
 

ATffifdepen‘ndet
' Farmer’s Weekly Owned and
Edited in Michigan

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1921. $1PER YEAR

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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YuNGZ‘DAIRYMAN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


  
   

V 11E of certhfied potato
8 being demonstrated daily
. - the’ reports which Mr.
, , secretary of the Michigan Po-
i: Growers’ Association,
In all over Michigan and the
boring states. This year When
. verage for the state will not ex—

   
   

 

  

    
 
 
    
   
 
   
  
  
 
 
   
  
  
   
   
  
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
    
  
   
  
   
 
  
  

, ed potatoes, well-cared _ for,
. yielded over 300 bushels per
in many cases. The average

Mim- than 150 bushels per acre.

‘ M; E. Parmlee, of Hilliards, leads
he state with a” yield of 360 bush-
to the acre of 11 acre. He plant-
certified late Petoskeys and cared
or, them according to the rules for
king, certified seed. He finds that
.best yields are grown on an al-
113} sod which has been turned un-
Woodman Bros, of Paw Paw,
, better than 300 bushels per
Mrs. They also raised Petoskeys
ﬁnd are strong for growing alfalfa
_. :efore potatoes. J. C. and F. C.
Bchmalzreed of Levering, produced
close to 300 bushels to the acre.
‘They turned under a J une clover sod
,tor the potatoes.

1 In all counties where certified po-
tato seed has been introduced results

H. 0..

receives ’

75 bushels per acre, fields of.

(certified potatoes in the state is-

have shown the superiority of certi-

> .fied; seed. and the value of standard-‘

izing on onelparticular variety for

the section.

‘To introduce and dem-

onstrate this point certified seefpo-
tatoes have been sent into 17 of the

southern counties of the state.

In,
every case they have proven their ,

superiority. They are also showing
the farmers the value of growing a

single variety in contrast to the large -

number found. in the average com-

munity.—‘-C. E. Johnson, M.

Correspondent.

FARMERS’ WEEK AT M. A. o.

LANS FOR Farmers’

A. C.’

Week at

the Michigan Agricultural Col-
lege, January 30 to February 3,
are fast shaping up and indicate that
the big round—up this year is going
to be one of the best everxput on

at the college.

Already the largest

gathering of farmers in the winter,

it is planned to make it the best.

Over 5,000 people attended the meet-

ings last year.
Leaders of agriculture and

eco—

nomics, who have attained interna—
tional fame have been placed on the

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
  
     
  
   
   
  
  
   
 
  
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
   
  
   
  
     
    
   
 
 
   
   
  
      
 

. ‘hs

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Imam yourself

 

VOICES

‘By Emanuel G. Frank

There’s a wondrous thrill of pleasure
When you see the form and face, '
0f some loved one in whose presence you rejoice;
. But the jay there is in Seeing
Can’t compare with what takes place, ’
When you hear the magic music of her voice.

3

. , ' Be it mother wife or sweetheart,
. Be it sister, daughter, friend «7
' As within our waiting vision each appears;
While your heart my leap to see them ,
What is better in the end,
Than their eager voices sounding in your ears.

Butrememherasyoulisten

‘ Thatthesesweetandnamelessthrills,
Findanechoandananswer richand true,

,Inﬂiehiearlsofcherishedlovedonns
~ Whichaloneyourvoicefulﬁlls;
Forwhenallissaid,yourvoiceisreallyyou.

So when travel takes you from them
Letthemfeelhow much yeucare, ,
Let them know you haven’t left them all alone; ‘ -
- Letthemfeelinfuliestmeasure '

arestandingthere; ,-
tlmm‘heerihevoic’ethey cherish through

[the ’phone.

.t ‘
,
~N‘;

\- ‘1,

ATEi‘EPEoNEgcomANY ,

 

 

 

1i.

. gr ‘ ,
asked to speak are President M . ..
Burton of the University of Michi-‘
gan, President—elect Friday of M. A.
0., Sir Auckland Géddes, British
Ambassador o the United States,
Henry Wallace, U. S. Secretary of
Agriculture, Senator Arthur Capper
of Kansas and Congress "11 J. C.
Ketcham and Patrick Ke 1y of Mich-
igan. '

‘ A number of the state agricultural
associations have set the dates for ‘
their meetings at that time, thus
adding to the crowd and importance
of the gathering. A few of them
are the State Farm Bureau, the
Michigan Crop Improvement Asso-
ciation, the Michigan Petato Grow-
"ers Association, the Michigan Muck
Producers Association and the Mich—
igan Horticultural Society—«C.
Johnson, M. A. C. Correspondent.

CORN AND OATS TRADE 0171‘-
LOOK

00 GREAT a consideration is
given this season to the large
corn crop~estimate; too little to
the poor quality and to the small and
poor oats crop. In the big corn and
oats belt—the states of Ohio, Indi-
ana, Illinois, _Michigan, Wisconsin
Minnesota, South Dakota, Iowa, Mis—
souri, Nebraska and Kansas—the
consumption and distribution of last
' season’s immense. crop was 1,944,—
343,000 bushels. This year’s crop
is officially estimated at 1,956,880,-
000 bushels ; there is a farm carry-p
over of 187,290,000 bushels and a
visible in these states as of Novem—
. ber 1st of 12,477,000 making a total
available of 2,156,647,000 bushels—
this total is 37,565,000 bushels
smaller than last season, hence it
bulks largely in the trade view. The
average quality of the new crop is
84.6 in this territory; last year it
Was 91 percent of normal. Assum-
ing the carryover and visible at last
year‘s average quality and applying
it to the consumption and distribu-
tion of this season, there remains 1,-
795,575,000 bushels, the quality be—
ing 6 per cent under last year. It
will take 1,948,141,000 bushels of
this season’s corn, with the carry-
over of 199,767,000, or a. total of
2,112,017,000 bushels, to render the
service of 1*,944,343,000 last year.
This would leave for carryover and
visible 44, 630, 000 bushels.

The September lst government re-
port on hogs gave the number in ‘
these twelve states as 32,102,000, an
inerease of 1.7 per cent—making an

- additional requirement of 35, 938, --
000 bushels of 84 6 quality corn
and reducing ‘the theoretical carry--
over to less than 9,000,000 bushels
—no allowance is made for the mm
which will be burned for‘ fuel in
many sections of the belt. ',

The cats crop in these same states
last year was 1,102,194,000 with a
carryover and visible of 46, 597,000
or a tetal of 1,148,791,000 bushels.
The quality was high at 95.4; the‘
consumption and distribution totaled
980,231,000 bushels. This season
the crop in these eleven states was
723,875,000, the quality the poorest
on record at 71.7. The carryover on

' farms and visible in" the same states
was 168,560,000. This being ac-
cepted at the high quality of . last-
se’ason, leaves 811,671,000 bushels
to be supplied—this is equal to 1.-
014,589,000 of a crop of 25 per cent
poorer than last season—a defici-
ency of 290,714,000 bushels in the
eleven states that supply the coun—
try’s surplus oats. As corn and oats
are interchangeable in feeding
on, the far m.
there is "a com-

  
  

, purpose of better

"a very bad condition.

ably-from drought.
. yields in Mississippi will be consid-

 

’ tee 6: a
eding the hopes of those who:
ure‘s turned in to Prof. 0. E. Reed.

' head of the M A. 0. Dairy Depart—

ment. Two cow-testing associations

are already organized and one and

perhaps 2 more are to be organized
soon. Twenty-six men or groups or
men have signed up ,to pure

pure-Tbred sires. Of the 935 «men
who attended the barn meetings, it
was found that 162 were using scrub
sires. In nearly all cases where new ,
sires are to be purchased, the men
stated that they would buy the same

.breed as the community is breeding.

These decisions 'on the part of the
farmers cannot help but mean better
live stock- and. bigger returns for Al-‘
legan county, which is annually pro-
ducing more than $4, 000, 000 worth

,of dairy prOducts.—-—C. E. khnson,

M. A. C. Correspondent.

CHANGES IN COUNTY AGENTS

>NUMBER of changes will be ef—

‘fected in 'the personnel of the ’

county agents of the state on
December 1. K.‘ K. Vining county
agent of Emmet county, has been ap-
pointed county agent for Kent coun-
ty to take the place of R. G. Carr,
who has been made one‘of ;the as-
sistant state leaders of county
agents. Roy Decker of'Eaton coun-
ty is moved to Jackson county to fill
the place made vacantby the ap-
pointment of C. V. Ballard the pres-
ent county agent who is located in
East Lansing, as one- of the assist-
ants to Halo Tenant, State Leader of
County Agents. Mr. L. D. Drake
has been appointed, county‘agent for
Antrim and Kalkaska counties, com-
bined. R. W. Tenney, the present
county club leader of Eaton county,

\has_,bee_n made county agent there.

Emmet county is temporarily with.-

‘out an agent.

A conference of the county agents
of the lower peninsula will be held-

8' .'
ed the campaign are shoWn by fig-y

     
 
 
 
  
 
 

 

some time in the near future for the '

organizing
work between counties and planning
the lines of work to be taken up dur-
ing the coming year.
that the various counties having the
same problems will be combined into

groups which will make the handling ,
of these questions more effective. An :

extensive campaign to increase the
acreage of alfalfa in Michigan will
be carried on in 1922.——C. E. John-
son, M. A. C. Correspondent.

amounmnar. BRIEFS

Nebraska farmers are getting ‘the
munificent sum of 22. 8 cents per
bushel for their corn. Weevil, smut
and ear worms are reported to be
doing considerable damage to the
corn crop the country over. . .

Over half the New York potato
crop is said to have been sold, leav-
ing the amount on farms much less
than usual.

Kansas' fallwheat is reported in
At least
third of the reading has not germin-
ated or has perished from drought. ‘
Very little old wheat being sold.
Prices at elevators from 70 to 85
cents a bushel. Manyr other wes ern
states report droughty conditions

'and outlook» far from promising.

Much" acreage will not be planted be—

, cause of prolonged, drought.

The. Georgian sugar cane crbp is
reported to have suffered consider-
,Sugar cane

erably less than early estimates.
Hog cholera is reported wide-3
. spread in Mis-

.souri, Kane a s.

 

bined shortage of .. -,
286,8 68.9 '00-.
bushels on ,. ‘ , ‘
yéar‘s. basis —- , 5
feeding 99m 9,0, '
instead

Illinois and In-..
'diana, with the
”progress of dis~-

   

 
 
 
  
 
   
 

It is probable .

I .

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__ 2 .

the ‘

‘_ _, .-...__._‘.. ., . 1

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1..

‘ large scale, it has been announced by the tag?
ricultural division of the Detroit Board of.

\ ; er peninsula.

 

ARMERS have started organization of a
Detroit company to market. produce on a

Commerce.

Reduction of 20 to 40 per cent in the guise
cost of handling various farm products be-
tween farm and retailer in Detroit Will be
possible through the, operations of this pro-

. duce exchange.

The campaign for the raising of the ne-
cessary ﬁnances is now in the hands of pro-
ducers in. Oakland, Mach and Monroe
counties. ‘It is expected to extend into most

of the counties in the eastern half of the low-x

Plans are for the ”completion
of business operations next summer.

'The exchange will be capitalized at $300,000
according to the announcement by A.
Bingliam, head of. the agricultural division of

1 the Beard of Commerce, which is co- operating
1 with the farmers. The statement describes

: proﬁt charges, the inSuring of square dealing , ’

‘ closer to actual distribution of
.He still has no representation or direct connec-

  

the value of this new organization to produc-
ers as being fundamentally in the 'elimination
of unnecessary handling, transportation and

and the certainty of obtaining full market
value for" goods consigned as well as the sav-
ing of hours of time for individuals now mar-
keting their 0Wn produce; to consumers—the
establishment of more uniform retail prices in

1

being that of consignment of goods.

“Why an organization of this kind is needed
by the community is easily illustrated. This
summer the Detroit market was swamped with
sweet corn and cucumbers. . Tons of the latter
were never picked and tons of the former wen
into silos for winter feeding of cattle. Thous-
ands of dollars as 1a result were lost- to Michi-
gan farmers. Yet there were localities in the
country where cummbers were‘ 11 1: grown or
‘or the crops were poor. The ind vidual farm-
er did not have enough of a crop to ship. An
organization capable of handling the crops of
scores of these individuals would have brought
man‘y dollars into Michigan.‘

. “This is just one phase of the farmer’s mar-
keting problem There are many, another one
When this

{is done, the farmer gambles his season’s work

_cago.

frequently on the honesty of a dealer in a dis-

‘tant city whom he has never seen.

”While the farmer has his troubles, .the con-
sumer has his share. For example, potatoes
coming 'to the city frOm the northern part of

the state are‘handled as many as eight times‘

by different parties between the farm and city
heme. Few of the better grades of apples
grown even as close in as 25 miles of the city
come here, until after they have gone to Chl-
These numerous handlings, which can be

' reduced, add considerable to the price.’
. , , ,

the ~city,¥'in frequent cases lower prices as a .
1 result of minimized handlings, more uniform

and higher grades and standards and a stead-
1er supply -
Farmers for several years back have been pere-

tecting local marketing associations”, said Mr.
Bingham discussing the proposition. 1 “These
Organizations have done an important work.

But seldom have they brought the farmer any
his products.

tion with the big markets of the country. He,
either personally or through a local association,

turns his produce over to speculative handlers‘
This proposed produce eXchange.

in the city.
will give producers direct connection-- with the

larger markets End save cost of unnecessary
handlings for the parties mast concerned...

producers and consumers.-_

1

Gd. Traverse Fruit Farmers

.Want Central Packing Plant

HE APPLE GROWERS of Old Mission
Peninsula held a meeting on November
15 which promises to clear up many of the dif-

ﬁcult marketing problems’ that have hereto-

fore troubled them and. taken a heavy toll
out of their proﬁts. The meeting was called
by the Grand Traverse County Farm Bureau
and included the members of the Peninsula
Local. The subject under discussion was

‘Marketing Apples.

The Hon. E O. Ladd, member of the
State Legislature for this county presided.
Mr. MiltOn LT.Gorc Was the ﬁrst speakeer,

dealing «mainly‘in his talk with the proper

preparation of apples for market: He dis-
cusSed the grOw'ing, spraying, picking, and
packing of the fruit, giving special attention

‘to the packing. Maintenance of fertility, use

11g. Produce Marketing 00. Launched 1n Detrmt
' Agricultural Department of Board of Commerce Promoting $300, 000 Farmers ’Corporation 1

of fertilizers, cover crop and cultivation Were?

all given due consideryion by Mr. Gore and
by the variOus speake s who engaged in the
open discussion which followed.

There ran through all the talks a single

thread of thought which led up to the second 1

subject on the program, viz: A Central Pack-
ing Plant for the Grand Traverse Region.
Mr. Wm. A. McCool, President of the Grand
Traverse Packing 00. gave the general outline

of what- his company has in contemplation" -
looking to the_handling of the apple crop for ‘-

next year. The Packing Co. built a canning
factory and, served the cherry growers of the
region very satisfactorily this season. In
view of 1thc success of the company with the
cherries and the general satisfaction of the
growers with the 10 cents per pound paid for

sour cherries last summer, the proposition of'
" the Packing Company to expand so as to take

‘care (ff the apple crop next year was hailed
with enthusiasm by the growers and the new

departure was endorsed by a unanimous vote "

of those present. About 4.0 pcr cent of the
stock of the Grand Traverse Packing Co. is
owned by the growers. The very excellent
showing of the company on the cherry crop
and the fact that the proﬁts
were retained in local bands and are to be
used to expand the business. leads the fruit
grower to feel that at last 110 has started on
the proper course-to get full value for his crop
and to'use the proﬁts of operation in a way

to build up the fruit interests of the region. "'1

——By G. H. Houston,

Mich. Scores at International

Chicago, Nov. 28th, (By Western Union)—C.
H. Prescott & Sons,R1‘chland Eclipse Junior

shorthorn steer calf wins fi1st in class. ——H. H. '

Mack, Market and Live Stock Editor. _
N THE CAR—LOT division of the Inter-v

national show there are 178 carloads en-‘

tercd, '93 of which are cattle. These exhibits

include animals ready for the butcher and"

feeding stock. In the (Continued on page 23y

 

 

will be in control.

. Chris Hansen, Secretary, B. S.-.
1.. (item, 83m Y6 _
H ~V-K1ttle

   

 

 

if

  

Central Mlclngan Farmers Organize to Distribute Milk in Lansing

HE MOST ambitiOus farmers’ co-operative milk distributing ’
enterprise ever attempted 1211 Michigan is in
. iz'aﬁon in Lansing. The name of the com'pan Wi 1 be the Lansing
'Dairy Company. It will be incorporated at $175, 090.. Farmers
, ' Its business Will be to distribdte Whole milk
‘ and manufacture dairy products in the city of LanSing. ,_
The project has the backing of some of Lansing’s big--
gest business men who oWn farms. This fact virtually insures the
success of the bompany. R. H. Scott, Vice president and gen’l
..‘ ’mauager of the Rec Motor Car Co., is a member of the. Board ~of
DirectOrs of the tentative organization. B. S. Gier, vice president of
' gigtheMotor Wheel Corporation, is also a director ,and hammer of
' the new company The complete personnel of oﬂicers is as“fo‘l-
lows;~ E B. Ramsey, President; Win. Knaup, Vice President;
, diet, TreaSurer, Richard Scott, Dad
Ed Stoil, hris M91915;Wm. Keck. ' "
age: weighs (31th county Earn; Bureau, is

Y * .
idea and is "doing excellent
among 11.1mm 02$ countypmany _:,‘,'

recess of organ" '

 

farmers supplying the city of Lansing received only $1.50 per cwt.,
f. o. b. receiving station, and for September and October, $1. 60.
During the same period the retail price of milk was 10 cents afar,
quart, showing a Spread between the buying and selling price of;
a nearly 7 cents a quart.
' Those who are behind the Lansing venture have received a
good deal of encOuragement from the success which the Grand“
Rapids co-operatiVe dairy company is now having. This concern
. made some mistakes in its early beginnings but it has now found":
its feet and for the past year has paid farmers from 50 cents to 11"
dollar more than the Lansing farmers have received. An ad-I,
ditional fact which tends to show the advantages of co-Oper‘ative'
distribution is the comparatively small margin on which the Grand,
Rapids company is now able to do busineSS. During the year 1929“
57 per cent of the gross receipts of this company went to
-farmers, and it is estimated that the close of the current year
show a still larger split in favor of the producer.
distributing companies, for instance, could do business on the Sam
margin they Wad-1d be able to pay the farmers 6 8 cents per q
“instead of loss than 5 cents as at present with retail milk at 12 cents.
‘ _ The BusineSs Farmer predicts that the sucCesS'ful culmina
, of. the Lansing company will force theMichigan Milk Produ~
-, Aos’n to submit to the demands of its members in the Detroit . .

If the Demo,

  

of operation ‘

     
   
   
  
   
  
   
 
   
  
   
     
   
  
   
   
  
  
   
   
    
  
   
   
  
  
  
  
   
   
 
 
  
   
    
     
    
    
  
 
   
  
   
 
   
  
 

  
   
  
 
      
 
 
  

    
  
  
 
   
   
 


 

 

Public Learning Difference Between Good and Poor Beef and Demand for Better Grades Increasing

O FEED or not to feed~

By H. H. MACK

Me., from C. F Baker of George
0. Shaw 00., Portland Me:

 

that is the question that
many a Michigan farmer is ask-
ing. The experience of the last
two years in feeding cattle hi1.)
surely been a trying one to many
men who thought they understood

the business fairly well- The
cause of the indecision and the
hesitancy about answering the

question asked at the beginnii'ig
of this article, is the fact that so
many of the feeding undertak-
ings of recent years have resulted
in a balance on the wrong side of
the ledger. The man with cour-
age and stamina will this year

 

 

“Last winter we bought of you a
carload of Aberdeen-Angus cattle.
Our trade was much pleased with
the quality of the cattle. We are
writing you to find out if you are
going to have any more of this grade
of beef for the market the coming
fall and winter. If you do h_,ave we
should be pleased to buy your entire
lot, and would be glad to pay you
from $1 to $3 per hundred more
than the market price on western
beef. The quality of the beef was
excellent and all who ate it were
much pleased With it.”

x A tribute to a breed of cattle

and to the feeder who made them
good, which the letter mentioned

 

 

surely decide to feed, make or

lose. For the most part, corn and
roughage are plentiful; market
prices for grain and forage are

low and freight rates are high.

The writer of this article fully realizes the,
hardships and (liseouragenient's that have fall-
en to the lot of the painstaking cattle feeder
during the past year; a, 't'reduent visitor to
live stock markets he has often seen cattle
discriminated against because, they were a
few pounds heavier than the trade was ask—
ing for. Hundreds of thrifty, thorough-g0-
ing feeders have been penalized rather than
rewarded for making prime, bulloeks. Con-
(litions like those described above are greatly
to be regretted. lt is the best work that is
deserving of and should reeeive the greatest;
reward. The fatter the cattle are the more
it costs to make them and for that reason
they should bring the highest market price
in order that the feeding experiment come
out right.

So far the picture we have been contem-
plating has had in it. very little of light and
cheer; were it a foregone conclusion that the
market, demand for prime steers would always
be as undependable as it has been for the
past two years’ the outlook would be very
discouraging indeed. "Many close students of
market conditions think they see a rift in the
cloud however. (leeasionally something comes
to light that tends to the eonvietion that, some
fine day, in the not distant future, the con—

seientious, painstaking cattle feeder will
com into his own. Slowly, it is true, but
surely, the beef eaters of the country are

learning the difference between cow beef and
steer beef. From time to time men of means

have by some lucky chance got their “teeth” .

into a juicy steer steak and they will never
be able to forget the pleasant sensation.

State Fair Steer Show

Last fall at the State Fair auction sale of

fat steers six carloads of fancy bullocks,
yearling and two-year-olds fell to the bidding
of Detroit packers; the net result was that ap-
proximately 60.000 pounds of high grade steer
beef was distributed among discriminating
Detroit beef eaters. The fat steer show at the
Michigan State ‘air is now a permanent i11-
stitution. Complete plans for commodious
quarters for the cattle haVe already been made
and the supposition is that Detroit the Dy-
namic will get a dose of high grade steer beef
every fall amounting to from 75,000 to 100,000
pounds. There is an old adage to the effect
that pounding away everlastingly in the same
place will, after a while, wear a hole through
that place.
time may sometime arrive when the bulk of
the steer beef produced in Michigan will be
consumed within the state. “Michigan-
grown cattle for lVlichigan-grOWn people”
should henceforth be the battle cry of the or-
ganizations having a membership among beef
cattle breeders and the good ﬁght for better
beef should be carried through to a ﬁnish.
Pressing the investigation a little farther
We learn from the men who killed and dis-
tributed the State Fair cattle that everyone
Who got a taste of the meat. from these splen-

l

Is it too 1111ich to expect that the ’

The above calf, yearling and two-year—old, winners of the herd prize in the fat
steer division at the 1921 State Fair, are a part of the l\[.
International Live Stock Show at Chicago this week.
direetion of Prof. George Brown of the Animal

A. C.
They
Husbandry" Dept.

 

 

 

 

This junior yearling Hereford steer is also in the Col-
lege's exhibit at the International.

did animals mentioned its wonderful flavor
and expressed a desire to have more of the
same kind. The feeder of high grade cattle
who assumes that his product is not appreci-
ated is making a great mistake. This would,
indeed be an ungrateful world if all of the
study, all of the planning, all of the hard
work and all of the money spent by the
breeders and feeders of beef cattle in this
country had accomplished nothing that would

compel gratitude and appreciation on the
part of the meat—eating public. That the
work of the breeders and feeders of prime

cattle is commanding attention and appreci-
ation in these later days is evidenced in many
ways, as witness the following: _

A correspondent to a western live stock
paper, in a recent issue of that publication
calls attention to a letter recently received
by P. P. Park of Jefferson Farms, Jefferson,

 

 

 

exhibit at the
were fed under the
of the College.

 

 

DB. J. T. HORNEB; . '
Assoc. Prof. of Economics and Accounting. M- A. Of

 

above contained simply shows
which way the wind is blowing;
it proves that every strictly prime
bullock whether Angus Hereford
or Shorthorn which has been produced and
distributed to the public is an active element
in the great publicity campaign which has
for its main object the improvement of the
average quality of the beef consumed in this
country. ..
Paying Freight Both Ways

The custom so long in vogue in this state of
sending prime beef cattle out of the state and
shipping high-grade beef back at the expense
of a double freight rate is really too expen-
sive and wasteful to be any longer consider-
ed. There is a perfectly legitimate demand
for common beef. There are nine consumers
of meat who cannot afford to buy prime steer
beef for every one that can. There will al-
ways be a demand at some price for the
dairy discards Without'permtitting them to
masquerade as steer beef. The . only right
way to handle this undertaking is for the re-
tail butcher to carry all of the diiferent
grades of beef and sell each one for exactly
what ’it is.

At the beginning of this article attention .

was called to the abundance of corn, much
of it in unsalable condition; in addition to
lowggrain prices we have feeding cattle sell-
ing lower than for many years. The fluctu-
ations of the live stock (Continued on page 20)

Treat in Store for M. B. F.

Readers“

R. J. T. HORNER, who took up his
duties as‘ associate professor-of econom-
ies and accounting at the M. .A' 0. this fall,
will prove a valuable man to the college staff

[in its work to helpthe farmers of Michigan

solve their marketing and other economic
problems in these times of strained economic
conditions. Prof. Horner has had consider-
able experience in dealing with these prob-
lems, having been engaged with the Okla-
homa Bureau of Markets for some time and
has dOne public accounting work. The farm-
ers of Michigan are fortunate that the college
has been able to secure the services of such a
valuable man to Work on their economic prob—
lems with them, for it it these problems which
are of the most vital importance to the farm-
ers today. They do not care so much about
making two blades of grass grow where one
grew before as they care about selling what

they have raised at a price which will insure

them of a living wage for their labor.

Dr. Homer is a graduate of the Oklahoma
Agricultural College and» also of Columbia
University. He has taught in each of these
colleges.
foods through deterioration during the market-
ing process, while connected with the Federal
Bureau of Markets. ’

Dr. Homer has consented to give the read-
ers of the Michigan Business Farmer discus-
sions of farm economics and the economic prob-

d1scuss10ns will begin if}! a 15121

He made a study of the lossesﬁin

lems confronting the farmers today. T‘lgese‘;

‘
‘ ‘A

     


jit'

' . the organization of the company.

 

 

New Plant of the Plttsﬂeld (Farmers’) Milk Exchange.

HE PITTSFIELD Milk Exchange, Inc

  
   
 
 
  
  
  
 
   
 
 
   
 
 
  
 
  

Was organized in February, 1920 for the .

purpose of previding an outlet for the dairy

. products of this county; to- encourage dairy-
. ing in this section and to put the dairy in-

dustrygback on the map by restocking the
abandoned farms that had been given over

to keeping summer boarders ‘and had given.

up the keeping of dairy coWs

. The cOmpany is capitalized at one hundred
ﬁfty thousand , dollars,

($150, 000 .00). The
ninety preferred stockholders have subscribed
approximately ﬁve-sixths of the amount and
the sixty commOn stockholders the remaining
one-sixth. Common stock is available only to
milk producers on the basis of a ﬁfty dollar
($50. 00) share of stbck for a twenty quart
,shipment of lmilk, the stock requirements be-
ing‘based on the average milk production for

each farmer for the months of September, Oc-.

tobcr and November The preferred stock
holders are the public spirited men of this
county who have the agricultural interests at
heart and are not neceSsarily milk producers.

We expect our farmer members to score 85 '

points on the government score cards, keep
ice during the summer and use covered milk
pails, also ship us their entire output. '
Last year we bought a local milk business
.and were swamped With milk from our sixty
members without proper eduipment for hand;
ling sam'e. . Our. new plant has just been com-
pleted, approximately eighteen months after
i We are
distributing milk here in the city, manufac-

turmg butter, Iiee.“ cream, cottage Lcheese and_
cencentrated inlilk We are handling an.

equivalent of four thousand quarts of milk
daily. The milk that is used for fluid milk
is paid for on the basis of _7 1 2e for 3 7 .milk.

The milk Ilthat is used in by- products is paid '

for on the basis of 90 score hatter 011 the
Boston market.

zanine. It is divided off into the intake room,
pasturizing and ﬁlling room. by—products I do

partment, ice= cream department and the bottle”
washing. department, With ofﬁce and milk sales '

— robin on the ﬁrst ﬂoor, with the refrigerator
maciline, boiler and lecker rooms in the base-
men
tion to skylights directly over the operator.
The intake room is equipped with a Toronto
scales, drip saver, double compartment Weight
can and automatic can washer, - sterilizer and
dryer. The pasturizing roam is equipped with
two large receiving vats, permitting of the'
grading Jo 1gilt: upon receiving same into A

 

   

 

'g’rade‘ being that milk'-

1% I ., . l n

Farmer Par ase Plant to Distribute Milk and Manufdct‘ure Dairy Products

of a ZOO-gallon mix
vat, viscalizer, two-

tal freezer, same hav-
ing capacity of five

day. The entire equip-
ment in all depart-
ments is motor driven.
A twenty ton Cream-
ery Package Refriger-
ating machine is put
up in the winter and
is used for packing the
ice" cream cabinets in
drug stores, etc.
The ticket, cash in
”advance system is
used on milk routes to
great extent and the drivers of the wagons are
on a ten per cent commission per week.

Three people are required in the ofﬁce to
handle the cash, operating thestatements and
general clerical work connected with the run-

ning of the business and the ﬁguring of the

patrons sheets. .An engineer is also required
in the basement to take“ charge of the ﬁfty H.
P. boiler and refrigerating machine. Four
men are required in the milk and by- products
room, also one man in the ice cream room.
Six drivers and a route foreman are required
to handle the deliyery and collections. A
stable man is also employed to take charge of

. the eight horses and seven wagons, also three

Each room has side lighting in addi-.-‘

‘ 1y rolling {‘lt’ s big—I"

trucks,‘ An ,outside man is required on the
soliciting of new business, etc.

Nine-tenths of the milk is collected by milk
trucks, operated on an independent basis and
not at present connected with the Milk Ex-
change. Prices paid for milk hauling range
from three- quarters of a cent to one and one-
quarter cents per quart for distances varying
from ﬁve to‘twenty-ﬁve miles. The milk ship-
pers are paid promptly on the ﬁrst and ﬁfteen-
th of each month for the two weeks period.

The Milk Exchange, Inc, has now been in
its new plant.about three weeks and have
made it a point to invite the public into the
plant, holding “open house” every afternoon
for One week in addition to entertaining other

A -‘Visitto the Famous

hundred gallon aging”
vat and onevhorizons

hundred gallons per

 
  

 

 

groups, such as nurses, teachers and public
Welfare groups and associations. .The growth-
of the last three weeks has‘been satisfactory.

We are also negotiating with the other in-
dependent dealers to supply them with milk
for their routes on the basis of two cents
over the cost of the milk to us, also take all
their ship-pers and enlarge the EXchanga;to
make it a country wide proposition as far as
the farmers go and a city wide proposition
as far as the distribution goes' pooling the
surplus of all at our Milk Exchange, pro-rat—
ing the surplus among all the farmers both
those in and out of the Exchange.

We are located about one block and a half
from the main street of our city, very near
one of the principle side streets. Pittsﬁeld
has a population of forty-three thousand, but
our bV-product busineSs not only takes in
Pittsﬁeld but the smaller places near by..

Although it is the intention of the stock-
holders and directors to make the Milk Ex-
change an institution working for the good
of the producer as well as supplying the city
with the better ,milk supply, we have met con-
siderable opposition from independent dealers.

Our main criticisms are that the organiza-
tiOn was started before its plant was ready,
second, that its building and machinery were
purchased at the peak of high prices, third,
that too much common stock and too much
milk was contracted for during the organiza-
tion period of the Exchange. Having such
a large amount of milk on hand, without
equipment resulted in the handling of milk
in an unSatisfactory manner and some pred-
judice against the Exchange on that account.
This however, has been overcome by the or-
ganized publicity wmk of our company dur-
ing the past three weeks since it has occupied
its new quarters.

The Pittsﬁeld Milk Exchange belongs to
the Co- -operation Council composed of eight
co- -operative milk plants in this state, all of
which work together 011 marketing problems
to some extent. The Council is also consider-
ing co-opcrative purchasing of supplies for
the various plants.——VV. H. Barber, Manager.

