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cf: Wee Owned and
ed in _. chigan

 

CLEMENS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1922

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Longing ‘for Green Pastures

 

 

 

 

 

 

am'wmrm'mmmmaa Year

 


 
 

 

during the recent mm-
at the I. A. o. Tho-or-
‘ Will be conducted in the‘

   

 

  

 

organisations of the state are
carried on.
- Jason Woodman of Kalama-
loo been eieaed president for
are to be no dues for mom-
_, ~ in this association" states Dr.
I. HoCool professor of soils at.
'- C. f‘Every farmer in the
is eligible, the only require-
bsing that he be interested in
and their improvement."
e object of the association will
stimulate greater interest in
anent, proﬁtable systems of soil
-_ ment among Michigan farm-
Material bearing on results of
era'tive test projects, recent de—
ments in soils methods, etc.,
be sent out to the membership."
0. J. Johnson, M. A. C. Corre-
dent.

 

 

   
  
   
   
   
   
  
  
  
    
   
  
 
  
   
  
     
    
 
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
    
      
 
  
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
   
 
    
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
   
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
 
  
   
  
  
   
   
 
 
  
  
  
 
   
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  

. Michigan State Farm Bureau
has given its endorsement to
tho elonts of the agricultural
c,._in congress to bar from Ameriv
the regular flood of unadapted.
them grow French and Italian
3" yer seed. The bloc seeks to keep
, t such menacing seed by means
' ~ certain privisions in the seed tar-
schedule which it is advocating.
.At its ﬁrst m‘eeting the new State
ﬁrm Bureau Board of Directors,
b. 14. adopted a resolution favor-
the tariif schedule on such seed
ﬂ advocated by the agricultural
1100. The Farm Bureau said in its
resolution that good adapted seed is
uﬂlndame‘ntal to success in agricul-
We and that cheap ocean freight
rates are promising again to make
the United States the dumping
found for immense quantities of
:éﬁnadapted. dangerous foreign seed.
_ (ocially French and Italian clover
'd, union some means is provided
: checking that movement. The
iculturol bloc would bar such
’ by means of a tariff.
. Farmers have suifered enormous
4‘ Mes through unknowing use of un-
pted foreign clover seed It often
Wer kills in our climate, say the
ords of many county agricultural
cults. It is declared that no one
detect unadapted foreign seed
gi’hen it may come from a car that
he been sold and re-soid half a
dozen times and mixed with other
”ed perhaps as many times. The
d proves itself in the ﬁeld and
' ally with disastrous results.

_F. B. F. NEUTRAL ON FED-
ERAL CROP INSURANCE
. ONGRESSMAN Edward J. King
g? - of Illinois has introduced a bill
" it into congress calling for the
, __blishmen.t of a farm crop insur-
.. bureau, which would insure
..: wing crops of non-perishable pro-
’ cts against loss or damage result-
, from adverse weather conditions.
‘ . bill somewhat antedates action
’ -esiIod by the administration’s
onal Agricultural Conference
'h advocated that a thorough
be made of the feasibility of
oral crop insurance agency and
mmended that data be secured
which to base premium rates.
> Crop insurance has been writ-
for a few years by a few agen-
A Federal crop insurance agen-
nticipates the insurance oferops
r/ possibly the entire United
is rather gonsrﬂly ad-

~ uponwhichoafolytodotormlno
,. amount of premiums necessary to
“-s e tho succeq of any crop in-

~ ouldmd

 

 

have had strict instructions
the President that he would
no bill of this kind'that did

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
   
  
   

= the Capitol Hm with a
agreement on a method be-

  

fore the bill is introduced. The lot--
est method devised already is rais-
ing a storm of protest. It is esti-
mated that $350, 000, 000 a year will
’he necessary to pay the cash bonus
extending over two and one-half
years beginning January 1, 1923.
, Estimates on the amount to be raised
through the present plan falls short
of this amount about $34,000,000.

The senators would place a tax
on parcel post packages, one cent on

each 25 cents; tobacco 2 cents a
pound; cigarettes, 50 cents per 1000;
amtomobiles, 26 cents per horse pow-
er; gasoline, 1 cent per gallon; stock
and bond transfers: one-tenth of one
per cent; real estate transfers, $5
per thousand; theater tickets, 20 per
cent; and two and one-half per cent
on undistributed proﬁts of corpora-
tions.

The American Farm Bureau Fed-
eration objects to the raising a sold-
ier bonus funds by a tax upon parcel
post, gasoline, automobiles, tobacco,
etc., as proposed by the recent House
Ways and Means Committee agree-
ment and would substitute a tax up-
on the excess proﬁt of manufactur-
ers H. C. McKenzie of New York,
the Federation’s tax expert says that.
of the $332,000,000 which the com-
mittee proposes to raise, 3300.000,-
000 would fall directly on the people

through increases ,in pmol’ pﬁt,

fates, tax on gasoliné, ammobiles
and increased stamp tan. Of the
balance, $22, 000, 000 Would be raised
from a tax on undivided profit of
corporations, 300, 000, 000 increased
tax on theater admissions.

“During the war government ex-
ports and Congress ﬁgured out the
best methods that could be devised
in raising taxes. The one of these
which was most productive, and least
burdensome, _was the excess proﬁts
tax on corporations, which has been
repealed by the 1921 tax law. If
re—enacted «this single source of rev-
enue would produce all the money
necessary for the bonus and obviate
the friction which would develop by
raising the parcel post rates, taxing
gasoline and automobiles and by the
increased annoyance caused by the
stamp taxes; it would not only do
this but it would be very much more
equitable as to corpormions them—
selves in the present situation," says
Mr. McKenzie.

“The last tax bill raised a flat tax
on corporations from 10 to 12 1-2
per cent, thus raising a tax on corp—
orations of low income while cutting
in half taxes on' corporations with
large incomes, through the repeal of
the excess proﬁts tax. If the excess
profit tax were re-enacted no cor-
poration would be elected ‘until it

 

~§oing/ Henry one better!

When during the war years

even Henry Ford nearly doubled the

price of his cars and tractor, the subscription price at The Michigan
Business Farmer remained the same as the day the first issue went

topress.

Now we know just as well as Henry does, that the quickest way
to bring back “good times" (and luckily for the farmers they are
within sight) is for everyone to give as big a dollar's worth as the

farmerhastoo!

The only way we can better the service we render YOU,

our

readers, is to increase the number of farm homes which The Business

Farmer reaches every week.

You may think that we reach every friend and
yours. but we don’t by a long shot!

/

neighbor of
And the only way we can hope

to, is by coming once again to the loyal men and women who have
seenfromthostartwhatthisweeklywastomeantothofarmers
of Michigan AND ASK FOR YOUR HELP!

You have never failed its weekly!

And now, when conditions
help us most.

seem hardest. is the time you can

So. we have decided to make you a special inducement to get

your friends and neighbors to start taking The Business

Here is our oifer:

F armor.

‘We will send The Michigan Business Farmer from now
until January, 1923, for FIFTY CENTS (5°C) to any

I. newsuhscriba-andwewillsinrtitcomingwiththevery

neat me.

It is not a big thing for you to do, but when YOU make it a
point to tell your friends and neighbors about this oifer, you'll be
surprised how thankful they are and we’ll repay you with a publica-
tionsomuchblggerandsomuchbetter, becausewe'llboableto mul-
tiply our departments of service and our strength to ilght your battles,
by even name you add to our list.

Tryandsondin onatwoos'more namesby Saturday ofnext week!

Youwillbodoingyourfriends andyoursoltno greatortavor than

you do
YOUR OWN

FARE WWI.

'ﬂie Michigan Business Farmer

 

Moo-Farm.
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utim.loutothoaownheﬂbors

“below:

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maladies-tonne

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whose

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.—

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I‘If :‘III.

Mill IIIIIIIII

 

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1y obiect to this woman
which would in a measure oddust the
burden of corporations more equﬁ-
ably and at the some time get the
money from the most available
source."

STATE WARNS mac!
annual meeting of the Michi-
gan State Veterinary Medical
Association was held at the
Michigan Agricultural College Peb-
ruary 7 and 8. Technical auctions
and entertainment features formed
the principal business of the meet-
ing. President, Dr. J. E. Warm,
Pigeon; ﬁrst vice-president, Dr. B..
J. Killham, State Department of
Agriculture; second vice-president,
Dr. J. Preston Hoskins, Detroit;
third vice-president, Dr. E. J. Cron-
kite, Saginaw ; secretary-treasurer,
Dr. R. A. Runnels, M. A. 0., East
Lansing.-—-By C. E. Johnson, M.'A.
C. Correspondent.

AGRICULTURAL CONDITIONS
‘ improvement in agricult-
l mini conditions a; beginning
to manifest itself in an order:
1y liquidation which is reflected in
recent repayment to the War Fi-
nance Ou'poraﬁom in connection ‘
with its export loans, as well as its
loans for agudcuiltunal and live stock
purposes," is the statement of Eu-
gene Mayan, Jr., .Mgr.—Dlrector of
the Wise minim Corporation.
Remnants of expert; advances
total $7,641,000, of which $520,000
m repaid by exporters,‘ $735,000
by (Io-operative associations, and

 

’82,694,000 by W mutations,

wills $3, 693, 000 reﬂects the liquid—
ﬂlons of export lows financed
m m hw bank accept-

Repayments on account of agri-
odh-d and Ive shock hams ag-
m 83,671,000. Of this
unsound, $2,871,000 was repaid by
m mum, $347,000 by
live stock loan empanies, and
$447,000 by lie-operative associa-
lIosl. ,

All repayments have been volun-
tary, and a eondderablve past of the
total represents repeymmts before
due dates. '

 

svn'nm FIGURES FOR THE
MODERN K00 ,

are out of style even in

m. The 11g of the future

in be In to." in the kitchens

of the W must be less ro-

me and dialer. Instead of being

In! lord he must be. mostly lean.

Smﬂiisiihedm-eemathmgone

harm from the packers and such is

iihe m opinion recently handed

down by the hog committee of the
Detuﬁt libs-mart (lab.

“The demon! may," repented
this committee “centers on the 150
to 300 poundhog astound of the 250
Investigation has

was! W (”W MG
Am , ll
following is the annual report
of the West Antrhn Cow Toot-

The records show a very good aver-
age production per cow for the lrst
year and establishes the fact that
there are some good cows in Antrfm

county. It goes without saying that

the 32 members of this association
know more abowt their dairy herds
on _

 
   
 

    
    

 

 


 

 

..   _ B11 SINESs ‘

  

a v an

FARMER

 

 

    

 

 

Every F armer who had a Net Income of $2,000 or More in 1921 Must Make Return to Government

"'1 Inn's much interested reader of M. B. F., and am
taking the liberty of asking you to explain the meaning
0! the following: (1) intangible personality; (2) tangif
bio malty: (3) excess profits tax; (4) surtax; (5)
federal income tax—F. D., Sheridan. Mich.

N the general sense of the word personal prop—
erty is movable; real property is not. Horses,
cattle, farm implements, etc., are example

of personal property. Land buildings, wind-mills,
wood—lots are examples of real property. For
purposes of taxatiOn personal property is some—
times divided-into two classes, tangible and in-
tangible. Tangible personalty consists of any-
thing movable which .is visible and easily located.
All of the above named examples of personal
property are “tangible personalty." Intangible
- property is something which has a value but no
physical form. Examples are rents, franchises,
savings deposits, etc ,

The excess proﬁts tax is a tax levied solely
'against corporations. It is exactly What its name
implies, a tax against excess proﬁts. The ex—
cess proﬁts tax adopted by the United States
government during the war allowed an exemp-
tion of all proﬁts (up to 8 per cent on capi-
talization.
which increased progressively as the profits in-
creased. This tax is not longer imposed. It was
repealed about the middle of last year and took
effect January 1st. There is rtalk of reviving it to
pay the soldiers’ bonus.

“Surtax” means an “extra” tax on individual
incomes. It is levied only against persons having
net incomes over $6,000. Such persons have to
pay a “normal” income tax as well as a “surtax.”
For instance, an individual having a net income
of $7,000 pays to the government a. normal tax
of $240 and a surtax of $10. A person with an
income of $1,000,000 pays a normal tax of $79,-
680 and a surtax of $470,960, or over one-half
of his net income. Incomes over $1,000,000 pay
a normal tax of 8 per cent and a surtax of 50 per
cent. This is according to the new law recently
adopted. The old law levied surtaxes against
incomes over $1,000,000. When the law was re-
vised the lower house of. Congress reduced the
maximum rates from 65 to 32 per cent, but the

agricultural bloc in the Senate put them back
up to 50 per cent

.. THE FEDERAL INCOME TAX

Every unmarried person (male 'or female, in-
cluding widows, widowers and persons not living
with husband or wife) whose net income for the
year‘1921 was $1,000 or more, or whose gross
income was $5,000 or more, and every married
person living with husband or wife whose net in-
come was $2,000 or more, or whose gross in—
come was $5,000 or more, MUST ﬁle an income
tax return with the internal revenue ofﬁcer in
whose district such person or persons reside.

This does not mean that every such person
will have to pay-a ttax. Every single person is
allowed an exemption of $1,000, and every mar-
ried person an exemption of $2,500. An addiv '
tional exemption of $400 is allowed for each
child under 18 years of age who is wholly de-
pendent upon the person making the return.
Thus, a married man with three children, whose
total net income for 1921 was $4,000 would be
entitled to an exemption of $3,700. On the other
3300 he would pay the government a tax of 4
per cent or $12. If his income was only $3,700,
he would have no tax to pay. Under the old law
the total exemptions allowed to such an individ-
ual were only $2,600.

DEDUCTION S ALLOWED FARMERS

All necessary expenses incurred during the
year 1921 in the operation of iarm‘as a business
enterprise, are deductible items. These include
harvesting and marketing of crops and the cost .
of seed and fertilizer used. Amounts expended
for the cost of feed for live» stock maybe claimed
bust theyal’ue \ot a farmer’s own‘products. used for

nth ' psosisnota deductible item. Theitarmi

Higher pro'ﬁts'were taxed at’ a rate '

 

 

 

BUSINESS EBRORS TO AVOID

RE you guilty of any or all of the fol-
lowing everyday business errors as
listed by J. S. M., of Fibre, Mich:

1. Neglecting to get receipts when bills
are paid in cash.

2. Neglecting to keep receipts where
they can be located.

3. Neglecting to check up
current bills.

items in

4. Inability to keep check-book bal-
need.
5. Too easy optimism in starting credit

accounts.

6. Careless handling of valuable busi-
ness papers.

7. Signing documents Without know-
ing their contents.

8. Tendency to establish living ex-
penses which would exceed income and cat
into savings. ,

9. Tendency to invest money on dan-
gerous hearsay without proper knowledge
of facts.

 

 

er may deduct the cost of farm tools used in the
course of a year, wages paid to employees (other
than domestic servants) and rent paid for farm
lands and buildings (other than the dwelling)
cost of repairs to fences and to wagons and ma—
chinery, also bills paid for hors-eshoeing, stock
powders, rock salt, veterinary service, insurance
(except on the dwelling) gasoline for operating
power and sundry minor expenses

The cost of farm machinery of a permanent
character, such as a threshing machine or tractor
and extensive repairs to farm buildings, such as
placing new roof on the barn are not deductible
expenses. Amounts expended in the develop-
ment of farms, orchards and ranches prior to the
time when the productive state was reached, may
be regarded as investments of capital also
amounts expended for the purchase of breeding
or dairy animals. The purchase price of an auto-
mobile, even when wholly used in carrying on
farming operations, is not deductible, but is re—
garded as an investment of capital. The cost of
gasoline, repairs and upkeep of an automobile it

used wholly in the business of farming is dew

 

 

State Farm Bureau Approves

Produce Marketing Plan

HE Michigan State Farm Bureau has oﬁici—

_ ally approved the plans of a produce mar-
keting department, with headquarters at Detroit.
This action was taken Tuesday of the current
week when a committee consisdng of M. L.
Noon, vice—president of the State Farm Bureau;
Geo. Friday, and E. C. McCarty, state farm
bureau directors; Clark Brody, secretary, and
Hale Tennant, marketing specialist, met with Mr.
Milton Carmichael, one of the fathers of the
idea, and created a pro'duce marketing agency to
be known as the Produce Sales Department of
the Michigan State Farm Bureau.

Mr. Carmichael was named director of orga-
nization and he will proceed at once to put his
plans into effect. It is expected that the de-
partment will be ready to accept shipments drom
farmers not later than April let. The depart-
ment will handle on commission all kinds of
farm produce including fruits, vegetables, eggs,
dairy products, dressed meats, etc. The tempor—
ary headquarters will be at 401 Bu‘hl block, De-
troit. Farmers desiring to avail themselves of
the services of the department should communi-
cate with Mr. Carmichael at that address.

As previously stated, if the Detroit unit proves
a success other units of the new department will
be opened up as rapidly as possible in other
leading cities. .

   
  
   
   
  
  
 
  
   
 
   
  
     
 
  
   
    
  
  
 
    
   
   
   
    
  
   
   

ductible as an expense; if used partly for b"
ness purposes and partly for the pleasure or W
venience of the taxpayer or his family, such ‘

may be apportioned according to the extent a:
such use.

Losses incurred in the Operation of a farm as"
a business enterprise are deductible from th' 3
gross income. If, however, farm products are.
held for favorable markets, no deduction is a
owed on account of shrinkage in weight or vainl,
for the reason that when such products are sold,
the shrinkage Will be reflected in the selling
price. The total loss by frost, storm, flood 01',
ﬁre of a prospective crop is not deductible. was
reason is that unless the crop reaches maturity
and is harvested and sold, its value never reached
gross income, and therefore an arbitrary deduc-
tion of such loss cannot be aIIOWed. The loss of
a growing crop simply means that the farmer.
has so much less gross income to report and 3
therefore would pay a reduced tax, if any tax '
all. A loss in the value of animals raised on the
farm is not deductible, except as such loss taro-1
ﬂected in an inventory _,

 

, .

  
   
    
   
    
   
  
  
     
     
  
   
  
   
  
    
   
   
  
 
  
   
   
  
  
    
   
    
    
  
  
    
   
    
    
   
    
   
    
  
    
   
    
   
   
  
  
 
 
 
 

or was killed by order of the authorities of thd
state or the United States, the actual purchase;
price less any depreciation which may have been
previously'sustained with respect to such stock,
and any insurance or idemity recovered may be
deducted as a loss.

Deductions of family or living expenses such
as rent for a dwelling, repairs to a dwelling,
cost of food and clothing for the family, education!
of children, servants’ wages and similar items
are expressly prohibited by the revenue act 6r
1921. General deductions, such as for taxes, in; ‘
terest on personal indebtedness, losses sustained“
in transactions entered into for profit aside from:
the farmer’s regular business, losses sustained.
by fire, storm, or other casualties, bad debts and"
contributions, are explained in instructions on the
form for ﬁlling returns. The farmer must 'in- i
dude in his return of gross income not only the
profits of his farm, but all other income such as
interest on bank deposits and profits received
from the sale or rent of farm lands. 'Dhe farmer
who lets out a 'farm on a crop—share basis mud
include in his income tax return for the year the
cash when received. A farmer who lets out I
farm as a cash rental basis and is paid in crop"
must report the exact cash rental agreed upon".
whether or not the crops are disposed of. V

The Bureau of Internal Revenue has had prev-i
pared for farmers a special form 1040 F———ior re?”
cording sales of live stock, produce and miscella—
neous receipts. All farm income from any source. 3
whatever must be reported in this schedule, which?
must be attached to the form for making indi-‘ﬂ
vidual returns. '

Form 1040A for income of $5,000 or less an ,
1040 for individual incomes in excess of $5,000“
may be obtained in the oﬂices of collectors . ,
internal revenue and branch ofﬁces. These form 3
will be mailed to persons who filed similar 130-»,
turns of income for the year 1920. Failure ‘
receive the form, however, does not relieve tr"
person from ﬁling his return and paying the
within the time prescribed by law. The retu
must be filed on or before March 15, 1922. T
tax this year, as last, may be paid in full at , '
time of ﬁling the return, or in tour equal metal
ments, due on or before March 15, June 16, ’
tember 15 and December 15.

Revenue oﬂ‘icers are visiting every county
the United States to assist taxpayers in the
paration of their income tax returns for
This advisory service is without cost to the ‘ ‘
payer. Before seeking such assistance, 11
taxpayers should read carefully the mum
on the forms.

  
   
 
  
 
  

 
 
 

 
 

  

  

 
 

  

   


 
 

   

ESSLY pushing to one side the protests
[of farm organizations and thousands of in-
,” ’ividual farmers, the state association of
ﬁperﬁsors at their annual meeting in Lansing
A list, week voted unanimous approval of the state
Load building program for 1922 as outlined by
tate Highway Commissioner Frank F. Rogers,
in accordance with the policy laid dowu by the

 
   
   
   
   
   
    
   
   
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
    
 
  
   
    
   
   
     
   
   
    
  
   
  
    
   
 
   
  
  
 
    
    
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
    
 
   
  
    
  
   
    
   
   
    
   
    
 

1,921 legislature.
‘ This program involves the expenditure by the
State alone of $14,000,000, in addition to what-
ever'sums may be expended by the counties and
townships. In 1920 the state spent in round
numbers for all highway purposes the sum of
$11,000,000. The townships spent another $11,-
: ”000,000 and the counties $6,000,000, or a
.3 grand total of $28,000,000. This was nearly
‘ ﬁre-thirds as much money as was spent for simi-
lar purposes during the entire 13-year period,
1901-13. If. the townships and counties spend
~ 11 the same proportion as the state the current
year of 1922, we may expect a. grand total ex-
penditure of approximately $36,000,000.

The 1920 expenditure was equal to a tax rate
of $5 per thousand valuation, but since a part of
,_the money was raised by the issuance of bonds
'iL-which will not mature for 15 or 20 years, the
' actual rate levied and paid was probable about
$4 per thousand.

TAXES BECOME BURDENSOME

"It is not to be supposed that so great an in-
crease in highway expenditures could be made
without the taxpayer feeling it. And he has
felt it very keenly. Simultaneously, of course,
taxes for other purposes? have also increased
enormously, as witness a comparison between
the total tax footings for 1901 and 1920. In
the former year the total taxes levied in the
state of. Michigan for all purposes was $23,350,-
404.37. In 1920 the total was $140,438,982.94.

‘ The assessed valuation of all property in 1901
was $1,335,109.918. In 1920, it was $5,319,—

702,886. Thus, while expenditures have in—

creased six times in 20 years the assessed valua-
tion has increased but four times. The rate per
Vthousand valuation ha‘s'increased from $17.49 to

about $27. -

Whenever burdened tax—payers rise up in pro-
test against the imposition of further taxes, there
is always some apologist to argue that the pro-
posed extra tax is really very small and won’t cut
much ﬁgure in the ﬁnal totals, or else that some-
one else pays the major part of the tax. When
the state cons-tabulary ﬁght was the hottest the
rural antis were silenced by the argument that
the cities paid most of the cost, and on the
strength of the argument the State Grange in
1920, reversed its position of a former year and
by a narrow margin endorsed the constabulary.

Now come others to convince farmers that good
roads don’t cost,—much.
borders of California, Phil T. Colgrove, presi—

~.".dent of the Michigan State Good Roads Associa-
tion, wires State Highway Commissioner Rogers
as follows:

“Just learned propaganda of Grange to stop
building trunk line roads. With federal aid ap-
prOpriated, surveys made and work progressing,
is move is fatal to the best interests of Michi-
gan. Farmers who read their tax receipts will
'diswver that the road taxes are the smallest of
all taxes. Michigan’s splendid work should not
I be interrupted,”——even, Mr. Colgrove might have
' added, if half of the farmers of the state go into
' bankruptcy in paying them.

‘ M. B. F. READERS WANTS LET-UP

More than ﬁve hundred readers of the Business

Farmer have expressed their desire that no more

 

 

From the sun-kissed‘

'2 if Abbrevdl of 'Suberuisors Levels. F orrner Opposition and PrompisStat to ProceedwzthPlans

.By THE EDITOR

 

SOME HIGHWAY FACES

Michigan has approximawa 70,000
miles of public wagon roads. Of these ap-
proximately 2,100 miles have been im-
proved or are under contract by the state
highway department as trunk line and
federal aid roads. There are no ﬁgures
available of the number of roads improved
by townships and counties. The roads al-
ready improved by’ the state have cost at
the rate of $22,000 per mile. If the state
continues to pay the same proportion of
the cost of these roads until its $50,000,-
000 bond issue is exhausted, it will have
been able to improve approximately 4,000
miles of highways.

The income of the slate Highway de-
partment from all sources for the year
1921 was approximately $22,000,000. 4‘01
this amount, $3,135,040_24 represented
the state’s share of automobile taxes,
$3,019,537 was federal aid money, and
$13,194,878 bond money. The rest of the
money was derived from direct taxation.

None of the highway bonds have been
retired. The total annual interest on the
$20,000,000 now outstanding is $1,052-
095. The annual interest on the $30,000,-
000 soon to be outstanding will be about
$1,400,000. It. is not unlikely that the
total interest charges on the $50,000,000
bonds if all are issued will amount to
more than the fare of the bonds them-
selves., The retiring of these bonds is
bound to be a slow and painful process.

OUTSTANDING STATE HIGHWAY BONDS

Annual

Date Term Rate Issue Interest
Nov, 1, 1919 15 Years 4%% $1,581,000‘00 $ 71,115.00
May 1, 1920 . 5 years 5% 3,000,000.00 150,000.00
June 80, 1920 5 years 5% 419,000.00 20,950.00
Aug. 1, 1920 5 years 5% 500,000.00 25,000.00
Oct. 1, 1920 5 years 5% 500,000.00 25,000.00
Dec. 1, 1920 20 years 5% 1,000,000.00 50,000.00
June 1, 1921 20 years 5%% 3,000,000.00 165,000.00
Sept. 15, 1921 20 years 51720]. 3,000,000.00 165,000.00
Nov. 15, 1921 20 years 5% 4,000,000.00 200,000.00
July 15, 1921 1 year 6% 3,000,000.00 180,000.00

 

$20,000,000,00 $1,052,095.00

 

 

road bonds be issued. They feel that the time
has come when governments as well as individ-
uals should cut expenses. There is no opposition
to good roads. Our readers are for the most
part believers in better highways, but they feel
that the program should be curtailed until farm-
ers and business men get back on their feet ﬁnan-
cially and able to bear the cost of the roads With-
out so great hardship. They are also ‘quite in
agreement that a ”pay as you go” policy should
be pursued instead of selling bonds and running
up enormous interest charges which ’the present
and future generations must help pay. Some of
the letters received upon this subject are illumi—
native of the average rural mind at the present
time:

F_ J. w., of Sanilac County writes: “I don’t‘believe
in a bond issue for 1922 or a bond issue at all. I believe

in a direct tax levy and a tax ”of one cent per gallon
on gasoline to be used for road building.”

“My opinion is,” writes C. W. L, of Leelanau county,
“that the state should curtail the bond issue for one
or two years Now is the time when strictest economy
shoud be practised. Never in my recollection has there
been such a hard time to raise tax—money and only way
out is to cut down on expenses."

 

 

“I am not a kicker and I like good roads," says M.
V. J., of Genesee County, “but our taxes are getting to
be so burdensome we can't pay them. Pay as You go
is the best policy. The Covert Act certainly ought to
be repealed.” .

 

“I have been reading your article in the Business
Farmer on the subject of further issuance of road
bonds in 1922," writes E, H. of Oceana county. “It

strikes me as being a very pertinent quesfron to , a,
great many farmerspespecially those who have been
obliged to borrow money to pay 1921 taxes. X ‘

“I am a good mad advocate and would like to see
improvement of country roads. But I can’t see any dif-
ference between public expenditures and those of the in-
dividual. In close times like.these the individual as rep-
resented by the average -fa.rmer must cut expense-
even though the investment might return profits after‘a
period of two or three years because the investment
must be kept within the capital and credit of the in-
dividual in question or bankruptcy will surely follow
before the investment matures; and so it is with the
State of Michigan. -

“While a bond issue of $50,000,000 of road bonds alone
would not cause ﬁnancial difﬁculty; it might if coupled
with $30,000,000 of Soldiers Bonus Bonds at the high
rate of interest whiclr’ they draw. And on top of that
we will be taxed indirectly for a portion of the Na.-
tional Soldiers Bonus and that is not all as it pertains
to this particular section of the state.

