroe. Mich.

Yearling ewes. ewe lambs. rear-ling rams, ram
lambs. All in excellent condition. Prices right.
Writn fm- forms. «to.

v": ii nrrycvi Chis Min.

 

‘5

 

 PET srocn " ,
THOROUGHBRED WATCH DOGS

Ten Day Sale

One pedigreed, registered English
Bulldog, photo on request . . . . . .$35
Two, five months old, pedigreed
spayed female and one male Aire-
dale Terrier ..........$20
One pedigreed, White Airedale
male, one year old‘ . . . . . . . . . .320
One pedigreed, female French
bull 
Three thoroughbred Rat Terriers
two months old 
One six months old pedigreed Bos-
ton Bull Terrier, male ... . . . .325
All stock guaranteed as represent-
ed. Send check in first mail.

BATH CITY KENNELS

Dr. W. Austin Ewalt. Mt. Clemens.
Michigan

use...

 

R SALE. FLEMICR CIAN‘I‘ RABBITS. DOES.
breeding ego. 66. Three old pelt. “33:
Registered does 812 each. 8 pedigreed. Q -
a guaranteed
E. HIMEBAUON. Coldweter.

 

Mich.
FOR BALD—FEMALE ROUND. PART FOX
Bound. pert" Bee 1e. two years old. the

. splendid in er.
RIVIAVIIW FARM. Venn. Mich.

 

 
 

m bias-n3? ‘6: est-.1... ~
this ass fell to

prizes with his Angus cattle:

 

   

   
   

Plumb, Square and Level. 

While Sorlpps had to be content with
reserve. positions In the grand champion-
ships for males and females. this loss
was very largely retrieved when the ﬁrst
prizes for breeders’ young herd and get
of sire fell to the sons and dau liters of
Edgar of Dalmeny. .At the ay Cit!
fair. Mr. Scripps won the following
Resem
grand champion bull. Editor of Wild-
wood; ﬁrst on breeders’ young
senior yearling bull aged cow. two—year-
old heifer. heifer calf over six months.
heifer calf under six months and bull
calf over six months. The herd won sec-
ond on two—year—old bull and two-yearh
old heifer.

At the State Fair the Scripps entries
in the Guiimsey division won ﬁrst on
senior bull calf and on junior bull calf,
reserve junior champion bull, second on
calf herd and third on breeders' young
herd. which was an excellent showing
when the wonderful average quality of
the animals which faced the judge In
this class is taken into consideration.
A1 Saginaw. the Scripps Guernsey herd
furnished the champion aged cow, ﬁrst
prize two-year-old heifer. heifer calf. sen-
lor and Junior bull calf and second prize
aged bull. At Grand Rapids. the Scripps
Guernsey herd won the junior champiion—
ship for bulls. ﬁrst on get of sire, junior
calf and senior calf; second an aged m.
twotyear-old heifer and heifer calf. At
Saginaw and Grand Rapids the Scripps
"doddres" ,bad no competition. Ms.
Smith has been invited to act as judge
of the beef breeds at next year's Grand
Rapids fair.

 

The Herdsmen's Special in the Short-
horn division at therecent State Fair
was a new class this year; the prizes be-
ing offered by the American Shorthorn
Breeders' Ass'n to herdsmen in charge
of exhibits: ihe decisions were to be
made on records made during the entire
period of the fair. taking into considera-
tion the following points: Personal ap-
pearance, including neatness and cleanli-
ness in and out of the show ring: order-
liness and cleanliness of quarters, stalls,
bedding and animals; systematic and neat
arrangement of traps. feed and to
The prizes hung up were $15. $10, and 35.
Robert Bruce. with Carr Bros. 6': 00.,
Bad Axe, was given ﬁrst prize; James
Napier: with C. H. Prescott a Sons. Ta-
was City. second, and John Lessiter, Jr..
with John Lessiter’s Sons. Clarkston.
third. The prize were to be aWarded by
the superintendent of the cattle depart-
ment; Jay Lessiter was superintendent
and it was a. signiﬁcant fact that his son
only drew third prize in the contest. In
the opinion of the writer each of the
competitors, named above; was entitled
to ﬁrst money. The competition in this
as well as all other departments of the"
cattle show was alto ether too hot for
the comfort of the udge making the
awards. The regular herdsmen's special,
applying to the entire cattle division Was
awarded as follows: First to Lenawee
Boys’ and Girls' clubs; second to Bldwell
Stock Farm. Tecumseh; third to John
Ebels, Holland; fourth to Arthur P. Edi-
son. Grand Rapids

About 70 head of registered Holstein
cattle from the best herds in Oakland
and Macomb counties will be sold 'at
Auction at the State Fair grounds Oct.
18. 1921. The oonsignors are John
Schlaﬂ. Mt. Clemens: Mrs. E. A. Omen.
Pontiac; F‘red Lee, Farmington; John
T. O'Hara, Utlca: A. W. Copeland. Binn—
ingham; Wabeck Farms, Pontiac: David
Brown, Rochester. and E. A. Hardy.
Rochester. A Some of the ﬁnest yearling
heifers ever sold at auction in the state.
Excellent foundation stock sired by the
best bulls in Michigan.

Everything sold will be strictly as
represented. and sold on a. 60 to 90 day
guarantee for tuberculosis. Also e. ﬁne
bunch of cows bred to great bulls.

Two outstanding young bulls will be
sold one from a 22-1b. dam and 31-11).
sire consigned by Wabeck Farms, and
one from a wonderful z-year-old heifer
that will have a record of about 19.000
lbs. of milk and 800 lbs. of butter in a

 

year. This one consigned by John
Schlaff.
NATIONAL BVVINE SHOW HUGH

SUCCESS

In point of exhibits and interest the
National Swine Show. held at Peoria
last Week. was a great success. There
probably'never has been a better display
of purebred swine. the outstanding fea-
ture of which was the showing of Tam-
worths.

Breeders are now headed for the next
big show. the International. where they
will undoubtedly once more impress the
country with the fact that they are In
the business to stay. Such large and high
quality exhibits are sure to be a splen-
did thing for the industry, and hem
are to be commended for making them.

Veterinary De’p’t

Dr. W. Austin Ewell, editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

YOUNG HORSE PANTS WHEN
WORKING
Wha. pauses a young horse to pant

i
when we king? And what is the cure?
——F. E. R. Gratiot County. Michigan.

This condition can develops from
various causes. One tablespoonful
of powdered potassium nitrate in
the grain morning and night will
often relieve them. If this does not
produce the desired rcsnlts‘give one
teblespoonful of. Rider's .SolutIO.'
of arsenic morning} and 

  

  

  

 

pew,

 

ifs... *

 
  

 


  

I

that reason eLegal Editor.

r’not agreeable to him.——Legal

  

tones: 101mm  man-
(Oontinucd - from page 7) I
the con. If the horse was worth less
by reason of being older than he
would have been if only three years
old and the same condition then
you would be entitled to damages.
If he was worth just as much being
four years old as he would have
been at three years old then there
has been no damage and they can
enforce the contract you made.—
Legal Editor.