Ramsdell Turkey Farm

Farm WomanShows what can be Done in Raising Breeding Turkeys

N _THE morn-
ing of Oct. 26,
my good wife and self decided to take our
annual trip up into Ionia county to see the
flock of turkeys reared by Miss Evelyn Rams-
dell. The roads were ﬁne, the sun was

The new plant is 90x60, one floor and mez— :_b.1'1ght, the air as" crisp as an October day

can be. Under these conditions we sped over

the ground to Portland and then west on the
{kmain road that leads to Ionia,
II Here upOn new ground and: upon a faim,

5 1- 2 miles.
quaint in the style of its Miss

buildings
Ramsdell has reared .- ,

 

By C. H. BURGESS

management is won.

Miss Ramsdell ’s
methods are so easily followed and results so
far reaching that it places her in the fore-
most ranks of turkey breeders, throughout
the United States. She simply has made it
an interesting study for seven years. All of
this time she has studied to secure quick ma-
turity, quick feathering and good fleshing.
At the time of our visit the turkeys were
well matured. The young toms weighed 21
and 22 pounds each. (Continued on page 20)

  

 

154 Giant IBronze.
turkeys and as ﬁne
and even‘ a' flock as
the writer has ,eI'ver

meadoWs“ 101d rail

   
 
 
    
  
     
 
 
 

   
 


 
     

 
    
 
  

 

  

 

An m
M I’ Won-mum
ﬁtter lug-n

Published, every Saturday .'by _ .. .
THE RURAL PUILISHINO COMPANY. Ino.
' Mt. Dismaylllchlgan

  

 

 

  
  
    
  
  
 
 
 
   
  
 
   
    
 
  
  
   
 
     
  
 
  
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
    
  
  
   
 
 
  
  
    
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
 
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
 
 
 
  
    
 
    
 

Form Papers. Incorporated

son 11. snow! ....... ' ............... PUBLISHER
ggnnsr A. LORD ........................... ‘. mroa

 

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H m‘ﬁzhoiek ..... .A:§.B.o. . . . .Iingssistant Business Mousse!
. j , 01' o-u c e o '- .................. Circuit” ‘ml ELIOT
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> a: Grhmell .. ' ...................... If fitm’ir‘immz m
. Nom- Jenn-y ..... . .............. I": Home Editor
V, J!- Mack .................. Market and u Stock mm
‘ . E. Brown ................. . . . .- ...... 1 Editor
~ ,w, Austin Emit ........................ Veterinal‘! Editor

 

 

’ :3 YEAR (52‘188118!) .31: TWO YRS (104 1581168" 31.50
> E "'3- (150 Issues) 82; no: rm. (260- Issues) $8.00 -
. ‘m’ d‘“ fQHOWinx your name on the address label shows when
in.“ d "Mailman expires. In renewing kindly send on: label to
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“column inch. 772 lines to the page. Flat rates. .
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RELIABLE ADVERTISERS

We will not knowingly accept the advertising of
any person or firm who we do not believe to be
thoroughly honest and reliable. Should any reader
have any cause for complaint against any advertiser
in these columns, the publisher would appreciate an
. ' immediate letter bringing all facts to llght. In
”P! can when writing say: ”I saw your advertisement in The

i

i

14 lines to

 

Business Farmer!" It will guarantee honest dealinz.
Mad as second-class matter, at post-onion. Mt. Clemens. Mich.

Surplus Products

. RITERS IN “What the neighbors say”
column are trying to make themselves
and others believe that the American farmer
can get along with the export market for his
surplus products. Several suggestions are
oﬂered to prevent a surplus and to provide
for its disposition on the domestic market
should it accummnte. ,

.One of the suggestions by a writer in the
inns is to take the surplus and dump it on
the ﬁelds for fertilizer. That might work
but for tWO reasons. One of them is psycho-\
logical and the other is biological. In other
words one has to do with human nature and
the other with the nature of soils. The .
psychological reason why this scheme would
fail is because of the impossibility“ of getting
all the farmers to act in unison on the propo-
sition. The biological reason is the nature of
soils to become more productive when fertili-
sers are applied to them. The dumping of a
surplus as a fertilizer only paves the way for
a larger surplus.

It is hard to believe that the time will ever
come when farmers will attempt to solve their
surplus problem by destroying the surplus,
‘ and we doubt if anybody would be the gainer
, "in the long run by such economic waste. We
i" doubt, too, if any plan can be devised which
will preclude anly possibility of a surplus.
, Acreage and the productive efforts of man
~ can be controlled, but only within very nar-

row limits can man control the elements
‘ which are after all the bigfactors in the mak-
ing of a crop. We heartily welcome the day
3 when organization will be so perfected that
' ‘ ‘it can successfully control the percentage of
our tillable soil which shall be planted to the
various crops. We expect to see that day
I‘ come, but even then We shall have surplus-
ages of crops, not so large perhaps as at the »
'present time, but sufﬁciently large to requlre
a foreign outlet. Despite all we can .do
through organization and understanding
there will still be years of small crops and
. years of. .large Crops. And the. export demand
Will, we believe, continue as at present to be
«the great governor of grain prices. ,

n...—

_. I... 4hr...“ .

nmh. ~ ”W... 7’“--————~

‘~.,.._

 

A

'\

   

 

 

 

 

I

  

State Taxes .
_HE AVERAGE farmer is a pretty can-A
_ tious individual when it comes to money
tters. In buying anything he usually has a
, Qty good idea of the value he is to recelve /
",’,return or his money before the deal is

   
  
     
    

 

“ in the payment of taxes; Whenn farm-
ays his macs he does not realize that he
actually [buying something. But he is.
' buying. good reads, education, proteo‘

 
   

other. simmer WWI» ,

“ hand what the
' 1921. And there (probably isn’t one in ﬁve
. thousand who can name oif—hand the princi-

pal items in it.

”stunted :31an 10% Chicago. St. Inuiseand Minimum“! l’!

d; Th .‘is true in nearly, all'cases exa 1:

com the seminar and ‘ the.‘1nsane,law§,« -'

Probably not ' one "farmer? can say goﬂ
state budget 'Was . for

 

A reader recently ventured the opinion
that road building was responsible for a large
part of the state tax this year. Well, he is
wrong. The total budget was Over $20,000-
000, and ‘only $1,200,000 was levied for high-
way purposes, principally to pay? interest on
bonds. , There are"several larger items than

this in the budget, including $1,107,500 to.

complete state oﬂice building; $2,456,250 in-
terest ‘on soldiers’ bonus bonds; $3,000,000
for the University. Appropriations for other
educational purposes
000 ;for the care of the insane nearly $3,000,-

' 000; for the “militaryfestablishment,” $295,-

000; for the “Public Safety Department”
$350,000; for penal institutions, $1,135,000;
for other state departments . over $2,500,000.

A careful examination of this tax budget
gives one little hope for lower taxes for some
years to come. The institutions of the state
are constantly demanding more
funds; the University has a huge" building
program which must some day be carried out;

‘ there will be $50,000,000 of road bonds and
$40,000,000 of soldier bonus bonds to be re-

tired with interest. When all these bonds
are sold as they likely will be within the next
two or three years, the interest alone will
amount to about $5,000,000 annually to say
nothing about the amounts which will have to

be included sooner or later in the tax levy
to retire the bonds. ' ‘
It is not a pleasant outlook, is it? Re-

minds us of the story of the man who Went"

to the masquerade dressed only in a long-

’ tailed shirt. “George,” asked the host, rather

severely, “-what the dickens do you represent,
Venus preparing for the bath?” “No,” said
George, “I represent a taxpayer."

 

The Problem of France -

THE NATIONS represented at the arms
conference must view with a great deal
of satisfaction, the skill and courage. with
which the conference is handling its great-
est problem—Hie problem of France. Bat-
tered and abused as she was during the great
war France has had the deep sympathy of the
American people and in a lesser degree the
sympathy of her closer neighbors. Too much
sympathy has proven a bad thing for France.
It has contorted her attitude toward her in-
ternational obligations. It has given her an
exaggerated notion of her position among na-
tions. ‘ It has brought her to the point of be-
lieving that she should not be, bound by the
same rules of conduct to which other nations
submit. . 7

France gave advance notice to the ,arms
conference that she could not listen to propos-
als for limitation of land armament. So long
as the conference should conﬁne its business
‘to' naval disarmament she would be with
them, but any attempt to force a reduction in
her land forces would be looked upon in an
unfriendly light. She came into the confer-
ence with that spirit. Her premier took ad-
vantage of the ﬁrst opportunity which came
to warn the conference against any such sug:
gestion. He spoke of the German menace, of

the great army that Germany was construct.»
ing for a second world conquest, 'of‘the' uner .
'tected borders of France. ‘,In view of all these
things how could the 'cOnference ask France to ~

disarm? .Still moved byg’zxnpathy for suitors
ing ’France the conferené‘e listened politely,
applauded with vigor the eloquence “of the
French statesman, but remained‘unconvinced.
The war-like notes «if, the premie’r’s address
were 3 distinctly fout'i'of harmony with the" pyr-

': poses of the convention; ” And a littlc'latel‘ sarcasm, injd‘ai

~' 3. acre" j my inugmiyoicea the disbe ﬁner oi: the
‘aesemblybya rebuke that was as, gentle 99*

   

 

total nearly '$3,000,-~

and more '

 

_, _ . . A _ cahoots
frustrate the. work of nations at,Washing-ton.”
Furthermore, I ‘ ' ' ‘ ,
"‘We shall convert Germany. into a peaceful
member of the international court of Europe ohly
it great; powers combine not merely to enforce

the treaty, but to make it clear-nostril” or re- ~

taltati-on or revenge- will be" tolerated by them

and that they will mm Germany to play her ’

‘ part, provided she shows sincerity and good faith.

“An example most not be. set hydone nation r

only, or even by, two or three; Itmm be i "1'
lower! ,in proportion tether: position and " ‘
ability by all. It is not for Greati;BI-itian to. se-
geypt or submit, to sacriﬁce while other-spans them

“If we who are the greatest naval m in the
world, whose son communications are the longest
in the world, who have to defend counts 1 ﬁnitely.
longerand more‘expased than any 0th empire
in the world, who arelrdevpendent for our daily ex-
istence as a nation on command of )he sea—it
we are willing to reduce our naval strength, let

no other powers he allowed ,to build up other .

engines or instruments of attack; either in the
air or under the sea, which may render ,ourzsac-
riﬂces nugatory and which so ,far from leaving
us in the proud position of having set an example
may leave us in the perilious position or: having

incurred an undue risk.”

Taxm' g the Rich
VNY DISCUSSION of~ the excess proﬁts

tax and the surtax is almost sure to ,_
bring forth two favorite arguments againstl

them. The one is passed on to the consum-
er; the other drives money into taxcxempt
see‘urities. It is very singular that the only

opposition to these. forms of taxation comes '

from the rich who claimed to evade them, and
never from the poor who are supposed to
eventually pay them. It grieves the rich to
escape their just share of the taxation bur-
dens. Hence, !they clamor for some other
kind of a tax which they cannot evade! ‘

If the excess proﬁts tax is pawed on to the
consumer then thereis no such thing in this

country as competition Our. present tax ex— ,
empts net proﬁts up to eight percent. Most *
capital ‘is satisﬁed with that return. Capitol s
which is not satisﬁed and seeks to earn a 3
higher proﬁt and to escape the‘result-ant'tax- ;

ation by' charging the consumer a higher price

' for its product immediately feels the compo- .
tition of capital which is satisﬁed with the '

smaller return. The same competition which
prevents monopoly and proﬁteering should
prevent any industry in which there ”is com;
petition from passing its tax to the shoulders,
of the consumer. - ‘

But the mpst absurd argument of all is that r‘ .

the surtax drives money into, tax-exempt sc-
‘curities. How intelligent men can be dm

ceived by any such specious argument is _a .

mystery to anyone who has takenther timeio
examine it. It should be apparent at , once
that no more money can be invested in' tax-
. free securities than there are tax-free secur-
ities to absorb it. To argue otherwise is akin

I

to saying that a pail will. hold more water?" .

after it is already, ﬁlled to‘ overflowing. High,
sortaxcs ,do not increase the amount of tai—l
‘ free securities on the market, neither do - low
, surtaxes decrease them. ' Whether, Surtaxes
are high. or 10w thetax-free security will ﬁnd

i. .

a market, and. any money (which is driven. into '

tax-free securities by high taxes can only ‘dis-
place an equal amount of’" man ' p .
turn will in large part be subject totaxation.

, Another Nail in a Popular. Argument
: HE GROWING success or the” Tanners."
Zoo-operative milk distributing. (30111me

in Grand Rapids whichha‘s. iIJSWﬁd far-mm
' in the vicinity of Lansing nowhere-sini-

lar company" has put “another ‘naili m 1311365616

argument that ‘.‘.f&rmors .cagr’ ' distribute '1 7 f '
‘ . out?! *‘ot =

‘:_their, milk": This ' is the stock-17
jj‘s'omeggf‘“ these who. ,‘Ftdlla '4

    

' 1m ease: or more

 

    

     
 
 
 
 
   
    

‘H-

"which in ;"

 

  
  

    
    
   
  
 
    
    
   
      


  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
   
   
  
 

   

' " Wm sermon

    
  

' w ”few wards ‘in'regard .to a"‘li_ttle
story ingyour issue oiNoy. 10th,*-by;
the'~'Hon. Thomas. E. _,Johnson,._:ena.

v intros {‘The Days or th'e:fI;iftl__e* 394..
.B‘chool-house’ are. Numbered; ‘ Per-
haps r-shouldj, state that I»‘-,live;in1 .e

district $116.1"? we still have $116" rut-
- tle- red ‘iclio'olho‘dseft" ouiy- our; . is

K“ I ,' White ,.apd'-;in the‘sar‘heftoWnship“as""
Gaines, and swam? Creek; 150th oi!“~

th‘ése " - have ‘conSolida‘ted‘ . schools as

“Mr. Johnson stated. . .

. ' " Probably most people sometimes
inﬁtheir liveshave picked out anice

. , , red appleto eat and looked it over
\ . , and thought what‘s nice treat they
. 'Were going to have, but when they
put it up to their mouth to take a

a ' ni'ce' juicy bite they found it all rot-4
_ten on the inside- Well that is the

_ way with the consolidated schools.
Leaks nice and they will tell you all

the nice points about it when they

are trying to get 'you- to consolidate.

, But when your children have to
get up at 6 a. m. on a cold winter
morning in order to be ready for
”the “bus” which. onlyzstops about 30

. ‘ seconds and may be around at ~7:30
and maybe not untilvs o’clock and
then ride for an hour or- two to
school on the so-called “bus” which
may be anything from a pair of

, mules hitched to a light wagon to

l a Buick speedster, but it is most gen-

-, orally an old Ford truck with a body

( “of the driver’s, own special design

, but usually composed of a wooden

'. framework covered with canvas to
keep out the wind and snow and

3 wooden seats for about '20 children. .
And they expect children 'to ride-

in a thing like that without heat or
’ 1 toilets, lotsof-times incharge of a
woman‘driv'er or half grown boy, for
, 'a‘ one or two hour “trip, time varies
'1? accordingly to breakdowns and con-
dition of roads. Then after the last
recess the, lower grades are turned
‘ out to run the streets until the “bus”

.' is ready at 4 p. m. .
I believe that if all the men inter-
, : ‘ested in consolidated schools had. to
z j ride the double trip for one season
I ,. -we wouldn’t hear anything more

‘ about consélidated schools.

And as far as consolidated schools
- 4 being necessary to teach a boy to
earn a living most of the boys that
u went to the "little red schoolhouse"
' andyare still on the farm are earning
_ ‘ thetrlivlng‘even titheYdep't set it.
. ,after the state takes out ”enough in
.. taxes to pay those highly educated
. state office holders. “
And as far as their moral educa-
t tion is coucerned I would Just as
soon have my children ‘in a little

red schoolhouse. as to have themrun .

i
l
‘ l the streets of a little red village;
‘. Of course we all believe in a good
5 education .but there is such a ‘thing
. Q as too much education along some
lines. "Where are the young men
"I that go to college? How many are
i on the“ farm? Most of them haves
stiff collar job. While the farmers

 

I
l
(' out time I'_ believe they are doing as
.ls-«mnch for humanity as the teﬂow
I that holds down an offiCe chair, or
' sells ribbons behind a counter, or
1 gets a' "salary for spending the peo-
1 ple’s money. _- ‘ - ‘

    

111.2 or 4 years'hghigh "so
. they'r‘wlll 'haveethiisztouse
, .a, .dinary farm; :1 {believe .t~
-' "fl Q Creek 994119}

   
    
 
   
  
     

to.-lea§n .all the" music ndidrawin’g
1 2

   
 
  
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
    

. rd Weft!» . ~
,. .,._ about 330.2me '
. eyhere'heth ..

heo M

_' si'sl‘anmna or as Business'v
“ Farmer .I would like to say a _

are notgetting very rich atgthe pres- -

menu bar or girl has punseat/ill“;~
eighth erase. thereeushtﬂte’ be .abl'a -

 

_ right to holler-.—
Taxpayer,’ Genesee- County. Mich.
, Wears very glad to hare your views
on this subject. and .‘wish more of our
readers would write us what they think
about the censolidated school. Your 11-
lustrationof the apple is_ver_y apt. There
' is' somethingabom the surface of this
consolidated hool proposition which ap-
. peels to themverag‘e person. The prin-
Haiple~ of giving the farm boy and girl as
{ ood education-1a!" the city. children en-
‘ y is 01.19"”1-‘_ . we Will all endorse,
., - ugh-We may differ as to.how-' to do
”it. _' The consolidated: school system has
many advantages over the present system
. but the’ir‘cost must be‘taken into consid-
eration. The Business Farmer does not
Kant to go wrong on this school ques-
on.
overcome but it has always seemed to us
that these are more imaginary than real
and can be successfully surmounted. If
. we are wrong about this we want to be
‘set‘right. Will not more of our readers,
particularly those who live in consoli-
dated school districts, give us their views?
—Editor. _

2...: Iike‘héhad a

 

 

Wu-

PRODUCINGi FOOD FOR EXPORT

T A STATE Convention of farm—
ers after a long and windy dis-
cussion without progress, one

old fellow rose up and said: I,

"If I were not sure that which I
am about to do, would do more good,
than anything that has been said, I
would not do it”——'—h‘e sat down. '

, not sure but I would do bet-

lam

ter to follow his example; but, pos- ‘

sibly, I may be pardonable for call-
ing the editor to a point of order in
the “Neighbor’s Say” columns.

Mr. Editor, one of your stock
phrases is “But you offer no remedy
for the situation.” Then, instead of
following with a remedy, you ad-
vance an abstract declaration that
things are or will be thus or so in
an "I’ve said it, that ends- it” sort
’or air, out of which comes too many
on the sidelines. a conviction that
YOU do not always offer a good‘ and
sufficient reason and in some cases
the remedies you do advocate are

pernicious, because at best your plan-

onlypermits the undesirable condi—
“tion to continue indefinitely its ex:
istence. .
In response to my article of a few
_ weeks ago, you said in effect that
could we not export our. surplus
farm products, many farmers would
‘ become«~bankrupts. If you please,
how much more is that saying than
can be said now, under the system
you advise for continuation?

In' a~genera1 way you admit as
things are the farmer receives less
than cost of production for the ex-
ported surplus and you DON’T offer
a‘remedy, except to recommend con-
' tinuing exports at a loss.
say in‘answer to Mr. Slagle of Wex—
ford: “Until farmers are so organiz-
ed that they can control production

. we must have the export channel to
relieve the market of surplus."

Mr. Editor, you miss entirely the
really vital issue at'stake. .

Incidentally I will boost your faith
in export necessity by saying there
will be just as much need‘of export
trade when farmers control produc~

.tion as there is now. ,
It, is not a question of shall or

aha-11 not there"be export trade, but,

the crux is, how shall we gdvern our
export trade, so as to derive a profit
rather than a deficit for the farmer
. You have not offered a remedy and
worse suggest that which is detri-
»'menta1.-, I . s .
Going back to the lace proposition
you indirectly .. advocate a custom,
that involves transporting the south-
era, farmers’ ,cotton.in raw form to
foreign lands there toﬁbe manufact-
_ mdﬁypa’uperlaborinto lace and

cvtransporteillback ‘to America .to be

    
 

     

. _____ 43th greeneseiitins. more
that}, denials?“ .nortatien charges,

 

   
 

We recognize’the difficulties to be

Again you.

 

 

 

 

  

    
  

  

sun

Get This Leakproof Iron .
Drum With Easy»
Flowing Faucet

FREF

Yours.

The Oil of a Million

Think of it! You can now buy this high
grade, scientiﬁcally reﬁned En-ar-co
Motor Oil—the on] that is known to, and
used by thousands of farmers every-
where, and endor and recommended
by prominent tractor, automobile and
motor manufacturers, at the big cash
saving of 35 cents per gallon, or $17.50
when you buy it by the iron drum.

This big saving is made possible only by
getting En-ar-co .to you in quanti lots
at the lowest possuble expense. You now
it costs less to handle ﬁfty gallons of
En-ar-co Motor Oil in one iron drum than
’ ﬁfty single gallons in fifty different pack-
ages. The difference in cost 13 35¢ per
gallon or $17.50 per iron drum—and this

 

 

 

 

 

us fifty times . .
_ longer to fill and handle 50
gallon cans of EN—AR- CO Motor . .
Oil than it does one 5 Oegallon iron
drum. The difference is $17.50.
7711'; Difference Is

 

 
  
   
       
      
       
      
       
      
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
  
  
 
   

   

Tests

big cash saving is yours. if you order
En-ar-co Motor Oil by the iron drum.
You know the National Reﬁning Com-
any. It has been serving thepubhc for
orty years and hasthe reputation among
everyone of making the highest quality
Petroleum Products on the market. No-
body has ever made any better, and our
farm paper or your neighbor wtll tel you
of the high standing of the Company and
the scientiﬁcally reﬁned quality of the
goods that we sell.
Act Now! Order your drum of En-ar-co
Motor 011 today. Advise what tractor.
truck, sutomobile or light plant you want
to use it for—we wrilsend you the proper
grade and guarantee immediate delivery.

If your dealer can’t supplyyou,fill out the order blank below and mail
it direct to us at Clﬂeland, 0., or to any of the following 93 branches:

 

Knightstown, Ind. Lawrence, Kan. Sidney, Neb.

Little Rock, Ark. Ladoga, n . Leavenworth, Kan. Wahoo. Neb.

Color-do Effisﬁ‘eﬁle'lhg: light Kﬁn. York, Nob...
Lamar. Cole. I! . n ’ 090.3. 811- .

um... . m. Wichita. Kan. 335%3°l5}g§°ouo
Aurore. Ill. 0111117031. Iowa 'chlln C8 ton'Ohio ’
Chimo, 11], Council Bluﬂs, Iowa Kalamazoo, Mich. a Clenveland Obi
Dec tur, Ill. Dubuque, Iowa Ilium-on Columbus' Obi:
East St. Louis, Ill. Elk-dot. Iowa Manhto, Minn. Finals Ohio
Juliet, Ill. Grund Center, Iowa Isl-um- F to 3" Ob'
Marseilleg, Ill Iowa ltr, Iowa Hayti, Missouri M0“ 2;: 0h?
Monmgnth, Ill. Iowa Fa] s, Iowa Hannibal, Mo. M" 9." v Ohio
Pearl; [1], Keokuk, Iowa Independence, Mo. M‘ﬁ‘ 0‘81}. °
lE’ek‘in. Ill. Malvem, Iowa Jefferson pity Mo. P! ”a“ “6
guincyé Ill. ' Redsh 035, :gwla glazes Cay, Mo, “meﬁounmalo
; [in eld "L ennn 0 OF“ 0 1' y, 0- .

p g Indium. Sioux City. lows P011181? 3‘03. M0. gfsﬁgﬁleﬁﬂkl‘
Mu“- Indv “n" 3 "" M“ Clinton Okla. "
Evansvrlle, Ind. Coifoyville Kan. Wﬁﬂwl Drumri' ht Okla.
Franklin Ind. Great Be . Kan. Jackson, Miss. Enid Oils,
hankfort Ind. Bolton, Heal'dton Okla
Indianapolis, Ind. Hutchinson, Kan. a. (gym '

. ls. " kl
EN-AR-CO MOTOR OIL Am“... 8 non.
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For a- - Mitchell, 8 Dak.
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Iron E alt-Drums (30 Gal.) ....... .85 1»... '
\. lo-Gal on Guns. ..............................._.......... .95 Memphis, 3farm.
5'“ on CIDI—u- o..... mm as... 1.00 ,WIMIIII
L-Gal-on ........ ...... 1.15 La 01-01:“,th

 

 

 

 

nu: NATIONAL REFINING co., J-m National mat. Cinema. one.

I NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS

tilled”? Bakeries—u Wk Oﬂeu

r"_-'—-=- Use this Order Blank -----F-]

I The National Refining ‘00., J-704. National Building,- Cleveland, Ohio.

, .

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Shipments”. ”freight“ muse-taller!“ it

A

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{NW
(Name of Car).

 

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“ =‘ w ” ' oestrous-u -, a .
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acme Home Lighting Pint).
shipping and...

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savanna»...

 

 

 
   
   
  

 

 

 


11.511151, if
ill! V _
ﬁlls“ ii

   
     

    

EIPORTIN G REINDEER

  

this spending ten
twenty thousand dollars to buy Norweg-
tan reindeer to put on our cut-over lands.

' . Eaton County, Mich.

The 60 reindeer, for which the De-

partment of Conservation have con-
tracted are being introduced pri-
:, marily as a sporting proposition and
the entire cost of purchase, trans—
portation and liberation in Michigan
gwﬂl be paid out of funds accruing
‘ from the sale of hunter’s licenses.
1 From such information as we can
' 'igobtain, reindeer in their natural ele-
ment are wild game animals," altho
easily domesticated, and there is a
large area in the Upper Peninsula
and the northern part of the lower
peninsulathat is believed to be suit—
able as grazing grounds for rein-
deer?- lands that are worthless for
agricultural purposes and of low
value as cattle or sheep ranges, and
on which deer and other big game
are fast decreasing.

The importation of reindeer
' Michigan is no more an experiment
f than the introduction of Ringneck

pheasants that has proved in every
1‘ way successful. ,
. Our duty to the sportsmen and
fishermen of Michigan is to make
every reasonable effort to perpetu-
ate the privilege of hunting game
. birds and animals, and taking fish,
in accordance with the laws of the
state. So far as we have heard, the
great majority of the sportsmen—~—the
men who pay the freight—are with
us on the reindeer proposition.—
, David R. Jones, Chief Deputy, De-
-partment of Conservation.

 

into

       
   
   
  
   
  
    
  
  
   
      
   
      
   
  
   
    
  
   
  
  
    
  
   
  
  
   

 

A}..—

l

EXEMPT FROM TAXATION

man bought an uncleared 80-wes
with no buildings on it 3 years ago,
‘ he was unfamiliar with the law he
dtaxes for three years and lately he
d out that he didn' t have to pay tax—
rthe first five years. Is this so?
0can he collect the paid taxes?
who must he see?
at years ago they dug a drain 1-4
a mile from our place to Which we
our water. Now they are digging
other drain to which we are assessed,
' which starts just across the road from
' as. First the supervisor said that we
‘ didn't have to pay taxes providing we
i didn’t endanger the roadbed with our
m. Now he says that we do have to
y and the drain commissioner says we
ye to pay. Now if we can show by
. locking our water from this drain, that
-,we do not endanger the road, could We
of an exemption from paying taxes? 'If
how must we go about iti—P. B...
Grant. Michigan.
. Section 4192 of C. L. 1915, pro-
,‘ rides for exemption of cut-over
‘ lands from taxation for five years if
1 the law is complied with. It shall
1 not exceed 80 acres and the Owner
must actually reside on the land and
- improve a least two acres each
year. In order to get the exemption
' he must apply to the supervisor for
‘ the exemption at the time the assess-
ment is made and the supervisor
~ shall refer it to the board of review,
. who ‘shal‘make the exemption iii

3 E:§§:§>’

ii

7'
I
l
i
l
l
l
-1
l
(
l

    
    

' 1' the law s been complied with.
From you; etter I conclude that you
have not complied with the law and,

emmptiOn and could sue no one for
1 a return of the tax. If you were in-
l eluded in the drainage district and
your land assessed for benefits and
you have not appealed from the‘ as-
sessment I am of the opinion you will
ve to pay the assessment or find
masonic other reason why ‘the tax is
,‘f‘i‘d. ——Legal Editor.

 
  

MUST PAY FOR 0111
I bought a barrel of oil of the Globe
- 00., and after it has been ship-
sold my tracto. I wrote them ask-
they would e the 011 back for I
g“, use for it.- They replied they
take the oil back and would
,check under the 30 day terms.
did not have the oil thirty days,

   

 
 
 
 

.me for the money.. I
wwhat I could do about
e.iM ch.

What next will the state do to spend

. therefore, you are not entitled to the.

Wabout ten days on the-road.'

 

s the idea anyway?—W. E. P., w

_. of theatate and there are many real good _

that’ you have sold your tractor

and will have no need for the oil will‘
net relieve you from carrying Out,

your agreement with the company.

_ ‘--Editor-

 

AMERICAN AMUSEMENT 00.

There is a concern known as the Am-
erican Amusement Company
large amount of Steel: in this Vicinity.
Can you give your readers any in‘form-
ation on this concern?——_C. J. P., Bangor.
Michigan.

The American Amusement Com—
pany was incorporated in Michigan
December 2, 1920 with $200,000 of
common stock. Application approv—
ed by this commission January 25,
1921, permission given for the sale
of $179, 800, par value of the stock
$10.——Michigan Securities Commis—
sion.

 

INSURANCE LAW REGARDING
ASSESSMENTS

Will you please give the exact word-
ing and a short explanation of the clause
in the Michigan law which gives insur-
ance companies the right to hold all pol-
icy holders responsible for all assess-
ments until said policy is cancelled, even
though failure to pay an assessment at
a stated time has rendered the policy
null and void. which in turn relieves the
company of all liability in case of dam-
age.

Believing that few people understand
the true meaning of the clausei and believ-
1113 if they did its repeal could be secured
we would like your aid through the col-
umns of your hustling farm papery—C.
S. D.. Harrison, Mich,

The provision of the insurance
law in regard to assessments is as
follows: “It shall be the duty of
the incorporators of any company or-
ganized under, or subject to the pro-
visionsof, this chapter to prescribe

in their articles of association, the

liabilities of the members to- be rat-
ably assessed towards defraying the
losses and expenses of such compan-
ies and the mode and manner of col-
lecting such assessments, and the
members shall be liable to assess-

ment for all liabilities of the com?

pany to the extent declared in the
articles of. association; and the lia-
bility of the persons insured in

r—JHIORSESHOE PITCHING—————

NATIONAL RULES FREE

 

WILL ORGANIZE '

I noticed in the last issue of the Bus-
iness Farmer that you desire to organize
a horseshoe pitching club. Horseshoe
pitching is greatly in vogue in this part

pitchers. I have talked with other farm—
ers in this vicinity and they would all
like to join such a club, therefor. I would
like to receive a copy of the national
rules and instructions as to how pro-
ceed to organize—Harvey Swan beck,
Genesee County, Mich. ’

" Call a meeting of your horseshoe ‘

pitchers and make up severai‘ teams.
Arrange to have all teams play at
least once a .week. if possible and
have the winners of one set play the
winners of another. After a com-
plete series have been played and the
champions established the victors
should issue a statement through
this department declaring themselv-
es the champion horseshoe pitchers
of \Genesee county. They should
also issue a challenge to the cham-
pions of some other county or ad.
vise that they would like to play a
game or series of games with a
good team. And before you know it
we 'will have a'team to challenge

‘ the national championship team. It’s

, a great game? President Warren G.

in therural

Harding is a lover of. the same and
’tis said he‘ throws awicked' shoe. I
am sending \you a copy of the na-

, tional rules. Keep me posted on how
your games come out, the success‘

of your organisation and names of

your officers and members.—Horses ‘

shoe Editor. .;
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME

 

 

  

In regard roan arti
November' 19 on horseshd'e pitching would.

say that I am interested in the game my,-

self as Soﬁa several of my neighbors. both -. ,
city, We 5 -- .

distrietandinthe
,m her

selling a _

- mailed to you.
-and address of your county cham-

“1.91:. 37

(3‘16 in your paper or-

suchf companies and the .‘ members
thereof, [for the“ losses or- expenses
'of such Companies, shall not exceed

. the liabilities assumed by such per-

sons when taking such insurance Or
by each member when joining such
company, and in payment in full by
such person or member of amount
assumed or agreed to- be paid on
taking such insurance, «or on becom-
ingxa member of such. company, the
said persons so incurred as afore-
said and the said members of such
companies shall be released and ab-
solved from any all further liability
for such losses or expenses.” The
liability of the member to pay such
assessment, is by contract of the
member as diSclosed by his applica-
tion for insurance and membership
and his agreement to pay losses. So
far as I ever knew of theby—laws’of
such companies they provide‘that his
insurance is suspended during de-
fault in payment of premiums.
Courts have held that such, an agree—
ment is binding and should the mem-
ber have a loss during his suspension
he can not recover from" the com-
pany because he agreed that there
should be no liability during sus-
pension. The courts are, t erefore,
only enforcing his agreement when
they hold the company not liable for
loss occurring during suspension.
However, member is liable for his
pro rata losses of the other members
‘because he agreed in the application
and by-laws of the company that he
would pay his share of such losses
up to the time of the cancellation of
his policyﬁ In mutual companies it
is necessary to have the premiums to
pay losses and expenses. If every-
body refused to pay there would be
no money to pay losses. The fault
is not the law but the agreement of
the parties the contract they make.
If one makes a lawful contract he
must live up to it.
needed the members of the company
may amend their by-laws and appli-
cations to meet any conditions de—
sired so long as they meet the re-.
quirement of the law.——Legal Ed-
itor.