“This territory is.» served by the Pentwater division
of the P. M. and when its road bed needs repair it
must ﬁnd the money in its own pocket but the local
trucks (motor trucks) have their hands in the taxpay—
ers pocket and their share in the majority of cases are
represented by the small license fee paid, for state
license. Having no other property except the truck which
they operate and which is exempt from assessment on
the twp. tax roll.

“Here is a man who uses the road for the purpose or

making his living from commercial trucking and who

has his road way built by the public taking the business

from the railroad which must maintain its own right
of way and also pay a general tax to the state,

“The railroad in this county is already weak and
must necessarily become more so now that it is par-
alled its entire length by the West Michigan Pike built
at public expense and maintained by the public for the
motor truck at a rental that amounts to almost nothing.

"It seems I can hear you say that the farmers have
trucks and so they do, but a commercial truck belong-
ing to the man, who drives it himself will use the road
as much in a year’s time as 10 farmer owned trucks
would do but he doesn’t pay any more license than
farmer if their trucks are the same size.

“There must be some way to even things up and I
think the gasoline tax is the solution of. the problem
but I'am not prepared to say that one'cent is the proper
amount for it looks rather small and I would rather
believe it should be two or three cents and let the money

, so raised take the place of the bonds for future road

building and madmtenance.

“Let us not have as elaborate a road building pro-
gram in 1922 as in 1921 out of sympathy with the condi-
tion of the poor man's pocket book and the harm it
may do the farmer when the truck has more seriously
crippled the railroads."

A LEGISLATOR SPEAKS

State Representative Frank R. Mosier of Alle—.

gan county, speaks right out on the subject, too.
He says:

“I see in the last edition of the M, B. F, a coupon
asking our opinion on the advisability of floating $10,—
000,000 highway bonds. I am absolutely against float-
ing bonds to build highways. .

“I believe We should have a gasoline tax and low
a direct tax enough to get the federal money. It is
very easy for an individual to vote to Spend money
but very different to devise a means to raise that
money, ‘

“A man voting to bond to build highways is called a
constructive man but a man that cannot see a way to
raise these taxes, I believe is a destructive man.

“Since the close of rthe legislature I have talked with
several men, some of whom are paying federal income
tax, some are drawing large salaries, and some have
sold their farms to get rid of ying taxes but all of
them are demanding the roads to be kept in good re-
pair during the year. .

“Here is the just-(less of the state income tax and hero
is where these men can pay their share of the protec-
tion and care the government is giving them.

“A greater share of these men are demanding more

protection than the farmer who is standing the burden
today.
. “ en an ind vldual is voting a tax that he does not
know how to r e, he is striking at the very Vitals of
an industry that the whole world is depending on.
Agriculture.”——F, R. Mosier.

“GO AHEAD," SAYS ANOTHER LEGISLATOB

Representative Joe. E. Warner, of Washtenaw
county, takes the opposite view. Out of hundreds
of farmers who have written us on the subject,
Mr. Warner, and Hr. G. F. DeLaMater, county
surveyor of Otse-go county, are the only two who
take the position that the Rogers program
should be continued. As will be noted both these
gentlemen give excellent reasons for their posi-
tion. Mr. Warner writes as follows:

“Shall Michigan curtail her road building program?
By all means no_ There never was a time in the road
building game when roads can be built as
cheaply as this year. There never was a. time

when the young man or young woman of today was
needed as badly on farms as they are today and \to

‘:1

 

 

 

   
 
  

 

 

apportioned to this state this year or

I. Read the Bureau’s letter below:

       
     
   
    
 
 
  

Editor, 1
The Michigan Business Farmer.
Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

Dear Sir: ,

   

  

  
  

(“v

T has been claimed that Michigan must match federal aid money

Butvaecording to the U. S. Bureau" of Public Beads this is not true.

' U. 3. Bureau of Public Roads Denies Michigan Must Match Federal Funds this Year

under the act approved November 9, 1921 amounted to $2,249,532.43
and the money remains available until two years from June 30, 1922.
While it is important that Michigan provide to absorb this fund
during the present year, a balance remaining would not necessarily
be ~lost to the state'if pr0vision were made in the following year to
absorb not only that balance but also such other apportionment as
congress may provide. On the basis gt a federal appropriation of
‘ , $75,000,000 annually the apportionment of approﬂmately $2,250,000
’ shouldbe provided {or during each year by the state.

else lose it altogether.

February 17, 1922.

, Your telegram of February 14 has been received, asking what
Would happen if Michigan should fail to match this year the $5,-
000,000 federal aid apportionment to the state. . ,
" ' 'The'mderal Aid apportioned to Michigan for the ﬁscal year 1922'

x

‘ Bureau, oriPublicwRoads, U. S. Deparunent‘ of Agric

 

 

Very truly yours,
. P. W. WILSON, Chief Engineer,

D

 
 

nit-are. '
Q ‘


  
  

 
 
 
 

 
 

.“ _, mm 1.. .‘n -v,,
15 ’3‘ a t" 6116’le ”ﬂamﬁag
' « ‘ , w .
133198 ot‘road for? fez! money. ' ‘ - »‘

Would be
taking I step backward and give the rural sections a
severe blow. The farmer 'must not lose sight of the
hot that with the federal government payint 50
per cent, the cities paying 65 per cent, leaves only
5 per cent of one-half of the cost. which makes a,
very light tax on the farmer.

Let us“ get behind Mr. Rogers and his road pro-
mmv and make our Michigan the ﬁrst and best state
-‘ 9. 'mtem of good roads and better rural com-
munities of any state in the union."—-J. E. Warner,

“Regarding your question as to whether road bonds
should be issued in 1922 I have answered "yes' not
because I believe that the idea is theoretically per-
fect bit because it seems to 'me the best and most
convenient way out of our present difficulties.

“First- The roads are an asset and I do not be—
lieve that the average man wants to see the program

halted. ‘

Second: It costs much more to build these roads
than it will to maintain them. and it is no more than
right that those who will use them during the next
ten .fr twenty years should help to stand this ex-

pause.

Third and most important of all: I believe ,that We
should all do what we can to stimulate thecirculation
of money. Last season our little county of Otsego
would have been flat on her back had it not been for
the road contracts which were the only enterprises
at work; many working men and many farmers teams
were furnished a job and it went a long way toward
saving the day; I would rather that my taxes amount~
ed to a hundred dollars and that it were possible to
earn that hundred; than that they amounted to only
tan with no prospect of raising the amount.

As soon as industry is again on its feet I should
favor curtailment of bonding; I do not want to see
the entire $50,000,000 floated but I am not averse
to seeing half or two thirds of it handled in this
manner.

{‘Regarding the proposed tax on gasoline: I believe
that it is the most practical suggestion yet advanced.
It is the automobile that tears up our roads and it is
the automobile that is demanding our trunk line sys-
tem; it is the automobile therefore that should pay
for the construction and maintenance of that system
as far “as is practical, and the gasoline tax reaches
to the heart of the problem by making him who uses
the road the most pay the greatest share of its cost.
The only practical objection that I have heard ad-
vanced is the argument that many gallons of gaso-
line are used in driving city streets where there. is
no highway funds expended. Now is it not poss1ble
to arrive at some plan whereby the city would get
enough of this tax fund to cover the amount of gaso-
line consumed in driving its streets? Having arrived
at such an_ arrangement, where is the injustice?-

“I drive an automobile an average of 25 mlles a
day all summer and over all kinds of roads; it is
my opinion that I would be money ahead at the end
of the season if I'paid a 5c gas tax and had surfaced
roads to drive over, as compared to_ dr1v1ng over _un-
improved sand and mud roads on tax-free gasolme.

“I believe that we should €01,311“? for taggthggr 8%-

the construction program a wen -
ﬁrd relieving the hard times of 1921.—G. F. DeLa-
Mater, Gaylord, Mich.
WOULD REPEAL COVERT ACT

The supervisors unanimously agreed that the
Covert act should be repealed, and Commission-
er Rogers is equally convinced that the act should
be limited in the number of roads they can bulld
in any one period under this act. The cost of
building these roads falls upon a comparative
few and thousands of farmers assessed for Co-

vert road costs will not be able to pay them.

Much complaint is heard by the Business Farm-

er upon this subject. C. J., of Gladwm county,

writes: n at d
“Last fall the gravelled one and a half m es roa
running west 0 Beaverton under‘the Covert act. The
land on either side of the road is taxed for one m11e
back in forties. First forty, $52.30, and the next $40.33
and so on and the rest of the township pays nothing
for the road, We farmers along the road have the

'bulk of the taxes to pay. I have 160 acres, of which
80 runs along the road. My road taxes alone are $170.
My total taxes are $355 this year. The cost of build- ..
ing this stretch of road was $75,000 and there is not
a neighbor along here who can stand the taxes, What
are we to do? We don’t see any way to hold our

farms and pay such high taxes!“

of Barry county writes: “The Covert road
1.335.110 be repealed. I am assessed $1,021.07 on
a Covert road and it does not beneﬁt me one dollar.
I have no frontage. My road runs parallel to this

mad-.1,
COST PER MILE STILL HIGH ,

. Road building costs have come down some in
the last year. But they are still high. State
Highway Commissioner Rogers reported to the
supervisors that the program for'1922 called for
the construction of 673 miles of state trunk line
at a total estimated cost of $8,123,652.90 and
822 miles of federal aid roads at a total esti-
mated cost of $6,287,073.12, making a total con—
struction program of 995 miles at an approxi-
mate costof $14,410,726, or an average of
about $15,000 per mile. Part of this cost is
borne by the counties and townships and part
by the federal government, leaving the state’s ,
share at about $8,500,000. .

EXTRAVAGAN CE CHARGED
Many of the farmers who have written "to the

.Business Farmer on this matter charge extrava-

. Sauce in the building of the roads, the erection of
sign posts, etc. One, farmer who is 80 years old.
says he can do more work with his team of oxen

. than What is being doneby themgn‘fmy deputy-

. ﬂ mentaonrthe roadin front of his place “-9, cost

0". 823:9 "r day, jAnOthOr that 1911: man 313.0111-

’ sent in warm rm When «two

. ‘ ‘Wkl “ A Macosta‘eeunty‘

9m?

. "To guts! l.the state stat ‘ hw commissioner.
' Frank .eRogers, in his 9 big 'ay' ‘

/

 

  

  

   

  
 
  
 

 

to. ., ,_ [as it cost the township of Deer-
.iield to buiid'six miles ofjust as good road. The
Business? Farmer cannot vouch for the accuracy
of these statements, but ithas learned that bond
issues. encourage extravagance. When an indi-
vidual's or a ﬁrm’s or even a state’s bank balance
is small greater economy is practised than when
it is large. And if the balance be both‘big and
borrowed and does not have to be repaid for a
long period of time, oh, how easy it is to let it
slip through the ﬁngers. So there has undoubt-
edly been extravagance in the building of our
roads. ’

WHAT HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER SAYS:

'State Highway Commissioner Rogers gives
some interesting information on highway con-
struction. Mr. Rogers is considered to be one
of the most able highway chiefs in the country,
andhis opinions on road building are held in
high esteem- He says:

The legislature of 1921 appropriated $1,250,-
000 for paying state rewards in each of the two
ﬁscal years ending June 30, 1922, and June 30,
1923, which was as much money as had ever
been required in a single year before, but during

 

 

SUPERVISERS HIT EXPENDITURES

N order to place a proper estimate upon
I the weight of the highway verdict ren-
dered by the state association of sup-
ervisors in session last week it should be
remembered that only 153 supervisors
from 53 countim out of a possible 1,500
from 83 counties were present. A consid-
erable number of these came, from city
districts, so that the attitude of the asso-
ciation can hardly be taken as an evid-
ence of rural spirit. ‘

Following their endorsement of the
1922 road program the supervisors adopt-
ed a strongly-worded resolution demand-
ing greater economy in all civic business
and areduction in the number of boards,
commissions, salaries, etc.

The board approved of a. tax on gasoline
and urged a universal poll tax.

An attempt was made to put the super-
visors on record for capital punishment,
but when it was discovered that it would
be voted down, the sponsors wisely re-
frained from putting it to a vote.

 

 

the present ﬁscal year the counties and town-
ships have built upwards of 1,600 miles of road
on which more than $4,250,000 have been earned
in rewards. This is about four' times as many
roads as therewere funds to pay rewards with
and was largely due to the increased activities
under the Covert Act as noted above. Since many
of these roads were of a local nature, the State
Highway department, acting under the instruc-
tions of the Highway Advisory Board, requested
the counties to revise their ecunty road outlines
so as not to include more roads than would
be required to build around each three mile
square; in other words, allotting to each county
a total mileage which would be determined by
multiplying the number of surveyed townships
by twenty—four fractional townships counting pro
rate, from which both state trunk line and Fed-
eral Aid roads are to be deducted.

“The counties have revised their system in
accordance with this plan and this restriction will
very materially curtail the activities under the
Covert Act but probably will not be sufﬁcient to
slow down the county road building programs to
the extent that may be desired in view of the
heavy tax burdens at a‘ time when the country

. is not overly prosperous.

“In 1920, there were levied for state highway

purposes, in addition to the state’s share of the

money received from the licensing of automo—
biles, $2,203,505.15. This caused a state high-
way tax rate of 490 per thousand dollars of valu-
ation in 1920.. In 1921 «the state Highway com-
missioner reported to the legislature that on
account of the bond money being available, no
special state tax levy for highway purposes
would be necessary, because, in his ‘opinion, the
state’s portion of the money to be received from
the. licensing of automobiles, which would be
about $3,000,000, would be sufﬁcient to pay the
state’s portion.of trunk line maintenancei state
rewards on non—trunk line roads built by the
several townships and counties; the state’s por-
tion of the cost of the so-called ﬁfty—ﬁfty bridges
and for all \other departmental expenses not
directly chargeable to speciﬁc roads under con-
str-uction. 7 ,

“Thesstatejbonding Act, Act 25, Extra Ses—
sion/P. A- 1919, provided for the issuance of
highway bonds stews rate of $5,000,000 3 year
at an interestﬂte .got exceeding 5 per cent but
was amendedbbyplthm1981 Legislature making
the bonds availcbbvol the rate of $10,000,000

‘ a year and, raised'tne interest rate 'to a maximum

;

(of 5 1-2 per cent: and while no money was ap-
propriated. for construction; purposes, the legis-

   

   

much" to

' line tram" More

  

  
  
 
 
 
 
 
  

.7 rm»: swat .
_ 001-3, scenes. 1021 for the . '1' '

_of paying uter'e'st on state j’hlsghwaﬁ“ U. ,. ﬁt
. creating a sinking fund "for‘ ”their rwr "
when due. This being the only state highway
levied in 1921, the rate per thousand on the"
state equalized valuation of $5,000,000.0001‘ , ,
only 24c per thousand or a little less than one-

. half of the state highway tax levied in 1920.

“It should be noted that there have been threb
Federal appropriations. The ﬁrst federal aid _ ,
was passed by congress in July, 1916, making an
appropriation of $75,000,000 of which $2,174,353
510.04 was allotted to Michigan. The second-T...
federal aid act making an appropriation of $200
000,000 was passed in February, 1919, andialé
lotted to Michigan $5,786,785.48. The third and
lust federal aid act was passed by c-Ongress 2‘
November, 1921, carrying an appropriation
$75,000,000 which gave to Michigan 32.29
532.43. These moneys are apportioned anion
the several states; one-third according to area:-
one—third according to post road mileage and”
one~third according to population, Michigan’s-
share under such diviéion being slightly under;
3 per cent. Thus, the total federal aid money...
made available for Michigan under the threer ,
acts will amount to $10,210,827.96 and since» *7
there is still available for placing under contract ,
nearly $5,000,000 of the federal money, it will‘v‘;
require an equal amount of state and county " 1
.money to match with it in order that it may be:
secured. This alone would require some $3,-
000,000 of the bond money to become available
July lst. Contracts are now outstanding which;
will require between one and one—half and two
millions more of this money so that were all con-
struction to cease during 1922, except enough
federal aid contracts to secure our allotment of
federal funds and to complete contracts out—
standing, it would require approximately $5,-
000,000 of the $10,000,000 referred to.’-’

PROGRAM WILL GO FORWARD

Despite the opposition of the farmers the 1922 '
program will go forward without change, for a
mighty lobby has been working in its behalf.
Both the governor and the highway commission-
er are committed to it, a large number ‘of the
members of the legislature are for it, every road
road building oﬁicial in the state wants it, and-'
automobile associations, chambers of commerce,
engineering societies, contractors, manufactur-
ers of road building equipment, and other large
and important interests have been working
avidiously to put it across.

Nor is the Business Farmer, prepared to say
that the 1922 program should not be consum—.
mated. The 1921 legislature authorized the
expenditure outlined by Mr. Rogers and acting
under that authority, surveys have been made,
plans completed, contracts let, and everything
put in readiness to start work with the ﬁrst
days of spring. But the Business Farmer is dis-
appointed and so are a great mass Off the farmers
that none of thosewho are so enthusiastic over,
good roads seem to give any thought to where
these enormous expenditures are going to lead
us and how they are going to be paid. ”Build
the roads,” is the cry, “and let the future genera-
tions pay for them.” When we talk of “future
generations” we may as well include nearly
everybody who is living today under 50 years of
age. It is proposed to retire these bonds in 20
years and all our readers who expect to live that
much longer will have to help pay for about $80,-
000,000 of state road bonds and interest and
$50,000,000 of bonus bonds and interest.

And in the meantime, under the stress of in-
creasing motor ,trafﬁc these roads will wear out- "
and will have to be repaired or rebuilt at anoth— '
er huge expense. If we are not careful we will
leave to our posterity a heritage of debts and
taxes which will crush them to the ground and,
bring their curses down upon our heads. Let
it not be thought that what we build today will
meet the requirements of tomorrow. Each gen-4.
eration in the past has had its own particular;
burdens to bear and unborn generations will:
have enough to do to pay the debts which they.
contract without having to worry about the debts"
cf their forebears. ' I

Right now, when every property-owner is feel? ‘
ing the burdens of taxation and when the matter?
of public expenditures is hot under.discussion,f‘-‘-
is the time for the people of this state to arrive?\
at some kind of a policy with reference to futurel'
public expenses. Let the state sell another $10,-
000,000 in bonds, ﬁll up the gaps in the trunk
lines and match the federal aid appropriatiod.
this year. But let that be an end to the selling _‘
of bonds. Let all state highway moneys from:
then on be appropriated by the legislature and‘
the amount required spread upon the tax re
The taxpayers should not wait another year/bee

 
    
   
 
    
  
   
   
   
  
    
   
   
   
    
         
  
   
   
  
 
   
   
   
  
   
    
    
 
   
  
   
   
   
  
    
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
     
  
  
   
    
   
 
 
 
   
   
   
   
   
 
  
  
  
  
   
    
    
 
    
  
 
 
 
  
   
   
 
    
  
 
 
   
   
   
  
  
   
   
  
    
 
  
 

   
 
   
 
  
 
  
 
  
  
   

fore voicing their protests against further bong,
issues, for again it may be too late. On the c “as

1 1

 
 
  

trary those who believe in, a “pay-as-yon—g
policy should begin work at once to impress ’
on the next legislature that they want no ,ni ..
bonds issued. " . . "

  
   
  
   

  
 
 
  
  
 
   

 
 


 
 

annealed for hidrwny

n -_:t in one your—W. W. Tuscan
I . Mich.

reply to the first question,
use he advised that it is legal to
p . a special assessment for bone-
ovor a. term of years for the con—
ctiou of a drain, under the terms
.the drain laws of the state of
H1 . .n.
‘ reply to the second inquiry
swenid say that the statute ﬁxes the
' p . uum amount which can be
‘ls'ed in one year for highway im-
, vement to not to exceed 50 cents
" each $100 of assessed valuation
Abeording to the assessment roll of
e last preceding year, except in
toWnships when the assessed valua-
, on is less than $500,000 then the
.1111: shall not exceed $1.00 on each
81, 000 valuation according to the
assessment roll of the last preceding
year. For reference to the section,
cite you to Section I of Chapter 2
‘35! the General Highway Law. ——-
, H. Partlew, Legal Advisor,
~m Highway Department.

mu no nave sru'mu ax-

      
   
 
 
 
   
   
 
    
    
   
   
  
  
  
   
   
   
    
  
 
 
    
   
    
  
 
  
  
  
   
  
    
   
     
     
  
  
  
    
 
    
  
  
  
 
  
   
     
 
 
  
    
     
   
   
    
 
  
 
   
    
  
  
 
  
 
  

me where to send my
examined for tubercu-
~ Y How ahead it be sent and what
.md the chance be?——J_ 1,, Elwcll.

Send a sample of your sputum to
the laboratory of the Michigan De-
mment of Health. Lansing, but
‘ write asking them for container
in which to ship it. There is no
charge connected with this service.
-_-—Editor.

SEEDING ALFALFA IN WHEAT
Will a seeding of alfalfa catch in

f If so, do you advise sowing in
spring same as clover?—Reader,
Goodells, Mich,
Under proper conditions excellent
Made of alfalfa are often secured
With wheat, seeding in early spring
:33“ as clover is ordinarily seeded.
Northern grown alfalfa seed, parti-
ﬁlarly the Grimm variety, should be
used. Seed should be applied broad-
. cast with ﬁddle seeder at the rate of
“-from ten to twelve pounds per acre,
or drilled in, crossing the rows. If
seeded broadcast the seeding should
be burrowed in with spike tooth har-
‘row with drills slanting slightly
backwards, so as not to tear out the
wheat. If common northern grov‘rrn

alfalfa is used ﬁfteen pounds per
store should be seeded.
Northern grown seed of Grimm

(1 common alfalfa can be secured
. vmm the Michigan State Farm
‘- {‘Bureau, Lansing, Mich.

Culture for inoculation may be so-
gcnred from the Department of Bac-
riology, of the Michigan Agricul-
tnral College, East Lansing. The
. so is 25¢ per bottle and one bottle
talus suiﬁcient material to ino-
late a bushel of seed.

If your land needs lime as most
M does for alfalfa, it would be
visable to apply two tons of ﬁnely
and limestone or several cubic
of marl per acre during the
Winter or early spring as a top dress-
“ing. If red clover catches well on
Ten land liming may not be neces-
sarye—J. F. Cox, Professor of Farm
(hops, M. A. C.

 

RIGHTS OF TENANT
Suppose a man gave up a land contract
Muse he could not
to rent farm

NovlsttoMarchlst.

      
  

:fuznn before contract was givenup
9%: E M,,Sa.1_eln. web.
9 tenant's lease and possession
e premises would have been
' March 1st. had he not our-

  
 

ere

land in hands of reutl. estate dealer ’

a

'(AOIe-ins mhmmfevmmen'mmmm

 

Pram oer-nu attention given to -
Ween here toe-II.

yawn“ for madman-hm
loonlﬂoemustheaooompanledbyfnn name and address. Nemenetuood "comm-Ml) .

 

L
k

0

if he voluntarily surrendered his
possession. If he did not voluntary
surrender possession he would be

~ entitled to damages for breach of

contract, and that would lessen the
rent. The owner of the premises
has no lien upon the personal pro-
perty of the tenant unless it is so
speciﬁed in the contract. He could
not therefore hold hog crates and
chicken coops mode from lumber
ed the farm before the contestwas
given up.—-—Legal Editor.

HUBAM CLOVER ON BAND

Will Hubarn clover produce well on
sandy soil? Would you advise sewing
on this kind of sum—Subscriber, Michi-
m.

Hubarn is a sweet clever whiCh
matures in a single season. It has
only been known for a few years
and its exact value has not been de-
termined. It is apparently a promis-
ing crop to grow for quick hay and
pasture. It is known to be one of
the best of honey crops.

Hubam clover is apparently adapt-
to a wide range of soil conditions
and instances of excellent growth
have been noted by us on light
Md! loans.

Hubam clover seed may be se-

cured from the Michigan State Farm
Bureau Seed Department of Lansing,
Mich., at comparatively low rates.»—
J. F. Cox, Professor of Farm Crops,
M. A. 0.

WHERE TO APPLY FOR TAX

. EXEMPTION

VVIll you please tell us how to go about
getting exemption from taxes on new
land? We have bought 40 acree of cut-
over land—Reader,

You should apply to the super-
visor fer exemption at the ~time as-
sessment is made. He will refer it
to the board of review who will
make an exemption if the law has
been complied with—Editor.

JEWISH HOLIDAYS

Will you please tell me if there are
any Jewish holidays in February or not,
or when are the Jewish holidays during
the year? Thank you—~F. G., Caro, Mich.

The Jewish holidays are celebrat-
ed in accordance with a lunar cal-
endar, and hence they fall each year
on different dates of the’solar cal—
endar. This lunar calendar is used
for the purpose of celebrating the
religious festivals at the traditional
times of the year, and the tradition
relates to the lunar, and not the
solar year.

The principal Jewish holidays fall
during the year 1921-1922 as fol—
lows: New. Year (Rosh Hashanah)
Oct. 3-4, 1921; Day of Atonement
(Yom Kippur) Oct. 12, 1921; Taber-
nacles (Sukkoth) Oct. 17-24. 1921;
Feast of Dedication (Chanukah)

FUR; DEPARTM ENT

Edited by A. B. HARDING, America's

 

LACE LEATHER TANNING

Recentl you told how to tan hides
with the on Would you tell how to
tan them to make lacing? We pay 5
cents a foot for a 1- 2 inch wide string.
One hide will buy only four or ﬁve
strings, You are a great help to the
farmer. I would like to give you your
dinner some day—L, R., Hastings, Mich.

For making buckskin, lacing, etc.,
the hair is removed before tanning.
The most common soak to remove
hair or fur 1.4 made in the following
proportion: Water, 5 gallons;
slack lime. 4 quarts; hardwood

. ashes, 4 quarts.

The skins are left in this one to
six days or until the hair or for
starts readily. A more rapid acting
application is made of water, 1
quart; red arsenic, 1 pound; un-
nlacked. lime, 1 pound.

Boil the water and arsenic, let it -

owl and add the lime. Paint this
on the ﬂesh side of the skin, fold

. bgether and let lie 12 or 16 hours.

when the hair will probably be ready
to scrape off.

QUESTION 8 INVITED

 

Dec. 26, 1921: Feast of Esther
(Purim) March 14, 1922; Pamper
(Pouch) April 18, 1922; (The
Penal: of Passover is celebrated by
Reform \Jews from April 13th to
19th inclusive. and by Orthodox
Jews from April 13th to 20th in-
clusive.) Pentecost (Shevnoth) June
2, 1922; New Year (as above) Sept.
23-24, 1922. The New Year in cells-
brated by Reform Jews one day, and
by Orthodox Jews two days as in-
dicated. The day is considered as

being from sundown to sundown,‘

and hence, each holiday begins on
the evening before the day indicated.
Philip F. Waterman, Rabbi, Kalama-
zoo, Mich.

user PAY FOR DAMAGE 21o
TELEPHONE was

Abouttwowecksagelmevedamll
house from our little town and min:
through town one of the telephone wires
caught and was bremen. The of
this telqhane company came to when
wewerogettingreadytomoveandnsked
if there were any wires in the The
man who moved my house told ‘he
didn't think there was, but one was
caught and broken. Now he want me
and the man who moved this house to pay
damages Can he collect it or in there
any law that the whethas
balm a certain height? Iaun monﬁn'ti
to get out of payin the

what yo ou T11think

ﬂrstwnntteknew Him“

the]! RF lctnoknew
Itseemstomewheaneareinmuble
We all turn to the M . F just like a
little child wha hurt, turns to its mother.
—P c. SanilnoComxty, Midi].

Telephone companies have a law-
ful right- to the streets and public
places for the stringing of telephone
wires; and the use of the streets for
the moving of buildings is an un—
usual use of the. highway. If the
public authorities grant permission
to move a building in the public
highway the telephone company is
entitled to reasonable notice of the

' intention to move the building and

a reasonable time in which they may
protect and care for the wires. The
expense of any injury to the tele—
phone wires and the safeguarding
them should be borne by the person
who is ’to move the building in the
streets, it being an unusual use of
the highwaya—Legal Edi-tor.

RENTING ON SHARES

What would be considered a fair share
for both owner and renter where owner
furnishes land, team, tools and seed and
renter does work?——G, W. A“ Scottville,
Mich_

The customary rental where the
owner furnishes‘ land. teams, tools
and seed and the router does the
work is two—thirds to the owner and
onedhird to the renter. This seems
to be a fairly equitable division.—
Howard M. Eliot, Professor of Farm
Management, M. A. C.

