
 

 

[An Independent

Farmer's Week”? Oimedxand

Edited in ichigan

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921

 

*—

5 ~

F WAYNE county has her way the bal-
‘ once. of power in the‘Michigan state leg-

-  will paw from, the hands of the
rural-districts .into the hands of the cities.
’ ' Peeved because. the state board of equaliza-
_ ‘ ‘tlon boosted Wayne county’s valuation to
within a few hundred millions of where it
belongs, her politicians have announced

Constitution which will increase Wayne
, county ’s representation in the lower house
*0! the legislature from fourteen ,to approxi-

- mater thirty members. , -
. ' ’The Constitution provides that the, house
'  ,  representatives shallconsist of “not less

" “\mémbers”. A legislative enactmentadopted
‘ in  the’total nuinber- at one hund-
red where it  since remained. Appor-
tionnient of these , one hundred representa-
tives is made’upOn thebas’m' of the U. S.
census, the idea  divide! the state
into representative  having "as

* ‘-ne‘a".rIy as [may be”, an eQua‘l-number of
. inhabitants. It is obvious, therefore, that
,as population increases er decreases, the
- ratio of representation must also change.
But there is ‘a clause in the Constitution
which prevents the! legislature from carry-
ins. with, exactspirit of equal representa-

~~  .To this clause ’we shall refer later.

 

 “      2,810,“
r   an:  .a‘ “Populatianbasls, 1.
23,102i'people "were entitled 13°- '

 than; '
‘ 'Z‘Ttme 1%  , new in the, state legislature.
‘ ' ﬁat mac  not. be follov‘ved out
“4" exactly .  the Constitution expressly
' states the ‘_‘ county’shall bo,,.entitled
to aseparate representative when it has. at-
tained a population equal to a moiety (or
one-half) the ratio of representation.” The
moiety of the ratio of representation based
on the, 1910  was 14,051 people,
‘ so that every county" having ‘ 
people was entitled to a separate repre-
sentative. . With only“ one hundred repre-
 to apportion, it is at once ap-
parent» that in. order to give every county
_' having 14,051-or more population one repre-
. sentative, it would he-necémary to deprive
" ﬂle'larger chnters cl  with'a
‘  p311: «if—their 
' d  Since 1905
» in ".1
t ~out the spiritoflﬂm. constitution 
19,10   Burma
1' i  
* ,Jm‘ use ”

 

 

that they will submit an amendment to the

 products except cottonseed

91,3 a. ampted  '“
3’ s lawlto the state   ,

By the EDITOR

ﬂed with the .present proportion of rauc-
sem‘ntion which they enjoy in the legis-
lature. But Wayne has had an entirely
unfounded suspicion for several years that
the rest of the state was trying to take
advantage of her limited representation and
give her the worst end of legislation and
taxes. Wayne county has experienced an
unprecedented growth in population and
property values, but she has persistently
fought every effort of the state tax authori-
ties to‘compel her to pay taxes in propor-
tion ,to her huge increases in valuation.
Heretofore, she has been satisﬁed with put-
ting np a stiff ﬁght against the increases
in her valuation knowing that she was
bound to be defeated in the end, but now
it looks as if she were in earnest and really
intended to force the rest of the state to
give her enough representation in the leg-

 

 

Farm Produce Rates Drop
Ten Per Cent

ICHIGAN farmers will proﬁt by the
latest drop in ‘ freight rates an-

‘ nounced a week ago by the Ass ’n of Railway

Executives. ,The,}teductjon amounts to ten
per cent and applies to the entire, United
States with the exception of traﬁic moving
wholly within‘ New England.

'“ The new rates which were expected to go

into eﬂect today are applicable to carload
lots of wheat, corn, oats- other grain, beans,
fld‘ur and meal, hay, straw and alfalfa,
manufactured tobacco, cotton, cotton-seed
oil and
cottonseed meal; citrons fnuits, other fresh
fruits, potatoes, other fresh vegetables,
horses and mules, cattle and calves, sheep
and goats, hogs, poultry, eggs, butter,
cheese, and wool.

While the actual savings to farmers and
other shippers of farm products of this

.state‘ as a result of the reduction cannot be

estimated’ With any degree of accuracy, it
is beﬁéved. that they will amount to up-
wards of a million dollars.
Farm Organizations Take Credit
‘ Credit for the freightarate drop is taken
by several national farm organizations,

I prominent “among; which is the farm bu-
    the time the announcement of
 f‘freightmfcuts in the western states was

made, thé‘A. ’F.’ B. F. announced that it

 ,j awonldu'ndOubleits‘ eﬂm'ts ,to'secure a re-
,'    the.  - country. On Nov.

 ﬁled a petition with

.\

  g Commission ask-

"  ﬁve  rate.

 with their urban neighbor, Wayne.
are proud of her tremendous growth and

Michigan ~Cities Would Control Legislature

Wayne, County Revives Movement for Reapportionment of Legislative Districts

lslature  dictate state policies and the
apportionment of taxes.

Wayne county is entitled to some addi-
tional representation and the legislature
is already empowered to give it to her, but
whenshe talks about submitting an amend-
ment to the constitutiOn to wipe out the
moiety clause which gives sparsely settled
communities a voice in state government
she is asking for something to which she
is not entitled and which the rest of the
state shOuld vigorously oppose her having.
Many Counties Will Lose Representative

The new census gives Michigan a popu-
lation of 3,668,412. This increases the
basis of representation in this state from
28,000 to 36,668, and the moiety from
14,000 to 18,334. Therefore, under the
present Constitution no county having a
population of less than 18,334 will any
longer be entitled to a separate representa-
tive. This means that many of the counties
which have had One representative since
1905 will lose him and will be combined
with some other county to make up a rep—
resentative district.

Such counties include: Emmet, Cheboy-
gan, Antrim, Alpena , Osceola, Oceana,
Newaygo, Mecosta, Midland. It also means
that if the strict letter of the constitution
is followed out the following counties which
have had two or more representatives will
be cut to one: Lenawee, Monroe, Ottawa,
St. Clair, Allegan, Washtenaw, Berricn,
Bay, Marquette, Houghton, Kalamazoo.
Kent would have probably five; Saginaw
two; Genesee, three; Oakland, two.
Wayne’s share under this plan would be
somewhere between twenty and twenty-ﬁve
members. But this isn’t enough, she saysf
She has one-third of the population and she
wants one—third of the repfwentation, and
that is the object of the constitutional
amendment which she proposes to submit.

It is needless to say that the rural coun-
ties of Michigan want to be entirely fair
They

wealth. They recognize in Detroit a pow-
erful asset to the entire state. They want
Detroit~ and Wayne county to have their
just representation in the legislature and
they want them to pay their just share of
the taxes. But they‘do not propOSe to give
them the power they covet to dictate to the
rest of the state. L

The wisdom of protecting the small from
the domination of the great has long been
recognized. This is as true of local politi-
cal divisions as it is of nations. In most of
the states the pe0ple have wisely written
theirjconstitution to give the sparsely set- ,
tled" communities a vote in the state gov-
ernment and to prevent the larger indus-

trial centers from usurping the politial

Film! 91 the: . er communities.- Such is.
thei-priﬁdplojouhe issue a stain. ' -~

 

 

 


 
 
 
 
   
  
  
  
 
   
    
  
  
   
  
  
 
 
  
 
    
   
 
 
 
     
   
    
    
   
   
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
    
   
    
  
 
 
   
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
   
   
  
 
   
   
  
    
 
  
  
  
     
  
 
     
 
  
   
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
  

:I GAN BEAN STANDING ‘
{MICHIGAN .bean .crop stands
iitihis year as the best propo-
on the farmer had says the
man Elevator Exchange in
l'g‘but that the price to the 0
" ‘_ for the past two months, has—
‘ .~the average yield of beans per '
and the average yield of wheat
ore for the state has brought
tamer about $48 an acre on the
‘and about $15 an acre for
0, The fellow who had
this year‘has fared consider-
better than that farmer who,
‘one.
average yield of beans in Mich-
is (19 or 20 bushels to the acre.
eare yields of 30 to 35 bush-
W to the acre. The average yield
“3* " wheat in Michigan is around 15
11811018 to the acre.
For the past two months the price
id to the producer for Michigan
- has been about $4 a hund-
which means $2.40 a bushel.
a yield of 20 bushels to the
“the return to the farmer at the
‘ve price has been about $48 an
Wheat at an average yield of
ushels to the acre at prevailing
2 has returned about $15 an
to the producer. With both
_ beans and wheat a higher or
 yield, of course, would change
e- return per acre to the producer.
The effect of the presént price of
beans has resulted in nearly half the
diligent bean crop going to market
thin the past six weeks. Receipts
1: many points have been two to
ghee times 'what they ordinarily
: and it is very likely that the
acreage will be increased ~ma—
rﬁllynext year.
Michigan is again the nation’s
_ding been producing state. Ca1-
‘ _‘pmiaheld this proposition for two
 during the war period, but has
damned behind Michigan once
min '

1_Tlfe Michigan Elevator Exchange
,mill-prdbably handle 175 carloads of
beans for its membership during
November, according to its estimate.

'HMS OFF TO THE \VASHI'NGTON
' FARM BUREAU LOCAL”
E ELECTION of L. C. Kamlow-
’ske‘, to the board of directors -
of. the Michigan State Farm Bu-
Elevator Exchange, has to-
 ‘attention upon the splendid
l‘ts which have been obtained
:fhe washington Farm Bureau Lo—
oidvhich Mr. Kamlowske has
n,manager since the founding of
, organization.
alluring this period the business of
3113 local has increased three—fold,
ﬁ‘giresent aggregating an average of‘
111; $10,000 per month. The an-
mu business includes the handling
of about 1200 tons of coal, 30,000
'uehels of wheat, 3 carioads of rye,
 the grinding of 1400 tons of
' The Washington local has about
 . Omembers, but does business
«. th over 500 people. The ware-
‘ house capacity is 15 carioads. Since
' asing the elevator, the Farm
ureau has made new investments
,1 In the we of structures and re-
»p‘lacements amounting to $3500.
“~‘S’l‘he success of the Washington,
Farm Bureau Local,” says one fami1-’
, 371th its accomplishments, “can be
Wham to various causes, the

ng system, prompt service to ~~
one, a square deal at all times,
' the, co—operation and conﬁdence
we members and 'board of di-
/ ‘ 9

 
 

 
 

local has established a credit
and enioys the privilege of
reserve discounts oWith the
, pin’g system in vogue, which
 been installed by seven of

 
 

  

 
  
  
 
 
 

  

   

  
 

(1 this appeals to the big
,nrith whom-r they do, busi-

 

   

year.

 

, and.98 .

Kamlowske, se'c’y-treas. and mana-
ger; .ELtD. Case, R. CnPotts, S. W.

Haines, Jesse Shales, Albert Lucht‘
malln, Chas. Schocke; ' ‘

MICHIGAN GETS, $2,249,532 FED-
 . ERAL BONDS  ‘
HE kPASSAGE 'of the Good Roads
Bill by the Senate unanimous
vote made $75,000,000 available

for road construction in. the states

for the remainder‘of this ﬁscal
The allotment to be made by
the Federal Bureau of Roads'is as
follows: ~ , .g
- Alabama, $1,553,420.67; Arizona,
$1,053,281.44; Arkansas, o$1,254,-,
142.20; California, _,$2,462,098.53;
Colorado, $1,341,175.69; Connecti-
cut, $480,897.78; Delaware, $365,-
625.; Florida, $886,825.69; Georgia,’
$1,997,957.58; Idaho, $938,536.68;
Illinois, $3,246,281.07; Indiana, $1,—
958,955.41; Iowa, , $2,102,872.74;
Kansas, $2,102,281.51;
$1,517,178.68; Loui‘siana‘, $996,-
989.64; Maine, $693,160.25; Mary-
land, $640,629.01; Massachusetts,
$1,096,176.04; Michigan, $2,249,-
532.43; Minnesota, $2,123,597.07;
Mississippi, $1,294,906.22; Missouri,
$2,448,128.62; Montana, $1,546,-
885.82; Nebraska, $1,581,189.50;
Nevada, $953,436.78; New Hamp-
shire, $365,625; New. Jersey, $942,-
870.95; :New Mexico, $1,189,823.34;
New York, $3,696,447.97; North Car-
olina, $1,709,333.90; North Dakota,
$1,164,714.42; Ohio, $2,823,004.05;
Oklahoma, $1,752,339.44; Oregon,
$1,182,663.90; Pennsylvania, $3,-
398,953.97; Rhode Island, $365,-
625; South Carolina, $1,061,237.34;
South Dakota, $1,204,060.31; Tenn—
esee, $1,647,692.24; Texas, $4,425,-
172.41; Utah, $849,417.21; Vermont

$365,625; Virginia, $456,828.47; W. '

Virginia, $802,359.77; Washington,
$1,108,709.77; Wisconsin, $1,894,-
815.86; Wyoming, $934,617.63“,
The 'appropriation of $15,000,000
for the improvement of rNational
Forest roads is also included in this
bill. Administration of the: federal
highway act is vested in the Secre-
tary of Agriculture, and under him
the Bureau of Public Roads. Each

state must select a connected road'

system not exceeding 7 per cent of
its road mileage for imprOvement‘
with federal aid. Both' interstate
highways and intercounty highwdys
receive federal aid. '

I

HARIETTA GRANGE BAZAAR *‘

E ARE requested to» announce

that the Grange Aid.of Hari—,
’etta Grange No. 1086, Harietta, ‘

Mich, will hold a bazaar Dec. 1st,
to secure funds to build their new

Kentucky, I

' guments in favor of basing the

V poses.

‘pos‘e‘:

\. I ‘

hall. This is a‘ most werthy under-
taking and we have no doubt_but
that’most of the Grangers and other

farmers of western Wexford county ’
will turn out and help the ladies .to '

make theirr'bazaar the success .that
it deserves to- be. a .

All other Granges of the , state
who desire to aid in this cause are

asked to contribute such articlesa‘s» ~‘
~they can-for sale’ at the bazaar.-

Shipments should, be made-at once
to insure receipt of goods‘by Dec. 1.
SHEEP HUSBANDBY  
HE NUMBER of sheep in Amer-.
ica has decreasedfrom 52,500,-
000 head in 1910 to less than
35,000,000 head in 1920, according

to gatements made before the Unit-
ed States Finance Committee at

tariff hearings by representatives of

the National Sheep and Wool Bur-
eau of America. .

J. FuWalker of Ohio, member of
the executive committee of the bu-'
reau, and J. B. Wilson of Wyom-
ing, its vice—president, vigorously at-
tacked the ad valorem feature of the
Fordney Tariff Bill in their state—
ments. to the Senate Finance Com-
mittee, and asked that it be elimin—
ated. ' ’ ' .

They presented comprehensive ar-
duty
on the clean content rather than on
the grease, and quoted the costs of
growing wool here and in foreign”
countries calculated to show that 33
cents per‘pound on the clean content
basis is the minimum duty that will
afford the sheep industry in the
United States sufficient protection
to prevent its destruction.

_——-———t————— ‘ 7.-
MICHIGAN GETS $5,000,000 IN
WAR MATERIALS FOR ROADS

PPROXIMATELY $160,000,000
. worth of surplus war materials,
" turned over by the War Depart-
ment to the Department of Agricul- ‘
ture,~have been distributed through '
the Bureau of Bublic Road to the
various states for road-building pur;
Under the Wadsworth-Kahn bill
this surplus. war material is sent to
the states with the sole provision,
that it be used only for road—build-
ing purposes, A vast accumulation
of “machinery, equipment, supplies,

K‘and-‘motor vehicles that was to have

been used in France has thus been
diverted tea useful peace-time pur-

Included in the supplies distribut-
ed among the states are 27,198 me-
‘tor vehicles, mostly trucks; 172 1000-
motives of various sizes; 25,000
gross tons of rails; more-than 4,500,-

, Hillsdale Closes Tuberculosis- Campaign

OSCOW township, in Hillsdale
County, Michigan, has the dis—
tinction of being the first town-

ship in the United States in which
all breeding cattle have been test—
ed for tuberculosis. This was made
possible by an intensive drive'against
bovine tuberculosis which was wag-
ed the iast week iii October and the
first week\ in November by thirty
federal veterinarians. ,

‘On arrival in the count each
veterinarian‘was assigned to a cer-
tain section, usually one half town-

most being an eﬂiﬂie’nt hock-4111p, and afarmer from that district \

secured to drive him. Work‘ prog-
ressed rather slowly at first. but
gained in popularity and momentum
daily. By the "and ot— the second
week 2,339 herds bomprising 15,737

"cattle had been/tested and 375 react- .
,are‘"3,1'9‘0_ herds tested '

ors located. r,

In all there
in the county up" to Nov. 15th and:
applications coming to the Farm Bu-
reau office _ever'y day ",from those

~ who did not test. Thor-ears now 93.5

per cent of all of the he in the“

the: percentage will, b g ',

county tested." ' It is believed . that,

The entire campaign was very suc-
cessful, in the opinion of "all concern-
ed and the Bureau of Animal Indus:
try have demonstrated what canbe
done to aid in the eradication of this

disease from which 11 percent of_._

the swine and nearly 3 per cent of
the cattle in the United States, any
affected. It will also tend to reduce
the infection in the human as pear-
1y one-third o. . the children get it by
drinking mil from affected cows.
This movement will undoubtedly
save the :farmereqit Hillsdaie coun-
ty. thousands‘of dollars as after dis-
posing of the affected animals they
are going‘to be very careful in pur-

chasing breeding stock. A campaign. 8
_will ..now be _put on to make [the -

stock" of. this'county second..to none‘
in quality. The-.coamty is already
 'asphaving' as good swinegas
can be found" and‘it'willnot be long"

19°“)? 6. thew same/win, be said (it we
. cattle:  .  H , , i,

r The Hillsd'aiei County, ,‘Farm‘ Burs?
can has prompt , z; directed 
work fromthe‘ first but i "

  

x‘

t would not 

,.000 pounds .of‘ powder]. and _ nearly

'1o,ooo_tons or 'r.--N. T; »

A compilation” .showiifg total de-
vil-iveriesof ,war material  the yar-
ious states upte July 1, last, place!
the value of machinery, equipment,
and/.sappliés so delivered at $30,-
648,799; or motorveh'icles, $74,730,-
.424‘. The totalvalue of deliveries, to
the states up“ to that date Was $117,-

110,771. That figure did not include ~f

matély $f1,000',000'which was re-

‘material to the: value of» approxi- 

*tained by the Department of Agricul- ‘

ture, largely for . forest road K work
which, is not dope, by the state. Also,

it «is believed that the states {haul

receivedﬂn additi'on"t‘o the amOunt
above. mentioned approximately $5,-.
000,000 worth of material! shipped
by the War Department from the
various armycamps’ and not report;
ed by the ‘states as delivered.
the latter metribution' Michigan
ceived $4,648,320, worth of. material.

 

LIVE STOCK MARKETING PLAN 
HE ,PLAN of the Farmers" Live V.

f Stock Committee of 15 for es-

tablishing in the United States -‘

a national co-operative live stock
marketing system as a means of im-

ketink live stock has been approved
by the producers’ representatives,
according to the American ‘Farm
Bureau Federation.

' proving the present methods of mar-. ’

I
i
l

V,
3.

Of”:
re- ”

l

i

i
i.
i,
i

, /
l

‘9 ‘ .
At the national live stockproducy ‘ I
ers ratification conference held at ‘0"

Chicago, November 10 and 11,, at-
tended by live stock producers" rep-

resentatives from‘ Texas to Minty}, I
0 ‘ c :

sota and Idaho to Ohio, the rep

of the Farmers' Live Stock Markeb' I

ing Committee 0,245 was-unanimous;-

ly adopted and with-1 scarcely a

change. _K‘ . _ v' _' ,_
Michigan representatives at the

oral manager of the Michigan State
Farm Bureau, and C. J. Miller of
Union City andE. E. Compson of
Lansing, president and secretary,
respectively, of the Michigan Live
Stock Exchange. - '

The Farmers’ Live Stock Market-
ing Committee of 15 was appointed
by President Howard of the, American
Farm Bureau Federation last Janu-
ary. Before submitting its report to

f.
i.'«
i

i

1'.

meeting were Clark L. Brody, gen-~ ,

X.
3
i
I
i

I

the ratification’conference» the com-» 1
mittee held some seven conferences;n
which were milestones in gasf‘miany.,~2 
months or constant/study offt‘h‘e‘ live  ~

stock situation: The ‘ committee’s?

plan for, nation (So—operative market‘-
ingpi live stock containsfour"teat—
ures: - I ’ ' ' ,,

1. _The establishment; of 
erative producers’ Live Stock Com-

   

mission Associations' at terminal.
markets. ' v, C r g
2. The organization 01‘s. Nation- 7

al Live Stock ’Producers'

tion,“whose. board of directors shall;

{split the plan into effect and direct
itsworking. ‘ - .. '

3.

Associa: ‘l ‘
I

The establishment of Produce  .

ers’, Stocker and Feeder Companies ;

in Connection with the
Commission Associations. '
4.

Terminal '

The establishment of co—oper— ,

ative live stock‘sh’ipping associationr ;

at shipping points. where available
,business will justify and» local sent-
iment Will generally endorse them.
FEDERAL LAND BANKS IN-
' ' 'CREASE LOANS.

‘ a

i

men MAY IST last, the Federai‘l‘

Farm Loan Bureau has sold 1 0

- million dollars of.bondslthrou£h
its twelve banks, and over
'member associations.
 32323138. closed a total “of”
' , -, _«ain. loans, in,  st,
$12,500,000, and. ' ‘
$12,407,400. from;ch

 

 

 

  
  

  

mattress
Ila. ‘ '

in i 8  I,

 
  
 

I

I 4,000   i
In July the,

    
  
  
     
 
   
 
  


 

y

 

 

 

the nature of an actual application. ‘ q
. In view‘ of the millions which have bee

loaned in mid and far western states, this
lack of interest on the part of Michigan garm-
utes

ers seems very strange.  Gray at
it to a general unfamiliarity with the a , ,

primarily to the lack of need for such assist-
ance. It is his belief that the great ma-
' jority of farmers in this state who are good
for loans are having. no difﬁculty 'in getting
their wants supplied througi their local
metropolitan correspon-

bankers and their
dents. ‘

' 'There is [no reason why-the farmers of the
state should not be fully advised as to tl'llS
source of credit, as the columns of the farm

press have been full of articles upon the sud
~ ject. Many farmers do not yet 'seem to clear

ly understand that ,they‘jcannot borrow direct
Asstated before ap-
plications must be made through their local ._
banks or some co-operatiVe association of ,
‘ Loans cannot be

from the Corporation.

which they are members. h
made through private banks, according to Mr

Gray.. Applicants for loans must be able to
provide the same security as would «be re-.
quired by any “banking institution. in other
words, a farmer whose credit is no godd. at his
local bank cannot borrow from the Finance
Corporation.,.. The funds of this corporation
are available only in cases where local banks
 cannot or will not loan to accredited farmers.

g.

.r’

bushel of wheat or corn or potatoes purchased
about the same quantity of nails, binder twine,
eta, one year as another. ' SuclkfluctuatiOns
as occurred in the proportion were slight and
unimportant. Consequently, the tanner could
ﬁgure with some degree of correctness upon
his year-to—year ability to buy of the things he
needed from the crops he raised. But the
War changed all that. It sent the price of
one commodity; mocketihg. Another clinﬂied
leisurely, and w on allhad reached thQ' peak
they descended even more irregularly than
they had advanced. Farm products declined
.the most. rapidly. As a result the farmer has
faced an extended period of time when his
purchasing power was at the lowest point in
his history. So much forr '

of the situation. ' _.
The estent'of the disturbance in the econom-

ic equih'b'rium is well Lillustramd by ﬁgures

‘ recently. put out .by_ the Department of Agri-
culture. These “ﬂgu'res shoyv comparisons be-
 tween increasesfinjthe. production. of comm
ities, increases: In 4110

 
    

 

 j creases in . selling  pur-
‘ 1.113351181119938"
'91 ' ‘ 

  

  

.CCORDI'NG to ’Mr. Wm. J. Gray, chair-
A man of ﬁle agricultural loan agency for.
 ,  less than twenty-ﬁve inquiries have
been .received at his oﬂice concerning the
funds available to farnxers through the Y War
Finance Corporation. ’None ‘of thesawere in

 Instances of How

  EVERYONE knows the, war raised
’ havoc with prices. For years there had
been a more or less constant proportion be-
tween the prices of leadingcommidities. I A

a general summary

‘ _

cost of iproduotionrkin.‘ ’

'" Slow  ‘ “inSeeking War."

. r    of Credit Need Given as Reasons for Lack of Interest

In the west where banks are hard pressed for
funds and interest rates high\there is a cry-
.. ing need~ for this kind of assistance, but in
Michigan where money is comparatively plen-
tiful and farmers comparatively prosperous,
’the need is proportionately less.