 

 

me a copy of the national rules and~
oblige. I would be glad to write you
$211; End: ito time and} 131: you know what
ng.—-—Geo. o O emaw -

ty, g Conn
A copy of national rules is being

What is the name

pion? Would he care to issue a
challenge to any pitcher in this
state through this department? Be
sure to write, every week if possi-
ble advising us as to what you are
< 11g. We want a national cham-
p: 'on or championship team in Mich-
igan. ~——Horseshoe Editor.

 

DISTANCE BETWEEN STAKES

Having read your editorial on “Horse-
shoe Pitchin' " and being a horseshoe
pitching sport myself along with a few
others around here I decided to write to
you for a copy of the national rules and
see whether we are wide of the rules.
Our biggest argument has always been
on the distance between the stakes
ranging\from 25 to 50 feetr—John Spi-
egal. Hioughton County.M1.

The standard distance
stakes is 40 feet. Organize up there
,and send me
cers and men ers of your club-
‘Then when I get a letter from some
team asking for a matCh. I can refer
them to you. I want the name, of
every horseshoe pitcher , "in Michi-
gan. for my files. Then no matter
where on live I can arrange a game
~Horseshoe Editor., ‘

 

We have several

9‘ 1 rs here in ,mynn box-111121;! em
. ~ . .
cameo iii/:13 rocm‘here. ' Please mail
me a copy of national rules. alsomatmo. ",_
Consumer-,4 .. ‘

 

~ columns the

The"

-If a change—is

between .
e names of the offi- ‘,

, possible kind of

' suspiciOus. The Collection Ber wants
eecesso-‘rs are operating “Within the'
glow," and if Mr; A.,Sp‘
'ident”,_ of the Simpl ' ’

‘ Mr. A.

 

      

WAR Fm ANGIE CORPORATION

' I would like some information about
the War Finance Corporation. Do the
farmers have to organizean an association
in order to get» the loans from the gov-
seem to kngvhoanythln wé’ﬁh‘gc’gf
poration.—-I:I P..1.ipgon.r
As explained previously in {th
individual farmer age
not borrow direct‘ from the War Fin-' .
ance Corporation. ‘Loans are made "
only to existing co-operative associ-
ations. which ,are he position to
store and offer as 'security non-per-
ishable farm crops, and to -' banks
Which may re-loan themoney to
farmers on. similar security. Loans _
are not made for permanent fixed
investments”but only to finance the
farmer during the period in which
he is disposing of his surplus crops.
Application for loans, either by (10— ‘\
operative associations., or banks, ’
should be made through the War
Finance Corporation' s Loan Agency,
at Detroit—Editor.

   

 

THRIFT STAJKPS ARE GOOD

Can you tell me what I can do with
thrift stamps purchased some time ago
and which I was supposed to have ex— ,,
changed in 1918'! Are they any good? -'
--Mrs, L. S. Pierson, Michigan.

There has been only one isSue of
Thrift Stamps and the same Thrift
Stamps which were on sale during»
1918 are on sale this year and may
be exchanged for War _' Savings
Stamps of the series of 1921.

Thrift Stamps as such are not di-
rectly redeemable for cash. It is
suggested, therefore, that you pur-
chase sufficient Thrift Stamps to
complete a Thrift Card and then
have such card eXchanged for a War
Savings Stamp. ’ .The exchange may ;
be made at any post office or other ‘
authorized agency for the sale there—
of on payment of the diﬂerence be-
tween ,,$4 the value of a a filled
Thrift Card and the current issue
price of the War Savings Stamp dur-
ing‘ the month in which the exchange
is made—Chas. H. Gould, Assistant
Chief, Division of Loans and Cur-

- \rency, U. S. Treasury Dept.

 

COMMONWEALTH CASUALTY CO.
éCan you please inform mevthrough the
columns of your paper if the Common-
wealth Casualty Company of Philadel-
phia, P8... is a reliable insurance com-
pany —A. D.. Lake. Mich.

The Commonwealth Casualty 00.,
of Philadelphia, is duly organized
under the laws of Pennsylvania and,
authrized to transact a general cas- .
ualty business. The company has
$100, 000 deposited with this De-
partment _for the protection of all
policy holders. Its report at the
close of theoyear 1920 shows: Total
admitted assets, $654, 870. 05; liabil-
ities, $317, 084. 37, capital, $300, -
000. 00; surplus, $37, 785. 68 —-Penn-
sylvarga Insurance Department.

 

THE SDIPLEX TIRE co.
HE FRANKLIN Tire & Rubber

Co., manufacturers f ; “heavy
racing tires/f “heavy duty aero-

' plane tires," and uextra‘heavy pneu-

matic tires for tr cks,’_' etc., 'etc.,
has changed its name. It is now the
“Mplex Tire & Rubber Co, ” same

address, same business, same bunk!
This company gives the strongest.
tire guarantee (in’
it’s printed matter). In fact, the- 1
guarantee is so strong‘ that, it locks ._

      
  

  

      
        

    
  

       
 

to know if this concern and its pred-

    
 

     
   
 
 

      
       

pe’ct's ,to carry 09': th
3. .

          
 
 
 
   

 
 
 
 

  
 

        
   

      
   
 
  
  
    
     
   
   
   
    
    
    
   
  
 
    
   
  
    
    
   
   
  
  
  
    


. .1,

 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

. n1

Wbeiigood tear the soul, I’m jest

.. goin’ to confess that your IUncle
Rube is.- not what you’d call a saint
Asher has he a real mild an' angelic
disposition either. If I eVer possess:-

, ed that kind I have out-grown it by

quite a considerable by buckin’ up,

ag'ln the world an’ after meetin’
with all kinds of folks, I’v ve found
that bein' mild an' geod natured a'n’
takin’ everythin’ that’s handed to
you don’t git yOu nowhere an' I’ve
kinda rebelled—Sort 0’ made up my
. mind that if you want a thing" you ’ve
got to go after it an’ sometimes
you’ve got to go strong! Time was
when I didn't dast to say anything
‘no matter what I got—in them days,
before I had cut my wisdom teethso
to speak, I wuz always gittin’ the
little end of everything. At the res-
taurants if .I ordered chicken I got
the n_eck;' if roast beef I got the bag

end of it—in the street car I 9.1-,

ways stood up, at the theatres I got

a back seat, in an argument I always «.

came out second; if I bOught a suit
of “all Iwool clothes”'I found them to
be two thirds cotton—if I owed a
man I must pay at once—-if I had
money due me I could wait. If I
got married I paid the preacher; if
I was divorced I Was supposed to

pay the lawyer; an’ all this ’cause II

.. hadn't sense enough to stick up fer
'my rights nor tp say my soul wuz
my own. Well after buckin’ up ag’ in
this sort of. thing fer a good many
'years I accumulated a disposition

' sim’lar to 01’ Everett True an' now.

When things don’t suit me I jest bust
right out an’ express myself an’
sometimes I don’t stop to choose‘ my
. words either. Goin’ into a grocery
. store a few days ago, I got into con-
versation with the man that owned
it, regardin’ the labor situation an’
the business depression in gen ’..ral
He sez to me, ‘ﬁihe farmers are to

' ’blame more’n anybody fer the hard

times; they charge so much fer-their
stuff,” he sez, “that'folks can’t hard-
ly afford to buy it.”

.“Farmers,” I sez, “v'vhy man alive

the farmers ain’t gittin’ first

cost out of the stuff they raise; ev-

erything is 130 cheap, " I s'ez, ' that it

don’t hardly pay ’em to “take it to
market, " I sez. '

“Oh rats, ” he sez, “farmers are
makin’ more money than they ever

' made before! Look at their auto-I
mobiles,” he sez, “and their farms

and everything; they’ re gittin’ rich
.hand over fist. " I tried to speak but
he kept goin' an sez, “if they’d be
reasonable an' satisfied with a small

profit folks could live an' times

‘ _wouldn’t he so hard. ” “Say, "’ I sez,

“you cantankerous 01’ he- -pirate, you
don’ t know what you ’re talkin’ about ,
——-you talk like a last year's bird’s ; ‘

nest. What is it the farmer sells
that he gits .so much for, "’ 'I sez.

"Why, eyerything,” he sez, “106k at

muskmelons an’ that sweet corn.

"You jest stop right there," I sez. “Ii
know jest what you paid fer that
stuff an’ you didn’t git it from a

' reg’lar farmer neither,” I sez. "You
..got it from a market gardner an’

.. .I yen give a nickle apiece fer the mel-

ons what you sel-‘l for 15 cents an'

you give 8 cents a dozen for that
corn an’ you hand it out to yOur.
customers at 20 an’ 25 cents, an’
everything else in the same propor—
, tion.” I sez, “an’ with every sale you '.
‘2 -’ make you give the interma-
tion that things is anul high 'cause
the farmers charge so much fer their

' stuff you can’t hardly handle it, an’

almost 1080 money. on everything you
,sell ’.’ “But ya know——-" ’ “You bet _
' your life I know}: L sez, not giViu'
' him a chance to bust in, “I’ve known

1 for a long time, " I sea, “an’ it.’
fsuch tellers“_as ﬂyou', that;

  

'. .[Ways 1) this tommyv-ro It
-. 'farmers"chargin so much: you have

.todo i " .isez, “or the people Wh
11mm 111

  

  
 

s—you fell ers make me sick,
I only had the gift of

wilﬁig’ to coins]:1 off a cent on your
pro
an’

- gab,"11 sez, “I'd jest like to tell you
What I think of you an’ your meth-

ods, ybut bein' a peaceful minded

man I’ll jest leave you to your own
conscience; if you ’ve got such a
thing which I doubt.”

"Well,” he sez, “mebbe it's jest

as well you can 't talk much, ’cause
,if you could you might say some-
thin’ you'd be sorry fer some time."

“Not on your life I wouldn’t be

sorry,” I sez, “an’ some day, the
people are goin’ to wake up to the
fact of what’s. makin’ livin’ so high
an’ fellers like you’ll be takin’ a nice
little ride," I sez, “an' there won't.
be much of anything under you but a
nice sharp rail,” I sez. Well that
ended our pleasant? little conversa—
tion an' I guess he knows now more

about my disDosition than he ever
did before an’ he won’t start any-
thin ag ’in right away either. Cor-
dially yours. —UNCLE RUBE.

FUR DEPARTMENT

"’———-—EDITED BY A. R. HARDING
America' s Foremost Author and Trapper
f—‘QUESTIONS ANSWERED——
. x .

DEADFALLS

OUGHOUT much of Michigan
deadfalls are much used, espec-
fully in the timbered parts, al-

though a very good one is made by
using a large flat stone. Scattered
from the Atlantic to the Pacific
ocean and from the Gulf of Mexico
to the Arctic Ocean are thousands of
trappers who use deadfalls, snares
and‘ other varieties of home-made
traps, but at the same time there are
many thousands who know little or
nothing of them. 'A few of the many
reasons in favor of deadt‘alls are:
There is no weight to carry; it re-

 

 

quires no capital to , build where

there are forests or flat stones; they
do not mutilate animals or injure the
fur; skunk are usually killed With-
out leaving any scent .' ‘

Where fur animals take bait ﬂdead-
falls can be used to advantage and
Michigan is such a state. At cer—
tain seasons animals do not take

~bait as well as others but as a rule

few baited traps are passed by
skunk, weasel, coon and mink.
'A Very good deadfall and one

much. used ismade as follows: First-

a little pen about a foot sduare is
built of stones, chunks or by driving
stakes c10se together leaving one side
open. - Stakes shOuld be out about
.30 inches long, small end sharpen-
ed, and driven into. the ground (about
half way. 'If the ground is very
hard stakes need not be so loﬂg but.
driven so that a little more than half
or say 18 inches remain above the
ground.

A pole about five inches in di-
ameter and anywhere from four to
six feet in length is laid across the
end of pen that is open. Another

log 01‘ pole five, six or more inches .

in diameter (giving to what animal
the trap is built for) and about 12
feet long is cut for the fall. Stakes

" are now driVen so that this pole or

‘ffall” will play over the short pole
on the ground. :Stakes should be
driven in pairs and oppoiaite;. two

* about a fact or two from end and

  

 

    
  
  
 

" ced automobiles like you mere"
c ants here in the lofty"; Fords are
goods enough «for them. or at
least that’s all they can afford to
buy, an’ your Chamber of Com-
' rue-roe. made up of’ merchants an'
manufacturers,” I sez, “are alWays
preachin’ lower Wages an' lower
prices for farm produce an’ yet,"I

sez, “not a one of you shrimps are

Sm. ”qu Lanes: "7“»... .

130 DavHiEr.

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
     
    
     

331.1: 3.51. ”may: 1

 

   
 
    
    
 
 

Before ydu buy any harness let me send 2
derful “No Buckle Harness” en

30yDaysIF1-ee Trial. Post yourself on the latest

Walsh 30%???“ 1’13):ng d” ‘

on ur team '

dons on your part. Send no mogy. ‘ we,

Look tit. Examine it. If

not oonvglnced that it is the biggieasmt.

 
 

€- f/a/W" m ﬂJVE‘I-Iy

  
  

soon have to repair. The Walsh Har-
ness will save trouble and expense be-
cause it has no rings to wear straps in
two—up buckles to tar straps. The
Walsh' is a proven success—thousands
in use for over 7 years. It is backed
by the strongest guarantee ever put 3

{keep it. and take
“No Patching—No Mending—No

Buckleslll cut harness straps. Rings
wear straps in two. Examine your
buckle harness and prove this. You'll
ﬁnd more than 100 places where buck—
lesandxingsarewearingitmlaoayou'll

Lasts a lifetime—Besides havingno
buckles, no rings to wear the straps.
it has all rust proof hardware—adjust-
able strap holders—improved hames.
and many other improvements.

 

Costs less than buckle harness—The Walsh costs A
less than buckle harness of the same high—grade ma-
terials. yet it 011th two sets of the but bucklchar-
nuanudnm you costotrepaln.

' 0
Liberal Terms?

SPECIAL THIS MONTH ONLY

Write today for FREE illustrated book. prices, only
payment terms. and full particulars of my 30 Day
Trial Oder—also how you can earn money on the side
showing Walsh Harness to your neighbors. Just Isay

“lend complete information about Walsh Hamel.

Milwaukee, Wis.

 

Thousands of Users, Praise Walsh Harness

ord.
aletofWalsthrnesotwo mandala.

Ipmchssed years
hiding up to expectationlnud I wantBInIothu-M let for my other

MA. Route 1.
amater. Nebr.

My Walsh Romania 0. Hot another set at once for my
tau “thing 3600 lbs. Please chitin: once.

13. MONIS. Routes.

Republ Mich.
believe there is any other harness on the ket that

don‘t
equals the Walsh in strm handincss and comfort for the
team at any price. ENRY P. PROVERT. Box 60

 

 

 

‘ o

@900 00029 y
HIRE

me will pay higher prices than lny .0
use in America to zotthom

 

 

We have such a big demand yearns! have more

' F or
Highest
Prices
Ship your furs to me. High—

est prices paid for all furs.
Write for latest'price lists.

Vreeland Fur Company

443 Jefferson Ave., West
Detroit, Michigan

 

furs quick. Write for new boob-Tuppcrs'

 

Partner. regular price lists and tags—111 free

 

Don’ t sell your furs until you get Foukc’s prices.

I, FOUKl-Z FUR co.,3s&ruhuag.s«.uus..u.. i};

 

 

. CUSTOM FUR

, Dresser and Manu-
facturer of Coats

Sup” Worll on Floor

 

Get our Catalog.

Wanted:

Raw Fur Buyer

We want a country raw fur buy-
er in every county of your state,
to represent us this season. A big
opportunity for those who qualify.
W'rite at once for our proposition.

CHARLES S. PORTER INC.

129 W. 27th St» New York .City

 

W. W. WEAVER.

 

 

Established 1891 .

FURS

 

WANT TO’ SELL LIVE-STOCK?

‘AN AD IN M. B. F. WILL DO IT

 

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

The Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens, Mich

duce a NEW subscriber and for. a quarter
(25c) enclosed in coin or stamps you are to send our Week ‘
every week for six months. _

I want to intro

, \ .w
.oco.eIdo.ooooooooooooooooooooooonhep
. ., . 3 ,~ ﬁg .

I00"0"-I0‘0sIO00"}...Ioooooo-ooeoooeo-ooph‘mooo‘uo

Introduced by your reader: -

l

inhumanmummumnmlmmmlunuuum

 

   
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
    
  
 
  
    

.1

     
    

   
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 

 

 

Greatly increase your proﬁts
by reading illustrated instruc- :
tive books on Trapping, Buy- "9“.
ing Raising, Tanning. A 32 page booklet
Free.
A. B. HARDING. Ohio Ave... Columbus, 0.

Will You Introduce a Friend or Nelghbor"

HERE’S AN INTRODUCTORY COUPON—Tear 1t out and hand Iit v
to a friend or neighbm who is not a subscriber.
25c to him, because we will send The Business Farmer on trial to

It is worth just


  

the trail of meat.

' northward into the plank/‘2

8
_hisf3hortly brought the cry with

V‘the wind, whiCh was out of the north
The howling of the _

- aid the west.
pack was very distinct after that,

I tend in Miki’s brain nebulous visions

and almost unintelligible memories
'Were swiftly wakening into life. It
was not Chalioner’s voice that he

heard, but it was a voice that he

know. It was the voice of Hela,
his giant father; the voice of Numa,
his mother; the voice of his kind for
a hundred and a thousand genera-
tions before him, and it was the in-
stinct of those generations and the
hazy memory of his earliest puppy-
hood that wereimpinging the thing
-- upon him. A little later it would
take both intelligence and experi—
ence to make him discriminate the
Mir-breadth difference between wolf
and dog. And this voice of his
blood was coming!
upon them swiftly, fierce and filled
with the blood—lust of hunger. ‘He
forgot Neewa. He did not observe
the cub when he slunk back deeper
under the windfall. He rosepupon
his feet and stood stiff and tense,
unconscious of all things but that
thrilling tongue of the hunt—pack.
Wind-broken, his strength fail-

ing him, and his eyes wildly search—~

ing the night ahead for the gleam of
, water that might save him, Ahtik,
the young caribou bull, raced for his
life a hundred yards ahead of the
wolves. The pack had already flung
itself out in the form of a horse-
shoe, and the two ends were begin—
ning to creep up abreast of Ahtik
ready to close in for the hamstring——
and the kill. In these last minutes
every throat was silent, and the
young bull sensed the beginning of
the end. Desperately he turned to
the right and plunged into the for-
est.

Miki heard the crash of his body
and he hugged close to the windfall.
Ten seconds later Ahtik passed with-
in fifty feet of him, a huge and gro—
tesque form in the moonlight, his
coughing breath filled with the
agony and hopelessness of approaCh-
ing death. As swiftly as he had
come he was gone, and in his place
followed half a score of noiseless
shadows passing so quickly that to
Miki they were like the coming and
. the going of the wind.

For many minutes after that he
stood and listened but again silence
had fallen upon the night. After

a little he went back into the wind- :

fall and lay down beside Neewa.

Hours that followed he passed in-
‘. restless snatches of slumber.

He
dreamed of things he had forgotten.
He dreamed of Challoner. He dream-
ed of chili nights and the big tires;
he heard his master’s Voice and he
felt again the touch of his hand;
but over it all and through it all
ran that wild hunting voice of his
own kind.

In the early dawn he. came out
from under the windfall and smelled
of the trail where the wolves and
the caribou had passed. Heretofore
it was Neewa who hadiled in their
wandering; now it was Neewa that
followed. His nostrils filled with
the heavy scent ,of the pack, Miki

travelled steadily in the direction of‘

the plain. It took him half an hour
to reach the edge of it. After that
he came to a wide and stony out-
cropping of the earth over which he
nosed the spoor to a low and abrupt
descent into the wider range of the
valley. -

Here he stopped.

Twenty feet under him and fifty}

feet away lay the partly devoured
carcass of the young bull.

‘ his heart stood still. Fromout of
the bushy plain had come Maheegun

, a renegade she-wolf, to fill herself"

of the meat which she had not help-
ed; to kill. She was a slinking, hol—
low—backed, quick-fanged creature,
. still rib- thin from the eiekness that

had come ‘of eating a poison-bait; a‘ '
beast shunned by her Own kind—a ‘ 3
her. t
But she was none of,

. he ,

‘ coward, a murderess even of

own whelps.
I these things to Mil:

It bore down’

It was .
, not this fact that thrilled him until.

  

 

91 JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD

 

4

 

 

Mlchigeni' Own and Amoncctr Emmott "Author of 'WIH Lia» Redwence

SYNOPSIS

 

T IS SPRING and in the northland Neewa, a black bear-cub. and his mother.

Noozak, are starting “on a Journey in their feeding grounds.

One evening

after his mother is asleep Neewa wanders through the woods by himself. He -
has an exciting adventure with an old he-bear and his mother appears Just in ,

time to save his life.
discovers the tracks of the bears.

In the meantime, Challoner, a Hudson Bay Co. factor.
He has a pup,

mm, with him, which he is

taking to his sister, and he decides he would like to secure the 0111) to give to

her also.

He meets up with the bears. kills Noozak and secures Neewa. Chal-

loner returns to his camp with Neewa and the cab and Miki become fairly good

friends

The next morning Challoner ties Neewa and Miki. one at each end

of a leash, puts them in the front end of his canoe and starts down the river.
As they are nearing a waterfall the pup and the cub get into a fight. and roll

out of the canoe.

Chﬂloner, who rows to the shore, thinks the two will be

killed but, unknown to him they arrive at the foot of the falls much bruised but
still alive. Coming out on the shore they start oﬂ through the woods. They be-
come lost. Neewa discovers a. wasp ’s nest and proceeds to tear it down. Neewa

and Miki. turn and flee with the wups in close pursuit.

They are badly stung

but continue their Journey. They are attacked by a great owl but escape -and
hide under fallen trees.

to him of his mother. And his
mother had come before Challoner
his master. _

For a minute er two he lay tremb-
ling, and then he went down, as he
would have gone to Challoner; with
great caution, with a wider suspense,
but with a strange yearning with-

in him that the man’s presence fail- ..

ed to arouse. He was very close to
Maheegun before she was conscious
that he was near. The Mother—smell
was warm in his nose now; it filled
him with ha great joy; and yet—he
was afr ' But it‘was not a phy-
sical fear. Flattened on the ground,
with his head between his fore-paws
he whined.

Like a flash the she-wolf turned,
her fangs bared the length of her

jaws and her bloodshot eyes aglow _

with menace and supicion. Miki
had no time to make a move 'or an-
other sound. With the suddenness of
a cat the‘outcast creature was upon
him. Her fangs slashed him just
once—and she was gone. ‘Her teeth
had drawn blood from his shoulder,
but it was not the smart of the
wound that held him for many mo-
ments as still as if dead. The Moth-
er smell was still where Maheegan
had been: But his dreams _ had
crumbled. The thing that had been
memory died away, at last in a deep

.breath that was broken by a whimp- ~

er of pain. For him, even as for
Neewa, there was no more a Chall-
oner and no longer a mother. But
there remained—the world! In it
the sun was rising. Out of. it‘ca'me
the thrill and the perfume‘of life.
And close to him—very close—was
the rich, smeet smell of meat.
~He sniffed hungrily’.‘ Then he
turned and saw Neewa’s black and
pudgy body tumbling down the slope
of the dip to ‘join him in the feast.
, ,.

CHAPTER NINE

AD MAKOKI, the leather-faced

old Cree runner between God’s
Lake and . Fort Churchill,
known the history of Miki and Neee
wa up to the point where they came

 

 

GEE" AND HAW

e

to feast on the fat and partly de-
voured carcass of the young caribou
bull, he would have said that Iskoo
wapoo, the Good Spirit of the beasts
was watching over them most care—
fully.
in the forest gods as well as in those
'of his own tepee. He would have giv-
en thestor'y his own picturesque ver-
sion, and'would have told it to the
little children, of his son’s children;
and his son '8 children ‘w0uld have
kept it in their memory for their
own children later on.

It was not in the ordained nature
of things that a black bear Cub and
a Mackenzie hound pup with a dash
of Airedale and. Spitz in-him should
“chum up" together as Neewa and
Miki had done. Therefore, he would
have said, the Beneficent Spirit who
watched over the affairs of four-
legged beasts must have had an eye
on them from the beginning. It was
she—Iskoo Wapoo was a goddess
and not a god—who had made Chal-

loner kill Neewa's mother, the big.

black bear; and it was she who had
induced him to tie the pup and cub
together on the same piece of rope,
so that when they fell out of the
white man’s canoe into the rapids
they would not die, but would be
cdmpany and salvation for each oth—
er. Neswa—pawuk (“two littlebroth-
ers”) Makoki would have called

.them; and had it come to the test
.he would have cut on a finger before

harming either Of them. But Ms.-
koki knew nothing of their adven-
tures, and on this morning when they
came down to the feast he was a
hundred miles away, haggling with
a white man who wanted, a guide.
He would never know that Iskoo Wa-
poo was at his side that very mo.-
ment, planning the thing that was to
mean so much in the lives cf Neewa
and Miki.

Meahwhile Neewa and Miki went
at their breakfast as if starved. They
were immensely practical. They did
not look back on what had happen-.
ed, but for the moment submerged
themselves completely in the pres-

Q

 

 

13y noudLas MALLOCK

- FELLAH had a pair of mules
That knew no laws and know
no rules. .
But good for haw and hatred for
goo
And went contrary gener'ly—

The darnedoss mules you ever see.

If 119111111111 good When it was haw,
While that 8111']; just exactly law ‘
It. would of we out party good,
If oﬂ‘eojhe W Was understood

‘And they done what you thought;

 

So gee and haw and hawand goo, “

But never simultan’ously. “
They went through life and kicked

' mere dirt, '
And done. less work and done more
hurt

Thantwohyenies,lassort. "
AndMI’vo seen folks Just like them
' mules.

Tho’,wed, but never read the rules

Who didn‘t know you had to wear

Accordingly, without no ads.— y .
3A1“! tbst’sfgood Mae. and that‘s-“um, .

For Makoki had great faith"

 

~ “and went easily.

ea—r-thoir fight for

killing of the young caribou bull by
the wolves, and (with Miki) the

’ ' : short, bitter experie’pce with Mahee- .
gun,

, the renegado: she-wolf.
shoulder burned wherers‘he had torn

at him with her teeth But this did ‘ “

not lessen his appetite. Growling as

he ate, he filled himself until he

could hold no more.
Then he sat back on his haunches

and looked in the direction Mahee- ,

gun had taken.

It was eastWard,‘ toward Hudson
Bay, over a great plain that lay be-
tween two ridges that were like for-

est walls, yellow and gold in the “
, merning sun. He had never seen the

world as it looked to him new. The
wolves had overtaken the caribou
on a scrag on the high ground that
thrust itself out like. a short. fat
thumb from the black and owl-in-
tested forest and the carcass lay- in
a meadowy dig that overhung the
plain. From the edge of this dip
Miki could look down—and so far
away that the wonder of what he
saw dissolved itself at last into the
shimmer of the sun and the blue or
the sky. Within his vision.» lay a
. paradise of marvellous ' promise;
wide stretches of soft, green mea-

. dow; clumps of» timber, park-like un-

til they_merged into the deeper for-
est that began , with the farther
ridge, great patches of bush radiant
with the coloring of June; here and
there the gleam of water, and half a
mile away a lake that was like a
giant mirror set in a purplish-green
frame of balsam and spruce.

Into these things Maheegun, the
she-wolf had gone. He wondered

whether she-:wpuld come back. He.

sniffed the air for her. ‘ But ‘thero
was no longer the mother-yearning
in his heart. Something had already
begun to tell him of the vast differ-
ence between the dog and the wolf.
For a few moments, still hopeful

that the world held a mother for‘

him, he had mistaken her for the
one he had lost. But he understood
“———now. A little more and Mahee-
gun’ s teeth would ‘m' “ snapped his
shoulder, or slaslnd his throat to
the jugular. Tebah-Gone—Gawin
(the One Great Law) was impinging
itself upon him, the implacable law
of the survival of the fittest.~ To
live was to fight—to kill; to beat ev-
erything that had feet or wings. The
earth and the air held menace for
him. Nowhere, since? he had lost
Challoner, had he found friendship
exCept in the heart of Neewa, the
motherless cub. And he turned tow-
ard Neewa now, grownng at a gay-

plumaged moose—bird that was hov— _

ering about for a morsel of ms

t.
A few minutes before, Neewa had ‘

weighed a dozen poundsy- now be
weighed fourteen or‘ fifteen His

" stomach was puffed out- like the sides

of an over-filled bag, and he sat
humped up in .a pool of warm sun-
Shine licking his chops and vastly
contented with himself and the rest
of the world. Miki rubbed up to
«him, and Neewa gave a chummy
grunt.- Then he rolled over on his
fat back and invited Miki to play. It

i was the first time; and with a joy-

cus yelp Miki jumped into him.
Scratching and biting and kicking,
and interjecting their friendly scrim-
mage with ferocious growling on
Miki’s part and pig-like grunts and

. squeals on Neewa’ 8 they rolled to

the edge of the dip. It was a good
hundred feet to the bottom—a steep,

grassy slaps that ran to the mah... _. :

and like two balls they: catapulted
the length of it. ‘For N A ‘
not so bad. He was round
With‘
all"

the monster owls, their flight, ' the -

His 5

     

.‘

     

" it was ‘i 7


91 1.». as . «#1

 

 

. times he watched Neewa go

 

result is that rural photodram s: are

 

a. “slide”

 

Neevva‘ climbed twenty or thirty feet
up the slope and deliberately rolled
down again!
in amazement. Again Neewa' climb-
ed up and rolled dOWn—and Miki
ceased to breathe altogether. Five
that
twenty or thirty feet up the grassy
slope and tumble down. The fifth
time he wadedwinto Neewa and gave
»him a rough-and- -tuinble that almost
ended in a fight.

9 After that Miki began exploring

along the foot of the slope, and for

’a scant hundred yards Neewa hu-
. "m'ored him by following, but beyond

that point he flatly refused to go.
In the fourth month of his exciting
young life Neewa was satisfied that
nature had given him birth that he
might have the endless pleasure of
filling his stomach. For him, eat-
ing was the'one and only excuse for
existing. In the next few months he
had a big job. on his hands if he kept
up the record of his family, and the
fact that Miki was apparently aban-
doning the fat and juicy carcass of
theyoung bull tilled him with alarm.
and rebellion. ‘Straightway he for—
got all thought of play and started
back up the slope on a mission that
was 100 per cent business. ,.
Observing this, Miki gave up his
idea of exploration and joined him.
They reached tire shelf of the dip
twenty yards from the carcass of the
bull, and from a clutter of big stones
looked forth upon their'meat. In
that moment they stood dumb and
paralyzed. Two gigantic owls ‘were
tearing at the carcass. To Miki and
Neewa these were the monsters of
the black forest out of which they
had- escaped so narrowly with their
lives. 'But as a matter of fact they
were not of Oohoomisew’s breed of
night-seeing pirates. They were
Snowy Owls, unlike all others of
their kind in that their ‘vision was
as keen as a hawk's in the light of

broad day. Mispoon, the big male,

was immaculately white. His mate,

. ‘ 611 y
more than a black‘béar dub, and as ‘
Miki rearranged his scattered wits-

Miki’ s jaws fell apart »

‘ tik, the dead bull‘-

, himself on the ground.