 

Foremost Author and Trapper

 

 

Tan as given in receipes some
weeks ago or as follows: Alum, 2 1-2
pounds; salt, 1 pound; oatmeal (or
ﬂour), 1 pound.

The above is for proportions only.
If tanning a good many hides you

will need several times the abovo'

quantities. Findy powder and dis—
solve in enough sour milk or butter-
milk to the consistency of cream.
Coat the flesh side. ‘

Another recipe is as follows:
water, 1 gallon; alum, 2 1- 2 pounds;
salt, 1 pound.

Heat the water to dissolve, and
when cool brush on the ﬂesh side of
the dampened skin. Lay the skins
flesh sides together in pairs or if a
single skin, double it up ﬂesh in-and
leave in a cool place. but not frees-
ing. Repeat this dressing of paste
or liquid, (whichever recipe is fol-
lowed) once or twice a day for two
or three days, the point being to
keep it damp with the- paste or
chemicals "until they penetrate.

~ gmsnta—eEditor

   

TO M A CHISEL
Would you
a... mm isms. m...
cold tarantula: rivdn and
not; menial—J 8., ﬂatten, Inch.

The tempering of steel tools con-
slain of two processes: First, harden-
ing by heating. then suddenly chill-
ing; and. second, “drawing the temp-
or” or softening from the chilled
state to the degree of hardness de-
sired. Inthecaseof the chisel
which we are considering, we need
to have only one end—Ithe edge——
hardened. To accomplish this, heat
the whole chisel to a dark or cherry

. red color, and holding it perpen-
dicularly over the water, dip e and
in an inch or more and keep it mov-
ing up and down .for a few seconds,
or until the edge is cool enough so
that the water will not ,‘dry on it for
the space of two seconds when it is
drawn out. Now polish one side

quickly with a piece of brick so that
the colors denoting the degree .of
heat may be seen. These colors will
form a band which will be seen to
move towards the edge or cooler part
of the tool. First will be seen a pale
yellow or straw color; than darker
yellow, which changes to brown;
thsnpurpie. then blue.

A cold chisel, needs to be quite
soft, so we will wait until the blue
gets to the edge; then quickly dip
the edge into the water again and
hold it there until the remainder of
the tool is cool enough so that we
may dip the whole without fear of
hardening it. Tools for woodwork,
such as carpenter's chisels and plans
irons, are tempered to a {straw color,
as they require a very hard edge in
order to be kept sharp—Professor
of Farm Mechanics, M. A. C.

COLLECTING WAR TAX

A number of young people has would
like to give a play next summer. Ad-
mission will be 25 cents each ticket. To
whom should the war tax be sent and
how much tax would it be necessary to
collect on each 25 cent admission?—
“Happy", Weidman, Mich,

Where the proceeds from any af-
fair held, do not inure exclusively
to the beneﬁt of either a religious.
educational or charitable organiza-
tion or institution, the law provides
that a tax at the rate of one cent for
each ten cents or fraction thereof
charged must be collected on each
and every admission ticket sold. The
ticket must show separately the ad-
mission charge, the tax on same, and
the total of both. The war tax must
be collected at the time the ticket
is sold and must be returned to the
governmenit even though the ticket

is not used. . The tax cannot be based _

upon the gross receipts.

Returns must be made on form
729, which can be secured of the
ofﬁce. This form together with the
amount of tax collected must be re-
ceived at this ofﬁce on or before the
last day of the month following that
in which the affair is held. Merely
mailing a remittance does not con-
stitute payment 0! tax unless re-
ceived within the prescribed time.
Unless the above instructions are
complied with the person or persons
responsible will make themsetvee
liable for the penalties provided by
law.

Make all remittances payable to
the Collector of Internal Revenue,
Detroit, Mich. If exemption is
claimed, application should be made
on form 755 supplied by this ofﬁce.
-—Fred 'L. Woodworth, Collector In-
ternal Revenue, Detroit, Mich.

FIRST FARM BUREAU
Would you plfeese mguhliﬁ when and
alsoby whom orgnglzzvclilsimz‘
leh. man. ' '

 

The first farm bureau was orga-1
nized in Brooms county, New York.
It was fotndsd in the fall of 1913
under the name of Farm Improve-
ment Association of Broome County
but in 1914 the name was changed
to Broome County Farm Bureau. Mr.
Byers. H. Gitcblell. at the time presi-
dent of the Chamber of. Commerce. '
Binghamtou, Brooms. county.
the man whatneuzmbpd the

  

wed

          
  
  
    
  
    
   
   
    
    
  
   
 
    
   
    
   
   
    
   
   
    
  
  
    
  

I

        
     
     
     
     
  
    


 

  
  

 
 

Do you realize that the use of limestone is the one subject
’ on which all agricultural authorities agree?

Try to think of another method Or feature of farm opera-
tion which all authorities agree in supporting. "

The necessity for the use of limestone in securing proﬁtable
yields is admitted and urged by the agricultural colleges, by
county agents, experimental stations, farm papers, lecturers
——in_ fact, by every reliable source of farming information.

Have you ever thought of the subject of limestone in that
light before?

Have you ever considered the fact that, in delaying the
appliCation of limestone, you are going against the opinion
not of one authority or group of authorities, but against the
unanimous opinion of all authorities? ‘

In short, do you dare—can you afford to run the risk of
going through the coming season of low prices and small
proﬁts without taking advantage of the help limestone will
be to you in increasing your yields?

Alfalfa Must Have Lime

In the present great campaign of the Michigan Agricultural
College on alfalfa, it is stated deﬁnitely that lime must be
used on the largest percentage of Michigan land in order to
get satisfactory yields.

If you are planning to get the unquestioned beneﬁts and
proﬁts from growing alfalfa, you must begin by liming
your land.

Clover Must Have Lime '

Clover has always been a part of the short rotation of crops
on most Michigan farms. It is impossible to raise clover on

Dare You Do ' Without Limestone?

Tim: illumau'on: drawn from adage! hologra In:
Hunt) the di’ trance limmonr make: an t. grqwt of
alfalfa. T large pittan- 1‘: of a ﬂrld m which two
ion: of Solva Pulverized Limntone to an acre [lave
been and. ¥lu circular {amt 1110“)! an unlsmd
Jm'p in the Jam: ﬁeld.

 

many Michigan farms today, while other farms are getting
larger. yields- than ever before. The only difference is
limestone.

Don’t think of these facts as merely advertising statements
of a concern trying to sell you limestone. They are facts
stated by your own agricultural college, by your own farm
bureaus, and county agents. Ask them.

Solvay Costs Less—Does More

Of course, there are several forms in which lime may be
applied. But by far the largest percentage of all Michigan
farmers using lime agree that Solvay Pulverized Limestone
is the cheapest and best form in the long run.

It is dry. This saves freight and haulage—the largest
items of expense in limestone use.

It is the most ﬁnely pulverized form of limestone known.
All of it is thus readily absorbed by the soil. No need to
wait'for its beneﬁts. Smaller quantities are necessary.

And it is produced by a company known and respected by
Michigan farmersma concern that can be absolutely. relied
upon for the purity of its product and fair dealing with its
customers.

Solvay Pulverized Limestone is one of the few if not the
only commodity bought by farmers on which the price was
never raised throughout the entire high-price area we have
been passing through. It is offered today at the same price
asked before the war.

Send For Free Book On Limestone

Write today {or free copy of 32-page text—book telling all about
its uses and beneﬁts—how, where, and when it should be
applied, and the actual results of scores of limestone tests.

 

   


 

 
  
 
  
 

 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
  

0T! hie-oh sch-smud—
_ mtmnrgt) 0357? order “
Montgomery Ward 8- Co.

      
  

 

  
 
 

Ohio-go Kansas City St. Paul I

 

  
 
  
 
    
 
  
   
  
 
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
   
  
  
  
 

ember, it is not
how many you batch

that counts b

largo batches of strong, vigorous chicks that
The Queen to oecnrstel sited-take

no) glow. . ' y _ _
»-eare «tactically Without attention of a variation in
hperstnro of 70 degrees without dang: to the eggs.
ﬁbﬂtﬁm Redwood—very seem in these
of imitation: Redwood does not absorb the odor
hem batching chicks. Cheaper woods and strswboard or
, mention mung in iron or tin machin retain the
‘ to weaken and kill the chicks of later atches.

, Queen lncnhotou and Breeders are sold by dealers
Bosdfor Book.

We. Free
”El INHIBITOR 00. Lincoln. lshroska
BIRD BRAND

SEEDS

THE BEST THE W
Certiﬁed Grim Alarm and
Huh“ Clover. Michigan and
I wn Bed Clover, Al-
sike and Sweet Clover.

of other Northern
grown Field and Garden
Seeds. A post card will
bring full information,

~7?i'EC-E~DEPLN Co.-
SEIDSMEE —. W

rs. ulna

2e

 
    
 
     
   
     
  
   
 
 
  
 
    
    
  
    
      
    

  

   
     

 

 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
  

   

 

""‘yr PENDERGAST

, Fence prices
g 1;: p ArcAbsolutolyTho lowest

Yes ﬁr! Youcansavemtmooey
now on Pend

m e as mm
the lowest price—bus you must
hurry.

We Pay Freight

    
 
 
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
  
 

-0;

‘9

     
  

 

  

, 77195520451 fE-NCE can:
‘ mama's"
I.“

 
 
  

 
  

 

 
  
 
   
   
 
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
    
   
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

SEED--§-HAY----STRAW

I’have 45 tons of nice June
olover hey, all nice. Almost
'. 15 tons of oats and barley
‘straw, 8 tons of millet straw,
: « 5 tons of June clover straw,
W100 bushel of millet. seed, 500
bushel of‘ old oat seed, 500
’ bushel of new cat seed. Write
;.for prices or come and see. ,
Cash must accompany all
orders. For reference, Rose-
: bush State Bank.

 

 

 

 

  

 

  
  
   

  
 

   
 
 

- RURAL EDUCATION
HAVE read the article written by
a “taxpayer" in Genesee county,
in Dec. 3 issue, on the conSolidat—
ed school question, and he has my
vieWs exactly. 1 cannot see for the
life of me what has caused these
highly educated people who are

to have so much sympathy all at
once for “the farmers' children. They
have always tried to make the tarm-
er an under dog, now why so much
fuss over his oﬂspring? And what
are they going to do with the farm-
ers after they have driven them off
the farm by taxation! It takes a
mighty good farm and a mighty good
farmer to ”make a go of it now. It
will be a consolidated poor house
thatwﬂibenecdedinafewyears,
if I am any judge. Around Perry
and Morrice, where they have con-
solidated schools their taxes run
from $27 to $33 per 31,000. But
what does Mr. Johnson know or care,
about that He gets his salary paid
whether the farmer lives or not.
That is just the trouble with this
country; there are too many of thoso
would-be bosses, trying to show the
farmer how to spend his money,
whether he has got it to spend or
not.

But to come back to the “Am I
My Brother’s Keeper” part. I was
educated in a village high school,
having been reared in o. village, and
I know what it means to the chil-
dren to enter school, who cannot
dress properly or appear properly.
Now they are trying to rake up these
poor ragged kids from all the by-
roads and absolutely make them go
to town to school, whether they
want to go or not, and whether their
people can afford to dress them in
a manner that will not make them
a laughing stock, or not. How much
rather would these children, who are
unfortunate in worldly goods, stay
in their own districts than to be
poked fun at by the town smarties.
It seems to me that each district is
doing its bit in paying a larger part
of the tuition for high school train-
ing, when the children are ﬁnished
at “the little red school house," and
if they can not take advantage of
such a means to get their education,
it seems to me it would be something:
like Pres. Sperry, of Albion College
used to say: “Putting a $1,000 edu-
cation on 3 10¢ boy.”

Then to the idea of conveyance.
The way the Genesee taxpayer de-
scribed it was sure food for thought.
How much better for a child to walk
along the country road in the pure
fresh air (that the city folks rave

like sardines in those "busses" along
with children who are not taught
to cough or blow their noses pro-
perly, to say nothing about keeping
clean. I had much rather know that
a child was walking home on a coun-
try road than to be hanging around
town waiting for the older ones to
get cut and the bus to start. If temp-
tations ever reach the young mind,
it is when they are hanging around
with nothing to do.

To make a long story short, I can
not see why, if the rural districts
can afford to hire a competent teach-
er, keep up their school houses and
educate their children to the eighth
grade, then pay their tuition to high
school, they can not be allowed to do
so without so much howling. If the
local school boards could have the
privilege of running their districts
“hampered by these salaried guys,
there would not be so much discon-
tent; and no clear.minded farmer
would want consolidated schools.
But the commissioner comes around
and tells the teacher in the- rural
school, to tease the school board for
everything she can think of, then
tells the board to get along with
just as little as they can (even to try
to get along with one toilet) as we
are soon to have consolidated schools
and it won’t pay to incur any ex-

penses.
ItisO._K.fortbeguyintheeasy
chairtotellthofarmer“'Atoboy’
stick to the plow and grub out that
tax money” so that he can hold down

‘ his Job or get a better me; but put

him behind the plow tor one loosen

 

and “lint you dollars to doughnuts,

 

   

clamoring for consolidated schools,

so much about) than to be packed ,

new, when». beans have been m

 

that he’ll be singing “How Door to
My Heart ~is the Little Red School
House" and he'll forget it’s “out of
date,” too. ‘

There is nothing that will drive
the children from the farm any
quicker than this burden of taxa-
tion. While the young man and wo-
man are trying to make a living on

the farm, let’s give them a chance

to make a life, and not always keep
their nose on the grind stone, and a
laughing stock for their dependents.
—-L. Z. S., Shiawossee Counw.

» FOB sum SCHOOLS
UST a few interesting statistics
J quoted fromoditorialpogooftho
February Pictorial Review nega-
sine, with Dr. Thomas D. Wood
Teachers’ College, Columbia Univer-
sity an authority for the ﬁgures and
all to show: ‘

Is rural education on par with
urban? Statistics say: No. The
ruralvckild does not have as good a
chance as the city child for develop-
ment and preparation for a useful
and happy lfio.

0! 30,000,000 children in the
United States, about 18,000,009 live
in rural districts. The percentage
of illiteracy in the country is twice
that of the city. The average school-
ternf is 140 days in the country and
180 days in the city and the aver-
age attendance is only 69 per cent in
the country and 80 per cent in the
city.

In some states it is found that
actual number of days missed by
boys ,and girls on account of farm
work (and here is the question 'of
child labor 'too) by far exceeds ab-
sence for any other cause. ,

In Michigan it is found that nearly
30 per cent..of the children were re-
tarded and that 86 per cent of 15-
year-old children in rural schools
were retarded.

Eight million children are in one
and two room schools in America
and there are ofer 200,000 such
buildings, many of which are in s
deplorable condition. y

We expend for the city school
children $40 per capita, for the rural
child but $24.

The rural child has from four to
eight weeks less of school term than
the city child. Meaning, in other
words the city children have eight
years of elementary schooling, while

 

their rural cousins, with less capable ‘

teachers and poorer equipment re-
ceive but six years.

Twenty-nine per cent of city chil-
dren complete the high school course
while only 5 per cent of rural chil-
dren reach that goal and 90 per cent
never even go beyond the rural
school.

In matters of health it is a sorry
fact that country children suffer by
far the more from ear defects, eye
defects, breathing defects and mal-
nutrition, 16 per cent of country
children are improperly fed and un-
dernourished which all tends to low-
ering the morals.

In “God’s great out of doors"
where health should abound we ﬁnd
these awful facts because of homo
and school conditions.

Give us better schools for our
farm child so he can compete with
the city child. Better schools mean
better homes.

Certainly the one room rural
school is not answering the purpose,
statistics say, and ﬁgures never lie.
Yours for advancement A rural
mother and a has-been pupil and
teacher in both city and rural
schools, Pontiac, Mich.

THE TRIALS OF AN EDITOR
THOUGHT I would write you and
ask why you are getting nervous
nianaArethewgetting too high
for you? For you said when beans
would sell for $8 or $10 a pound in
the city the farmer would get 6
cents a pound. Well I was in Bay
City two weeks before Christmas
and I went in a store and they were
selﬂegtmteeatsspoundasdwo
were getting 00.16 a hundred
pounds tor our beans. How. about
the ﬁve dollar beans what you pre-
dicted before the__ﬂrst of tho year
and nowit is. the tithe! ”rust-y
and no toodollar heels “,ud‘

 

1

     
  

  
   

   

can see no reason for 'it and how
about the Russian relief buying mil-
lions of bushels of beans and beans
were a short crap all] around us.

I think that been ought to be
much higher for the hard work that
we had weeding, cultivating and har-
veuing and last of all sit by the
bean picker all winter picking them
so they wouldn’t skin us up entirely
picking ever beans about three times
what they ought to when beans pick
about 30 pounds how much will we
have left at the present price? Are
you really working to help the farm-
er or are you helping the big fel-
lows? Well, my husband started this
letter but I thought I had to say
something too, as I had to work so
hard in the beans last summer and
I know just what it is to raise them
as a farmer cannot afford to hire a

man at from 2 to 3 dollars a day at g

the low prices of grain and I could
not look this on any longer so I

thought I would eXpress my thoughts ‘

too. The city people were going by
in their big cars laughing to see a
woman in the ﬁeld but they didn’t
think how hard a farmer has to
work. Could tell you lots more but
am going to’ leave a. little space for
my husband yet. "

Well I have no beans to sell now
but I wish every farmer would get
a good price for his beans, who have
any left, which are very few, for if
beans were ﬁve dollars a bushel then
it would pay him to plant some. 1
think there is something wrong.
-——Mr. and Mrs. Henry H.
County.

My dear folks,

is it
that we should

of lo'in were the
same proportion. It lath
aim at the Business to give 11:
readers F about the mktts and
to markets as best- we

' mos.
can. We have made mistakes, it is true,
hutwe‘lnvobeen right manylnoreﬂmes
than we have been wrong. When
Detroit market shows a particularly 80-!
tive tendency for a long period of time
which is not followed by our. markets,
it immediately becomes clen- that arti-
ﬁcial forces are at work. Perhaps mani-
gzinlationj lzfmhapsuakstudied snort on the
o o the rice at
a time when an up p ‘

are getﬂn ready

for another planting. Who knovsv‘s‘? We
mimoﬂymournngerontbem
and so it makes us nervous. Can't be
have mwﬁh Diagnose very
ong or you n't ave written it
like you did—Editor. qu o

 

ESSENTIALS 0F CITIZENSHIP

T this present day, when worthy

citizenship is at a premium,

tint because of the prevail-

ing hanmfull results strung from

the too intense pursuit of material

possessions, causes the earnest in-

quirylbobemedoemducareful

search for the essentials, so abso—

MW necessary ibr the develop-
ment of thrifty citizenship.

It as the firm conviction of the
writer that there are three most
oweniillall of possessions if worthy
ditizenshlip is to result and these
ossenltiaﬂs are—Ability, Integrity
and Activity.

Most certain it is, if any one of
these ﬁbres essentials is absent. a
faulty character is the result. The
man. possessing ability and activity,
without integrity, is sure to go
mug. A goodly number of this
class cure now in the prisons of the
state. '

Aﬂso will he be a failure Who po-
ssesses ability and integrity, yet
lacking activity. is but a oumberer
of space. Again, the possession of
lilnbegrrity and activity will not be
h‘bﬂe to amompﬂlisih worth-ﬂy because
Of ﬂocking iihte element so essential
nor the accomplishment of worthy
results.

There is, today, an imperative
demand ﬂou- m'ue men, men who,
like our lamented Theodore Roose~
velllt, also feomless of opposition be-
causoofboisgisthollghtondin
Co .1“ of Duty. And my the
number of out nu. be hugely tn-
cmod. ' ’

      
  

It is truly, a very, sad wndthton.
in Our, , j so ,. .

ing Just a little now you say you

Are-nae

  
   
    
 

 


  
     
  

 

     

mes «mud smug minds, gran.
hearts, true saith and willing
We. Men whom the lust of ofﬁce
does not kill. Men, Whom the
spoils of oﬂivce‘ cannot buy. Men
who possess opinions and a will.
Men who halve honor, who will not
live above the fog, in public duty
and m the thinking.”

The question as to whether the.
world is growing better at this pres-
ent day, is being considered and with
a ﬁltering of views. upon this-im-
portant matter and while there is
evidence to sustain a favorable
view, of line important question, it
is to be regretted that there is much,
in present conditions, to sustain the
view that evil is in the ascendency.

Well! Dear reader! Surely you
ondIcandoourpartinthebet—
testing the (conditions surrounding
us and it is no less than our positive
duty to do all that is within our
power to [help make secure such
conditions as will advance the high-
est interests of our fellow men.

It is well no remember that “To
whom much is given, muohwifl'l be
required” and we, Americans, liv-
Inig in this band of Freedom and
in this age of marvelous physical
cdvianoement have, thereby, laid up-
on us a reSponsiibdlity for the aid-
Img of and that is truly Worthy and
which duty does not rest upon those
not “in possession of the advantages
that are ours.

Flina'lﬂy: may it be our good fort—
une to possess and make full and
emective use of iihe three essentials
referred to above—Ability, Integrity
and Acﬂivﬁty.—J. T. Danielle, Shia-
wassee County, Mich.

You have omitted the most important
of all the requirements for the highest
type of citizenship.—unselﬁshness. The
mat able and honest man may be the
most selﬁsh whose every private and
public act may be for iihe benefit of self
at the expense of humanity.‘ Most of the
woes ofthe world can be traced to self-
ishness. He who would measure up to
the full stature of manhood must erase
self and substitute selflessness. As men
woken to the realization that service to
Godandtomanisatoncethemost
pleasurable, the most satisfying, yes, and
ﬁle most proﬁtable ideal to follow, so
will we have better government, better
homes, better people—Editor.

 

 

THE WAY WOMEN DRESS

reference to the letter by Uncle
. Rube Spinach, published in your

paper of Feb. 11, I think it a ri-
diculous shame for any man or wo-
man to u'phold the young women of
today in the styles or fashions they
are wearing. Although there are
some innocent girls who wear such
clothes. Such undue exposure as
seen on the streets today will arouse
the passions of any live young man.
The result is the girls are going
wrong and becoming mothers before
they are married. Some get mar-
ried to save themselves from dis-
grace, and a good many of these are
divorced in a short time.

Divorce is wrecking thousands
of homes every year, and every year
it is getting worse.

Any woman can dress modestly
and sensib‘ly and still be comfort-
able. In fact there can’t be any
comfort in some of the modern
fashions.

We need some reformers to cry
out against the wickedness of this
nation, for unless there is a general
turning back to God and the old
time religion thiscountry will slow-
ly fall.

Tell Uncle Rube to wake up and
look around at the way things are
going. Read the accounts in the
newspapers, it's alarming the things
that are taking place today.

I‘am not a reformer nor a preach-
er, but just a simple farmer, but to
publish anything like that arouses
my indignation—L. W.
Ingham County, Mich.

The physical culturiets would say ﬂint
carnal mind. so I must be

is that oval only in
If your mind be pure you will think no
evil.,do no evil. see no evil. Fine theory,
hn'tlt? wonderifonepermt or our
population amid actually My? .

yes. lots of people THINK they .can.
Hands, up. all you folks, whose every
thought e um no the driven/snow!
Don‘t think tint. Uncle Rube]!

informs—v! ' ‘

 
 
  
  
  

 

 

        
        
     

no men. The.

Fiedler, .

  

‘ when unemployment is

  

 

HONEST PERIODICAJB
OGER BABSON, whose forecast-
ing of business has general ac-
ceptance, says that within ten
years a fourth of American farmers
will be bankrupt. The Secretary of
Agriculture says that under present
conditions farming can not endure.
Very generally, farms are kept going
by money made away from' the
forum-the old man and his team
work on automobile roads; his
daughter teaches school.

In the cities, not in Europe only
but new in America, people starve.
Millions of American men, women
and. children now enter from lack
of food; every investigation proves
it. To get the food, they would have
to pay more than they can earn;
it is not the farmer that gets such
prices, that gives so little for their
money. Most farmers are destroy-
ing food in one way and another
because it will not pay the expense
of marketing.

If farmers controlled the govern-
ment, there would be a “truth in
fabric" law: they do not control.
Railroad workers and coal miners
can testify that wage earners do not
control the government. Farmers
and wage earners have an easy ma—
jority; the others are few. If the
few control, if there is a dictator-
ship by a minority, that is Bolshe-
vism; that is what Bolshevism is.

The means by which a minority
controls in America has been demon—
strated again and again. Peri—
odicals, for example, require the larg-
er investment, and periodicals obey
their masters. Not all periodicals
are controlled, or this article would
not be printed. When a reader ﬁnds
an honest periodical, he has found
what he may not easily ﬁnd again.
It is for misinformation and mis—

leading counsel that the mass of
Americans now pay.
The Michigan Business Farmer

has told the truth about taxation.
The excess proﬁts tax and the surtax
are not paid directly or indirectly
by anybodywho can not afford to
pay. It is because these taxes fell
upon the rich that the campaign
against them is so well ‘ ﬁnanced.
The Michigan Business Farmer
might have added something to its
resources. If it was offered nothing,
that was a. high compliment.

This matter of taxation is not a
theoretic thing that a farmer may
overlook or leave to politicians.
What is at stake is, who pays for the
war? If farmers and wage earners
can be made to pay that tidy sum,
they will not live long enough to
get their noses off the grindstone.
The way to make them pay it is to
misinform them and mislead them.

Regularly, a paper that opposes
the excess proﬁts tax wants labor
deﬂated. Farmers are urged to op—
pose the railroad workers in order
that transportation may be cheap—
er. The Michigan Business Farmer
has not taken that position. Lower-
ing the cost of transportation need
not be at the sole expense of work—
ingmen. Henry Ford has proved
this in practice as others have by
ﬁgures. A bill was introduced in
congress to limit the salaries of rail-
road ofﬁcials .to the generous maxi—
mum of $15,000; but that proposal
received little publicity.

There is a direct relation between
wages and the returns from farm-
ing. This also, though demonstrat—
ed and known, is little emphasized
in propaganda aimed at either wage
earners or farmers. When wages
are high, farming is proﬁtable:
general,
farming does not pay. When farm-
ing prospers, it competes powerfully
for- labor by offering a choice be-
tween good wages and emancipation
from wages. When farming loses,
it sends men to cities to compete
for jobs. '

“Labor needs capital and capital
needs labor. The farmer needs
capital and capitaln‘eeds the farm-
er." Capital is everybody’s friend.
The wage earner is told that he
wants lpwe cost of living; he does.
The form
C‘", (Cmﬂnuedonmo 18)

 

 

 

‘mnst ,be deﬂated; my.

By

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*st

 
 

 
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
   
  
 
  
 
  
   

   

ALL of your

e “New York World” and odd tho mi

 

Write us for votes on other publications not Included in this list.

 
 

 

 

 

(We are not responsible for increases in rates made by other! publications.)

  
 

 

 

DAILIES
With

Names of The M. B 1“
other papers Each One Year
Detroit Free Press ........... $4.5

Detroit Journal .............. 4.50
hetroit Times . . . .......... 4.50
Grand Rapids Press ......... 4.50
Grand Rapids Herald . ...... 5.50
Grand Rapids News .......... 4.50
Toledo Blade ................ 4.50
Toledo News-Bees ........... 1.28

Toledo Times

................