Are Bahks Unfriendly?

At the same time this need is net entirely
absent. A‘few farmers have ; reported to us
that their local bankers are not able to supply
their wants and in many cases are ignorant of
the War Finance Corporation and not at all
anxious to become informed concerning it.

One does not like to accuse the banks of in-
diﬂ’erence when farmers are suffering for lack
of funds, and we do not believe it is fair to

J

t

 

 

STATE HIGHWAY PLANS FOR 1 922 -

OAD BUILDING will commence earlier

next year than over before in the his-

’ tory of the State Highway Depart- 7
ment, and many of the roads closed for
construction in' April will be ready for use
during the summer instead of being closed
throughout the season-as has been the us-
ual condition in the past. Specifications for
the roads to be will be ready for bids in
De‘cember or January. All contracts will
be let early enough so that actual road
building can Commence the first of April.
The state will build a total of 645 miles of
road next year. Of this 431 will be gravel
and '214' will be pavement. The cost will
be $13,250,000. In case the federal aid is
increased, as is expected, the mileage will
be increased and an additional $2,500,000 ,
used: ’ . .

 

 

Increases in the cost of production of cer-
tain farm products during the years 1918 and
1920 are shown by the following ﬁgures, 1918
being 100) : '.

Wheat Potatoes Milk Hay Cattle
One acre One acre 100 lbs. 100 lbs. 100 lbs.
Minn New York Wis. Mo, N ebr.
1918 182 142 187 189 168
1920 212 229 247 106 . 118

The wholsesale price of all commodities as
compared with 100 'per cent in 1913, Was 196
in 1918, 243 in 1920 and in" July,1921, was
148.,Wholesale prices of farm products were
'220 in 1918, 218 in 1920 and 115 in July, 1921,
, that while farm products were 24 per
cent higher in 1918 than all other commodities
they were 25 per cent lower in 1920 and 33
per cent lower inJuly, 1921. .

The income. of certain types of farms as
compared with other kinds of business was
as follows, (1913 being 100):

Eastern Com Wheat Standard U. S.

Dairy Belt 01! Co., Steel

Farms Farms Farms N. Y. Corp.
1918, 149 174 196 177 145
1920 122 63 73 ’  243 129

The power of farm products for

tiesii‘sfig’iyen! as follows: I

‘   years, coinpared with other commbdi-

,  A . Meat ,Wh’eat; M Cloths a Building
,  ~ ~ Animals _. , ducts Clothing Materials
_ .1318; n98  153$ V 112 r 122 77
.' _,:1’9a1.~' ' '74. a. .97 - -733  m 13.5 ,

  

  
  
   

   clip/pricesduriggﬂeptember the cents . . .- . . _, .
 average of  commodities .stoodat 52 per ,cenb , One (year ago prices at these points wer‘
'  ,Wmleveln Farmerproduets ' ,$2@2.l  Presque Isle ‘ $1.?5@1.8,0-’* ”

 

I oved :up-
,‘rh Xi: ‘3 ‘1"  hily

the Great War Upset Our Economic Balance VI

.. 1.50; Greeley,‘-Golo., $1; Idaho Falls, Ida,

    
   
  
   
   
    
   
   
   
  
    
   
    
  
   
   
   
  
   
      
 
 
   
  
  
   
  
  
 
 
 
   
    
  
   
 
  
  
    
   
 
   
  
  
     
   
  
 

bring any such acﬁusation upon the rank and
ﬁle of Michigan bankers. However, it may -
be, and\ the evidence seems fairly conclusive ‘
that some banks are failing to take an interest
in this matter because it means a certain loss
of revenue to them. In many sections bank» 
ers have no hesitancy in charging farmersﬂ j
twelve per cent or more for money. So long
as they can put up the claim that money is
scarce and they themselves have to pay high
for it' they get by with their usury, but they ,'
would not dare to borrow through the Finance * '
Corporation at the ﬁxed rate of ﬁve per cent "
and re-loan that money, at more than seven, .
the rules of the corporation being that. no bank _
shall charge more than two per cent for its ser-
vicesin this connection.

The Business Farmer is anxious to see the.
farmers of this state get their share of the
War Finance Corporation ’s funds, if they
need it. In any case where a farmer considers
himself good afor a loan and his local bank
refuses to take care of him at a reasonable
rate of interest, the farmer should immediate—
ly" report the case to us. With the funds of
the Finance Corporation now available there
is no reason why any farmer in Michigan
should not be able to borrow up to the limit
of his ﬁnancial responsibility at a rate of in-
terest not to exceed seven per cent. It should
be borne in mind, however, that loans will only‘
be made for certain purposes having to do with
current expenses, marketing of crops and feed-
ing of livestock. Money will not he leaned for
making permanent, ﬁxed investments, such as
buying land, building, etc. A fuller explansﬂ"
tion of the exact purposes for which loans will 
be made will appear in a later issue. '

own at 120. Farm products have now yielded 
the palm to the metal’s group as‘worst 01f in '
wholesale prices.

nk Higher 

Michigan Spuds Ra
~ m Price
AFACT which should give Michigan pota-
to growers much encouragement is the
higher prices which they are receiving in coms -
parison with most of the other potato states?"~ ‘
On November 14th, so reports the US. Bureau’ » v
of Markets, Grand Rapids, Michigan, was pay- 
ing farmers $1.60@$1.65 per'cwt, which was -' ’
only ten cents less than the normally high New 2
York market, ten cents more than the usually '
higher Maine market, the same as the Minne-
sota market, thirty-ﬁve to forty cents higher -
than "the Wisconsin market and sixty to sev-i 
enty cents higher than Colorado and Idaho
markets.
The week previous Grand Rapids paid more
than any other commercial section, in the
country with the exception of Rochester,” N.
Y., prices on that date, for the various mar?
kets being as follows: ' . . - '
Rochester, N. Y., $1.85; Presque Isle, $1.5]r
@$1.,56; Grand Rapids, $1.65@1.70; Minnesf
sota, $1.50@$1.60; gWaupaca, Wis, $1.25,

 

  
    
       
     
   
  

   
  
  
 
 
  
 

  
   
  
 
  
   

   

 
  

      

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access ,0,  $3.99;


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An independent ‘
III-Ema Weem Owned end
aired in chm-n

. .2

a
i

' '; wwwaﬁ

raw .

 

 

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921

' Published every Saturday by V
THE RURAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. IM.
Mt. Clemens Michigan '

 

Bmented mm. York Chlolld. St. Louis m1 mnneepolil by

the Assooisted Farm Papers. Incoporated _
.. >~ GEORGE M. SLOCUM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  . . .PUBLISHEB
 FORREST A. LORD ..xéé6.l., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..unrron
A -‘ f ' O ATE : -
Frank R. Schalck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .S.Assistant Business Mantle?

‘ K siker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . don Manner

H - F mh’ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “Hamliito:

our: . Hipidns . .r . . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . .Plant Supe '1 n 9“

H.303 Grinnell . . . . . . . . . . . . .; . . . . . . . . . . . ..Msnuins Editor

Grace blight: Jenney . .K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . hFaLrin 132$: 

wmhm Eika-r . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Msrket an VG Legal Editor

W- Austin Ewalt '.'.2212222222212 '''''''''''' Zv'eéénnm Editor
on: YEAR (52 Issues . 1; TWO vns (104 Issues) $1.50
' THREE V88. (156 Issuds) $2; FIVE vns. (260 Issues) $8.00

‘ date following your name on the address label sham W110"
ription expires. In renewing kindly send label ‘30

 

kes.
: stamps and currency are' at your Tm“
r ‘ V ﬁrst-class mail every dollar received.

Advertising Rates: Forty-fire cents per ante lino.

* column mch. 772 lines to the pase- Flat rates-

Live Stock and Auction Sale Advertising: We otier special 10"
“‘33 t0 reputable breeders of live stock and poultry: WY!“ “‘-

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS
We will not knowingly accept the advertising of
any person or firm who we do not believe to be
thoroughly honest and reliable. Should any feed"
have any cause for complaint against any advertiser
in these columns. the publisher would appreciate an
immediate letter bringing all facts to light. In
use when writing say: “I saw your advertisement in The
hixan Business Farmeri" It will guarantee honest decline.

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

d r or resistant!
Remit by check. draft, money-Otvev. ] 0'1“

14 line!“

Pres. Burton on Disarmament

. RES. BURTON’S published views on
disarmament have inspired profound dis-
appointment among many of his'loyal fr1ends
throughout the state. The University head
has been quoted as saying that while he be-
lieves in limitation of armaments, he is not a
pacifist and cannot support the theory of
complete disarmament and a world forever
free of war. Dr. 'Burton’s skepticism might
be excused on the grounds that he is a pure
intellectualist who finds nothing in historic
precedent to warrant other convictions, were
it not for the fact that so many other emi-
nent educators are notoriously pacifist in
their views and aggressively committed to to-
tal disarmament. . o
The essence of most arguments against dis—
armament is this: “What has not been done
cannot be done. The world has always been
_.cu.rsed with war and it always will be. We
may lessen the destructiveness of war by hm-
iting the weapons of war, but we cannot do
away with war altogether.” . .
The answer is this: Precedent and tradi-
tion are worthless guides to the solution of
present day problems. Every year that goes
‘by proves man capable of performances
theretofore believed impossible. If the de-
structiveness of war can be lessened by lun-
iting theJYeapons of war, why is it necessary
to draw a line Where such limitation shall
stap? Why not contine disarmament to the
“irreducible minimum." Then, what mat-
" tersv if the desire for war exists, how can it
be waged when the means have been destroy-

ed! .
"The world ’51 thought has too long been

tinged with militancy. The new spirit which '

.is rapidly permeating the hearts of civilized
'nations everywhere is the spirit of love and
pacifism. Let us not say .
peace is» only a lovely dream. Let us believe
that it can be clothed with reality, and so be-
lieving we will help to hasten the glad day
when war shall be no more and peace Wlll
rule the universe. .

 

A Thin Disguise
‘ PROMINENT DETROIT daﬂy ,.mildly_
' condemns the volunteer prohibition en-

forcement program laid doWn‘ by Commie-f
sioner Haynes on his recent visit to the state H

{jarﬁnempoua In an ' rial enatlea._“No
g ,‘l’laee for a Snoopers’ ’ e,”  paper
' ' seeks to interpret theHaynes idea. of having

  
 
 
 
 

4’ every friend of. prohibition report known vi-. ,
lations of~~the law as‘a schemeeto go praying ,

to the basementsaad peekingf‘ghmugh the
   of  the

- Lao the. ﬁelations .of manque, 

. obeying the.

that universal '

 The.      -
W T i '  r I: ', the

ey is 1ts~"”o »

primary fault lies with the   a
thousands, and tens of thousands of press?

ably. law'a'biding Citizens Who are' habit “ ."

ly and almost openly. disre arding " andifiédis~
nal. -

It might have added: that a large:

the responsibility for this disregard  [the
law “rests upon the shoulders of the "press

which fills its columns ‘ with tiresome jokes,

articles, cartoons, theatre 'advorti'sem‘ents,
etc., intended to make light .of prohibition
and offenses against the law. 'It is a thin. dis-
guise for any newspaper to declare itself . in
favor of law enforcement when in adjoining
1columns ‘ it carries a veiled’ attack upon the
am . I

 

Better Late Than Never T

HE RAILROADS iiiade a tactical

blunder when they deferred their freight
rate reduction until after ‘ most of the__.19.21
crops had passed from the farmers’ hands.
They must have knOWn months ago that they
could not much» longer withstand the , public
insistence that freight rates be reduced. Par-
ticularly must they have been impressed with
the plight of the farmers, millions of whom
were practically isolated from their markets
because of the prohibitive freight rates. But

they argued long and ,vociferously"‘that rates I

could not be reduced, knowing all the time
that a reduction had to come sooner or later.
It looks like another case of having the penny
so close to the eye as to obscure the vision of
the dollar beyond. The roads made a few mil-
lion dollars by not cutting their rates ninety
days ago when they should have been cut,
but what they have lost in the good will of
the public is beyond estimation. Lower
freight rates will help the farmers some on
the 1921 crops but most of the beneﬁts will
go to the dealers in farm products who now
hold a large percentage of the crops.
Sailing a Life
HEN NATHAN Fish cf Gm Lake
V got his poor hands caught in a corn
shredder and lost so much’blood that his life
was despaired .of a call went out for volun-
teers to lend enough of their blood to save

the life of the unfortunate man. Eight stal-
wart fellows responded. One Was chosen,- the

transfusion of blood was miade, and‘tlie, farm-o
er will live, it is said, though terribly crip- s _ 7 ,
_fought. " “It; is regrettable that :the  .

pled for life. It is not related whether )‘the
man who gave of his blood expected to be
paid in money for his sacrifice. It does not
matter. Men do not as la. rule invite certain
pain and risk their health and possibly lives
for any paltry
kind is to be benefitted in some way by the
sacrifice.
right to think that the young men who so
nony stepped forward and bared their arms
to save the life of another were moved by
compassion for the suﬁering man and, that
unselﬁshness and courageousness of spirit
which impels men to fags death in all its
forms to rescue others in danger. - Our faith
in humanity comes back a little stronger
when we read of deeds like this. I ‘

dry enactments, ’ says thlgfijolll‘r '

" ,_ There’s a lesson in this? experience.
. cess usually. lies just over fthe borderland

sum of money unless human .

We like to think and we have a -

 

 
  
 
 
 

Ll

 
 
  
  
    
  
 

 
 
 
 

 

a

“4 "impi’m‘l‘ #0. have decidedrtehe in candidate 
.-.-,VLieuteli’aﬂ-Governor 'nPi'gvlded Lteagﬁon  I 1
° ‘ 7' 7mg “4°” ‘1” "me “WP-"r  'smciennr l,

,  Hor‘.

 

 
  
     
  

  
    

  918%.33? : .  . 
, -  in: It hhﬁnéither'” ..  a.
the time: northe isn'-tagnaka"inyse1f...oae Was  ~
a; plumbing; job: the 3013116  .e» taplaeémentaof. 2   v
 broken  - it}  _.plﬁmbing . '5 ,"
Ishop~I.‘was;t01d5it;mouldhe,thl’eeﬂdhys before '- ._ J
a man. coﬁldapossibiy ‘hé' sparedf‘togda   
Work? I; argued  We compromised'i‘on‘es 'i- .
day’s .delay. .At~--the,‘wihdow eh -p..I.  ‘ ' .
 my wants. “‘ es, sir", We’llsend ayman right  .
up.” gvahreehou‘rs rhter _» the jobvijwas, done". "  j i 4»
 prbmptness gave'me a pleasant sense of " '
satisfaction. ‘9 The .nexttime I want any “win-
. dews repaired my fectsteps wilh involuntarily
lead me to" the shop, where they say, “Yes-
sir, we’ll take care of it right aWay.”

      
    

Suc-
of
failure, and the distance is bridged by only ~
a. few rules of ' principle and! conduct. * No
matter in what ﬁeld a man may labor, Wheth4
or he may work fer himself or for another-

‘- the value of being prompt cannot be overes-

timated. PromptneSs in doing a job at the
time itshould be done .gives a man a feeling
of power and self-control, and renders hinrr
, more capable to perform his ether . tasks.
Promptness, in plotting, sewing and reaping
guarantees success ,where‘ there has formerly
been failure. TAnd promptness in one ’8 "re-
lations to- others, gives a man a" standing .._in ‘
his community of which he, can be ,proud.
Therefore, he prompt. The thing you can do
today, never "put oif until tomorrow. v ".. .

Censuring Ambassa' dot. Hm . ey
IF AMBASSADOR ‘Harvey‘ever hadlany
doubts about his unpopular-ii;r with the ~—
American people they must have been Idiss'iJ
~ pated When he received a cepy of/ the resolu-
tions adopted by the American Legion de-
nouncing him for his infamous maiden speech 
in London. It did not set well with the Toys
who feught and won the war to have a cheap 7
politicians declare to the werld that. America
entered the war for purely selﬁsh reasons.
They had been told that the war was a strug-
gle for worldwide democracy—3401‘" the , .self- r, _
determination of small nations,+—a- war to end  
war. ‘1‘.We have no selﬁsh ends to "serve’?,,‘
said, Pres. Wilson.“ The Soldier ' youth”, ibfes
lieved and fought and a won. And ' ' 
top ' of~their victory comes, Ambassa or 'Har-
vey and belittles the objects for which; 

Legion modiﬁed its" original “ resolution 'Which ”
‘ declared Ambassador Harvey  foryliis
gob and .urged his recall. Most of the 
1can people think the same" thing. . i f

 

, Campbell sun- in Running , H
HE FARM forces at, Washington—/ are
putting up a  ﬁght to prevent the
conﬁrmatiion of Pres. Harding’s appointment ,
. of “Mrs. George Upton’shusband’to the Fed-
eral Trade Commision. There is a general-
~feeling"gaming-the agricultural representatives
that th Preseident “put one over on thorn",
because his attitude up to  a day or
two of the appointment of Upton was [very
favorable to Milo Campell. ' The farmers point
out MVCmpbwh qualiﬁcations are~ far‘\
superior to Upton ’s and they will ﬁght the 
appointment until they have won their point
or. all hope, is lost. Anyway, Campbell’s
friends are deﬁnitely assured that he  be
appointed to the next vacancy which will  A .
curonthe Commission. 3» ' ' " 

‘  ﬁnesrésentative. Franklin Moore. or at. claret;

   
 
 
 
 

 
   
 
 
   
    
 
  
  
 
 

 

‘ mterestinrto innit? anew.

;,‘-‘i1.9t:,dee1«ied *‘
r,*e.nd'>

    


"" nearer,

 
 
 

    

   
 

I a  com suddenly out of day" into
. . the forest into which Neewaﬁs flight

fined led them'was like a vast mr

sterious cavern. Even . Challoner
*would have paused there, awed by
the grandeur of its silence. held
spellbound by'the enigmatical whis-
pers that, made up its. only sound.
The sun was still high in the heav»
ens, butnot a ray, of it: penetrated
the dense. green canopy of spruce
and balsam that hung like a wall
over the heads ‘of Miki and
About them was no bush, no un
growth; under. their feet was not a
flower or a spear of grass. Nothing
but a thick, soft carpet ’of velvety
- brown needles under which all life
was smothered. It was as if the
forest nymphs had made of this
their bedchamber, sheltered through
alltheseasonsoftheyearfromwind
and rain and snow; or elseﬁhatthe
were-wolf people—the loup-garou——
had chosén has their ‘ hiding-place
aud'from its weird and gloomy fast-
nesses went forth on their ghostly
. missions‘among .the sons of men.
Not a'bird twittered in thetrees.
There was no flutter of life in their
crowded brauches. ‘ was
so still that Mild heard the ex. ted
throbbing of life in his own body. He
looked at Neewa, and in the gloom
the cub’s eyes were glistening with a
strange fire. Neither of them was
afraid, yet to that cavernous silence
their comradeship was born anew,
and in it there was something new
that crept down into their wild lit-
tle souls and filled the emptiness
that was left by the death bf Neewa‘s
mother and the loss of Miti‘s mast-
er. The pup whined gently, and in
his throat Neewa made“ a" purring
sound and followed it with a

squeaky gruntkthat wastlike the‘

grunt of a little pig. They edged
, and stood shoulder to
r shoulder facing their world. They
_wehton_afteralittle, liketwochildé
ren «poring the mystery of an old
and. andoned house. They were
not outing. yetgevery hunting in-
stinct in their bodies was awake, and
they stopped frequently to peer
about them, and listen. an scent the
air. v A ' ' s
To Neewa it all broughtiback a
memory of the black cavern in

which'he was born. ,Would Noozak '

his mother, come. up presently out
of one of those dark 7 ferest aisles?
.Was she sleeping here, as she had
'slopt in the darkness of theirﬁeuf
The questionamay have come vague-
lytohismind. \Foritwaslikeths
cavern, in that it was deathly still;
and a short distance‘awayits gloom
thickened into black pits. Sacha
place the Indians sailed inuhnedoo

___., spot in the forest blasted of  I;

‘life by the presence of devils;  for
only-devils- would grow, trees so
thick that sunlight never penetrated.
Andf‘only owls held the companion-
ship of the evil spirits. ’ '

Wh‘ere Neewa and Mild stood a
grown wolf would have paused, and
turned back; the fox would have
slunk away, hugging the ground;

' even the murderous-hearted little
ermine would have peered in with
his heady red eyes, unafraid. but

turned byinstinct back into the open-

. timber. For here, in spite of the
stillness new there was life.
It  and waiting in, the
ambush of ’thoseblack pits. It was

. rousing itseif,  at  and
Niki went en deeper'lnto the silence,

and eyes that were use round “balls  M
were beginnith to glow'with a 

ish fire. Still there was no soundr
no, movement in the” dense lover-
growth of the tree's. Like the lions

of ,muhnedoo the monster owls look... .
ed, down, gathering: their slow wits 7.

fad-then .e hm shadow floated

Courtroom: mud mac» v
. close em all”. “heads-011.51% 
'jlfiki:  they heard i the owns“.

fl A: them-aim.

  

 a. M  
 ef‘a‘mile 

  
 
  
    
   
 

  as though they
' of evening; That part of ’

  

i.’

  

Y OF THEGREAT‘ eurooqgs‘ 

 
   

‘ /

 

     

4‘. ‘ JAMES OLIVER CURWQOD
“Woman magmas 0‘ WW Romm

  
 
 
 
   

   
 
 
  

 

 

T18
Neesak,
atterhis

hasnnerxeiting
timetesav

SYNOPSIS "

srnnto and in the northland Neewa, a black bear-cub, and m. mother,
are starting on a Journey to their feeding grounds.
mother is asleep Neewa wanders through the woods by
adventure with an old lie—bear and his mother appears just in
e his life.‘ In the Immune, Challoner, a Hudson Bay Co. factor.

 

 

 

One evening
. He

discomthetraeksefthebm Behasapup,hﬂki,withhim,whichheis
taking to his sister, III. he decides he would like to secure the sub to give to ~
her also. He meets up with the bears, kills Noosak and secures Neewa. Chal-
lcnor returns to his camp ﬂttheewa and the sub and mm become fairly good

friends.

Of I inch. puts them in the front end of his canoe

The next morning Chalioner ties Neewa and mm. one at each and

and M down the river.

As ibey‘nnar awaterfall themsndthe cub get intoafight and roll
out of the mammalian, who rows to the shore, thinks the two will be
. killed but, unknown to him they arrive at the foot of the tolls much bruised But
stiilallve. Gemingoutonﬁseshoretheysharteifﬂsmghthewoodm'rheybe—
some lost. Neewa discovers a wasp’s nest and proceeds to tear it down. Neewa
md'mld turn and ﬂee with the wasps in close pursuit. They are badly stung

but continue their bunny.

 

stinct that had been ﬁghting to
reuse itself within him flared up
like a powder—flash. Instantly be
sensed the nearness of an unknown
and appalling danger.

There was sound about them now
—-—movement in_ the trees, ghastly
tremours in the air, and the crack-
ling, metallic snap—snap—ﬂap over
their heads. Again Miki saw the

shadow come and go. It was
allowed by a second, and a third,
until the vault under the trees seem-
ed fllled with shadows; and with
each shadow came nearer that grat-
ing menace of powerfully booked
jaws. Like the wolf and the fox he
cringed down, hugging the earth.
But it was no longer with the
whimpering fear of the pup. His
muscles were drawn tight, and with
a snarl be bored his fangs when one
of the owls swooped so low that he
felt the beat of its wings. Neewa
responded with a sniff that a little
later in his life would have been the
defiant whoof of his mother. Bear-
like he was standing up. 7 And it
was” upon him that one of the shad-
ows descended—4. monstrous feath-
ered bolt straight out of darkness.

Six feet away Mlki‘s blazing eyes
saw his comrade smothered under a
gray mass, and for a moment or two
he was held appalled and lifeless by
the thunderous beat of the gargan-
tuan wings. No sound came from
Neewa. Flung on his back, he was
digging his claws into feathers so
thick and soft that they seemed to
have .no heart or flesh. He felt on
him the presence of the Thing that
was death. The beat of the wings
was like the beat of clubs; they
drove the breath out of his body,
they blinded his senses, yet he con-
tinued to tear fiercely with his claws
into a fieshless breast.