    

was rending flesh
so ravenously with his powerful beak
that Neewa and Miki could hear
the, sound of it Newish, his mate,
had her head almost buried in Ah-
tik’sjbOWels. The slght'of them and
the sound of their eating were
eno’ugh’to disturb" the nerves of an
older bear. than Neewa, 1 and he
crouched'behind a stone, with just
his head sticking out,

In Miki’ s throat was a sullen growl
but he held it back, and flattened
The blood
of the giant hunter that Was his
father rose in him again like fire.
.The carcass Was his meat, and he was
ready to fight for it. Besides, had
hennot whippedthe big owl in the
forest? But here there were ,two.
The fact held ”him, flattened on his
belly a moment or two longer, and
in that brief space the unexpected
happened. .

Slinking up out of the low growth
of bush; at the far edge of the dip he
saw Maheegan, the renegade she-
wolf. Hollow—backed, red—eyed, her
bushy tail hanging with the sneaky
droop of the murderess, she advanc-
edover the bit of open, a gray and
vengeful shadow. Furtive as she
was, she at least acted with great
swiftness. Straight at ‘Mispoon she
launched herself with a snarl‘ and
8113.11 of fangs that made Miki hug
the ground still closer.

(Continued next week)

an

A FEW WORDS FROIII OUR FRIENDS

Inclosed find $1.00 for my renewal and
a new subscriber'forp one year. This is
the way I came to get the great paper. It
is what I 'call a real farm paper.—Fred
Kailer, Arenac County, Mich.

I like your paper and I don’t want to
miss a copy so keep it coming. I am
sendingmy neighbor's name and address.
Yours for success. Keep pounding——
Henry Deloney, Tuscola County, Mich.

Don’t never stop my paper, because it
has expired, for it has done more for the
farmers than all the rest of the papers

that have been printed in the state. Con- _ ,

tinue the good work as there is lots to be
adjusted yet before the farmer gets his
own—J. W. Wellington, Tuscola Coun-'
ty, Mich.

“Homes-Keeping Hearts”, a Farm Movie

 

 

The fake health inspector condemns the dairyman’ s best cows at the order of the

creamery ownere—A scene from “Home-Keeping Hearts.”

HE FARMER in the movies is
generally a figment of the imag-
ation who bears little or no rela-
.tion to.- the real farmer on the farm.

..He is Just a caricature and general—

has an unkind One. Life on the farm
is similarly distorted. for the sake
of making other' people laugh ,The

 

D1 stnbutcd by Paths.

' dents come close to the experience of

us all. It has, say the critics, the

. “right smell. ”

The story is a highly dramatic one

and concerns itself with the fate of ‘

a typical little red "schoolhouse of
the familiar type and with the fight

' of a group of dairy farmers to get

,1

out of the clutches of a scheming

~ and crooked creamery operator It
1

  

he quarrel ever. the monthly milk
« th ' _’ of the trOuble

 
 

  
  

 

 

 

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greater conggpioﬁvcnience and ever—lasting

Value are ad ed to your farm.

a m * . GLAZED
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Beautiful buildings that need

No expensive upkeep. but

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no paint to keep them in condition.
constant and dependable service and protection.

FREE

of wood and tile silos.

 

ESTIMATES AND
BUILDING HELPS
Send rough sketch of buildings wanted and receive complete
.- estimates on cost of Kalamazoo tile con-
struction. Let us help you. Write today. .
If interested in silos, ask for our catalogue

KALAMAZOO TANK & SILO C0.
0991:. 444, Kalamazoo. Micho

   
   

mprovelbur Earl—.415”

_ DECAY is the world’s greatest destroyer. It

and you

 

 

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FOR
This

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Ask your
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men :1-

 

 

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Is the same machine of which Thousands
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Other models at slmlliar great reductions.

dlrect from this ad. or send a postal for
complete Information.

MITCHELL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION
2957 GRATlOT AVE. ::

DETROIT, MICH

         

      

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IT ALL DRUG STORES
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ents. Catalogue a n d
measure blanks mailed
free. Send name and ad-
dress today.

C. E. BROOKS.463F State Str‘eet, Marshall, Mich.
._ Good — $
Magazines

(Monthly) Our Price
Good Stories, (Monthly) $1.00
Mdther’ 9 Magazine, (Monthly)

American Woman, (Monthly)
The Farm Journal, (Monthly) 110111111111

 

"- . ORDER BY CLUB NUMBEB 152

A Dollar Bill will do—We take the risk

Sendouordento

 

   
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
  

Protected by U. S. patu ;

 
   
     
 


 

 

 

    

ASK ANY WHITNEY - OWNER

Dear Sirs:

The tractor 1 recently bought from you ll satis-
factory it: every way.
have plowed 30 acres '\
this winter. My tractor
was very saving on
gasoline and oil. con—
sidering the condition
of the ground. The last
ground I plowed was
frozen 3 inches deep.

I have handled tract-
ors of other makes. but
this tractor has more
power for its size than ‘
any -tractor I ever saw. ‘ 7

Respectfully, C. P. SMITH. Aurora. Oth.

    

Gentlemen:

Have used the Whitney a year and am very much
pleased with results. During the spring of il9|8 l
plowed l06 acres and fitted 56 acres for farmers
who were shortest of help. While the land is hilly
l have always plowed right through and have never
had to nee low speed except on tough joint grass
sod. I firmly believe the Whitney is the best farm
tractor on the market today.

ARTHUR LOPUS. Waterford. Pg.

Gentlemen:

We have had our tractor since March I919 and
used it for all kinds of work. We plowed and
disced 36 acres of oats and 34 acres of corn, using
a. double disc and spring tooth harrow at the same
time when other people had their tractors stored

, away on cement ﬂoors to keep
them from sticking in the
mud. This fall we plowed

about 32 acres for wheat and
double disced the same. We
had some ground that was
never plowed over three inches
deep until this fall when our
Whitney. followed by a P. 6: 0.
gang plow, went through to a
depth of eight inches. The
neighbors were surprised to see it ull tw0 bottoms
eight inches deep—said they cou d not see where
it had the power. I claim that the Whitney is
. one of the best investments any farmer can make.

JOHN lNWALLE. Minster. Ohio.

 

 

Gentlemen:

I want to say a word of commendation about the
Whitney tractor I bought last spring. I am well
pleased with it for two ‘ ‘
reasons. It has the
power to do the work
and its light weight en-
ables me to use it on
clay land without un-
duly packing it. And
in wet times it is always
ready to do its duty—and does it.

W. W. BlLSlNG. Crestline, Ohio.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 
      
     
    
   

   
 

   
 

   
 

standard trader at 7 "m

‘ 112E unheard-of pr is
that places it easil

’ thin the means 0 ..

’ eVeryfar-

men in th
' country.

1 i
‘7 NW N: W "‘J ' The Trtacto
' ._ 7 A ll You’ve Waite
F o r +A t t h .1
Price You Cal
Afford to P3,

 
  
    

   

quali
price.
reset

.'- be‘
Here
this (
know

 
 
     
 
   
   
 

      
   
     
         
 
      
  

  

F.O.B.
Upper , . \
Sandusky, .

9': Ohio

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”will; '1 l ‘ --— I, \. JIM”

’ ,7 mi}; .
JIM"


» HE Whitney Tractor Company, manufacturers .of 16 years’ standing .in, I
, a - the tractor industry, announce a new; unparalleled price on the Whitney
tractorm$595-.-complete, no extra parts to buy. '

This price, made possible only through huge production, Without a doubt _

. 'shatt'ers all former standards of tractor value. It marks a new epoch in the tractor industry.
It brings the price of this sturdy, ﬁeld-proven machine down to a level squarely in line with today’s price of
' farm products -- to a place where practically every farmer in the country can afford to buy. _

Common ‘honesty has told us that tractor prices or ﬁfteen hundred tractors a year we actually built-
; would have to come down in fairness to the farmer. thirty thousand-in a season -- then we could certainly
Common‘sense told us that if we concentrated the produce this one tractor at a lower rice than any-
entire force of a ﬁve million dollar company on the one in the world had ever equale -- at a price so
manufacture of just this one proved-up type and reasonable that every farmer could afford to buy.
model ‘-- if, instead of turning out merely a thousand Common hard work did the rest. The result is

I" r A Real Utility Tractor--a Standard, Two-plow Machine at a
. Price _' no Higher Than the Cost of a Good Team of Horses.

, The ‘Whitney is not new. For 16 years Whitney-built tractors have , . . . . . _
been proving their economy and reliability under the most adverse Brief Specnfications ii
3900 lbs.

 

 

. . - - - ' ' ’ _ POWER—9 H. P. d wbar; l8 H. P. on b it.
operating conditions. ‘ And thl§ new-price Whitney isnthe self seine DWS,ONS__W':;h T233,” width 56.”; heist“. 58...
gnaw“ ' -built machine ’-- Simply produced on a larger scale to se at a new, 0W WEIGHTr—Domwic ’h‘PP'W' 30"" 1b: 3““ ‘°" “9°“ .
price. Note the speciﬁcations. Never before has a tractor With the enormous Tm‘sg‘vii;3§ M‘seflfﬁfe'jﬁ ﬁggzrimegﬁigtﬁgf czgdagdngggkggghfgg;
reservepower capacity, the adaptability to all kinds of work-- belt and draw-bar more?“ 2mc°iind ”ed t e 5 as" b 6%" t k 750
-- been produced to sell at such a bed-rock price. ' ‘ per minil'te. er opp yp ' are' a m °_ "W"
~ ' .‘ . _ , , . ,_ GOVERNOR—Whitney Special ﬂy ball type. lnclesed. gear driven.
nge 13 the Oppomlmt-y you haye been waiting for“ here 18‘ your Chance to buy PULLEY—Direct driven from crankshaft. Size H” diameter by 6%"
this dependable machine at a fall', square pnce you can easﬂy aﬁ‘ord. Once you _ face. Clutch controlled. Pulley regular equipment.

- ' -' ’ ' ‘ ' ,. FENDERS—Pressed steel over rear wheels. Regular equipment.
know this reliable outﬁt .you’ll’ agree it is the biggest tractor value on the market . The Whitney is a sturdy. time_tested' ﬁeld'proven tractor, built to pull

. two 14” plows or operate a 22”x34'” thresher. It has the traction.
strength and reserve power found in the best of the two-plow jobs built.

‘ Your dealer will be glad to give you the com- . _ It has not been "rated up." Insteadhit ie under-rated. Bearings all over-

aized; drive wheels 6 inches larger than found on the average 2-plow
machine. No Extras to buy. A one-man tractor that will plow 6% to

plete information on the ‘Whitneyuor a card I ' acres a day or draw a double 8-foot disc barrow at 2% mi. per hr.
.to as will bring you full facts. Get the com- ‘
plete, information and then decide. Write today.

 

 

 

 

I I!

\

he " Whitney 7 Tractor Co;
49 ProspectTAve., ' ’CleVeland, O.

I

//
///////

, , F. O. B.‘

‘ .. » 4 Upper

. , . Sandusky,
z - -’ < ' . ' Ohio

 


 

  
 

,. " - H 1 33a, hollow in one she found
a note, from a Southern farmer who

_’ had raised the potatoes, running: .‘

"Igotpdec a bushel for these po-
tatoes. How much did you pay for
them?" .

sue wrote back:
bushel."

_ The farmer sent her one more let-
ter. It said: “I got 69c for thoSe
potatoes. It could not have cost
more than 31c to carry them to you.
Who got the other $3. I am going to
try to find out.”

Something is wrong. It may be
wholly the fault of outsiders, it may
be at least partially the fault of the
farmers and of those who eat what
the farmers raise. But one thing is
certain, the situation is not satisfact-
ory.-—From the Foes of Our Own
Household by Theodore Roosevelt.

   

"I paid $4 per

‘It is the common belief that Op«
portunity knocks once, and having
knocked returns no more. This is
what Gilbert Chesterton would call
the Ultimate Lie.

The truth of the matter is this.
Opportunity greets us every morn-
ing with the rising of the sun, offer-
ing us today the thing we missed
yesterday and a ﬁghting chance to
win

I hear the Boy'Scout repeating in
droning tones, “I will keep myself
physically fit, mentally alert and
morally clean,” and I wonder wheth-
er he realizes the import of those
words, if he does and will do ltr—
the world is his!

Read the letter of Mrs. B., of
Cheboygan in this issue. As far as
the schools go there is one and only
one solution of the problem and that
is the community school. That sys-
tem gives your child a fair chance
and equal opportunity with his city
cousin. Good teachers, modern
equipment and a fine building which
can be used as a community center.
What would he choose?

ON COUNTRY LIVING

IRST OF ALL, I want to thank

you again for the help you have

‘ given me, personally, and thru
the columns of the Business Farmer.

I want to say to the ladies who
recommended the Gem Vacuum
Sweeper, that I purchased one, and
am surely well pleased With it. I
think it a great time and labor-sav—
er. If one has several rugs or car-
pets they Cannot afford to be with-
out one.

I think there is a vast difference
- between “country living” and dwell—
ing in the country. We can make it
what we will, a life of drudgery, or
a life worth while. First, the coun—
try is the only place, to my notion,
to bring up strong, healthy children.
A child confined to a small back
yard or alley and fed mainly on
package foods from a store she,lf
must fight a double battle, while the
child whose play ground is not lim-
ited, and who is fed the best and
freshest of fruits and vegetables,
home cooked food and good pure
milk will not only measure and
weigh up to the standard but is able
many times to ward off sickness.

“Keeping fit” is a hobby of mine
although I’ll admit, there are times
when I fail. _

I do not believe that just because
we live in the country'we should be
content with just any kind of a
home. While we cannot all have a
large house, we can all have conven-
ient, comfortable’and cheery homes.
Thought we may not be able to have
all the modern conveniences, welcan
all have some, and we should be just
as proud of our well— kept homes as
are our city sisters.

We have one great disadvantage

though, in our locality, and that is
poor schools. Too few scholars, and
too many dis-interested teachers. I
say dis-interested because the only
thing they seem to be interested in
is the end of the month. but I be-

lieve a better day is coming ~ Since . 1; .

the majority of farmers _
car or a' Ford (We 11, '
0rd for several yea, ,. ,

,truly with all women and
they are net really to blame, in lots

- mentioned by

ﬂeeting I then h:

 

  

’ going out, occasionally, for the even-

ing.

Those of us, -Who- do not strive to
fulfill our duties to God and our fol-
low men, are losing something of life.
I believe in living in the fullest sense
of the ’word even though it be in
the country and on a farm. ——Mrs. B.,
Cheboygan County:

 

A BIT on EVERYTHING

AVE enjoyed the sisters’ letters
very much, also your kind
notes and although I may not

be able to be of great help to the
dear sisters who asked for advice, on
the “eternal tangle.” I will proder
my advice at least.

None of us can live our life just
as the other woman does, everyone’ s
nature is different. I could never
do as “Cousin" did, because of my
children. I would not want them,
after they grew up to hear that their
mother was not a “geod woman. ” No
doubt “Cousin" feels she can never
love and forgive her husband again,
but, isn’t she putting herself down
to his plane by flirting with other

JANE

JANE JONES keeps talkin' to me all

 

 

the time.
.An' says you must make it a rule
To study your lessons ’nd work hard 'nd
learn,
An’ never be absent from school.
Remember the story of Elihu Burritt,
An’ how he cl‘um up to the top,
Got all the knowledge ’at he ever had
Down in a blacksmithing shop?
Jane Jones she honestly said it was so!
Mebbe he did——
I dunno!
0' course what’s s—kbepin' me ‘way from
the top.
Is not never havln’ no blacksmith shop.

She said ’at Ben Franklin was awfully
poor

But full'of ambitio and brains:

An’ studied philosophy all his hill life,

An' see what he got for his pains!

He brought electricity out of the sky,

With a kite an’ a. bottle an’ key.

An‘ we’re owing him more’n any one
else

For all the bright lights ’at we see.

June Jones she honestly said it Was so!’

Mebbe he did— .
I dunno!
0’ course what’s allers been hinderin'

me
Is not havin' any kite, llghtnlnf, or key.

 

JONES

fellow trouble, jealousy,

Marriage is NOT the end of a wo-
man' 3 career. I am a firm believer
in suffrage and equality. The war
taught us a number of things. Chief-

ly that'woman is man's-equal and

can perform his work as well as her
own. The home. should be run “ on
the same basis, 5'0~5_0, I say. God
gave woman to man for a help-mate
and she should be used as such.
Sisters, what do you think of

: hart’s books! I like the new books. .
’ . or should say the new woman type. .

iWe are sated with courtship, other, '
marriage 5
‘and then all over again type of
«reading.

birth—control? Of the uniform mar— “

riage and divorce laws? Do you
believe that every .man, every ~wo-
man should have‘a clear health cer-
tificato’ before they can procure a
marriage license? Let ushave your
ideas on these subjects, if the editor
will allow us.-—A Better Race “Wo-
man. ‘
UNFAITHFULNESS

This is evidently a word to the wise

from one who knows. However, we wel-

 

 

Jane Jones said Abe Lincoln had no
books at all

An' used to split rails when a boy;

An’ General Grant was a tanner by trade

An' lived way out in Ill’nois.

So when the great war in the South first
broke out

‘ He stood on the side of the right,

An' when Lincoln called him to take
charge 0’ things,
He won nearly every blamed fight.
Jane Jones she honestly said it was sol.
Mebbe he did— ,
I dunno! ‘ _
So I ain’t to blame, not by a big light,
For I ain‘t never had any battles to fight.

She said ’at Columbus was out at the
knees
When he first thought up his big scheme,
An' told all the Spaniards ’nd Italians too
An' all of 'em said ’twa‘e a dream, .
But Queen Isabella Jest listened to him,
’Nd pawned all her Jewels 0' worth,
’Nd bought him the Santa Maria ’nd said
“Go hunt up the rest 0’ the earth!”
June Jones she honestly said it was sol
Mebbe he did— |
I dunno!
0’ course that may be, but then you must
allow
They ain’t no land to discover Jest now!
—Ben King.

 

 

,

men? “A woman always pays,” and
I would consider myself far above
adopting the ways of a common
“vamp." No matter howémy hus—,
band conducted himself.

Perhaps he is entirely cured. It
may be she was too quiet and now
that he finds other men admire his
quakerish wife, he finds he loves
her himself.
forget and try again.

Now to the other sister who has
also suffered will say sometimes it is
lack of affection that makes the" hus-
band turn to the “other Woman."
All girls should behave after the
honeymoon as they did during that
time, a man always longs for affec-
tion and I have noticed after babies
come the father is often neglected.
Strange as it may seer .- is of-
ten jealous of his owl. 4dren. A
wife will neglect her personal ap-
pearance and a man likes to find
her neat and trim. I empathize
realize

of cases, but I trust’ my talk may
help some.

’ I have read all those books
the sister
others. I love to read above all else.
I did net find anything really bad in

."Main Street. i”It is certainly a true,
picture of a sinall town,

It was dif-

    
   
 

mlmmsins v01;

  

   
   
 

Were it me, I’ would

and ,

big. _“’l‘he .-
“ loss —inter—f .f .,

:men ‘say right

come the men to Our Page and there

have been many who have written, of- "

I

mthe linoleum when moisture comes
' in contact with it.

Waxing or varnishing is said to .
iimprove the appearance of linoleum

ten you have replied and called hi'in— .

lishe D!

T IS A strange thing but neverthe-
less true that married men run
after the girls more than single

men.

\They who have never used coffee
.do not know what they miss, there-
in lies the secret. Or to make it
more plain a man or woman who has
once been married generally gets
married a second time much quicker
than a single person gets married.
The peets tell us that marriages are
made in heaven, they are not of
this earth. Certain it is that there
are very few of this earth. Ninety

per cent of the people who get mar-.5

ried do net love each other, they
only imagine they do, or the love is
all on one side,- and after the novel-

‘ty of the thing wears off the woman

looks upon the man as a meal ticket
and the man looks upon the woman
as a maidé’of-alt—work orgv'drud‘ge.

You girls who read "this sit up
. and take notice, and you men also. If

you want to hold your husband or

wife, dress neatly. not expensivoly, >

but simply neat. If you girls who
are married can’t compete with the

' single glide you ’re going to lose out,

that‘s all. and you married. men Who.

; don’t care a hang about your person-.1.

 

now To mr‘m‘oann non
mom

IKE MOST other 11:56: cum;

ings, linoleum when once laid
usually remains ‘ undisturbed
until it is worn not; therefore par-

*ticular care should be taken in lay-

ing it The floor under it- should be
level, smooth, tight and dry. On
rough fl‘oors linoleum will wear un-.
evenly, and moisture will cause’ the
burlap backing to deteriorate.
There are two ways of fastenin
linoleum to wood floors—tech
and cementing. The first is the sim-

pler method, but by the second the
seams and edges are made water- .,
' tight and the linoleum is said to give '
”longer service.

First of all, the
quarter-round molding along the
foot of the baseboard should be re.-
moved and the linoleum cut in strips
running crosswise of the floor boards
if possible. It is is to be tacked, the
strips should be fitter snugly togeth-
er along the seams but should not be
fastened for 3 or 4 weeks, for lino-
leum'usually expands when laid on
a floor and if tacked down at once
will buckle. To give plenty of room
for this expansion, it is a good plan
to trim back the edges next the base-
board for 1- 4 or 1- 2 inch, or just
enough so that the molding will cov-
er the edge. The molding should
then be nailed directly to the base--
board, leaving the linoleum free to
expand and to be trimmed more next
to the base board if necessary. The
linoleum may be so perfectly held in
place that it will not need to be
tacked, but if it does, brads should
be set 1- 8 to 1- 4 inch from the edge
about 3 to 4 inches apart and driv-
en well below the surface.

Linoleum .may be cemented -' at- u

snseen so much of it 4 x
that I’m afraid to take a enamor— "
3.30311”, Monroe County, Hick.

the seams and edges directly, to a ‘

wood floor or permanently cemented
down firmly over a layer of deaden-
ing felt paper that has itself been
pasted to the floor. Some manufact-
urers and dealers furnish printed
directions ,for this method. The ce-
ment used should be waterpm‘of and

contain no silicate of soda (water "

glass) because this is injurious to

and to make it last longer.- Wax
‘should be used‘wn the inlafd and
plain kinds, and varnish on the
printed ones, for wax sometimes

tends to soften the printed surface.

If either of these finishes is applied
the linoleum is then cleaned and car-
ed for like a wood floor so finished.
If not given a special finish lino-
leum should be swept with a soft

brush and dusted with an oiled or ,

dry mop. Occasionally it should be
cleaned. more thoroughly with a
cloth wrung out of suds made With
lukewarm water and neutral soap,

rinsed with clear water, and wiped

dry with anbther cloth. Only a’,

; small space should be wet at a time

and a linoleum-covered floor should

fl

" never be flooded Strong soaps and; :13,

..

cleaning powders that contain alkali
“injure linoleum and should never be
‘,used on it.
cleaning Powder is used on a partic- .

Whenever any kind of

« ularly dirty spot, care should be
taken to remove any trace of the wa- ,, “

al- appearance, will lose out too. g1”

am 1 a single .1

  
 

they would be only to

fshould be replaced by glas
_, shoes having... a widez‘ba
face and no rough " '
heavy pieces ,

116w and, have traveled added '- we ,

-. ‘xfhad married wag»
etbre their hﬁshandsw "

that it their husbands would dressy
the way y I

ter in which the powder was dis-
solved ,-

     
    
   

Castors on heavy furniture are

likely to cut into linoleum / a

1:.

‘H-‘-.‘-‘-

t
1

ends m assesses" ll

: .14

 

‘Luuu HIS.

banana NO! I

 

 

   
      
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
   


  

 
  
  
 
   

‘ mrta’bout five years age. . I
for over four years and dfind
"hing for seven a‘. pleasure rather
than hard work. It isas follows:

Secure from your druggl’st 1 can Bab-

W’s potash or any good lye, 2 ounces ‘

each‘ of salts of tartar, ammonia and
bet-ax. But in a large creek and pour
over one gallon boiling water and then
ml in fruit jars. .Dissoi've from 1.2 to

1- bar soap in boiler and when water

. comes to s boil add 2-3 cup of compound.

_Wring clothes «but of cold Water, sort
them as usual in washing the old way.
put them in boiler and let bell 20 min
rinse n'na hang out. Win find that about
all the rubbing that is required willb
to gotythe dirty suds from the clothes.
Nearly ever; woman in our little town
usesthisandnoteneofthemwomd
wash the old way. ~
If you have beets stored for winter In
the cellar reﬁll your empty fruit jars
ufollewe. Wash and cook beets until

tender. peel and slice To a quart each _\

- at vinegar and water add a. (:11pr of su-

o.
I

  
    

he
‘1“:
mm]:

p.153. small bag of mixed spices and
when the mixture comes to a. boil put in
boots. and ball up. Put beets into slab
and cover with the boiling hot pickle,
seal while hot.——Mother of Five. .
u—g—aw—
“Grlggsliy‘e Crossin’”

Several are asking a source where they
might get the poem “Griggsby’ s Grossin’ "
by James Whitcomb Riley. Would it be
possible forde M. _B. F. to publish this
poem? If so I am very sure it would
: appreciated by many of Its readers,—

“Has any one this poem? I have
looked through two sets of Riley’s
works and do not find it.

 

Attachment for Sewing Machine

I‘ wonder if I can ask a favor. through
our page? If so I would like to know if
any of our readers have used an attach-
ment that is supposed to fit any sewing
machine and to be used for hamstibching
and picoting. There is such an advertisie-
ment in the "Fruit Belt" and I would
like to inquire as to its merits before
lending for it. The M. B. F is our most

magazine—Mire. R. E. Kleint
tar. Mich. " . -' .

 

The letters regarding unfaithful hus-
bands are interesting. I would like to
ﬁt my ideas on the subject. Who

we his temptations and struggles to
mid a fall? It says in the Bible, “Judge
that ye be not judged," and again

the Lord's Prayer “Forgive us our
Moi: as we forgive our debtors." If we
a) not forgive how can we expect for-
giveness? One writer says, “There is not
a single human trouble that Christian

Then rub through urea:- ‘ water, ,

_ and pepper to taste.

. It '1?
ﬁlled several swan '
any one knew the recitation “D. Puff
Still!” and one “The Inventor‘s W
we are gain to have an entertainment
would like e two if I can possibly
get themr—Mrs. A. W., Bailey. Mich

One lady asked for a chop suey recipe
and also Spanish rice. H ere they are:

’ , Chen shay -
1-: lb, of ﬁesh pork, 1 cup chopped

 

'c'elery,1 cup sliced onions, 1 tablespoon

of brown sugar, 3 tablespoons of Orient-

al Show-You. Cook all these together

and serve on boiled rice. You can pur-

chase the Show-Yen at any grocery store.
Spmish Rice

1 cup of rICe boiled until tender, 1 pint

.of tomatoes 1 onion sliced and grated

cheese if desired. But these in a casser-
ole and bake slowly for two hours. Salt
We enjoy the M.

.F.so rs.Q.T.

 

Pluin Pudding Recipe
Dissolve a package of Lemon Jell-O in
a pint of boiling water, and while it Is
still hot stir in three-fourths cup Grape
N‘uts or one cup coarse dried and browned
,bread crumbs, three—fourths cup stoned
three-fourths cup English wal-
nut meats, three-fourths cup cooked
prunes and one~fourth cup citron——all out
fine: one-half teaspoonful cinnamon,
one-fourth teaspoonful cloves. Salt to
taste. Mix and let harden. Serve with
whipped cream or pudding sauce.

 

_ Correction
I must apologize to Mrs. G. S. of

' Memphis, Mich., for my failure to
recognize in the Cora. Harris, con- "

cerning whom she inquired, the pop-

'ular fiction author of the present

day, whOse stories appear in some
of the leading magazinesr I shall
be very-glad to give her in a later
issue the information which she'has

asked for.
_,______._._....

GOOD BOOKS THAT SELL FOR
$1 1.00 EACH

The After House, Long Live the King
and Bab, the Sub-deb by Mary Roberts
Rine'hsrt.

The Hand of Fu Manchu. (a Chinese
story) by Sax Rohmer.

The Judgment House, The Weavers and
Ladder of Swords by Gilbert Parker.
”The Beloved Vagabond by Wm. J.

cke

His Daughters and The Seven Darlings,
by Gouveneur Mo o.rris

Pieces of Eight, by Richard LeGalliene.

Cabbages and Kings, by 0. Henry.

Tess of the d’Ubervilles by Thomas

 

==Qliirisfmas Suggestionsw

The over blouse is a most popular style
his winter and is made up in velveteen

~inure than any other material, although'

e was very popular in the" fall.
., ,. , all and mohair
'__in adrepsti tch..

he. git'sday yandissoxne-
out to an hem of the

 

. ﬂirt. It: may Wm be .made of georgette
crepe and is worn oylr’ter a sin; sl‘izpillg'hen .
made 11 this way may e a
mg

I have seen them made entirely of

worn over silk or satin. t has
terestlng to watch thK develop-
of. this style. It might 'be‘ milled.
in. evolution of the jumper. The style

ABetomeforManyUIee“

3817. For shop-
ping, for sewing. for
‘ embroidery, one will
find there models

fashioned '

chintz or satin. 'No.
1 would be attractive
in cretonne with lin-
ing or facing of plain
i crash or. esteem. No.
2 could be made of
canvas or leather. as

with linen. It may be
a flatbesefé or folded. as il-

NB quini-ll- ”VI-rd
"lam “any

  
 

  

The over blouse.

‘retum mail.

f r o m \
crash. cretonne, silk.

“It Will require one
well as of cotton or.

and 14-2 yard of red
ﬂannel for his suit.

em Rabi:

 

A going, Simon .

‘ 1211th

is easy to construct and quite within the
Wars of the home dressmaker so We
might as well give it a welcome.
More stuffed animals this week and
different designs in bags.
filled in with the cunning “little
boys“ suit. Our catalog shows some
very .pretty pattern sets for essing
dolls Ifyou have not the book,. d you
Should have it, can choose patterns
for you Just send me the length of the

Adoll. The patterns cost you 120 and are
'for dolls from 16 to 26 inches in length.

. I recently sent for a goOd supply of
catalogs and can send your book out by
I know you will like this

prompt service.

A Pleasing Set of Nursery Toys

2298. This com-
prises a Monkw, a
-Babet and an Ele-
phant. Developed in
ﬂannel. canton or
domet ﬂannel and
stuffed with cotton,
down or saw dustL
these __ animals ,are
the. delight pf little.
children.

. The patterns are
out in one size only.

    

yard of brown flan--
nei for the Monkey

   
   
    
  

ﬁElepha‘nt. . re_
«um. m6 yards The
dyad. 1

  
  
  
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

; .1. .

r
e

New 8787 Sup-
blouse models '

 
 

I
satisfactory. J thOught I would ask if
as r

18" USED BY

[I

A

 

Millionsrol‘ Housewives
more" Chefs
by more Railroads
by more Restaurants
and by more Hotels
than any other Brand

cAu. roe
CALUMET

It’s , [moderate
in price and
never; fails

A pound can'of' Calumet
contains full 02. Some
baking powders come inl
'oz. cans instead 6 oz.-
cans. Be sure you get. a
pound when mquant it?

 

 

 

'Aspmn

-Unlees 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 Manu-
facture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicy-

llcacid

  

 

INSIST ON IT
blﬁy name

bname
yname

PISO’S

. ; vSAFE AND SANE
a ’ . For Coughs ff Colds

‘This syrups different from all other;
Pleasant—gives quick relief. contains
inc coma—good havering and old.

55¢ per bafﬂe everywhere
_

 

 

‘ on. Best Offer

Wle will renew your subscrip-
tion for 5 years for only $3.00.

This is not only a substantial
saving of money but, also saves
you the annoyance oi renewing
frequently and the possibility of
e missing. a copy.