 

Chicago Herald-Examiner . . .. 5.25
Chicago Drovers' Journal 6.00
Jackson Citizens' Patriot . 5.50
Jackson News ............... 5.50
Battle Creek Enquirer-News 4.50
Battle Creek Moon—Journal 4.50
Saginaw News Courier ...... 5.50
Lansing State Journal ...... 5.50
Kalamazoo Gazette .......... 5.50
Flint Journal ............ . . 5.50
Big Rapids Pioneer .......... 4.50
Port Huron Times-Herald .. 5.50
Ypsilanti Ypsilantian Press 3.50
WEEKLIES
Allegan News ............... $2.00
Kansas City Weekly Journal . 1.25
'l‘nledo Blade weekly ......... 1 40

Wheeling Register, weekly 2:25

 

 

TBI-WEEKLIE S

Atlanta Constitution ......... $2.25
New York World ...... ' ...... 1.65
MISCELLANEOUS
American Bee Journal ....... $2.00
American Fruit Grower ...... 1.50
American Poultry Advocate 1.55
American Sheep Breeder 1.75
American Swineherd ......... 1.75

American Thresherman and

Farm Power .............. 1.65
Better Fruit ................ 1.65
Breeder’s Gazette ............ 2.00
Chester White Journal ....... 1.70
Everybody’s Poultry Magazine 1.40
Fruit Belt ................... 1.35
Gleanings in Bee Culture . 1.95
Guernsey Breeder's Journal . 2.75
Holstein-Friesian Register . 1.85
Hoard’s Dairyman ........... 1.75
Horse Review ................ 6.70
Horseman ......... ,. ......... 3.50
Hunter-Trader-Trapper ...... 2.40
Jersey Bulletin .............. 2.60
Market Grower's Journal 2.15
O. K. Poultry Journal ....... 1.30
Poultry Breeder ............. 1.25
Poultry Item .............. . 1.65
Poultry Keeper ........ . ..... 1.35
Poultry Success ............. 1.70
Poultry Tribune ........ 1.70
Rabbit Journal .............. 1.35
Reliable Poultry Journal .... 1.60
Southern Fruit Grower ...... 1-35
Swine Breeder’s Journal ..... 1.35

Tractor & Gas Engine Review . 1.75
Trotter and Pacer .......... 3.50
MAGAZINES

- With
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The Michigan Business Farmer, Mt.

renew my subscription to your paper for..." ..... .... ya." ...
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r. 0...... ....... .sm.

a_ oneoon-ooeoeoooooooooooooooooooooo.

 
 
 
  
 
  
   
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
   
    
   
   
 
  
 
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
   
  
  
 
   
     
     
   
  
  
    
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
    
  
  
     
 
   
  
   
  

All Out Doors . 3
Argosy (All Story Weekly) .
American Boy 2

 

 

American Cookery .......... . 2.15
American Magazine . . . . . . . . . . 3.00
American Women ........... 1.35
ROY’S Magazine ............. 1.75
ROY’S Life .................. 3.50
ROY’S World ................ 1.55
Century Magazine ........ . . . . 5.00
Christian Endeavor World 3.35
Christian Herald ............ 2.25
Commoner ................... 1.70 ’
Children's Magazine .......... 1.70 -
Collim’s Weekly ............. 2.75
Current Opinion .............. 4.00
Delinaeator ................. 3.00

Designer & Woman's Magazine 2.60

 

 

 

 

Detective Story Magazin 6.40
Etude ................. ' ...... 2.50
Everybody’s Magazine ....... 3.25
Every Child’s Magazine ..... 2.00
Forest and Stream ........... 3.70
Garden Magazine ........... 3:50
Gardening ............ ...... 2.85
Gentlewoman ................ 1.10'
Girl’s Companion ............ 1.45
Good Stories ................. 1.15
Guide to Nature ............. 2.10
Harpenr's Magazine ......... 4.50
Household Journal ........... 1.25
Illustrated World ............ 3.50
Independent ................. 4.50 1
Junior Instructor Magazine .. 2.75
Judge's Weekly .......... '. .. 6.50
Leslie's Weekly .............. 6.50
Literary Digest .............. 4.85
Little Folks ................. 2.25
McCall's .................... 1.50
McClure’s Magazine .......... 2.25
Modern. Priscilla ............. 2.25
Mother's Magazine ........... 1.30
Motion Picture Magazine 2.75
Motion Picture Classic ....... 3.60
National Sportsman .......... 1.90
Needlecraft .................. 1.35
Outlook ..................... 5.50
Outdoor Life ................. 3.00
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Pathfinder .................. 1.80
People’s Favorite ........... 2.70
People’s Home Journal ...... 1.90
People’s Popular Monthly 1.20
Physical~ Culture ............. 3.40
Pictorial Review ............ 2.50
Picture Play Magazine ....... 2.70
Popular Magazine ............ 4.50
Popular Science Monthly 3.50
Presbyterian Banner ......... 8.15
Sunset Magazine ............. 8.00
Science and Invention ....... 3.00
Scientific American ......... . 6.00
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Short Stories ................ 3.50
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Student’s Art Magazine ....... 1.65
Sunday School Times ......... 2.60
Today’s Housewife ..... ...... 1.50
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Travel .................... .. 4.25
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ooooooeonOQQIolO‘OA no}
V »,,

 

 

 

 


~ g. 3‘
J-

View
”dugout-Owned

 
     

:Ess'y'Homo Treatment Keeps
Cows Healthy and Proﬁtabl _

   

OLIVER CURwooD

 

Fiﬁ

   

'

.aﬁmaatﬂﬁrf W U“ Raw ‘

 
 
 
 

(Continued from last week)
R several minutes after that
Miki lay still while the blood
made its way slowly through his
numbed and half-frozen limbs.
last he stag
then it was

We get scores of letters we
this one from W. H.
Petr-oils. Out, a dealer who so gored to his feet. and
Kara: - that Le Beau

Jubilantly and turned bac

And now followed many days that
ll and torment for
unequal struggle between
Brute and the

“Wehandleelotot

ulators’. etc.. but when n is upto'ns to

    
  
   
  
   
 
 

were days of he

 

spirit of the Dog.

”I must break you—'Ow!
Christ! I will break you!
would say time and agai
came with the
“I will make yo
and when I say

It was a sma
Miki could no
reach of the club and
They maddened him—for
and Le Bean’s ugly soul
with joy as Miki launche
again and again at the
tearing at them with
frothing blood like a
For twenty years
trained ﬁghting dogs, and this
his way. So he had done with N
until The Killer was
at his call cre

Three times
cabin, Nanette
horrible strug
and the dog,
buried her f

1119 of the endorsements
from cow owuere themsel
Ilstter from O. E. Dodge,

club and the whip.
u crawl to me—oui,
ﬁght you will ﬁght!“
11 cage, so small that
t get away from the

sapling bars,
his teeth and
wolf gone mad.

mastered, and
pt to him on his belly.
from a window in the
looked forth on these
gfes between the man
and the third time she
ace in her arms
sobbed; and when Le Beau cam
and found her crying he dragged
her to the window and made her
look out again at Miki,
bleeding amd half dead in the c
It was a merning on which he 8
ed the round of his traps, and he
was always gone until late the fol-
lowing day. And never was he more
than well’out of sight than Nanette
would run out and go to the cage.

It was then tha
Brute. At times
blinded that he could scarcely stand
or see, he would crawl to the bars
of the cage and caress the soft hands
that Nanette held in fearlessly to
him. And then, after a little, Nap
nette began to bring the baby out
with her, bundled up like a little
and in his joy Miki whimp-
wagged his tail and grovell-
ed in his worship before these two.
It was in the second week of\his
captivity that the wonderful thing
happened. Le Beau was gone, and
there was a raging blizzard outside
to which Nanette dared not expose
the baby. So she went to the

and with a heart that b
she unbarred the doc
Miki into the cabin.
should ever discover what she had
done—!”

The thought made her shiver.
After this ﬁrst time she brought
him into the cabin again and again.
Once her heart stood still when Le
Beau saw blood on the ﬂoor, and his
eyes shot at her suspiciously. Then

DAIRY ASSOCIATION 00.. m0,
m VI.

   

  
 

 

 
  
 

 

t Miki forgot The

 

 

per YEAR

 

r—and brought
Ixf Le Beau

 

 

 
 
 
  
 
 
  
    
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
  

“I cut my ﬁnger she said.” and a
moment later, with her
she did cut it, and w
looked at her hand he
about the ﬁnger, with blood-stain

back to him,
hen Jacquu
saw a cloth

After that Nanette always watched
the ﬂoor carefully.
More and more this cabin, with
the woman and the baby in it, be-
came a paradise for Miki.
came the time when Nanette
to keep him in the cabin with
night, and lying close to the pre-
cious cradle Miki never once took
his eyes from her.
she prepared for bed. She changed
into'a long, soft robe, and then, sit-
ting near Miki, with her bare little
feet in the iireglow, she took down
her wonderful hair and _began brush-.
It was the ﬁrst time Miki
had seen‘ this new and marvellous
garment about her. g .
shoulders andgbreactaud almost :to
. the ﬂoor. in a shining-1135310

 

It was late when

 
   

 

 
 

men over her

 

 

  

 

wacaskingGodtobegoodtoher
bathe llittle \Nanette tn the crib.
After that she cuddled the
up in her arms, and put out the
light, and went to bed; and
all the hours of the night Miki made
no sound that would 'waken them.
In the morning, when Nanette
opened her eyes, she found Miki
with his head resting on the edge
of the bed, close to the baby that
was nestled against her bosom.
Thatmorningasshebuﬂttheﬁre,
something strange and stirring in
Nanette’s breast made her sing. Le
Beau would be away until dark that
night, and she would never dare to
tellhim what she and the baby and
the dog Were going to do. It was her
birthday. Twenty-six; and it seemed
to her that she had lived the time
of two lives! And eight of those
years with The Brute! But today
they would celebrate, they three. All
the morning the cabin was filled
with a new spirit—a new happiness.
Years ago, before she 'had met Le
Beau, the_Indians away back on the
Waterfound had called Nanette
“Tanta Penashe” (“the Little Bird")
because of the marvellous sweetness
of her voice. And this morning she
sang as she prepared the birthday
feast; the sun ﬂooded through the
windows, and Miki whimpered hap-
pily and thumped his tail, and the
baby cackled and crowed, and The
Brute was forgotten. In that for-
getfulness Nanette was a girl again,
sweet and beautiful as in those days
when old Jackpine, the Cree—who
was now dead—had told her that
she was born of the ﬂowers. The
wonderful dinner was ready at last,
and (to the baby‘s delight Nanette
inducedMildtositonachaii-attho
table. He felt foolish there, and he
looked so foollish that Nanette

E

chair, feeling his shame horribly,
she ran to him and put her arms
around him and pleaded with him
until he took his place at the table
Ilsa-in.

So the day passed until mid—after-
noon. when Nanette cleared away all
signs of the celebration and locked
Miki in his cage. It was fortunate
she was ahead at time, for scarcely
was she done when Le Beau came
into the edge of the clearing, and
with his was Duran-t, his acquaint-
ance and rival from the edge of the
Barrens farther north. Durant had
sent his outﬁt on to Port 0’ God by
an Indian, and had struck south and
west'wi'th two dogs and a sledge to
visit a cousin for a day or two. He
wasonhiswaytothePostwhenhe
came upon Le Beau on his trapline.

Thus much Le Beau toid Nanette,
and Nanette lo’oked at Durant with
startled eyes. They were a good
pair. Jacques and his guest, only
that Durant was-older. She had be-
come somewhat accustomed to the
brutality in Le Bean’s face, but she
thought that Durant was a monster.
He made her afraid, and she was
glad when they went from the cabin.

“Now I will show youths hate
that!!! trains t6. km ”I? 900! ‘II

rabbit today, , m'sieuﬂ Jae-

dues. ’ “I have told" you but you have
Aindho took with nth. -M

mathewhm-g ' '
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“You beast!" she
M you shall not! Do you
You shall not!”

the chain. The club rose as
head came through. In an
stant it would he

caught Nanette on the
and sent her frail body
th a crash. The Brute
sprang upon her. His ﬁngers grip-
ped in her thick, hair

 

From Durant came a

It was too late. A l
geance and retribution,
the end of his chain and»
’s throat. Nanette heard!
azed eyes she saw!
gropingiy and struggled
looked just once
9 snow. Then, with a
she staggered toward

When Durant
drag Le Beau
Mild made no
him. Again, perhaps, it
Beneﬁcent Spirit that told
duty was done. He went
his cage, and lying
looked forth at D

stained snow

streak of van
Miki was at

reached out
to her feet,
down upon th
terrible cry,

gathered courage to
out of Miki’s reach
movement t

there on his belly
urant.

t, looking it the blood-'
and the dead body of

“Mon Dieu! he is a devil!"
in. Nanette was upon

efore the cruciﬁx.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
HERE are times when death is a
shock, but not a grief. And so
it was with Nanette Le Beau.
th her own eyes she had looked
upon the terrible fate of her hus—
band, and it was not in her gentle

her knees b

him to receive
And for the baby‘s' sake me
her own Nanette was
rant, whose soul was
less wicked than the
had not even waited
had not asked her
had chopped a ho
earth and had burl
most before his
Nanette was not
would never strik
because of the
a prayer of gratitude to God. .
-cage of sapling bars
belly at the and
had

not sorry. Du-
only a little
dead man’s,
for a prayer—
what to do. He

ed Le Beau al—.
body. was cold. And
sorry for that.
e her again.

baby she oifered

Miki cringed'
of his chain.

 
      
    
    
    
    
   
 
  
 
 

  
 
  
  


   

  
   

 
  

 

int t 1:, mm
. ' shej ;run;’ away with that
.. when vhekiiled the man-beast? Was

. steady gaze of her eyes?

it- not the man-beast who, had struck
her down, and whose hands were at
her white. throat when he sprang 6the
length of his chain and tore out his
jugular? Then why-was it that she
ran away—and did not come back?.

He\wmmpered softly.

The afternoon was almost gone,

and the early gloom of mid-winter ,

night in the Northland was settling
thickly over the forests. In that
gloom the dark face of Durant ap-
peared at the bars‘of Miki’s prison.
Instinctively‘ Miki had hated this fox-

hunter from the edge of the Barrens, ,

just as he had hated Le Beau, for in
their brutish faces as well as in their
hearts they were like brothers. Yet
he did not growl at Durant as he
peered through. He did not even
move.

“Ugh! le diable!” shuddered Du-
rant. , _

Then he laughed. It was a low,
terrible laugh, half smothered in his
coarse beard, and it sent an odd
chill through Miki.

He turned after that and went
into the cabin.

Nanette rose to meet him, her
great dark eyes glowing in a face
dead white. She had not yet risen
above the shock of Le Beau’s tragic
death, and yet in those eyes there
was already something re—born. It
had not been there when Durant
came to the cabin with Le Beau that
afternoon. He looked at her stran-
gely as she stood with the baby in
her arms. She was another Nanette.
He felt uneasy. Why was it that a
few hours ago he had/lauged boldly
when her husband had cursed her
and said vile things in her presence
-—-and now he could not meet the
Dieu! he
had never before observed how lovely
she was! He drew himself together,
and stated the business in his mind.

“You, will not want the dog,” he‘
said. “I will take him away.”

Nanette did not answer. She
seemed scarcely,r to be breathing as
she looked at him. It seemed to him
that she was waiting for him to ex-
plain; and then the inspiration to
lie leapt into his mind.

“You know, there was to be the
big ﬁght between his dog and mine
at. Post Fort 0’ God at the New Year
carnival,” hewent 'on, shuffling his
heavy feet. “For that, Jacques—your
husband—was training the wild dog.
And when I saw that oochun—that
Wolf devil—tearing at the bars of
the cage I knew he would kill my
dog as a fox kills a rabbit. So we
struck a bargain, and for the two
cross foxes and the ten red which I
have outside I bought him.” (The
vraisemblance of his_ lie “gave him
courage. It sounded like truth, and
Jacques, the dead man, was not
there'to repudiate his claim.) "so
he is mine,” he ﬁnished a little ex-
ultantly, "and I will take him to
the Post, and will ﬁght him against.
any dog or wolf in all the North.
Shall I bring in the skins, madame?’_’

“He is not for sale,” said Nanette,
the glow in her eyes deepening. “He

.. _ .‘bh1,,’_l‘g&

.be sent fbr the'baby and me.

. , Durant, amazed.~--'
“And “When" You reach Post Fort
0’ God, -m's1eu, you will tell is Fac-
teur that Jacques is dead, and how
he died, and say that some one must
We
will stay here until then.” ‘

. He had never seen her like that.
He wondered how Jacques Le Beau
cOuld swear at her, and strike her.
For himself, he was afraid. Stand-
ing there with those wonderful eyes
and white face, withthe‘baby in her
arms, and her shining hair over her
breasts, she made him think of a
picture he had once seen of the Bles-
sed Lady.

He went outthrough the door and
back to the sapling cage where Miki
lay. Softly he spoke through the
bars.

“Ow, bete,” he called; “she will
not sell you. She keeps you because
you fought for her, and killed mon
ami, Jacques Le Beau. And so I
must take you my own way. In a

'little while the moon 'will be up,

and then I will slip a noose over
your head at the end of a pole, and
will choke you’ so quickly she will
not hear a sound. Anr who will
know where you are gone, if the
cage door is left open? And you
will ﬁght for me at Post 0’ God.
Mon Dieu! how you will ﬁght! I
swear it will do the ghost of Jacques
Le Beau good to see what, happens
there.”

He went away, to where he had
left his light sledge and two dogs
in the edge of the timber, and wait-
ed for the moon to rise.

Still Miki did not move. A light
had appeared in the window of the
cabin, and his eyes were ﬁxed on it
yearningly as the low whine gath—
ered in his throat again. His world
no longer lay beyond that window.
The woman and the baby had obli—
terated in him all desire but to be
with 'them.

In the cabin Nanette was thinking
of‘ him—and of Durant. The man’s
words came to her again, vividly,
signiﬁcantly: “You will not want the
dog.”/Yes, all the forest people
would say that' same thing—even
le Facteur himself, when he heard.
She- would not want the dog! And
why not? Because he had killed
Jacques Le Beau, her husband, in
defence of her? Because he had freed
her from the bondage of The Brute?
Because God has sent him to the end
of his chain in that terrible momen
that the baby Nanette might grow
up with laughter on her lips instead
of sobs? In her there rose suddenly
a thought that fanned the new ﬂame
in her heart. It must have been 1e

' bone Dieu! Others might doubt, but

she—never. She recalled all that Le
Beau had told her about the wild
dog—how for many days he had
robbed the traps, and the terriﬁc
ﬁght he had made when at last he
was caught. And- of all that The
Brute had said there stood out most
the words he had spoken one day.
“He is a devil, but he was not born
of wolf. Non, some time, a long
time ago, he was a white man’s dog."‘
A white man’s dog! .
(Continued next week)

a

 

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You Know HOW
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Write for your FREE copy of this Remarkable
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. L > ‘ he. re 3
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; {It line-u ............. Us“ “'1'!"
, 1'- Wm-r ........ “Hermann lie-m
n- n hub ooooooooooooooooo ‘IeOt ............ ‘,‘mf
III-v: r. ninth: .................... rim swam-dent
. we? 1.11 ............ .............ﬁ.mnﬁm Egg;
may .................... om
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Live Stock and Auction Sale Advertising: We offer special 10"
‘ I“?! *0 reputable breeders of live stock and poultry: write “3

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS

We will not knowingly accept the advertising of
In! person or ﬁrm who we do not believe to be
thoroughly honest snd reliable. Should any reader
have any cause for complaint against any advertise!
in these columns, the publisher would appreciate an
-- immediate letter bringing all facts to light. In
"817 case when writing say: "I saw your advertisement in The
"‘6th Business Farmer!” It will guarantee honed damn.

I Entered u second-class matter, at post-office. Mt. Clemens. Mich.

14 lines to

‘ ‘

 

How Exports Aﬁect Prices

HERE has been a good deal of discussion
_ ' in these columns over the eﬂfect of ex-
' port trade in farm products upon domestic
prices. Some readers profess to beheve that
inasmuch as the farmer gets only a compara-
tively small portion of the export price, ex-
port business might just as well be done away
with altogether. The Business Farmer has
taken the position that the indirect effect of
export trade upon all domestic prices is. far
more important than any direct pecumary
beneﬁt the farmer might receive from such
transactions. At the same time the Business
Farmer believes “' that everything possible
~.. should be done to put the farmer in control
' . of the export and of his business that he may
1 receive a greater direct beneﬁt from the same
:3 than/he does under the present system. The
Agricultural Commission which was appoint-
ed some months ago to ﬁnd out what’s wrong
'w'ith agriculture, has made an interesting re-.
port upon the influence of export business on
domestic prices. From that report is taken
this striking statement:

“In “assessing the importance of exports as a
factor [in determining the price of the domestic
product, it must be remembered that agricultural

' products for the most part are produced insur-
pluu quantities and that 1a relatively inmnmder-
able dnlcreaxse or decrease iln exports has a more
Q then correspondingly great [influence upon prices.
The great economist, Gregory King, has estimat-
’ ed ﬂint a. deficiency of one-tenth mu increase
the priliee ﬂhree—tenﬂhs ﬂuid that a deﬂdascy of
“two-tenths will increase the price eight-tenths.
The same can apply to surpluses. Exceu- pm—
ductiom, therenore, unless absorbed by exports
.m to depress the price in much the some
Mo.”

Raising the Bonus

AISING the bonus promises to be as hard

3 job as raising an ornery bull, and the
‘neighbors” are about as free with their ad-
vice on how it should be done. Wall Street
and the President suggest a sales tax and
Congress Insight flirt with the suggestion were
it not for the fact that a congressional elec-
tion is not many moons away. But the dem-
ocrats are getting gaunt and hungry. and the
adoption of a sales tax by a Republican con-
grass would make the ﬁnest kind of polrtrcal
lvprovemder. So congress puts the temptation

mum bonus question over to the next
session. But the soldiers want their bonus
whentheyneed it. And thou-ears so
wefthem. And they all have a vote.
“Cm "gm 1.
the farm organizations, » including the
Farm Bureau Federation, have
deﬁnltely opposed ,to a sales tax, and
'. was excess prawns 15‘;

  
 

 

   

   
  

. .1 ,, 1
- >“\ i' ,. l
r . 1,; ’E in

’ “aﬁeowmmm’t like to pose as
' truths balms ems, when ‘ “ is really

   
   
 

z I;
gagkstyear,'bus£it isdoubtﬁil ifthey condo
it again. Of all the suggestions that have
been advanced b raise tho bonus money the
most feasible-km execs: proﬁts tax. And
that will likely be the means which congress

T

miliar with the series of cartoons by Briggs,-
“How to Start the Day Wrong”, showing
‘how a very little occurrence can transform a

 

Poor But Happy . .
HE M. B. 1F. folks who read the dail

perfectly glorious day into a perfectly miser-’

able one for any human being. Picture the
editor setting forth for his oﬂice in the morn-
ing with a light heart and a whiStle on 'his
lips. The morning sun turns the awakening
earth into a thing of wondrous beauty. All
is well with the world. He reaches his oﬁice.
The mail comes. There are stacks of it; al-
ways is at this time of the year. A hundned
letters perhaps to read and to answer. He
digs in with a will. It is a real pleasure to
hear from the farm folks, to share their bur-
dens, to help them when he can. First letter,
“taxes too high”. Right you are, old friend.
Second letter, “farm prices too low”. Betcha
boots, we know it. Third letter, ”can’t pay
my interest on the mortgage, banker threat-
one to foreclose”.
little family, too; all have worked hard to
save the home; deserve betterthings. Fourth
letter, “robbed by a crooked stock salesman”.
And so forth and so on. Letter after letter
pouring out tales of woe, asking for advice
and information on every subject known ti;
mortal man, pleading for assistance. As we
read we catch the heartaches of you folks
Whom we love and serve. The sun goes bei-
hind a cloud and the day is utterly mined.
But once in awhile there shines forth from
that stack of letters a . gem which radiates
hope-and optimism. Take, for instance, that
letter of Mrs. Palmer’s which, came last week
from Good Hart, a little village in Emmet
county, overlooking Lake Michigan. She
writes: . .
We are subscribers to the M. B. F. and like

it very much. We are but small] farmers, but man- ,

, age to who a Mimic more mam enough to make
both ends-meet ﬂou- wihiidh we are thankful. The
men folks do ths'c’hlores and cut wood in the
winter and on mice days :husk out a little more
corn waldo]! they dilldm’i: have time to do last fall.
I do enjoy letting them sleep-a little later these
mounting will I get the children attended to and
aur‘ldt‘tlegrlrloﬂhosohooﬂ;ﬂorthenlcan get
mena- bmkmst without being bothered. Oh, the
Winter time is no planar-able fliers even if we do
ﬁve quite a my! mom neighbors and have only
a mint}! m we £10 visiting. The hillscre
sodargeamndaomamywndthemowdriftsso
much that we cannot keep a road broken an
Minter lung." ‘

Far from. neighbors, snow-bound part of the
time, farming in a small way, not very much
to do with, but happy! Has this woman
learned the secret of true contentment?
ALL that was lacking to make the annual

meeting of the Michigan Allied Dairy
Association a glorious success were the farm-
ers. The exhibits were ﬁne; the progam was
’ excellent. The milk distributors were there,
and the mufaetureres of ice cream, condem-
ed milk and all-the other dairy products
mingled jovially with the makers of ﬂry
machinery and utensils. Every m of
the industry was represented but the most
vital, of all. ’The farmer
_was.honmemilking-theem , .
" What is the Michigan ARiedDairy Am-

 

Where Were the Farmers?

elation anyway: It is a Mademo- 'M

 

   

‘12

   

 

“r devil 0i a consumer who" is footing '
Thecerporations ‘g‘dt away With that ‘

newspapers are probably more or less 19,- '

Too bad, too bad. Fine-

m’t Me.__Bs-”

in; W961°31'1°°W13°

  

 
 

which contﬁbute New . ,l ' Willow
ace; InstyeertheStatanrm paid

Hiawatha“. . .
The'ebjeets .oirtbe unionization m W”
hat cobscung They are; partly alum},
partly commercial, andpertl‘y diplomatic. ..
The farmer is encouraged... to produce better
qualityof milk; the public istau'ghtthsIIOOd .
the mmfaetnrere of My M seam to W
every effort is made to activities the W
firmer that the. present methods of marketing
milk and its products arethe Ingest em
and economical that can be devised, ,
With all of these objects. except the last,
the Business Farmer is in perfect accord.
We all ought to know each other better, and
then we would understand each other better.
The. farmer is still a. long way from attaining
perfection in his products, and the public
is woefully ignorant of What milk. really is
and can do for the human body. And we
have no objection to the manufacturers show-
ing their wares. Farmers are always inter- '
-ested in these things. But We do object most
strenuously to what is perhaps the principal
motive of these conventions, to quiet the
.. farmers’ dissatisfaction over existing market-
ing methods and convince him that he can’t
dorlany better. 3
Farmers haVe every excuse to qfestion the
spread ’twixt producer and consumer. It is
too large. And in the majority of cases term-
ers’ amoeiaﬁom, properly organized md ad-
equately financed, can do a better and cheap-
er job of manufacturing and distributing
than em'sting corporations. We are not, there-
fore in sympathy with the subtle aims of
those who comprise the Michigan Allied Dairy
Association. And judging from the attend-
ance at the last convention neither are the

farmers.
IN discussing the difﬁculties that list in the,
way of an early agreement between beet
growers and manufacturers with respect to
the coming season’s crop, “Facts About Su-
gar,”_ suggests that the “sliding scale con:
tract is the most equitable of all,” but' re-
marks that a principal reason why it has not
been more universally adopted is a “prefer-
ence on the part of the. grower himself for an
arrangement under which he will receive a
ﬁxed price for his beets.”

This is hardly a fair statement of the facts.
Some farmers prefer the ﬁxed minimum.
Others a; sliding scale from zero upwards. The
principal objection to the kind of a sliding
scale with which we are familiar in Michigan is
not that it carries no assurance of guarantee,
but that it does, not/slide equally for both part-
ies to the contract. The manufacturers’ no-
tion of fairplayie admirably illustrated in the ‘
sliding scale contract in vogue in this state.
For every increase of one. cent per pound in
the price of sugar the manufacturers give the
farmers $1 a, ton more for their beets. They
keep for themselves $1.40. \

' Give the fam‘brs an even split in the proﬁt.
of the beet sugar-industry and they’llgoen
even split in the lowes. . .

 

The sang Scale

 

The Business We market editor is are;

paring an interesting little treatise entitled. “I
told you so." . ‘.

 

 

 

 
 

 
     
  
   
 

   

  
   
    
 
    
 


 

  
    
 
   

 

'rﬁ

 

_-'9‘

A.

‘) GPEAOHLEAFOURL
the many diseases to which the
peach is subject. there is none

more dominion than the lent-curl .

and perhaps none that causes greater

loss. Whileitdoeenet km’the'
trees, like the yellows and mm-

peaeh. it interferes seriously with
-. the yield of fruit and the growth.
Yet it can My be convened.
free-m is omen apparent
when. the leaves are still mall and
.Kﬁecendmsmfsvwaﬂe ltd.-
ve'lope rapidly. run-v or ﬁve days
’ are sufﬁcient to turn the lelhge
. from) a healthy green to a beautiful
mange, followed by crinkling. As
the disease progresses the leaves be-
'come red and drop off.

Spores form and when ripe are,

distributed to the wind in other
leaves. Those forming last in the

season pass the winter on leaves or .

on the ranches at the tree.