In his first savage, Weep Oohoo-
misew,’ whose great wings measured
five feet from tip to tip, had missed
his" death grip by. the fraction of an
inch. His powerful talons that

would have buried themselves like

knives in Neewa’s vitals closed too
soon, and were filled With the cub’s
thick hair and loose hide. I Now he
was beating his prey down with his
wings until the right moment came
forhimtofinishthekﬂlingwtththe
terrific stabbing of his beak. Half

 

van! man’s home is the beat old
. home. *

And every man’s wife the sweetest;
, man‘s child is the best littleehild,
The best behaved and neatestz
Everyman’s-babyisbetter'tbnn‘sll,
The babies that ever werebon—

And Just so 'lt’s babies and wives and

homes, , r v t
I let 'em all blow their hon!
 man’s wife makes the finestpre-

“1"”. ' . “'1

‘  every‘snen-‘s wife babes bread

 in  breadjthat ever was
 ‘mﬁo‘rsg: to Stony nasal ~ » :

' Every new; house is the pines to. see

 Just so it's bread and preserves and
1M?“  “5"”

EVERY MAN’S HOME

wife
In all the world to see;

a minute of that and Neewa’s face
would be torn into pieces.

It was the fact that Neewa made
no sound, that no cry came from
him, that brought Niki to his feet
with his lips drawn back and a snarl
in his throat. All at once fear went
out of him and in its place came a
wild and almost joyous exultation.
He recognised their enemy—a bh'd.
To him birds were a prey and not
a menace. A dozen times in their
journey down from the Upper Coun-
try Challoner had shot big Canada
geese and huge-winged cranes. Mlki
had eaten their flesh. Twice he
had pursued wounded cranes, yap-
ping at the top of his voice, and they
had run from him. He did not bark
or yelp now. Like a ﬂash he launch-
ed himself into the feathered mass of
the owl. His fourteen pounds of
ﬂesh and bone landed with the force
of a stone, and Oohoomisew was
torn from hishold and ﬂung with a
flutter of wing upon his side.

Before he could recover his bal-
ance Miki was at him again, strik-
ing full at his head, where he had
struck at the wounded crane. Oo-
hoomisew went flat on his back—
and for the first time Miki let out of
his throat a series of savage and
snarling yelps. It was a new sound
to Oohoomisew and his blood-thirsty
brethen watching the struggle from
out of the gloom. The snapping of
beaks drifted farther away and 00-
hoomisew, with a sudden sweep of
wings, vaulted into the air.

With his big forefoot planted firm-
ly and his snarling face turned up
to the black ~wall of the tree tops
Miki continued to bark and howl de-
fiantly. He wanted the bird to come
back. He wanted to tear and rip
at its feathers, and as he sent out
his frantic challenge Neewa rolled
over, got on his feet, and with a
warning squeal to Mild once more
set all in flight. If Miki was ignor-
ant in the matter, he at least under-
stood the situation. Again it was
the instinct born of countless gener—
ations. He knew that in the black
pits about them hovered death—41nd
he ran as he had never run before
in his life. As Miki followed, the
shadows were beginning to float
nearer again.

Ahead of them they saw a glim-

 

When every man thinks that his own
home's best.

And his own. wife’s sweetest, why then

We’ll swing back unto the golden dream

Of a heaven on earth again.

And isn‘t it beautiful, fine and sweet.

Thefdthofamaninhisohild,

And hismvlfe and his home and his simple

life
That he beasts of undeﬁledi
When every man‘s home is the sweetest

~ P
On earth fora mun to be;
When every man's wife is the sweetest

When every man's child is the deares

_ child
That ever drew breath—ah. then,

We shall have betterlehildren and we-
 hsmes. 7 ,

» and

nor of sunshine. The trees gr] .
taller, and soon the day began break"
ing through so that there was n';
longer the cavernous hollows off
gloom about them. If they had gone
on another hundred yards they;
would have come to the edge of the];
big plain, the hunting grounds of the?
owls. But the flame of self—prom;
vation’ was hot in Neewa’s head; boil.a
was still dazed by the thunderOU*
beat of wings; his sides burned}
where Oohoomisew’s talons had scar- 
red his flesh; so, when he saw» in 
path a tangled windfall of 
trunks he dived into the security of 
it so swiftly that for a moment or
two Miki wondered where he had '
gone. V
crawling into the windfall after
him Miki turned and poked out his
head. He was not satisfied. His
lips were still drawn back, and he
continued to growl. He had beaten
his enemy. He had knocked it over
fairly, and had filled his Jaws with
its feathers. In the face of that tri-
umph be sensed the fact that he had
run away in following Neewa, and
he was possessed with the desire to
go back and have it out to a finish.
It was the blood of the Airedale and
the Spitz growing stronger in him,
fearless of defeat; the blood of his
father, the giant hunting-hound
Hela. It was the demand of his
breed, with its mixture of welfish
courage and fox-like persistency
backed by the powerful jaws and
Herculean strength of the Macken-
zie bound, and if Neewa had not
drawn deeper under the windfall. he
would have gone out again and yelp-
his challenge to the feathered things
from which they had fled.

Neewa was smarting under the
red-bot stab of Oohoomisew‘s tal—
ons and wanted no more of the fight
that came out of the air. He began
licking his wounds, and after a
while Miki went back to him and
smelled of the fresh, warm blood. It
made him growl. He knew that it
was Neewa’s blood, and his eyes
glowed like twin balls of fire as they
watched the opening through which
they had entered into the dark,
tangle of fallen trees.

For an hour he did not move, and
in that hour, as in the hour after
the killing of the rablrit, he grew.
When at last he crept amountiou-
ly from under the windfall the sun“
was sinking behind the western for-
ests. He peered about him, watching
for movement and, listening for
sound. The sagging and apologetic
posture of puppyhood was gone.
His overgrown feet stood squareb‘
on the ground; his angular is;
were as hard as if carven out of
knotty wood; his body was tense, his
ears stood up, his head was rigidly
set between the bony shoulders that
already gave evidence of gigantic
strength to come. About him he
knew was the Big Adventure. The
world was no longer a world of play
and of snuggling under the hands .of
a master. Something vastly more
thrilling had come into it now.

After a time he dropped on his
belly close to the opening under the
windfall and began chewing at the
end of rope which dragged from
about his neck. The sun sank lower.
It disappeared. Still he waited for
Neewa to come out and lie with him‘
in the open. As the twilight thick-
ened into deeper gloom he drew him-
self into the edge of the door under
the windfall and found Neewa there.
Together they peered forth into the
mysterious night.

For a time there was the utter
stillness of the first hour of dark-
ness in the northland. Up in the
clear sky the stars came out in twos
and then in glowing constellations.
There was an early moon. It was 9‘1-
ready over the edge of the forests,
flooding, the world with a golden
glow, and in that glow the night'was
filled with grotesque black shadows
that had neither movement nor
sound. Then the silence was bruit-s
en. From out of the OWE-infested .'
pits came a strange and hollow 
sound. Miki had heard the shrill .
screeching and the tu-who-o-o, tu- 
who-o—o, of the little owls, the trap-
pirates, but never this voice of the
strong-winged Je ' ‘

  

 
 
 
  
 
   
   
    

    
   
 
  

   

 
   
   


   

  
 
  

 

 

._..

  
 
   
  
  
   

hide. or other skin
or hugs. and makerthem,
m and we .
, m whenso er

~ahot

troubles. m oar-slur attention
and be M

_ for. interdiction ul- ‘
MI mun-I, I -‘m

(noted-Mg sweater mm , ,
one-ed to summon-w. no he» to  lull name on ,7...
nearer a. school » in * oAN‘ YOU  THIS 
than to the school ' a
‘Howeverthere

i the h’oard.
e law governing this
1919 General School
section 512."-——T.‘ E-
Public Instruction.

children livin

another distri‘t
,in their own district.
is no compulsion in the
is left to the at
.You will ﬁnd
“point in the
1m page 2,22,

STARTING GRAPE mm mm
'j . CU'ITINGS

Please inform me in regard to starting

grape vines from cuttings-—

Jordan. Michigan.

 

usually propagated
hich are made in late-
winter from canes oi
en's growth. These

ght be possible some

vo such a
osdty Boxes” and

renders mtg
their ‘-‘Old. ‘
to find out. Would

fall or early
the current seas

u the " '
we sell, taxidermy. etc.

 

 

' could get a key that

v heretofore has been I. separ-

 
 

rated in and made:

ally made six to

cuttings are usu ‘
gth. the lower end

BREACH OF WARM , '1‘!

It In Fashion plates of mods.

  

nine ,inches in ion _ A)“ wpum mm’m  u

8 just below 8 bud implements and stock /

for Siemens: also remodel-
w th prices and estimates.

of the cutting bein A bought a farm,
' rice.

  

es.» ' .wrieenuleanduldreup

 

 
 
 

t the cutting be—
halt inch to an inch
d. Well-matured cones of

Fur Com . and the upper and o

in-
Ave. Rochester. . Y.

 

  
   
    
    
     
  
  
  
  
 
   
   

 It is time to ship your fun
"new.
3.1, Your price and grade exl’ec'
«canons will be realized by

 

 

’::_Rosenberg Bros.
use W Jefferson st. Detroit
Raw and Mfg. Furriers

p ted on. the Thames.-
abont 14 miles east of London. 'It is
a popular summer resort, an
a pepulation oi‘about 10,000.- It is
in Kent county—éEdltor.

, M ‘ M,

‘3 ‘ PAYING NOTE
I am , ending yousL copy hr 9. note and .
This . refuses

give inonmation as.

‘ I am ‘s'en’ding you a
stamped envelope for replyr—J. J.. North
Branch. Michigan. ’ ‘r r  ‘

medium size are on
‘- this-“purpose.
Alter the cuttin
they should
convenience
in damp moss or
cool cellar where th
until spring wh
cuttings shoul
and are ready
soon as the groun
in condition to we
We have also h
here at the coils
cuttings in the spr
ommences an
cuttings immediately

nsldered best for

gs have been made
be tied in b
in handling and packed
excelsior or in a
ey may remain
0 ends of the
have callused over
for planting just as
d thaws out and is
rk in the spring.

-he

did leak pretty bad-
What could A do
Ionis. County, Mich.

seller is liable for breach of
s the representations

egal Editor.

ly in the'tront
about it’f—Beader.

warranty unles
Were in writing and
were not included—9L

_ __._____....—---—
CLEANIJNESS AM ONG SCHOOL
Isn't there some way to make p
keep children who go to

dun? Some children who
have head lice
anything about i

There is no direct law on this so

 

I Would _ ke advi

 

As the note reset-yes more than
seven per cent interest it is usur-
ious and all of the interest on the
note is forfeited. As the maker has
paid more than the principal

by making these
ing shortly before
d planting the
in the field. It

W

 

 

 
 

Should be Stated: no fan as schools. are concerned, but

 

     
   
   
  
 
 
  
  
  
 

u “(republic-pr e.

business since 1878 Ind
tee satisfaction.

Wn'ufort't today

$16M“

lanted where it

irrigation and more can be collected by law»:—
nstant supply of moisture.
ssoc. Professor

cuttings have been p thr-ough the board of
county commissi
ﬂoor a matter of
"ually be adjusted.
not in proper co
excluded by the
in suitable condit
Our advice in ma
has been toptake si
kind up with the cou
er.———T. E. J ohnson,

d truant of-
this kind can us-
Ii"children are
on they may be
board until they are
ion to attend school.
tters of this kind
tuations of this
nty commission-
Supt. Public In-

 

AHNE run com;

ammYou'r Own

Here. or Cow Hide.

We lush this cost to measure
from the hide you izencl. Write

TREES BELONG T0 ABUTrING
PROPERTY OWNER

In grading for a paved road. Which
passes through our farm the co
obliged to remove some
order to get the proper slope ,to.
ditch. Who do these trees belch to
the land owner?.
ere should the tense be '-
the edge of the ditch or on the
on the six-rod'line‘!i This

roads—R. '1‘.. nosing.

—-Roy E. Marshall, A
of Horticulture. M. A. 0.

?_____.——'-—-—-—-
CAN TENANT COLLECT?

Last spring I leased
It was understoo
live in farmhous
tools and seed.

AnyKlndof Skin
Wemkeupenykindofskintn
suityourneeds.

Also Ladlos' Coats and
Furs, Robes. etc.

We have been in the tanning

guaran-

my farm for one
d that I was to
e and to furnish

Lessee was to live in contractor or

tour-nod line or
to'rlal

It so. can I collect pay for things
I furnished .not mentioned

Reader. Weidman. .

He can collect rent it you never
of the house.

id be subject 1:

FREE imminent-“'-

FUR DEPARTMENT

.—;—-—-EDITED BY A. R. HARD“,
America's Foremost Author. and Turner

The trees in- question would
long to the abutting p
191‘. Concerni
are advised

roperty own-
d fenced. you
that the fences should

Beam lobe & Tallinn cs.
Resell-t. nick.

 

 

 

The lease wou

 

 

changes as were agreed upon but 'r—QU'ESTIONS A/NSWERER—“j _be placed on the fouﬁmd mm on

 

   
   
  
   
  
    
 
   
 
   
 

For
. 1 Highest
- ~ ~ ' Prices

. - Ship‘your iurs to me. High-

' W‘ri iorJatest price lists.

H 1443 Jeﬁerson Ave., ~West
' Detroit, mohigan

regular state, county and
roads and, entire six-rod line on ter- V
all roads. where such roads are
ix-rod roads.—
Frank'E. Rogers. State Highway
Commissio' 

were inadvertently 0
could not collect for w
to‘ furn-ish.—-—Legal Editor. /

TANNING SHEEPSKINS

p pelts I would like to
hions for riding tool seals.
‘how to do it my-
blish the recipe of

?—W. .C.. Inspect.
' \

hat you agreed

ten to make one
I would like to know
self. so could you pu
tanning in your n
igan Business Farmer

sintained as s

__.____——a—-———_

FALL PAINTING
know through your ser-
aint this tall. cold
to avoid the small

Please let me
vice bureau w
or warm days.
F. 1—1., Sidney. Michigan.

'1': one could forecast
I" would believe I won
ting bu paint just
spell in the autumn;
ually impossibl
one Will 'hav

 

 

JOINT DEED V

A. man's wife dies.
He marries again. Has two
d he and; second wife
If he dies who gets his
interest in property? Or how 211,. di-

For I tanning sheepskin, the fol-
lowing I like best of a .
on! all ragged pieces,
cold 'water until 1:
until you feel no.
If the skin is soft

- remains. then soak the hard 8

wenty-four hours is about»

the average skin. Remove
lace over a halif round

 

the weather,
1d avoid put-
before a warm
but ,as it is us-.

then soak in more children an

‘ est rices paid- for all iurs.

’ ha a s t 1 it. have joint deed.

\ . , . ~ r po 3 n‘

Vreeland Fur Company and a hard mt
Iiafmah and hiswiie own real es-

tate in their joint names upon the

death of either the survivor

e to depend
til the weather becomes

on waiting un
discourage the« flies.

cold enough to

 

 

 

 

the hide, p

.——R. H. Pettit, . .
the whole‘with absolute title, Real

 

  

Proiosser oi Ento-‘

block, peeled slab or log. ﬂesh side

 

  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 

 

 yWanted:

 

' d by such title does, not de- ,
f ‘ pcend to children and they have no
" right oi, inheritance therein-pug“ '

~ mology. M. A. C.
mamas OOMAN‘Y BREAKS
CONTnAcr '

A pickling company
pickles and l

_A.L_. ._.i.. A

old draw kniie
ﬂesh and fat. Now
it soap. ‘ A strong
arm as you cansbear
and wash the skin '
A,wash board
Also' pick" out all
ke the skin nice

up ’and with
scrape 011 all.‘
mix -with_,your so
soap suds as w
your hand in;
clean, wool and all
will help matters.
burrs/etc. and ma
and clezin. Now you are ready for
the tanning. ' ‘ ' '
While the skins are dam
gether one pound of pulverised alum,
d of saltpetre and; twice,

 

‘ Raw Fur Buyer

- We not a country raw fur buy—
I‘.er in every county of your state,
- to represent as this season. ’ A big
. opportunity for those who duality.
. Write-lat once tor our proposition.

CHARLES S. PORTER lNC.

129 W. 27th St. New York City

 

has quit taking .
he balance of

nly planted one.

. \
ADOPT CHILD

Anzl writing you concerning
case of. Friend. of
“holding child for board.
Himake the child a coun-
witll a charge of desertiou
father and mother, they
hild. from the
I know this tombs so as my

ears: and we 0
they can’t go
ave we got to
It has damaged us over
Advise me please.

$80 right now.
., Fremont. 1nd.

You should dispose of the crop at
the best price obtainable after you
m to the company

 

against the

can then adopt the c

have tendered the
half a poun

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

list.

monk and loch] deal
Will all for lots of
or out. My

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
  
 
  

m was 

   

It you have been
11 not receive
u do not need

and "been refused.
notified the
y more pickles yo
to tender the
against them

go to court to_

the whole mess of bran.
make complain'i .

over skins one—
now. fold the skin
t lie in) a. cool
3, the longer

V'Dﬁople didpit. Just
the Probate J udge,
and they will adopt child rlgt away
with it going out of your care. This
did.——J.'M. L.. Gablea. ‘ ~

Fur Exchange
If you Mt manufacturer's
' prices for your furs. uwrits for

’ Speed this evenly
‘ iourth inch thick;
wool si'deuout, and is
place. for several day
the better so long as
a week. Now scra
dry out the skins and
The easiest way,
go enough is to take .a
6 board; f-nail it to
upportinz, the out-
right and With a
and ﬁraw‘ 7 back
_ the edge oip'the
is skin is “random;
dry awhile and :then
,‘Iffthil‘ is net-carried"
 will 10

for the loss and dam-
y their refusal to take

the p~ickles.'——Legal Editor.

OPTIONAL WITH SOHQOL BOARD
me: of 'our school district.‘
have 3 miles‘to walk to

is the way we.-
“ Michigan. "

\
1‘“ AH
AAA-ll. .
A_s._A.__..
AAA

outlet
you the key to a world-
mu'kot. ‘r

ouvsx DIX._ 3.1;... Mach.

 i‘ -v ——'—,————-———-—-‘-— ’
mammg’srnns r
ease send me the address
of one or tWo matrimonial papers 
Oblige~r-C~ Ei- Sn Alberta, County
The only. two! matrimonial papers -. ,
ms country... so a: s8. 
_ Cupid‘s Columns, St.  ’
Mini-L. and The.i’.‘lofres - '
.‘»Gble++Editor

 

Would» you pl

-Great1y increase your proﬁts r and our children.

by reading illustrated MD!
the on Trapping, Buy-

smooth sharp edg
a beam: entree, s
side end with an up
- person, holding sac
and forth - a

r lithe skin“
rub 8 while.

A -H“__

p epnblished in
 Ohio A7900 columns! 0' ’ ‘ we  
would I Saw

   
 

 
 

    

on' item. the sub-
tate 'whether
unit or a primary 7
' rather: diﬁlcnlt

“As- the questi
scriber does not 3
, 11‘703111 ’9 township

' disﬁ‘ict

e  The" Michigan Business
" f willbe' worth your while '

    
          
     
 

- ._..A A ‘h‘... n ,

 

  
  

 

 

 

 

vertisaments.


   

r .. ~  »
Pollardtho‘ Malonree‘es‘  _ a.”
cussion of :the,,_sub,1ect is invited—Editor.

WATERED Screen AND

 

y  "scriptio‘d-‘v tor, your paper to
 ’ ‘ take the place. of' that ‘fupssate
“summer? who stopped on account

‘ not. your stand 'on prohibition: . ‘

' ’- There has been. a. continuou 

sidio'us propaganda harried on thru:
out thecounty fo.r.the past yearhih'
an endeavor. to discreditnth'e nigh--

‘ teenth Amendment'and the laws for

In the newspapers,»

fillers, Short and pithy'of the “Pro-,

'w hibition‘: When does iLbegin," type;
in the movies sub-titles written in
an endeavor to be _,.funny and excite
laughter, but insidioust calculated,

~ - to enhanCe a feeling of familiarity

and‘contempt for the law; in vaude-
ville the lower type performer counts
on his stale jokes about prohibition
to get a hand where it
hopeless otherwise.

' An occasional joke could be appre-
ciated by the most ardent prohibi-
tionist even of the highbrow charact-
er, but this disgusting persistent ly-
ing propaganda is inspired and could
not live were there not' good solid

Somebody, some-

’ where is getting a fat rake off for
this persistence, and it is high time,
that the great body of decent people,
law abiding citizens who are in fav-.-

or of the abolition of liquor, woke up
is nuisance out~oi ex-

  
 

the Associa-

‘ 'F‘ is, c AIME!)
L‘ ecutives' ad-

tion' of- Railway '

7 vertisement which‘rnn in all the
'farm’ papers, I presume as propa-
ganda for the education of the farm-
"er? i. e., that f‘capitalization has no
effect on rates” and that watered
stock would not cost the farmer one
‘c'e'nt, “as it does not enter into or
become a‘basis for rate making,”
upon what valuation then is the 2
1-2 per cent earnings figured?‘
we to presume that these executives
have deducted the amount of water~
ed stock in figuring their 2 1-2 per
cent earnings, or was it figured on
the government valuation or on the
“capitalization” water and all?
the last named‘ewould it not appear
then that the roads are endeavoring
to maintain a rate sufficient to in-
crease the earnings ‘of the same, and
would not that affect the farmer to
the value of “a cent”?
If the valuation ,of the roads, in-
cluding the
upon which the earnings are figur-
ed which seemingly are too little,
then if rates are increased so as to
__ increase the earnings would it not
affect the farmer and all using the
roads as a means of transportation?
In this case w0uld not the watered
stock cost the farmer?

v. truth and fiﬂbts are what we want
and what we seek, and if our de-
ductions are ‘erroneous we want to
be put right-5A. F., Glennie, Mich.
Nearly all of the national farm organ-
izations contend that the capitalization
used as a basis for rate-making include
anywhere from three to five billions of
watered stock, representing about (ine-
third or one-half of the actual valuation.
Most certainly, if this be true, the farm-
a pretty high price for wa-
of the statements made by
the Association of Railway Executives
were either deliberately untrue,
as to be capable of severajr in—
For instance,
ment was made /that
"does" not guarantee the roads a profit.
At. the time the statement was made ‘it
was true, but the same statement would
have been untrue had it been‘ made sev-
eral months earlier.
per cent" guaranty of the‘Cummins-Esch ,
.law had expired and the railway execu~

its enforcement.

coin backing it.

and sneezed th

That. this class of
awakening is‘ more evident to me
‘ Expressions of disgust
‘sandfimpatience are more audibievdn
the theatres, ‘and there is more Jute
spoken condemnation of this propaé.
ganda right along.
is a concerted editorial and news
barrage by the right thinking press, 
to awaken this class of people and‘
they will do the rest.

Trusting .that you will . continue
the same sturdy stand you have
..' taken, I am—-—Wm. F. J o
ford County. -

Right you are!

hib'ition laws are m
A thoughtless

What is needed 

hnston, Weft-

 

Violations of th
apparent than
ority is «doing
everything it; can to give prohibition a
bad name and the agencies youemention
. are working, overtime in a last desperate
attempt to sicken the people "of this great
moral and academic measure.
.propag'andisits have had thei

the government

The infamous

 

   

‘ut the Price

  
 
  

 

Sys Melotte

new i \ —
 sameness
hhaevermm swoop. ins reduc-

D .
, 1' co ditions with tram
 a... Wanna“ “meg...
 costs to the bone. in
And right now attha's ‘ anger-ates
V groggxtremcly favors 1e. Take advantage of this

xtronwhile‘it lasts. Get the st f
Amencan' dollar. Buy nowand'savemomonegtl m

‘ 1
ﬁgdggced Nearly /4

3 an arator ﬁnd out he
Melatte has won 26‘; (signal and Internationalﬁinaeas
.turn-

 
 

and how. for mainmkimménm
ce 0 on an the
Great Belgium Melotte has Won

_5 or

after so Days
Free Trial

Thieishisoﬂer. no new DOWN-—
-suu. scrum suntan—om?ng

We will send an Imported Melotte Cream Separator
direct to your farm on a 30 days abs‘olutely Free Trial
-—no deposzts— no pa ers‘to sign—use it as if it were
yourownseparator. ompare lit—test it in every way.

en you are convinced the Melotte akims cleaner
turns easier, washes quicker, lasts longer than all
others. thean $7.50 as ﬁrst-payment and the bal-
\i'agtlggiglem monthly payments until the separator
L / '

Self Balancingsnowl ﬁtﬁﬂgg _
only sin le-bearing-bowl separator ever made. This ’ ' ' ‘
atente bowl hangs from one frictionless ball bearing and spins like a

 

  

  
  
 
  
 
 
  
   
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
   
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
    
    

top. It is Icy-balancing.

t slums as perfectly after 15 years’ use as, when new. Positiv can no
lance—cannot vibrate and thus cause crosscurrentswhich wastegreamb t a?!" get out Of

milk. The 600 lb. Melotte turns as easily as the 300 lbamachine of other

 

y remixingwith the
makes. Spins for 25

 

minutes unless brake is aglplied. No other separator, has or needs a brake. Th M

bowl has solved the pro cm of perfect Bklmmmg

Send This Cou

   . I  

 

Fill out and mail the coupon for New
Melotte catalog containing full description
of this wonderful cream separator.