 

 

 

  
 
  
 
 

 
   
     
  

Better send your renewal order”

 

Method will that

 
  

 

 

.' today before you forget it.
to MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER,
3:: Mt. Clemens, Michigan
9 V -

 

 

 

 

 

. This service is free to the live stock industry in Michigan

BREEDERS ATTENTION!

Hyouareplanningonaealethisycar.writcuenowand
CLAIM THE DATE!

to avoid conflicting sale dates
LET “THE BUSINESS FARMER" CLAIM YOUR DATE 1

 

 

 

 
 
  
 
 
 

o

 

 
 
  

 

  


   
   

  

Us“ [Cow-Kare with Grain Feed
‘ with Wonderful Results

iii Yankee dairymau knows the value of
= Win23. the milk yield through perfect cow-
.heelﬁ. D. Johnson of Groton. Conn.

go‘ﬂeve used

 
   

:- Kow-Kere fog the pest
,1 _ have never fed cows any
1* ; min without giving one tablespoonful of

now-Kare. I heve positively doubled the
" worﬂiofcows.1boughticowayear ego
“ l for $75 and she was giving fourteen quarts
1 per day, end she has just freshened again .

\ three weeks ego, and I am getting twenty-

.four quarts per day, end' Row-Kare made
. cow. \ Have four others that I bought
‘ that were giving from fourteen to sixteen

quarts and now I am getting twenty-two
' quarts per day from them."

1 ' Row-Kare is e valuable winter aid in the
cow born because it keeps the assimilation

end digestion in healthiest condition when
J, the feed must be mostly concentrates and

Winter housing and feeding re-
duce the vitality and activity of the milk
making organs. ow-Kere restores and keeps
digcetive and genital functions healthy. Ber-

‘~ rennees. Abortion, Securing, Bunches, Milk
Fever, and Loss of Appetite are banished by
using Kow—Karo as directed.

The milk yield tells the story of the healthy
herd—ind poor milkers mean a loss. Let Kow-
ere help you to a bigger dairy proﬁt. Gen-
eral stores. feed dealers and druggists sell it

‘ It the new reduced prices—65c and 81.25

‘7 DAIRY ASSOCIATION C0,, INC"
‘3 Lyndonville, Vt.

Write today ‘:.~”‘:"“-—— .
for (hie valua- * i “M

1‘ i ' ble book on “plow
; diseases of ‘ ‘

‘r can».

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Everywhere —— in country
and town -— hundreds of
millions of Christmas
Seals arebe’ing used dining
this 14th Annual Tuber—
culosis Christmas Seal sale.

Their sale brings health to
over “1,000,000 'cOnsump-v

V tives in thousands of
'.. homes. ’ . a

Every seal- you buy helps
to strengthen the disease
ﬁghting forces in your
community.

.‘u‘

  

  

  

 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

are taking quite a long vacation.

 

APPBEGIATES FAVORS

Dear Uncle Ned and Cumulus—'1 want
to thank each and every one of you who
contributed to my shower of post cards
and letters, and also those who )sent oth-
er tokens of remembrance. I received
140 cards and 34 letters, besides some
papers which I enjoyed immensely. Two

of the cousins sent stamped envelopes

for answers. I also received a hyacinth
bulb and I was told to ‘watclr it grow."
That will pass the time away very pleas—
antly, I never walked a step in my life
and I never went to school. .My parents

started me out and the rest I picked up ‘

by myself. I have a little sister, nine
years old and in the fourth grade, so
you see I can’t *be very lonesome. In-
deed, I foel that I am blessed by having
a. father and mother to take care of me.
don’t you think so? Good-bye to you all,
your loving nephew and cousin, Orville
H. Trueblood, Pewamo, Michigan.

EAR CHILDREN: See what_..hap—
piness many of you brought to
this unfortunate cousin of

yours. It did not take much time 7‘

and I” am sure you all feel more than
repaid for your time used for this
purpose. I had no idea so many of
my nieces and nephews would re—
spond to my appeal and I wish to
thank each one of you for what you
did. During your life you will be
repaid many times over for the lit-
,tle acts of kindness you perform
along the‘way. I also received a
birthday card from Bernice Klein
and she writes that she received
several letters fronrmembers of the
Children’ s H0ur. Many birthday
cards are coming to my desk and
they are all so pretty Next week I
will tell you how many I received. I
am also receiving a large number of
letters. And, althou h I can not
publish them all at resent as we
haven’ t the space, I am Very glad to
get them and hope that in the near
future we may have more than one
page for our department. 4 —
Now that Thanksgiving has pass-
ed it will not be long before Christ-
mas will be here, will it? Whatgdo
you want Santa Claus to bring you
this year? I haven’t really decided
yet what I want. I will have to let
Santa know soon or he‘ will be so
busy filling orders that he will not
have time to get What I want. How-

ever, I will not care if he will be .
generous with my nieces a‘nd
nephews. ,I have heard Santa is

quite poor this year so if we do not
receive all we want we should not
feel ,«lisappointed.
me whht you want this Christmas.

“I have- not' received a word from

Write and tell .

1

Doc Sawbones for over tWO weeks;

I can not imagine what' can-be'tho
matter. He planned on returning
to us the last of November or the
first of this month. His conduct
puzzles ,me. Before another week
passes I will do my best to get in
touch with him and find out what is
wrong. ——UNCLE NED.

 

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS 1
Dear Uncle Ned—I suppose' you will

an Ohio girl.
ter from Ohio and that: was a, few weeks
ago, It» was written by my cousin. I

‘ was fifteen the fifth of October. Who is

my twin? Have I one? I am a fresh-
man in the Bowling Green high school.

There are about '650 pupils enrolled. 'I ~

live in the country and go to cho‘ol in
a bus. My father drives it.‘ e start
at 7. 00 a. 111., go fourteen miles, make
eighteen stops and reach the schoolhouse

‘ be rather surprised to get a letter Tran .
I have only seen one lot-‘

about 8: 00. There are forty-two children .'

that ride in the bus.
are high school students. My father
takes the M. B. F and I am always anx-
ious when the paper comes to road the
Children’s Hour. I am also leading
“Nomads of the North ” I hope Neevya's
nose will soon get well. I am writing a

letter to,Ann1o Toumann and will She.
glad to answer any letters from any of

the cousins—Helen Whitmer, R_ F. D.
8,1301: 29, Wood County, Bowling Green,
Ohio. . -

Dear Uncle Ned—I think the D00 Dads

 

anxiously“ Waiting for them to come back.
It won't be long before
wﬁlbe here. j‘Wo will have an enter-

Want at our school the 18th of this .

dinner at

 

9. Thanks lying
d. The ll

a will have

school; children:
' attending on;

children
and We Ml
”13101.

Thanksgiving .

on will furnish ‘
to have a good ”

Thirty of them ' ‘-

1am,

:I like ‘
I

- nesday night before Thanksgiving.

"house in town.

~of age and

I

' July 16.

or?

.gﬁ ..
as“.

  

on her-vacation -We put a tent on is
our woods and“ lied our dinner and sun- '»
Fermen- Afewdaye tertw‘o ethos
girlfriends «innocent tohavetheir
v'acation with me. My cousin who llvoe
across the need came over for the at-
tornoons, so' we really had a picnic. Af-
ter the girls were gOno I helped on the
farm, picked up potatoes and [food the
boots. I wish to say good-bye to Uncle
Nod and the cousins and would be glad

y. '.>' g‘

.to have some of the cousins write to.

Ina—Laura Felnouer, It 1,

Michigan.

Dear Uncle N am glad the Doc
Dads are coming ha I lfve on a farm
of 160 acres. My cousins 1nlive, on the
same farm too. We live the tenant
house. All the pet I hays is a cat nam-
ed Budge. When We lived in the other
hou'sowe had a man and his wife work-
ing for us. They were Hungarians.
They were very kind and when they may-
ed away they thought that there was
some rabbits under the house yet so
daddy built a pen and put some hay,
cabbage leaves and some oats in the
pen. But there was no sign of any rab-
bits. I like school very much and we‘
are going to have a box social the ng-

Y
teacher boards at my house. We had
very much fun with our sleds When the
snow was not so slushy I am ten years
old and in the fifth grade. I hope I can
have a ride on the bobs some time. - I do
not know which I like better, winter or
summer. t is mined, shut up in a

Bay City.

,wooden case and never let out, but peo-

ple use it?—.Answer: A lead‘pencil.‘——
Lucy Belle Pope, Mt. Pleasant, Mich.

 

Dear Uncle Ned and Cousins—I am 10
years old and in the 6th grade at school.
We own a farm of 150 acres and also a.
We have 7 horses, 6
milchcows and about 200 chickens. My
father is a breeder of Duroc—Jersey
swine. I. belong to a. club called the
Wild Rose .and I am treasurer.—-Jose-
phino Wells, Pokagon, Mich.

The Golden Apples .
‘There was. once upon a time three
golden apples for sale and an old man
owned them but it seemed that no one
was rich enough to buy them. At last
some one said, "What is the price of
those apples?” The old man answered,
"Those apples cannot be. bought- with
money You must go to a certain foun-
tain in wonder forest and say ‘token brok-
en’ 20 times, then the apples will be
yours " Now there was a young lord
in the crowd who thought himself very
wise so he said, “I will have those ap-
ples." . He jumped’ on his horse and
dashed awayto the forest as he got to
about the middle of the wood his steed
fell and broke its neck. T on he contin- ,
ued on foot. He had not one far when
he met a pretty little girl who said to
him,‘ ‘Come with me and I will give you
11.11 the golden apples you want for just
the picking." So he went with the child
but when he reached the trees several
people jumped out and began to beat

him and he was glad to run back to the ' '
When he told his story .

market place.
the people all laughed and said,
3. lord should not steal.
earn your apples." ,

"Event
It ‘ is better to

 

Dear Uncle Ned—s—I thin your merry
circle is very interesting. ow do you.
like the cold weather we are having?
you keep warm? Say I received. .14

tors from the boys and girls of the M.
B. F. answering my riddle and there "

wasn’t one who guessed it.

I am going
to let them guess again

I am 13 years
the 7th grade at school.
Why is a dog's tail like a heart of a
tree? Answer: Because it is the farth-
est from the bark—m-Ina Anderson, Rose-
bush, Michigan, R I. -

 

Dear Uncle Nod—I have just been
reading the M. B.- F. and like it very
much especially the Children's Hour I
am a girl 11 years old, my birthday is
Is there any boy or girl whose
birthday is on that date-'1 I have two
sisters and 2 brothers. I live on an 80-
acre farm. We haVe only 2 cows and 3 ‘
horses but 11w father buys lots of lambs
every fall to food up during the winter.

- The school house is on the corner of our

farm. I am in the 6th grade at school.
Bernice M Klein is one of my friends.»
She lives Just around the corner. Hoping
to hear from some girls and boys of the

.merry circle I will close with some rid—

dies. How many sides has a. water pitch- \
Answer: 'i‘wO, inside and ouSido.

What is a good thing to loso? A bad rep-

utatlon. Why is a horse like a stick of >

faster

(1 o more it lsTlckodAho
can y? m Ipox\ 53,‘

it goes-r4310”. Raymof.R

:Fowlcrville, Michigan

Dear Uncle Ned—I was just reading .7
‘ the Children's Hour’ and I have guessed-

       
 
 

 

the riddle that Ina Anderson has in her

 

   
 

.letter. It is Mississippi, because it has‘
four ey no.8 cannot. see. am 13
years 01 and in the eighth grade. There

 

are 21 children anathema col. 1m on

a 106-ecro

 
   

   
    
   

. Curriberworth, R 3,

' Erna Boll,

amazingly
light, even better than gas or, el‘oc-v

._.,_..~
Dear Uncle Nod—I am a girl ten years
old and in the fifth grade. I like to go
to school. We have twenty—nine echoi-
ars in our school. For pets we have two
cats and three rabbits. We have 1111
cows and eleven calves. "I have one
sister and one brother. My sister is old;
or and my brother is younger than I. W
live on a eighty-acre farm. I like

 
 

read the children’s letters. My has

takes the M B. E. and likes it very much.
——Boatrico Campbell, R 5, Box 30, Hes-1
perla, M1chlgan.. '

Dear Uncle Nod—I have been reading
thoM. 13. F. rdrtwomonthsand dthink
it yory interesting especially the Child-
ron’ s Hour.
issue I saw that there was a girl 18
years old but would be fourteen them Is
20f February and she wished if shelled
any twin sister or brothers they would
writo to her Tho paper has been min-1

 

laid so I cannot find it and if this girl-
' whoever she is would please write a lot-

ter this week telling her name and- ad-
dress, tolling just where she lives, so
that her .twin sisterhifsho wants to call
me that, may correspond 'wlth hoi- Ir‘wili
be glad to do so.—-—E. G. McGuire, 1312

'Pleasant St., Saginaw, W. 8., Michigan, -

 

Dear Uncle Ned—I like to end the let-
ters in the Children’s Hour 9. (1 also the
Doc Dads; I am five feet 3 inches tall.
I goto school every day now. We. have
lots of fun playing ball and other games
I raised some Belgian hares this sum-
mer and now I’m killing them for meat.
I let some of them .run loose all summer
and they became wild so I had to snare
them in the holes. I have about ten
small ones.——Your nephew, Maynard
Carillon, Cheboygan, Mich.

 

Dear Uncle Ned——May I enter your
page with your other nieces and nephews?
I am 12 years old and am in the 8th
grade. I live on an 80- -acre farm. My
father .has 17 head of cattle, 3 nurses.
chickens and 2 little kittens. I would like
to hear from some of your nieces and
nephews. -—Robertta Baker, Inkster. Mich.

 

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a girl 10 years '

old. I live on an 80-acro farm 3 miles
from town. I have 3 sisters and 3 broth-
ers. I am in the 5th grade at school.—
Eunice Butler, Bellairo, Mich.

Dear- Uncle Ned—-—I like to read the lot-
tors in the Children’s Hour. I am nine
years old and in the fourth grade. I like
my teacher very much. I have two sis-
ters. We live on a‘hundrod and sixty
acre farm, I am glad winter is near as
I like to go coasting .---Helen Saunders,
Chase, -Michigan.

 

 

Dear Uncle Ned—I have an aunt" that
takes the M. B F. and I go over .thero
often and read the letters in it. I think
they are real nice. I am a. girl eleven
years old and in the siXth and seventh
grade. For pets I have a cow, a dog and
two cats. I have a pony. It 15 five years
ohi._ I ride it every Sunday. We have

air of 11111163 and. my father lets me
dr ye them. “that can go up the chimne
down, but can 't go own the chimney up
Ans: Umbrella.——— belle Susdorf,‘ R‘s,
St. Louis, Michigan. - , ' ,

 

OTHER LETTERS RECEIVED
Ruth Botxman, R 1, Box 58, Vassar:
Helen Freeman, B 6, Owosso; Marie Hon-
old, R 4, ”"Caro Nellie Young. R 2, Mt.
PleasantrRuth- Haist, R’ 2, Hersey; Doris
Ashley; Florence
Grogg,Meslck;Ma1-garitto Sensabaugh,
North Star; BerniCe Klein, Fowler-ville;

R 2, Rochester, Michigan

OIL LIGHT BEATS

 

ELECTRIC 011 GAS

BURNS 94 0/0 AIR

j» A new oil lamp that
brilliant, .soft.

tricity, has been tested by the U. S.

Government and 35 leading univert

sities and found to be superior to 10
ordinary oil lamps. It burns with-
out odor, smoke or noise—no pump-
ing‘up, is simple, clean, safe. Burns

92p per cent air and 6 per cent 'corn- I
, mon kerosene (Coal-oilﬁr

The inventor, A. 3‘”

Today as I was reading your -

gives an
' white ’

  
    
  
    
  
 
   
    
      
 

 
 
 
 
 
       
        
   
    
   
  
   
    
    
   
 
  
  
  
   
   
    
  
  
     
  
   
   
 
 
    
      
   
  
    
   
   
   
 
 
  
  
   
 
  
   
  
  
   
     
 
   
   
 
 
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
    
   
   
   

“JHHHAA-theﬂmn11_n ‘u4--_u

"his-ﬁnish 191: eta-a a (4-5 m.


  
 
     

 
  
   

SNELL , ~ Glisten?“ Healso .yiz.. a progressive 15.x. a certain page
emphasized the int. raised by means. of consumption met.

poi-tonne or a reductio - I °p~p°s°d “'11 "Hm securities" at“ ‘ ‘ I
, n in com acre ed repeal of excess profits 'tax I 9 ep-

    

iaﬁm dollar" ' ysd Idea _‘
W are itwaswortlr—inother wmmoa’ 8:39 the 001311112 year and discussed posed principal of general sales tax; ura- .

3‘7 :By :E.

lined. - to

   
 
 

.6 .
D. : ”39‘ member—
a * millitin‘ members

 

    
  
 

   
 
  
     
    
 
 
   
   
   
 
    
    
  
  
 
  
   
  
   
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
   
   
 
  
   
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
   
    
   
  
  
    
     

. ’9’ . ﬂy ‘. i
.‘ jean *ui‘codithnta, Gar, last week" ities but 69c and that today it was ' '
‘ ' '- - ' " . ~ : -. ‘ - n . . . the reorganization t _ -
a... Anna..." “tissues? - -manageshostages m: Ae’ struggles; Sitiigmmlwm‘ ?‘d‘e”°”m°"i’-‘e~“" ”it"s" ‘
. iniportantbranch of our governT ﬁxing: save” my? as a pastels tor price ,7

oration, Naveinb'er 21523; a Canyon-V .140 per cent *0: t e nation's: and - ' '
ti99.th§t,will so down in in ' ry- as agriculture repress ' .30 per cent 111612331133“? ”gem mmm’ gilecfmawybmm ”1° mmwufmm “I".
2:135 do: it?! greatest events; agrl- «gt talaah tillumintlul toeccupations, gates represegtirzggfgnmzasggs o gggul'eglslaxlon amend
_ airs, 477‘“ 3g- - .35' eyes _.‘,ony tween 16 ’ _ ,. sting sumac than ‘ m ‘ "--
_ ‘ ,Iifrem m, 1959‘ fﬁh_”ggjpn- of; $13.9 - and 333192“ :cent of the total income 3322:; t1”; , mention this :year—-— [vine tuber-comics ei‘tm‘ﬁéuﬁnﬁw 3?;
mus to the Closing-'gsession or the} in: power.” he declared. “must” be m] that it “39°!“ ““1 the 11”" Bill: urged Coupes- 0t: authorise Sheree .

Executive Cemmitéw Meeting on. organized in the game way that A in . Rfe ended the, Chicago meet- .tary or Wu- to enter into contram vim
“amuse”. ' so; new «we» mama's l:::.ti:::“°:...:s: m use seamen “m1
m i , I V L , - . . ~ L e,
on: gathering. ’ The sessions were - He indicated that the- probable »- as; daleigates on “Bird’s Eye Views of Wﬁgsﬁggﬁ ifaﬁgga‘ﬁa" Howard . f. 3
so smooth that many were‘inclined recommendations 0f the Commis- —m:;.s 26x3 Stiate. The farm WO‘ Iowa and Oscar E- Bradiute 01 013°
to wonder. if the control, had- not 8 on Would contain these six planks: something. 0: gogqaifwlfsad a *0 were unanimously re-elected Presi-
1’ 53‘ dent and Vice-President respectively

been ‘Vested in a welt-oiled polit- _ - . .
1 Prompt legislation attirmatively ed requesting that when funds per- by the sixty . three delegates Th
’ . ere

k , teal rmachine. If there were any . recognizing am right of a... {mel- to
.\.\ 9 - unfavorable :criticisms. of the meet— wmbino fat the purpose of marketing. “1“ 3 Woman secretary be selected was . . .
' * ins—i there was no time for them , 3:1?acmtevemrE-ha Germ: widget-ligating. or to head a department that compare gate seine discussion among dele-

’ from the ﬂoor. This powerful ma- . duct. p . own pro" favorably With the head of any other P ado an opposition candidate for

. china new past the ‘pioneer stage, 2. Prompt legislation to meet ade- department 01' the Farm Bureau. 1138 enhtbut all efforts t° “tab‘

- has already accomplished much in mtely the farmer’s credit .requirements. Resolutions of A. F B F a con est disappeared following.
, 3. Mon of the statistical division Th ' - ° a unanimous endorsement of Presi-
8 Closing hours of the conven- dent Howard by the old Executive

their efforts to restore a balance of the DW”
. - v .. toforleuituresoas_

in “giggégieenoward’s Ad » . to, turgid: the basis for a sound agricul- ‘ 39:1; :38?ng the agoption of nine- Committee. Three changes Were
. . ,dl‘OSS “"31 "WT“? . y u- . t

The applause which greeted Pres- 4." Embnshmmt‘ ~01 ammtmal 3" important ofogiich mong the mOSt made in the personnel Of the Ex I-

id 1’. J R H ‘ d- 1 Iowa ‘the " tachees in all the Dwell)“ Mg and t was one oﬂered th8 Committee. H. C. McKenzie of .
h or:1 glazes 0., 9103:1103 "as h; re- progucing foreign countries so as to fur- 1:011“ the ﬂoor by George A. Manse. Walon, N. Y., was ele-‘éted from the
vieeai'ivedJ thee Flegegation’s’ work for Etior‘taoggzrtgm-mo “9n tor ‘ﬂ sound. rigs 2:112:11“ gaging/613mm: State Northern District in place Of E‘ B'
the past ten months and set fortlr 5- Standardization 0ka “name’s 0“ pointment of ’a com gittor t 6 ap- Cornwall. 0' H‘ Gray Of Nevado,
the, problems confronting the mum cultural. products and at products 1. u m 9" to care‘ MO» was replaced by Ralph Snyder
_ . mm,“ . . u y prepare and present to Congress of Oskaloosa, Kansas in the Central
a bill to so amend our existing bank- Region and C. S. Brown of Tuscan

.erd’today, silioyved till}? ﬁnial: esteem ﬂ'mnﬂmgmt or the relation of ag_

an. a reca on W c ‘ e ‘mem— on can to the can of 0th r in . ~

bershixl:p have for their executive commodities. including malnutrition. e 811iiillaswzdarﬁnfgtgiggrz:§:rqtiteijé: 5303a. Esplaced W. G. Jamison of

head. Mr. Howard declared that Hon. Henry C. Wallace, Secretary pendent Board .01 Directors that will - i e a' 0 v in the Western Re-

”19'0” fashioned Golden Rule is a 0‘ Agriculture, 111 81308111118 on “The 'properly regulate the expansion and g (:11: i

fundamental, economic law that Agricultural Outlook" discussed in reduction of credit, . C m game? ﬁg of the Executi"
detail the importance of the ang- Other resolutions insisted upon the J .0 WélCSSergagwgalgs tige-elcgagznggcn

'will right the wrongs of the Ameri-

can tarmer as he painted for his cultural legislation that has been the early enactment of laws defining the t .

audience a pictureyoi the economic enacted during-the last few months as!“ of tiller-mere to market their products 1‘9 ary and given more executive de—

voes of America and the world. and enumerated the benefits that mfg-3r: "’1" “1° “Pawn“ °‘ ““1”“ tan WM" Charles E- Gunnels was
Th ﬂ ts of ’ Mencgggegmgg- 23:11:31,931 “3% the re—elected treasurer and made Di-

6 e or ‘ on road rector '01 Organization, which was

the’ American {arinlera could tlhope for from such 1&1?" urged th t m t
Farm Bureau Federation have been as s a on as ' 9 extension of the . ‘ a 0 Dream effective—
mcessrul in already reducing rau- powers or the m. Finance Y. Corpor- mom: 13.222.22.31“; giantess; $321612.” tirihiiflﬁ‘ M’aC°V°’d“e~
road rates $50,000,000 and more ation, the Packer and Stock Yards reorganization or the Federal Depart. .9 committ e t thg [y re deed and
are to follow. During the year ﬁve ControliBill and the $25,000,000 .in- {genltegggggsged snuggtment geomor- mittéemgnsp‘l’aced’f: cﬁcg‘ﬁlgg 00m-
' ;. rein: can eve
$125321,“ mheldfurtie aggizmﬁ 91'9“? n 3119 Federal Fm Loan Farm Bureau principals of a tax‘pollgy’ department. ry
, which is to promote (lo-operation to
shorten the tarmer‘sv road to market.
As a result of the appointment of ‘ , .
the Farmers' Grain Marketing Oom- ' ' 7,. I. . I a a o ,,
‘mittee or Seventeen we have the U.’
8. Grain Growers, Inc., -with a sub- _ , ,
scribed membership at this time of _ ' .
._ g _ 25.000 _tarmers and 600 \ elevators ,
g ' and 300 new members loining daily. _
‘ . 604100.000 linesr’gﬂs old- masketagg; -- .
‘. grainlarear yunercontr HY w hﬂl *
.. g p and at the present rate oi progress - . on '8 e 6“ ome
‘ he '0. 3. Grain Growers should have

. 150,000 tinemgggsogoﬁza; 3011;111:101 . B . . . .
“g ' ’ . ~ aklng Be mN ' W th
_ ' 2 g 0W 1

 

 

QUALITY

 

 

rep
' _ grain. There. is handled on p the
a \ ChiCago marketin one year anx‘aver-
ago of about 325,000,000 bushels .
' at grain so there is promise ofithe .
U. 8. Grain. Growers becoming a _ .
real iactor“’in the grain markets of,

 

the world. .
, Secretary Cover“ , elseRepoi-t . . . _ ~' 7
. The report of the secretary '- “The Flour the Best U n ,
. showed 1that 3:11.16 gel (19222731 pals; . ‘ - Lily W111 made C0058 as
up more era 6 e e on us > - 7 ' of . -
1486 County Farm Bureaus and 46 ' bladed wtii’h Wﬁgﬁwﬁ gram m Algfma'
State Farm« _ Bureau ‘Federati‘ons, ‘ ' f . , mm a. stat- e um.
i " 'all members of the American Farm .. . m KIWOD, W111 assure you of better baking results
- Bureau. It wasualso £33066? ﬁrst . - . 1 than any ﬂour you can buy. . .
' - there are more an , a -' , , a _ . ' . .
' tional members who for one reason . « . ~ . Ma” Bread, rolls and biscmts baked Wlth 11b White are light
or. another are not yet elegible tor - - A . tendenﬂavory, wbateandwholesome. Pastryis crap—that
membership in thefAmerican Farm ' v trade-mark ' delicious ki-ﬁd never ﬂat 01’ W .
Bureau. lgidno ngw 2Balzate Federations ~ - on the sad The]: m - .9 ' '
have jon an ,878 members ‘ 9 i8 8 ‘ ' ‘
' were added to the roster during the ' ' 1mm Wfégefommm Elﬁngwgﬁpol? i
_ . .- a enee eats cry

you. - .
The» report of the treasurer

milling It is not reasonable to expect the best .
, wed. that '7- total 91‘ $241,442.28 WW m m lily White will pro-
, been expended by the national ,_ . _ duce be“ bakingjbecause (If its W quality. ' . A I I K

. once during the 'rnr‘stten months of _ ‘
the years, Healso; estimated a total ' i . ' - ' ' r a ' ’ ° ’
expenditure .ptzsaoo,‘oco.oo torpthe : ‘ ‘ ‘ v . ' Bake ‘ [ally White ’ ‘ V
ﬁl’itimﬂﬁgg “91.1 under the. “ f . ‘ i - ’ ’ i“
,‘ . ->.up ; ~-=ap raved. h. a ,' ‘ - ' - ' ' - ' "
, themecnﬂye :Qi’mmittéegeei- ”ﬂu: _ ‘ . .. A‘ . The next tune you bake call up your _‘ and ask him for \ L
am mammal”thieforgamamn. _. _ p ‘ . , asackof the-ﬂomthebestcooks‘use.” knowwhatb *
" ~ ~ . * ‘ ~ '~ IALLEY CITY mums comm §
. _ - sum) RAPIDS. moms m .. » /
.gw, , p‘v‘ﬂillenfor mow - '- ._ 'e

,1) ‘ _‘ ”I , _ ‘ '-',

 
 
 

    
 
 

   

  
  

 
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

i.» .1 iii... HIIIIIIH. : riiiz ii'

(IPEcIAL
Mu eut whet you have to eﬂer. lotus
lime or Id. or copy II often II
here It special low retee: Iek

 

or thorn.

oven-nuns n 1:. under um main. te-hcneet breedere 31 live need u'nryeii an
A u out It In ”I”. show you I proof Ind tell you whet It .wm eoet tor-613', to or

Write ted

   

RY)

Ml

BREEDERS DIRECTORY. THE MIONIBAN BUSINESS FARMER-

 

 

 

UFairlawn Herd—éiiolsteins .

 

"I" 3H9. 'EmbIIIsaai-d Llllth Ghemplon 10801.3. .

 

 

 

Porter Coleswck, Eaton Rapids. Mich.
rryA. Eckhard t—DI City. ILL

John Hoihnen. Hudson, 'ch.

John P. 123”

l.
Lyons.
St. Johns,

taken soon.

Lukeview, Mich.

I

T YEABLIIID BULL BABGAIIIS

Ion2 20‘

m ColInthI 4th’s ehInnI.
ﬁrst 35““ lb. cow. end world H‘s ﬁrst 1300.le
Th0 cow thIt ever worlds butts:
-, "Gong-mu rum onerahy mucous” 1‘. end thmworldl
To avoid is iiiictin deter we will without 1.” 1’0 . “-
eeet, iisi. the "In. ofgIn ny live seen sale in with Piebo De Kol No. 98110 1'1 15013:
ichleen. If you Ire ocnelderl I sele 9‘ butter from 20' 99:4 ”uh. '01.; ”mm w
"I. no It Aedii‘oe lndIVlI will III em themat- and; “HEEL," 3:1th rd for {fan .
" .f iii'gU'eimJi'“ L " emu mm. ' . one Michigan co'w with higher milk record Item:
meats; nearest dame Ivmze: 99 2‘
December 16.-—-Holsteins. romeo Deiry J“ ”a ’m "‘_';j;::j::::2'5 1mg
1318981331, lake Odessa. Mich. OhImp’I Ions from choice A. R. 0. dams
. Jen. 13—Horsee—Mich. Horse Broaden Idd prestige to your herd Ind money to your
Als’n, M. A. 0., East Lansing.
Feb. 2 ~—- Hampshire Swine. Loneweo J. F. “IE“A"
County Hampshire Swine Breedera’ Am, Owner —
Adm M‘ch- - Flint. Mich.
EIGHT HEAD HOLSTEIN-
LIVE STOCK AUGTIONEERS FOR SALE F‘reix'nn mule, condBtin nz of one
Andy AdImI, Litchiield, Mich. cow six years old; one cow 5 yum ohls‘.f one :0;
Ed. Bowers, South Whitley, Ind 2 years old; one 18 old a!” ld:
R. Benjamw—Wsukeshs. Wisconsin. months old heifer; 1 herdbull bull3 years 0

2 bull mlves seven months old. All for 8800. 00
If L. CULEY

J. E. “Law—Ft- Atkinson, Wisconsin. gun.2 1- 2 lbs. .Dams I daughters of Kine
D. L. Perry. Columbus. Ohio. eels Pontiac. I 37 lb. son of King Se

J. 1. Post, HillsdIle, Mich. ords 16 lbs. to 30 lbs. riced halt vulue.
0. A. Rasmussen. Greeﬁlvilge. Mich. famine” Federally tested June“ 10. W
HWE'oBuii’ggte'rtfrhmbecafu}, Mich. ALBERT o. wens. White Pigeon. Mich.

 

HIrry 'Robinson Plymouth, Mich.
Wm. WIiflc, Goldwater, Mich.
r. Wood—Liverpool. Ohio.

 

 

 

CATTLE ﬂ

HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN

 

 

 

Dun

HIDE YDUHE BULL

over 20 lbs.

BRANDOKHILL FARM

Ortonviile,

JOHN P.
1205 Griswold St., Detroit, Michigan

Michigan
HEEL

sired b 35 lb. son of King of the Pentium.
y First check 3100 gets him.
A180_A few heifers by same sire

 

SHOW BULL

Aired by I PontiIc Augie Korndyke-Henzer—
void Dex Kol bull from I neIrly 19 b: show
cow. First prise junior calf. JIchon FIir.
1920.1Azht in color Ind Iood individue.
Seven monthsl old. Price 8125 to‘ mIkle
room. Hurry
Herd under Federel Supervision.