As so u as the buds swell in the
spring the spores come to life. If
they ﬁnd a way between the scales
that cover the bud they get into the
leaf. After this no amount of spray-
ing can prevent mischief. A leaf
once inoculated is doomed.

The life history of the disease
suggests the remedy. Spraying
should‘be done early, before the
buds have begun to swell. After
the leaves ‘are 01! in the fall 'is
really the safest time. If the work
is left till spring the weather is

frequently unfavorable or the
ground is too soft, so the spraying.
is delayed too long for the best re-
sults. An application of a fungicide
in the fall will clean the trees of the

j winter spores as well as thought ap—
plied in the spring and usually the
conditions for spraying are as fav—
vorahle or more so.

If there are any scale insects it
is of course advisable to spray with
lime—sulphur, using it at the rate of
one gallon of the commercial solu-
tion to seven gallons of water, or of
a corresponding strength, it the dry
lime-sulphur is used. But if there is
no scale one-fourth of this strength
is sufﬁcient. - .

For a fungicide alone copper sul-
phate solution has the ﬁrst place. If
it is applied to trees having no foli-
age it is used at the rate of a pound
to 50 gallons. No lime should be
used. This will kill the spores of
funge, though having no effect on
scale'or any form of insect life.

‘ It should be kept in mind that
sprays of the strength mentioned are
for dormant trees alone. They
would not be safe to apply after the
peach leaves are‘but. The foliage
of the each is tender. Neither lime—
sulphur nor copper sulphate should
be used. Bordeaux mixture cannot
be used with safety. If the weather
conditions are just right a tree may
escape injury, but the chances are
against it. Probably it will lose its
leaves.

Where there are only a few trees
and no sprayer at hand good results
can be obtained by sprinkling with
an old broom. This is a crude
method, but if by that means the
leaves can be kept from disease i
is worth all the trouble. Without
healthy foliage there will be little
or no fruit and few or no fruit buds
another year.

CRANBERRY AND BUCKLE-
BERRY PLANTS

Can you tell me where I can buy
cranberry and huekleberry plants to set
on a‘ plot of mick lend?
otaumshwheeeleouldgetplants?
How long would it be before Inbonl
10¢]:sz menial—A. A. 8., 14m:
M . '

Few nurserymen are selling this
kind of stock; 0. R. Burr. Manchest—
er, Connecticut; Hicks Brothers,
Westbury, ‘N. Y‘; Glen Brothers, Ro-
chester, N. Y.: Storrs & Harrison,
Paineville, Ohio, are a likely to have
the plants as anybody.

Interest is thus traits is increas-
ing Will readers 01 M. B. -F‘
kindly send ,us the names or jmn- .
berry‘or buckleberry growers? ‘

' j-PPLE men DISEASED, -

 

 

 
  

  

  
 

MU..-

 
 
 
  

 
  
 
   

16K: n.‘ WELLS "
should, be twice as large as they are, Is
lime seed to apply ere-11nd trees and
work into soil? I would like to get them
started if I lamp-R. ,P. Ham'isvﬂle,

,The belts are apparently winter-
killed. but the primery'cause of the
trouble is probably starvation. An
ndeﬂed tree, like an animal cannot
stand a cold emnate. .

Line m scandal to plant growth,
but be! little use on soils lacking
hp other Ms. The soil should
be supplied with plant ipod by some
3“”. '

0! course it barnyard manure is
to be had the answer 8‘ easy. Give
the ground a good top dressing in
the spring and work it thoroughly
into the soil. .,

Apply about half a pound of sul-
phate of ammonia to each tree scat-
tering it around about as far as the
branches go and working it ino the
soil. Do this as early in the spring
as‘the weather will permit. This
will give the trees a start before the
manure is available.

Cultivate the tree till the middle
of July, but not later, then sow a
cover crop, using whatever legume
does best in your locality_ Do not

,:‘ cultivate in late so
mists M 151585“ I. h killed

  

.» j -
u

by the winter. The cover crop checks
the growth of the tree and forces it
to ripen the new wood.

If manure is not available it will
be necessary to build up the soil by

means of legumes and cover crops'

that Will supply humus without
which commercial fertilizers are of
little account. This is a slow pro-
cess, meanwhile the trees must wait.

The importance at having the land
in good condition beiore the trees
are planted is evident. Better to
wait a year or two then plant trees
when they must starve. ’

 

Honsssnos PITCHING '

 

PLAYS AGAIN S’l‘ CHAMION

In reading the Business Farmer I no-
ticed a? item about horseshoe pitching
which have been quite interested in. I
had not pitched a. game for 6 years until
last August. At that time I was visiting
in Welland county, Ontario. Canada, my
former home, and I happened to be at a.
family reunion where they were engaged
in pbtdiing horseshoes. They asked me to
join in a. four-handed game. My pardner
and I won two games out of three and
then a young man stepped up to me and
wanMd me to pitch a series with him.
We pitched three games and I won two
out of three. I was told later that he
was the champion horseshoe pitcher and
that he had pitched in every state in the
Union. I remained there for two months

‘ ortsJLas‘

" yours.

 

 

‘ B You Can Expect Unusual Economy

The 'complete equipment of the new Superior Chevrolet is

an evidence of the real economy

this car.

 

complete and modem to the minute.

jEconomy' after the purchase price is assured. The new Sup
perior Chevroletgives far more than the m1
gasoline, oil and tires, and requires fewer parts replacements.

. _T1w.wty to thirty {niles to the gallon of gasoline

Ask your Chevrolet dealer to explain the new features of the Superior
e Chevrolet~or write Dept. 125 for catalog and other information.

CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY

Division of General Rotor: Corporation

DETROIT, MICHIGAN
um ea. ﬁMOGarolelfMlamWStmandSthMﬁominthe UnitedSe-eucnd Can-do

ROLE

Transportation

  
 

uj/ _ Bali‘._jEcojaomical

'4 .2.

  

.» V

 

   
   

, you: rules mini-seeks.
lug? Hewrmn’ypointstoaim? ..
doyouoeqm,a ringers! e ,,
About what weight. We the she. .
to vital: forty fed? Would like to ,
some of your best players but

  
 
 

 
 

    
        
 

against me as I have just ms.
.311} birthday—Benhnin m Oce-
an. Cots-tr, Etch

After you pitched the It: you did;
last summer then you It: you ﬁ'e
too old to meet some 0-! the “are!
in this state. “Young man", 1
ashamed of you. Why I’ll'bet
are sewer-l “you: hen" d
age or evu older that would he
pleased to match their skill on“
And some of then M
champions too. Yes, and I'll were
my shirt that you can beet a but
peremtage oi the men in this'etete
who are only about one hell as old
as you are. ’ .

I am going to answer your ques-
tions in the order that you ask them.
Our book ozi'. national rules contains
all the information needed to play-
a championship game. A regulation
game consists of 21 points. To be
a ringer the shoe must encircle the
stake far enough to allow a straight
rule to touch both calks and clear
the stake. There is no special count
for a hubber or leaner. If it is near- '
er than your opponent’s shoe it'
counts 1 point. The shoes should
not exceed 2 pounds, 8 ounces each. ‘

  
    
  
  
  
   
     
    
  
 
   
   
  
   
   
    
  
   
    
 
  
  

 

you can rightly expect from
Not an extra dollar‘to Spend. The Chevrolet is

usual mileage from

.... .

    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
    
   
     
    
  
    
   
      
   
 

 

..._.l, - m a;
lEVROLET ~

  
 

, l \
”assassin . ,, a - . .;

  


‘, ar.

.. m 0N m neon?
in time to time we ..
.rOVivals of the question: “Are

there men on Mars?" But new ,7

Professor Pickering, of Harvard Uni-
may, U. -S. A., declares that the
moon is not dead.

[He believes that life is possible on
the “silvery- orb,” and that recent
Observations have revealed actual
areas of vegetation.

. According to the professor, two
crops of this vegetation "grow every
day on the moon. A “moon day”
. consists of fourteen of our days, and
” ‘all that time the sun is shining on

the moon without any period of“,

darkness.

‘ The much discussed craters of the
,moon hold supplies of water, says
‘aBro'fessor Pickering, and by the aid
of a large telescope he has actually

1- ;,0bs_erved steam issuing from them.

i. ,, ~ When the moon emerges from its
-' .periOd of darkness, he believes the
sun's rays quickly heat the surface
' of the moon, and start fungus-like
growths.

The prbfessor argues that life ex-
ists on the planet. It is probably
unlike anything on our own planet.
Nevertheless, we get a set-back to
our conceit when we realize that we
are “not the only pebbles on the
beach”!’——London Answers.

WHO IS THE PAGAN?

IL, I will try and express my
feelings in a poor way. Your

oaper sure is a dandy. Would .

not think of getting along without it.
Sorry did not hear of it before.
When it arrives I just stop and read
it. You get every lady’s opinion,
weigh them all] over and ﬁnd we
are all liable to guess wrong at
times. Even our Mr. Foster. Also
our market predictions \are a little
in error.

Have read the “Broken Wing” de-
bate, the cousins troubles, Uncle
Rube’s ideas, y'our Ohio girl’s side
who put on dad’s boots and hauled
in corn, the young man that was al-
ways slicked up——say, it is equal to a
Free Methodist prayer meeting.

Now along comes a man that hon-
estly put his name at the bottom.

Most people puts their “Z_ O.” or “A .

Friend" but mind you he put his
John Henry in full and call the most
of the women heathen. Now he is a
man after my own heart. He said
what he honestly thought. Say, I
read it, called wife in and got my
specks on and read it to her. The
redeemed (or church) "doesn’t care
what the other people do. Now if the
church does not care, who does?
I notice they take everybody’s
money. He did not say the men
were pagans, just the women.

Now, I think the hand that rocks
the cradle should help make the
laws. They surely have helped a
great deal and so has the church but
not the redeemed according to Thos.
H.’s opinion. I think there is a mis-
take some place. He either mis—
understood your stand or I got him
wrong. Christ came to save the
pagan. The redeemed did not need

’ him, they were safe. When I read
anything so radical I think of the
old verse, “There is \so much good
in the worst of us and so much bad
in the best of us that it stands ill
for any of us to speak bad of the
rest of us." Most stones bound back.

My dad preached 25. years, my
uncle, grandfather, also my only
sister’s husband are all men of the
broadcloth. They surely would not

have left us at home for weeks go- »

ing out to preach and pray for the
sinners, if the church does not care.
Now we have a Roosevelt family.
We know that youngsters must have
amusements. If the church will not
interest them who does? Some of
ours dance. Some would enjoy Sun—
9 day school, but mind you, they think
' Miss has better and nicer
I clothes. One of the boys goes regul-
like to but it is too far. So the
drawing line is a little weak. _

Don’t think that the brother can
get many converts by throwing his
vinegar around. That word “Pagan"
is a bad one to use.

New in regard to politics and re— .

aligion. I don’t think they will mix.

«pDoyou ever expect to, votefor a

l, .- 94:99de president, either male err
" [don

sawm~

.church - going

4 their

One of the girls says she would .

l; The

.4. " epartment 1‘01“ t e WQ'K -. .
Edited by nus. GRACE NELLIS Jams

again. It interested me at least. You
know an henest confession is good
for the ‘soul. I don’t live up to my
early teaching but I don't think I
am a pagan. I know lots of crooked
preachers. also

pot your plants and"! am sure you
will have no further trouble. ~ ,

Winter bulbs may be dried- and
then put in a basket and hung in a

 

 

people who wear
d a n d y g o l d
watches close‘ to
waistline,
or a pair of nose
glasses with a
chain over their
ear, or maybe a
suit of latest
clothes that they
seem to think
more of than the
“Good Book”. ‘
Now they honest-
ly worship those
things. Are they
redeemed or pa-
gan? What is
y o u r h o b b y,
l‘om‘! Your team,
registered cow,
or what? If so m

For m. Is u‘swift

Andherang

grows.

AROUND THE CORNER
By Charles Hanson Towns
BOUND the earner I have a trial.
Inthiemateitythathasneend:
Yet days go by and weeks rush on.
And before I know is a year has gone,
And, I never see my old friend’s face;
and terrible race.
He knows I like him
Asinthedays whenlrsnghisbeii
‘ e. We were younger then
And now we are hey. tired
Tired with playth foolish game;
Tired with trying to make a name,
“Tomorrow," I say "I will call on Jim. ‘
Just to show that I’m thinking of him.”
But tomorrow comes—ad temorrowgo'es;
And the distance between us grows and

Around the eornerl—ayet miles away,
“Here's a telegram. sir."
“Jtm died today!”
And that's what we get—ad deserve h
the end-—

Around the earner. a vanished friend,

where they will
be cool but not
booze. In the
fall they can be
brought out and
started in earth
or water.

It is always a
gamble whether
they will] grow
again or not.

Justa'eweli

W

Will Mrs. Mc-

wrote about tur-
key d r e s s in 3
send me her ad-
dress? I have a
letter here for

very sure she will
want to answer.

 

who is the pa-
gan?—Walter S. Covert,
County, Mich.

Kalamazoo

CORRESPONDENTS’ COLUMN

The editor wishes to thank Mrs.
Bartow for the pattern for refootr
ings.

This pattern looks good, it comes
higher on the foot than the one sent
out by the pattern company. If any
or our readers want to try it send
an addressed and stamped envelope
and I will send a few out. It is
called the slipper foot.

Mrs. W. A. W.——The only thing
you can do for these white worms
in the soil of your plants is to take
the plants out of the pots wash them
well especially the roots, then either
take new soil which has been thoro-
ly baked or bake'well the old soil
thus destroying all animal life—re-

I have before
me the address of an art goods
com‘pany who buys work, done by
ladies at home. I believe they ’are
reliable and I will give the address
to anyone sending a stamped and
addressed envelope.

Canniu Frozen Meat \
I just wish to say to the question in
today’s paper, yes frozen meant can be

successfully canned, First. saw into me- .

dium chunks then put on to boil in 001
water, Boil until bones can be removedi,
then fill your cans with the meat and
broth, put on rubbers and screw up lid,
not tight and boil the meat in the, cans
three hours. Have enough ‘ water to
cover the cans one inch over the lid;
if you let it boil below lids your cans
will not be full as the broth will boil
down to the water line.‘ Do no be
alarmed if you see grease in the water
as there will always be some that boils
out of can, I hays used different methods
and find it does that.

To Mrs, Irene A., I will say take a child
into your home and see whether things
do not change. A little fellow would

_________AID-S TO GOOD DRESSIN ‘

For Simplicity, Service and Style ’
New Spring and Summer-Catamgs, lEc—Patterns, 120.

If you have not ordered the new catalog send for it soon for it is lovely.

Every lady who comes

to my house picks it up,

becomes fascinated and

wants one herself. The M. B. F. is doing you a real favor in enabling you

to have such a selection of modern styles at so reasonabﬂe a price.
pattern department has improved its
complaints on account of delayed orders.

Our

mailing system and I have almost no

However order your patterns

a week at least before you wish to use them and we will attend to your
orders just as quickly as possible so that you will have the patterns when

you are ready for them.

These [are charming styles for children. One would not ﬁnd anything

prettier in the New York stores.

A Popular Romper
. Suit

3885. Children us-

ually look happiest

when comfortably

dressed .. for plain

and surely the

bloomer suit has the

right lines for com-

fort and conveni-

ence, This model has

a pretty pocket and

is easy to develop.

The rompers may .be

worn without the

smock, Pongee with

stitchery is

shown. One

_ k- have chambrey, or

pm checked gingham, The sleeve may be
ﬁnished in wrist or elbow length.

The pattern is cut in 4 sizes: 2, 4, 6

and 8 years. A 4 year size requires 2 7—8

yards of 32-inch material,

could

A Unique, Design

.3887. Fashion has
given most graceful
lines to this pretty
dress, and made it
Simple too. so that its
development will not
cause confusion, The
slender as well as the
plump girl will look
well in this frock.
Pongee, taffeta, serge,
velvet or jersey could
4be used. It is also
nice for wash fabrics.

amuse-rm . .
\

'ﬁﬁ$ﬂkﬁt
‘ ‘ I"

I'd-V ‘2 a». an)»

t :11, thaomoriﬂnity ‘L .. ,,
t be so; my

here .

" in

A ' Practical Style for
School Wear

3884, Here is a blouse
with a Very practical
and pleasing '
The Russian eﬁect is
up—to-date. The sleeve
is a new feature. The
straight plaited skirt,
ever popular with girls ‘
of school age. One may
have plaid or check
suiting for the skirt,
and crepe, poplin or
Indian head for the
blouse. A pret de-
velopment wou d be
red serge for the blouse,
and black and White,
check woolen for
skirt.

The pattern is cut in L
4 sizes: 6, 8, 10 and 12~
.years. A 12 year size
requires 3 yards of 44-inch material.

A Good Garment for
Pia

ime

3874. Trim and
neat, and altogether
practical is the mod-
el portrayed here.
The boy who likes to
romp and run will
welcome a play suit
of this kind, with
its spacious pockets,
an comfortable
lines. The style is
good for wash fa-
brics, for. some and
pongbamm 3: out
' 4; 3156' . = 3'” ' Q
was years. A -

Carthy who.

her which I am -

‘it kept all summer.

.1102“- Musocmxm ,. '
“a or an inquiry fora recipe .

Busin . .
, for home made crackers. I. send mine that

I have used for many years. As much
depends on the baking as the makinz.
1-4 cups of sifted ﬂour, '
water or milk, cold: 1

ening packed; 1 level teaspoon ,
level teaspoons cream of tartar Allber- '
al supply of salt if desired. 'cuick. hot ~
ﬁre in baking. Mix thoroughly after sift- ,
ingthecneamtartarand sodawiththe
flour. then turn a pan over the dough
and let stand 2 or 3 hours. Break of!
small hits the size you wish the More .
to be, mold into shape, then roll and bat!
They are very nice for children and I .-
ﬂnd many adults enjoy them. though I

soda; 2

would advise the housewlﬂe to begin with

halftheredmifherthneisumitedaa.
it is something o'fatask’on herifshe

is not strong.-—A, E. A. Milan.

Coffee Cake With Bread Dough

Take 4 cups (2 pounds) bread dough.
when ready to shape in leaves, cream to-
gatherI andadd 2 tablespoons sugar, one
tablespoon butter and 2 eggs then add
enough flour to make a no t dough, let
rise until light then place in a shallow
pan, wash top; with melted butter and
sprinkle with granulated sugar and cin-
namon. Let rise until light, bake about
25 minutes in a moderate overu-
either warm or cold. Should one-half; in.
thick. ‘

You can send 350 to the Brethern Pub-
ishing House, Elgin. 111,, for Kin dom
Songs, No. 2. On age 58 you wi find
the song entitled with music) “If-'Your
Heart Keeps Right."—Miss ‘B. S. ,

Canning~Meat, Not Cold Pack -

Having read requests for recipes for
canning meat, I wish to give mine. The
cold pack method seems to me a' lot of
work. ~ ‘
~' First I put my cans on the warming
closet, then put the meat in the oven:
salt it like any roast. When done out
the meat just so the pieces go nicely in
the can, pack tightly and pour the hot
drippings over the meat in the cans. Fill
the cans. I take a knife and pack the
meat down so all the spaces are ﬁlled
Screw tight... This meat is the very ﬁnest.
When you wish to
use a can put in a warm place and it will
come out easily. The gravy is fine. I'
used pork, but think any meat could .be
canned this way if there is fat enough,—
A Subscriber. , _ ‘

To Clean Bug _

I have a Roxbury axminister rug in m
living room and where my stove stands
it has become soiled from coal dust» and
ashes, Can any reader advise me what to
use on my rug to remove this dint. Any
advice will be‘ appreciateda—Mrs. A, R. H.

Your rug could be cleaned by us—
ing H. & I-I. so‘ap. Directions come
with the soap.

Canning Corn ,

I very seldom answer any subscribers
query in any magazine and this summer
when someone asked for a recipe for
canning com I let “George"- (or shall
I say “Katie”) do it; as usual. But when
I saw but one answer, the I might have
missed some, I felt sorry I hadn't sent
in my recipe- The one one I saw printed
used “Mrs. Price’s Canning Powder” but
you can put 11]) com without it—so why
nae it—and the corn keeps too, and is
dan’d‘y. I know for I have been putting it
up this way for 10 years. Here it is:
9 cups raw corn (cut off of ooh). 1
cup sugar (granulated). 1-2 cup salt
(cearSe is best), 1 pint water. (Boil 1-8
hour after it comes to the boiling point.
Put in strillzed glass cans and seal at
once. Before using pour off‘juice and
freshen about two hours,

This year in additiou to this method,
we cold—packed corn and this kept ﬁne
and surpassed any corn we have ever
tasted done up in home cans or in fac-
torie's. It was simply the best ever. We
use the Golden Bantam mostly and Ever-
green oornr—H. H. Manning.

Making Solp

We take the M. B. F. and like it very
much, as anybody finds lots of help in it.
But now I come to ask for a help. Has
any one of you had any trouble in making
soap, cold process? I made some but it
spoiled. I have followed directions given
on lye box.‘ The lye settled down and
grease was on top when cooling. Have
any of you ever had this trouble? What
can I do with it? Can I make it so it

.'would be better or can. I _take up the

grease on top and use it for other soap?
My mother, makes a nice soap. I got
a recipe from her known as the "boiling
process." It_ is as follows: 5 1—2 quarts
soft water, 1 can lye. 5 pounds grease.
I‘made that but had the same results a! "
with the above. cold process. This soa‘p
shou d be boiling until thick but it never
got ick, only settled on the bottom'of
pan after boiling about 2 1-2 hours. Can
any of you help me? I would be obliged
for any help. I will give a. recipe for
Meat scrap cookies. ' f ‘
One bowl meat ,scraps -(it should be
about 1 quart)‘- run through meat chop-
per. Add 1 cup sugar. _1 teasp00nfui
8 .teaspoonsful cloves, . . '
namon: and one of ginger. 1 p
Add‘iflour~ to roll. and for ,, g our 0‘.
flour-put 1 teaspoon bakin, 8 190‘! d!”-
They.m soodand cheap .0 wh .bnO‘_

 


‘

WWHFTFY. ﬂnnﬁﬂvlruwr—rwmnnw——rruu-
.. . I

 

W Exceptionally

w prices on
lots {531‘ soil re»
; building.
'Guatrmteecll
'agaimt impurities

until safe in ,

: ..//" l Coo’oer {em'
’XC}IIC \ o '
$7.2»: hi‘RF-‘xl;

5.35.39 9...

. / BUREAU
' Seed Department
BOX H4 ‘

Lansing. Michigan

/

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\ MICHIGAN
)5TATE. FARM

IIllIlllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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/{“4H|lllflll H $llllllllllllilr'-‘ '
””“Illlllnll ll.llllllmmg
I} l‘

.

or
Now. we come

with the low-

est paces our $41.01":- than

 

CWXﬂERm

—- to
For 2'4 mezzzmm‘ ‘“ 3..

We?" 33-. ' ~pri
.. .ssea-sw'ﬂ-m

on' ear, olarlnde'. Ian

 

,;. 1130 Egg/ﬁruﬁdfar
1‘ and Broader

$17.7:

 

 

 

' tutu. anginmea Bandy.

 

EAR CHILDREN: I feel happier
this week because the one dear
to me who was- very ill last

week is now out of danger and on
the road to recovery. We all love
our people but when they enjoy good
health continually we often become
so absorbed in our work that we ne-
glect to show our love for them. But
when they become ill and are near
death then we think how we love
them and how we have neglected
to show it. I sometimes think God
takes this way, many times, to
awaken us.

Nellie Inman, whose letter is
printed on this page this week,
makes some very good suggestions
about writing interesting letters. At
the same time she sets a ﬁne exam-
ple. I hope I may receive more such
letters as this one. She asks about
sending pictures to the Children’s
Hour. I. shall be pleased to receive
as many pictures of yourselves, your
pets and your homes as you 'care to
send but I cannot promise that they

, be published because we have

so little space (not even a full page
for the Children’s Hour) but I
should. like to receive them to keep.
It seems that I know you better
when I have seen a picture of you.
Will you not send me some?

What do you suppose? I received
3 valentines. And they were all so
nice thatI can not say which is the
prettiest. There is the one I men-
tioned last week from Edna McIn-
tyre, Kawkawlin, one from, Master
Dick Hewlett, Alanson, and one from
Myrtle Bearss, Owendale. Please
accept my thanks for remembering
me. And now just a word to Mast-
er Dick: I like the valentine you sent
me, Dick, even better than the card
I received from you on my birthday
because you made the valentine
yourself and I realize the time and
care you took to make it. Dick
writes often to me. Why do not
others of you write more than once?
Your letters are aways welcome——
UNCLE NED. ,

WE
OUR BOYS AND GIRLS

Dear Uncle Ned and Cousins—Why
don t you older boys and girls show some
spirit and Write? Why can’t we make
this page a lively one? Write and tell
about all your parties, sleigh rides and
describe your home or make suggestions
on how to make it more beautiful. May-
be if we ask Uncle Ned real politely he
will let us send some pictures of our-
selves, homes or our pets, or any go
picture. Don’t you think that would be
fun? It would make it more interesting
to run races and see who could send the
bfst pictures of their colts, calves, pigs
e c.

The young folks have been having skat-

g parties on Devil Lake,
from our place. We ha
with tires on both ends of

n, .

My home is right beside the woods. Just
a lane between them and the house and
an apple orchard on the other side. It

.is cool in the summer and
_ break the wind in

How many
on the farm?
cultivate or

I would rather work out-
house, although I do all
bout the house because
my mother is not able to do it. I am
15 but will be 16 the 9th of March. Have
I a twin? If any of you have taken long
and tell about them. Hoping
om you, Your friend—Nellie

_ 2. Box 112. Fremont, Mich.

~

Dear Uncle W—Mg father takes the

M. B, F. and e Jus
I thought that if
he there wouldn’t
so have decided
I am a girl 10 years old and
amgin the ﬁfth and sixth grades at
Our school is about one-fourth
mile away and is on our own fann.-I have
one brother, Kenneth, eight years old and
no sisters. We go to the Minnonite Sun-
day school. We Spent one year in. the
south and I attended a school in Flor.

once, Ala. We like the south the best

ing back to stay some day.

in New Orleans a week and it

was very interesting there: We have a
126-acre farm here. We children have
lots ’of tame rabbits, 8 pet cats ,and a

We had quite
a scare this morning. My papa started
to Detroit with a truck-load of dressed
hogslast night and when “we went out
thismogitng we couldn’t ﬁnd Sand
V ,_ o

. ﬁnal fun
m was» W'gm"

been reading the ‘

‘Albertena Bratanus’. R. 1

Hour -: £3;
timeznrwareMsnm

Dear Uncle Ned—May. I join your mer-
ry circ e? I am 12 years old and in the
sevent grade at school. My birthday is
the ﬁrst day of August. I like my teacher
very well. She has taught here about
eight years. I live a half mile from school,
I have no brother or sister. We live on
an 80—acre farm. We have 8 COWS. only

6 are milking. I milk 2 of them_e_VGX‘Y.

evening when I am well and it is not tOO
cold. We have some geese and 50m‘3
ducks. We have 30 Ancona chickens and
would like to hear from some one that
has the silverlaced or speckled Wyan-
dottea I have 4 cats, 2 of them» are
pets. As soon as I sit down on.a chair
they are on my lap and want to play.
I like to go sliding o the ice but that
is hard on shoes. We lave a small patch
of ice in our ﬁeld and the children from
our school come here to skate noons. I
have not had a sleigh ride yet this
winter as we have not had much snow.
The autos are on the road every day.

I live almost half way between Bad
Axe and Harbor Beach, which you can
ﬁnd on the map. I have never seen a
letter in the M. B_ F, from here, while
there has not been many from Huron
county at all.——Ottelia Strauer, Harbor
Beach, R. 1, Mich

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a farmer's boy.
I am seven years old and in the second
grade at school. I am very much inter-
ested in the Children's Hour so I thought
I would write too. I like to read about
the other children’s pets, For pets I have
two dogs, three cats, three pigeons, five
g'uineas, ﬂve rabbits. I have a sled and
an auto wheel coaster-wagon, I some—
times hitch my dog to the wagon, I have
a tool chest full of tools. I made a cart
and a little road scraper. I scrape the.
paths with the scraper, I can skate. I
like to skate and slide down hill. I think

I will be a farmer when I get big. We'

have a 90-acre farm_ We have lots of
little lambs now.-—Ralph Arthur Ken-
nedy, R. 1, St, Clair, Mich. '

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a girl 12 years
old. I am not going to school. We just
received our ﬁrst M. B, F. and I read the
Childrens’ Hour and I want to join your
circle. My birthday is April 6th, Have
I a twin? My sister Ruth and I go to
Sunday school every Sunday. We have
not missed a Sunday for two years and
a half. One year we received a. book
each and the next year we received a cup
and saucer each. Our minister gave them
to us. I have ﬁve brothers and one
sister. One of my brothers and my sister
and myself belong to the Willing Work—
ers class in our Sunday school. We meet
every two weeks and have very good
times although there are only six of us.
We have a birthday dinner every month
and our class bought some cups to use
at the dinners, We have a very good
teacher and we like her very much.