Don’t buy any separator until you have
found cut all about the Melottexrits 15-year
guarantee and our 30 Day Free rial Offer.

Send coupon for full information and also

The Melotte Separator,H. B. Bab»... u.s. M .

WiDept. 9308. 2843 W.’ 19th St, Chicago, .
th t t to bli ti i

no of: M331” Catalina "o; wﬁhﬂnﬁ :3: Puiiaﬁgsff‘ffﬁ

wonderful separator and M. Jules Melotte. its inventor.

 

 

 

 forces are Waking up and tives forgot to refer to it.

 

their Strength- Rames are 30011 to be the rail fiasco is not yet. An interesting

rewsed price list showing  reductions. Nan
Add .... ..
mmhastuwﬂmi ""
930'” Y - ‘" °"'°"°- "" Post 017i“ ............................ .antn  ..
k

 

held all over the country. The presswlll
be full of stories the ne
the activities of the p
WOW‘ on they will occupy the stage
and the fellow who says that " ohlbi-
tion is ‘a joke,” will have to s
wuspera-‘Editor.

, warms man-m: Discusng .
p NCLOSED find petition on dis-

chapter-is istill to be written—Editor.

MUSINGS OF A PLAIN EARLIER
AM RUNNING my own house for
seven calendar days.

, Monday found .me gloomy and.
restless, making frequent visits to
the cupboard for a snatch of icold
food. '

few Weeks of
hibition forces.

 

 

‘BREEDERS ATTENTION!

. If you are planning on a sale 'this year, write us now an

CLAW THE DATE!

This service is free to the live stock industry in Michigan

to avoid conﬂicting sale dates

 

LET “THE BUSINESS FARMER” CLAIM YOUR DATE 

 

. 1'
armament. .The time was so Tuesday—wawakened at the c'row

 

short in which to return coup-
on that I had no time to go out
among my neighbors.
is one of the most essential or all
public quesions before our “people

 of the cock and hasten to the stable.
Murmuring of my discontent. Chores
drag. My pace is much slackened. It’s
a cruel world. ,
Wednesday—I rinse the’ coffee pot
.\and prepare fresh. Very strong; To
the stable and strap the horses to
Remove some litter
‘ The furrow mare
. very anxious. Gnashing the bit and
Burn the potatoesat
fire for a

Saw it in the Michigan Business Farmer.

_ ‘ see a discussion
r in “What the neighbors say." col-

umn in regard to the problem of '

our high tares‘and how to reduce

them.‘ Up in this part of the country

they lay a to the good‘roads pro-
; Now if this is the reason
for our high tax rate, which would
be best, to\have good roads with no
one living on them or dirt roads with
farmers trying 'to improve the land
and make homes:
of our townships returned 50‘ per
cent of-the taxes uncollected, and it

looks "as though the «return roll a
would be heavier, this year, (and ‘Despatch the milkman for a loaf of

bread and one pound of fruit cook—
ies.’ ,Chores as usual. Spend quiet
evening watching fire?
yaelf with my own voice.

I “Would like to
the spreader.
from the stable.

rarin' to go.
supper.’ Repose at the
Thursday-——Spend mo t of the day
Hold frequv
tions with the dog-and divide With
him last loaf of bread.
his fidelity when he sniffs at the
baby’s shoes and whines.
Friday—Eat .a canary breakfast.

Last year" some

some poor people Will probably lose
their homes a‘throu

 81!, high taxes.‘
—-John Shaw. 6

 County.
You andvthe hundreds; 1, nose
Farmer readers who took the trouble to
secure signatures to thedisarmament pe-
._ tition are to be commended. for
p interest in thissgreat question,
like to think that the confidenceﬁisplays
ed by Se _ Hughes When .he. presented the
, program was .the result in part
“ s sent in by Business,
rwmy‘limrzz
. e p M a ‘

 

 

O

(DA

Satu day—Do some. more
‘ chandiing at store. Admire every
. child I‘ see on street.

toj,‘»a .qulet. house.

 and confusion oiLch
-.bab'y’s_,{ dollior 20th time.
. “(townie same place.
 [home- ‘to turn steak.“
Wt .bachelora'cag hav
1a .Jseryants for. a:
.- ee‘Watch window
 car comm, '

Return horns
«Wish 7 for noise

 

of the 'very ‘petiti
Farmer ' readers.

 
  
 
   

_ :nsgoive that ;
apartments and} 

  
  
  
  

 

 

     

When Writing to Advertisers ‘Please Mention the flact that You

It will help both of us.

Will You Introduce a F riend‘or Neighbor? ﬂ

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

to a friend or neighbor who is not a subscriber.

It is worth just

250 to him, because we will send The Business Farmer on trial to

any new naxhe for six months, for this coupon and a quarter (25c)

in coin or stamps.

 
 

WilwmﬂmmﬂﬂmmmIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllilllllllmlmﬂﬂlHmliﬂlllillllmﬂﬂmilillliilllﬂllﬂmlIll!

. N

he'Michigan Business Farmer, th. Clemens, Mich.
riends:

'11'9

 

This Coupon is worth twenty-ﬁve. cents to any N EW
5 subscriber introduced by an old subscriber. ..  .. ..

I want to ‘introduce a NEW subscriber and fora quarter

very week for six' months.

*3

"P

ntroduced by your reader:

‘ \

., 5
, n » .' I _3
0 ' \‘D o o 0 o e u “' e a e 0‘. e o o o o o o o O U"

 

eddies -

     

 
 
    
  
   

25c) enclosed in coin or stampsyou are to send our weekly

0 '..’,......... o..oeoococoon-eoooeoaoecoedgogo.d‘t....

 oIU.‘.Ican...oI.to.‘O.........;....r..'.'z:\.......'..>

eaa~.}.ooenoo&-oioeoo-eoeogleoooooooo'ooq...‘....."..ir
( Y - r i ‘ ‘

epic-noose


 mayor, no : i
 little known beyond her.  _
but there she silentlyspnead around her
'- ~ ‘thﬂtésoft, pure light. the preciousnessof
 is never fully understood an it is V
’ «leached. 

l

Devin-ﬂuent 'fOtl‘ tit .
7m. to lot this  1i“?

o‘- u-ﬂ \‘i‘

I

    

I “14*. {n

 

 

use"

 

.09 HE OLDJ old story,” titled by a ,H p“,  
friend wanting advice of other M M

    

————-.'mdited' by  oases

      

 

      
   

  
 

    
        
      
        
     
      
      
       
  
      
  

   

  
  
   
  
  

  

  
    
  
      

 

From hard work I stay pretty
close to home and do not care to go
out to spend my evenings.—-A wife
of twenty-eight and mother of four
children.

I am glad you wrote dear reader and
your letter comes straight from an hon-
est heart. No doubt we may help each
other by an interchange of opinions and
experiences. If you will send me your
full address I will answer your inquiry
with a personal letter as I have done
before in just such questions. I would
stop the patent medicines immediately.
There is a much better way. of relieving
the difficulty and it should be taken care
of without delay. I will answer by re-

turn mall.

___________—-—-—
MAKING LAMP SHADES

ARCHMENT shades are still

much used but as one must have

instructions for making them
and materials not easy to procure
outside of the big cities, I will give
slew suggestions for making shades
of such materials as silk georgette
and chiffon combined with fringes
and fancy braids or guimps. For
bedroom cretonnes and organdie are
both used.

In choosing your materials hold
them over a light to get the effect
of colors and patterns, otherwise
you may be much disappointed in
the completed shade.

Choose your frame and cover the
wire tightly with ribbon, winding it
very tightly. This gives you some-
thing to sew on. _

Cut a piece of ribbon three times
the length of the wire to be Wound,
begin at the top and tie in. a hard
knot, then wind tightly to the end
of the wire and fasten neatly and
securely. Do this with all wires,
then your frame ‘is ready .to cover
and silk twist is best to use for fast-
ening the materials as it is strong.

If your outside cover is to be put
on plain, not plaited, put the‘lining
in first, lay it on the inside of the
frame holding it in place with pins.
ﬂow around the top leaving a half-
‘inch of the goods to be turned over
onto the right side of the frame,
earns around the bottom. Then put
on the outside in the samo manner,
turning the raw edges in top and
bottom so that all edges are smooth.

Seam your terial together care-
fully before ginning operations.
The edges may be finished with a
silver or gold braid or the bottom
edge with a fringe.

I saw a very attractive cretonne
shade with a fringe. of white beads
around the bottom.
fringe would also be pretty. ‘ ,

One cannot be too carerul in
choosing colors. Rose and pink are
the most cheerful, next comes yellow
and then shades of tan and/rose or
blue combined. ’

For 'el trio fixtures. painted
bulbs are ingused but it is hardly
work for the amateur.

connmommt  ~
Mrs. A. .8. of Memphis-sﬂtgm  '

isthebestknown'mﬁ,.,_.h

A White silk‘ '

 

 

 

very thankful for it. My addresa is: Mrs.
W, 8. Coleman, R 2. Augusta. Mich.

 

Canned Corn Smells Sour

This fall _I canned some sweet corn
and it did not keep. I thought I would
write and probably someone else will
know a better way to can it so it will
keep. 1 used the cold pack method. first
blanched it for about eight minutes then
cold dipped it, then I cut it from the cob.
always enough for one can and put filled
cans in the wash boiler and boiled for 2
hours. Now every can I open smells
sour. Would very much like a recipe for
a large white loaf (take. I have quite a
few recipes for brown loaf cakes and will
here send one in. 7

Brown Loaf Cake

2 1-4 cups brown sugar, 2 eggs, 3-4
{cup lard, 1 1-2 cups of sour milk. 6 table-
spoons molasses. 3 level teaspoons soda.
3 cups flour. 1 teaspoon each of cinna-
mon. dovos and salt, 1 cup raisins. This

method of— canning corn alloWs for
a slight fermentation. Rinse well
in cold water before using.

——.-F—

I am an interested reader of the Bus-
iness Farmer and would like to ask for
a little help from some of you. Will you
please print a recipe for sugar cured
pork? We had one recipe

for brown sugar, black pepper
but we lost it and woman not rem
the amount of each for 100
meat. If you could printthis A
any other good one you ﬁve for sugar
curing I would certame be ’mankful. I
amsendingacakerecipethatllike,

Molasses Cake
1-: cup sugar. 1-2 43“? mOWm- 1"
cup cream. 1-: cup buttermilk. 1-1 t8?
spoon each of cinnamon. cloves. 1 W
banal

each lemon. soda. and
powder. 2 cups flour. Mix the wet ingre-

“gﬂlhristmas Euggrstinnsg

“Out of clothes, out of countenance. out of wit!

DRESS HINTS

NE WILL not be able to make a
dress out of tm and a half yards
of cloth any more. In the first
place skirts are longer and fuller. even-
ning dresses show decided pumness on
the hips. sleeves are sleeevs today both
long and very wide in the morelextreme
gawns, W are to be covered! No more
peek-a-boo. cobweb blouses. No more
transparencies. as to clothes. at least.
Is there a “spiritual awakening, or do
the manufacturers find themselves over-
~v loaded with mere cloth? It were as hard

Loud‘m 336'.

 

    

 
  

 

V i  ,e
. Mp n: or m
’ ‘ in velvet orgilk.

  

  
   

  

 

 

 

 

.nese modoi

sea

 '

- in
boys

to dEcide as so what emu-Bis the money ‘

market and foreign ex 8°-
How be it. it is
Even the sleeping garments
day are made to protect
but then as you will say. winter is~upon
us. A- pajamais a most sensible sleep-
: garment for either men or women.
or girls for it will not wind-itself
under your arms but at the ex-
tremities, where it is needed most. We
picture two ones today. Do
you‘ not think they would be most wel-
come as .
Then look over. our
you know no woman ever had too many.
With a good pattern they are not hard

shown to-
cold

to make. _ -
The little step-in W V

not made for warmth. but very pretty

3 addition tta any

gift: '

and a pleasin
supva of under-Wear.

Alumina!
Pam”

 
     
   
 
 

     

.England, Germany, v .
the total result Vof» Zio‘ndstle opera: \ — ._

; gin to tell the story.

and l
a nice brown.“
_.._______——-:—-

HENRY MORGENTEAU 0N
‘ I ~ ZIONIBM
T IS interesting to note what
Henry Morgenthau, the former
ambassador to Turkey, a , Jew

“opposed to Zionism, says of the mat—

ter. We quote from his article in
World's Work (London) as follows:
"‘As to the economic aspect of the

‘Zlonist-ie program. Mr. Morgenthau

declares that it is impossible. After
working for thirty years with
aid ‘of millions of money supplied
by philanthropic Jews in 1 France,
and " America,

W611?! ‘

tions at the outbreak of‘th’e
10.0.00

War was ' the movement of

‘ Jews from other lands to the 

Palestine.‘ In- the same period Tali
he points out, a million and a half
Jews migrated ‘to America.
"‘Mr. Morgenthau proceeds
show that Palestine cannot support
a large J wish population in pros-
perity. O the 13,000,000 Jews in *
the world. the Zionist organization ‘
claims for Pale tine a maximum poo-5

'sible population. of ﬁve m , wA.f- ,
ter careful study on the spot, 
Morgehthan. . estimates that Pales-

‘ tine cannot support marathon- 1.- '

000,000 additional inhabitants; ~
“Palestine-is in area abou-t‘equal
to the state ‘ﬁof Massachusetts: and ‘
that New England state blest (8.8"
Palestine is not) with plentiful wa-
ter, ample water-pOWer, abundant
forests, and a good soil, supports
only four million people. This bald"
comparison, however, does not. be-
Massachusetts.
is 'an integral part of a tremend-
ously pro. erous nation of one hun-
‘dred million sd‘u'ls. 8116 9111078 all
the advantages of a highly indus-
mamwmmumw, and of e‘sia-b-
lished commercial intercourse with
the rest of the most progressive na-

tions in the world. -

'I‘This is the condition of Pales-
tine: not only must agriculture be
pursued under the. greatest possi-
ble handicaps of soil and Water, but
it. is subject to the direct competi-
tion of far more favored lands in
the very agricultural products for
which it is distinctive.” ' ‘

 

Pmromoxs 
“99“” 4“ this young housewife.
57”“ 68881.30 1 qualn, of mar, for ;
1 Wu .0! murmur“ Lined

‘

 
 

 

 

'I .

666 l 

to“

  
      

   
  
  

l

7 i I I ' ' " ' zlriﬁ'JWiflllive‘ii’x’media'va 'tir-V'   
: ,waives' kwm say that one EARJtEADERB: It is not possible for rallied gun,  ' '  i
i. should not .change‘ one's disposition Print without some mention of the most importantevent before . .B.  f. ..
 g to spite onevs household. If she the world today and the thing-foremost in our  the 0031-  g Hm.)  m  V )
thought him doing so wrong why “fence on disarmament in progress in Washington. . . , ﬁgment- (Lam:  x  
does she disgrace her honestywand . More than ever we may be proud to be Americans. Our  ‘ °9 “1!. 5?» “3°11 £1;   -. ‘ . '  V 1 . :j-g) 
her children by doing what she of State. Mr. Hughes took fearless hold of the big problem and clear- “.ﬂw with thin    ’ ‘ = p41
knows to be wrong herself. ed the decks for action when he outlined before the delegates, our ma. Paul 1).. W County.ﬂ','a"_ >3 i '. r-
I think you will agree with me 90110? 101' naval reduction. . ,  - ‘* on” In”. 5: L ’7‘: I. I ~\. I 7‘
that it is a sad thing for men or Nothing could be more generous than the offer of the United ‘ 1 MIN,“ or swim. 'Wk‘ 0, :7 . a .
women to run around with other States. We who are best able to carry out i big program of building ‘ chicken out into (small  cups of;~ , ,-
people’s wives or husbands. 0301‘ to give it up. “king as much from Great Britain and Japan.‘ It “I”! “£1,012: piece- about an inch , in '
The onl cure I can find for the . Put honor. integrityand-hig purposo back where they were before the just, a" . 3 W, of clva  I
y _ , , tablespoons of brown sugar. 3 table-
eousin ’spoken of in the letter is a great war and it maké. country the leader in thogreatest move- spoons-ot- Show You sauce. Heat 
change of locality and plenty of hard ment toward world- peaoe. the war-sick world has ever lmown. . :h the! lard in u. trying _ , _
‘ Work for amusement, then when . r i and mm m mtg. .K
night comes a good rest will be all . . y g > You “myrmv magma,” Wm" M ; *
she is ready for and no running W and “A “an to Dmmtoohw. , . - 190°“ 0  . its > the *

- ed taste and two i J
around for pleasure. Two it takes by Merle Q 9,, on. :30: 1"?“ “k” and  Pm“ . “gm cook-.331“:- Pt'”  ‘_
to make a quarrel but one may end  . Dr” 0”“ ‘ I mm‘g‘ticmom W,“ ' In”

*- ‘ I am a subscribe to th Business 2 cups granulated sugar, ‘1 cup sour  ‘ don. 
Where does the co sin get the brunet and I saw or; the Seopt. 17 issue cream. 3 eggs. 1 teaspoon soda, 8 mp! W  and mum  i it
money to dress wit' and to go $113: ﬁgmegafdyt 1glitter-ed It; Berg  13;: of flour. handful of obooanutz—Mrs. it. at am m“ k 1

around? " °° 3 30° “3' Because your corn smells sour 1 14 cup. of 1-10, mm; W, ‘ x.
who would send her address. I would be is not necessarily Spoiled for on green pep  3 onions an. in
m otbutter or drip-

.4 r

‘I ‘-"---.-M-“‘

y

 . Erin)“.  Aﬂn. I;

Iv.

d

     


 

  

   
  
  
  
  
  

 

ayingjlﬁ‘ for a
 e the ones that
Our garden? In

.   V untries‘ gardeners Jill glad-
’. 'pj‘aygthatrnuch for’on'el and they
" ., not; only buy one at that .pricegmbut

1
 so .I‘al: "One? toad will‘prevent. $120:
iff'ryear. He does this  eatingbugs

, and insects. “ He never; eats any-
- : thing: that is alread‘yrc'e‘fa’d but must
 i_’catch“ his meals. s In 59. day and a
night he‘catche’s. enough .to rm his
stomach tour'time‘s. although if nec-
 hej'ca'n live- longer (than any

‘ other anilnal ,without ' food. . His

5' mealseconsist of caterpillars, weevils,
. , .‘ moths,. bugs, snails, grasshoppers,
'9 , u'lclretslsvspiders, beetles, rworms,
4 many"kinds ofawin'ged insects, even
I We and innumerable, other noxi-

 - one pests. ,"And in six months he
will put twenty thousand of them

4 _where they will harm no man’s gar-
den. —In many countries the toad is
protected from persons trying to kill

   

(

  

_(V\,-~./f« .

it like we would proteCtiour dog, or _

father would-“protect his best horse.
If you have several in‘ your garden
~ I ‘ do not‘try to kill them but protect
é ‘ them because they will protect your

, crops. I have Several in my garden
" ‘ .and. , y. are all very ...»friendly fel-
lows. I came very‘near killing one.

)- . my garden. He" was sitting under
4 the branches of a weed in the shade
5. and just as I has about to cut the
weed down he jumped out to catch a
bug. It is said that a toad will live
1 to be 40 years old if ’he‘is not mo-
; lasted, and if allowed to have his
i own way he will live the entire per-
. led in your garden. Many people be-
. li'eve toads are pOisonous but it has
I been ’proven that, they are“,not,_'l‘hey
. cannot live, under. water liMe
- L frog, altho. h~ their five—teed hind
_   at. part1 ,-. webbed. You did not
2 know there were so many interest-
" ) ing things. about _“iust an old toad,"
. did you? Do you like to learn about
"the different animals and would you
like to have me - tell you more?
Please write and tell mar—UNCLE
NED.

 

1

01m Boys  0mm

i Twas the first snow of November
And the leaves were brown and cold.
I send the bee hives Ifremember
: Were golden with their hold. ‘,

’ the prom” ’ when' good Thankng 8

‘ use with all her umpkin-piee
When It follows he’s living,
6708.

fr .Andcsnseewithbothhis

; Dear Uncle  will 'tell' you about
‘ gas-“good time that we had at school on
' Vowo'm.  The dra

 kinsan
' gmiroundthemom. Thefhstsecondl
’ilndthirdgradosmarkodsomecatsthat
montheblaokhoardandtheonethat

" oil by" the  VW

“worth of damage to a garden in a p

1 last summer when I was hoeihg in"

  

‘l‘ven 92 Den-
‘bl past board at; 13th::
max-jest some 'e_ 1 ca“'
. were sitting on the rflobr. ', I lmbcked
down‘the most oats and the
gave me a pencil. It wasyery exciting.
After we .got thrOughzwith our games.
' the teacher treated us to peanuts. Then
we all. wenthoma, I hope somerof the

hem mom-anion"
‘ e ro led

Tether boys and girls that write to you

"

~will tell got some-of their ‘Hallowe’en
 Julian. Harriette. — Mich.

 Uncle Nedi—We are tw0 country
girls. We hope to be admitted to the
mart-7‘1 circle of boys and girls. When

[are e Doo Dads coming back again? Wo
think th‘enﬁaper looks . onesome without
them. the boys and girls please
write to us? We will send our photo to

' the first boy or girl that writes to eith-
er of the following addresses: Thereas
Abel. Remus. R 1, Michigan; Bernice
May, It 1. Remus, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—~I am a big boy. l
years old. I- am in the fourth grade.
I enjoy reading the M. B. F. My father
and brothers attend the fairs with Berk-
shire hogs. They were in Michigan three
Weeks this fall ‘at Detroit. Bay City and
Grand Rapids, Since . then my brother
has received the M, B. F. I hope some
time to visit Michigan with theta—Your
Ohio nephew, Kermit Kite. St. Paris. 0.

Dear Uncle Ned——Please hurry and
publish the D00 Dads. again as I can't
wait until they are in the paper. They
are such comical little creatures. One of
my favorite winter sports is skating.
There are‘ many places around here to
skate. They skate on three lakes most
of the time. The names of the lakes are
Bark Lake, Mill Lake and Johnstons
Lake. They skate mostb on Bark lake
and at night many times a are goes
to the lake and skates and some will
play tag. We go siding and sleigh rid--
ing about .a mile from town and have
lots of fun. Well goodbye Uncle Ned
and NUMYI'UO Prodell. Sidnaw.
'Micbigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—How are you any-
how? My birthday is on the same day
as yours, I will be fifteen years old. I
enjoy reading the children‘s mg!!- I 13385-
od the eighth grade last 'year and in-

 

 

 

so couldn‘t go. ,
Adella Arnold. Snover. Mi

. w .

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a boy 13 years
old. Iliveona8o-aorofarm. Wehave
8 horses. 3 colts and about 100 chickenS.
I am sick with infantile paralysis. I
m’tgoto‘school. Igiiesstillbeout
of school all year. My father takes the

gm
89E

I from
twin

3’:

rl Dom. Kendall. R 1,

birthday is the 8rd of August.

5

   

  

 

” ‘ NEW LAMP BURNS '
f BURNS 94 96 AIR
snare momma! on one
' _,  gives an
.  .. . , - sort, 'white
 ﬁshy oreLbetter Ethan 888.9161”-
 ,. «my,   tested by the U. s.
a We?  85 leading 

  
 

   
  
 

  

 

 

  

 

D
' Uncle Ned and all the cousinsa— _

Dear Uncle Ned—I am 10 years oldi

  

Iii.

   
 

have a’twi'n please write to me and
‘ ‘urself and I will answer:—
Morena, Fairview, Michigan.

Dear Uncle New” I enter your
happy circle? ‘I am in the eighth grade
at school and am 12 years old. I miss
the Doc Dads very much and hope they
willhurryback. Iexpecttheywillbe
Surprised to see all this snow. I wrote
a letter to Gladys Miller but did not re-
ceive a reply. I am reading “Nomads of
the North” and think it is very interest-
ing. We are going to have a program
at our school. There are 36 of us count-
ing the teacher, Well Uncle Ned the
people that were born in November are
sure lucky, I was born in June so I
guess I‘m left out this time. With love
to Uncle Nod and all the cousins, I amy—
Leona Haselhuhn. Richmond. Mich.