 

FIRM DOES NOT ANSWER

Please let me know if the United
Leasing Trust is a good company to in—
vest In. They have been selling leases
on Texas and Kentucky oil lands at $90
per acre and now the price. has raised to
$30 per acre. They agreed to my 20
per cent the ﬁrst of July, but paid only
7 1-2 per cent—L. S., Osceola County.

Letters addressed to this ﬁrm
have remained unanswered. When
this happens we usually put the ﬁrm
down in the N. G. class. Unless
you have already done so, we advise
you to have nothing to do with this
concern. If you have invested
in their oil leases, my advice would
be to visit their headouarters and
find out for yourself whether they
have a legitimate proposition-Ed—
itor.

BUILDING

 

LINE FENCE

Is thorc any way in which I can force
my neighbor to put up half of the line
fence? If so. what proceedings are
necessary? We refuses to come to any
agreement whatsoever in holoing to put
11p a fence. Part of the land is cleared
and port of it is not—H. W. R.. Prove-
mont, Mich.

 

If both parties improve their land
and your neighbor refuses to divide
the fence then apply to the fence
viewers for assistance; but, as the
steps to compel one to build the
fence is somewhat complicated, it is
advisable to have the assistance of
local.counsel before starting any-
thing—Editor.

TERBIS OF‘ RIXTING FARBI

I would like to get some idea of the
terms upon which I should rrnl :1 gr. 
80 acre farm with buildings and cio‘hi
cows. fresh in thp spring. There will bc
around thirty tons of hay to cut. The
owner wants to take, possession in tho
fall and wants half or all of the straw
and corn enough put in the silo to win-
ter the cows. He will furnish one—half
of all feed and seed net-“rd Should ‘-
get a share. of the calvos? What share
of the grain, and potatoes should l rc—
ceive.——-A Subscriber, LeRoy, Michigan

 

Your inquiries are questions of
contract and the agreements of par-
ties control. No man is obliged to
rent his farm upon terms that are
Ed-
itor.

 

FEDERAL FARM LOANS
Will you kindly advise me where and
how I may secure a federal loan?——G.
S., Kalamazoo County, Michigan.

Write the Federal Land Bank at
St. Paul, Minn., which can advise
you of the location of the nearest
farm loan association with which
you may affiliate, and send you
complete information about securing
a loan. Because of the long time
the law was tied up in the courts, a
large number of applications accum-
ulated, and we understand that
farmers are obliged to wait some
little period of time before the bank
can pass upon their applications.—
Editor.

RENT MUST BE PAID

A has rented a pasture of B for sev- 4

era] years by year and verbal agree-’
ment. Pasture is vatcrcd by a spring and
always furnished water until this last
summer. It went dry in August and A
bad to take cattle home. No special
agreement as to guarantee of water.
Should A pay full rent for pasture or can
B collect full amount? Suppose A rents
a fawn of B by the year and the build-
ing burn during middle of year and B
does not replace buildings or help A in
any way. Should A pay full amount of
rent and can 13 collect full amount?——-
Subscriber, Lapeer, Mich.

Rent must be paid in full in both
cases unless exception is made in
the lease—Legal Editor.

 

CAN HOLD OFFICE
I would like to know if a man that the
state tax commissioner exempted from
taxes can legally hold the office of
supervisor or any other office in the
township.——Subscriber, Evert, Michigan.

 

Exemption from the taxation does

N

as:an umnsg

 

 

BUSINESS FARMERS’- , EXCHANGE

       

 

A \I'ORD PER. ISSUE-——3

5

insertions for we per word.
Twenty words is the minimum accepted for any ad. in this department.
as one word each initial and each group of figures, both in body of ad. and in address.

fore Saturday for issue dated following “'et'k. The Business Farmer Adv. Dept... Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

File for sale ads. not accepted
Cash should accompany all orders.

times.
Count
Copy must be in our hands be»

for less than 3

 

 

 

 

Lvl-Av-JL CAI-i1 FARM WITH HORSES.
poultry, 30 cows and young stock, hay, grain,
full equipment included; in one State'l moat
prosperous sections, close town; city markets;
160 acres machine~worked, very productive; 65-
oow spring-watered pasture, Iota wood, timber;
fruit, 400 sugar maples: good 9—room house,
running water; 90-ft. basement barn valued at
$4000, silo. hay barn, stable, poultry house.
etc. Owner retiring, all $6800, part cash, easy
tonne. Details page 26 new Illus. Catalog
1100 Bargains. FREE. STROUT FARM
AGENCY, 814 B E P‘ord Bldg, Detroit. Mich.

 

FOR SALE, RAVENSWOOD STOCK FARM
in Ogcmaw county, Mich., on trunk line 76,
220 acres, all good soil, no waste land, 140 a
under cultivation, 60 a pasture, balance tim—
ber. 2 spring creeks, 4 good wells; 12 room
house, cellar under all. Basement barn 40x60
80x40. Natco tile silo 16x35, 5 other build
ings, 2 corn cribs, large bearing orchard. Have
lived on form over 35 years. Will sell on con-
tract, unable to work it on account of age.
Price $65 per acre. W. B. SHEPPARD, West
Branch, R-l, Michigan.

 

(’8 ACRE FARM FOR SALE. MOSTLY ALL
cleared. Fair frame house. new born built last
.yenr, 32x46; frame, granary 14x20, good well
280 feet deep; well drained, good ditches and
fences: clay and black loam land; good road,
mail route, schools and churches. Located in
B-w county, Garﬁeld township. Section six.
\Vith horses. cattle and implements if wanted.
MARTIN SMITH, R 1, Rhodes, Mich.

 

FOR SALE—120 ACRES. NUMBER ONE
land and host of buildings, fruit, timber. One
mile to Dixie Highway, station, church and
school. 30 “1th from Detroit. “Hunt with!
experienced livostnck former. It. XV. ANDICR

 

l
l

 

.—

 

not her one from holding office for“

strain

SONY. (“la rkston, Michirrn n.

 

200 ACRE SAGINAVII
level clay loam, 100 ncres
brim-k house, furnace. 2 big hip roof barns,
silo, plenty of outbuildings, 19 head cattle, 23
hogs, 3 horses, 40 hens, full line tools, good
roads. Worth $253,000. For quick sale includ—
ing 1'00 )1. crops. $40,000, $6.000 cash, hul.
6 per‘cent. BEVJA’HIV 8; SUN. 531 l-‘_’ S.
Saginaw St... Flint, Mich.