BDABBMAH FABIAS .

JAOKION. MIOH.
Hoktdn Breeders Since

*7

1’0.

 

 

 

dam and sire whose six nearest dIms Ire 33.3

enision.
Oscar Weliln. Wiscogin Farm.

AM OFFERING LIGHT COLORED HOL-
Iteln-Jhiesiun bull 1 year old from 21. 51 lb.

King Sella Glisin

A BLUE IIIBBDII WIIIIE

on the 1921 Show Circuit. For sale It I low

Price. Out of In

Pontiac Korndyke.
Sired

A

B

YOUNG
BULL

O mnddsuzhter

e!

by our SENIOR IEEOW BULL Model

32.37

GBAIID IIIVEII STDDK FAIIIIS

COREY J.

SPENCER. Owner

111 E. Main Street, Jackson. Mich.
Herd under State Ind Federal Supervision.

BUV HOLBTEIN OR GUERTNESEY

oou‘r
OALVEB ANYWHERE urn-n. you Will

EDOEWOOD FARMS.

WHITEWATER.

W18.

 

Herd under state Ind federIl

Unlonvllle, llch.

 

 

 

TUEBDH STDDK FABN

Breeders of Registered Holstein
cattle and Berkshire Hogs.

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

ROY F. FICKIES
Chesaning, Mich.
O

 

 

 

HUSKY,

 

Two Holstein Bull Calves

Nearly ready

for service.

AR. 0. dams. .Birooneof

Michigan’s best

bulls.

Dam of No. 1 has 512 lbs
milk, 23.5 lbs. butter in 7 days

std yrs.

Dam of No. 2 has 507

Ibsmﬂk,25lbs.butterat5

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-

 

 

 

 

IO HEALTHY, HOLBTEIN BULLS
god-1' 'i‘nurtue 8mm Honolulu stock. Bemtcrcd . W. J Gamble
rec or so
use. ' ”HER, so. Mmm mm 606 Taylor Ave... Detroit, Mich.

PURE-BRED BULL

HOLSTEEI FBIESIA calves, “so cool ULL OALF, BORN APRIL 20, 1921. WELL

Brads heifers; tuberculin tested herd. II no grown. w very streizht, Ind sure to

rig please you. Sire Se Flint Henzerveld

LARRO RESEARCH FARM. Box A North End. when two nearest tested (Inns Ivera e 81. 93.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Detroit, Michigan. Hinge? I 21 g). m3 at odsozrerii
. a I U . -
OME 000D YOUNG REGISTERED “ngl auhm.del¢;m 8125.00 1. I. b. tht.Write
Iood bulls Iron 3.3133211)“. L. c. KETZLER, rum, Michigan.
ly from [Maud auxin?“ rcIIonsble Ind '
rents-d. em re-
mg. ml J ”HSDHE " "’ REGISTERED HDLSTEIII BULLS
l ' Bired by I son “oi toKing One Ind from good
Plnckney. Mich. producing or photos Ind prices.
V. 2 ~ EARL coPETE‘WRS. North Bradley. Mich.
Bull alflut Sm Midlb'ut- thawl more ' SHORTHORN -
get-1nd Ire mostly w te. ’i‘heyI Ire nice ItrI Mm tel- EGISTER ‘BHORTHORN CATTLE. Du-
g'ﬁm'h‘d ‘ ”" “Kin Ii 190me Hugs and Percheron
lb. tab, old dunk IndI the other 1:") ”In Quality right price.
Friend Iguana; Up.“ ‘0‘“): Butt” “a, one GRASLEN llFARMS, Northvillc. Mloh.
the ("It bulls.
JAMES HOPBON JR.. Mao. Mldh- N B. . sumnnnns
on BALE—TWO sou. ”use. A non.- .

have hery milking “lime.
nob it then It on

tein nd D but: Ibout 8 months old. Both
' m Not “mud. eso
Mel-lotto. MIOII.

CHASE BTOOK “FARM.

 

i We
I nine-I III III
i m
i Worldb

NT. DH IT! .
WHAT AI MINT

oﬂmebeclﬂml

no new A ~ ,0
Ind. ”Shine a: 85.08“

. 4-01!
“me3. r. *mﬁw

 

 

We Ire now oﬂoﬁnz bulls,

oi tho kind “that is hard to and. out 0!
months ‘1' ball Perfection Bah-:11,
of them. well Ihmuin

s“. 123.333?

rthth .Writ
”“0?me '13", oag‘ill
“mum ‘

3. ii. iuiiassiiii I soii

7.7

min lest.

Ilium Isl-m {igneous
;r..4r.~z.e..r .,

R43 ~

.m-o

.» ram ....“' ‘ ‘

   

two splendid

3.130..

Bod Alt. Mich.

Iud'bbtbeemn

W
WWII.
Icon.

I

you wIIIi. copy or ehen ee muet be received one week before date of Ieeu .
U“.- Clemene. mulch”.

r

 

     
  

I on I“ ' ‘ .
3: times audience 7
Breeden' Auction “new edurtieed}

 
   
 

Mia-K STRAIN DOUBLE BTA‘N—

Fan SAL Pulled S horthorn i

set." by Yon-ks Polled Duke No. 18881- .
“5109 1mm moi-edited herd , ,
AUL 0U AOKé'

p
Scull Ste MIND. MINI.

FIIAIIDISDD FAIIH SHBBTHDIIAS
RAID BIB. TYPE POLAIID DHIIIAS

rndyfot r11
mwfﬁ ”oi:

 

WCEMIn.
glib bad for sprineﬁerro

pop: carriers on 2....

Mt. Pleasant. . niobium

‘

ENTAAI. MIOHIOAN
lion oﬂer for Isle 75 heed:
m. both milk Ind bee! breeding.

M. E. MILLER Ieo'y.

IHORTHORI IRIID-
Bend for “‘3
.Mleh.
FOR SALE—REGISTERED . agencighzs
c

end one 5 months
were old.

men
bred. Add
RGE W. ARNOLD. or JARED "ARNOLD £

Granville.

 

WIIIIAI'I‘ISI‘IIIN. I 1. "ADM

 

THE, VAMgﬂEtOOg‘OPTRﬁIN BREED-

Ild beet Maﬁa.“ ye or .' both ’
Write the Iecre

FRANK BAILEY.

Hertferd. Blob.

EXTRA GOOD BULL GALVEB FOR SALE.
Batu Short-

3From Ridge herd of

horns. September 1920.
J. E. TANSWELI.. Mason. Mlohloln-

SHORTHORN CATTLE AND OXFORD DOWN

sheep sex for sale.
J. A. DeOARMO. Muir. Mich.

IHHEBITED mSHBIITHDBII QUALITY

pedigreessh din-Ions mixt t-ure of
best blood lines knownju

 

 

 

the breed. Write .1
JOHN LESSITER'B SONS,
Clarkston, Mich.

FDH POLLED SHDIITHDBIIS

Shropshire. Seuthdown and Cheviot rams write to
L. 0. KELLY & SON, Plymouth. Mich.

suanmonls etered It IttrIctIve prices

before January ﬁrst. Will trade for seed lend.
. Wm. J. BELL. Rose City. Mich. . .

MILKIIID SHDHTHDIIIIS ....:.‘,‘.‘.".§." ser-

vice. tuberculin tested Ind It bemin prices. _
W. 8. HUBER. Gladwln. Mich.

IIIDHLAIID SHDIITHDIIIIS

Special oﬂer on two white yearling Bulls
hum IMP. Cows and sired by IMP. Newton
Gammon.

Also sevens] other real Bull Bargains.
Don’t overlook these burnins.

C. H. Prescott 5?: Sons
. Towns City. Michigan ‘
now, 411: ANNUAL.
hex-ﬁg test without I reactor. Some hernia
JOHN SCHMIDT A son. Reed Glty. Mleh.
two man snonmomi “ﬁrth:
mo. old and sired hylm
W. W. N.APP Howell, Mich. ':

 

 

cows. HEIFERS. cone

 

 

 

UY SHORTHORNS
In

 

 

 

GUERNSEYS .
DUEHIISEY BULL

FIoesieB BSir Thomas of Mismukec 37310 born
July 9th. 1920. His dun now on but 99
days mad. 8965 lbs. milk 201.8 I. {II II 'I

3 your old. He he over 7-8 blood of

'S , Rose 89724 new on
tut. month with about 12000
mﬂkInd590hhtuIiunim-2

 

your old.
Shef beﬂnsda her 10th month with over 2 lbs.
h. per Sir clear nose,

straight top line. is light fawn. very masculine.

wcli grown and lame. Ready f.or Service. Sheet

Anchor. Glenwood Ind Gov. Chane breeding. Ro-

duced price, $150. 00 for 30 days. Bull calves

hr sale. Write for particulars. Accredited hard.
A. M. SMITH, Lake City. Mlch.

GUERNSEYS F DII SALE

Several good bulls. one from ﬁve months' to. '
two and a be years. —
G BRYOE. Romeo. Mich.

1:
. r.
REGISTERED GUEAIISElS “"3933'
“he. ”50' 1A iiii. wauIsie . "a, M
No. Ademr. Mich.  ;

 

 

 

EUEBISEYhEULIéhfliﬂ SUSIE“.
Witt. as ‘. rs.- at. up:
ttt WW3“) 1 A. B. deuzhters 9‘9.
‘ none“ Ines. . ‘ f '
’._Ailgunn R1. Iteration?“ (A

 

comma * "

MAY ROS! AND “W BBBIDINO.

 

 

 

 

Abduction altering- {pedigreed

stemeFﬂe-sian cattle was modest Jack-

sen on meaty. November 18.1mm- the

auspices or the state association. :3. W..
Secretary so

   

 

   

e... '

   
           
   
     
 
   
 

 

 

 

sold above $300
trait and EH.
the largest buyers. the latter buymgﬁr
the Industrial School for Boys at Lens-

The con etc were as fellows: F. :3.
Jenkins it on. Eagle, Mich; Traverse
City State Hospital, Traverse City. Mich.
Beasley Stock Farm. Ypsilanti; Mr. an

Mrs. Kﬁrt Rheud, Pittsford, Mich: I.

A. Campbell & Son. Par-ma, Mich. ,
.Black & Son. Lansing; R. J. Bird, Ypsi-u
lanti; M. D. Smith and Boardman Farms.
Jackson

Besides those mentioned above,
breeders who purchased cattle at the sale
were as follows: Layne:- Bros.Q Janine!"
M. E. Browne, Jonesville; Detroit Cream-
ery 00.. Detroit; B. M. Clark a: 8011. Win-
omr E, W. Miller.» Battle Creek: J. 8.
Earl. Ceresco: Dr. R. Chivers. Jackson;
Frank Thompson, Musing; '1‘. 2?.
Jordan. Spring Arbor; Blue Bird '
Northville;' Anthony Snyder, Belle-r
ville; R H. Wilson, Lansing; Russell E.
Blake, Jackson; C. S. Allen, Pulaski and
F. C. Kinne, Albion.

Arrangements for the sale had boa
carefully made and the program was
painstakingly carried out by the am):
tioneer Col D. L. Perry. Columbus, 0..
and s! '1‘. 'Wood, pedigree expert. ‘
sale was well attended by a represenmn
tive body of- Holstein breeders and I'd-
mirers of black and White cattle and the
bidding was active from start _ totinisb.
The only criticism that can be oﬂei
will apply with equal force to near
every sale the writer has attended
tall, namely, the opening was deferred
until entirely too late in the afternoon.
making it necessary for the auction
to hurry through the closing sales of. the
offering.

 

One 01' the most persistent bidders on
the cattle that met with his approval in
the Jackson sale. was Commissioner 01
Agriculture, H. H. Haliaday, who was
out after females with which to
en the dairy herd at the State Industrial
School for Boys at Lansing. By way of
explanation, Mr. Halladay' made the fol-
lowing statement to the writer? “Some
of our state institutions already haw
splendid herds of pure-bred cattle; we
are determined to place them all on

the same basis in this respect." »

 

The cattle sent into the Jackson sale
ring by F. .S. Jenkins & Son, Eagle. 11161:.
by their appearance and department bore
testimony to the judgment and farsight-
edness of this firm as breeders of use—
ful dairy cattle; every animal in me
Jenkins offering was in show-yard bloom
and by its conduct. while being sold.
manifested that innate dociiiizy that so
Well becomes the ideal dairy cow.

*/

The work that has been done by the
Traverse City State Hospital and by the
State Hospital for the Insane at Pontiac.
is certainly I breeding mm or which
the citizens of this state may be justly
proud. The average quality of theat-
tle sent into the sales and show by these
institutions during recent years. has been
very high; it our new Department of Ash
riculture can succeed in niacin all of
our state institutions. on a par th those
mentioned above, it will in the opinion
of the writer be functioning along in-
tensely practical lines. ’

!-r-!—

Elliot G. Stevenson. the well—known
Detroit attorney. was represented It
Jackson sale by his brother.A. E. Stem
enson. of Port Huron. Mr. Stevenson
was I rsistent bidder. on the annual!
that ted him and «when the day was

over he had 8 head to his credit.

Col. J. 1 Post. the Hillsdale auctioni-
oer. was an interested observer“ the
Jacksonsaleandwasseehtcmekeebﬂ
every new and than when an

animal entered -Besi¢c‘

 

in the state. Mr. Post eimsto
I stud or pure—draft horses.

good begi‘nningin three pure-bredle
cheron Wmares ‘ ‘

 

The auction sale of L. PEPolan:

the

tow
bavinsI,

rd.»

 
    
  
   
   
 
 
  

    

 
 
   
 
 

 
 
   

 

  
    
 

  

    
   
  
  
 

a

e
”Matﬁhm‘hemuu-u—_L

I! 2:!!! Linton-a been

sag-

   
  
 

.aacsrzeeeaquT


    
   
  

 

seem ‘ I ~AMI'1IRICAN’
RAISE PDBE-BBED POULTRY
T IT pays the average farmer

uniyersally conceded. In keep-
in; with other business undertak-
. -- i " 111:3, poultry raising, is of course,
'7 1.191111; the effects of the depression
‘ but not in the same degree that the
breeders of other lines of improved
live stock are feeling it; while , a

.’ part of the meat produeta, from the
animals. produced on the farm, must

 

our poultry and eggs are consumed
here at home.
make money with poultry why not
the farmer who has the cheap food
whieh an almost limitless range af—
fords‘l. A flock of chickens on the
farm are in their natural element;
f nature gives to them, first hand,
ylit the tonics which the fanc-

ier must pay money for.
If poultry is to be grown, the next
question to ask is what kind will pay
,1 best; pure-.bred birds with which to
' starts flock will cost a trifle more
than common mongrels.

The vital

mm .

I to raise poultry is now almost ,

seek a market abroad nearly all of’

If the fancier can,

question iFwill the increase in the

incomefrom the undertaking, whiCh

can be justly credited to the use of

warrant the additional outlay? For

ten years, the writer of this article

,, . ‘ specialized in poultry on the farm;
during the early part of that period
he experimented with mongrel and
pua‘e-bred birds, keeping a careful
account of the income from each.
The records of these experiments,
without exception, gave the pure-
bred birds the best of it.

In this enlightened age, argument
to establish the reliability of a tru-
ism is superfluous; very few farmers
there are in this country today who
are willing to spend their time and
money on mongrel stock of any
kind. The farmer is no longer in

pure-bred stock, be, large enough to .

.._,; doubt and the breeder of birds, that '

1. - ' are adapted to farm conditions, has

a harvest before him if he has the
’ nerve and courage to go after it.

The advertiser is quite often not \

theonly one that benefits by'the re-
sulting publicity.
improved live stock and poultry who
advertises in publications that are
read and relied on by farmers, is
rendering a three— fold service; be—
sides the'benefit he himself derives
he has the satisfaction of knowing
» that the farmer, who purchases his
- stock will see his annual income in-

creased’ by the venture and a mark-‘

ed benefit will, in the, end, accrue

to the general public because of the.

great improvement in the quality of
the product. ‘—H H. Mack.

/

PRODUCING FOOD FOR EXPORT

-(Continued from page 7) '

.cent American and then Mr. Ed.-

. if youmeet me with your bland‘

declaration—“top much monopoly, it

‘ can’t be done,” I will not only deny

_ go. soundness and truth of your con-

- ‘ ntion but I will meet it as though

‘ - - admitted. If all else fails to estab-

‘ 111111 a profit on efport' surplus then

put that surplus farm product back

ripen the soil as fertilizer and keep

' it there until we can sell our fertility
Q E at a profit.

, Whenever the manufacturer-- meets

 

  

until there is; a demand. .

 

me and can not be so ‘Theld.
By comparison let’s see about that.

    
  

 

The breeder of"

the manufacturers returns his

a. flooded market he closes the fact- .
0,17 and holds. the overplus in store.-

' . for the farmers.
be Said farm products are? -without the M ‘B. F.—-C. L. Hatch, Ot-

 

high salaried officials and lackies,
all of 1Which may. only serve to pile
one year' s surplus upon another, un-

til it all spells catastrophe"
‘ think it over.

Now, Mr.— Editor,
and even if We are both of us plain
spoken we are friends and both

» working for a common achievement

of farm progress and if it appears to
«‘you that after all, it is not so much
a question of export or non-exports
salt is a question of curbing the un-
reasonable ambition of exporters and
modifying the form or. character of
our expert products and adjusting
our production to the demand. Then
we two Will do well to get-down to
work on the biggest proposition yet
promulgated, a subject vastly too big
for either or both of us, so we shall
need a power of help from the or—
ganization you suggeSt and we shall
need a'~- few county agents such as
they have down in Ohio.

Incidentally Mr. V. N. B., Mont-
calm County in which I live has had
a farmer agent several year. Besides
personal invitations given since he
came, before he came I extended to
-him through the public press an in-
vitation meal].
of him. The nearest response I have
received has been a generalized pub—
lic invitation to bring up my farm if
it is sick and let him look at it in
his office. I .am also engaged in
farming in Ionia county.‘ We have
done quite well over there without
a farm agent and good old Jason
Woodman (Co. Farm 'Agent) was up
in this woods last summer and by
his measure and «physique the treat-
ment I am givingmy farm is the best
ever but the profits I receive from
my farm are not as large as I have
received from other lines of business
though the living is good and the in—
dependence appreciated. Draw your
own conClusions.——-J. E. Taylor,
Montcalm County, Mich. ."

Yes, friend Taylor, it is parddnable to
say anything you want to about the ed-
itor and his opinions. His sense of fair
play will lead him to publish criticisms
about himself which he would never think
of publiphing about a reader. But we
are straying from the subject. Let's go
back This discussion started over the
objections that were raised ns me time
ago by certain Republican n,wspapers
importers. etc, and ore recently by
Pres. Howard of the merican Farm Bu-
reau Federation to the American valu-
ation plan of the Fordne'y bill, which it
was and is alleged, will work an injury
to our export trade and consequently to
the farmer. You’raise no question as to
the alleged injury. Your “theory” as I
understand it is that the‘farmer would
not suffer from the loss of this export
business because "he makes no money
out of it, anyvmy." How do you know
what effect export demand has upon the
pricesmf farm products For years \V}
have produced a surplus of grain. The
prices the farmers have received, wheth-
er high or low, have been influenced by
that export demand, and they. always

e. But in the case of potatoes, for
hilch there is little if any export de-

.mand, what happens when we produce

largely in excess of our domestic require-

ments? Would not the same thing hap-'

pen to grains if We were to suddenly de-
stroy our export trade by the adoption
of the American valuation plan? The
"theory" that farmers should produce
less, develop their domestic market, and
make a profit on What they do produce is
fine. I agree with it whole-heartedly.
But it's going to take time to bring about
that condition. In the meantime, would
not good common sense tell us. to cons
serve our export market until that happy
condition is brought about? That is
really the .only issue with which we are
confronted so far as the American val-
uation plan is concerned r—Editor

/

Many thanks for what you have done
I couldn’t get along

 

sego County. Mich;

    

* may it ‘_
its“ out. expense in cost, upkeep and

There has been two '

l Imp. Edgar of Dalmeny

' FINDLAY BROS"

751111 311.:

 

co to 9buy good breedins stock at reason-
11“
B. SWINEIHART O. E. ATWATER
resIMde . Secretory
I“stilaiiwin, Mlch.

 

 

JERSEY BULL cALvss. Show type. From pro-
ducers. $50 and up according to age. »MILO
H. EDISON A SON, R2, Grand Rapids. Mich.

 

ONE OF OUR MAJESTY BULLS WOULD IM.
prove your he r.d
NORMINOTON. Mich.

ate-ianssi

Ionic.

HEIF-ERI 1 YR. OLD——
Young com in milk sired

by unanimity”: Oxford Shylock 156 692 .130 young
Frolica Mum Pod- 1770811 .
grand-6110133: 99th and Son his 19th'l Ton-

mentor, two greate e11111111 of the breed. Write for

. prices and pedigr
OUY O. WILeBUR. R 1. Boldlnl. Mich.

 

JEﬂSEY BULLS AND BULL OALVES'sIred
by 11 son of Sophie 10th Tormentor.
J. E. MORRIS a. SON, Pennington, Mich.

 

IF THE BULL l8 HALF THE HERD, Hg“!
much would 11 son of Pom‘a 99th's Duke th
who has 60 per cent blood of Sophie 19th.
worth to your herd?
Let me send you pe" gross and prices on bull
calves from this buEll and Sophie Tormentor com
FR HAY WA ARD

SEcotts. Mlch.

 

HEREFORDS

HEREFORDS & DUROOS

Yearling bulls and bull calves, Beau Donald
breeding. Also Duroc boars and gilts.
J. O. THOMSON a SON, Perms, Mlch.

 

 

LAKEWOOD HEREFORD '.?,‘1‘.§‘,°oa§.'1‘.'.'5
. 4 year old Herd Header, a show bull. possessins
size, quality! and bluest blood. Cannot use longer.

 

 

 

TAYLOR, Fremont, Mich.
ANGUS
DODDIE FARMS ANGUS of both sex for sale.
Herd headed by Bardell 31910, 1920 Inter-
national Jr. Champion.
01‘. G. R. Martln & Son. North Street, Mich.

 

FOR SALE TWO REGISTERED ABERDEEN-
ANGUS BULLS, one six months

old and the other 3 years They are from the

best herds in the country. Address

GEORGE D. STUCK, Otsego. Mich.

REGISTERED ABERDEEN - ANGUS—BULLS,
Heifers and cows for sale.

 

 

 

Priced to move. Inspection in vitcd.
RUSSELL BROS., Merrlll, Michigan
The Home of

Probably

, The Worlds’ Greatest
BREEDING BULL

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

The Junior Champion. Bull, Junior
Champion Female. Champion Calf Herd
and F1rst Prize Junior Heifer Calf, Mich-
igan State Fair, 1920, were also “the get
of Edgar of Dalmany. ‘

A very choice lot of young bulls—sired
by Edgar of Dalmeny are, at this time,
oifered for sale. .

Send for Illustrated Catalogue.

.WIIDWOOD FARMS
Orion, Mich.

w. E. Scrlpps. Prop.. Sidney Smith, sung,

 

 

 

 

BARTI ETT’ PURE ansn ABERDEEN-
.«NGUS CATTLE AND 0. I. O.
Swine-- are right and are priced right. Corro-
Ipondence solicited ind inspection invited.
CARL BARTLETT. Lawton Mich.

PREMIUM BEEF PHODUOERS

Sired by Block Rosegay, third at Mich. State
Fair and grand champion at Bay City, 1921.
'vYoung stock for sale.
ANGUS HOME FARM

Devlson, Mich.

  

 

 
   
     
  

 

  
   
   

"_——FOH SALE, LARGE TYPE————-—

POLAND OIIINA

boar Digs. Sired by F": Cinnamon 891211,
Michigan‘s 1920 Gr. Champion boar, and
by Smooth Buster 395823, Michlilanl
1920 lst Jr. Yearling Boar. Immune by
double treatment. Priced to sell. Write
or see them. Free livery to visitors.
A. A. FELDKAMP '
Manchester, R. R. No. 2

WALNUT ALLEY

have a few more 0!

is boned.higl1 bsIcked, smooth sided

11:“. left. Tlho Iliad that makes good at on.-
their vs. no Ohio or write 11d

tell you what I will do a let in.
A. D. GREGORY, Ionic, Michigan.

E?NARD;8 BIO TYPE P. O. BOAR FIG.
11 wean 113 time, from Mich. Champi n h

825 with Epodigrec. Satisfaction guarantegd. O
or write B.,LEONARD R 8. St. Louis. Mich.

L. T. P. C. $15— $20-$25
We are oﬂ'ering our 1921 fall crop of pigs at the
above prices. They are sired by Hart's Black
Price andF Right Kind Clan.
Mich.

BIG BOB MAsronoN

Is sired by Caldwell Biz Bob, champion
the world. His dam m’s sire is A's Mastodon.
grand champion at Iowa State Fair some breed< .
1112. Peter A Pan is my new boar sired by Peter
Pan. he by Peter the Great, Glover as Frank D.
Winn herd, Kansas City, 0. Some choice
boars left sired by Big Bob. Priced low and
guaranteed. 30 choice {all pigs, either sex.
0. E. GARNANT, Eaton Raplda, Mich.

BIG TYPE POLAND OHINAS

Spatial Prim; on Boar: for 30 days. Extra ions

.big- bone, from P.’ 3 Big Orange and Orally ‘ ,

Price 31d dam’s being of Buster and Orange '

strain. Also gilts for sale Price to sell quick

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

BIG TYPE POLAND OHINAS

Spring Trig! all sold. For fall Digs. write
“I. CALDWELL & SON, Springpol't. MIDI!-

Bla TYPE P. 0. SPRING PIGS EITHER SEX ~.;_
from large growthy dams and sired by choice
herd boars. Come and see our 5 pried '
reasonable

L. W. BARNES A SON, Byron. Mlch.
L 8. P. 0. BOARS AT AF'ARIYIERS' PRIOEO.
0. SW "‘11

Mlch.

          
       
  
    
   
 
   
  
 
   
  
 
  
   
    
  
    
   
  
  
   
  
 
  
    
   
  
   
    
 
   
   
   
  
   
     
   
  
  
  
  
   
 
   
   
   
  
 
   
    
   
   
     

 

11114111.

 

 

 

g.

 

 

 

Schoolcraft.

 

IO TYPE POLAND OHINAS. Fall pig: for

sale sired by the 1200 lb. boar Monster Bic
Bob 327, 623 and of Clansman, Giant Buster
and Yankee breeding. Ready to ship now.
hogs double treated. Priced right for quick sale.
Write or come and see them.

CHAS. WETZEL A SONS. itheca. Mich.

BIG TYPE

BOARS AT HALF PRIO 1:01.... on"...

 

bred in the purple, sired by Mich. Buster,
A Giant and Butler's Big Bob. No better ‘
breeding. big rugged, blg- boned boar ready

registered, for $25. 00—330. 00.

for service,
JN c. BUTLER, Portland. Mich.

L

 

TYPE P. 0. TWO SPRING BOARS, ONE 80‘”
$25.00 each. Registered if sold this month.
PLEASANT HILL FAR

Evert, Mlch., Route 3, Box 89.

HIGH OLASS POLAND OHINAS

Anything you wzmt. Choice spring gills and
boars. Auction Sale Nov. 16
HOWLEY BROS..

 

Merrill, Mlch.

 

L. 'l'. POLAND CHINAS.
gills and weanling pins.W1-i
HAROLD LEONARD, Alma,

BIG TYPE POLAND. OHINAS

Spring pigs of both sex for sale at reasonable .
prices. Slred by Orange Clansman 2nd,, litter l,
brolller to Michigan 1920 Gr. Champion. Also ’
fall pigs. Write for prices. Immuned by douhbs

treatment.
E B ROS.. Mich.

111111: TYPE POLAND 0111113

For sale, bears and gills sired by B’s Gun.- 3
man, grand champion 932191921 Mich. State Fair, I
and by F’s Clansman 920 grand champion.
Prices reasonable. Visitors welcome.
livery from Parma. Correspondence cheer!

answered.
N. F. RORNOR. R 1. Mich.

SPRING BOARS,
Mlch.

 

St. Charles,

 

Parma,

 

AYRSHIRES

FOR SALE—REGISTERED AYRSHIRE
bulls and bull calves, heifers and boiler calves
Also some choice cow.

R 5. Mlch.

 

Vassar.

 

 

RED POLLED

ﬂ

  
  
  
 
 
  
 
   

SPOTTED POLAND CHINAS

Large Type Spotted Poland China; 1

Some spring pigs at right prices. sired by
Au

 

Pride of Mecosta. Satisfaction Eucranteed.
papers with Di 11.11 Phone or wn ‘
J. B. FULLER, R 2, Reed City, M1013, ,

  

 

 

25 RED POLLED OATTLE

Registered All aces
_ E. B. ARR Homer, Mich.

RED POLLEDW CATTLE FOR SALE.
heifers 11119. Prices gth
ROYSTAN OTOOK FARM

WIII Oottle, West Branch, Mich.

“ BROWN swrss

FIVE REGIME... -J BROWN
Swiss cows and one yearling bull,

 

CHOICE

 

 

T. H. -
Howell, Mlch., LB. EF'. D. 8

 

  

 

 

FOUR REGISTERED" DURHAM

 

 

 

“In. sum from c to months. old.»-
"ibis mm Durham
11mins .1. 1.4111011, numb, 1111.11.

 
 

DUROCS

   

 

 

    
  

 
 
 
  
   
 

"III SALE sevens: goon ”nm‘
tober pigs 131111113232" Semantic: and 01...
Harley Foor a. Sons, M". Klein. R ‘ .'

DUROO SERVICE BOAHI
$20 to $40. Bred cows and
Fall plus $10 to $15. All

 

      
    
 
  

  

 

nee. ounce TRIED sows
gills bred to Big 1011111111,
650 lb. Jr. yearlin¢. Double immun . ’
JESSE BLISS A SON. Henderson,

PEACH Ill”. FARM

TRIED mend wow
Hill Orion ”Klni'om152489.

Mac a in open
new

  

FOR SALE

       
 

  

 

   

Satisfied: " "1' 1 '

    
 
  

 
 

 

 

 

 


  

 
 

virtcn » ~
'lrlMis. Mich. V.‘ .‘I

 

Folios“: 75. 1:113:00 rues.
; .. nth! 0 or sex. ig bone. lino
. m nub superior individual! .133 breeding. ”13m

15 dollars. A few March guts. Esta
or money back.
WEST VIEW FARM. Hilledale, Mich.
B. E. Klee. Pro

‘ PIIRE maBREI DIIROO JERSEY HUGS

ha've good boats and sows of on
W; to or“ syaie. Reasonable prices.
LARRO RESEARCH FARM. so: A North End
Detroit. Michigan.

UROC JERSEY IOARO. loan of the MO.
heavy-boned type. at reasonable prices. Write.
or better. come and see.
I J: DRODTI R 1! mum. "I'M:

F0: fOALEz—l-Igff. DUROO JERSEY SWINE.
ewrea randsowpigstihin
Grand Chunpion Boor and from price wlnﬂg
gem; Also a few fall pigs either sex, sired by
3::si.l:::.rt::s.;rd 2.. ‘i.. Budgie

u
Satisfaction except ‘

ran.toed
~ F. I'IEIMSI.n A BON, Mich.

”tires 01mg! Bp'i“ Nachos" Sold. Orders taken
or wen ng as 10 um! 11 d .
s. convenes. dim-1.1133133"

OAKLAIIIIS PREMIER GRIEF

Bord Bosh—Reference only—No. 129219
1919 Chicago International
4th Prize .Ir. Yearling

BOOKING ORDERS FALL PIGS AT SIB
BLANK A POTTI R
Pctterville. Mich.

ICHLY-BRED DUROOS. YOUNG BOARS
and gilts sired by Brookwater Demonstrator
27, K boar. State Fair 1921.
H. E. LIVERMORE a. SON. Romeo, Mlch.
DUROG BOAR

FOR SALE AT BARGAIN pies .n-oa by

. Model Orien. Grandsan of $20. 000 boar,
Defender. Jack Orion, and Taxpayer Orion dams.
hose pigs are making of Darrel boars. Will ship

for inspection before you

V. LIDGARD. Hesperla. Mich.

”unocs ANYTHING YOU WANT AT
0.