Dear uncle Ned—--I am a girl thirteen
years of age and in the 7th grade at
school. I love to walk to school in the
fresh air in the morning. I live about 9
miles from Ann Arbor. On Hallowe'en
we had an entertainment at our school
andwehadaverygoodtime. Thepro-
gram was quite long and we didn’t get
to bed until about 12 o’clock. The next
day we had to go to school and I guess
I would have slept all day if no one had
woke me up, We had a rather sleepy
school the next day. For pets I have, a
horse, cat and two lambs. I wonder if I
have a twin? My birthday is the Slst
of September.——Margaret Remnant, R 3.
Chelsea. Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—How are you this
flhe morning? There is snow on the
ground here but air is very warm. I
have been very busy this morning. I am.
going to have a good time Christmas for
we are going to have a Christmas tree at
our schooL I haVe a twin brother, We
are both in the eighth grade at school. I
also have a brother sixteen years old
and a sister seven years old—Helen
Isham. R 1, Napoleon. Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—Hello everybody!
I am fourteen years old and in the
eighth grade at school. I live on a ram
onOOacres. Ialsoliveverynesra
lake. Have any of you heard of Crystal
Lake? You've missed something if you
haven't bathed in it, It is very clear un—
triildeyo's’t;v react:I thewblgle1 line. 'I have to

enmes a 00! and thereare

eight riding in the bus. We go in a five
passenger Ford. I am sending a

Johnny to father: '“Sayﬁdoryou cw
more was a murder in town last night?”

Father: “No. who was it?"

Johnny: “A‘ man killed his engine.“—
Edna Weifenbach. Beulah. Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a little girl 0
years old. I have two little sisters. We

 
  

    

 

 

 

 

 

Vanderhoof. 'I‘ustin. Michigan.‘
D m.-
ear Uncle Ned—I am a farm girl 18
78m Old- 1 3’0 to school every day. I
mmm°ﬂfthgradeatschooh My
fathertakestheMERandthlnhﬁ
“me- Imageizhty-acrefamm

pets I have two kittens. a Shepherd
and a b cab—Helen McKay. R 3,
Dent.

 

DearUncleNed—Ihavercsdso
nioelectersintheM.B.F.thatI
Iwouldwritealettertoo. Iliveans
ISO—acre farm. Iibr pets I have a
names Jack and a cat named Tones.

 

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a 1 13 years
old and in the seventh and Eighth grade
at school. For ts I have a yearling
cult that my fa gave me. He also
gave me a swarm of bees. I go to school
every day and like it quite weal—Mabel
1!, Sweet. R 2, Maple City, Michigan.

 

ornnn "LETTERS nnonrvnn
Lucile Moxind, La Salle. R 1; Eloise
M. 'Grossman, R 11: Lillian Eangv-
WWI];me 1Esperia Norma A.

apo eon; arion ll B

ham. R 4; Mildred Zell. St. clau- n I;
a; banjo.
Innis.

Leotta. Desneen. Gagetown, B

N. Tracers. Williamston, RV;
Fail-view; Verna Nichol, no.

Gregor3AddieM.Clark.Bx.ImlayCitn

Celia Betas conning: Julia Hand-

low. Butternut Violet Mozen LaSalle
Dorothy Stover: Frontier, gm ;

 

 

@

    

W 017/. D
STA/VOA}?
FOR m0

WEm

secondl- Ssi'esi and
only remedy [on Cold; .

 

 A. as“ ,; -
 _ d. anyione whose,  -
 same day as mine. ,I would Inns.
tﬁ'fet a‘ letter from the girls and boys.

 

r. "W‘- lists Y9" Wife?"

        
     
 
   
    

E3
Ea

 

Always say “Bayer”

Unless you see the name “Bayer” on

tablets, you are not getting genuine '

Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
12 years and proved safe by millions.
Directions in package. ,

Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Man-u-
ﬁagltglée of Monoaceticacidester of Salicy-

    
  
   

“ ii"

a DAY SALE
i’ricas'Slashed

( Here is the greatest money saving sale I”

you ever heard of. Prices cut to the bone on Fences.

. Gates, Steel Poets, Rooﬁng and M

GET BROWN'S FACTORY PRICES I
Don't endscentuntﬂmgdmy

mata'rmiwsnm h.

Wt) m

E 9 6 - FAG E B 0 0 IQ

0F BIG BARGAINS

Eye" is like Ingmoneﬁ. new

 normal-natal gnbﬁow. thﬁﬁﬂ

lmrwdﬂhﬁum anonymous

¥
#-

 

   

 
 

  
 

 

 

BUY A VIIIGIIIIA FARM HOW

lwhtheunetobuyafarmlu
Prices You

Virgina oumnresdvantagutothn
tanner than any other state—variety of
soime longgrowingseuon.
WluhmwhereyoumgroVonlytwo
«three cromandbe hrsway from
good when can grow a
verisy cropsin bow
tin oonsumngmarhmmhmlth-
iestcﬂmateinAmcrim.freefromdis

novforﬂ'and
Book.

p

Maps. etc.
W. KOIIER. Commissioner of Aori-
eulture. Rlchmond. Va.

 

 

 

 

n’éﬁ'ﬁf‘fj 
ONE YEAR 

$38 gawk

Means-ﬁlmdofoctslnmn
. ad- aloo In four
I born-oi on
30 DAYS' FREE TRIA’
ndensfmwbmbyduyesrntbelro‘-
more ‘ bet Groove.me bring-
lo $2. from the mum
and save money.

Egg Given Awa

t Model—:Electrle Starter naught.

 

 

- 55.1.} _

m I' m.
Lrorewlsson. Inﬂux monument! u

————EVERY ﬁg
BREEDEB

anusenkli‘h
Brecders’ Directory
Run your ad. and '3' j

 

 

 

 

  
   
  

one! 0-

   
   
    
    
    
    
  
 

     

    
      
    

   

.3}:

x

Asplrm

  
 
  
  
  
  
    
  
       

    

       
     
      
      
   


elite out
.1 ,xﬁeeef’ed. or copy es
3 bel'e'ht rpeoielxio . rem:

   
  

you with.
eel: for than.

 

         
   
   
  
  
    

  

To Avoid oonruoung date: we will Without
."eeet.- list the ‘date of any live stock cute I. \
Michigan. If you- are considering e ale el-
VIee us At ence and weed" claim the “to
lee u. Address. Live Oteek Editor. I. I.
K. t. Oiemene. » ~ ~~

 

» Decolnber 18.-—Holsteinii. lakeside Dairy
Dispeml, Lake Odessa, Mich.
' Jan. 13—Horses—Mich. Horse Breeders‘
 M. A. 0.. East musing. Inch-
” 2 -— Hampshire. Swine. Lenses”
m nEli'liulllipshire Swine Breeders' Assn.
. c .

 

 

‘ _ LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEERS
- ad, AdAms. Litchfield. IQGh.
Bowers. South Whitley, Ind
B. Benjamin——Wsukeshi.
Porter Colestock, Eston Repidl.- Mich.
kha —Dulhs m

paw"

L. Perry. _Columbus. Ohio.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

J. I. Post. Hillsdsle. Mich.
O. A. Rasmussen. Greenville. Mich.
J. I. Runner-t. Perry. Mich.
“nm‘hzndﬁim‘i; .1)“. 3'1???
Wm. Wl‘t’nﬂ, Coidmlytﬁ,uuibh.
B. '1‘. Wood—Liverpool. Ohio.
. " CATTLE
. , J
HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN
SHOW BULL

.lired by I. Ponﬂsc Annie Komdyokel-bﬂenger-

uld DeKol bull from A nenrly 1 show
now. First prize iunior cell. Jschon N1,
1920. Lizht in color end good individusl,

Seven months old. Price 8125
room. Hurryi

Herd under Federal Supervision.

ROARDMAII FARMS

1 l JACKSON. MIOH.
; ‘ Holstein Breeders Since

tomske

1906

 

 

 

 

‘I AM OFFERING LIGHT COLORED HOL-
u IteimF‘riesian boil 1 year old from 21.5] lb.
stem end sire whose six nearest drums are 33.34
~, lbs. butter.
' ‘ervision.
“Oscar Wallin. Wiscogln Farm. Unlonviiie, Mich.

u

Herd under state and federal sup-

 

-. TUEBOR STOGK FARM

f Breeders of Registered Holstein
cattle and Berkshire _Hogs.

Everything guaranteed, write
me your wants or come and see

 

 

y seasons pincer-our. his woman” wetness EARLIER. 

" "nm 35* lb. ,
. TM, cow and

v realm HerdL—Holsteins' »

Hire sin.lmbieggeard .Liiith Champion
Bis sire’e dsm Countlgddﬁghl moo .nrlu'l
we ’e “It,
bulimwthstmrhildﬂlwoﬂdﬁm
records from one any to one year, end
'mr'iy milk record st the same’

if
I

(is
a i“ Am“
mule Ind Michigan state recor or mm-
one Michinn cow with higher milk record
“His two nearest dame creme:
Butter. one you 1.1.
0. dc

.. .................I...2
Chunp’e eons {rem choice A.
Add prestige to your herd And money
puree.

J. F. RIENAII ,

VIIIGE rouse BULL ‘

by 85 lb. son of Kin .of the Pontiac.
m201bni‘lrstchec‘k8100mm
a few heifers by some sire.

BRANDONIIILL FARM
Ortonville, Michigan
JOHN P. HEEL

I

in

Q

Ale-eeoeoveooe

‘E
irvi

ESE

 

A BLUE mason VliiIlIE '33::

on the 1921 Show Circuit. For sale At A low
co. Out of an A R O mnddsughhr of

‘ c Korndyke. . ,
Bired by our SENIOR SHOW BULL Model
Kins Satin Gum 32.37 lbs. _

“ GRAIID RIVER STOGK FARMS
COREY J. SPENCER Owner
111 E. Main Street, Jackson, Mich.

. Herd under State and Federal Supervision.

DON'T BUY HOLSTEIN OR GUERNSEY
OALVES ANYWHERE UNTIL YOU WRITE
EDGEWOOD FARMS,
’ WHITEWATER, WIS.

Two Holstein Bu“ Calves ‘

Nearly ready for service.

A. R. O. dams. .Sire one of
Michigan’s best bulls. ‘

Dam of No. 1 has 512 lbs.
mﬂk, 28.5 lbs. butter in 7 days
at 4 yrs. Dam of No. 2 has 507
lbs. milk, 25 lbs. butter at 5
years. -

They are both extra good,
well \marked and guaranteed
right in every way. $100 each.
I cannot buy their equal for
twice that amount. ’
A postal will bring particu-

lars.
W.  Gamble

606 Taylor Ave., Detroit, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BULL CALF. BORN APRIL 20, 1921. WELL
grown. wall marked. very tsin-alight. and sure to

please you. Sire Segis Flm Household Lad

 

  
 
 
  
 
  
  
   
   
 
   
    
 
 
  

 

01' se .

‘oeo. W.,,PUF.FER,180. Badman, Mich.
“Holstein FBIEsun'°“:.m2..‘2i-i
.‘ m' heifers: tuberculin tested Prica ere

antic REsEARoH FARM, Box A North End.
w Detroit. Iichleen. .
, _80\HE.‘  YOUNG REGISTERED HOL-
‘rr' ltdn goodcolor, bred N

cows. hi1- sine.
* bulls and due from July to December. Mole-
feom A. R. 0. stock. prices reasonable I!!!

 

 

 

SOLD ASAIl

gull caulk lest  sold but hue anus:
no out]: w ey ere nice etn
sired by e of Kin One. {1‘

son I .
lb.2ﬂ.olddunlndth00th0th tome
 r. Synold nonnative-one!
' nenxerveid De Kol Butter Buy. one o!
greet bulls. '
es HOPSON am. ovum. lies. a I.

    
  
 
 
  
  
  
  

BALE—m0 BULL‘OILVES, I "OL-

, and Durham shout 8 months old. Both‘
4 heavy milklnsgsms. Not registered. 350
 it taken at e ‘
, ‘ HASE STOOK FARM. Mariette. Mich. 

  

 

‘~ YEARLIIG BULL BABaAUis

by Segis Korndyke De Nijlsnder. e 32 "
'of  moo ‘Michizsn ribbontevgn ‘ .11.:
eggs: 1.37 lb. 5 ° ‘3...“

Der
3
»to 3 lbs. Priced 1;.va
; reden‘ily tested on: 10. was.

‘ﬂOOIEirAnei ‘nerolrre ,
f:_.dir'hurd.w ere well
.. oulkJu'gitlr‘l era ‘1? 
u.- g , . I ».

  

 
   

   
    

 

  
 
 

Bea-ls
. headed

 them. ggosemlt‘ymhneagejst ntestetdh dams 3.7013113 81.9il(i
/ » ROY F. F1 :xfnﬁg 0;, Engage-521305;: ye“: .° 3 m”
' Chesaning, Mich. ,mumaded'mmeg. - °' 'y
1 L. o. KETZLER. Flint, Michigan.
_' ' REGISTERED HDLSTEIII BULLS
 ' s 5 o Bil-ed by a son emu; One and from good
m. N08". HEALTHY, HOL8TEIN BULLS Mining cows. Write for pilot/0! Md m
 vaertse State Hospital stock. Registered EARL PETERS, North Bradley. Mich.
L W nice

 

 

SHOBTBORN

BEaIerBEB wright; tars-m

Hornet Quality at the right price.
OHASLEN FARMS. Nor-thrills, lich-

FOR SALE MILK ernsm boun: mn-

- dsrd Polled ‘Bhorthorn Only.

either sex. by York: Polled Duke No. 10884-
545109 from Accredited herd.‘
PAUL QUICK

'&UN 8“ WHO. R 2, Mich.

SIIUR'I'IIIIRIIS

We ere now oﬂerlng two splendid bung, tan
monthsold. kindthstishe‘rdtoﬂnd,outd
our great b -bull Perfection Heir: Aho A
few heifers. some of them well .10 in an.

“R” W5

 

 

 

_Will be priced worth the money.
nuts or better come end pick them out.

guarantee modem
. ‘ s. H. PAIGBOIIII & son

a Miiee East. Bed Axe. mos. ,

man 8er SII nilnus

‘ tered stock of silage: and both sex. Herd’
by the imported bull, Keimscott Vla-
oouni: 25th,;648.503. Prices reasonable.

LUNDY BROS..QR4. stison, Mich.

cusp. shoRTl-ioﬂll, FAN‘GY HEIFER
and Bull~0elvas“end Heifers. 0. I. 0. May
end June Pigs. Write "your wants. ..
'FRANK‘ BARTLETT, Dryden. Mich.

price so nurses
.I ' "r . ‘- egg? ~ n e
" F “10?, Slide”... I
'w'nsl.‘ memo“ suohﬂonu enun- *
_ 'tion oxerdor  75 heft]: ell.

 

 

end

 

 

 

‘ but manic! Send ark-new ‘

   

1205 Griswold BL, Detroit, Michigan»

‘Flossie S

i F12. 3.1.254: ""3"..."mm as.
- Gila! ‘ D . ereex: the
red bulk. one 11 month end 0% 5
Sev‘eni hdfers from - months 2 ,
Scotch Top and Beta bred. A I
GEORGE W. ARNOLD or JAR D ARNOLD,
immanent-e. ll 1. meme-n

TH: vs’u nuance. euon‘fno‘lm Ines.-
ers' Associstion hsve stock for Isle. both milk

 

end but b‘reedkig.
.- write (Re secretory. ‘
FR NK ‘DAILEY. Hartford. Milli. ‘

exrRA coco BULL OALVEOVFO'R one.

From th Ri ‘ Bet-
3horns. W n e r I3:920: SM
‘ a. s/ renews“. Meson. —ﬂiehiien.

suon‘rﬂonu min-LE AND oxron‘o oowu

sheep. Both sex for sole.
‘ J. A. DeGARMO. Muir. lie!!-

-IIHERITEU SIIURTIIURII QUALITY
0111' show A judicious mixture of the
beet blood lines known to the breed. Waite t

Joan LESSITER’S eons.
« Olen-men, Mich.

FUR ROLLED SIIDRTIIORIS

Shropshire. Southdown end Cheviot rams write tr

e.
i.
3'

 

 

 

"nei

 

 

 

   
 
  

   

_ ' pit gave its Inn
orgyl‘ite;.éndthaen there W t sin.
lanes 0:. voice, broken at inter-uh

f...

  

wines in £503:ch ’

.as the him 7 launched-themed”
up and. overjthem lithe/“direction d

| :thg  Kim  ,_ I . ‘ ~.

The going forth o£ the“ o is m

nivaL for Neewa and Miki. Fan‘s
long time they lay side .by side.
sleepless,_,’,hnd ._ listening. Past' the
windfall wen , padded feet of A
fisher-cat, and they’caught’ the scent
of it; to them came the tar cryfgt e

and the mooing of a cow moose feed-
ing in the edge of a lake on the
farther side of the plain. And then.
at last, came the thing that made
their blood run faster and sent a
deeper thrill into their hearts.
(Continued next week)

.VETE R I NARY

 

L. O._KELLY & SON, Plymouth, Mich...
SHURTHURHS 333.? -::".'::§.i..";:::

before Jenusry first. Will tnde for good lend.
. Wm. J. BELL. Rose 0M. Mich.
Julie old

MILKUIU suonrnonns m... m ..

vice, tuberculin tested and st burnin prince.
w. s. HUBER. Giedwln, Mich.

’ RIGHLAIID SHORTIIQRIIS

Special * dot on two white ’ymrling Bulls
from I . Cow: and sired by IMP. Newton.
Chm Dion. ' .

Alec seven] other use] Bull Bsrgnihs.

Don’t overlook these homing

C. H. Prescott & Sons

Tawas City, Michigan

4TH ANNUAL

in 1:54:38 test without in reactor. BOlne bargains
JOHN schoT a. son. Reed cm. Mich.

TWO REAL SHORTIIORII "‘ﬁgnaé’i'fg

1.5 1110. old and sired by Imp. Dainty_

w. w. KNAPP, Howell. Mich.

 

 

 

U‘Y SHORTHORNS NOW,

 

 

 

GUERNsan

GUERNSEY BULL

Sir~.Thomss of Missaukee67610’, born
July 9th. 20. His dam now on test in 99
days made 3965 lbs. milk 201.8 b. fat as e
junior 3 year old. He has over 7-8 blood of
Norman’s Missaukee Red Rose 89724 now on
test, ﬁnishing her 9th month with about 12d00
milk and 590 b. fat, as a junior 2 your old.
She begins her 10th month with over 2 lbs.
‘0. 15. per day. Sir Thomas has clear nose.
straight top line. is light fawn. very masculine,
well grow and lame. Ready for Service. Sheet
Anchor. Glenwood and Gov. Cheno breeding. Ro-
duced price, $150.00 for 30 daysl
for sole. Write for particulars. Accredited herd.

A. M. SMITH, Lelia city, Mich. _

GUEnusn BULLs Fiﬁxﬁr .1... .

yearling; 1 ﬁve months old; 1 three months old.
all the May [I‘lt'ose straingsdvcnced registry. Write

 

 

 

BRYCE. Romeo. Mich.
REGISTERED ‘GUERIISEYS 15????
cakes $250. A choice bull out very

J.‘ M. WILLIAMS-
No. Adam. llich.

GUEBISEV BULL GAL 1 "mm

01.0. NEE,
Lsngwater Prince Chsrmsntc. A.
R. ughters 1 lbs.
am: stton's Lady Lu,. 41
use) 1 A. R. daughter.

A. f
lbs. int D. 1). ti e
MORGAN BROS»
Altman. R ‘1. Michieen

GUERIISEYS

OF MAY ROSE AND GLENWOOD BREEDING.
No abortion. clean. f are] Their
sires than made 19,460.20 milk, 909.05 ht.
Their mother‘s eire’s de;m made 15 109.10 milk
778.8001. CsnspsreScowe,2heifer-ssnds
u lot of young bulls. _
T. V. HICKS, R 1. Bettie Greek. lick.

FOR SALE, GUERNSEY NULL. 1 YEAR OLD.
Write for particulars in . _
ECHO LODGE FIR.
R. F. D. 2, Watmllot. lick.

REGISTERED GUERNSEY HEIFER ONLV'O'
for $126 each delivered. Bull calves for $50.

Sires 5, nearest dams svem'ge 725 lbs. fat.
:INE HILL FARM, R8. more OI”. Itch.

_, musan '
LADWIN COUNTY PURE BRED LIVESTOOK

 

409

 

 

 

 

 

 

ASSOCIATION. He' ord. Shorthorn. Jersey ‘
'ﬂolstei 'cattl : Jersey.” Poland Chine
smug Hﬁmpseﬁre haven; Oxford. Shropshire end
Bagging: to but good breedinz stock ct reason:
ble D can. . " -
. NEHART ‘O. E. ATWATER
FRED .s elm ‘ 8” V

President
,, aledwln, Mich.~

JERSEY BULL cALvE's. Show type. Foam ' 
duoers. $50 and up according-tohgmf ,MILO‘
H. EDISON a. son. R2. «rend Binnie, Alien.

.1”

one as; egg} gluing-V» euLLe“ _:wo91.,' us.
' DEERE?.efmgnmmaros.fi§nr 1: 

 

I 7.,.' 'm: 

 
  

     

B, *else be done? Is there any hope

 

DEPARTMENT v-

on. w. AusuN EWALT a son-on

 

 

 

BLOODY MILK

My grade Jerse heifer. just fresh for
first time, gives b oody milk. No apps:- .
ent reason. Udder perfectly normal in
‘zzery other respect. Milk is not stringy

d bloodis fresh—not clotted. All four
' quarter show it, enough to color 811
milk peroeptlbly but seldom enough a
look streaked, I know about hot m

bathing and shall try it. ,Can anythin‘
of cure
She is a great pet and promised to males

Lake Odessa, Michigan.

this. It will undoubtedly recover in
time. ‘Try some Fowler's Sulphsu
of Iron ; dose 1 drain 3. times day on ‘
reed. . ‘ 

CYSTIO ovsnrhs.

I have a mare that raised a colt two
years ago. During‘ the past .3' months
she has come in heat every day. Will
you- please give me some eidviozze?——A~ 8.,
Sparta, Michigan. . ..

This condition ishno doubt caused
by cystic ovaries and the spaying op-
eration is the only resort.

 

 

SYMPTOMS OF' TUBERCULOSIS
I would like to know the Symptoms or
tuberculosis in cattle.-—R. R, Beavers
ton, Michigan. > .
The’ symptoms of tuberculosis h
cows vary according to the location
of the parts of the body affected.
There is probably no organ or tissue
lot the body that is not susceptible
to the infection. Since we have (tn-
berculosis of the lungs. liver, intes-
tines. spleen, heart, kidneys, lymph
glands, bones, joints, udder, repro-
ductive organs and skin. One on
roadin perceive that since the lee-
ions of this‘diseese may be widely
scattered throughout the body al-
most any symptom shown by a cow
may be a symptom of tuberculosis.
For instance, ‘unthriftiness in\spii:e
of a good appetite, a. chronic cough.
chronic diarrhoea, frequent bloating.
chronic. lameness, hard lumps in the
udder with occasional preSence of
bloodmr curd in the milk may be in-
dications oi! the disease. However,
in a quite large number’ of cases
there are no apparent lesions at All.
In fact some animals show a tend-
ency to lay on ﬂesh, especially dun-
tng the first’stagos of the disease.
The diagnosis of this disease by sym—
ptoms alone is not possible except
in some very advanced, cases. Sub-
jecting suspicious animals to the
tuberculin test is the most reliable
method of determining whether they
9 affected. All cattle should 'be re-
arded sssuspicious until they have
been - tested.-_-Rus,sell  "Runnellg‘ ;

1.0.

f

 

 

 

an ideal little cow except for this—45. .B... A

"No external application will help-

3

Asset mt. criminal Paihqlosyl;;i¥f 

loan, the yapping of a restless tom. " ‘

l

by. the tilnt’crsshing mop, 5f  I‘
end balsam 1; , '

oﬁly the beginning of than (gnu? - 

y

l

  
    
    

     
 

   
  
      
 
  
  

 
     
 

b
4’

   
   
 

serene: (serene necessaries: nonsense. use“;

egress-he n essence-ess-

n so none:- 

/ 

LESBE‘S‘RQS 3‘!

not: he es"

   

 
       
 

 
     


 
    
     

 

 
 
 

we; .

,. liminari sport, .
of‘ Chemistry , and. Animal Indus-

from the' Bur-

.  in the'JUhitedetates Department
' l'hfaiAgricniturefbasedr on an experi-

' toC‘dctermine the feediiig’value.
dried apple penises, especially its
suitability as food for cows in. loco

 Preliminary results are re-

' d because of} large number of
as on the‘subiect,

The text of the report follows: V,

:It‘ appears that there is a helm"

mong’v‘dairymen that the dried pro-
. Cnctvhas a tehde‘netho (autumn the

ﬂow, or feven‘ cause cows to go"

- .-; . . although’apple  fresh
’ ‘ I ‘ the older press

is generally
liq-DOan a .good succu-

  feed for milk cows. To test, arrives at market.
" .  of this‘belief. a feed- . I .
\ ' ‘ trial”has'bleen carried out by —graded at the shipping p01nt
 tﬁ department. Only one cow was

ﬁfth test, ,and the total
tity .0 dried ppmace fed “was
than [400 pounds; therefore, it

insist be borne, in mind that the re

nits obtained, while. indicative, can

~ not be accepted as conclusive.

lin'~ this feeding, trial the-dried ap-
npomace was fed wet and its feed-
value compared with that oi
corn silage, since it is intended to
be a succulent feed. v The pomaee
was prepared by adding to the dry
material three times its weight of
water several hours before feeding.
as producing a feed similar in wa.