CO ’ ' NTY FA RM
under plow, 9~mom
tile

 

'/2 MI. MI.

Edenvillc,

SOUTH AND '/2
80 acres good sandy and
farm. All good buildings and fences.
noxious weeds. For full particulars
come. FRANK CTIILDS, Edenville,
Mi'l‘avivl county.

E AST 0F
clay loam
(“ion r of

write, or

Mich.

 

GRAIN ELEVATOR,
with 4 acres of land in the villnge of (‘hilson,
Mich., on the Ann. Arbor Attractive
price and terms. May consider farm in exchange.
Address owner, A. J. McDOTlGALL, 1535 Dime
Bank. Detroit, Mich.

FOR SALE. 15 BIN

80 ACRESt 50 T0 60 ACRES CLEARED,
loam soil. good young orchard, 6 miles to
good town. 1—2 mile to fine lake, 5 room frame
hon-n, good well, barn 32x40, good granary,
l 14 miles to good school. Price $3000 with

 

$500 down and $100 or more each year until
paid for. Write owner. W. F'. UMI’HREY.
Evert. Michigan.

.FOR SALE, 160 ACRES LAND. GOOD

bmldinu. good fence. Complete set new tam
book. motor plows. Price very low till NOV-
l5th C. E. PRATT, Marlon. Mich.

 

GOOD FARM FOR SALE. 80 ACRES,
clay soil. 55 acres cleared and fenced, small
house and burn, flowing well, 14 mile 03’ of
stone road. Can raise all kinds of grain and
sugar beets. A bargain at $6500. 1-2 down.

 

 

 

 

 

MISCELLANEOUE

MACHINE“).

 

Isaw MILL MACHINERY. PORTABLE
nulls to: farmers' use. Make your own lumber
Bend {or new catalog HILL—CURTIS 00.. 150i
Ni. Pitcher St. Kalamazoo. Mich.

 

 

TOBACCO

 

OLD KENTUCKY TOBACCO—3 YEAR OLD
1.31. ' ' nature cured. ‘Tho Kind
C ewing or
$1.00 postpaid. KENTUCXI
TOBACCO ASSN. W519, waesville, Ky.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

balance to suit purchaser. D. A. FOLEY, Tun
ner, Mich. a
TOBAgCO: KENTUCKY’S hPRIDE, MuiLD‘sAND
ellow. est. chewing or sum '11: 10 .00'
FARM FOR SALE, 80 ACRES. 1 ACRES m _. . ' 0
under cultivation. Small house, small barn. 2o "1 s')‘00' FARMERS CLUB' Mayﬂdd' K"
chicken coop, running water, best of soil
Terms to suit. $2000. One Mogul tractor 8-16 HOMESPUN TOBACCO 10 L38. $2.50. 20
good condition. One Beeman garden tractor new. lbs $4.00, collect on delivery. FORD TOBACCO
Tractors sold separate. ROBERT VVILKINS. COMPANY, Mnyﬂeld, Kentucky.
Turner, Mich.
‘
WANTED, TD TRADE A HOUSE AND LOT FENCE POSTS
in Pontiac, Micxlm fairtstrlgck said milsfor hall ’1
' in stoc an 00 an wor arm on
Lilirgtor Would rent a farm all furnished by BUY FENCE POSTS DIRECT FROM FOR.
an experienced stock farmer and can give any III... All kmdL Delivered prices. Address “H.
kind of rcfcrcnces you would want. Address M,‘ care Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clem.
C. D. “WILSON. Cliﬂ’ord. Mich. one Mich.
120 ACRES SUGAR BEET LAND, ISABELLA EAL
county, lO-room house, 34XS4 barn, 10x40 tool a” 
house. All pointed. All crops, stock and machiu— Fm“
(‘r'f mmmm MARBLE, Coleman, Mich. TRUNKS, BAGS, SUITCASES, WHY pAy
twat middlemen lgroﬁisl’ lIiuy from [soggy di~
‘ rec .‘uzhi for res cantor. GL‘M '1‘
HIGHLY IMPROVED WELL LOCATED 118 BAG pawl-UR)" Spring Vine)“ “L B x &
acre farm. Good buildings, tiled; if) miles from
Detroit. City Hall umr Royal (Juli. Addrcss
BOX K, Mich. Business l‘hrmer, Mt. (.‘lt‘mous, FILMS DEVELOPED FIVE CENTS. PRINTS
\HPhhmn‘ regular slat-s, three cents ouch. UUMSEB ART
STORE. liolnml, Mich.
FOR SALE, GOOD 80 ACRES WITH OR
without tools, crops, lirvslm-k. Near schools, GGVERNMENT CLERKS NEEDED—(MEN,
churches, market. on state reward road. \Vrite women); 55140052000; permanent; few to
W’K 97‘ (lT'Oill‘S‘ MML travel; expense allowance. Write Mr. Ozment.
Former U. S. Government i'lxaminer, 355 St.
TOOLS AND Louis, Mo. lie gives reliable information.

WANT BEST FARM. STOCK,

crops $3500 will buy. Good Soil, near school.
minis orchard. MILTON I{U(;IAI']Y, Column.
Mich.

 

160 ACRES GOOD LAND, FAIRLY LEVEL,

some hardwood timber, new buildings, good
crops. $2,000 takes all. BOX I... (,‘ure of Mich-
iszun Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens, Mich.

 

258 ACRES. DO YOU WANT TO OWN ONE
If the best gmin and stock farms in Jackson

county. Long time given. write for terms and
‘ull description of farm. E. A. C ROMAN,
Grass Luke. Mich.

 

FERIK‘ETS FOR SALE. PRICE LIST FREE.
Book on ferrets, 10c. Ferret quzzles 256 web.
BERT PHYEIAL, Wellington, Ohio.

 

BEANS WANTED—WE INISH TO BUY RED
Valentine, Bountiful. and Golden Wax Beans.
Mail samples to S. M. ISBELL & 00., Jackson.
Michigan.

 

BUY YOUR TIRES BY MAIL, 30X3Vz
guaranteed noneskid tire, $9.2m; tubes, $1.39.
Order tolny. O. A. iASMUSSEN, Mail Order
Dept, (in-envllle, Mich.

 

120 ACRES GOOD LAND, GOOD BEILD—

ings. 2 Dams, silo, 7—room house, 2 wells, tools
and stock is desired. Price right. ERNEST
\‘Al FNTIVE, I‘besnning. Mich.

 

DON’T BUY A FARM. BEFORE *YO'J GET
our free list of 50 good farms. DeCOUDRES,
Bloomingdale, Michigan.

 

FOR SALE. 80 ACRES TILLABLE SUGAR
w-t land. Good buildings. Bar count-y on
Dixie Highway. O\\'.\"l‘}li, 3727 24th Street,
‘\..iv‘\ll‘ Miclli'mn.