My oldest brother is taking up tele—
graphy at Ferris Institute. My sister is
ten years old and in the sixth grade I
have started reading "Nomads of the
North.” I also have a cousin going to
the Ferris Institute. He is an ex-service
man. He lost his left arm and was
wounded in his right hand. His brother
was killed in the war. I remain. your
loving niecer—Grace Weidenhamer, Tra—
verse City, R. 6, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—I have been reading
the Children's Hour and I like it so well
that ,I thought I would write, I am 12
years old and in the sixth grade at school,
I have dark brown hair, dark gray eyes.
I am four. feet, nine and one-half inches
tall. I have been reading "Nomads of
the North” and I like the story very
much. I live on an 80-acre farm. We
have 16 head of cattle and three horses.
I was born in Michigan and when I was
three months old we moved to California.
We lived there seven and one-half years
and then came back to Michigan again.
I was only seven years old when we were
out there but I can remember quite a
lot of things I wish some of the boys
and girls would write to me. I would
try and answer all letters. What is it
that comes with an auto, goes with an
auto, is no use to an auto and yet the
auto cannot run without it? Wishing
success to the M. B. F, and Uncle Ned
——Pea.rl Campbell, Hesperia, R, 5, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned—I would like to be-
come one of your circle of happy friends.
I do not agree with Marion Weeks that
we should write more of our lives. This
is a farm circle of friends and we wish
to know of each other. I am not a farm
girl but I live in a small town and my
father has a farm out of town a short
distance. In town we keep a few horses
and a cow. My father's farm is of about
180 acres. We hava about 15 head of
cattle, 10 horses, 15 pigs, 70 sheep and
40 chickens. In town I have a little pony
named Queene that I Would not part with
for anything. My birthday is .the 4th
of August I am 13 years old and in the
seventh grade Have I a twin? Will
close with love to cousins and Uncle Ned.
-—-Marion Fuller, Farwell, MTch.

OTHER LETTERS RECEIVED

Winifred Carson, R. 2, East Jordan:
Irene Jarvis, R, 1, Rodney; Carroll Cul-
bert. Jonesville; Lulu A. Finch. R. 3.
Milan: Alice Gill, Kalkaska: Velma E.
Haas, Ithaca, care of Mrs. C, Boyd:
Summet City;
Ilone Storms, Jonesville: Edna McIntyre.
R. 1. Kawkawlin ; Zella Wilson, Gladwln,
R. 4" H. SchuizL Romeo; Louie Goren-
sentfludmm: illian Oliver, Houghton

_ Bachman, Mil ' D

.:. o
'._l":1‘-irnble.l .Chﬁlevo P: ~
0 berylle: or! eteraon. L9"

. 't Ramnan Chalets. Ruth.

(.1.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Always say “Bayer”

Unless you see the name “Bayer” on
tablets, you are not getting genuine
Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
12 years and proved safe by milliona
Directions in package.

Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manu-
factuird‘e of Monoaceticacidester of Salicy-
icac

 

 

;. .\‘:®g) .

Cont-Ins

Samples of ~ Samples 0!

Over 100 Patterns Borders wlth Sldowalls
Send coda for this big free book containing actual

samples of a new wall papers for 1922; shows sample-

of borders as well as sidewalls.

from—over 160 patterns in all—popular styles and colon

Many correct designs for every room.

Lowest Prices Since Beiore the War

“NLY 8 Per Double Roll

C- (96c for Room llllexB it.)

We have slashed prices on all grades of wall

unllty that last year sold for 81.

Be or double roll. Reme
3. long (not 8-yd. sing

sold). Our 81: per double roll means
t our new prices. Is little as 96c will pa ”menthol...
10x12x8 IL. sidewall, border and ceiling fnclu ed.
Be sure to get a co y of this new cam Io book before,"
y. so our new es. see our low p cos «it will myo-
to send for (Ms FRE book today.
Write our house nearest you. Address Dept. 81 1

Montgomery Ward 8: Co.

Chicago Kansas Clty St. Paul

MAlNllllll l0

often results from a diet .
deficient in vitamines.

SCOTT’S
EMULSION

aﬂords a pleasant and
efﬁcient way to add
body-strength; it is
food rich in vitamines.

AT ALL DRUG STORES
PRICE. $1.20 and 6°C.

Big Variety to choose

 

a
.

1,.eu > v.
“ ”nu-‘u'u

r I . .
-‘ ‘n‘Jﬁ'ﬂ—a

4 ’ f . ' .P'l O ‘3’ 4
rutuuo‘.'o'~‘o'~u~u'u‘-n.‘.'.f.’

,.14\or .5,

' Pave-
' 119*"

.0 a
I..~3.u‘.’l .1

.v.~l‘."
~......

1.0, to
. .-

 

trom picture which shows larger ca- . .
pacitymachines. Getourplanofeasy W

MONTHLY PAYMENTS

and handsome free catalog. Whether , /‘
dairy is large or small. write today.

AMERICAN SEPARATOR co.
3011061 . Juan-mm?-

apiece:
”'3" . h" "

o

 


 
   

 

 

“My .

° BUSINESS"

 

 

W

Farmers Bremen " ‘

 

 

  

    
    
     
   
  

, “I. not accepted for less then
”opted for any
‘ Count on one word eoeh initiol and

 

 

 

A " 5' ' syn-4 .‘Imﬂnll hi I" perv-rd. M for sole
.vuawonnrmsrss atmmmumm

this 4 artment.
.“ in on wh group of ﬁgures, both in body of ed
hands before ﬁetnrdny fer keno

Cosh should accompany all orders
I“

 

 

 

 

: .31 Ire . Oep not b in o
'. b11021: moth. I): nn‘uelnee: l‘ormer Adv. De) .. llt. Clemens, Michigan.
—4-.r

 

 

 

  

FOR SALE: FINE QUALITY, REOLEANED
Ito San Soy Beans at ﬁrmers’ prices. Order at
once. G- P. PHILLIPS. Bellevuo,

 

    
  

120-AORE MICHIGAN FARM TEAM. POUL-
nd calves, begs, we also, .
cream separator. season's crepe included:
rous district. on improved md- all ad-
85 acres we? worked ﬁlhz

. orchard;
‘ use, 5 -ft. burn. stable, poultry
me; other interests force sale 0 00 in
' . cash. usy terms. Deinih Iago 70 lus. Catalog
11-00 Bargains. FREE.
AGENCY. 814 B E Ford

120_AORES BEST FARMING LAND ABOUT

'0 m cleared. 1-4 mil. trunk line revel

and. Ieung orchard, good well. $4000 of 11d-

' 10‘. 00 personal property for cash value of

Bﬁv r prices and terms address owner J. W.
CST, Prescott. Mich, R 2.

  
  
        
       
   
   
   
      
      
       
     
    
     
 

 

 
 

 

  
 
     
     
 

"mu immature;
' ne ' I” . e .
”CHAS. WUBBENA. Standish. Mich-188.11.

Box 964.

F RM BARGAINS IO. ONE 2‘0 ACRE

#3:!“ cement road.'Ferur miles to Port Huron.
be BOX 244. GrosWelL Mich.

AOR ERED AND DRAINED.

' Eindwgrﬂculsn write L BOX 94,

    
        
  
       
         
   
  
  
  
  
  
   
 
 
 
   
 
  
   
 
  
 
    
    
    
   
  
  
    
  
    
   
   
  
  
     
  
   
  
 
 

 

 

 

eehry _ .
W. Mich.
CO ACRES CLAY LOA‘M COIL. 50 IMPROV-
the! mﬁm'ﬁTa and in for
pm o y w
000.00. Inquire owner I! TKBOP,
Rey Mich. B 8.
' 120 ACRES. REST OF SOIL. LOTS OF
sh Hmber. easil cleared. Market 8 miles.
323% acre. EDVI’. 0N. South
1!.
0 ACRES. DAIRY FARM
FomAlﬁé took: feed; 38500' in Kent

tb. .
count! income I 40 from ‘airy. For
Brunch- 3% BOX 13?. ‘G., cnr- Business

mar, EL‘CIemem. Mich.

SALE 11‘ ACRES 2 MILES FROM
FORM building; plenty water, rui . ber-
ries Good mods. rioed right:i easy
CHAS. LEGGER. Rhodes. Mich
0R SALE OR TRADE. FINE ‘ICO ACRE
hm. ﬁne Millage. 0n main gmveled road,
well leaded near markets and schools. BOX A.
mini: W ﬁrmer, Mt. Clemens. Mich.

. FARM FOR SALE. GOOD SOIL.

1m buie'ndm plenty wood. well watered. Tim-

gdior building . Stock and tools Write
0! no A. BRANT. Centre] me. Mich.

FARM FOR SALE. 100 ACRES OF LIE‘VERL

goedbuiidin endgoodsoilnear .
5:31.. 00. seat. Weighs J. M. OSWAL . Heresy.
Michigan.

 

 

A GAIN: 90 ACRES, GOOD BUILD-
Insgfaonnstgte mad and nice lake. only $2000.
DeOOUDRES, Bloomingdale. Mich.

- seam so ace: new.
his: black. lgsm soil, two flewin
“I

__A

5 ACRES
s will: 7

has from .
Fﬁ). THIERRY. B

FOR SALE: 160 ACRES.
drained, tworgrtirlnlﬁs of mfg.
mm. vel . ences. 3
BOX gnOﬁsvﬁIe. Mich.

EIGI-ITY ACR‘; FARM ONE

00ml. Mouton County. all
tile dml buys level; orelnnd: new

nod:
'. Clay loam. Stock and tools. Terms.
ﬂamm, Howard City, Mich.

114 ACRES FOR SALE Va MILEndEAST
school. and

end '5 mile south of Gegebown. ,
d buildings. Near
E51 £33 $31.19. Write JASPER nouns.
City. Mich.
RM, 40 ACRES, VERY PRO—
ELMWOOD FA tools buildin

Stock and . gs, _fine
ﬁctive. Close, to town. Write me for partlcu

Emmi'oun RYAN, Presoott, Mich.

ARM IN FRUIT BELT. SMALL

BO ACRWE :, m. silo end ouibsuldings in
1 condition. Well drained, clay loam soil,
from Mich. Pike, 8 miles from zoo

’ at. M terms. Write ROBERT WITTE,

E 1, Indium. Mich.
véo LAND. FIRE
FOR SALE. so a. IMPRO . l LAMB

tlm. For particulars write 0 ,
Earhart. Mich.

RADE FOR SMALLER
Fonlﬁglle-ME 03% T i. from market. Excellent
cell and mils. Care BOX L. Michigan

Farmer. Mt. Clemens. Mich.

'i on SALE, moser ALL

IS A011?! $2.31.": house. new born built last
frame granary 14x20, good well
well drained, good ditches and
ck loom lend: good road.
and churches. located in

township, Section six.
and implements if wanted.

ESCELLANEW
Tobacco

coo HIGH GRADE. HOME GROWR.

To" 10 be $3.00; Smoking 1s lbs are;

E nu. 84,00 rnopocnns chases.
xv.

STOCK FARM:
orchard. wind-
buildings. Addrus

 

FOR SALE.
n of

”:46:
lost

 

 

 

 

 

    
  

EX

 

    
 

‘ L CKY LEAF maooo 8 YEAR
V KE:‘;2° cured. Don't send l ' . my a:

~ ﬁne d poem on n1 ,
. ‘ $8.00.

 
 

I In we noes. new
room“ rerun“

‘mrmmss “‘ 3‘"-

lbs.
goon. ‘ use on. no! a

   
 
 

Write Ior prices. stating kin we
. WELL MILLS Maxwell Mich.

TOBACCO, KENTUCKY'S NATURAL LEAF,
Mild. Mellow smoking 10 lbs. £2.25; Hand ee-
lected chewing 3 lbs. £1.00. Free receipt for.
prepmlng. WALDROP BOTHEBS. Murray. Ky.

NURSERY STOCK AND SEED-

uo shall-rs TO PAY LETS
eel] on Oonoerd Gun. US UNDER-
Toes.

 

 

 

pee, Stmwberries,
ties. Hardy Hedge. ers, Shru
GOBLEVILLE. MICE.. NURSERIES.
NORTHERN, GROWN WHITE BLOSSOM
We: can ram “enamels.
c . .
ISBURY, Hale, Mich u .

STRAWBERRY PLANTS

 

 

 

 

STRAWIERRY PLANTS FOR SALE; BEN-
Itor Denier. sand Dr Burrill. 400
hundred. $3.00

£9“ our theme . ngrmive
lverbearers $1.00 per hundred. $10.00 per
mound. ROBT. DE CURSE. Ovid, Mich.

STRAWIERRV PLANTS: SENATOR DUN-
hp and War-ﬁeld at $4 per thousand and Gum-i-
enteed strictly ﬁrst class or money refunded.
Our 16 years experience costs you nothing. You
get it with every purchase you make of us. Our
free cabalogue illustrates and describes inn best
varieties. including the three best everbearere. A
valuable book for the grower. HAMPTON &
SONS. B 20. Bangor, Mich.

FILM DEVELOPING

KODAK FILMS DEVELOPED AND SIX
priniz, 25c. MODERN PHOTO WORKS, 303
M. B. K, Le Grouse, Wis.

 

 

 

 

 

 

KODAK FINISHING! NOT THE CHEAP
way. but the neat, at a reasonable price. Mail us
a trial order and prove to yourself that it is not

only what 11 pay but what you get tor what
you my. aim always has been and always
will be. “the prlnin from every neg-r

very best
tive." MOEN PHOTO SERVICE.
dak Finishing. Box M. B .

HONEY

HONEY. DIRECT FROM THE PRODUCER.
delivemd ”new anywhere in Michigan et
$1.25 per 6 lb. E. J. DELAMARTER.
Chem, Mich.

Quality Ko-

F, In Crease, Wis

 

 

 

 

Henry so pounce 3.10. LAKE n
HONEY (50.. man (new.s Wis. Em“

BEE I'IIVEB. SECTIONS, COMB FOUNDA-
t'len. smokers. etc. Complete outﬁts begin-
nus with or without bees. Agents for A
Reel: 00. goods M '
Beeswax wanted. M.
Cedar St, lensing, Mich.

PURE CLOVER HONEY, 10 lbs. $2.00: 60
lbs. $19.00, prepaid by mil or express. BLOOM-
FIE'LD APIARIES. Ed Stewnrt. Port Hope.
Michigan.

 

 

 

 

GENERAL

WANTED POSITION. 0N DAIRY FARM BY
young man with wife and tyro children. Ther-
cushy

 

familiar with . Win methods and
able to furnish best e! referenca. Address I
X, Michigan Business Farmer. Mt. Clemens.

Michigan.

 

'wmveo To euv‘usoluwl SIZE onene-
km evaporator. one to e care of 400. trees.

Slate size and gm ﬂat letter. J. L.

SULLIVAN.

HAY FOR SALE. BUY. RAY IN CAR LOTS.
d ms. to FAB-

 

(FOR SALE) FIVE SHARES IR gLEANER
(baring lime. Will make discount r cash.
Good invatmut. Address 30! 103. M
Niobium. '

ALL MEN. WOMEN. BOYS. GIRLS OVER
17, willing to accept Government Positions
135, (stationary or traveling) write In.
serpent. Dem. 855. St. Louis. “0., immed-
l1.

 

\ME PAY $200 MONTHLY SALARY. FUR-
nbh rig and expenses to t our man-
tood ultry end sinok wders. BIGLEB
PAN}. X682, We! . Illinois.

LEATHLR FOR REPAIR WORK. "Annzss
er sole 300 per . Hides tanned for farm-
ers. OOCHRAN TANNING 00.. Granville, men.

12x30 useo “GINA!” SILO wrru noes
F. O. B. Our here at $125.00. BOY S. mall.
me Lake. Mich.

cacao POSTS FOR SALE IN can Love.
0. A.V0\NF.I1IIS, AIM, Mich.

 

suv FENCE Peers olnscr room FOR.
All kinds. Delivered prices. Addru K.
ehigau Busine— Farmer, Mt. (31m-

est.
11.. are m
‘Qs. Mich.

 

l8 .YOIIII FIRM 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 tam in Michigan and you
deal direct with the buyer. No
agents or commissions. If you want
to sell or trade W11? farm. send in
~ your ad. today. Don’t Just talk
aboutit. Our Business Fez-many
Exchange set! results-

Address the Michigan Business
Met, Adv. Dept» Mt. Clemens.

 

 

 

  

. Ly
inhuman. Send it on
u. HUNT a; soft. 50,3133”.

”be-Inn

  

young calf is indigestion. or
secure. Naturally «the digestive
system of the young call is weak and
is very easily upset. The old adage,
“An ounce of prevention is worth a
pound of cure," is very applicable
here.

There are two kinds of scours that

commonly etect the young calf—-

white scours, sometimes called. cal!
cholera, and common scours, caused
from indigestion.
is a Contageeus form, and if the
calf becomes elected at All it is
within a. few days after bdrth. The
germs gain entrance to the body
through the umbilical cord soon after
birth. The remedy for this disease
is a preventive one, and the best way
to insure against it is to keep the
stalls and pens cleaned. Stalls used
for calving purposes should be
cleansed and disinfected after each

should be taken by tying 0. string
around the navel cord of the young
calfimmediately after it is born, and
applying some good disinfectant to
the exposed parts. .

The common scours. or indiges-
tion. may usually be traced to faulty
methods in teeding the young calf.
The principal causes are as follows:
overfeeding, feeding cold milk, in
regular feeding. feeding alfalfa or
other highly nitrogenous bay to the
young calf, using dirty pulls, and
dirty stables.

The ﬁrst sign of indigestion or
scours among cults is usually the
characteristic foul-smelling dung.
When a cot! shows the ﬁrst signs
of scours the milk should be reduced
one-half or more, and then gradual-
ly increased again as the calf im-
proves. This method 'of treatment
is usually euﬂicient boobed: s. mild
case. There have beﬁh many reme-
dies suggested for treatment of the
scours, and all are used with more
or less success. The feeding of dried
blood to calves has proved very effec-
tive. This may be fed by adding a
teaspooniul of soluble dried blood to
the milk and stirring it up well.
Dried blood not only acts as a tonic,
but often is fed along with milk at
each feed on account of its feeding
value as well as its value as pre
ventive treatment against the scours.
A fresh egg given the calf when the
scours is ﬁrst noticed often checks
the attack. Castor oil is also used
.with good results. Two tablespoon-
' fuls is sufﬁcient (or 0. dose. This may
be given as s. drench mixed with
milk.

 

HONEST PERIODICALS
(Continued from page 0)

is. Then the wage earner ﬁnds to
his surprise that his fortunes have
not improved, though some fortunes
have. Next, the farmer is told that
he wants cheap transportation; he
does. Labor must be deflated. The
fact is that every gain made by labor
is a gain tor farming; beneﬁt to the
farmer from lowering a wage scale
can not last if it comes at all.

When the farmer might have
cheap hired men, he and his mmily
can not make money enough to pay
them. The farmer does not pay
wages to the farm family; the taxes

will make. Labor donates the farm-
er, and the farmer takes the labor-
er’s job. The farmer receives wages
that be has helped to deﬂate. In
big dollars, the farmer and the wage
earner pay back the little dollars
that the rich gave for their bonds.

In past history, such systems have
worked until there were explosions.
Europe has seen some explosions,
and others seem not for away,
America’s hope is honest printers'

most common new ad the

The white scours.\

calf is born. Additional precaution '

are more than the year‘s farming,

 
  

 

     
 
   
    
 
 
 
 
 
 

public can live with one-half of its peo-
prosperous and ham and the other
poor and discon There must
g: an evening up process, There must
fewer hundred-W-dollar sale-
riee and more $10 wages. There must be

give every one a. decent living, Human
nines must go up and money values mint
come down. The leveling process is large '
ly I. meter 01 education and just luvs.
, Many greet em-
ployers are returning a large of
their proﬁts to their employees. e m
maldng rogrws along these lines, slowly.
but . There are can too many who
lave their dollars more than they do lite
itself.Butsomeda.yth willdleeﬂ
antaciwhimmn justice will ran W
1‘. '

 

WEST ANTRIM cow merry a
ASSOCIATION
(Continued tom page 2)

than a year ago and it speaks for
the progressiveness of the dairymen
of Antrim gpunty when they are wil-
ling to make the considerable ‘ei'fort
necessary to operate an association
under their conditions, their herds
being small and far apant. They
realise the necessity for knowing the
productive ability of the individual
cow in their herds before they on
expect to dairy proﬁtably. Many
agreeable surprises and some not so
agreeable have been experienced by
the members during the year that
the production of their cows was set
down in black and white from mouth
to month. The association with the
help of County Agent L. L. Drake
has reorganized for another year and
will continue with practically the
some members under the supervision
of E. W. Fox:

Number of members in association. ”:8
Average No, of cows in test dur-

ing year .................. . ...... 170
Total pounds milk produced. . . . . . 910,744
Average per cent of fat ........... .4.
Total pounds of butter fat pro-

duced ..___....................42384.!
Total cost of feed. . ............ $8,984.00

Average pounds of milk per cow. .5357,8
Average pounds of fat per cow... .2493
Average cost of feed pes- cow ...... 352,85
Avemge feed cost per 100 pounds milk 98°
Average feed cost per 1 pound of fat 210
Average receipts for 100 lbs. milk 81.71
Average receipts for 1 pound of fat :80
Average income per cow above .
cost of feed .................. $41.80
No. of cows producing over 250 lbs. fat 75
No. of cows producing over 300 lbs, m M
No. of cows producing ever 350 lbs. fat 15
No, of cows producing ammo lbs ﬂat 3

Highest cow in milk {genom‘mde
Holstein. 3571 lbs, 4.38 pes- cent.
866.7 lbs. fat. Owned was Links
Roberts. '

'Highes: cow in rat production. undo
Jersey. 7170 lbs_ milk. 815 per cent, “0.!
lbs. tut, Owned by Lewis '1‘. Hickln

Cow wlﬂi cheapest production of milk

- grade Holstein, teed
ed by Gust.

aowe‘vna dheepest prom donors-t
(on test run year) grade Holstein, feed
cost no per pound Owned 1;me

Inhaler,
00w with largest incarne above not.
”5.85. Owned by Chas. W. Fox.
No.ofherdsa ewes-890 lbs.“
per new, 10, .
Nmofherdsavengingeverzso‘mm
per new, 5.
Owner of herd with largest ova-ego
f «that. 831.6 lbsmWJ.
or

' of hen!
production of milk
Owned b

y Miss ,
Owner of herd with largest average 1114

came mwvhm or ﬂood per w. 858.84.

, . ox,_

-No.ofpure bredbnllsinassociatio 1,
No. of grade bulls in association. .
No. of pure bred cows in‘ association. 14,

. No. of cows with value of product lo.

- lee-goat hm
r cow. 7079 pounds.

Mounts. ,
The ﬂowing shortages can that
produced over 3501b; your:

 

Breed

Hickln‘........Gra.de
Fox..........Grade

Fox. ..._......Grade

Hoopfer.......Grade
Hiakin........Gz-ade
Fox.......... redo

‘ Fox..........Gmde
ado

. .Hub gr -
_ E Fox.,........Grado
T, Hickin........Grnh
Lulu Roberts........Grnde
C. Fox.........._ .e
E.,.Fox.........Grmle
, Khiser......._..mv

Owner

ago

my.
Guernsey. .

n e

Draper
ﬁﬁﬁ“
Eg

E

u

eooeoea.

a

“use“...

Guernsey. .

nee-e

r?

§l

  

 

 

 

ARAB IN 3-." moor:

 

Jersey....., I:
Guernsey.. I

oonoa‘

set

if},

Age Whentresh 115va Percent Lbs.
mm Fat Est

7170
me

1 8631
ms

  
 
 

 

 

    
     
      
  
 
   
    
      

 

I ﬁmrdﬂdﬂmmnnmmd“_g-_-

'33‘3EE§5-BE=$5351”liaisrssssssa wagers


  

  
 
  
    

  

OONCRME HEN HOUSE .
I ,want to build a hen house large

, Mlﬂmeomdnhm

build it of concrete but some tell me it

would be too damp. Is this truer—«I. M..
' ville. Mich.

It has not been our practice to ad-
vocate the use of concrete in the
building of hen houses. It is poo
siblo however, to make a cement
ﬂoor which will bet/dry provided it
is properly constructed. Proper
construction means that there must
be something between the cement
and the moist ground to prevent
water from comiig in contact with
the cement. This is usually done by
placing several inches of gravel
under the cement or by putting a
layer of tar, paper between the ﬁrst
and second layers of the cement.
Poultry houses having the walls of
cement are very much inclined rto_be
cold and damp, and since cement has
the characteristic of allowing water
to' pass through it easily it is not
considered advisable to use it in the
construction of poultry houses—-
Geo. F. Davis, Assistant in Poultry
Husbandry, M. A. C.

HENS BECOME LAME

We are having trouble with our hens.
They are fat and seem to be in good
health when all of a sudden one of them
will become lame in one leg. They grad-
ually- get worse. lose weight and die.
do you think about iti—H. W.,
Clio, Mich.

You might be suspicious of tuber-
»culosis. These clinical
coincide exactly with those of tuber-
culosis. However a postmortem is
necessary to be absolutely sure at
the trouble. If the liver, gaﬂl blad-
der and intestines show the typical
lesions or tuberculosis nodules
which are whitish in color with a.
yellowish center. If this condition
prevails it is a positive indication. of.
the presence of tuberculosis. The
treatment will depend on the sever-
ity of the trouble. If the mortality
is high indicating a general infec-
tion the quickest possible way, to,
eliminate it is by disposing of all the
stock. The healthy appearing birds
can be marketed and all that are
light or under-weight should be
killed and either burned or buried
in quicklime. The house should be
thoroughly disinfected, provided
with an abundance of ventilationThe
ground should be thoroughly cov-
ered with lime and poultry should
not be returned on the premises for
two or three months. The young
stock should be reared on new soil
away from any possible. hence of in-
fection. If sanitary mea res pre-
vail and good vigorous healthy stock A
are secured one does; not need to
worry a great deal about tubercu-
losis or any other poultry disease.—
E. C. Foreman, Assoc. Prof. of Poul~
try Husbandry. M. A. 0.

pack REPORTS

 

 

smnwnssnl —— Cold would)», no
new. not vary to. table crap '
ers not busy. A good attend-
ance at all m consuming oar-halt-
ural trend 0: Namely o-op-
eroxive :hm n, Grange. tonnes-3'
clinic an mm The. m
ual sate moot at

mentationitwooldbetheninﬁu-all.
——V.G.W.,lhb.1&

several etmﬂd
weatherithao mm no
”backbone"ot doesnotoweorto
broken by owmoano—it so. we
doomedtoouonount of lose-oath-
mohm‘mm
altitudes-nth”
The roads oooin

LE :Feb. 16;,

symptoms /

'out odor, smoke or noise—no

I‘m, WWeatbor’ «enthuse cold.
with momma-ties. Buzz piles rooming up
all; our: Sales are quite morons, while
' has changed their minds about a

sale no they think things are selling tOO

cheap. A neighbor had a bad accident
when- he tried to kick a belt from gas
engine pulley, injuring his limb severely.

Everybody looking forward to spring.—

Mrs, H. C. Halts, Feb. 18

SAGINAWb—Tennperature 2 below zero
to 20 above. Mostly clear with some
wind. Reads fine. The winter w eat is
having a hard pull by lack of snow. Rye
prospects are not rthe best but farmers are
optomistic about it. Only small amount
of “ye stock was marketed this week.
The corn shocks have all been hauled

. from the ﬁelds. Farmers are _cuxtting

and hauling wood.—-—-C. C, Dew... Feb. 18-.