V content to that of corn silage. .-
For a period of 30 days the cow‘
ed’ a balanced ration consist-
of grain, hay, and corn silage.
he silage was then replaced by the
“pie phmace for 'a similar length
of. this; allowin-g a 10-day transi-
Oan cried for the change in diet

- an! after a like transition period at
» _the\end of 30 days the original raw.
 period for the change in diet
ﬁnd 7 continued for a third 30-day

’Wiod.‘

The quantity tea—36‘ pounds of
wet pomace’tper day—’was such that

3 ' the total dry matter, in the pomece

«nailed the“ weight of “dry matte:
in the silage replaced. The, nauti-
ties of grain and.hay fed remained
practically constant throughout the
Whole experiment. 7 ~ ‘ g
1 While the data. obtained are. not
sufficient to warrant the drawing "of
ﬁnal and definite conclusions, the
ications are that no bad. eifects
w the feeding of (dried apple
mace appeared to be‘equal. pound
milk flow. nor in the yield at"
butter-fat. . ,  .
When fed as described the dried

mace appeard to be eq‘u'al,1pound 7

pound of; dry niatter,’ to good
corn silage as a succulent food for
this dairy cow. Owing to the prop-
erty which is possesses bf absorbing
larger quantities of water and swell-"
tag, it should never be fed dry, but
should be allowed to soak in water-
for" an hour or 'so before feeding.
The pomace appears to be a palat-
able feeding stuff. '
Caution is advised in
dried apple‘pomace, as there is‘ ’a
possibility that the feeding of large
quantities, or of quantities contain-
ing (excessive. amounts of 'apple
seeds, might prove injurious. It ap—
pears to be safe, however. to feed

Yes much Soaked pomace by weight

(1 part dried pomace to 3 parts wa-
ter) :as it would be to feed the same
amount of pomace fresh from the
older press. » ‘ * ,

 

 FEEDING 0F LIVE-
su‘oon  SHIPPING
EPOR’I‘S to the’ effect that one

cessive shrinkage on live stock

. at central Whats infrequently

experiencedxgre  'receimed

from members  manners of 

glans, gh’y the-«Unite'd‘fs‘tat ' _‘ Depart-

“, . “an; Stingricultura'gn j ceases
 take the.“ form,,pt..eomeg «
 a I M .. . " -

 

the 31113196501 . r-

. soft to move corn'to husker.

feeding ‘

swears. live stock .shlvplngfiﬁhsbcid. --’ we” r” 1913'

 

 
   

opera
{came \into‘ ‘vo "

country” buyers. 1 Under the system
of marketing wherein live stock was
usually sold on the basis. of home
weights. Or at most, shipping point"
weights. it wasnsually to the pro-

ducer’s advantage to Obtain a gem.

crops “fill” on his stock before
turning,“ over to the country drover.
' 'Thefco—opera‘tive system of ship-
1511181176 stodk, however, practically

 eliminates the incentive-to excessive
- home *or shipping point fills. Stqck

.thﬂt is fed heavily ‘iust before load-

»ing is not only quite likely to sickem

and“ sometimes die while in transit,
but seldom takes a good fill when it
Furthermore,
are

where". co-operative shipments m
e

‘ man whose stock has been given a

heavy fill receives more than his just
proportion of the" net returns. Home
grading of co-operative shipments is,
in most instances, highly desirable,
but it can be successfull only: where
the individual members “play fair"
with each other or, in other words,
where they really co-operate.
ITALIAN SUGAR FEET CROP

, The\harves’r of beets having been
abundant for the first time since the
war, Italy will have enough sugar to
satisfy her demands for this year.

 

 

 

7‘ Crop Reports

 

 

 

 

Mocosta——Snow and cold weather for
past 10 days but warmer today. Snow
all gone. ’ Not much corn left in
fields on account of several community
owned shredders. Lots of fall plowing
to be done yet if weathermts favorable.
Potatoes moving steadily: market week.
{Prices of many things farmers must buy
too high. in comparisnn to what he gets
for his producer-«P, A W. Nov. 18.

Eaton—Snow1nearly all gone. Warm
and foggy lastithree days. One-half of
corn still in fields. Ground too, wet and
‘We need
colder weather to freeze ground toghandle
can. Somewheatgoingtnmarketaiso

and lambs, Prices too low‘so there

no profit to producer. ' We

buy too high in comparison with. what
We sour—C. F. ‘L.. Nov. 18.

Saginaw—We had about 6 inches of
snow, It is all gone and. raining now
with air warm; There is some corn to
husk’yet. There is a lot of fall plowing
being done. Farm work in general is
well done up for the fall.—G. L., Nov, 18.

St Joseph—Bad weather in this local,-
ity. Some corn to shred yet but rain
delays work. Some farmers have been
hauling manure'and doing odd jobs. Sev-
eral sales in vicinity. Everybody cele-
brated Nov. 11 at Sturgis. Good time
was, reported by all even if weather was
quite cold—Mrs. H. C. Holiz, Nov. 18.

‘mdland—«A few, beets are still going
‘towtown. Feed being ground. and
beans and grain_ 1d. Some building is
being done, but the eccentricity of the
woatherfupssets many a well-laid plan.
‘The snow \nearly all gone, but it has
been raining so that it has been impos-
sible to finish corn husking. We .hope
the weather clears up for a while—C.
L. 8.; Nov. 11,

FARM PRODUCE RATES DROP 1

a . PER CENT '
' . (Continued from page 1)
comparable to the ten million, dolr
lar reduction on‘longlhauls.

Counsel for the .Farm Bureau ar-‘
gued as folloWs: ‘

“The average farm price on cat-v
tle for Sept. 15 of this year was ap:
proximately 89_ per cent of, the av;
erage price for 1913. x ‘

“The average farm price on"— hogs
for Sept. 15 of this year was approx-
imately 100 percent of the..average'
price for 1913. i I. ‘ r 

“The average farm price on sheep“

for. Sept. 15 of this year was approx-e

inater 9.1.,er cent of theaTerage

 munching  am...
gist-91!; ‘177 ‘ net: scent 0‘13 the?31.913

\—

 
   
 
  

   
    

      

t9:

and whem’most-l
small prod-nears sold their stock to ;

PDT”

_A’» ,ILHVUVV. -. - i_

 a I... wane. ' record im- all

breeds"'for-’“c‘ows under two years of
886 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, 976.29 lbs. of 85 per cent
but-tor. 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 \wiuners. Jerseys are
ideal\ dairy coWs. A pure bred
Jersey bull is a‘money making. in-

vestment. Think! Act! ,
Write T” ’
SEO’Y HENDRICKSON
Shelby, Mich.

for free literature.

  HEIFERe 1 YR. 6L0—
I Young cows in \milh sired,

\[aicsty's Oxford Bhylock 1561692 also Yon!!!
Ls sired by Frolic’s r Pozis 177003. a
grandson of Poe-is 99th and Sophie 19tb's Tor-
mentor, two great bulls of the breed. Writs for

 

prices and pedigree.

GUY O. WILD“: R 1. Beldlns. Mich.

JERSEY BULLS AND BULL cALvEe sired
by a son of Sophie 19th Tormentor.
J. E. monms a son, lengtoﬁ. Mich.

I THE BULL l8 HALF THE HERD. HOW

much would a son of Panic 99th‘s Duke 8th.

who has 60 per cent. blood of Sophie 19th; be

worth to your berdl . ‘ ~

. . flire send gov pedigrees and prices on bull

calves ran: this ull and Sophie Tormentor con
‘FR D HAYWARD

 

 

E
Booth. Mlcb. ‘

a;

HEREFORDS
HEREFORDS & DUROOS

Yearlli bulls and bull calves, Beau Donald
b Also Duroo. boars and tilts.
J. O. THOMSON a SON. Pal-ma. Mich.

 

 

‘ ‘ You bulls

LAKEWOOD HEREFORD mlg'oﬂmm-

4 year old Herd Header, a show bull. pmsessinl

in quality and bluest blood. Cannot use 1011:!!!-
E. J. TAYLOR, Fremont. Mich.

 

 

ANGUS

DODDIE FARMS ANGUS of both sex for an
Herd headed by Burden 319125;;20 Inter-

 

national Jr. on. ,
Dr. G. R. Martin & Son. North ‘St 1, Mloh.

TWO REGISTERED ABERDEEN-
mucus BULLS. one six months
all and the other 3 years. They are from the
best herds in the country. Ad Tess

GEQRGE D. STUOK, Otsego, Mich.

EGISTERED ABERDEEN - ANGUS—BULLS.

Heifers and cows for sale.

Priced be move. Inspe tio
L BR08..

 

c n invited.
RUSSEL Men-Ill, Mlchlgsn

 

 

The Home of

Imp. Edgar of Dalmeny;

Probably

The Worlds’ Greatest
BREEDIHGKBULL ‘

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

of Dolmeny. >

The Junior Champion Bull; Junior
Champion Female, Champion Calf Herd
and First Prize Junior Heifer Calf, Mich-
igan State Fair, 1920. were also, the get
at Edgar of Dolmeny: _

A very choice lot of young bulls——sired
by Edgar. of Dahneny are, at this time,
(ide for sale. A ‘

Sand for Illustrated Catalogue.

WILDWOOD FARMS
Orion, 

w. E. Scrlppl. Prop.. sldnoy Smith. .upl.
‘ !

 

 

 

PURE snzp nllnnslu.
Aldus CATTLE AND 0.I.o.

' an“.
BARTLE I l' h c
ginning .53" m “3513?: {gig-d. m"
“it ’

CL < “(1
. CARL BARTLETT. Lemon. MIGR-

y mamum BEEF mn‘uggism
m  m% at m3 (my. 1921.
Yuma . ‘ggﬂﬁlg HOME FARM

stlson. Mich.

    
  

 
 
 
  
  

 

~Tum .é  l ,

“ﬁat-o -  .' 
POLAND cums

""—-P—‘-F0R sAL-s, use: TYPE——‘——-—v ’ 

.P o I. A u n - c II III A“ 

boar piss. Sired by 1’: Classma- I.
Michigan’s 1920 Gr. Champion boar. '
b! Smooth Buster 3958284 W’ 
1920 lst Jr. Yearling Boar.  by ‘ ‘
double treatment. Prbcd in wan,
9! see them. Ff. livery to Thurs, " 
' A. A. FELDKAMP

R. 2 I)...

R. No. _ ‘

Type ‘Poland Chinss. I have a few 

1!]ch mstthsogoodstme-

their value. Come or write and H me
you what I will do. ' -
A. D. GREGORY, lonla, Michigan. '

Liounno's ale TYPE P. 0. sons Plus

at weaning time. '

325 ‘with pedigree. Satisfaction gnu-an
E. R. LEONARD. R 3. St. Innis. Midi.

L. T. P. C. $15-$20-$25
We areoﬂ'ering our 1921 fall crop of pigs at the
above prices. They are sired by Hart’s thk'
Price and Right Kind Clan. ‘
P T HART, 8t. Loud, Mich. -.

BIG BOB MASTODON

ls sired by Caldwell Big Bob. champion of
\the world.» ._Hls dam’s re is A’s Mastodon.
and champion at Iowa State Fair, some breed-
ing. Peter A‘ Fan is my new boar sired by Peter
Pan, he by Peter the Great, Glover 6: Frank D.
Winn herd, .Kansastity. Mo. Some choice
boars left sued by Big Bob. Priced low and
guaranteed. 30 choice fall pigs. either sex.
0. E. GARNANT, Eaton Raplds, Mlch.

BIG TYPE POLAND OHINAS

SpecialPriceoanntoraodayaExtralong

big-bone, from P.‘s Big Omnge and Oraugl

Price 3rd dsm‘l of Buster and

strain. Also edits for sale. Price to sell Gulch

write or come see them and convince yourselves.
M. M. PATRICK. Grand Ledge, Mich.

BIG TYPE POLAND DHINAS

Spring pigs all sold. Flor fall piss, write
W. CALDWELL a SON, Springport, Mloh.

Ia TYPE P. 0. name PIGS EITHER 881‘
from large growthy dams and sired by chain
herd boars. Come and see our stock. prices
reasonable. p
L. W. BARNES a SON, Byron. Mich.

L. s. P. c. soaas AT FARMERS' PRICE. *
H. o. swanrz
Sohoolcraft, Mich.

Fm'lsco mm suonmonus’ 
AND IO TYPE POLAND Gill/NE» ~

New oﬂering:——Three bulls ready for cc.
Mastodon, Clansmau, bmmncipato breeding in
gilts bred for springri’arrow. hem.

POPE BROTHER 0

Mt. Pleasant. Michigan- ' r - -_‘.

IO TYPE POLAND CHINAS. Fall pin {a , »
sale sired by the 1200 lb. boar Monster B
Bob 327.623 and of Ulansman. Giant
and Yankee breeding. to ship new.
hogs double treated. right for quick sale.
to or come and see them. _ . ‘
CHAS. WETZEL a SONS. Ithaca, Mlch.

BOARS AT HALF PRICE  ma-

Poland china ‘.\ ~

1.

 

   
 

 

        
  

 

  
 

     
   
 

  

       
         
     
       

 

 

Manchester.

 

   

 

    
   
  
   
   
 
   
   
   
   
  
   
     
   
  
     
   
  
  
  
    
   
   
 
   
   
  
  
   
 
   
    
   
   
    
   
   
 
  
    
    
  
    
 

55553

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

bred in the purple, sired by Mich. Buster.
A Giant and Butler’s Bl: Bob. No bettc!
" breeding. A big rugged, big-boned boar

ready
for service, registered. for $25.00—$30.00.
JNO C. BUTLER. Portland. Mlch. '

TYPE P. c.~‘l‘wo sPRmososns, on: sow
$25.00 each. Registered if sold this month. '
PLEASANT HILL FARM
Evart. MIch., Rodte 8. Box 89.

HIGH GLASS POLAND DHINAS

Anything you want. Choice spring gills and I
been Auction Sale Nov. 16.
HOWLEY BROS“ Merrill. Mich.

L. T. POLAND OHIEAS. SPRING BOARG.
31143 and weanling pig‘s. Writs
I ~HAROLD LEONARD. Alma, Mich.

BIO TYPE POLAND OHINAS

«Spring pigs of both sex for» sale at reasonable '
prices. Sired by Orange Clansmau 2nd,. litter ‘
brothet to Michigan 1020 Gr. Champion. Ab .‘
{all pigs. Write for prices, Immuned by double
trmtmenh " - 
MOSE BROS., St. Charles, Mich.

LARGE TYPE 90mm 'ch Is ’.
s 

 

 

 

 

 

 

man. gun Mich. State  , ',
and by F‘s Cinnamon 1920; grand- _ ‘ t ‘
Prices moo c Visitors welcome. ' I
livery from Penna. Correspondence sh 
answe -

N. F. senses. a 1. Perms. Mich.

 

 

AYBSITIBES

Iron CALI—REGISTERED "some:
gsnd all calm. heifers and heifer calm

Also some oios cowl.
_ IIIDLA!» BROS" R 5. Vassar. Mich.

 

  it“! Pt“)? lint?! inf-woe; 

 

'\f   roman)

g!"  RED 'POLLED OATTLE .

 

 

 

 

“1 Large Type Spotted Poland Chills:

“L, um 

 
   
 
 
 
  

epo'rrnn mum) canvas”, ‘.

 

  

   

Some sprint 1116 at richt prices. .3
Pride ‘01 Mecosta. thfaetlon manta-EM 

        

   
     

 

  

' SPOTT

Your; boar in» 1—4
Art MOU’I K1113 (and

EDHPOLKNDS' ' A
“ Passer
l Eyred to Joe m-m of 87.100-109  ,

  
 
 

      
 
   

    
 
 
 
 

   

 

 

.Ail secs- - A .
1.4% 8-’ 0"“?- H°m°"- M'0h- ‘munsd. Also Barred. menu: nit
" . I , . dogs. 1 hound. 0.. .  r
 - ' - ‘ ‘“’ - Kansas. 9 «' r 
‘ p 4“ r BROWN SWISS ; ~ ‘g ..
. ‘ ' '- "I"! s nEenTEsEo snows ‘ " r *5, ,
_ p ,v pwapdp one ‘ y

 

salt" 


.h, u: I I
” ohm "Fennel.
' 1 KW'

" new

 

 tum—run um. um nun. ms
v am 001. 188995. Write on

' Hem.“ POOR a eons. n 1. em man.

 

men lllLL Hill V _
mmddhbredtoordredlum
Orion 152489. am nor-
0:: ‘em over.
3 open silk.
mo QROTIIERO
Romeo. Itch.

 

    

 

A. OFFERING 00-8 “10" «.13.

SP!!!“ BUBOG BOMS

,.(.

ocx rm

 

 

 

 

bled or oven.
K II. EVERY. rum, Iloh.

 

ﬁnmblepdeee.Afew 'tlbledl' IQ-
hnberhmwetbuﬂnprlogl 0’
W.0.TIVLOR
“lieu,
ﬂew; '13:“ “he‘d: "’ ‘
rlax.
_ . mm.

under ‘
nunsme Aral-mi:qu

 

 

 

 

:

‘ TAMWQRTH
LAKESIDE 1 Hill
mu: Boon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

line;- now1 nan, mum'lmn. den run end San !or .1. It
B.E.Klee.onp. ﬂmAInd-meﬂmmw
nun? linen. onndstano cy, much. a
warm nunoe JERSEY noes “i. m m *
Wombhveaoodboenmdlonoim
for lie. Ree-ombb‘ prices. V
one RESEARCH nun. Box A m m FOB SALE
3 via. a bum end a now wed Sept...
by Houston No. 79401 Dun 83
ounce damn nouns. Been a on In; “4980 Well. lime-n- Bnk V
.,   m u.’ I. memorize. Imp. man.
I. a. oaoor. n 1. lam-0e. luau. ._--
n. magi. 3...... .3... m... a SHEEP E
m _ ' .
“Twmnmﬁ a-‘Te'%...m m w: 5”» “Wu- "m
 m_mmw-&mh
'ﬂEl-samljpmm JOHIW.WMMIII¢
’ or 0mm use:
Janey Bred em an em. can u- lllllE arm Rama.
073mm... via 1.000 pound herd boot. , “ﬂops owe. gun
ace. SGHUELLER. Newman. man. ._ Inn.
olxmns pnmm cellar sunopsnmas Wmmnnoﬁai
mun eoousn. n 4. Eva-t. m.

Herd Bosh—Reference only—No. 13921.

1919 (lingo International

LA

Wilt-lob.

nonooannsvmmiﬂt

old. 8d. Walkman. Price
t Woodman-a
e

stock tunable
FREY 5308.. R 1, 0mm

FOR SALE—BROOKWATER PRINCIPAL 8M
2% you: old. right in every my.
J. “a. Iomus a son, Fol-annals!» llob.

Inglagnd nuaocs. You-a ’Bom
by tutor Demomtnhn
2'1, 'an Ema ued boar. sum M 1921.

H. a. meme: a son, m, list.

run men men ....

Mlodelmanmboooi .000

 

 

 

 

 

 

II SALE REGISTERED

name 3303.. RS. m, u

glam. SHADE WIRES
m

 

andmufthebdhnedlnzl’th-

0."..0ﬁ'

 

so Ina-u momma-end :—

o. LIIEI. m, not.

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

 

AMMMun-end
hthbM'ZEC—dlmtornh
bunny-amm-

MRKI II. IAIRI. N Branch. .1013.

 

 

RESISTERED RAIBOIIILLET BAI
Wondlmihldueltty. Metronome
himyeenold.

“mummmmm,na

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

. I!ch Room.
um ‘ You; In! at 12 dolhgl had. OI!-
-~ ~ mum . ’"
mnmummummxmuﬁ unless
whomlnnimonprlnvlnmnuthotb MIMAmmm
we. hire il the 2 you-- than other D.-
womnmvmwhum“ mmDELIIIE "In.
Mt 85 to 40 Du, old!!! .8. mm“ "All WEBER.  Mich.
‘Sdltg ouch. We ere Med may: chad ‘
“In! M a" “M '
03»  Ian. I: 1 90m

m HIIIMFII'BII. nee-awn-

Ind Boers end sprint lb» 100 haul   
“m‘m‘hm‘i‘h‘ﬁdm-mhummmmnomnm
GntlotOo. Newbonanhnkmmlﬂt “Llaanmdﬂafmm
w 0 A m" .‘L'” be w 011 blah 01 mt performance
Gﬁdmmﬁm n‘Duroe Boon. the m hey Ii" founm each gal-3f” non
unleuomu ec'rogovol." a. use. It... Am“, mmmnwm m. I' can"

 

FOR SALE #33113." 03:3.“v9li'aﬁfﬁ
no

u all or write
Gills. F. ROOMRDOOI. Blanchard, Ilch.
ONE DUROO DOA!

 

 

 

. “to.
0.1.0.
0.1. o. AOHWR mm none. seno-
ialthy-Jeet WWII-dd
mmmmmmuu—
www.mendm no
mbphue.writemebdereyeubuy. can
one you money. on. V loom. lion.

 

o. I. 0.5.r‘mIOB mm, wanna m
t m .
nonnmu'nr "00K nan: lune. may

0. I. c. "NINE—MY HERD m. 1'“
blood line. of most noted bad. the tenth
you dock at "live end let live” prions. ,

I. .1. can I. new. I 8. ~

 

 

 

@ PET - STOCK. -
I. mﬁpuuon.‘ mm. Inch.

 

 

W momm' warm col.-
maﬁa-Egan City, ‘Mlch.
IS Younmn rpn sun

Write out, a. plain description and
ﬁgure 10c for each word, initial" or

 

» group of ﬁgures i0 rthree Insertions.
 as no ’cheaperor better way or
m a. term in Michigan and you,

deal. direct with ‘I the buyer.

No

 

V numb-er minimise?“ I! 70': mt
 “emu or traders)!“ tarmrend 1;. 7
 ed. tony. Don’t ‘3uet out-1..

ebout it. Our Business - Mart
 “trunks; ‘

 

, BERKSEEBES
EVERYS BIG BERKSHIRE °§€i§§
Ion Satisfaction '

company
.lyetemyoumentioniaa

We
mbrodbkmbinlﬂehum v

    ‘

  ian will; x; m r --?1%
oi! as i am   sale '}I  

31m at we opinion‘that  have
building: you have

have any
ed on the
MISSING we
‘Wanted—To know the where-f
shouts of my mother, litre-Sherman
last heard of {it I _Duran'd_._
-lieh. \My father, Doriel Le'w'elly'n

 

CM Fred  . , marl was in'
Jennings. Mich, about six or seven
Jeers ago, My pawn, ts resided in”
Luther, Mich about, 17 years "ago."

 

country
they

responsible

E

mmspurchan-l
k3ndonecoutractit is
but tohxvea'lletutemenuaboutthe
mommam‘ ' '

 

Would leasetell

7mm“ mother-along
mmp—w,e.namm.
erfetoﬂmmnmtaf
rm Inning, mob—m

 

WWW
nthmahwmmemtememnpe'l
the of hi '
Mme-Fiﬁ umnqm'” mm
umtedpreriaoelyintheee eel-
mnethe 1921mm:

 

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oursu

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b—mmumtlmlm‘mm
m m

Moron all letters, glut full particular;
mum; etc., also your Id-
dmlabelﬂ'untbetnn \
Immunoaem .bon.

 

 

BUSINESS FAME. common Bax

 

mom manager m .
1mm carousel. 

" _. " ous coinplaiﬂte "have been
I q  by the Collection Box

v against,   cam
business in"Detroit, under the name
a the Wayne, Commission Co. Sil-
vermanfe practice was to, solicit farm
produce and eend worthless cheeks
innrpeyment of game. He mﬂnam
mutational  beforeludze 001—.
meet Mooneoonnty who,  .
 lupon  on his. ,

 

    ~

1 0..   “1“. '.

elright under your, contract toil-e- '
.plae- _

“id my three brothers, EarlyErnest'“

Anyone‘knowingj 'otamyotiiheee;
persons-please wrftrtoMru. Or-l

 

'mmnmetntmaem.

»but the of a note
deuce or goodimith and

you  no the new «men. 1181!! "
tonne-where
tion on the-Subject? 1c: ‘
theth men £120? , the m

* line- the
‘ The motor vehicle light luv 
lubjected to several changes by the
X legislature of 19:21ﬁbutl believe the
latest enactment can 4119f tom ~ on 
page .822 of the Public who! 1981-. -
1—5Legal Editor. . ‘ j  

 
   

fr.