 

I WANT TO RENT A FARM ON SHARES
I’(":-S write me for inrticulara
Adrian, MiclL, I".

flil‘  .
lill,l.ll'.‘ l‘HX, R.

WANTED MEN TO LEARN AUTOMOBILE
business. “'ritc for free catalog, in“ EXPORT
AUTOMOTIVE SCHOOL, IMVcnport, Iowa.

 

TYPEWRITERS:——ALL MAK L'S SLIGHTLY

 

used, 2520 up. Easy payments. Free trial.
limmuteed two ymrs. PAYNE COMPANY,
Rosediale station, Kansas City, Kansas.

 

 

POULTRY BREEDERS DIRECTORY

 

 

 

Advertisements inserted under this heading at 30 cents per line, per issue. Special rates for 13 times or longer. Write

 

 

 

 

out what you have to offer and send it in we will put it in type, send proof and quote rates by return mail. Address The
Michigan Business Farmer, Advertising Department, Mt. Clemens, Michigan.
POULTRY Ml N ORCAS

 

LEGHOHIIS
and Anconas

Yearling Hens and Pullets——This stock is all se-
lected l‘uro Breed Practical Poultry, lain monit-
ers and good layers. 3000 Yearlings; limited
number Pulets. Guaranteed good practical qual-
ity. We will send you description of fowls and
en records. If you went ﬁrst class Dang Leg-
horns, write to us.

STATE FARMS ASSOCIATION

Desk 2. Kalamazoo. Michigan

MUD WAY AUSH-KA FARM

08ers young stock and a few mature breeders in
White Chinese Geese, White Runner Ducks and
White Wyundottes. Also 0. 1. spring grits.
Write today for prices on what you need.

lKE C. MILLER. Dryden. Mich.

 

 

OF QUALITY COCKERELS-—MINORCAS,
lloudans, Rocks, Reds, Orpingtons, Spanish.
TYRONE POULTRY FARM. Fenton. Mich.

 

BREEDERS

We have a ﬁne lot of English and Amer-
ican Leghorn (Jockcrcls for sale at reason—
able prices. Let us know your wants. \Ve
ship on approval and guarantee satisfaction.

LORING & MARTIN C0.

East Saugatuck. Mich.

   

 

.aRAeowsxs's .s. 0. WHITE LEGHoiNs,

 

 

 

 

cockerels and cocks for sale.
L. GRABOWSKE. Merrlall. Mich, R. 4
VVYANDOTTE
"lives AND WHITE wvhNDorTE COCK-
ercls, bred from prize winners t Battle
Creek and M. A. C. Round—up show. Good
birds at: $3.00, $4.00 and $5.00 each.
W. BROWNING, R2, Portland, Mloh.

 

s & n c BLAGKMNBW

Cockerels, l’ap’s Strain. 4 months old $2.50
and $3.00 each.

MAPLE VIEW POULTRY FARM

E. Sylvander, Coloma. Michigan.

LANGSHAN

DR. SIMPSON’S LANGSHANS OF QUALITY
Bret. for type and color since 1912. Winter
laying Itrsm of both Black and \Vhite. Hen
some cockereiz for sale. Eggs In melon.
DR CHAS. W. SIMPSON
Webbervlllo. Mlch.

 

 

 

ORPINGTON S

ﬁPlNGTONS AND LEGHORNS

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

CYCLE HATCHER COMPANJ, 149 Phil. IIdj.

 

 

CHINESE GEESE.
Loch i'us.

1r.
MRS. CLAUDIA BETTS, Hlllsdale,

PEKIN DUCKS, R. C.

Mich.

 

 

PLYMOUTH ROCK

HEAD YOUR FLOGK

with a Genuine Park’s pedigreed Barred Ply-
mouth Rock Cookers]. June hatched $2.50 each

 

 

while they last. /
A. F. BODDE.‘ GoodeIls. Mich.
mm nocK EffKiiitPS-Fit“ 32%

direct from Parks best pedigreed pens.
each.

R. G. KIRBY,
Route 1. East Lansing, Mich.

 

 

 

WHITE WYAIIDOTTES

Martin Foundation. A ft-w ﬂood breeders for
sale. No more baby chicks this . your. rder
cockerels now for fall tit-livery. Prices

reasonable. 7
C. W. HEIRIBACH
Big Rapids, Mich.

early

 

UREBRED WHITE WYANDOTTE COOKER-
els, Rosecomb Fisliel strain, March hatch at
$3.00 each.

MRS. TRACY RUSH. Ithaca, No. 7. Mich.

RHODE ISLAND REDS

n. I. “DEX—"rilluﬁ‘mw‘
Greatest Color and Egg Strain. Both Bone

and Single Combs. Get our cockercls catty

 

 

HITTAKER'S

 

and.save money. VVrito or free catalog.
LEGHORNS INTERLAKES FARM, Box 4, Lawrence. m
SINGLE COMB DUFF LEGHORN COCKER- WILL HAVE A FEW CHOICE PURE cm
oil, April and May hatched. Heavy 18.34!!! R. I. Red Cocks, hens and oocken lot uh

.1. ya. ween-In. path. Mich.

 

Must act quickly if w

 

anted.
Wm. H. FROHM. New Baltimore. R1. Mich.

 

COCKERELS AND PULLET.

ORPIIIGTOIIS

for sale. Buff, Whi
Black Uockereis It $7, $8, and $10. Pull.“
$3 and $5. Lise yearling hens 33 and $L

Hatching eggs, $6 per setting of 15.
RABOWSKE BROS.. R 4. IIOI‘I'III. Mich.

 

 

DUCKS

FOR SALE, MAMMOTH IMPERIAL WHITE
Pekin Ducks, males or females, $2.00; three
or more $1.75 mob. Buﬂ‘ Ducks, $2.50 each.
Also have a ﬁne lot of English-American S. G.
White Leghorn oockerels at $1.50 each. 8.
Brown Leghorn Cooker-ole $1.50; nice ones.
MAPLE WOOD POULTRY FARM
Benjamin Scott, I! 1. Bannister, Mich.

 

 

 

TURKEYS
TUIIKEIS FOR SALE

 

A m mum-“m “Bourbon Rod. mu htohd'.
.- W. IDIOT”.

etc. .
Howie. moo.

  

 

   
  
   

     


 
  

 
    
       

 

..
1..
_. .
.l _ . '
. l 1’
' ' C
_ , . .'

p .
v.49“

‘ €273?