LIVINGSTON (E.)—Cheer up good
farmers, the first sign of spring has
001716: early potatoes have started to
sprout. Better times are on the way now
as tax time is about over. The prices of
farm produce are advancing to cheer up
the farmer so he will dig in for another
summer. The ground is well frozen
and a. light covering of snow is a great
benefit to the Winter grain in this section
of the country—J. W. 0., Feb. 17: .

WEXFORD—Lots of snow, and still
coming. Plenty of cold weather. Farm—
ers are not doing much only keeping their
stock and themselves thawed. Feb. 2nd
Mr. Jno, Sdnut-te, Sr. died at the age of
77 Years. He resided in this county over
50 years. Feed is moving some now.
Farmers are planning on seeding a. good
acreage this spring—Wm. A. Jenkins.
Feb 16.

ARENAG——At this writing the ground
is covered with snow and more winter-
like than at times. It has been a very
hard winter on grains as the ﬂreezing
will surely heave it out in the spring.
Beans sure did advance some and at this
writing are around $4.60 per own. at
the Farmers” Elevator at Omer. Mich.,
ﬁfteen cents higher than most anywhere
else in the county. Farmers busy getting
up wood, cutting ice, drawing in a few
beans and the like but as a rule are sit—

rtlng tight for higher prices. Some farms

changing hands, few auctions—M. B.

[Russel], Feb. 14, ‘

CHEBOYGAN —— Weather extremely
cold in this section. Thermometer
around zero all week. Not much produce
going to market. Many farmers gettinir
short on feed and compelled to buy hay
at from 8.?0 to $24 a torn. Cold spell has
halted shipping of potatoes. 1,700 bushels

., received for shipment at (meboyigan (mo
week ago. two carloaxls shipped out from
Wolverine to Pittsburg. M. A, C. expert
gave land clearing lecture through this
county last week —M. G. F., Feb. 17

KAIJASKA—Farmers are not doing
much except chores; a. few are putting
up ice and a. few are working .in the
lumber com We had hard winds last-
week and the weather was very cold and
stormy. We have about 28 inches of snow
and the roads are not very good. Farm
sales hm been few this winter and not
but a few auction sales. Feed is getting
source with some and has to be bought.
There is a litxtle straw being and at about
$16 per ton bailed. Taxes are being paid
and some have to borrow the money to
pay them with. Some cows and horses

 

  

  
 
  

   
    

   

{

 

fl'he Easiest [heft—The Best Buy’ /
“For twelve years I have operated a 13-
inch Papec. have ﬁlled the tallest silos -
in the ‘Thumb’ of Michigan and have never
0.10ng the blower when the 600 REM.
was maintained. I consider it the easiest

draft, and the best buy."—Jlos. Ward,
Richmond,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

positive
on“

"“W

iedeeignedandbuilttolivouptoibgueruoee—tho hood-tendon“
mmteegivonanyensilagecutter. eroarothouoondoof
Former-3' Record and Account Book—FREE
The farmer who ﬁnds and stops the leaks in his
business is the one who makes a reﬁt. This Ell-page
is so conveniently theta few entries
a day will enable you to eterrnino your exact
ﬁnancial standing. Write us givmg the size of
your silo and your dealer’s name and address. and
the book will be mailed promptly. It’s worth a
dollar to any farmer.
Also ask for free Catalog describing the four
sizes of Papec Cutters. It shows wiry a Popeo
will pay for iteelfin two seasons. Write today.
P- ‘ "EC MACHINE COMPANY
1.7 Main St. Shortsvllle New York
86 Distributing Houses Enable
Papas Dealers to Own
pt Service.

/ .
\

4

 

 

~ .

   

Cut;-

 
 
 
  

., . . ’ ‘ Hardic Sprayers
- . cost less to buy;
cost less to own,
cost less to oper-
ate; give highest pressure, biggest
capacity, and best results. r»
Made in twenty sizes, both power
and 'hand, and used by the experi-'

Write for the complete
Her-die catalogue

 
  
 
 

 

 

  
 
 

 

 

 
    

 

 

are offered for sale but not many are

 

changing hands. A mild winter on far.
good for all fall Wheat and rye—W. A.
B., Feb. 17.

LIVINGSTON—Have had good winter
weather with but little snow; not enough
to make covering for fall crops which
have been injured more or less by the ice
that covers a great part of the ﬁelds.
Have not had but little sleighing this
winter and the wheeling has not been
the best for elither auto or horse. Roads
are very cy 11 many place at this
writing. Stock all looks good with some
sheep and lambs bring marketeda—Geo.
Ooéeman. Feb. 15.

, T. CLAW—Farmers are preparing
for their spring work with more pop and

cheer than for some time past: instead
of the sober downoalst look it is a broad
smile you see, since and

hogs have made such encouragi -
vances. Fan sown grains look bad with
the word yet to come. The general opin-
ion is wheat will not be a. good crop this
year. The weather is steady with now
and than a cold snap but no snow to
weaker. mmmfroomsohdand
quite dog with not chm moisture.
Dive shock is looking well and business
gab 18 in this section—I. J.

ngad

\

NEW LAMP BURNS
94% AIR

BEAR ELEUI‘BICITY OR GAS

A new oil lamp that gives u
amazingly brilliant, soft, white
light, even better than gas or 3190.
tricity. has been tested- by the u_ S.
Governmt and 36 leading univer-
sities and found to be Manor to 10
ordinary oil lamps. It buns with-
pump
ing up. is simple, clean, sate. 3m.
94 percentairand Gpermtcom
mon kerosene (coal-oil.) ‘

The insontor, A. R. Johmn, 60'!
W. Lake 8L. Chicago, 111., is oﬂering
to send a lamp on 10 days‘ FREE
trial, or oven to give one FREE to
the first user in eachlocality who
will help him introduce 1:. WM.
him today tor full particuliro. lilo:
ask hints explain how you can get
thy-agency and without experience
orjiitig’ney, make $350 to 8300 w

 

   

 

cnced growers everywhere.

m MANUFACTURING C0., HUDSON. MICH.
Mes st: Posthd. Loo Angela,

cum. Kano; City. Ila. Hour-tool, II.
N. Y., Petr-lie, 0st.

THE AUTOTIOILEDWA

  
  

 
    
   
 
 
   
  
 
 
 

A Real Seli-Oiling Windmill 33:,ng of
Oil an Aermotor once a year and it is always my 4mm

 

oiled. Every moving part is completely and fully
oiled. A constant stream of oil ﬂows on every
bearing. Theshaftsruninoil. The double gearorunin
oilinatightlyenclosedgearcase. Frictionamiwear
are practically eliminated.

Any windmill which does not have the gears runninginoilisonly
half oiled. A modern’ windmill, like a modern automobile, must have
in oil. Dry gears, exposed to dust. wear rapidly. I
, cause friction and loos of power. The Aermotor
pumps in the lightest breeze because it is correctly designed and well
3 windmill satisfaction, buy the Aermotor.

  
   
         

Isbell’s Michigan-grown Garden Seeds assure a big-yielding, proﬁt-

Write for able garden, for they are thoroughbred stock—tho result of 43
John’s years of development and selection. Send today, for Isbell'o 1922
Seed Annual. giving valuable information on quality seeds and quoting direct-

1922 from-grower prices. 7 '
cataIOQ ‘- I. ISIELL 8: COMPANY 5‘53 Mechanic St. (30) lackooﬁ, Mlch.

 

 

 

CAN YOU

” FOR FARMERS ONLY

GRAND RAPIDS HEALTH o ACCIDENT 00. will pay you $10.00 a week or
d that note for every day that you. no totally disabled from either scold“
or disease. ’

”’3 week for m disability. $5.00 a week hospital beneﬁt
$100.00 for accidentd death. for onlytsxlo a year plus $8.00 policy too he

”m“ AGENTS WANTED?

wm pay you more if wanted.

Address: W. I. BEACE, Gen. Agent, Owosso, Mich.

 

 

 

 

308 Washington 8L,

  
 
 
 
  
 

 

 

  
  

BAIIELS 0F DISHES

mm m ..., o A T s ema- WWW»-
cot . Hotel Chum. per u. ‘
Mined gin-ins. GREAT!3 BARGAIN. Write f. loft! SEED CORN. Gd
partieuhin. our low price. 3am and catalogue. v
RALVEA. mo. ”:0 R. BUR A SONS. Molme. cue.

Buffalo. N. V.

Can You Sell Subscriptions to this Paper?

We have a position for you in your county which .

Will Pay You from $15 to $50 per Wee

INGASEdnringthemonthswhenyouarexnotengagedinfuming

work. We want ambitious men and women who can SELL the best

farm weeklyinnliehignnand wearewﬂlingtopoyogenerouscom-

missionandwhenyouhovemadegood,ifyouwishtoglvethiswwk

your entiretimewewinmake youaregularsolariedagent. Agedoos
successful men

 
 
  

     
   
  
 
 

   
 
 

 
   
 
 
 
  
  
 
   

    
   
   
  
  

    
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 

  
   
 

intimated, write, )
”Agency W, The MichiganBusiness 'Farmer, Mt. Clem ’

  

 

 
    
     
   
    
   
  

 

   
  
 


,1.“

 

 

  
     

 

 

 

 

 
    

 

  

 

 

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
 

 

 

  
 

 

 
 
  

 

  
   
  
   
    
 
 

  
  
 

 

 
   
 

  
 
  
  
 

 

 

   
    

 

   
 
     

  
  

 

   
  
     
  

   
  

 

 
  
   

 

      

 

      

 

 

 

 

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3 _ .
I 415'."
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‘ . ‘ - vmImmmruunum,4 ‘ . ‘ V
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nm“u“.;.:f..°°.§¥.“ oft-n amo'rﬁ'w’“ " 'ﬂ ”ka ‘0, “WM broaden of n .M""mmm"”“""”|HIH‘mmmmn .: « ' "
NW: In .9 thom' 0'" or ohm... my“ ‘ "0°! and an you" 3““ Md mm 'm .. ‘ '- » . ' h r - , ‘ I
“no“. Ming-"org; u33‘3”" M b. "m" "" “fwd: “L”: '°" ‘3 2.0 3m“. 1: "M "W? “I"! V ﬂ LIP M " ‘ r a
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‘ ‘ , "nun, m “km-nu. “W ’ Should "be “89.13 on Feb. 11 mop... ‘
' “ CLAIMY ’ ' “" ¥ "WU-n- v 0d” mam the credit 1:”"ml‘v
, CUM humans 1""? man in th V!‘ ham
SALE "“3 taxman“ in MW" “ﬁlmed ‘
DATE'ﬂ‘a it gm- wmﬁﬂr‘égm m A?“ “'4‘“ 0315 i!
To “ 7 C ’ t sweep. 4 and an 5' Mg . ,
mt. nfé°'tm“:;{;°‘$o .1?“va- mu wnhum “mommm Fﬂe' --- Omplet ___ 00L John am betel-081%h m h
"glib-n. If you an ooynsl '0 “I III. |- . Mal-Nb 9’ ch ‘ of Hudson' m I
'0 us "- Inc. and “m" 3 III. “- 1922 at — ester ”Id g 1 ‘3 Pin-ma ' ch.- ‘
P nu_ “dim, ‘0 WI" chlm u“ a“ ’ F8115 ‘ ' . for the .3380 811” “an“.
F LIV. 3 child Wonder: 0 of ,
.. an. own"... Wok mm. a. 3. Cl Farms, Mt. 30 Holstein mo- $37911 on: on b‘ﬁmwﬂg 1n whmmguggdit. :
8 a m. M . nians March “be ‘ these an cg:
ﬂag“. m. in Swiss Cattle gm! Poland J’ohn . 801112;. f 1922 f 10' Jghn is cemrtv:§ﬂ;°“thmu mm 52%] long, i
- - Ill-nah 2.— m”! much“. mom- Pro '1‘ ‘ ’ .01- Hardy o the blds. that cone,» and .eman.
- , Pontho, mmmm James Nye a; son, R. p. aka D- U. ‘ & Green, Roi When he is in the“, given direct] 3' Gaunt
A. m“ 8’15”“ ”m“ ‘5 Ber-m u Imoall)“t Hum“ '°h°“°rv Mich. ' 35°?” that an: $1191)?!“ °°nv§nté2h§
cums. . or Limited ecret sue: v and has 5':
- mm W ““1“ Bowen- Sturzn. 1111 OR at Fair. E wank-U. 111%. 2: “RMﬁ’f 13:“ intergalt stile?“ 51““ ed
, Ham}: 9_ H c d " Roc - lea gun and o-dau-ym \
7- . we) d, mob. Obtains, John W, Ch“- mil“ sntgft’ll 2: ’ hezgr- m 831:: algal “gob veggiggggglng tstates %
Much 10— 0 amp 8 b ' red ”an aucti
‘ . ~ m" m- Home!“ In. A‘ mm” M Detroit, 0n Gra- Of F d ‘ from D :11 on fax“ Y“ Mammbﬁotstem cattle wgﬁ
I “P‘gigh 29—“HOII I J. F. . . V“ dot. ~ e era-l Tested Cattle waiting I ' a held on 31.126 {3% Of thewgleseﬂly in
April 20—39mm. mm cm 3. at 1 v ”'1“ 33:1“ ‘3 located 0t; J°hn Schlaa Jpn“
“if???” “V“- ﬂ" n 0 0 C100]: A M S Who game”. On 1&9, fam°“‘ ester-
onhom 1,330er Conan w w . . 7 . harp history 151mm“- with reg-r3 GVeryOno
mun. inﬂon. Gm a. ‘ ’ On M 0W8 of this W t' Holstein
h ‘ d ' ‘ ' :2 heaa“33ml% ea" outrun +
- _ -O » made b '. r Holstel " ng 0‘ «—
H y the we! _’ n cattle ::
‘ L ‘— 0f chome sa‘immgwum‘m grower 3:: -
Iv: 3700K Aucnouzzas { _ . I life-ted to“: 11:31:50“ the H33; IT!”
0 '7 a
ﬁdln‘fdsml. Umhnud, men. 0 . O “5;“; While Mr. Hgatheast tram £31 "or
a. nun. Bogth wmuey, 1.4 fe “011 testing th V has never do 1
WW;nkeshs. WI- - ., males in thi , g WW5 an no ‘ ﬁrst
11,112? mﬁhmwn mpu. In W an 7 3; 30-pound 1:311:83 dare the «33911321121: Th"
0. tP'Drtllu 0313:. m. 0 ha. v a ~ cows 31 same of few
. Johns‘ mm. m mm“ b eat of Va tested everything th A ‘sale at? 12:?“ has ever kngh: great, has:
{on P unnbnffudﬁt’m that m In) °°nd8tlon and tree from: d1? freShened for two ' EE‘MMMEB huggeeyrfe Bum-bred Poland “u
R- Law—ng ' m m 24 to 33 ' ease ma Years All Y- arch 3 b mfmmnced f ' yam
L w. mm“). s! ym‘olds powdﬁ on T- B-. with A. cattla in of Ithm M y 01131-185 Wet 0T Fri— m‘
I, 1 m Agid LYODI. Inch. . Out of sires 31 aged cows, and f R. 0. records an envi 10h. The Wetz zel & SOns on.
D. L P nson, WWI. 0‘ $3.13, Out to 36 T0111 15 to 22 Iﬂ-nz- f8. able Show 61 herd mad.
I. I. Péymghoégﬁbuﬁi on». the last at 31 t° 35 Sires. Impound,t Fm“? are du mums °n tWo- - c1123 of MIChIgam reicord at the leadme mi
9- £- gamma. émﬁi‘m m tw° Years at Fail-mum lowing are some of thee to freshen by time snmrggbgﬂups. 25 tiny-”19%;; Winning 9; n
' wrt. Pony “1 h. FMS; ml‘ds mad ' Wm 588, Alt 288 and 2 C
G“! 0 Butheﬂogd M9 AIUS Penna 6 with“) Ola Won 11 Grand Ra. id 0 ldd
8"" \Rm’im‘m- P'lym t?" m 33"" lbs. B c 88.8mm 601.11bs. ' herd. ﬁrst on 1‘s_t on breeder? 8' 1“” pun
zm-i- wmﬁ' “Mum?“m'cnm mﬂkv 139.70 11%"; day”: 2703.1m1ib1: M1” Harm: in gem" 90W 83:1” yearling heir-y?“
. Woo IAVerpooL N. I. Chum-y S ' ' F" 30 days. 111111;. 36.2 lbs EmmeH08.6 lbs. cﬁaBay City the ﬁgmd Champion. '33::
milk. 31.04 mpg“? may—702.5 lbs "’8- mm; losfo many," days: 2089.0 n.9,(§"?,}°r;1 boar and 3333““ the mna
PURE BRED lbs' mﬁlk, 123 7' [b's F" 7 days; 2 7006 Huron Hﬂ] P ' ' F‘ 30 days. R‘nh- qnﬂo’zs ranks wph .‘th The Wet”! ——
LIVE STOCK Lowland Ma - B- F, so day's ' 3 Year 01d_513°nt130 Komdym Sr tér fa} ”‘1" Ownnrs ha 9 best-in the ‘
w... WL‘LS T | 0 II E E n 3 ms» mm. 29 621%??? DmH-m B'vf' 7 am '8 ‘m ““1" 22-2 u»: $1931.12? that wiﬁxaaxpwm o.‘
. ' . 5+ 1 . ~ ‘» 19-. . 81'
commm, Mm. J. 1'. HOFFMAN 273° K°l Flam-16 C E. 7 days, 01 d 351,5?1‘ Minnie Roy s 4 Seﬁcamg “Caess 11W rigging Sale the 05?; a
$9.": ' “9:22: "rm- 1 lbs» B. F 7 d§§§W—7°5-3 mm 7 days-$15382, muk. zm’rb: gm es ‘° -"6- “ Wimv do "a
a o ., ecu! o rnq " - ' - ' - - F. ________ -
\ tyne PoJlnnd Cﬂmf’sp‘jfmﬁ’mgghuxgm bred big" ~563.éai%g $11241)?! Crest Hart 30 days. milk. 84.83 lbs. B. F; T HILLSDALE DURO Kim
”“1“ men W. 11 Ohm“ m , ' .6711) “a 0g 01:}: he H11 0 SAL
'em mm W, ‘ mm w. 1] S. B. F 7 er reoo as Lsdale C E
33.1.1“ 'Sr-‘h'boz‘szv «.33: mm: ‘33: Four bulls out 0, Dan ” w“ ”“1“”- "‘” m numerous to nui‘ifriiﬂgge “3% i’t‘émﬁrﬁmgs ‘i"*dem ‘
' a t “8 871m . 11]
b", one price ohmum like to an to, E W" ranging I, on Wednesd e Hillsdale fai en?-
81 . r ”.0”: of us m1 ' Good . 9m 22 pm Was ay. Febru r grounds.
Aﬁﬁu’ﬂﬂhgﬁtsi ﬁat put it on"; “it: brig};- m bankame notes will be , ted d 2 year on u, 35 Down}; DOintti Sﬁertugédﬂigfcessfgé’myéverghgt sale' :1
14 “Hiawatha? mm on m mmumd for 6 months 0, 1 year M 3;: ”61} extra ﬁne 333%. {he hogs 03:33.; "a
u-“EED'A PRAGT Ogs ready for dist: Fm to Rochm ,' 7 Der and the spring. gutsy. it 18 tma M m
IGAL "Wood in 1button on March 1. 19 - 3 distance of 'geneg‘lm bred too late twere too young» Ll“
COMPETEﬂT-Au "Wood ””3 3°“ CoL Mack 22' a few average of the ° Se“ Well 'm.
to 1mm. ”m “It chouEEn 1n the Boxxv 00“ Hulsize Fort mm“ W11 TedUcedoetrylts lessthan 35:139. which’ was
mEmplny tha on. Aﬁgfioxggl "holuocess_ 1" Master, Mich Allsnt auctioneer. Faimhlli the few ui’ldg-ZipreSenoe 1}, ‘3’: girl-ﬂy
wgdilgglmlt 3 p110. m keeping with can ﬁn . . ‘ - 0 kneel; Hardy & Gree The tWo highzeed_ gilts. 9 Qt from
Satisfying plenum: €1er lld F \ n eagle were quchESStdprioe-d gHts 1n ﬂh Hex
ES MADEn ‘i‘Ymm'TEED °' N0 CHARG— arms 4 :ndHIIISda’IG: for S, by Hageman B o b° q
arm- ver'w Tm‘mmpaﬁ ”gm ’ acres, or an ”3;? 31% cost 313:3 m m 5% . ‘
cvoryon - tn ”"10. p h . . am . , —
1 mi?“ “, “mm P art t ereOf For S m y ff‘gﬁthe ring i’uQﬁe ”tame“. Cried m 2;
Mn. Let In m. 03nd; Dumas. um ’ a e 7 ' she? and For rs Were J. I. p 9. 1.".
Writs or vim s 922 a“. for m 0 31% Work or Mreszgiaynes. The gitfeg- ad;
Ves him to ' ams. In thi - _ I
“Am A. Ecxlum . Eﬁztg’ggsdg m2°m?ggle°gv gm ml; rm
03"” any, ""MII . no an! DOBed of h] e : the oﬂ
‘ r . - .
mm AUCTION SALE 331;?” ”mm cswgmockegcggwggpeumg 3'3“!
I ““110“ “'25 head PURE ‘ eve o stag-{es no b y e Bean-m1 ‘
Complete a]. O BRE OLSTEI ’7 minute'- Wa - unkg Sell h __
- LEEEJWK Aucmnm mat“ merm- mm “garme- M D NS samzmwgo oiné‘ﬁnemm. °" Hm
.. ADDRESS ‘138‘15? 321.32,?” ' o south °" bulk of 8::“nir‘tilwwt 0" Pam" Bnd- Hollteln- EJ‘1§°h°ﬁ9‘d.g:|.l%ws£ Wm‘ﬁugl'?1 Em” 1""
w UNSINO. lion, ‘ '1' ON MARCH 2nd, 1922 (mumI 0- ‘ ut 0mg!“ Au" Séhoﬂéld 8’33“} Cljd'emggdgéyn vsvmjth'. 32::
‘ , r This v » ar . ' .
s on. mamﬁthgut‘i“ ”5 pure bred hzus :g at 1:00 P- m. slurp ::¥'&RPW- Buff: graﬁn'toﬁws- R. K123: 3M5:
CUTLE “7 thou: 1,300 9 V“ ‘ht about 2.900 In. “In" 3 10W ma & Snyde OWdeﬂyv 0- H Tu k ever, Kint- With
:11“ Intommoﬁu {:3' “as one wag], gonna tray 8 “a .“hihﬂo hon", KBHe'y 3 BA E. mes, E. E cEega Webster milk.
mm." ”“1“ 0“ doublourl: ”rad”? F'rd OileYttth “" “‘1 hung? “‘1‘ “n” The'na'mes' “Sher and "M Ly? Hr 3- “W
HOIBTE ‘ ”tides. °“W We on true ’- 3 mr. who and add,- - - Fisher. ‘ 2
IN'FRW Th“ hard co .1.“ u' ”n" “Mohomk’mhrz‘u m" hOOtOr as “Wught the “038 3388311 or the men I' A
bred " of Is m1 0 “a - .Ows': E. ‘8 cal ~
nix m$&,'°°d 3"“er herdlhf: 9°“! no fresh so other . John mm] I, ‘ M. Harris. cmaﬁaé‘"? ‘ —
01“ no tub ' ° which is ‘1 ' "PM 3001. d 3811. J. P B “”0"“ Pox-be 1'.
Th1! 83.1. Wm b Grounn tested m so for I“. An “0' “d "O Hag'em ' “muEhS R ﬁ’ E- s H I
"'0" “M .. 35‘“: w «.393: “:r' ....,, 41-" ”gm «2., ., 1° Mr £22,9-wa 'Sno‘wﬂa ”WM n, I
on “In. or 0.00 m 6. “too. d3} . ‘ 211:“- M ' - 9n, .
213‘ 33‘; 'swm‘;m~mn JAMEWEYE '°‘°‘ “‘3‘? ﬁrm". an. mom .., a a: 3m Bnggwh??raﬁl,:‘s¥n’ziﬁ ’“ °.
”'~ huh ' 1’ 1‘ ”I" » ON PPO “ 7 up” °f Anéan Fm“ ﬁLnd Geo ' =
"20. m h wag”. Jackson M 9 PS. PONTIA ' ‘ Cm“ p10 '. ~J. Carr Ca 1'86
7 good ' Hm 1' F. m ’ ' “oer. Albe '- mbria; J
Conn Igua‘ ‘ Pd: ‘1’; W1 7 Robertson. Auctioned». 'hbock. Iodine. El] 011' C. MICH, vme.3vm Igmby, Lgohghrmers’ J Ohn
Bord undo}: mm; luv-H1110... "I“ H. II. Mack. mm for M. 33w.“ 81min, 0!. Jongsﬁxxffl’c'ghlgmna; 8d :O‘L‘txﬁar— v REE
_ x ‘ . I" » 1k. ‘E_ J. Kﬁmnba 06 S'rnbth' Man 61', now
”All!!!“ nu ‘ TALK “OUT 60 - Imm‘fﬁ 8J1 at 853nm’ner Donbréﬁmem ..
4‘0“ F‘ s m Hm Ethan: on o'Es 1 YHHLI ' ’ E i J. M. W1??? 0- 0- Brettlgoglhén
no“ “lmou, 1"“ W05 roooﬂh o: m m‘ “M and IE BULL 3“ 3' M- mm. Coldm’v Notrh Ada 7 SH(
M" .1“. 1... é“... mm m», a: .. m yaw .. n. my“ Am“ «a: vexzteag- 1. s31:
uomo a: Mari-d: bull 1, mm Pena“, D... u. " mar ' 1mm). Hmsd . OW- Jonegvl] . ,-
| “ OFFERII. LI‘HT 00 ‘1“. ~ouwt ‘mmfzm 3‘ $530 b 16 lb; t: g3“ III dd. m of 3rd Mantpleagr' Ohio ‘91:. H. C. Ober‘ngz M
stain-mm Loan Better Mme- g 00 m In W a... 1e and - . D. gm aw.
dun sud m. inn 1 your old m 81.5?“ . unkind. Fed.” w In. uh: C. S. Allen, Pulaskilth, Jones_ head.
m’isi‘é‘ﬁtm' 3'“ Ind-x suntan ﬁm”‘ﬁ SHHWAIA FIRES In!" °“\W‘Dl. wm ' ‘ 10' wm. THE Mange]: h mm“
Oscar Wang. Wu Fm ' Inp- 3- IOWLlV 1; sons, Ovid Mich ; u "9”"- mau. 0n ngay, ’Mmh 2171:1100 PSALE __
. ._.. w ' ' ﬁ' Bum, on ' 0 . '
dun, ,HOLSTEIII any“, 1 “a nun a ‘ Sup ‘6‘“ «, alm- mnuum’ M1ch.,.wm maéum Creek Ho
puns. Tub. W Oll- ﬂmm If Int “ h Oceﬂn 6 Its re IhI
, "' “a? "‘3th - ”mom“, ma ... “mm-«aw wmuwg: .1... , ....r “‘3‘ mm nst mm mew Dora‘s ..
‘ - TIIEBon smx - u °“” ° “'“"“‘”“-‘°v°""~ * ﬁ~:=”’-‘om m... .. .2»:- 22: :2: am 2an zﬁmsgmm ms 22:. m,
4 LL GAL! [can , ' " n. on u , or 1. “ Mid you. 3 gﬂm ‘ - ‘
H“ 3m “5mm” ‘V:RIL to. 1921, WELL a“ '1 Pant-"old n. x." ‘1" '1 by n m ' will .33. be ingﬁén Master K1T3° two- but?
Breeders of Registered H 131 Erha- {23' .91” Bed- &g'"mnﬁa%mn to “am ".11.. .0. an m, Bay. on :5 3'4”“! of the 1:33. '1‘ and we.“ and;
Battle ”4 Bum H 0 Bin '1'!" all h . 31 mtg-tad (hm u .Lhd " "mm. Ila... I .‘ 2am Were Hired b 01-13 ‘ ta in e ——
0“. dumb! m, “n". ”- l-Vlmu 11" ‘ can 01' 13'. y on “ﬁle? Kin TH
E'm . ' «nae-c. “pm. ”32"?! m E.“ . 8our-mt! “1.. gmn‘ﬁffwx nu up..." ‘14 saw that m}; Kins“: Lady, 2. ”1,1,5 ,5 m‘
m 1,, m 5 .oo 1. .. n a. mu. r hard. w. ‘ . «on The 030m 0‘“ of Jack- '
” you n mt. '- ed M. l'Bnt.w t. W from .1]: Junior 30:3 '0“ ylw m - g 18 bred ,« to 5 Friend.
mm or can ' ' 0‘ “mtlﬂ, ﬁlm. M O . In a. u 811-. “I. P..- F Md Dl.dt'! 0110 ——
ﬁ. ‘ Q “d m , lohlun ‘ 7 th. P ., . .Who I. ‘ 011m To 09'. w
‘ m. ' " 8"" m. ' :3 “hm“- D3nxof'zndf” ‘ “with: ﬁrm." ‘ 'D 091.3,“; The sale “ﬁnial! , E.
' “I and. - ‘1'. . m n 8.3.13.3." “an ‘1] m I. V "‘11: ‘ ll:
-. WISHES!" mom-u. “L h‘ ' _..,‘
m...“ ﬁnn- , 9... sun
mic-L ”" “m“
-. "in h» __'__
, H ‘

 

 


  
  

.5

sun
y-s
Id

552335

‘PPEEEE’.