5! 5‘! H1

 

can you tell me it. tux-km

no good readers?

II’V‘JISEII

Yearling mrkev'ye are not consid-
end as valuable for breeding pup
poses as two, three and four year
old stock.

Icaunotstaiemmorenearly'
accurate the number of eggs 3 tur-
RBywouldlayinayeax-thanm .
ouecoul‘dsayhowmuchmilkacow. r
would give, or how that a horse
could run. Some breeders report 
Rey hens which would lay thirty—five
or forty eggs 9. year, but the hem
ueually produce from twelve to six:-
beeneggslntheapringottheygear.‘
The Bourbon is second in size only
to the Mammoth Bronze. The atm- -
erd weight tor the adult cock is
thirty pounds; yearling cook, twew
ty-ﬂve pounds; cockerel, twenty x

hen. eighteen pounds: pols-3'

“gr —II gggg

A! 1"

loan NETQ:

mm: m

on aim old‘turkeya died and-
Ifo’und

I if?” a“! ll

:

arm-:1

m "I (am

 

WWW. ”
Oneotmynoighbm'eent " teat
(llxilzlouneoti‘theMinimum:ClklmmimiunaamClow
unmannemnﬂimioandlm
‘iuooomraaudetatedthuw ﬁrm
.othrunmnncomniuhn the
or a
mam 3mm
bmtbthntl‘ong

In em a

payablein‘

whonidlh,
torhismow-
on.

- ‘ Con»
whaebeenmbuuinemforenm?
.. ﬁlm and Woo bommmtohe'
reliable. A: to whether'or'not m
mannwmmhienoteswhenthey

 

 

1' .

oredue, we Invent)

 

[hon ﬂint 

    

   


  
  
 
  
 
 
  
     
  

  
 
 

  
   

. . V t ,
. .. . V 6,, 6!.) ' d, send" it in." '
‘ i ' . ' , “   «tyre. 'wd' proof

   

   
 

 

 

 
 
 

 

 

 

    
  

 “in on: ere-rs .~ f  J="1922'
 If  are to "buy'Chicks the coming 5913011.
 and»  . description of our HERE
BREED PRACTICAL POUIJ1‘B.T.- .
_ ‘ ,  nconas.‘ Rocks, ,Reds, and other
_  Quality of Chicks end sate arrival
guaranteed: " ,
~13" is time now to ,1: up your Chicks for
., next ,smeon;-‘xthe_01ick 'bgsjnsss is going  be
 ' ones a eriire. FARms ASSOCIATION
{- ~ -l(els_mezoo, Miohlgsn '

 

i { IIRe. FLORENOE 'RovsARD,‘ FersRssuna,
' mu. Pure .bred ﬁne quality White Rock
, millet!  for sale: Erica reasonable.

 

FOR SALE LIONT IRAHMA OOOKERELS.
Pure bred. ' nins. _3 to .
MR8. E. I. WILLITS. Reading. Mloh.. R 1

t = sun unusn-KA mm

elers young stock and s‘Isw mature breeders-is
White Chinese Geese,‘ White Runner Ducks and
White W andottee..' Also 0. 'I. 0. spring
, Write to ,v .for prices on what you need.
DIKI c. MILLER. Dryden. Mich.

 

o; d“ous’iialg'v mxegELs—n-mngncsg:
on us I c , rpingtons, penis
rchné Foukf‘er FARM. Fenian. Mich.

 

~w‘oms‘sss cease, ream DUCKS. R. o.
' . 'M’BT._‘I Leghorns. .
jLAUDIAssn-s. lllllsdale, Mich.

\ m .

  ROOK‘
surr- nooks

Quality Bred—By us for 80 rs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hundreds of big husqu cocerels
T .millets: solid color from
'Bbcsn" tested heavy hyers.
> ,- BIG TYPE. IRONZE TURKEYS
'3 naive ,ckl’s 'snd".pulloln by 1st Chicago and
  Chvehn‘d  Our export: to Europe and
.. '  proves their qua . .
 AFRICAN GUINEAO, any number.
1.9. (31119.57 Sons. «BxM, ‘SaltilloJrrd.
 “mm mm ' cooknaan. Parks 200.
. - egg ~straim From stock
 direct {tom Park;  pengreed Done. 83
' ' . R.'o.'ijRsv.
 Route 1. East Lansing. Mich.
V -IAEGHOBN8

 

smea- cosss BUFF LEOHORN .cocss‘n.
cl: April and May hatched. Heavy laying

'_ .. J. w. WEBSTER. earn. Mich. _
  Rosa Tan ’Bﬁ. LEGl-IORN
Cookereis; The big, kind bred for
hyers. Nov. price $2.50. Dec. 38. Quality
5. Riﬁsesucu.‘coldwm. Mich.

., 1.5; .   ..:ron sue _
9. :29. mm: LEBIIBIIII-PIILLE‘IS;
‘.inlohcl,25upt0200 “$150K 

mu.st moss POULTRY FARIII
, - Bloomingdale. Mich.

 

 

 

g CL'erlts Inhomféoo. sliro‘im Leghornsd
Guanine-J . s - . White
sue .Olp'instons. Houdsns, we. m “

Spanish. Partridge Wyandottes. $2.00
., MAPLE WOOD FOULTR FARM
Demo’sth R 1. san , Mich.

AH’EIIIGAII BOSE 00MB ,

Whiﬁ Leghorn ‘Cockerels...$2.00. ~
FRANK KOROAL, R 1. Pierson. Mich.

INGLE 00M? aUFF AND lgROWN LEGHORN
. Cochteis. a rmers' ._. p ces. White
modem

,m-s. Rottsusecx, Athens, ‘Mlch.

 

 

OOH! BROWN LEGHORN 'HENS. 1
year old for $1.00. Also cooker-eh for 81.50.

WI. OHEEOEMAN,
' MIMI. .

 

 

 

 

 

          
   
 

 
 
  
     
   

eves—Try“...— .,--...__‘;_L._rv- .- .__,
. , J,_ , , _

     

from» cocxrnris FOR SALE,

; ..-....‘..s: j 

 

   
       
     

 
 

 
 

  

   
       

, A

,1.

 Poses...” rum-rs WtAnDo-rrs- Full—Ere.

a“ 82.00esoh.- ~mq'ét
use. TRAOV R es. _  No. Lumen.

moon;  . .

 

 

 

 

A

«v est color and egg strain. IJBo'thf combs. rite

I ' 15: [free-catalog and our new proposition in r5- "‘

breeding eockerels.

 

4w‘lLL, HAVE A FEW CHOICE PURE. BRED

R. I. ‘Red Cocks, ., hens and cookers for sale.

Must act quickly if wanted. , ~»
Wm. H. FROHM. New Baltimore. R1. Mich.

 

 

“ORPINGTON'S ‘

= ’ORPINGTONS AND LEGHORNS

Two gust breeds for proﬁt. Write today is:
[res catalogue of hatching eggs. baby chicks sad
breeding stoc . .1
OYOLE HATOHIR COMPANY. 14. Phlle II“.

' Elmira. N. Y.

 OOOKERELI AND,PULLETO
. for sale. Buﬂ. W
Black Cookerst st 87.. t8, and 810. Bullets
$3 and 85. ,Also yearling hens $8 and $4.
Hatching sun. 88 per setting of 15.
GRABOWSKE‘BROS.. R 4. MOI-I'm. Mich.

‘ANOONAS
3000 EARLY APIIIL HATGHED

FULLY MATURED ANCONAS.

BUGKEIE AIIGOIIA FARM

\ NEW LONDON. OHIO.

Heavy layers endoshow birds, none better. Res-
somble prices and quality stock is our motto.
Can furnish wihners for any show. Ask for our
late winnings at Columbus. 0.. Louisville“ Ky..
Cleveland, 0.,, org Pa... Hagerstown and
Cumberland, Md. Che. ens, Ckls. Pui. and
Pens. leays for sale. Eggs and Baby
Chicks in season. 100,000 Incubator capacity.
Write gs and get the best.

‘LANGSHAN

DR. IIMPSON’B LANEIHANS OF QUALITY
Bred for type and color since 1912. into!
hyins strain of both Black and White. Have
some eockerels for sale. Eggs in sesson.
DR OHAI. W. SIMPSON
Webbsrvlllo. Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
  
   

I» ,Rrrrsxsn's‘ R. l. Ruthenium". e e *

r i

{erdAtc good I
.-INTERLAI(EO~“ FARM. Box 4. Lawrence, MIiIII.

 

 

TURKEYS
TIIIIKEYS FOR SALE

A few purebred Bourbon Bed. early hatched
Toms. Write for prices, etc.
R. W. ROBOTHAM. Hesperis. Mich.

' BOURBOI‘ BED TIIIIKEIS

Get your choice early. Unrelated stock. 
THOB. G. OALLAOHA‘N. Fenton. Mich.

 

 

‘OIANT BRONZE TURKEYS.
strain. Dirge thoroughbred birds. copper bronu
color. MRS. B. SMATTS, R1.'Eest Jordan, Mich.

GIAIIT BIIOIIZE TUBKEYS

large vigorous pure bred birds of Copper Bronze
strain. Buy your stock now at fall prices.
AIRS. PERRY STEBBINS, Saranao, Mich.

MICHIGAN’S' BEST GIANT BRONZE TUR-
kfys.‘ Splendid pure bred birds. Take advantage

0 em: low prices.
N. EVALYN RAMSDELL. Ionle. Mich.

“White. Pepeekled or
If you’ve got the right “dope” on care. culling and feed.”
If you want to make big money in poultry read the Modern Poultry Breedeﬂ

how to doctor your sick chi

eggs the year around,
official organ of the M1
Each month we have].

in in Novem .
tic.n--,.‘°HOW‘TO éﬁ EGGS. _ WHEN,
eyfrizht now in

 

 

CHAMPION ~

.5‘:

 

I

,. .‘

 i'IngssFAfRMs‘rs? (3......

“I. not-accepted for less than} times. Twenty words is the minima-

ucepted for any ad. in this department. Cash should accompany all arm.
Count as one word each initial and each group of figures,
7 and in address. Copy must be in our hands before Saturday for issue dated
following week. The Business Farmer Adv. Dept” Mt. Clemens. '

10o per word. M for ssh

both in body of Dd.’

 

 

 

 

 

tools, imple-
eto. in-

180-AORI moment FARM' wrru Hons-
0 Gem v

ehicles.

motor bus passes; liege. ure.
woodland: timber, about 1000 cords wood; fruit.
6-mom noose, substantial barn. poultry

use. Owner unable operate sacriﬁces all for

' $4960, on? 32000 needed. eas terms. De-
9 Illus. Catalog 1 00 Bargains.

Ford 3163.. Detroit, Mneh.‘

EXTRA GOOD VALUE—80 acre farm ham.
$85001 good loam. nearly level, no waste; ex—
cellent buildings: timber, fruit, wmd-mill. Full
1~details if you'll write. FRED A. GLEASON,
Greenvﬂle, Mich.

FOR SALE; 200 ACRE FARM. WITH
stock and machinery, 4 miles from county seat.
Would take small farm as ﬁrst payment.

«0E0. JONES, Tam City, Mlch.

8 CRE FARM FOR SALE, MOSTLY ALL
classed.A Fair frame house. new barn built last
year. 32x46; frame granary 14120. good well
280 feet deep: well drained. good ditches and
fences: clay and black loam land: good read.
mail route, schools and churches. located in
Bay county. Garﬁeld township, Sectlon six.
With horses, cattle and implements if we
MARTIN SMITH. B 1, Rhodes, ch.

WILL BUY 10 cACRESf CENTRAL MICI-L,

 

toils go
FREE. STROUT FARM AGENCY 814 B E V

mISCELLANEQIggﬁ

MACHINEHI

 

 

NEVER-KLOG SAW DUST BLOWER. Guar-
snteed ﬁve years. Cash or easy terms. Write
for circular. HILL-CURTIS 00.. 1507 N0.
Pitcher St, Kalamazoo. Mich.

 

 

TOBACCO

TOBACCO. NATURAL LEAF. SWEET AND
mellow. hand-picked chewing or smoking. I! lbs.
$1.50; 10 lbs $2.50. Smoking, 20 113. $4.00.
We furnish free receipt for preparing. Quality
and delivery guaranteed FABMERS’ TOBACCO
EXCHANGE, Sedalia, Ky.

 

 

HOMESPUN TOBACCO, COLLECT ON DE-

Every, 10 pounds $2.50; 20 munch 4.0
FORD TOBACCO COMPANY. Hayfield. ’Keg:

 

TOBACCO: KENTUCKV'S PRIDE MILD AN
mellow. Beet chewing or smoking, 10 lb. $3.00”:
20 lb. $5.00. FARMERS CLUB, Hayﬁeld. Ky.

 

TOFACCO, KENTUOKV'S NATURAL LEAF

gmﬁjkmgsllgo lb; $1.75. Hand selected chewing

s. . . ‘ree receipt f AL-
DROP BROTHERS. Murmy.0rKIy)f-emrln“ W

CODIMJSSION" .HOUSES

 

THE OLD

 

 

 

G00d house,
11 mom 20x50 full basement. tile silo.
buildings and running .wate
bought‘for less than buildln
terms. N. B.

ment, cow barn
Electric lights in
on farm. Can be
are worth. Write for price and
PETER, Wolverine, Mich.

80 ACRE FARM. GOOD

' ‘ LE
FOR 8‘ '30“, orchard, woodlot, 60 acres

mum, good

 

5 or 0 room house and barn on terms. RELIABLE .105ng
deal direct. BOX A. Mich. Business Farm“- ‘ Company. 726 W. Randolph St” OMmmDul-Igj':
ML clamor!" “1“ dairy PTOdUCiB_ Write. wire, or phone.
160 ACRES—60 ACRES CLEARED, BAL- 
once good pasture. Buildings fair, clay—loam ~
soil. Handy to school. $26.5; peitaciiei. hRUS-
SEL WARD, R. *F. D. ‘2, resco . c . PEANUTS' no. 1 VIRGINIAS, SNELLED
or unshelled, 7 lbs, $1.00; Peanut B r,
so A. IDEAL DAIRY FARM \glsrn Euslg'ﬁAa- Sglpird andmg’agmofeanuts, 5mg... £23m; m
' of 5 pop on. . mmn . mm
nah“ mﬂk trade in “‘33.. 28x38 full base- PRODUCTS 00., Magnolia, Virginia.

 

 

GENERAL

 

oIRL AND sov Assn-rs — WANTED
quick. We trust you. Sales evory home for
greatest article ever invented. Agent: delighted.
parents approve because pleasant and proﬁtable.

 

meat included; big-crop farm in rich, pro-
gressive section: on improved road, motor bus
passes; close B R town, easy drive to
Kahmanoo; 80 acres productive, loamy. tillage
cutting over 2 tons hay acre; fruit; ber-
ries. 1000 grape vines; attractive 12-room
holse. piam: 2 good barns, cement silo, stone
hog house. smoke, poultry and tool houses. ’l‘o
settle aﬂeim $7500 takes all, part cash, easy
terms. Invcs be now. Catalog free. B. B.
BURLINGTO , Lawton.

ALLOW YOUR AD A CHANCE TO "PULL"
ruulil by running it at least 3 issues. It is
the mosh economical way 50 per word

 

r-f—BIG MONEY IN POULTRY—N

 

mangled, whatever the breed,

Michigan’s one great poultry journal. a- gold mine
tells you how to build your poultry houses. how to mate and exhibit your birds.
ckens and how to keep them well.
tocullyodrﬂockandtopickoutthebestlayersandhowtofeed for lotsot
It tells you all
branch of the American Poultry Association.

a! article to fit the needs of the season.

E. C. FOREMAN, THE GREAT CHICKEN WIZARD AND POULTRY EXTEN-
SION SPECIALIST AT MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE TELLS

' HOW TO GEI'EGGS III FALLAIID WINTER

the u on: Poultry Breeder.
"1 4 od mom ARE HIG

. than

 H “Poultry ‘ ea- can: , how. Our writers are all

.  out. ’1‘}?  who have ; a-esuccess with chickens and
“how to  others the we, ‘ m

(200.
for 1 insertion—10c per word for 3 insertions.

  

oi! poultry information.
It tells you how
the Michigan poultry news and is the

This is the big ques-
There is more mon-
else on the farm it you can only get

 9-51.1690 Cash Bonus

1/   Subscription. Agents be.
"  highest commision paid-

so  to get our neat FRESH
g, , g.copies for new sub-q
"see; your subscription without
per our November issue alone

‘ 4-3339631":  « f

. «a

I

.S.
4

 

 

cleared. For particulars write owner. RAY BARw grits quick. FIRE X COMPANY. Portland.
BER. Evert. Mich. “3m

80-AORE FARM NEAR, CITY. $6000 TRUNKs. aAos. SUITCASES. wuv
“mam; Hom_ 3 cows! crops, wmter fodder. two middlemen pmnm Buy from factoqu
hogs, blmbr, grain drill, cream separator. dim rect. Send for free catalog. GEM TRUNK A

BAG FACTORY. 8171'an Valle!- Ill.

 

'BUY FENOE POSTS DIRECT FROM F0
est.” All kinds. Delivered prices. Address "ARL-
Il, lc‘sir:1 Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Olem‘
ens. c .

I

GOVERNMENT CLERKS NEEDED—(MEN-

women); 8140062000; permanent, (w to
travel; expense allowance. Wri Mr. Ounan
Former U. S. Government Examiner, 355 St.

Louis, Mo. He gives reliable information.

 

FILME‘IEEVﬂElLOPED FIVE CENTS. PRINTS
regular 1 3. rec cents each. GUMSEB AR
STO RE. Holand, Mich. T

TYPEWRITERS:—ALL MAK E8 SLIGHTLY

used. 820 up. Easy payments. Free triaL
Guaranteed two cars. PAYNE COMPANY.
Rosedale station. nsas City. Kansas.

 

HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR LIVE AND
dressed poultry, wild rabbits. veal. eggs. etc. A
square deal always. 0. E. McNElLL & 00..
326 W. So. Water St. Chicago. Illinois.

 

KODAK FILMS DEVELOPED AND SIX
prints, 25c. MODERN PHOTO WORKS, Box
M. B. F., La Crosse. Wis.

 

KODAK FINISHING! NOT THE CHEAP
way. but the heat, at a reasonable price. Mail us
a trial order and prove to yourself that it is not
only what Sou pay but what you get for what
you pay. or aim always has been and always
will , "the very best prints from every nega-
tive." MOEN PHOTO SERVICE. Quality Ko-
dak Finishing, .

Box M. B. F, La Crosse. Wis.
NOW Is The Time
to advertise your turkeys.

HERE Is The Page

toget results.

~ TRY IT!

BREEDERS’ ATTENTION

‘If you are planning on a sale

this year, write us now and ‘
Claim The Date!

 

 

avoid conﬂicting sale

 

 

This service isiree to the  i  a
stock industry in Michigan . t9? "

   
  

 

 
 
 


"  look -in ,the main. .

 
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
   
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
   
   
 
 
  
   
  
 

‘ . TRADE ANDMABKET REVIEW ,
 GENERAL, trade and busi-
; ness situation and general out—
continue to
imprbve although there are excep-
tions to this rule. An improved deb
mand for many basic, products, such-
as wool, cotton, hides and lumber is
one of the features 'of a {ire-holiday
trade that ioreshadoWs "a good win-

ter’s business in the products Amanu- 

factured from the materials reﬂerred
to. ‘The cotton and woolen goods
“situation is being complicated, it is
-. "true, by the garment makers’ strike
‘: which now bids fair to be a long.
drawn out affair. There are certain
facts, connected with the business
revival now going on,. which indi-

cates that the demand for nearly all ‘

of the necessaries of life except food
products is growing stronger, every
day. The buying movement, which
is developing at this time, is the di-
'rect result of a growing conviction
that times are going to improve and
that the only way to secure a supply
and a comfortable surplus, for fu-
 ture emergencies. is to go out and
buy before thelgeneral public “gets
next” and values begin to soar. ‘
' ~Wool is growing strongen every
 day, under pressing demand from
. fabricate 5 upon ‘ whom the convic-
tion, tha there will not be' wool
enough to go around, is just begin-
ning to dawn. The'trade in all
kinds of construction lumber is ac-
tive but, just‘now, hardwood seems
to have the preference in the de-
’ mand. 0n the Pacific coast, the lum-
ber trade has been booming for some
time past but‘ at the Atlantic sea-
board, a dependable demand is, ,just
_ beginning to develop. In New ~York
City and state, the trade is gaining
momentum, rapidly and many good
judges of the situation are looking
for a“ winter building boom as a di-
rect result of the working of the
state law that exompts all homes that
are begun before “May, 1922, from
.payingtaxes for 10 years.

The steel and pig iron trade is
7 arking time, probably, because-of
0" "L e uncertainty concerning the out-
come of the arms conference. Corn
wheat, cattle and hogs are selling

son’s business. The lowering of the
freight rates on farm products 
' certainly soon begin to hawk a fav-

; orable eﬂ’ect on business in the ex-
clusively agricultural districts of the
country.

Bank statements and clearing-
house reports show that the finan-
cial situation is growing stronger,
every day and, as naturally would
be ted. the accumulation of
funds tends to weaken interest rates
for both cell and time money. On
, the New York Stock Exchange call
money has, of late. ranged between
4 1-2 and 5 1-2 per cent. Profit tak-
ing has been the leading feature of
' the week’s business insecurities of
all kinds but bonds have been in w

tive demand. The week’s bank clear- .

11138 were “5,982,792,000. .

WHEAT ‘
Wheat had a. good many ups and
downs last week the market clos-

 

NOV. 21. 1921
cmme N. v.
1.10 1.20%

1 .08  '

vyyur Palm-:8 PER BU.
' “Wanda lDotrolt

 

 

 

 

 

 

PRICES ONE YEAR AGO
No.2 Rodl No.2 Whitellrﬂoz Mlxed
1.92 1 1.90‘ I 1.90

 

notrolt I

dug at near the same priges which
.:prevailed at the opening. lnha‘t the
market should be nervous just now
henﬂconﬂicting reports are _ being
.eceived of the Argentine and Aus-

 

 

‘ lanyileld's is only natural, and it 
‘ V erratic alt-y  I
" «1r until more specifl. knowledge W

1'1:er to ‘ continue

 so  countries.  per-1

on] nail-mums great 

Ll

.Eaitoa‘w u.  ,.

 

 

.last week" that the men. . .

week.

demand.

V  Market Summary"‘ >
Grain in. Waiting position fquWing Virregulgr trend of
Feeling slightly strengé‘r due to placing of .ocean ship—
ments and slowing up in marketing ~ movement. '
Potatoes slightly”weaker, withv-no ' change in prices.
early improvement in this market.‘ Poultry .in very heavy sup-
ply?“ onmost markets and generally weak despite heavy holiday

Beans ﬁrm.
Expect

v»

 

 

 

 

 

 

bu’ll story brought out enough wheat
to ease up the market again. Wheth-
er of not the report was, entirely
rumor. or had some foundation. in
fact has not yet been clearly estab-
lished. Condition of tall sown grains
the world over is nOne too encour-
aging. Dry weather prevails in
many sections and of both the Unit-
ed States and Europe, but as point-
ed out by a Chicago authority, this,
condition cannot be taken as a bull
factor for "Kansas has sown wheat
in the dust and harvested a. bumper
crop."

This same, authority estimates
that the “thebretical “surplus” of
wheat in this country willnll be
cleared by January 1st. He points
out that clearances from July 1st to
October 1le aggregated 162,000,000
bushels, and for November promise
to be around 20,000,0‘00, which will
leave only 18,000,000 bushels for
December clearance. This would
leave the United States upon a pure-
ly domestic basis somewhat earlier
than usual. The’ ,sffect of this situ-
ation will not be’seen until the sur-
plus crops of the other export coun-
tries like Canada, Anstraiia and Ar-,
gentlne are cleared. Cdnada‘ will,
it is believed will make the”Ameri-
can price for wheat for some time
to come.- Despite the fact that she.
has cleared for an export a. very
large percentage of her crop, great

“quantities are yet to be marketed

and a good many million bushels are
in transit to foreign ports.

One very important factor which
will affect all grains. must not" be
lost sight of. The War Finance Cor-

at the extreme low point of the sea- » poraﬁon is loaning money to farm-

ers through banks and co-operative
societies with incredible speed and
prodigality. -' Farmers who avail.

themselves .01 these funds will not ‘

' room.

he, in, such a hurry to maer ﬁheir
surplus/grains. considerable hold-
ing movement is therefore looked

,.for, and if this develops we ‘can‘most
certainly expect a stronger market ,_

in consequence.