TRADE AND MARKET REVIEW
LEB weather is bringing bet-

ter business conditions the coun-

try over, and dealers are begin-
ning to take an optimistic view of
the immediate future in spite of the
fact that the future will be set in
the dull days of early winter. Re-
tail trade in general is much more
active than on this date last month,
and there are abundant evidences
that the “buyers’ striike," which has
been so long in evidence, is about
over. Conditions which prevail in
connection with the great foundation
industries of the country seem to be
especially important at this time: the
recovery of iron. steel and lumber,
at this season of the year is signiﬁ-
cant, showing as it does abundant
conﬁdence in the future of this coun-
try and a disposiiton to take advan-
e of current low price levels in
the belief that future revisions will
be toward higher rather than lower
price levels. The Pacific northwest
reports a rapidly increasing demand
for lumber from eastern interests,
and the production of iron, steel
and coke is gaining in volume exceed-
ed each week as the Season advances.
The railroad executives have rec-
ommended a cut in freight rates on
iron ore, which amounts to about 28
per cent; the effect of this develop-
ment upon the steel industry of the
country is hard to foreshmlow .at
this time, but it is generally believed
that it is the ﬁrst gun to be ﬁred in
a wholesale freight slashino; cam-
paign which will eventually include
all kinds of dead freight. More than
1,000 Connclsville coke ovens were
lighted last week; activity in con-
nection with the demand for coke has
always, in the past, been a forerun-
ner of a general industrial revival.
All of the better grades of lumber
are being marked up rapidly. in anti-
cipation of a greatly improved de-
mand which is timed to reach this
country when the frost is out of the

ground next spring.

“THE A T

WHEAT PRICES PER 80., OCT. 12, 1921

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grade Liar-troll lCh moo N V
No. 2 Rod  1.28 1.15”; 1.13%
No. 2 White .. .. 1 25 1.11I/2
No. 8 Mlxodi . . 1.25  1.08

PRSleiinNEAYEAR AGO

Incest-ml unfailing No? My;
Detroit I 2.22 I 2.20 I 2.20

 

The wheat market has recovered
Ifrom its slump of last week. and as
we go to press the tone is strong
with an indication of higher prices.
The speculators made good use of
the large visible supply last week to
bear down prices and were success-
ful in putting them down to the. low-
est levelof the season. Visible sup-
ply and the farmers’ tendency to
sell are the only hearish’factors in
the situation, however. All others
are of a distinctly bull nature. Ev-
ery week since the middle of August
total world supplies have been
shrinking, although some of the
countrie which are ﬁnding it nec-
essary to buy American wheat have
made desperate efforts to make us
believe their wants are less than
supposed. We have no faith what-
ever in the French government’s es-
timate of a wheat crop of 10 million
bushels above 1920- No wheat crop
could go through such a drought as
France experienced without suffer-
ing to a far greater extent than re-
ported by the French government.
France may be able to supply her
temporary wants from her own crop.
but we expect that this country will
be begging for American wheat be-
fore another harvest. The crops of
the southern hemisphere are still in
the making, but unfavorable weath-
or has greatly damaged the pros-
pect for on name yield. Reports
are still conflicting with respect to
the Canadian crop, which in now
placed at 287 million bushels. We
would not. be the least confined to
and this out still W when
threshing returns are on completed.
N «:50 for  United States is con-

    
 

’1

Edited by H. B. MACK

 

 

 

LGENERAL MARKET SUMMARYJ

 

_ vanced 4c.

DETROIT, Oct. 12.—-—-Wheat closed strong Tuesday. Rye ad-
Corn easy. Beans ﬁrm and 10c higher.

CHICAGO, Oct. 12.—Holiday today. All grains ﬁrm at close
a Tuesday. Hogs 11nd cattle steady. ‘

Provisions strong.

 

 

list page is set In typo.
uolng to press —Edltor.

(Note: Th, no" gummuil.od lnformatlon was recolvod AFTER the balance of the mar-
lt contum has minute Information up to within one-hslf hour of

 

 

 

 

corned, the government’s report for
October lst showed a further loss of
13 million bushels or a grand total
of 740 milion bushels which is 47
million bushels less than the 1919
crop and 90 million less than the
1915-19 average.

The immediate future of wheat
depends in a word. we believe, upon
the quantity which will be marketed
the next few weeks. A continuation
of the heavy movement can only
mean sustained low values, while a.
cessation of marketing would mean
instantly higher prices. The ﬁnan-
cial situation is still discouraging
enough although British exchange
has recently shown a surprising re—
covery. but we doubt if the ﬁnancial
situation can reach a point where it
will exert any greater bearish in-
fluence than at present. We look
for considerable recovery from the
low values reached last week. The
up and dowu moVemenls of this mar—
ket this year has fully vindicated
our savior predictions We eypect
these wide fluctu'ltions to continue
until most of the grain is out of the
farmers’ hands. when the speculat-
ors having options in the grain will
be in full control of the situation
and ready for a substantial bull
movement. This movoment will come
sooner or later. Some authorities
differ as to the exact date. The gen-
eral consensus is that it will not
come before the ﬁrst of the year,
although somewhat higher levels
are expected to prevail by that time.
The big bull movement may be de-
ferred until next spring. all depend-
ing upon the whims of the specu-
lators, but come it will, and he
will be a wise farmer who lays his
plans to proﬁt by this advance-

CORN

a

CORN PRICES PER BIL. OCT '2. 1921

Goff: _'Petroll Vl Chicago I II. V.
'90. 2 Yel‘ow .61 Va! 15% .8296
“o. 3 Yellow .50 V,
'30 4- Yo low .. . .47'/.l

O emcee ONE vsnn aeoli—
 __ No.2 YcllJ No.8 YollJ No.5 “You.
ommn ' 1 02 I I

 

The big slump in the wheat mar-
ket last week did not affect corn as
much as expected by many. the mar-
ket developing independent strength
several days during that period.
Several large traders are quoted as

saying that they believed the bear-
ish conditions-have been discount-
ed and that the market will later-
go higher due to crop complaints.
Reports come from many sections
where husking has began showing
that the ear worm, rain and mold
have caused considerable damage
and producers believe final returns
will not substntiate the government
estimate of October lst of 3,163,-‘
063.000 bushels. which is nearly
231,000,000 bushels under the Sept.
lst estimate. While the corn mar-
ket was not very active last we‘k
there were indications that demand
was increasing. At the same time
supplies decreased. farmers appear-
ing to feel that prices were too low
and they did not care to market
their crop with them at present lev-

/ e‘s. There have been several bull-

ish factors at work in the’ market
for many weeks but heavy receipts
helped the bears force. prices down.
Now that farmers are holding their
crop these factors of a bullish na-
ture, which have been discussed in
the columns of M. B. F. the past few
weeks may have a chance to put the
prices up where they belong. They
are bound min the long run. _On
the opening day of the current week
the market at Detroit was inactive
and no change in price noted, but
at Chicago corb advanced.