Farmer’s prices.
. POWER. Jerome. Mich.
urcc sows anc slits JI'OG to Walt's King 82940
who has sired more prize winning pigs at tho
mt. fairs in the last 2 years than any other Du.
roe boar Newton Barnhart. at. Johns. Mich.

 

Davleon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

50 DUROC JERSEY PIGS. 10 to 12 weeks old.
weight 35 to 40 lbs, either sex, all registered.
810 each. We are crowded for room send check
with order. Money back if they do not please you.
SOHAFFER BROS" Leonard, MIch., R 1

 

urocs. Hill Crest Farms. Brad and open rows
and 4.gilts Roars and spring pigs. 100 head.
miles straight S. of Middleton, Mich.
Grimtiot4 Co ewton 6: Blank, Perrinton Mich.
wE OFFER A FEW WELL-IRE!) IELEOT.
ed spring Duroc Boosrs, also bred
Gilts in season. Ca 1 to
McNAUGHTON A FDIRDYGI. Ct. LOUIS. Mich.

FOR SALE DUROCS OF QUALITY, SIRED
by Schuller's Orion Wonder. For
particulars call or wn rite
CHAS. F. RICHARDSON. Blanchard. Mich.

OR SALE: ONE DUROC BOAR FRPVI
Brookmter breeding stock Choice spring pigs.
JOHN CRONENWE1’I‘.Caneton. Mich.

O. I. C.

0. I. 0. & CHESTER WHITE SWINE. SPEC-
ial 10 day sale at reduced prices. High backed
smmth Aug. and Sept pigs. Bloodlines of Ad-
vance Type. Schoolmaster and Special. They are
sure to please, write me before you buy. I can
save you money. Clare V. Barman. Snover, Mich.

., I. O.’ s. SERVICE BOARS, SPRING PIGS
at Farmer's price
CLOVER LEAF STOCK FARM. Monroe. Mich.

0. I. O. SWINE—MY HERD CONTAINS THI
blood line! of. the most noted herd. Can furnish
you stock at “live and let live" prices.

J. GORDEN. Dorr Ml.ch. R

HAMPSHIRES
‘ An Opportunity To Buy '
Hampshires Right

We are offering some good sows and elite, bred
for March and April farrowing. Also a ten
choice foil )lgs, either sex, Write or call

I 3 THOMAS. New Lothrop, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PLACE YOUR o
HAMPSHIHES for bred tilts agdoefgungiig.

of the leading blood lines. 9th yrea
JOHN W. SNYDER, R4, St. Johns, Mich.

 

lEVEN SPRING HAMPSHIRE
tilts: best of breeding;
E. DO OOLEY.

BOARS. 18
$25 to $40 eacli.
Selma. Iowa.

 

R SALE HAMPSHIRE FALL PIGS. BOTH
sex and two spring boars, at farmer’s prices
HERBERT BROOKS. Lennon. Mich.

LA FAYETTE sroexv FARM

We have a large
her of HAMPSHIRE
GILTS.

REFORD
CATTLE all gages.
Write us———tell us whaj
you want.

J. GROUGH 81 SO"

LsFayette. Ind.

 

 

o.

Going to, hold an 7". =,-. - ‘
AUCTION SALE 0 _. ‘

farmers within a hundred ‘mu 9?“

a '1-2 to .4“

your advertisement hi1; The Business met. ‘ widen

. [Send Us Complete Description

 

 

Berkshire boars. ontrue to
service. .
JOHN W. WORTHINGTON.

SHRIPSHIRE IIAMDSo FER SALE?!
Three yearling-s sired randsons
Senator Bibby.

owes hrodﬁothls
0, V. TRAOY, lthmo oMIoh.

LITY LAMBS
SHBOPSHIBDES [LEndouYAearling Barns.
“so!“ ~

EEvart.

Howell, Mich.

Y ' AM
SHBOPSH'BES LAMFIES‘AI’RAIIOOEOD- TO SELL
DAN BOOMER. R A. Evert. Mihc.

REGISTERED snnorsnms

lamb in rch or
Ha Mich.

LE
OR SA April.
Fowlervllle.

ewas bred to
ARMSTRONG BR08.. R8.

WILLOW SHADE SHRIPSIIIIIEPSG‘G.

and ram of the best breeding.
reasonable. W 80

. Fowlervnie.

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

A few good yearling ram! and some ram
lambs left to offer. 25 owes all ages for sale
for fall delivery. Everything guaranteed as
represented.

BMich.

'CLARKE U. HAIRE. West Branch. Mich.

 

 

Ranging from one
Micah" R 9.

Breeding and individuality.
to four o.ld
ROBERT J. NOON. Jackson.

FOR SALE

BLACK TOP DELAINE RAMS.
FRANK ROHRABAOHER, Laingsburg,

PET STOCK ..

0R SALE, FLEMIEH GIAN'I RABBITS. DOES,
breeding age. 86 Three months old pair. 55.
Registered does 312 each. Stock pedigreed. Qual<

ty guaranteed.
Goldwater. Mich.

E. HIMEBAUGH.
THOROUGHBRED WHITE COL-
Fon SALE lie puppies. MIG“

CHAS. KEPNER, Carson City.

Mich.

 

I

 

 

 

FORlam SALE, taSIMIETLAND PONY. For particu-
wrl
ROY JACKSON, Caro, Michigan.

U-NEED-A .
Ymcﬁoal. Competent Auctioneer to ‘insure
your next sale being a success.

Employ the one Auctioneer who can ﬁll
the bill yet a price in keeping with prevailing
conditions.

Satisfaction GUARANTEED or NO CHARG—
ES MADE. Terms $50. 00 and actual ex-
penses per sale. The samle price and service
to everyone.

 

I specialize in selling Pclands, Burma, and
(heaters. Let me reserve a 1922 date for you.
Write or wire,
Harry A. Eckhardt. Dallas City. Illinois
CONSOLIDATED

. Pure Bred Live Stock ’
AUCTIONEERS

Wm. WAﬁle. Coldwater, Mich" on the block.

J. 1'. Hoffman. Hudson. Mloh. in the ring.

We make 11'. specialty of selling pure bred big
tyne Poland Chinas,‘ Spotted Poland Chinas and
Dome Jerseys. We are experienced. We sell
'em and we get the‘money. We are expert hog
lodges. We are booking dates right now. for
1922 sales. We would like to sell for you. We
have one price for both of us and it‘s right.
Select your date: don't put it off; write today.
Address either of us.

JOHN P. HUTTOII
LIVE STOCK AIIiiTIOIIEER

ADVANCE DATES SOLICITED.
ADDRESS 113 W. LAPEER 8T.
LANSING, MIOH

IS YOUR FARM FOR SALE?

Write out a plain description and
ﬁgure 10c for each word, initial or
group of figures for three insertions.
There is no cheaper or better way of
selling a‘ farm in Michigan and you
deal direct with the buyer. ‘ No
agents or commissions.
to sell or trade your farm. send in

 

 

 

 

Don’t depend on just the Moéf‘otks.” they are not ;,the best buyers'
, 5.3931

”Marsala. -

Eon SALEM AMERICAN MERINO “drug”
Wm. and ready for

REGISTERED RAMBOUILLET RAM-

If you want.

your ad. today. Don't just talk
about it. Our Business‘ Farmers“
Exchange getsiresults. ‘

Address the Michigan Engines.

Farmer. AdV- Dept“ Mt. Clemens. 7

  
 

sen worth-w e

 

' _d ghtful one. . .

 

ford to sell his grain; hay and other.
forage crops. There is no way to

7 keep up the fertility of the soil that

equals the use of barnyard manure.

The cattle feeder who exercises
good judgment in buying and selling
his cattle, feeds a properly balanced

. ration, regardless of whether he rais-

es all of the ingredients or not, can
trust the old farm to make up. by
increased production, more than the
amount the cattle may lose. No. man
has yet been born who is
enough _to torcast the future in con?

nection with feeding Operatioq i; ,

the best that the feeder can do lite
ascertain as nearly as possible just

the..kind of cattle that sell best in” '

the market and do his level bestlto
buy that kind; then make them as
good as they can be made and abide

'by the outcome.

. Yearlings Lead in Demand

The up—to—date cattle feeder will
not overlook the feet that high grade
yearling steers have the call in the
beef cattle market and will continue
to have it until further'notice. All
through the current year prime
yearling steers have been outselling

- all other grades, commanding a pre—

mium over steers of even quality but
heavier weight of from $2 to $4 per
th. In' the Chicago market on
Wednesday, Nov. 2, a carioad of
choice yearlings sold for $12.50, on
the same day in the same market,‘
another car of cattle equally well-
bred and well—finished but a year
older and 300 pounds heavier in av-
erage weight, brought only $9.50
per cwt. The first prize carioad at
the State Fair fat steer exhibit last
fall were light—weight Here-ford
yearlings but they brought $16 per
cwt. The fourth prize carload in the

same show were Angus two-year-olds -

and they only brought $9.35 per cwt.

They were just as well—bred asythe .

younger cattle and much “riper”
from the standpointof finish but
they weighed 1,3 60 pounds.

Michigan is to be well represent-
ed at the International Fat Steer
Show, next month, by a band' of
yearlings and two-year-olds, bred
and fed by the Michigan Agricultural
College. The wri-‘er has never seen
steers of better q ality than some of
the yearlings included in the M. A. C.
exhibit; whether they win or lose,
the beef cattle interests of the W01—
verine state will be Well represented
at the greatest fat stock show in the
world. ’ ' .

A vlsm‘ TO. THE FAMOUS RAMS.-
DELI. TURKEY FARM .

 

This means that by January or Feb—

'ru‘ary they will weigh around 30
Healthy, strong and vigor.
' Not a --

pounds.
ous, every one of them.
dumpy bird among them. What a.
beautiful sight to see this great
flock on its way from the woods to
their feeding and roosting quarters.

In conversation Miss Ramsdcll
stated in answer to the question,
“Can a flock of turkeys be reared

upon a. farm where turkeys have long ,

been reared and where that dread
disease, black head had visited them
and took a large portion of the flock
each year?” “Yes, I believe that
birds can be reared that can and
will resist disease. " We then asked
“How can you prove that state-

‘ ment?” and she replied, “my present

1:1on is the result of seven years’
sister’ :5 farm

eding upon- my .
[w re turkeys had been reared for

twenty years previous and where
black head visited the flock every
year n .

“Miss Ramsdell, how many young
turkeys have you lost this present
year?" '
She replied

i t

  
 
  
 
 

‘ year.

who

grim first one held by the

  
 
  
 
 

‘ «of one. bun-4 -

_ “We were given to understand that
’ Miss Ramadan is preparing a series
‘of articles for publication in the lepd-
mg farm papers during the coming
Whatever she says can be is:
her! upon. ,
ads that have made it possible to
bring to maturity for 1921, one of
the best, one of the largest flock; of
turkeys in Michigan. ‘ .

/ DEADFALLS
, (Conﬁnued from page 9)

stout stick driven through and mm.-
ly into the ground, a few inches
from end so there will be no danger
of the “fall,” turning and dropping
of its own accord .when no animal is
at bait. Trap is set by placing the
prop, or upright, Which is a stick
about seven inches long and half an
inch through, between the t p log
and the one nnthe ground. 11‘ top
of the" upright is placed the long
trigger, which is only a straight
stick about the size of. the upright
but some 15 inches long the baited
end of which extends back into the
little pen.

Bait may be a piece of rabbit.
chicken or any tough bit of meat
but best results generally come it
fresh, and bloodier the better. The
animal on scouting the bait will
reach into the trap—the top of the
pen having been carefully covered
over—between the logs. As the bait
is being eaten the. long trigger is
pulled off the upright,“ or. prop, and

down'comes the fall generally catch- ’

ing crimes the neck. A rabbit will
make from eight to a dozen baits.

Fish are good bait for mink and also _

used to some extent for coon but if
the wealther is "not’freezing should
be tied ‘on. The head of a.
weighing a pound or so makes a
very good bait. ‘

' To set this trap simply place the
bait trigger or upright, take hold of
the baited end from rear, move bask
and forth, down also as the animal

generally pulls down , when eating - ’ ‘
and you Will find that it gees off 0113- ,

ier than supposed. Be sure to Cover
top of pen after setting. Both ends

of the prop, or upright. can be some-. .

what rounded if desired and under
side of bait or long trigger can be

flattened somewhat on under side -

where the upright rests. Triggers

should be made of hardwood, hick-r:

ory, hard maple, beech, oak, dog
wood, etc. it is not a. bad idea to
make triggers in advance so that
they become seasoned and hardened.
To set this trap raise top or fall
pole up and hold with knee while ad-
justing triggers. Put bait on trig-
ger before setting. .
' Skunk, civet cat, wild cat, coon.
mink, weasel and in fact nearly all
kinds, of land fur bearing animals
are easily caught in deadfalls es-
pecially during the first part of the
trapping season when, as a rule. they
take bait more readily. Red fox and
wolves are‘ exceptions as these ani-
mals are rarely caught in deadfalis.

Marten are now but few in Michigan _

but this trap is a good one for this
animals. /
’ (To be continued)

 

HILLSDALE BREEDERS’ ASS’N
. .AUCTIO
The early part of November

pure-bred hogs and cattle Was held b "

the Hillsdale County Pure-Bred Breeders' :
a. yomig and grewing organ- -
This pale was ‘/

Association,
ization in. that co
Ass’in and was
very successful according to Mr. .F. E.
Haynes, pfésident
were hogs. were acid at the. auction

 

 

VBETTEB unnNEss AT LESS PRICE

Anyone interested in buying a;
will well to gok into the—me oﬁeri s or
the Walsh heme hich has no buck-19!.

tion rin gs be. holes in straps. It
use oir ed that not only does thi ha
cosit less the; buckle 'h I

  

fish .

a. Balls 91"

80 head; ofvwhioh 6,0,31'

   

2

She will deal with meth-

 
 
  
 
 
 

   
   
    

   

       

 

,.
a l

\

IRE HELME-

goenwn. 1 ‘ mama-ism

"[

I.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EL?” HFWQE'

 

r

seminar

 

 

e-r-i ens: sea I

. i

41“!” 5111

 

   

      
  
 
  

         
    


 

 

an. A "031) PER ISSUE—«8 Insertions tor 10s per word. Farris?!” sale
_ .-- 8:011: not nocepted for less the:t 8 titlnesé Swintﬁdw'ords ls thewmnhnrdm
' ,. ‘ ‘ noes for any ad. in this ‘depa men a s on accompany c on
V“ “F a f '“m WHITE “W““oﬁﬁ PULL-5T8. " Court as one Word ouch initial and each 8‘an of figures, both In body of ad.
MR8 g5,” §°hﬁu§iﬂhe tﬁgﬁn‘ N 1- Mich and In address. Copy must be in our hands before Saturday for issue 116th

Q, ' ' o" ' ' following week. The nBusiness Farmer Adv. Dept" Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

~RH0D_E ISLAND REDS ' 1 ' . _' 7 , . . ,, - —

- . " , . FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SMALL PLAGI
ulth building suitable for gardening and poultry
raising. 90 acres, 60 cleared. “’rite BOX 153,
R3 Lake City, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

ITTAKER13 R. I. was. Michigan’s .great
651‘. color and eg strain. Both combs. Write

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

., it“ free catalog an or new proposition in to Y $2800 WITH 2
a ' ‘ nrdeto' ood breeding cockerels 100- ACRE FARM. ONI-
11 ~ , a _ _ POULTRY I . . "'11an KEG FARM Box 4, Lowrance. Mich. horses, tools,10 cows and heifers, poultry. hay. CHOICE 148 ACRE “‘RM1F'NE BUILD- w’
i . Winter’s fodder, potatoes, vegetables. wood ve- iriagli’l F¥iﬁtiom good soil, priced right ERNEST

 

 

hlcles. full implements included, fertile dairy Vernmntville, Mich.

1*» W 011’ “MKS v I922. Mt: 3;.tflenfz"&l°loglz’.ﬁ:'35? onestems..s°t1§t.:l°zzop‘él. tissue Eng. ISCE LL AN ECU; ﬂ '

 

‘ 1‘ , Hydu are 1121; b11516“m unless the coming sesson, .Mm not quickly if wan d 1 -
i “as us RE' III! 5,, oow sprlng watered pasture; lots wood, 100,000
“mag; 0‘. our PU ‘ m. 'FRQHM' N Baltlmors. R1,Mlch. ft. timber, fruit, 1000 sugar maples, pleasant

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

i1 1 3.5311081! PM trillion“ POU 2' d th 3 .. 8 room house, basement barn, eta; owner alone MACHINE“
. norms-vi dunes. Becks, Reds. on 0 er _ l 1
.1 heavy: breeds. utility of 01.1.31. and sore arrival ORPINGTONS - sacriﬁces all $2300, part cash, easy terms. De- .__._.__.._ W
1 talls‘page 26 Gaining 1100 Bargains. FREE. NEVER KLOG sAw DUST BLOVVER. Guar-
‘4 It ll mull-ls new to look 1111' your Chicks f0? STROUT‘FARM AGENCY- 814 B E FordBldm, anteed ﬁve years. Ce sh or easy terms. Writs
i 1.3.; “season: the Chick business is going to be ». ORPINGTONS AND LEGHORNS ‘Detroit. Michigan for 1circlélélr.KH}U.L—(lUR’§}Sh00.. 1507 No.
. » ’ P't, .r ., sanmzoo, lc.

“DESK 2 31151-5 FARMS ASSOCIATION Two great breeds for preﬁt.W1-lto today for 68 ACRE FARM FOR SALE mos'er ALL ”ﬁle
it“: K‘jmuoot Mlchlg‘n (115 c‘uloti-ue 0f bNtCX'ing '33.: bib, CthBl I'd cleared. I‘illl' frame 1001158, new born built Inst BUZZ-SAW FRAMES, BLADES, MANDRELS
\- breeding stock. year, 32"“6‘ frame granary 14’20 300d well pullies, beltinz, etc., of every description at old

OVCLE HATGHER COMPANY. 149 PM"! B|d|. 280 feet deep; well drained, good ditches and time prices thato co;respond wth farm products.

PURE BREE GEEKEBEI-S FOR SALE v "‘“"" “i' ' :3t...‘;‘“°..‘§.d‘°:il‘u.él2$‘ 53.32.5111; You'll we 1» sendggcwggge, @551-

mm "WW1 GEO. J. .WETTCSHURACK

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

White Leaho'r'ns, S. C. Brown Leghorns, -
_ OOOKEREL: AND PuLLET. Bay county, Garﬁeld townshm, Sectlon six.
Ii gﬁabcﬁpﬂpﬁ’ at 31'50' ‘8' C. White and OBPWGTON for .313 But! White, With horses,. cattle and implements if wanted. .

., . mngtons, Houdlns, White, oFsce 7 Black 1; -- - .1“me “mm R 1 Rhodes Mich FOR SALE. 6 H. P. FAIRBANKS MORSE
' f— Spanish, Partridgg Wya'ndoﬁeg $213st ., Black Coc srels at $7. $8,1nd 8,10.Pullsts s. 1' ' ‘11 1 ' ' _, ‘ gasoline engine in A1 condition. Price $80.00 if
F I 1‘ ‘ ”MA PL wooo ”“1"" Plum glitcllrinz $652.38 limo yfaligtxil‘n ﬁll“. 12.3 wd 34' WILL BUY 10 ACREs CENTRAL MIOH. take“. at °“°°- HOWARD JOHNSON: Shepherd.

i ”Wm”.- 853?)“ .3 11 “Emma” ”w" ORAsow'sKE onos.. R 4. Morn-III. Mich. 3 (if d6 ”rim £1;ng anhﬁalrln «31 terms 1m Will Micm‘m'
‘ ea irec c usiness rmer,
. WANTED PULLETS 1 ‘, Mt. Clemens Mich TOBACCO
‘. ' 1», , ANCONAs 1 1
k for full gigod ng’ln’lgotlﬁs Rhoda 1151511?) Red, ~ FOR SALE 80 ACRE FARM. GOOD E0]?chclo'ndeAi1-1:J?AL1I LEAF. kuEiET 5A3,”
‘ Md 8 De I will pay 4 cents . b 1,“ d n orchard woodlot 60 acres 8 o , 111 - c e( clewmg'or smo 11g. . s.
i n». shipping coop wl‘th wctsr' can rented to . 43000 EARLY APRIL HATGHED egregémgmmggum write; owner RAY BAR_ $1.50; 10 lbs $2.50. Smoking, 20 lbs. $4.90.
Shippers with feeding, and shipping instructions. ‘ BER Evart Mich We furnish free receipt for preparing. Quality
‘ '1 Comma“, reference t a same for 14 yea“, FULLY MATURED ‘ANCONAs. A and‘delivery guaranteed. FARMERS’ TOBACCO
i when River National Bank Athol, Mass ' BUGKEYE AncouA FARM , . z N or: My CHOIOE l<l.X(HANGE, Sedalia, Ky.
1‘ Joseph A. Blron, South Royalston, Mass. NEW LOND N, FOR SALE—I OFFER 0 E i 1 to
>1 0 °"'°- farms in the Greeley. 0010- dis“ 0‘» 009° TOBACCO 1919 NATURAL LEAF SELECT

Heavy layers and show birds, none better, Rea- Greeley, with her unexoelléd schools This is an ,h “711121 3 1 . . . B _
WANTED To. BUYSPFGKLED HAMBURG sortable prices And quality stock is our motto {irrigated farm suitable for intensive farming 1?“; and. pheyﬁl‘gﬁ‘ﬁmfﬁgiggg fei'umresgmgigg:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
  

 

 

, COCKEREL Ca
\ , n furnish winners for any show. Ask for our (1 c t ﬁnest alwlity of onions. 1* - -
.i” 1 jMRS. E.‘ A. BROWN, Edmors. _Mi_oh late winnings at Columbus, 0., Louisville, K). .,- Egnglliabﬁog: email]? beans, potatoes. hay and ﬁﬁ's $1f§)3h11§?;§;%31€§onnrfggmntﬁefl' PRODUC‘
i ' Cleveland 0'1 Pittsuburg. P31 Hagerstown and all small grains. Here is a chance to locate in ’ y, 5'
MUD WAY AUSH- KA FAB” -1 $ﬁ§°’%2§g 33,53,553?” 15,3:- Ckl‘i‘ég, i111 1332‘; the moshhealthé‘illll “a: “f‘ggﬂﬁgdd‘gm‘l‘l i? “I; HOMESPUN TOBACCO COLLECT ON DE-
' world rm su 1v1e s11 . . 5 1.9
. Oﬂ'ﬂi young stop}, and a f", mature breeders In Chiicks in season. 100, 000 Incubator capacity. will rive terms to practical Farmer. For fur- F601;?) 3P%BIX’88(IOS 3(2)\;3AN"3? gang?“ “$22:
3 White Chinese- Geese. White 'Runnsr Ducks and Wrte “3 and get the best. that pariculars write me N0 trades will be tucky. ’ '
" Watt: .“fzm‘lﬁm “5%, 21...}... c ”“3? 3“" « considered 111. L. BOYE, Bx 312, Greeley,
, :1 nv 0 prices 0 you use ~1 LANGSHAN Colo. '
HIKE MILLER Dryden. Mich. _ . TOBACCO: KENTUCKY’S PRIDE, MILD AND
. ‘ . *— mellow. Pest chlwing or smoking 10 111.33.00;
‘ DR. IMP O ' ' TV 66-AORE FARM; $5,600 BUILDINGS WITH 20 ll. 5” 00 Fill“ Ti. 1
(ii? houmi‘lryal CoengELHINoRCAs. Brads for stylzssnﬁiagoalfrnsﬁm: 351§UA1Lvllnm horses. mglltry. cinws. 5°ng Earnessk ample??? ’ ’ F q (1.11: ‘Iayﬂeld' K’
011 ns Rds, rpingtons, Spanish. ' 1 . ' ‘ vehicles t rown n; exec .11 mar es: 0 - ,
TYROIIE POULTRY FARM. Femon, Mich.agggcdgileir-leo‘forbpgse,8131;53:23 3.33:: H‘" proved road, close busy RR town; all fertile, Sm-lr-lgigfclgll)’lbﬁElgi|ngle§nrlNAqggc§eﬁL 1:51"
_ HAS. W. SIMPSON y‘ loamy tillage, wir- efenced pasturnge; 86 ll‘pplt:i 3 lhs. 31.1)” ﬁrm: Adam (for prteparingf SVAYII:
(3..“ GH'N'EBE GEESE. PE‘KIN DUCKS. R. 0. .- Wehbervllio. Mibh. 11)?)111‘, 111111;, \1gllerrgpefkggai‘ngtreelikeg‘mpgi: 1:21:11 DWO" '11‘“q‘1713‘¥3§ “ﬁrm“ KY.
‘room 0 e , bsta
N 3 runs , tool shed and poultry house.
wine. Chums arr-rs. Hillsda e, ,r‘wucn. ‘ TURKEYS -. gym fmblgyo‘pmte mum... $1; $15,600 pm . COMMISSION HOUSES
” ‘ a msh. easy terms. If you seek ppness. pros-
! PLYMOUTH ROCK . _ PURE aREo BOURBON REo TURKEYS. pteﬁiy 1131mm. illow $11103 free FRED w. c THE “7'36 \gElig‘ABdLIEh E:osEPR DUSEK
—.. . ._ ' Toms» $9 00 Thus 3101 AMT; esea. (1 ompany, L . '1n op .t., Chicago. Farm
. . . MRS. ALFRED MEEK Boolmont Mich. and dairy producty \Vrite, wire, or phone.
’ B H F F ﬂ 0 c K s A ’ 80 ACRES, 3V2 MILES FROM KALKASKA
{ 1 Quality Bred—By us for 30 ears ounaou RED dun-r BRONZE AND on a, state gravel road. nearly level, (kirk sandy 81:"? YOUR POULTRY, VEAL. Eoes, ETc.
Jthdreds 10‘ big husk ifels Narragansett turkeys Also Brown, White and loom top soil with clay eub- soil, hard wood to L. Quinlan, 9 Fulton Market, Chlcugo. Cor-
, 1 and ‘Dullets ,solid wglofoc gram Buff S O. ”Leghorns 11.1. Reds, White Wyun- land, two orchards, one old and one just begin- rect weights, ‘prompt returns and highest prices
61 1 .‘ I'Hogsn" tesgted' hes laye dott‘es and Barred Rocks Write for prices. min-g to bear 12 acres of beech and maple wood guaranteed. Lstabllshed 1878. erte for tags
- sIo TYPE» BRONZE TURKEVs 0“” Law" PM"? "W“ D‘"“"1°1v""°"' “1 ﬁmber'm‘iﬁod {Sniésl'mbﬂsi‘arglggilg onlgmsrgifcxg and qmmmm; medem 000mm moms'
' X .‘ . ' housie 2'00 e 1- <
‘f' ﬁ‘vﬂﬁnaﬂh‘éﬁ 333.3%“; 01333.23 :35- CIANT BRONZE TURKEYS. CHAMPION Norm 0f the diam“ from Where I 1W- HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR LIVE AND
‘ Am‘erlca» proton their Quality strain. Lame tllomuzhbred birds, copper brorm‘ “llllfllzlgs $111 $3036 ?ﬁ%°;ddf°‘ 553383-0512; dressed illoultry], wild (rabbits, hielitll' (1111,18, etc. A
I n M TT 1 mvdine D 0W” square (eel aways. I. 1‘. o EILL & 00.,
”we "mam“ amuEM’ “"y "“mb r wlor‘ MRS 3‘ S A s, R Em Jord‘m’ MiCh‘ mnrtcacc or soon. Write owner. W. F UMPH- 325 w. So. Water St, Chicelm, Illinois.

 

 

w..."

J. C. (3pr & Sons, BxM, Saltillo,Ind. REY Emrt 'Michisan.

1 GIANT BRONZE TURKEYS i ‘ ' ' MORE MONEV FOR YOUR HOLIDAY LIVE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘-’- ‘ IIIRs. stove VANWIL, Woodland. Mich. . -. , .-V ’80.. wob- 3.1113121131151315 eggmsfmg‘tm Eﬂﬁntp‘tﬁﬁﬁ 4128313 years a . a. 111-
auras» «congmgmm 1"... ”Angelo-11.1.1.3. 1.5.1::s:3~.r....11lel1:t...lt:; 352° mmt.§§?bttolt‘l%:m.:“§§£uin Willi Moscow
”‘1 ‘5 d"°i' 11““ m ﬁkw‘r‘: 19°11 - 01: hmaiﬁvplim ammo-1...... Ionla- Illoh- -, f 1133531133533 $351135 "whlr‘irmminmn. 1th "r”."in'lﬁ'n‘ﬁF 7333.53.51.53: 13332.31?
“an!“ m“ 09‘0me F333? 3133;, ‘ ‘ _ .. . V _ t . 3:131:31 Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clank

 

weal? 1110.111 Park” N meéd‘ p 38 -’ '1 I - A I R GOVERNMENT CLERKs NEEDED—(MEN-
" ' KDRBL r - 1 ' ‘ ‘ ‘ women); $1400-$2000; permanent; 3w to
0““ 1. E . ' ' 1. 1 . ' travel: expense allowance. Write Mr. zment.

I .,R ”‘ Lind“, Egg—LE ~. . " i' 1 Former U. S. Government Examiner, 355 St.

Louis. Mo. IIe ‘givee reliable information.

 

 

 

LEGHORNS ' .- 1' .

sINkGLE 00MB BLUFF LEGHORN 0°0KER~
11. April. sud May botched. H'esvy' layin;.-
'l"_"l._ .1. ‘w wEssTER Bath. lunch,

I. C. 'BﬂOigN: LEGHORN COOKERELB, KUL'P

£011 one bird. $2. 00 each for 2'
or “more W? E.L,OUMHINOB. Coleman, Mloh. ‘

wH rs ~ ’
LEGHOBNS .1... ' romLﬂfusllsﬁoci‘fgo

FILMS DEVELOPED FIVE CENTS. PRINTS
regular sizes. three cents each. GUMSER ART
STORE. Holand, Mich.

TYPEWRITERS: -—ALL MAKES SLIGHTLY
used, $20 up Easy payments. ml.
Guaranteed two years. PAYNE COMPANY,
Rosedsle station, Kansas ~City, Kansas.

 

 

   
  
   
  
  

KODAK 'FILMS DEVE’LOPED AND SIX
prints, 25c. MODERN PHOTO \VORKS, Box
M B. F., Le. Crosse,. Wis.

 

 

 

“White. speckled or spangled whatever the breed,

 

   

     
   
 

 

 
 

. JOHN W. MORGAN, V310, Mlch. .; . . If you Ive got the l'l‘ht “dope” on care. culling and feed. or KODAK FINISHINbl- NOT b] THE (D’AHEAP
. ‘ ‘ It you want‘ to make big money in poultry read the Modern Poultry Breeder, way, but the nest. at a rensrmn e price. 8 us
FOR SALE 3%ﬁwkco'ﬂa min” gﬁbmgo?n " Michigan’ 3 one great poultry journal, a. gold mine of poultry information. It s trial order and proggtto £131ng 21;? figriswgg:
1‘ 1'1”!“ N.“ on”: $3 laugh? tells you how to build your poultry houses, how to mate and exhibit your birds; only what 51:11; my ﬁlm; hm3y been and ﬁlm”
.- ' ‘ y ' ‘ how to doctor your sick chickens and how to keep them well. on tells you how 3:3} {32? "the very best pn'nts from every new.
-to cull your flock and to pick out the best layers and how to feed for lots of ﬁve. MOEN FHOTO SFRVICE Quality Ko_

eggs the year around. It tells you all the Michigan poultry news and is the dak Finishing, Box M B F” La Crease, Wis , ‘ ;

 

official organ of ‘the Michigan stnCh’ of the American Poultry Association.
‘01 l articl to fit the needs of the season. NTED: MIDDLEAGED LADY To KEEP
E30}! 17101131 we have 9- ape 3- 9 hlou‘lzleA for widower, no children. Have good home

. c. FORMAN, THE GREAT CHICKEN WIZARD AND POULTRY EXTEN- C M, 1.. Write BOX N. Michigan Bub
E SION srporA'LI-s'r A111 MICHIGAN‘AGBIOULTURAL COLLEGE- TELLS - 5‘3; Fiﬁ,“ “ML Clemens, Mich. , ‘

U“ as ON SEED MEAL. WE MAKE SHIP- 1.
no To GET E s I“ FALL Ann WINfEn meﬁgT-tliirect from mills to feeders and dealers.