The current week opens with the "

market easy and prices slightly high-
er than a week ago, We do not an-

' ticipate any important changes in

the wheat market this week due to
the Thanksgiving holiday. Any
gains which may be made the fore
part of the week are quite likely to

, be lost by the close,

.. CORN . .
On Monday and Tuesday of. last

' week corn was e‘asy \but'thejollow-

oorm Pumas (new) 30., nov. 21,,1621
Grads noun-on. lchloasol u. v.“
No. 2 Yellow . . . ' .51

39'”
No. 3 Yellow . . . .53
lo. 4 IYellow . . . .51

PRIGES on: YEAE Aoo

rule. 2 Yolﬁﬂoﬁa ﬁi’fuo. 4 Yell

iii—mTt-ffes"mlim_ia1 “‘1 ' .8'3‘"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ing day the market took on a steady‘

to firm tone and when the market
closed on Saturday prices at both

'Detroit and Chicago had advanced

3c. The‘news the greater part of the
week was favorable to higher prices
for corn.. Exporters took consider-
able and would havetaken more es-

.pecially from the Chicago" market

but they were unable to get vessel
It is rumored that there‘is
a great shortage of feeding crops in

. Europe and that considerable Amer-

ican corn will be needed. This has
been our contention right along but
foreigners have been very careful

not to let the country know . their

needs and—"have bought onlylonlla
declining market.‘ They have work-
ed so as not to cannothe market to

I l

n: , loge.- y ,.

1 prices will be upward from the om.
ent timeforward. Local demandis ,

—, fairly large. r

‘ they have not done so.

 

—___i

 

 

Above
udsodth
"mm
w W
Mbﬁmmu‘mw

WASHlNGTON, D: 0.." Nov. 25‘
192L—Jrho weak centering on Dec. 1
will be warmer and the storms more
severe than usual, the precipitation
greater than the average of Novem-

forget I told you. some time ago: Now
ember and December would bring less
moisture than usual and that winter
grain would be damaged» by dry
weather. and damage has already
reached Winter grain. the dry weath-
er is here and, we have only passed
. throughmno of the two dry months. I
have many letters complaining that
mannewspaper bulletins do not give all

i

"will publish. in the newspapers—which
.l’s the'jonlyuwayaio reach thermal)?"
my complete cropweathcr forecasts a
{hm  and cm
x'eca_,,o.j  ,l
x ' .~,to’r.-larse~sectlonsral 
trauma  r1 ,
correcting thexew, mistakes
made-tor small sectionm

 

 

I, have

Nov. '29. western

~ THE wnirnnnron NEXT WEEK
AsForecastedbyW.T.Fbster-tor1’homdxiglnnusineasm

her and December 1921. But don’t

i'ent'. .

W as far ahead as I could. .,..\Y.0u_
 show‘me\,ehow I can live omit and”! -

 ‘nounce -the
I absolutely knew. ~ 

l I m “‘7 “1°” ‘9‘” ‘- gage " '31::
I it: ,.

fthewauuwaveof this am  ,, .,

 

 

,Idonotmekcurymistnlmmmy
general tot-casts of crap-weather and
crew of North Amen-1m for guy of
the past five campus-one. For small
soothnsldidmakosomomistakcson.
rainfall ,and the little up and down“
rather unimportant.
movements. But after 10 months 01
additional experiment: with tho -
or records, of the t 100 years. I
now have these sma errors nearly all
corrected. Our North Amorimn crop-
wcathor' and crop- tlor 1921 will be
the most important that will have oc-
curred within a 100' years. I abson,
lately know the and can close-
approximato e emp-
and crops of every contin-

I , ,
The fruit crop of 192811111 be un-,
usually immrtsnt because of the great
failure in 1921. For 1922 some late
show,  ' ted that should lg.

, ” - y ..prepac-lng  _
make smoke ,fires v-bctween_,m,1. .‘ ht

and sunrise.  esor bulletins an- ,
  that are ex-v
."nected to beiollow d by killing

 

7 ﬂoat.

\k"

i thexcaliforniabean‘l. . l

 

 i
' 9-“
I lift
Ii 11
Ar? ‘sbnl‘:

. - . .. v.1-
. A re: ' ‘ * g . » ~  h-
dances of consequence f;

, ,r ‘ , (.,- .. . - 1 
. andcpeoplei-Were "unable to estimaﬂ Drisi
_ the need!“ of Europe; _ From the 9.92.;  sorbl
peagance 40149.31; week’slmarket they f on!

are" géttin_ in agpositionﬁo do con- ~~. throw
siderable uying. The "  that  stem
farmers are ableito secure govern-  o t‘
ment money to hold, crop cg. are]

,‘ o. mover-loaded. market fund thusjiteeiif‘  nt 1
prices up may cause the foreigners /  they
to come out in force ,helieviug’tl‘ntf. A

or a}
a ons:
tells
that
, 
V {W ‘ I’Ota‘
com-l
\ 3- and
age.

‘- ry
mies
may,

only lair. Receipts continti‘e to be 
,. OATS . ‘

Interest in cats is increasing and "

the market gained ~a Cent or two,

 

entrances ran su.. nov. '21. 1921 ."l
Grade loimn- Chicago] I. v. L
,wmu  ' .ao .3w. ,4;
a wmu  .39 34%
Whlte .. .81 Va
rmoss om: YEAR soc :
[No.2 Whital No.8 wnTal’hoA wnln 4 Ti
.55 1 L55V:’T"751yf the (
past
cont:
eral
qual‘
ut"
ed.
able
ship]
price
shbu

 

 

No. 2
No.
No. 4

 

 

 

 

 

Detrolt I

 

 

 

from the low of last week. The price
is too low, but there is still plenty, of ,
the grain visible. Oats have had .
plenty‘of chance to drop tonew low '
levels the last couple months in “ 
sympathy with wheat and corn, bu‘t ,
V They are ,x
'still at virtually the same level- at’ ‘
which’ the market opens last, Au-
gust. ' Higher prices on wheat and ..
corn must/ certainly have a favorable " or b
influence ’on oats; ‘ ' pres“
. r ,v H - .  A  price
RYE “ ‘
Rye shared in the strength Shown ;
by other grains last Week and as a 3'.
result prices are higher. The man- :
Est declined on the closing, day .of :
the week but finished higher than it"
was on the opezﬁng. day.. No. 2 is 'r' -
840 at Detroit and 83@83 3-4c30n @ 
the Chicago) market. It has been  so
some time since the'price’o‘n the
Chicago market was higher than the ‘ .

. Detroit market.

.1 , 80
BARLEY ’ 
The unchanged tone or the barley ‘
market continues and prices show 1‘
one change, the Detroit market ,re-
maining .at $1~.10@1.30»- per~ cwt.
This grain seems independent of the _
r others and general price fluctuations ‘-
are not reflected in this grain. ‘
B  l BEANS ,
cans ost all the gains the '
made last week{ dropping in 2% '

BEAN-FRIOIS run cwnﬁov. 21.1921

Grade loom" IOhIonool n. v.

 ls."  m ' In
~ 1.0:

 

 

O. H. P.
Rod Kiﬁlm
Pﬂlm all YEAR AGO

M H. F.
.c'. . . o . . ..o o . . . . ....I 4.“

days from $4.45 to $4.30. Hemmer.
we are not discouraged. Looks like
a little bit of Speculation. Believe
other and more important advances 4
_will be registered in this market he- 1
fore the close of the year. An sd- :
«ditional factor of confidence in this
_market is the decision of the Cali-
fornia bean growers ,_ to maintatn »
their organisations. Members "or ‘
this association who held their hem .
when prices crashed lost consider-
Ma‘ble money, and laid part of m
blame to the Association. For a
time it looked as if they were suing '
to desert the Association and. go it .
alone, but news --comes from that.
that the organization will, remain iii-C v
tact and continue  exert its effme
_ to . secure an orderly, marketing of

 

Detroit

 

 

 

3133.55.53}  'U 

3
'4

Eli

sruosgs‘in 0W7 ‘ I V I I  1

 

 


_.. I—..

.UulﬁwnwV—nw

I 
lg"
f :
t"?
3
‘1.
u 
O
9.

aegaassevsaerzrrsae

m 7
ng. .ofI, -

 ' a *  . arter- tne'jsea:
'bnfg, gammy den j '-‘.ar9_,t'empor-
' ﬂy out (ﬁfths market. _It is sur—
prismg hofyell the market has ab-
sorbed '.  E’gxtremely heavy
ents ot‘jtjt‘d’past four weeks. Prices

throughout . the countrijerm fairly "

steady last week and we look for
o‘,de,c1ines_/ori__}mportsneo. prices
are‘ﬁlihely- to rule at about the pres-
nt ,lovels'for 9 time, after which

 ~ theyjshquid? slowly, advance.  -»

in potato report from the/divisione

or "zigricul v enmeshed onthswm-

' onsi," “"De ' , 'ent of" ‘A‘gricnltore
tells ofjn’uch‘iniury to potatoes in
that state by scab and grub worms,
J mavera'ge-é quality of 'Wisconsin
otatoes-‘this year 78 per cent
comm.ﬁth so ,
age. ,It may be; after‘scab, wormp,‘
ry rot, frost andeother spud ene-'
mieshave‘ done their work the crop
may, not be so large after all. ‘

‘ JAPPLES

, There has been little change in
the Chicagmapple market during the
past week. The tone of the market-

oontinues steady and prices' in gen- .

eral are at last week’s level. Good
quality-apples are in fair demand
ut".the_ loWer-grades arenot want-
ed. The‘heavy receipts of undesir-
able stock and exceedingly” large

shipments of boxed apples have held .-

prices below 'what this year’s crop
should warrant. However receipts
of boxed apples are decreasing and!
pr‘eSent indications are for higher
prices. . ' ' v "

Quotations on,bushel baskets, all ya”-
eties, 2 1-21!!! “A” grade, $1.75@
36.2fm unclassiﬁed. stock. allyarieties, 75c.

Quotations on  different barreled'

varieties follow: Standard "A'lgradc, 2
‘ @950: Jona-

‘ Grimes. Golden,

,6@6.50; Snows, $7

McIntosh, 3?, 068; Spitzenberg,

:1» . 11 , $6.50 7, 2 1—4
 $2 @3 pen barrel less. ~

 ',0N10Ns'/‘ ‘- .'
Some of the» dealers and operate
wiho { putﬁonions aWay are i .

not, standing up in-storage as well
as had beenanticipated. The stock
that shows deterioration isnow ‘be-
ing Placed on the market  the
result that thalinmediate omen sit-
nation here “has become, rather easy.

On the other hand those who are ,r

holding good, stock shew no 

ing but are rather inelined to de‘-‘-

cline orders for early Shipment from
storage even though prices offered,
ould, show a-fair margin of .proﬂt.
Indianaor other nearby Reds and
Yellows’lwere quotable last week on
the Chicago market at l$4.75.@5.00
per ‘cwt, f. o. b. shipping point. ‘

brought-1 a” marked -

I demand of a

g of hay receive

cent in. 1.920 ,
and 89 per cent; the ten-year aver: ‘

’ 'at thejprese'nt time—Bureau
s 

that a” portion or their hofdings are Dept. of Agriculture.

gs—Small
’ 11c: heavy, 7@9c per lb,

 

\

 ' sow ‘
.3NLY

i

V  mean a , Ira-Em
‘. conﬁdant  ,

2.: ,

». dared. $8:‘ No. x somrseso; Michigan

 

'rlééusua the n7

a

cabbage market, ’this, time irgnnihgl.

“the price up- $15 ‘ a, toiisat Chicago"

within a few days last week. ,
Last week's market was quotable
at from $50 to $559. ton on Wiscon-

shi-p- - sin Holland stock withlsales being

made at different figures within that
range. ’ - ' ‘
\
Markets in general amok-quiet with
w ﬂature: ReCeipts
be greater. quantity
is of poor duality.
Buyers are lookingi'or the better-
grades butthe‘re, are few seller's to
be f'c'ﬁind. .Stan'dard timothy is $18
@19‘ per'ton at Detroit with .the
best grade $1 higher. No.\1 clover

are ample bit

and No.‘ 1’ clover mixed are worth

$1,5@1;s‘-\per ton. Markets outside

' the state range from the same level
’to $6 higher. _‘ - ._

/
WOOL NOTES
Although thevolum‘e of business
in the wool market at eastern points
for the week ending November 12,
was irregular and several lots .of the
finer grades were withdrawn fronr

the market, prices are firmer and an, _

advance in some grades is noted. A'
continued demand for medium wool
has beenk in evidence for the same
period. Prices quoted on the Bos—
ton and Philadelphia- markets dur-
ing the week were as follows; "
Fleece Wool—Fine Dela‘i'nes, 36c;
1-2 blood 'combing, 31c; 3—8 blood
combing, 280; 1-4 blood _combing,
26c. Common'and braid, 15@16c.
Territory—$8 blood combing, 24c;

.1-47bloou combing 22c.

A considerable volume of busi-

..ness has been transacted ,by the deal-

ers and mills in the east direct with
the growers in the west.

. The War Department has announce! V
'ed~an,. auction .sale ‘of ‘ government
‘ owned wool tobe held at Ford‘Hall’,
1 Boston, Massachusetts, December ‘1,

1921,4at ‘wh clhtime 7,000 pounds of
wool .will b . oifered for sale. -
Approximately 25,000,000 pounds
of wool is owned by the government
of
U. S.

Markets and Crop Estimates,

w

MISCELLANEOUS MABKE
QUOTATIQNS
Detroit, November 21st

’Butten—‘Best creamery, in tubs, 36@ ~
88c per pound. '

Eggs—,r-Fresh, candied and graded, 46
@7550; storage, _32@36c per dozen.‘
.Apples-eGreenmg,' $2.5'0@3; Baldwins,
$2.25@2.50;""Spy, $2.60@3; Jonathan, $3
@325; Show, 8.3.50@4 per bu.; western
boxes, $2.25@3.zo. " “ - '
.Cabbage—31@1.25 per bu; h

« Whigan, _25@30c per doz.: :1
@125- per box. ’

Onions—Eastern,
08.25 per 100 lbs. , .
Dreed Ho to medium. 10@
Dressed Calves—Choice, 14@15c; me-
dium, 11@13c; large, coarse, 5@10c.,per

Y , ’ chickens, 15.
1 :A-large fat
beam, ,' medium has, 15@16c.
small hens, 13c; old roosters, 12o; ducks,
21@22c; geese, 200: large turkeys, 34@

35¢ per lb. '1 ~
granulated, $6.30.;
, 8.10: m pow»

$6.50‘ per own,

granulated,
‘ o. ‘1 cured, 6c: No.

Hid

kip '
2  31.59; sheep pelts, 250,
mbbyulndea, 2: under No. 2: No.
use; were Hagan and‘kip‘ 1 1—20

,..r _.y.

some in". or "

. light.

x points.

seem Indiana, $5 '

, »- 1m-  m;- min
:o I 1» am .15; loam: n14;
 mamas 10.1.2 pants. ~'  '
. HAY—‘sMarket'«practically umanged.
Receipts light except at Kansas City
where record sales, for ’CI‘Op Were report-
ed. \Market active at. Chicago put re-
ceipts increasing. Storms causing light
receipts at Minneapolis. CIOVer $1 above
timothy at Cincinnati, scuth‘ern markets
very dull and Weak. Eastern markets
unchanged-\m‘ices steady, but ,kiemand
light. Quoted Nov. 18; No.- 1 timothy,
New York $26; Chicago $23; Minneapo-

- lis $18.50; Atlanta $25; Cincinnati s20;

Kansas City $14. No. I alfalfa: Mem-
phis $24; Kansas City $22; Minneapolis
$20.50. No. 1 prairie: Kansas City 313;
Chicago $175!; Minneapolis $10. I

I FEED—Feed prices firm. Demand
light and offerings improving. Cotton-
seed meal-supplies in excess of present
demand, prices easier. Linseed meal in
fairly good request, supplies ample. Pro-
duction of corn feeds good, demand un-
changed. Alfalfa meal dull, production

mbverrient light. Quoted November 18,
bran $14.25; middlings $14.75; flour and

'middlings $21.50, Minneapolis; No. 1 al-

36 per

falfa meal ~§16.50, Kansas City;
34

cent cottonseed meal 333 Memphis;
‘cent linseed meal $38 Minneapolis;

“white hominy feed $19.50 St Louis; gluten

feed $34.39 Boston; beet pulp $25.50 at
Philadelphia. '
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES—Onions
markets dull, d and slow and prices
firm at Connecticut Valley I. o, b. ship—
ping points, firm at $5.50 pér 100 pounds
,sacked. Eastern yellow globes in Bos:
ton held at $5.75@6. New York nearly
steady in New York at $5.25@5.40. Down
75 cents in Pittsburgh at $5@5.25. Mid-
dlewestern yellow varieties lower in Chl-
cago at $4@4.50 per sack. Steady in
New York at $5:~25@5.40. Cabbage mar-
ket up $8 f. o. b. New York shipping
Danish type $406043 bulk per
ton. Up $10 in New York at $456348,
higher in Philadelphia at $38@45. Dan-
ish down $5 1’, o. b. Wisconsin points at
$40@4$; up’ $201111 Chicago at $60. Ap-
ples dull, demand moderate. Baldwins
@2 1-2 down 50 cents in NeW* York City,
ranging $7607.50. Steady in Chicago at
$7@7.50. Maine No. 1 firm in Boston
at $5@0; higher in Pittsburgh at $761)
7.50. Northwestern extra fancy ana—
thans down in New York at $2602.15,
Pittsburgh up 25 cents at $2.50@2.75.
Stronger in Chicago at $2.25@3. Potato
markets dull and weak, .demand and
movement slow. Shipments light, New
York sacked round Whites weak in east-
ern city markets at $1.85@2.25 per-1'00
pounds, off 5 cents at shipping points at
$1.70@1.’80. Northern stock down 20
cents in Chicago carlot market at $1.65
@1.75, down 5 to 15 cents at shipping
points at $1.45@1.60. Bulk Green
‘Mountain down 5 cents f .o. b. Maine
points at‘31.35@ﬂl.41, down 10 cents in
New “York at $2.10. U

LIVE STOCK MARKETS

The cattle trade is certainly on
the rocks for ‘sure with‘very little
prospect of ‘any material improve-
ment before the advent of the Christ-
mas holiday. A set of. circumstances
and conditions have combined to
drive the demand for live cattle and
dressed beef‘down dangerously near
the vanishing point; Jn Chicago, the
packinghouse crowd is playing the
game in the usual way, banking on
the farmer’s need for tax money to
keep the hopper full of .both cattle

" and hogs», In the cattle end of the

market, the competition is strong,
between the grass cattle cleanup and
the; generous run of shortfed cattle
that is coming to hand. The weath-

' er of late’ has been badly against ac-

tiVity in either live or dressed ani—
mals and the week‘s decline in the
steer division of the Chicago market
equals right around 75 cents per

.cwt. ~ ‘

The slump in fat cattle values has
had a deadening effect on the trade
in stockers and feeders and selling
prices eased off from 25 to 5.0 cents

‘ in all of the leading markets of the

country. - Very few cattle have gone
east for feeding purposes during the
late summer and fall months as‘the
.50 per cent cut in live. stock rates
did not apply east I'o’ffClrlcago. So
far this fall, Pennsylvania has taken
but very few feeding cattla"1rom the
west because «fracturing/W
rateaandthefacttbatthelocalm.
, ﬂoss  is just about equal

_ and; tor the 

‘ .

ﬂockiieumr" higher
 especially. in the
._ «ment A 
I SIG!“  feeding. lambs):
Groping .11! " an. parts of  , 003.1“.
- ’ " .mr “conﬁdently

." ’ ‘

1:91. on

View"

Dealers stock generally good and.

.‘the world war... i. ‘

I‘a‘I

    can.

 iti‘o’n‘s not:  3a: _.;¢ns: close «or ’. \  ‘iy

Hogs have been). slippin right \
along, of late, until; glance at mar-
ket quotations shows (hog prices on
a level with early in 1915. It is an en- .
couraging fact, however, that every '
time the market eases off a strong
wave of buying develops and a mod-
erate reaction takes place. Grow-
ers are finding no fault with the»
prices they are getting, they need
the money and they knew that what
they have to sell will bring it if the
amount is small. The current mar-
ket for all kinds 'of meat, except
poultry, is adversely affected by the
over‘supply of the latter which every
Detroit dealer has on hand. Cooler
weather is in prospect and, as a re-
sult, a better trade in meats is look-
ed for.

 

P—i

 

"-1

Wigwam“

. . ' ’ .No.
M38390

Sizes
7 to 12

Men's. all felt lace

No. ' 12‘

M321 20

Sizes '

8 to 1§  
M on 's ﬁrst quality
warm lined all Rub- shoe. Heavy felt soles
ber Four Buckle over and heels. 790 wool
shoes. 790 wool socks socks Free with every
Free with every pair. pair.

Ladies' four buckle arctlcs. H1 11 and low
heels. Quality guaranteed. 3 
No. 217, sacs 2y; to 8. 0
Men‘s Cloth top, four-buckle overshoes.
Quality guaranteed. Order by No. 2890. sizes
6 to 12. Wool ..

cox free ........................... .. 0
Men’s Cloth top two-buckle overslioes. Order
by No. 2260. sizes 6

to  '-
Boys' Cloth top four-buckle overshoes. Order
by No. 2090, sizes 1

to __._.__....“WWW..-__..___..u....... -
Boys’ Cloth to two-buckle oversnocs. Orde!I
by No. 2710, es 3
_.__....._._......-.....___.-....__n.. -
Youths' Cloth top two-buckle overs oes. Order
by No. 2280, sizes 11
to 2 _......
SEND no MONEY
Pay'When Goods Arrive, Plus Postage
0th Dlrecl From Th'u Ad. - - Send fot Caielol

I CHASE SHOE CO.

. ........._.. I

llIII-IuI-IIIII-‘I-llmapullllllll
llilllilI-IIIIIIIIIIl-IInllllllll

MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
lllllliillsllllll

 

 

 

 

BS

' ’ direct {min iaclory and save

. I o x
" evon 110.13 malaise
@1/ Qxeméﬁr 1’
12VOLl

 

 

 

7plaiei2oe ‘

 awemﬁﬁl

 

 

 1901?er comer a bite
ﬂar ﬁnara‘nlee

 

. was» enemas cw: MAKE
or m Alto. YEN; MADE.
Ms: carom MUST mean..-
Iwn' ataoanms. ’ ‘ \
nu. ms 3mm amass
can. sunset To mmcnou - .
h'ﬂQDISCOW WILL IE AL- "~ ‘
t with” ADVERTISIMENT
. 5!, we" known" omen. r ,
Sique galley Semce Ce. :
' ' JEFFERSON [web-1’ f

«of: :.
earner-r» M I

 

 


  

   

  

“ i‘ .. in“,  .  "" ‘-

Axi Opportunity  Get. That ’e
Long Wanted Furnace NOW.

‘7 No Payment Unt April!

 

MAKE this a warm Christmas. Dispense your holiday hospitality
on the farm in complete comfortthat all may enjoy. ' .. '

This is the best opportunity you’ve ever had. The furnace installed 1
Nothing to pay until April, 
by which time you are getting cash for your crops. Then only small

at once, if desired. Not a cent down.

The H '

HOME , ‘

HOT BLAST FURNACE

is the best money can buy. A perfect, scientiﬁcheating plant, solidly
constructed to last a generation or more. Easy to operate. Economizes
fuel. Installed by our own factory experts and guaranteed to give

satisfaction. - . A , . r
A chance like this does notcome often. p I. V ‘
See our nearest branch or writedirect to

monthly payments.

HOME FURNACE" COMPANY 

HOLLAND, MICHIGAN ,'

MICHIGAN BRANCHES-h!
Gmd.Bopido—Henry Barkem 8t. Johns—4'. D. Crank

John J. Sweet Lawrence—Bk:th F. Cook

0. Van Koevering . Port Huron—4!. J. Bnekema
Wayland—M. Looyengoed Benton Harbor—L. B. D‘ﬂmn
Charlotte—F. M. Kincaid Flint—Eran]: De Emlyn
Belding—F. E. Blouxh' Mnekexon Helghtr—J. W. De Vriel
Reed City—H. M. Stephens » nineteen—W. If. Goodrich
Greenviﬂr—J. A. Church ' .,.Bay City—David Goe-
Kalksska—lt N. Lehner Bottle Creek—H. I. Jone-
Bhde. 1. Mom «2 Poncho—V. A. Lemphere
Bangorb-P. 8. Behoyer Mono—and Lemma
Marlon—M. andemn Holla'nd—A. K. Prin-
Whltehalk—Dlok Van Oort D. Vereeke
Bid Rapids—O. 1'. Andersen Bother—H. 0. Bedmon
'l‘rsveree City—A13 B. Outreach: It. Louie—~12 B. Zuhler ‘
Lansing—G. W. Kooyere ' Inductor—Boa! Sheet Hotel Work
Kalnmoloo—F. W. Moon 'l‘hree liven—Bowed need v _

 

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