 

 

 

 

OATS
1.5T PPICES (new) BU.. OCT. 12. 1921
Grade 77 M 'Detroit Vluclilcaool  V
'o. 2 Vl’bfte . . . .88 V2 .83 % .43 V:
"'n 3 Wb'te .83 .82
No. 4 White 

 

’ limiters oNI-r ‘vsnn ‘Aﬂoo_______
'No.2 White! No 3 wmw No.4 wnm

Dctrolt. ~I H I .59'/.  “56%;

 

The government’s Oct. lst report
shows some further loss in cats as
we expected, the total crop now be—
ing placed at 1.078.619.000 bush-
els which is 12 millions less than the
Sept. estimate. There is very little
doing in cats. and not likely to be
much life until some of the enor-
mous holdover is gotten out of the
way. The visible supply is said to
be the largest on record. Oats ap-
pear to be a poor crop the world
over, and considerable of our grain
may be required by foreign coun-
tries. At present export demand is
light.

 

um

 

l "'—

Ion-(u Weaker Chart for 00L 1.21

  

it. above Insight lin- wuu. below

WASHINGTON. D. C,. October 13,
1921.-—The cool dip came, as predict-
ed. near Sept. 30. on meridian 90, a.
little later‘ eastward. Temperature
forecasts were good for “last week in
September and ﬁrst week in October.
A general low temperature wave will
prevail on most parts of the contin-
ent during week centering on Oct. 18.
This will be the beginning of the new
cropweather condiitions that will pre-
vail for about five months. The ten-
dency will be toward less precipita-
tion. But some severe storms are
expected. during the next two weeks,

 

 

    

THE WEATHER FOR NEXT WEEK
As Forecasted by W. '1‘. Foster fOr The Michigan Business Farmer

v will be

probably near Oct. 15, 22 and 28.
These storms will cause some precip-
itation and may prevent much change
toward the dry, -
These indications are all favor-
able to good cropweathcr generally.
The famous Indian Summer weather
promises good for last week in Oc—
tober and first half of November, but
during the week centering on av. 15
the notorious November storms will
begin and continuously grow worse
to end of month. Of course all are
expecting the coming winter to be
more severe than the last one. I am
not yet ready to say how severe it
It is not usually good policy
to predict disaster out loud—except
in case of dangerous storms. In case
of severe droutb ahead of us it would
be harmful to publish. Best way
is to put out such damaging prodi
tlons privately. .

 

 

 
 
    
   
   
  

   

v- BYE

Rye was as hard hit as wheat lat
week, the price for No. 2 at Detroit
declining to 90c and at Chicago to
84c, making the declines for the two
cities 10c and 11c respectively. Chi-1
cago reports a heavy buying of fut-
ures, which is a good indication that
export business is increasing.

y—u—I—

BEANS

BEAN PRICE: PER cum. 001'. 12. 1912
and. Detroit chlcauol I. V.

0. II. P. ...... “I 5.1. $18
Rod Kidneys. .... 1.00
PRICES ONE YEAR AGO_ >

In. T“. _p._
3.00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..|

There are no bears in the bean
market. The feeling with regards
to the future of_this market is the
most optimistic it has been in years.
Following a perfectly natural decline
last week beans have again recovered
and advanced quite contrary to ex-
pectations. Frankly, we have not
expected to see much doing in this
market for some weeks following the
opening of the season. but the fact
that the market has held up and ad-
vanced in the face of normally heavy
receipts shows that the market has
inherent strength and good posibil—
ities. There are two \very bullish
factors in the bean deal this year.
One of them is the size of the crop
which is the smallest in over ten
years. Another is the unuuestion-
ably improved demand. There is
no theory about the better demand.
Grocers and restaurants in all 'sec-
tions report that people are eating
more beans now than they have in
years. The big canning companies
are again advertising the old-fash-
ioned “pork and beans” With a
certainty that more and more people
will take to beans as they are still
the cheapest and most nutritiOus
food that can be obtained. So we
are justiﬁed in believing that prices
will take the upward trend. Thirty
days ago we saw $5 beans in sight.
Now we think we can see still higher
prices, but we prefer to await the
developments of the next sixty days
before making a more deﬁnite state-
ment. Next week we will publish
a review of the bean situation :8
promised a couple of weeks ago.
Watch for it. You will ﬁnd it of
value to you in selling your crop.

 

 

/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

POTATOES
SPUDs PER CWT.. ocT. 12,_1_921

I Sacked! inn
“atrolt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6M
'l’ilcago . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.00
‘low York . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10
‘Ittsburo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.0.

PRICES ONE YEIH AGO

“scroll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .l 2.80

 

 

 

We are going to have more pota-
toes than we supposed. thirty days
ago, according to the Oct. lst esti-
mate. Last week we stated. as a 19-
sult of reports received from farm-
ers, our revised belief that the Oct.
1st estimate would show a. gain over
the Sept. lst. It did. The gain was
22.600.00 bushels, or a total of 345
million. This is ten million less than
produced in 1919 and the smallest
crop wiith one exception since 1913.
However, it is still large enough to
preclude the probability of fancy
prices- The market has held up roll
in the face of the heaVy receipts and
even advanced last week on the Chi-
cago market, much to the surprise
of the trade. The current week opens
with prices somewhat high ~r in Don
troit. We expect a temporary re-
action to lower levels. The govern-
ment's report is very bearish and
receipts at primary markets are very
large. Week before last, the De-
partment of Agriculture reports,
shipments were close to ten thousand
cars or nearly three times as many
as for the corresponding period of
last year. I Prices cannot hold up if
the movement continues st this rate.
In Michigan potet

    

 

 

ilﬂdﬁﬁﬁjr

 

ﬂnI‘AA-AAg_


   
      

  
  

 
 

 
  

"theircr

 

 

193.3 m

 

     

15‘ away  an a, o Juds-
m‘e'nt wouldjreveal”,:theafolly of it.
Why haven't we seine sixth sense to
tell us What to do in periods like
this? We cannot see higher potato
prices for some weeks. We look for
lower prices. Golder weather and a
consequent let-up in the movement
which we may not expect for at least
another thirty days will be the fac-
tors to stabilize the market and en-
courage higher prices.

 

HAY

Hay markets through the cast are
stronger than they have been for
some time in the past owing to the
small amount of hay of good qual-
ity being offered for sale and prices
are on the up grade. Western mar-
kets continue ﬁrm wiith receipts
about of the same volume as they
have been the past week. Dealers at
al points are having all kinds of
trouble searching the country for
No‘. 1 timothy and the greater part of
what they do ﬁnd is not for sale.
Standard timothy at Detroit is
worth 519 @ $20 per ton. with
the best grade $1 higher. At De-
troit. No 1 clover is $14©815 and
clover mixed $15@$16 per ton-
New York and other outside markets
range from $4 to $10 higher than
Detroit.