Write or wire for delivered prices and railroad

        
      

 

        
   
     
 

. r one of the Modern Poultry Breedel‘f This 18 the big ques- station oar his only LYLE & LYLE Hunt"
{1,1035% ovembd ls EGGS WHEN 53.10131: AREthm f GHin Khan is morelmon- "'1‘“- 1““
than an t g1 e e on 9. ar you can on y 3st,.
3,; r322. Willem M03111??? sPoultry Biecder tells y°u h°w our, writers are a" - 9113.3: '35 ﬁﬁ?2&£%mﬁfﬂ1§rlﬂma§g:ﬂ :11"
8113309852111 procuesl poultrymen, who have made a success w th chickens and strawberry marker practical idea], on
. know how to t each others the same thmg.t001_ ORCHARD LODGE NURSERY.Gs1ss~

 

 
 

burn, Hickman-

MAKE ' $100.00 Cash BONUS 1 14 INCH WASHABLEmtongcKINET use

doll. cotton—stated, oil-pa sutures mornbls
limbs. will sit alone; 506. Three, $1. 35. Same
.. ‘1 to our Subscription Agents be' dressed. :1. 00 each: three $2.75. All prepaid.
‘ . ' sides highest commie“ pug. NOVELTY RAG DOLL 00.. Petersburs. Mich.

‘RIT - - ULL BARREL LOTS DISHES. SLIGHTLY ,7 ,1
W E ‘ Gained ,orockery. shipped any sddrsss

   

 

   

 

   

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

    
 
  

 

, . ggt (11111- great b . m; .
extrg. no es or new on - ' -' y

your. subscription without .- Writs uti.~E. SWASE! s 00., Contact

our November issue alone; 1PM-

I ' Hines TANNEOORLEATRER Eon Rsc‘
' 111m Int

~ psi'work'sold . , A , us-
‘ send ....ssmnlgs;, com W '09.. , .

 
  
  
 
 

   
   
 

 

 

 

  


      

 
  
   
   
   
 
  
  
   
    
   
  
   
   
   
 
    
   
   
   
   
     
    
    
     
 
   
  
    
   
   
   
    
   
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
     
 
     
 
  
    
     
 
  
 
     
   
   
  
   
 
  
    
     
    
  
  
 

  

  

    

  
 
  
  

. ~begotten by the anticipation of
‘ hard Winter and the prospect of a

‘ fact,

. at 4 1-2 per cent.-
.. clearings were $5,651,656,000.

, ing the past week the ,French

troif. _market. _

TRADE AND MARKET REVIEW
WING, probably, to the inter-
vention of the Thanksgiving

p ' holiday, the business develop-
ments in the country at large have

been withOut important feature. A‘

survey of the business situation re-
veals a slowing down along. whole-
sale lines and a tapering off , in \the
general jobbing business of the
country. More activity than here-
tofore is reported in retail lines but,
at that, the volume of trade does
not equal that of other recent‘years.
The falling ed in retail demand is
accounted for by the conservatism
a

period of unemployment following
the holiday season; this latter con-
tingency is largely. imaginary for
the records of the United States De-
partment of Labor shows nearly half
a million more men employed in.0c-
tober this year, than during the pre-
vious August.

A great deal has been said before
and after, about the timidity and
tender-footedness of the average
farmer in the face of serious busi-
ness reverses; investigation shows,
however, that the\ American farmer
is really standing the test just as
well as men in other lines. The most
natural explanation for the eleventh
hour fortitude of the farmer is the:
that with the signing of the
armistice his hopes of high prices
faded and he, decided to make the
best of a bad situation.

The metal situation as it relates
to pig iron and steel‘is gradually
growing stronger because of a steady
increase in orders for both of these
products. The huge pile of clipper
ore on hand at the close of the war
is beginning to dwindle, a very en-
couraging feature,
is in the higher levels of manufact-
uring that copper is used in large
quantities. \Vool is showing more
and more strength as time goes on
but cotton is tending toward lower
price levels. "A fain demand exists
for hides. but at prices so ridiculous-
ly low that butchers make very lit-
tle on account of the daily “take-
off." A survey of the footwear trade
shows a marked reduction in retail
prices, during the last 60 days.

The financial situation is showing
a regular monthly improvement in
connection with interest rates and
the availability of funds with which
to carry on their regular processes
of trade. While there is no accumu-
lation of funds for investmentpur-
poses the demand for dividend-pay-
ing securities has been more active
of late than hitherto,_the movement
being confined largely to the manu-
facturing group and the railwayelist.

,Call money has ,been available for

the most part, during the 'past week,

The foreign exchange situation
presents a peculiarly mixed appear-
ance with sterling above $4 andthe
Belgian and German circulating 111e-
‘diums on, just about the most 11n-
popular footing they have yet occu-
pied.' In England financial condi-
tions are said to be improving rap-

» idly and with the passing of time

the French government is regaining
its former financial prestige. , Dur-
gov.-
ernment has repaid to the Bank of

_ ‘ France another 100,000,000 francs
of its lean. ‘

WHEAT . ‘ ‘
Wheat is back to $1.29 on the De-
The tone as we go to

 

WHEAT PRICES PER -a,u.,'u,ov. 29. 13,21

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grade _ Iowou‘rchmsgu 13.1:

._ no." 2 Rod: . 1.29 11.23 1.26%
110.23,th 1,23 \, .1 _ .
Io. mixed 1;..1 1:23 1.13%.?

. paler-:3 on: YEAR A130 .1 p
. ~ 211322 aw no.2 wmm No.2 11mm -,
“ 1;",1-03 I 51.91 ‘1'? 1- 9'1“ 3.

13113..

 

 

There are many

5311111311 factors in the situation. The 1
- .is the poor condition - ,

inasmuch, as it .

The week’s bank

j . waves, heavy rams or sans

  

Edited "by n. 11.

Wheat suifered a slight setback.

demand for milch cows.

 

Market Summary .
The week opened with all grains strong, but on Tuesday

dition. Beans ﬁrm and potatoes easy. Early Improvemen
dicted in both these markets. Better feeling 1n cattle, and better
Good demand for butter, eggs and poul-
try with higher prices in prospect.

max ‘

seriOu 001%

pre-

Kansas wheat crop'

Other produce steady.

 

 

 

the worst in years, the condition be?

ing reported only slightly ever 50
per cent, as compared with a. ten-
year average of 87 per cent. Both
the Australian and Argentinian ex-
portable surplus have suffered a re-
duction since a week ago. and a good
deal of the Australian crop is being
taken by Japan to make up her short-
age of food occasioned by the partial
failure of her rice crop. In addition,
there haVe been some downward re-
visions made in the size of the Arm
erican crop. These factors have en-
couraged more or less active buying
the past week which have given a
good deal of temporary strength to
the market. On the other side of
the deal is the comparatively low
domestic demand, therebeing very
little inquiry from the mills and the
Canadian imports. These
however, show some sign of falling
off. All in all there is a good deal
of encouragement in the present
wheat situation. Statistically it is
very strong, but the market is yet
quite too sensitive to the financial
factors to permit of any worth—while
conclusions. As a reaction from the
steady advance in prices the past
week we may expect a weaker one'
before the close of the current week,
with some. unimportant declines in
the market However, we do not ex—
pect to see as much liquidation take
place aslhas been the case in the
preceding months following substan-
tial gains in the market, and His
not likely that the market will re—
turn to- its previous low levels.

 

CORN
Corn prices went slightly higher
last week and the tone of the market
was st1ong most of the time. Ex-

. port business was good and receipts

moderate up to the clbsing day of

latter, _

the week at which time they became
liberal and the market Was some-
what easier; however, prices did not

 

 

 

 

change. Shipments from Chicago
coma Pmoss (now) ou.. NOV. 23. 1921
am. Douro". Ichiooool u. v.—
uo. 2 Vouc- .. . .30 .
No. 8 Vulgar- . . . .54 "“%
No. 4 Vonaw .32

 

 

 

 

PRlcEs on: YEIR,AGO
1m.- 2 mum. 3 YolllNo. 4 Yell
.31 I .33 I 31

 

 

Detroit l

 

 

aggregated 1,000,000 bushels and it .

was said that if lake boats had been
more plentiful considerable more
.business would have been done. Re-
ceipts at that point amounted to 1,-
287,000 bushels. During the week
ending November 19th, 704,000
. bushels of corn left the United States
for foreign lands and the week pre-
vious 454,000 bushels were shipped.
For the week ending Nov. 19th5 in
1920 exporters took 702, 000 bush-
els, or only 2, 000 bushels less than
shipped this year in the same per-
iod. This fact alone would lead one
to believe export business has not
. been any better than it was last year
but when the figures are compiled
for the period from July 1 to Nov.
19th of this year they show that 10, —
214, 000 bushels Were exported. com—
pared with 2,552,000 bushels last
year. On the opening day of the
current week corn was quiet and
firm. ‘ ‘1

OATS

Oats continue to Show improve-‘

ment and are back to 40 cents on
the Detroit market Both oats and
corn have been benefitted from the

nation— wide conviction that prices ,,
issue

published elsewhere in this

 

are too low for the geod of the coun- .

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

publicity should
_ upon the cat market.

RYE

There was a. firm tone to the rye
market every day of last week and
as a result prices advanced some. No.
2 is 86c on the Detroit market and
85 1- 2c at Chicago Exports ,of rye
for the week ending Nov. 19 amount-
ed to 146, 000 bushels. This was
nearly four times the. total'of the
shipments of the previous week but

-less than 1—4 of the amount for the -

, same week one'year ago. The‘total
amount shipped from July 1 to Nov.
19 this year was only about 1- 5 of
that exported during theisame per-
iod in 1920. The explanation for
this is that wheat prices have been
.so low that foreigners have bought
wheat for bread insteadvof rye.

BARLEY

The barley market has an easier,
tone than a week ago but. prices.

' remain unchanged. At Detroit feed:-
ing is $1. 10@1. 30 per cwt., While
on the Chicago market it is 51@.55c
per bushel. There has been consid-
erable more barley exported than the
majority of the people knew. Reli-
able figures show that over 15, 000, -
000 bushels have been shipped from
this country since July 1.
the past few weeks export business
has been on the decline in this grain
and the market has weakened.

‘ _..__.___
BEANS

The slack in the » bean

 

BEAN PRICES PER GWT.,NOV. 29,-1921
Grade 'Detrolt I Chicago I N.‘ . Y.

EEO—TEE?“
l 1.87

 

.- . . 5305*,
Rod Kldnoys

 

 

PRICES one .van Ace .
. Jo. H. P.‘
................ .- . . . . -I

 

 

Detroit

 

 

 

 

Folior’o Weather Clint for ‘92} C/
‘3 1 a 3 7 I '- '. '

 

 

' 17.1.1.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

:—

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘ I“ l ’ " 1‘ I)“ .. 3
....1 I , , , . .

" U l l‘ |

l l ‘ '
Above chart is to meridian 9t aline extending norh ,
and loud: from St. uis.. Weather chm move from .
extreme northwest to that line in about. day. andfrom
that line toAtlmtic coast in 3bout 2 days. Straight
line avers f. temperatures; crooked line above warmer,
below coo or; heavy line severe storms and most. pro-
cipitstion.

«1 unzl l.\(.xTO\' D. 0., Dec. 1,
’1921. The week centering on Dec _8
is expected to average colder than us—
ual in Michigan. A cold wave will
reach here near Dec 5 and Several
days of cold weather is expected to

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

first severe storms of December. Near

will reach Michigan. Two or three
days of ' severe storms Will fol-,
low and as the temperature rises

[rains are expected, followed by snoWs
in northern sections. These weather

the week centering on Dec 13 in Mich-n

"3,. igan. ’ About two days earlier they

will be in Alaska and western Can-
a‘;da two days later than the Michigan .
dates they will be in latitude of Ohio
and Ontario and three days
they will cover the eastern coasts of
the continent. There are no accidents
in weather events; they are all strictly
controlled by
and practically perfect forecasts may
e madevwhen We better understand
he3e laws. I am progressing iu flrfd- -

' ing- their methods. ~, . ,>
Severe storms. : cold ‘waves .hot"
0 not

progress with the up and down tam;
perature movements. Severe storms
and heavy rains or snows sometimé's
ceme- before the high temperatures,

 

 

 

 

  
 

 

THE WEATHER EOR NEXT WEEK ,
As Forecasted‘ by W. T. Foster for The Michigan Business Farmer - "

follow. T is cold wave will follow the .

Dec. 13 axgreat high temperature wave -

events will control the weather for '~
* I again advise that the most im-

13‘th ‘ will occur in the northern ‘hemisphere

positive natural ‘ laws .

5 (events. {region

sometimes with thiem and sometimes

I.

/.,

after them ' The severe storms cover-
ed by the period or this bulletin were
calculated to occur as the tempera—
tures are going down in Michigan
| Dec 2 to 5, as they are going Up Dec
10 to .13. As I have it, there are Seven
principal weather features and, to
forecast them, each feature must. be .
calculated by a 'different system. 10r-
thodor: weather forecasters; who are
supposed to 'know everything about
weather worth knoWing believe that k
a. system that will forecast temper—
atures will foreCast each of the other
features. In that matter they clear“
reveal their profound ignorance of the
cauSes of the Weather changes. , I,
pbsitively know that a system that '
makes fairly good temperature fore—
gasts will not make equally good rain-
all forecasts. . ,
Weather features. as I have them,
are: l—Frosts. 2—The 27- day period
of temperature curves. 3——‘Inversi‘on~
of the temperature and magnetic curvy
es 'and the hot wave'a d coldx wave .
”results 4—Severe sto'r s most pre—
eipitation and resulting cold waves
and hot waves. 5-Tornadoes, cloud
.bursts, thunder—storms, hail. 6——The
6 1— 2 month temperatyrg and precipi— _
tation period 7——-Hurri fies and the ~
floods, deep snows and co od waves re.
sulting from them.

portant crop- -weather and drops with-
in a 100 years prlOr to middle of 1923

during 1922, and in the southern hem-
‘lsphere during our fall and winter "
of 1922 23. These advices are based .
on well known facts and I cannot be r ' .
mistaken about them. I warn every-
body ‘:'~to prepare for unusual, continu- .-
.bus’cropweather and wot-op prodw
men wand
11110111 '

 

 
   

   

 

MDOX‘W"
12,238. .

 

,

. up and the'itendency

a'gofspems to have been largely taken
is somewhat
stronger. We"’look_ for a. rather
quiet market proceeding and during

try. The announcement b2 Goodwin...
which has been given more Or lea

reflect favorably V

During '

market»
which showed itself about ten 'days.‘

4.23.,“

       
       
   
    
 
 

on PRICED on 311., now. 20. 1321
tirade ' m 01110190! I. V.
x 9. 2 won .40- .30 ..45
No. .3 1mm; .3.1 1:34
No. 4 1mm. .33, ,
21110153 .0111: YEAR And . 4,-
mo. 2 wnnaI No.8 11mm No.3 wmu '
- nmnl 341/. I _.3aﬂ1.30_i

" ‘. 1*

the holidays with prices steady to

higher. - " .. .

POTATOES

"» The potato market was easy all

9.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

last week, due principally to, ,the
SPUDS. PER CWT” NOV. 29, 1821

\i Sacked l_ Bulk
Detrolt P 1216
Chicago ................ 1.50 , 1.10
New York . . . . .- ....... 1.84
Pittsburg ............. 2.00
, PROOES ONE IVERR AGO- '
Detroit . F ........... . '. .l 2. 50 .l

 

 

Thanksgiving; holiday and a slight- W

increase in the Increment over the,

"‘ previous week Tetal shipments up

i,

,

to‘ the middle of. “November were

over 100, 000 cars as compared with .‘

84, (TOO cars for the same period a
year ago. “The trade looks for a
better potato market this week,- with
prices looking up. Maine farmers.
are shewing no disposition to mar;
ket the balance of their crop at
prevailing prices.
deal of the crop has gone to market
and the farmers Will speculate on;
the balance in the belief that price3

' will be much higher. » Despite the 1::

_e,asy tone of this market'afor the past

     
         
  

Already a good a,

    
        
           
     
        
  
          

      
 
 
     

 

     

 
         
     

              
    

 

  
  
  


   
   

    
 

s
1

HP '1‘ r H-‘ 5-0 "a m 1;“ ”,7

Fran-mp 1,701 o one-31

 
  
  
     
     
 
  
  
 
  
 
   
  

  
 
    
 
  
  
 

    
 
 
  

   
   
  
   
  

  
  
   
 

 

 
 
     
  

  
 

 
  

 
 
  

 

” orable conditions have

of the season.

and lamb arrivals in all

5 will advance.

- min deem

 

  

so.

"is, lmellix. I] Glover
, 0‘ 19 wa1e1c.oo@1
.83: , 0.0002218.00@2
on. horizons.” --

. 0061920450019
'uvfsicssnvssn loo 3- .

' No. 1 11mm. 'rInIIoa-run

‘ .120. esolzmoo 22121. noon
140.1 . ~'

No.1- ] ~,l9.1‘ 1|
lug» Musicians Ira. Glover,
..[2aoo @20121. 0042 28120 00021

' I

 

 

 

 

 

.Detrolt’

 

, market will no doubt become more

active.

 

. , LIVE STOOK MARKETS
Unsea‘sonable Weather and unfav-
had a de-
ing effect upon the cattle mar-
ets of the country during the past
week; the holiday demand for poul-
try' at the expense of beef and other
fresh meats was another diacourag-
ing influence in connection with the
trade in live cattle In Chicago-
steers sold during the week on one

.0! the most uneven markets of the

entire year so far; a few of the best
oﬂerings in well—matured yearlings
brought prices on a par with the best
All heavy steers and
short- fed bullocks were 25 to 40
cents lower than the week before. A
few loads of top Angus yearlings, av-
eraging 1, 050 pounds, sold for $12

' per cwt.; the best price paid fore ma-

ture cattle was 310 per cwt. Butch-v
m cattle, canners, bulls and veal
calves, steady to strong with the
wok before. Medium to heavy stock-
ers and feeders dull but about
steady; extra quality light weight
stockers scarce and firme

A marked falling off in e sheep

‘rkets
during the past week has had a ton-
in effect on the market and prices
are quoted higher all along the line.
A few 'nativeflambs of fine quality
hve'beat the Iii-dollar mark of late
and bid fair to do considerable bet-
ter in the near future. unless arriv-
als beenme much more ample to the

, needs of the situation. The top for
the week on yearling wethers was

37.30. Mature sheep very scarce.

Sham lambs of high quality, 39; ex- .

the. heavy, 38. 50; Washington rang-
era, 39. 50; Montana rangers, 39. 25;

iiambs scarce, and firm with

A steady
desirable

the best selling for 38. 50.
prices paid for

in
wing lambs is predicted by those _

best acquainted with market supply
and demand in’ this division of trade.
A marked ﬁlling of! in the live

1 has movement during the t week
‘laslentﬂdmesstotheﬁe and

caused a gain in prices from the

close of the week before, of 25 cents .

cwt. in the Chicago market.

tern markets were strong and "
. active toward the close of the week,
. reflecting the general clean-up
' supplies of fresh pork the country

in

over which has resulted from a fall-

‘ing of! in receipts of live hogs.

Shippers are active'in all western
markets, taking a wider range of
weights, than on any preceding date

I this fall. Pigs and light weights are
.~ .lliSnnably scarce, aowing to the tre-
, agndous country demand for feed-

purposes and quotations for this

we range from '15 to 30 cents per?
. cwt. hig‘ r than for mixed hogs. Fu-

hog prices will be entirely at
mercy of current arrivals; with
or even normal receipts, prices

of’Dece‘mber show a repetition of

{ the early November 3101;, values will
Th5 writer is of the ‘

opinion thatdlive he“ have been the:

low price for the present fall seasons 3.

‘Strictly pigs l...‘....’............

‘dium feeders, 4. 50

'yearlings 37 @8. 50;

division devoted

Should the beginning ,

~ehnw',
states in the union and several Cana-

Fair to good sheep .
Culls and common ..... .- ..... 1. 00Q1. 75
j Hogs ' .
Mixed hogs .................... v. . . .37. 30
Lights

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

 

' Ens! BUFFALO LIVE s'ropn
- am

. ‘3.

. November 20th

.......3‘....,.~...‘.... ......... 760'
' ~ . 625

Cattle-Recelpts 80 cars, market 25c ,'

. higher; choice to prime shipping steers.

38 8.50; gnod ’oo choice shipping steers,
. 37. 568'; light native yearlings, good
quality, 38@9 best handy steers, 36. 25@

7: fair to good, 35. 50@6; handy steers
and heifers, 35. 25@6; western heifers,
35. 25‘@5. 75; light Michigan
heifers, 34. 50@5. 50; best fat cows, 34@
4.75; medium fair 32. 50@8. 50; cutters, 32
2. 05; canners, 31.50Q1. 85, best heavy
bulls, 34 @4 25: heavy bologna bulls, 33. 50
@4. 25; common bulls. 32. 50@3; best
feeders, 700 to 800 nunds, 35. 2’5@6; me-
5; stockers. good, 34
@4. 50; light common, 33 @3 . 50; best
milkers and springers, 380@100; mediums
340®60. Hogs: Receipts 90 cars, strong;
he'avy, 37. 50@7. 75, . mixed and yorkers,
37. 75@8; pigs, 38. 25@8 50. Sheep. Re-
ceipts, 40 cars, higher, top lambs, 311. 25,
wethers, 35@5 .;50
ewes, 34@4. 50 Calves. Receipts, 2, 000;
steady, top calves 312; fair to good. 37
@9' , grassers, 33. 50@4. 50. I

MISCELLANEOUS MARKET
QUOTATIONS
Detroit, November 29th
Butterh—Best creamery, in tube, 376
390 per pound.
Eggs—Fresh, candied and graded, 48

 

- @60c; storage, 36@400 per dozen.

, A pples—Greening, 32. 50@3; Baldwins,
32. 25@2’.50; Spy, 32. 50@3; Jonathan, 33
Q3. 25; western boxes, 32. 25@3. 25
Cabbage—31. 25@1. 50 per bu. /
Celery—Michigan, 30Q406 per
31. 2591.” per box.
lone—Eastem, 35. 25@5.50; Indiana,
353565.50 per 10018b.

doz.' ,

Dressed Hogs—”Small to medium. 963'
106; heavy, 5Q7c per pound.
6 Cal nice, 12@130; me-

Dresee
alum, 10 @12 large, coarse, 5610c per lb.
Live Po wiry—Best spgrin 20
17@180' ,

r'n springs, large

~ Lesho .
fat 2hens, 206226; medium hens, 19@20c;

small hens. 13614c: old roosters. 13c;

large ducks, 2402“; small ducks, 20@

220; large turkeys. 86638c per pound.
.a.ngr

anulated, 38. 80:

0 38 0: XXXX powd-

cred, 38, No. 2 soft. 36.50; Michigan
gran 36.50 per cwt.

. 66, No 1 green,

50; .
bulls, 3c; No. 1 cured calf, 14c; No. 1
green calf, 13c' No. 1 cured kip, 9c; No.
1 green kip. 8c; No 1 horsehides, 32.50;
No.2 horsehidee. 31.50; sheep pelts, 250
@31; grubby hide. 20 under N0. 2; No.
2 hides 1c and No. 2 calf and kip 1 1-24:
under No 1.
W. . '-
‘ ‘ . WOOL

The midwestsrn wool market continues
fully steady, but not quite so active, the
normally one of
comparative dullness. Prices are well

maintained, and movement. especially on

medium grades. in excellent for the time
of year
Quotations on midwestcrn or so—called
native woois in large lots—such prices
as are obtained by the farmers' pools-—
are as fellows. ' Fine s1 1e, 31@330; 1— 2
blood staple. 316323; blood clothing
26028;}: 3-8 blood wools, 2-5Q260; 1-4
23 @24c; low 1-4 blood, 18Q 2:00
braiid. 13615c; western territory wools
bring 3640 less than correSponding
grades of native wools In most cases. .

 

MICHIGAN SCORES AT INTER—
NATIONAL
(Continubd- from page 3)
to fat yearling
steers, there are 48 cars entered,
with 21 of them from the corn belt,
16 from the southwest and 11 from
the south central district the
country. In the class devoted fto the
exhibition of fat two-year-olds, 20
leads . have been ‘entered. In the

short-fed class, 8 'cars are on exhi—Y ‘ ‘
,nnd in addition to this list are the"

bition. There are 15 loads of calves
and 100 of yearlings in the feeder

, division.

Over 3, 000 entries have been made
in the International Hay and Grain
abont threevfourtﬁis of the

[rovinces are represented. The
' ~ Trade donated

butchering _ , .

J.

 

  
   

 
 
 

  
  

  
    
 

STATE OF OHIO

APPLE

snow

' TERMINAL . AUDITORIUM

TOLEDO

DECEMBER 5 to 11

INCL.
, l 92 l

10:00 A. M. to 10:30 P. M. Daily, Sunday Included

2450 ADMISSION 25,0

 

‘

 

 

. have a good coaster?

‘The FIRE FLY COASTER has

spring steel runners, I-shaped,
making them stron‘g, vertically,
but flexible sideWise. This en-

ables one to guide the Coaster by
the steering bar, curving the run-
ners to the right or left, as desir—
ed. The steering is thus made

 

 

Mount Clemens, - _- -

easy, and is a great charm to the Coaster.

How to get one of these Dandy Sleds

We will send by prepaid parcel post 9. FIRE FLY COASTER to
each boy or girl who sends in four yearly
- MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER at 31.00 each (at least two of which
must be new). No additional commission will be paid on these orders.
, Any bright boy or girl can secure the necessary
required to obtain one of these sleds in one evening or two at most.
Do not delay but start right out after orders today so that you will

i have your sled ready for the first snow.

THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS ' FARMER
“The Farmer’s Ii‘riend’l

."Hﬂ! Hm "snows,” ERIES IHE scuunmnv

But what if it does, what fun can you have if you do not

Think what joy the ﬁrst snowfall will bring to you if you
have a brand new FIRE FLY COASTER all ready and waiting
to carry you down the hill back of the barn at lightning speed,
one that 'is fast enough to win a race at school.
to stand on the side lines and watch the other boys and girls
coast down the hill in a. merry race again this winter.

GET A FIRE FLY COASTER

md enjoys‘somo real healthful sport this winter.

, We have purchased a lot of FIRE FLY COASTERS to supply our
boy and girl friends and are going to give them
single penny of expense and for only a few hours work.

You don’t want

away without a

 

Length 82 inches, heighth 6 inches,
width 11 inches, weight 7 pounds
Light, Fast and Strong.

subscriptions to THE

subscriptions

Michigah

 

 

 

names of many prominent breeders

- of Percherons that have never been

seen ‘at the International. E. B.
White of Virginia, W. H. Butler, of
Ohio and Ed. _Nicodemus of Pennsyl—
vania are all here with full classes
of- Perchernns. Bell Bros... O. W.
Humes, Ohio State University, Archie
Bishop and C H. Van Wickle of

. New York and the world famous,-

' .m.
. .represen ed by two large studs of

B. England- is

.Mcnaugmin.
r000

3:11.110 s are here from 21 enl-

‘ Stake 'part in the stock judg-

ate. in teams of four on

' 26th, these ambition

ed the merits of the
0p and swine. The

0 none is,

 

 

c_u_T

SllﬂS Al lame

$104.00 cut on .‘ 18 ton Silo
$835.00 cut on 195 ton silo
Boss In-de-str—unt-o.
Galvanized nMetal - _,
Champion and New }S”-ﬂs
' Boss Oil Filled .....
at rock-bottom, honest present cost
material and labor .

Easy Payment, Early Order, Club -
« - ., Shipment Proposition
.1 E. W. ROSS COMPANY

Dept. A. Springfield, Ohio

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

    
    
  
     

Write todny for our Low. urn-ta." ”'

    
    

 

 

   
   
   


 

 

ELOTTE. the Edison of Europe, manufacturer of the greatest Cream
Separator the world has ever known, announces a sweeping reduction in
prices. Labor conditions in general together with tremendous re-building and
re-organizing efforts put forth by this big man of Belgium has resulted in cut-
ting production costs to the bone.

And right now at tlzz'xparticular time exchange rates are extremely favorable. Take advantage of
this condition while it lasts. Get the most for your American dollar. Buy now and save money.

    

Before buying any separator ﬁnd out how the Melotte has won 264 Grand and International
Prizes and how, for efﬁciency of skimming, ease of turning, convenience of operation and
durability the Great Belgium Melotte has won every important European contest. Find out
why 500,000 Melotte Separators are in continuous use today.

self-Balancing Bowl

The Belgium Melotte is the only single-bearing-bowl separator made.This patented bowl hangs from one frlc~
tionless ball bearing and spins like a tbp. It is self-balancing. It skims as perfectly after 15 years' use as when
new. Positively can not ever get out of balance—can not vibrate and thus cause cross currents which waste cream
by re-niixing with the milk. The 600 lb. Melotte turns as easily as the 300 lb. machine of other makes. Spins for
25 minutes unless brake is applied. No other separator has or needs a brake. The Melotte bowl has solved the

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

problem of perdfe skimming,
“lawman!”

Every Belgium imported Melotte Cream Separator is
sold under an absolute. ironbound. 15-year guarantee.
No Melotte is ever sold except under this guarantee. A
guarantee written in plain English so that you can un-
derstand it. A guarantee that is 100% stronger than any
other separator guarantee ever made. A guarantee that
really guarantees something—upon which you can ab.
solutely rely—an absolute protection to the purchaser,
and which binds us to our bargain.

\\

Vibration of a cream separator’s bowl will soon cost

you more money in cream waste than the price of

your separator. U. 8. Government Bulletin No. 201

says that a perfectly true motion of the bowl is abso-

lutely necessary. the bowl is the vital part of any :
separator—the part where the cream separation takes }
p ace.

 

 

after 30 Days ' i

Free Trial

 

 

—NO MONEY DOWN—FREE TRIAL
—SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS—DUTY FREE

We will send an Imported Melotte Cream Separator direct to your farm on a 30 days‘ absolutely 'Free Trialfno
deposits—no papers to sign—use it as if it were your own separator. Satisfy yourself that the porcelain b0wl 15 as
easy to clean as a china plate. Compare it—test it in every way.

When you are convinced the Melotte skims cleaner, turns easier. washes quickernhas one-half less tinware to
clean, lasts longer than all others, then pay $7.50 as ﬁrst payment and the balance in small monthly payments

until the separator is paid for.

After 30 days free trial, then send only the small sum
of $7.50 and the balance in small monthly payments.
The Melotte pays for itself from your increased cream
checks. -

You’re not to send one cent until you've used this
great Belgium Melotte and have made up your mind

 

The Melotte Separator, H. B. Bablon, v.5. Mgr.
2843 West 19th Street. Chicago, Illinois
Without cost to me or obligation in any way, please send
me the Melotte catalog which tells the full story of this
wonderful separator and M. Jules Melotte, its inventor.
Also send me your revised price list showing 22 % reduc-

Dept. 3309

tionS.

Name

Sand 5 Ionoyl—an.

---—-—-—___———-—_-——-j

  
 
 

  

,‘0 w-rslv 1

it is the machine you want. Keep it for '30 days and
use it just as if it were your own machine.

Compare the Melotte separator with any other—
test them side by side. Then send your milk to the
creamernyet them prove which separator skims the , ., . _ . ‘
cleanest. . . ’

end This] o

Mail coupon for catalog giving full descri tidn of. this wonderful cream separator. Read about the
porcelain-lined bowl. Easy to 'clean as a c ma~ plate. One-half less tmware to clean. An exclusive:
Melotte feature. other exclusrve Melotte features described in full. ‘ ' , , -
Don't'buy any separator until you have investigated the Melotte.Take advantage of the 30 day free trig; which)“, :
Melotte has now authorized us to offer.’l‘est the Melotte against all other separators and satisfy your-self as hundreds .
of American farmers have done that it is the world‘S-g‘reatest Separator.The oaneparatm- that requires 31mm}: in

   

 

Address

So e'asiy to turn that it spins twenty-ﬁve minutes after you stop cranking. And remember it is guaranteed far 15 M x; >
Don’t wait-be sure to mail coupon TODAY! ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ -- . . j

 

State

The Meldtt'e‘ Separator, 3 MW” .. ‘ };
Dept. 3309 ’ 2843 West 19th. Street . 7‘ ~

 

Post Ofﬁce

   

  
 


Issue
Missing /

Not
‘ Available

 