 

LIVE STOCK MARKETS

The greatly improved tone to the
general live stock demand of the
country at large, which was noted in
these columns, last week, has per-
sisted until the present writing; in-
deed. the market was stronger, in all
divisions of the trade at the close
of last week, than at any preceding
date during the summer and fall
months.

Small receipts of corn-fed cattle.
during the last half of September and
the first week in October. provided
for a complete clean-up of mature
beef supplies in the coolers of the
country; the result of these influ-
ences has been to gradually harden:
the market and sharpen the demand
for good killing cattle. The demand
for prime dressed best, of light to
medium weight. is more active and
dependable, just now, than at any
preceding date this year; Yearling
steers are, of course, in the most ac-
tive demand but buyers are not
bulking at heavy cattle in such a
disagreeable way as formally. Yearl-
ings bid fair to pass the 12-dollar
mark before long and the demand
for anything young, that carries
killing quality, is sure to be active
until after the holiday season has
passed. Stockers and feeders are in
active demand in all markets at
prices from 50 to 75 cents per cwt.
higher than on this date, last month.

The sheep and lamb trade is
sharing the prosperity in evidence
in the cattle department, and has
been frequently intimated in this
column, of late, seems to be on the
road to a more dependable business
during 1922. The wool market is
ﬁrming up- in good shape as cold
weather approaches and the meat.
tram this variety of domestic ani-
mals, in sympathy with other lines,
is selling higher than formerly. The
demand for feeding lambs is gain-
ing strength and activity every day,
as the season advances, the highest

IEW LAIP BIHIIS

9 4 0/9 A I ll

BEATS WW OR GAS

A new oil lamp that gives an
amazingly brilliant, soft, white
light. even better than gas or elec-
tricity, has been' tested by the U. 8.
Government and 35 leading univer-
sities 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
94 per cent air and 8 per cent com-
mon kerosene (coal-oil.)
_ The inventor, A. R. Johnson. 609
W. Lake St., Chicago, 111., is offering
to send a lamp on 10 days’F’REE
trial. or even to give one FREE to

 

’ "the first user in each locality who

 help himintroduce it. Write
him  forafull particulars. Also
5b"  haw roman set

M.

 
 
  

    
 

    
   

 

_ Gilli-gale season. 37.5“, per cwt.
for 'a' fine bunch of native origin.
Very few western lambs are coming,
lust now.

The Detroit packer, who recently
predicted 6~dollar dressed work,
seemed to be placing rather too
heavy a rate of discount on the fut-
ure of the live hog market. The
prevalence of cold weather has re-
cently lent a marked activity to the
demand for park and its products.
at retail and the moderate receipts
of live hogs that have come to hand,
have failed to replace the drain on
storage-house supplies. Packers
have been free buyers on the ad-
vancing market, competing with
shippers and helping to boost val-
ues. Shipping demand is more ac~
tive, just now, than on any preced-
ing date this year. Very few desir-
able pigs are finding their way in-
to the market, the inference being
that growers have corn enough to
feed out all of the young stock
that they have before sending it to
market.

 

FACTS ABOUT THE MICHIGAN
FLUID) MILK BUSINESS
(Continued from page 3)

eiforts to enlighten the farmers, as

shown by the following letter:

“Your publication in regard to the
relations between the milk producers and
diistrlbutors is worse than the breeding
of anarchy. If you knew the facts in
the milk business in Detroit as I do. and
know that the Detroit area is being
paid as much or more for their milk as
is paid anywhere in the United States,
and then have a so—called “farmers

friend“ publish articles as you have
caused to be printed, I want to say it is
ridiculous, I am not claiming the farm-
er is over-paid. But he is satisﬁed. His
milk market is the bag ready cash he
has had for two years, and what they
need is some one to tell them so. The
Milk Messenger announces that, and the
Michigan Business Farmer contradicts
and tells about the milk trust in Detroit.

“My advice to you is. get ﬁrst-hand
information or facts, and stay by the
truth. and they will all be your friends."
—-John Schlaﬂ. Fairchild Farms, Mt,
Clemens. m

The writer of the above owns a
farm in Macomb county, but his
principal occupation is being presi-
dent of the John Schlaff Creamery
Co., of Detroit. Mr. Schlaff is no
doubt a fine gentleman and we would
like in all sincerity to have him for
a friend. But if the price for that
friendship is the sacriﬁce of life-long
convictions we will have to struggle
along without it, for we cannot pay
the price. We do not blame Mr.
Schlaﬂ‘ for taking this position. As
long as he does not claim the farmer
is being over-paid, we take no of-
fense at his letter. He is merely
defending his business as we or any-
one else would do. But we hold the
prosperity and the happiness of the
farmers who produce this vital food
product far above the interests of
the Schlai! Creamery Company or
any other creamery company, and so
while we appreciate the motives
which prompts Mr. Schlaff and other
creamery owners to take umbrage at
the BUSINESS FARMER we cannot
permit them to move us from our
position.

Mr. Sch-lat is no doubt sincere
and believes he is entirely correct
when he says: “The Detroit area
is being paid as much or more for
their milk as is paid anywhere in
the “United States." Mr. Schlaff
could not have made any investiiga-
tion on his own account. or he
wouldn't have accused the BUSINESS
FARMER of not telling the truth. It
appears that he gets his authority
from the Milk Messenger, so is not
entirely to blame for having erron-
eous ideas and thinking the farmer
is satisﬁed with the prices he has
received the last nine months. In-
cidentally, we cannot refrain from
remarking here that if the Milk Mes—
senger persists in telling the distrib-
uting companies of Detroit and the
condensaries of Michigan that the
farmer IS satisﬁed and that “his
milk market is the best cash market
he has had in two years", it is mor-
ally certain that the distributors
will-never do any better by the farm-
ers until they are forced to.

In order to answer the charges
that the BUSINESS FARMER has

,misrepresented, the facts about the

milk price in Detroit and other ar-

‘ . see, we have compiled a table of fig-

‘hsving  paid in Chicago recently _

 

 

 

typical dairy states. The figures
are taken from the monthly report
of the Bureau of Markets and are as
authentic as can be secured.‘ We
challenge. Mr. Reed and Mr. Schlaff
or anyone else in the producerdeai-
or group to prove that these ﬁgures
are incorrect or unfair or that areas
to which they apply are not compar-
able areas.

Special attention is called to the
prices paid in New York, Chicago.
Cleveland, Cumberland, Md., and
Los Angeles. In all cases the price in
the latter three cities has been much
higher than in Detroit. In Cum-ber-
land, the farmers own the distribut-
ing business outright and have been
successful in securing cost of produc-
tion month in and month out. The
producers of Los Angeles own a
controlling interest in the largest
distributing business in the city, and
are able to control milk prices to a
very large extent. In all but two of
the last thirteen months both New
York and Chicago paid the farmers

 
 

L

 

$31.31* the
' lunar"; T035960; national
Copyright 1011 by joy
J. Reynolds Tobacco 0e.
.. “news—Islam N. G. smoke

119) '13'

higher prices than did Detroit. The
New York Dairymen’s League has
embraced a pooling plan which has
stabilized prices materially land has
brought larger returns to the farm-
ers, and the Illinois dairyme'n after
a loug and successful battle for an
equitable price appear to have got-
ten it.

,There may be reasons why under
the present methods of selling milk
in the Detroit area the farmer can<
not hope to receive a higher price in
comparison with other cities. But
if so, that is all the more reason why
the system should be reformed, and
a direct—from—i‘armer-to—consumer
plan put in operation.

As previously announced the ans
nual meeting of the Milk Producers‘
Ass’n will be held at the M. A. (3-.
October 18th, and affords a fine op-
portunity for open discussion of the
marketing question. The issue can-
not be dodged much longer, and the
sooner it is met the better it will be
for all the dairy farmers of Michigan.

  

   

F illiyour makin’s‘
papers with P. A.

GREATEST sport you know to pull out your
makin’s papers and some Prince Albert
and roll up a cigarette! That’s because P. A.
is so delightfully good and refreshing in a ciga-
rette— just like it is in a jimmy pipe! You
never seem to get your ﬁll—P. A.’s so joy’usly
friendly and appetizing.

Prince Albert will be a revelation to your
taste! N 0 other tobacco at any price is in its
class! And, it'rolls up easily because it’s crimp
cut and it stays put. It’s the best bet you ever
laid that you’ll like P. A. better than any
cigarette you ever rolled!

c « . ""‘i
And, if you have a pipe hankering, know
what Prince Albert can do for you!
can’t bite or parch. Both are cut out by our
exclusive patented process.

P.A.

Prince Albert I: sold in toppy red bags, tidy red
HM, deems pound and
and in the pound crystal glass humidor with em.

half pound tin humidore

Widener 1 ap.

 

AUCTION SALE

Having rented my farm will sell

41 awhile!) 116E? 41
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19th

at 1 o'clock, on the John Shaw farm.
3 miles east and 1 mile south of
Northville. Also tools, household

 

 

goods and horse.
MARTIN F. MILLARD, Prop.
NORTHVILLE, MICE.

 

 m In I!

.1

  

 

“ I... .W. .Loyeweﬂ.  l

 
 

Breeder-8’ Directory
to good advantage.
Run your ad. and
watch the returns
come in

WHAT HAVE YOU
TO OFFER?

 

 

 

 

#3500 is big money these 
You can win it See pageﬁ 

 

 

 
 
 


 

 

 

   
 
   
   

"A I.»
. b—

- "Wm. , .
lrunnmulllll . .DE‘ .’ ,
~....~.._g"‘nnnn. -\_;\: in" r/
V  2 w \ “a . '
. V. "K. limitless ‘. /.
:  ﬂlllll l/ ‘n

2- x\\ V

 
 
  

 
     

   

The man you buy your stoves and ranges and
furnaces from—where does he get them? He
orders from the factory, from a manufacturer’s
price list. Why don’t you order from the
factory, from a manufacturer’s price list?

You can. No trouble at all. You go to town
after your stoves and ranges and furnaces any-
way. Just as well get them from the factory
yourself. Write us and we ship from the factory
here direct to your town. You’ll get unbeaten
quality and think of the saving you’ll make by
dealing with the Kalamazoo factory?

Suppose we send you a manufacturer’s price
list so you can see for yourself how low stoves
and ranges and furnaces sell at factory prices.
Look through our large assortment of stoves,
ranges and furnaces. Find what you like.
Look at the prices.

'saving to you.

and remain our satisﬁed customers.

articles and tell their neighbors, too.

  
   
 

 ’ factory.

0n These Articles,

articles all sold at a saving to you.

back guarantee.

- I “.
Kalamazoo ‘0 Mail the coupon or a postal
Stove Co., Mfrs. ~‘Catalog N01777 -

Kalamazoo, Mich. . \
Gentlemenz—Please send me your

cm Big Catalog No. 777 \

‘Namevcc'oncooonooo- o n a o a o u o - loco-coo...-

  
 

Q

  

AddreﬁtIoC0......U.I....ICUOOCOOOOOOI....O‘..C.


I V v
edmorotor-couooovooooo-ucovo'ouoto'oolojop,

 

 

 

 

  
  
      
        

 Get It from the Factory
Yourself

The Factory Price Is Always the Lowest Price

Then put the quality up alongside similar
designs in your locality and note the difference in price—the

Hundreds of Thousands Buy This Way

Once they learn how easy
it is to buy from the manufacturer’s price list, how much they
save on one article alone, it’s little wonder that they send for more
That’s largely the way we
have built up such an enormous “Kalamazoo Direct To You”
business—by word of mouth advertising among our customers.

But there’s no need for you to wait to be told. Get our catalog
and price list and see for yourself how low prices really are. Decide
to make your dollar buy more by dealing the Kalamazoo way.
And besides you have the satisfaction of dealing direct with the

Get Our Money Saving Prices

Kitchen Cabinets, Paints, Shoes, Sanitary Indoor Closets, Washing
Machines, Fireless Cookers, Sewing Machines and many other
Pay cash or use our easy

installment plan. Everything sold on thirty days’ trial and money

Cash or Easy Payments
24-Hour Shipments

~ \KALAMAZOO STOVE CO.

Manufacturers
" Kalamazoo, Mich.
Q .

“A Kalamaol .

"’l'l'a t i ('7 N'ldz'k

    
   
 

- - "‘ '.'.. .
 i \,A . ‘:*.£‘.,, a,
no ‘i \W \ End-p" 35.-
ém ‘ > m‘  *7"

 
    

 
          
    

 

frﬂﬁ.‘ _ 3‘ V x .

-v._ ‘

\i

'5‘ ‘ ,.
Mor‘

 

an. 4

Save money
on these
Kalamazoo articles

Shoes

Indoor Closets
Paint

Roofing

Sewing Machines
Washing Machines
Aluminum Ware
Kitchen Kabineto
Fencing
Congoleum Rugs
Cream Separators
Dishes
Phonographa
Furniture

and other

 

Base

    
   
   
    
   
   
 

  

 

     
     
   
 
 
 
    

 
  
 
 

  
 
 
 

 

cook Stoves '-
and Ranges

    
   
 
  
 
 
 

 
 
 
  
  

   
   
 
  

Pipeless ~
Furnace

$699§

Complete

  
   

   
   
    

Too

    
     
   
     
        

today and ask V for

      
   
    
   

 

 

litmgistx T? (:l

Direct to “on” ..

 
 