825',

'3.
1-.
D-

9.

1e
10
IS

F"?

  

“Bi-'37? SEWER-'7" -.

-m -n—rmmmmm m

.~w_ v.4... .. .._.. -m- -—__._... .

see arses

‘f‘..3?..?53§7TESFT?FP33‘55.W

HARDY

HEAD OF
, REGISTERED ,

  ¢0

some good records.

All animals guaranteed_ Satisfactory terms to responsible parties.

E. A. HARDY, WALTER GREEN ’

Col. w... Hulshizer, Auctioneer _-_ 001. s. T. Wood, Pedigree Expert
Catalogues ready March 4. Auto service from cars and trains at

Washington _ and Rochester.

FRIDAY MARCH 10,1922, 10A. M.
‘ CHARDY’S DAIRY FARM, Rochester, Mich.

In these herds are some very Inc large cows carrying the best
bloodlines. Fitbeenotthejsecowssreireshorwillrrcshen soon.
Some extra ﬁne heifers. all from 30-1b bulls. We have been breeding
for type as well as production. We have some real show cattle and

.. GREEN.

HOLSTEINS

/

 

   

 

 

C
GUERNSEY BULL 8. BULL GALYES

 

 

 

 

 

Faulawn Herd—Holstein:
Herd Sire. Emblssssard Lilith Champion 103018
His Ida: Cola Islths. 4th’s Jehsnnl.
am 35‘" 1s. cow, end world's ﬁrst 1 zoo he. cow.
The only cow that ever held

. better from
year. World's 2ndmlggbeetmmfilk smog: when
msdss ndlﬁcbksn reco or y Only
one cow with higbsrmilk today.
His two nearest dues avenge:

sdd ipreclii'gemto your herd and money to
purse.
J. F. RIEMAH

OW
Flint. Midis.

A BLUE RIBBON WINN "WP

on the 1921 Show Circuit. For ale"J sl: Ls
cc. Out of on A R O granddaughter d
Korndyke.

aired by our SW03 SHOW BULL In“
King Sells Glists 32.37 lbs.

GRAND RIVER STGGK FARMS
COREY J. SPENCER, Owner
111 E. Main Street, Jackson, Mich.
Herd under State and Federal Supervision.

HDLSTElN FRIESIAN ”REESSHM'ERR‘.
Prices are ﬁsht.
LARRO oRESEARCH FARM, Box A North End,
Detroit. Michl him.

 

 

FRANGISGD FARM SHIRTHDRNS

NOV 0161138 '--Tlree bulb reed! for service.
Mastodon. Cinnamon. Elondpetert hbreeding in
gill: bred for

POPE BROTHERS I30

It. Pleassnt. Michigan

 

INHERITED n‘SHIRTHIRN QUALITY

ﬂew s judicious mixture of
best blood lines known the breed. Writs 1
JOHN LESSITER'S 80 N8,
0 n. Mich.

HIGHLAND SHORTHBRNS

Special offer on two white yearling Bulk
truss IMP. Cows end sired by Newton
Cinnamon. -.

Also cereal other red Bull Bargains.

Don't overlook these bargains.

C. H. Prescott 8: Sons
Towns City, Michigan

REGISTERED SHIRTIIBRNS

cows and heifers for $700. 00. Four due to
all before M111
WM. CLAXTOR. Swans Creek, Mich.

FOR SALE AT BARGAIN

1 Shorthom Bull,14 mes. $75. 00.
'1‘ h Shorthornt Bu]; tine mm. . ,seoiogé“
886 are mlm
0- Hashim Sega 0e. Grenville, anchIgsn

 

 

 

HDLSTEIN BULL GALF $25
from s heavy milkm to our
Herd Sire Kins. Saris ‘i’mtho Korndyke. Just

11. hi tether.

quic He da,ndy
SOHAFFER BROS-.y Leonard, Michq R 1

 

FOR BALI—TWO BULL CALVES, A HOL-
tei'n and Durhsm about 3 months old. Both
have heavy milking dams.

Not registered. $50
each if tskcn at once.
CHASE STOCK FARM. Mariette. Mich

REGISTERED HDLSTEINS “33:32::

your next years bull is interesting 24 1b, dam
82 lb Sire.
M WILLIAMS No.

 

Adams, Mich

HDLSTEIII BULL "if”; m “:m
no rgc growl y fel-
low 16.1501: ﬁne
show cow wi record of 25 98 lbs. butter 7
dap- Siru ch:- 80 lbs. Nicély marked in]!
white end In]! bhck Price 8200.! also have
gathers born Nov 1st. 1921 from cow
with record cl 80,12 lbs. butter. 6398 lbs.
milk_1 born Mu. 10,1921 fro- cow in
recor'd e! 2%23 lbs butter, 5095 lbs. milk u
e MY
I A_ KIDNEV, P. O. Brant. II‘.
‘ R R Station. St Chm-lee. Mich

 

 

HOLSTEIN suu. 3.2.".°3I.:. '5; 191‘. ,

 

 

lb Bull and out etc 22 lb. daughter of s 21
1h: cow $50 delivered your mﬁon .
EARL PETERO. North Bradley, Mich.
SHORTHORNS

 

“Ems-I'm SHORTHORH CATrLE, DU-
' roe Jersey Hogs eand Percheron
Horses. Quality at the rightm

CHASLEN FAR-S; Nertivviiie. Midi.

suosrumscm- razor; 5.2%.:
FRANK ROHRABAOHER. Llimbur'. lb“.

R SALE—REGISTERED SHORTHORgvs
and Dame Jersey spring pigs either sex: 0
red bulls. one 11 months snd one 5 months old.
Several heifers tree: 6 months to 2 years cad.
Scotch Top and Bates bred. Addre
GEORGE W. ARNOLD er JARED ARNOLD
WNW R 1. “Mine

IATTENTION SNIRTHORN BUYERS

want s. real herd bu or some good
he‘lfersu bred to Perfection H , write me
matured

rm .
S. H PANODORN A SON
8 ml_ oast_ ' Bad Axe, Mich.

 

 

DUBOOS AND SHONTHORNS. BRED GILTS.

 

yearlings and two year elds. few good boars.
bull calf 8 weeks old, good cow with heifer calf,
Several bred heifers.
P. B, LUDLOW, Rolling Prairie.‘ Ind.

MILKING SHORTHBRNS mgl'eu'é’ld m.
rim

vice. tuberensiin tested and hernia D
W. 8. HUBER. Oledwln. Mich.

BUY SHORTHOINB NOW, 4TH ANNUAL
test without s reactor. Home bench-

hJDH'N SCHMIDT I 90*. Rod Ola. M

WATERLILY STDDK FARM

oﬂers 4 line Reg Shorthorn Bulls from 10 to 21
moi. old at

borgxin
HE EODORE llCKLAs, listeners. Mich.

JERSEYS
ONE OF OUR MAJEiTY [01.1.8 WOULD II.
more your herd.
NK P. NORMINGTON. Ionic. Mich.

WORLD’S RECORD
MADE BY JERSEY

 

 

 

 

 

MILKIRG STRAIN SHORTHDRRS

red-tack cussed both Hold

headed by the Imported bull, Kelmscott Vis-
count 25th. 648, 563. Prices reasonable.
UIDY BIO... I4. Dwvhon. Mich.

SHORTIOIN CATTLE AND OXFORD DOWN
sh cop. Both sex for Isle.
J. A. DOOARIO. Mule. MIL

sHORTHORNS snd- POLAND wuss. We on

now offering two ten-months—old bulls. all

bred heifer, and two Un-monthspold heiten.
90‘! lost, ”is.

 

rum-u Janus?! ﬁrst-

m“. 03.
two REAL snom "chant:
’5 mo. oldsndsired by hthyPrinle.
W. KNAPP, Howell. Mich.

 

GOOD BULL CALVE8 FOR an
53:39:» Maple Ridge herd of Bates Short-
bem Osl vent $191920.

J. I. TANSWELL. Meal. .3“

sum cows, NIIFERC. ems

closed “it sttssctivs pric-
Wi’l’lt do for good hud‘.
.J BELL. Rose City. Mich.

 

é ' ‘ I GUERNSEYS ~

A new world’ s record for all
breeds for cows under two years of
age has just been made by the Jer-
sey heifer St. Mawes Lad' 3 Lady N0
451568, owned in Oregon. She be-
:an her test 1 year,11 mos., 28 days
of age and produced in one year
11, 756 lbs. of milk, 829.09 lbs. of
butterfat, 915. 29 lbs. of 85 per cent
butter. This is the second time the
world’s record for all breeds for a
heifer under two years of age has
been made by a Jersey in Oregon.

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

restment.‘ Think! Act!
Write
SEC’Y HENDRIGKBON
Shelby, Mich.

for free literature.

8 REGISTERED GUERNSEY COW. ADI
trons 2 to » 5 ere imported.

trom (isms making large A. R 0. Records.
Accredited herd Writs for multicolor:KE CI Y

T
A. M. SMITH meme...

 

REGISTERED GUERNSEY BULLS

ready for servie. Also yeerlhm heifers. Farmers
prices.
Dr. W. 8. Baker. 4800 Fort St. W. Detroit. Mich

 

 

GUERNSEYS

OF MAY R08! AND CLEHWOOD BREEDING.
No abortion, clean federal inspected. Their
sires dam msds 19,480.
Their mother’s sire's dun mode 15,109.10 milk
778. 80 fat. Can spars B cows, 2 m sud s
bountiful lot of young buns.

T. V. HIOKS, R 1, Battle Creek. Mich.

 

 

BEREFORDS

BEEF
PRODUCERS!

Michigan Produces the World‘s
Best lost It the Lowest Cost.
Rules for better feeding Cattle
than you can buy Grew Bsby
Beef when gains c'ost least In
feed and labor Avoid costly rail hauls with
their shrink, brulm gnd loss_

SOTHAM’S EARLIRIPE
BEEF CONTRACT

Solves your nsum your success A
fair intelligent. satisfying system evolved from
Years conscientious service to American Oat-
tle Industry by three generations of Sothams.
GET THE FACTS Write now or wire. Address

'1‘. F. B. SOTHAM & SON

(Cattle Business Established 1835)
Phone 250_ SAINT CLAIR. MICHIGAN

 

   
  

 

 

 

 

FOR SALE..-TI1ree-year-olci 1‘: ' L ,

May Rose Guernsey Bull.
Herd Federal Tested.

.- MAPLE HILL FARMS
North Farmington, Mich.

E. S. JACKSON,
.. . Hemlock 984, Detroit, Mich.

 

J

EGISTERED ABERDEEN- ANDUHULLQ
Heifers snd oc'ovvs for sole.
Priced to Ikinspect invited.
RUSSELLo 'BROB" Merrill. Michigan
:=

 

AYRSIIIRES

 

FOR SALE—REGISTERED AYRSHIRI
bulls and bull calves boilers and boiler cs1"
Also some choice cows.

FINDLAY BROS" R 3. Your. Mich.

RED POLLED

 

ﬂ

THREE YOUNG RED POLLED BULLS FOR
sale. Sized by Cosy Ells Lcddic. He too]
the prize st six State Mrs.
PIERCE BROS.. Eaton Rapids, Ilium, R 1

25 RED PDLLED BATTLE

 

Resistered. All ages.
E. 8. CARR, Homer. Mich.

SWINE

POLAND CHINA

WAIJIUT ALLEY

Big Type Poland Chinus I have s few more 1‘
those big boned high ked, mooth sided
boars left. The kind that makes good at our
half their value. (‘omc or write and let me
tell you what I will do.

A. D. GREGORY, Ionic, Michigan.

 

   

 

 

EFOR SALE, LARGE TYPE

POLAND GHIII

b0!“ Digs. Sired by F’s Clansmsn 391211,
Michigan’s 1920 Gr. Champion boar. and
by Smooth Buster 39.5323, Michigan’s
1920 lst Jr. Yearling Boar. Immune by
double treatment. Priced to selL \Vritc
or see them. Free livery tn visitom
A. A. FELDKAMP
Manchester, R. R. No. 2 Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

PURPLE

 

 

AOHIEVEMENT

The reward of pure breeding: the se-
compnshment of quality Success use
again contributed more isurels to the
already remarkable record of

EDGAR 0F DALMENY
THE SIRE SUPREME

At the International Live Stock Exposi-
tion, where gathers each year the elite
of North American Cattledom to com-
pete for the covetous awards. ﬁve more
honors have been bestowed upon the “get"
of Edgar of Dalmeny-

You too may share these honors. A ball
by this world {mus sire will prove a
most valuable snot to your herd

 

Write III M.

WILDWDDI FARMS

ORION, MICHIGAN.
w E. Scripps. Prop. Sidney Smith. in...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

X
x.
\
DODDIE FARMS ANGUS of both sex for sale
Herd headed by Bardell 31910 1920 Into:-

 

LEONARD'S BIG TYPE P. O. BOAR PIG.
at weaning time. from Mich. Champion h

82 5 with pedigree. Satisfsction guaranteed

or write 131R. LEONARD. R 3. St. Louis.“

L. T. P. C. $15- $20-$25
We are offering our 1921 fall crop of pigs at the
sbove prices. They are sired by Hart's Black
Price and Right Kind Clan.
T HART. St. Louis, Mich.

BIG TYPE POLAND GHINAS

Spring pigs of both sex for sale at reasonable
prices. sired by Orange Clansman 2nd.. litter
brother to Michigan 1920 Gr. Champion. Abs
fall pigs. Write for prices. Immuned by double

treatment.
HOSE IROB.. 8t. Chm-Yes. Mich.

 

GLADWIN COUNTY PURE BRED LIVESTOCK
ASSOCIATION. Hereford. Shorthom We
and Holstein cattle: Duroc— Jersey, Poland Chile
and Hmpshire hogs; Oxford. Shropshire and
Hampshire she on.
be A pplace to buy good breeding stock at reason-
FRED“ B. SWINEHART O. E. ATINATER
President Secretary
Giadwin. Mich.

 

BRED GILTS now ready to oship. bred to boars of
Bob Clonal-en, Defender and Joe breeding st
tanner! pilecs. H. 0. Swans. Schoolcraft, Mich.

 

L T P G BRED GILTS .
Bred to mmy new boat Liberator Pride. Pricd
with ﬂuﬂm No!
I. I. PATRICK. Grand Ledge. Mich.

BDARS AT HALF PRIDE 3.1.1372...
Bum.

bred in the purple, sired by Mich.
A. Giant and Butler’ s Big Bob. No better
breeding. A bis meted. bis-boned bohr ready

 

 

national Jr. Champion.
6. R. Martin A Son. North Street. lice.

L

um' registered, for $25. (IO—$30.0
W JNO 0.301153. PM ”0'

 

 

 

 

 

ﬂowers Oils. Michigan.

 
 

 

 

SALE OF BIG TYPE POLAND CHINAS

Chas. Wetzel & Sons, Ithaca, Mich., will seII

38 BRED SOWS AND GILTS
FRIDAY, MARCH 3rd

of the most popular braiding as Big Bob, The Clansman, Giant
Buster, Big Halfton, Gerstdaio Jones, Big DesMoines and Ls Big
Orange. Sows bred to Crange (lineman, Wetzel’s Cavalier and Monster
Bob. All hogs double treated. Write for catalog. All trains met at
Ithaca in the foronoon. Auctioneers, Wm. Wafﬂe Ind J. B Rowen. '

 

 

 

y CHAS. WETZEL & SONS, ITHACA, MICH.

       
   
      
           
       

 
   
     
     
 
  
   
    
  
   
  
    
  
      
   
   
   
    
  
    
     
  
  
  
 
     
    
         
       
     
 
        
    
 
 
  

  
 


,‘ V .1
»ﬂe&ne‘ his.
I‘— W. BARNES l ION. Rm m

POLAIIII IlHIIIA BRED BILTS

Bred Billcren Liberator by Liberator Leader
the 1920 Grand Champion and to B P

1 by Liberator Buster the 1

plan. will start you right the
breeding industry. Excep tionsl bargains. Write

Ier pdeee. HILLGREST FARMS
l'. D. LAY. Kalamazoo.

am TYPE POLAND oIIIIIIs

ring Piss all sold. For fall pigs.
”W. GALDWELL Q SON. 8|:II'InIIIMDI't.to MIoh.

LARGE TYPE POLAND 0HIHAS
boots and by B’s Glens-
dlemnlon et11921 Mich.y State Fair.
nsmsn 1920 grand champion.
.. Visitors

 

 

Mlch.

 

welcome.
correspondence cheerfully

md.
N. P. BORNER. R 1. Perms. Mich.

 

DUROOS

SALE EXTRA FINE SEPT AND OCT
Fun pigs. either sex. priced right
HARLEY POOR 8 SONS,
Oledwln. Mloh.. R 1_

1 FIRE DUROC SPRING BOAR ready for

service. Sired by Big bone Giant Sensation

Breakwater Dam_ Registered_ S35 00 gets him.
SOHAFFER BROS,l Leonard. Mich R 1.

 

DUROO bred sows all sold. We ere offering
high class fall pigs. Double Immune.
JESSE BLISS a SON. Henderson, Mlch.

PEACH HILL FARM

1mm) sows end gllts bred to or sired by Peech
Bill Orion King 152489. Satisfaction guer-
enteed. Come look ’em over.
Also e few open gilts.
INWOOD BROTHERS
Romeo. Mlch. ,

 

 

AM SELLING A GREAT ‘OFFERING 0F

DUROC BRED SOWS AND GILTS

March 4th, mostly mated to Orion Giant (£01..
son of Ohio Grand Champion. Get on mail

Enlist f‘nor catalog.
W. o. TAYLOR. Milan. Mloh.

 

UROO JERSEY ROARS. Boers of the ISM
heavy—boned type, at reasonable prices. Write.
or better come and see.
F. J. DRODT. R 1. Monroe. Mloh.

 

PURE- BRED DUROG JERSEY H0618

We us’ually have good boars and sows of a1
sale: Reasonable prices.

LARRfOr RESEARCH FARM. Box A North Enc
Detrolt. Mlchlgan.

 

DUROO SOWS AND BRED GILTS. $85 end
850.1031] pigs $12. 50 end $17. 50 Unrelated
Semi for circular and p

Illchlgana Farm. Pavlllon. Kalamazoo County.

ouroo Jersey Bred Stock eII Sold. Orders taken

f wentiing pigs 1000 pound herd boar.
or.Ios. SOHUELLER. Weldman. Mich.

OAKLAHDS PREMIER GHIEF
Herd Boer—Reference only—~No. 129219
1919 Chicago International
4th Prize .Ir. YearIing

BOOKING ORDERS FALL PIGS AT 325
BLANK e POTTER
Pottervllle. Mich.

 

Outlet 00 Vewto

 

‘ A me ISL!
desired a no. ”Whig. ”:3“ m

agaiii'e'g'dn a c'irlonovc'E. es. 1..qu Ilse.

rcoe. Hllt Oreet Farms. Ire:l end 105‘s,“ 11”:
end Its. Boers and spring gs. ee
’l‘erm 4‘i miles strelgnht S of Middleton. Mich.

«roe sews ene slits )I‘.‘ to Welt'e Klne .2909
who has sired more prise winning pigs at the
etete fairs in the last 2 years then en otherDIv
roe boar. Newton Barnhsrt. St. ”Exam

on SALE. one ounce’ eosn FROM
Breakwater breeding stock Choice spring pin.
JOHN ORONENWETT. cerletcn. Mleh.

R SALE: HERD BOAR A MODEL ORION
King.“ ‘11 line bred and son of Jackson’s Orion
King.

OHAS. P. 0RICHARDSON. Blanchard. lloh.
FOR SALE PURE 3R5: CHESTER WHITE
T. J. WEENEOY, "loin,

THE FIHEST DUROG JERSEY -BH06S

i Michl n. Near 100 to choose from.
Snows. c1i§,era11.a1em sex Write us your

'8" m “m" Leonerd. MIch.. n 1 '

Brent,

rprloee.
SOHAFFE?! BROS..

TF0“ SALE DUROO BRED BOWS OR OPEN

guts and only 1 hour left. 14
sows to farmw in springm beginning March 0th.

tief tlon .- back
“my" °iI if. "£3,“ HIIIsdeIe. Mich.

HAMPSHIRES

An Opportunity To Buy
Hampshires Right

We are offering some good sows and tilt: bred
for March and April farrowing. Also e few
choice fall pigs, either sex, Write or call
GUS THOMAS. New Lothrop. IVIIch.
HAMPSHIHES BRED GILTS ONLV FOR
sale.

JOHN W. SNYDER, R 4. St. Johns, Illch.

 

a: Blank. Perrinton. mos. ,

 

 

BERKSHIRES

BERKSHIHES

Special prices for Registered Berk-
shire Breeding stock:
10 Mature Bred Sows. . . . . . . 476.00
10 Fall Yearlings, Bred ........ 50.00
Best type with size and quality. Sat- ‘
isfaction absolutely guaranteed, Write
for information.

C. C. COREY

2428 First National Bank Bldg.
Detroit Michigan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

0. I. O.

 

Registered 0. I O and elite fgro eels
Weight around 250 pounds at 340
JOSEPH R VAN ETTEN. Clifford.o oMIofr

. I. 0.'e. SERVICE BOARS, SPRING PIGS
st Farmer's prices.
CLOVER LEAF STOGK FARM. Monroe. Mloh.

 

 

\

Route 5

ANNUAL

DUROC - JERSEY SALE

of the

St. Joseph County Duroc-Jersey Swine Breeders’ Ass’ 11

At the Fan- Grounds, Oentervillo, Mich.

Wednesday, March 8,1922 at 1:30 P. M.

The oﬂering consists of

40 head of Bred Sows

Catalogs mailed on request. Address

FRANK BORCERT

STURGIS, MICHIGAN

 

 

 

Dundee.

DUROC BRED' 50w SALE

Friday, March 3, at 12:30 p. m.

At farm on Stone Road, 8 miles west of Monroe and 6 miles east of

Four tried sows, four spring yearlings, 10 fall yearlings and 26
spring gilts; also Orion Master King. boar, 2 years old
Write for Catalog. \ .
Auctioneer, H. L. gleheart, Elizabethtown, Ky.
Fieldman. H. H. Mack, M. B. F.

‘DRODT & BERNS, Proprietors, ,

Monroe, Midi.

 

 

 

3'25 su‘vsJe'ese. snnonmes ewe
hmbs um have

breedi Just u. thin tostgorihs ' i1 tin me
as. sto
cam. 'rorI'LIrr. Eeton Replde, Mlch.

HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

A few good yearling runs and some rem
lambs left to cﬂer. 25 ewes ell ages for ssls
for fell delivery. Everything guaranteed as
represen
IOLARKE U. "lob.

HAIRI. West Drench.

 

 

-' PET STOCK!

FOR SALE, FLEMISH GIANT RABBITS does
breeding sge, SS.‘ Three months old pair. 85.
Registered does 812 udh. Stock pedigreed. Qusl~

tygus tee.d
WE.“ HIMEBAUOH. Goldwater. Mlch.
WANTED MALE GOAT. SAANEN BREED,
for breeding purposes. AWhite pre-

ferred. Address.
H. DEVERS. Inkster. Mlch.

 

 

SHETLAHD POHIES

We have a few good Shetland Ponies for sale;
prices ranging from $75.00 to $1 0. Write
JOHN FARMER, R 2. Stockbrldge. Mloh.

GOLLIE PUPPIES

Write Dr_ W Austin Ewalt, Mt Clemens,
Mich. for thoroughbred. pedigreed Collie pup-
pies: bred from farm trained stock that are nat-

ural healers with plenty of grit_ All Puppies
guaranteed

 

 

 

BREEDERS’ ATTENTION
If you are ’lplanning on a sale
this year, write us now and
Claim The Date!
This service is free to the live
stock industry in Michigan to
avoid conflicting sale dates.

LET “THE BUSINESS FARMER"
CLAIM YOUR DATE!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ESTABLISHED 1 819

B E L L S ’
PERBHEHIN I BEIEIANS

The most complete selection
America of these popular breeds. In—
ternational and state fair winners.

STALLIONS AND MAKES
Write today.

BELL BROS, Wooster, 0.

 

 

 

 

FOR SALE THE BLACK PEROHERON
Million. Sampson. No 110945
Within! close to a ton. years 01 , and
splendid producer, 1922 license. price 5500 W:
also have on hand a splendid lot of youn‘
Aberdeen Angus bulls ready for service at bar-
prioes. sired by imported bulls. Address
mwooncors STOCK FARM. lonls, Mlch

 

EGI1881(')%RED BELGIAN STALLION welghlng

tt r. lbs. Sound, 6 years old. Sure Foal
8 e
“D. F. HOPKINS. Milford. Mloh.. R. F. D, 5

FOR SALE

Jessie Mignon No. 99300 Percheron Bro d
Dapple Grey. nine lyears old, probably on: 0912111.:
best in this be 088500 . the]! her value
L. H. CHEESEMAN, OIarketon. Mich.

PURE BRED STALLIOHS

One black Percheron, 7 yrs old weight 1800 lbs
One black Percheron 5 yrs old weight 1800 lbs.
2 yr. old black with small star, weight 1400
lbs. Re tion papers furnished. These stal-
lions are sound and fisht and will be sold on
reasonable
JOSHUA l.mHILL. Box 6. Cause. Mich.

 

 

 

 

"POISONOUS WEEDS
One of my neighbors has
miich cows and one steer. These cattle
apparently seem to be just as Well as.
can be at night, :0 out in the morning
and there would be one dead. He had.
our local veterinarian and he can't Ana
anything wrong. He opened one tram
one end to the mother In One stomach
at the entrance we founda lot of weed
seed and the feed on the inside seemed
to be very hard Could there be
disease. if so would It be catching?—
F. C.—-—Rosebush Mich.

There are a great many poisonous

"weeds and the weed seed you found

at the entrance into the stomach was
no doubt the cause of the death of
your neighbor’s cattle. The feed in.
that portion of the stomach. known
as the omasum, will always be‘ found

hard and dry and has the appear-y

ance of a book, the feed being be-
tween the leaves.

HIND PARTS SEEMS PARAMZED

I have a collie dog two years old that
will suddenly throw head sideways and
writho and roll as though In pain Seems
to be unable to use hind parts as he
will get 11;) on from feet go a short ways
when his hind parts seem to penalize and
go dbwn. He does not froth at the
mouth and his eyes look natural. He
has had two spells like this about five
weeks apart. We keep him tied in the
barn nights and he runs loose during
day He is fat, eats well and appears to
feel good Plays and acts very natural
at other Smear—R. A, W., Saint Charles
Mich. . ‘

Either the result of a blood clot,
thus interfering with the circulation,
or, the result of an. injury, causing
some pressure on the n‘erves of the
hind quarters.
allowing him to run at large for at
least a month and give the follow-
ing: Potassium Iodid, four drams;
tincture nux vomica, three drams:
add sufﬁcient water to make four
ounces and give one
three times a day.

HORSE WEAK AND DEBHJTATED
I have a horse that sweats nights. Be-

gins to sweat about 7 o’clock and sweats ‘

until about 12 o’clock, He is in fairly.
good ﬂesh and feels good. The barn is
very cold but he seems to sweat just the
same. Can you tell me what is the cause

and what to do?——G. P. -K,, Delton, Mich.

This condition 1'9 often Caused by
an animal becoming weak and de-
biliated_ In other cases it might
be caused by ananimal having too
long hair, not having shed properlv
in the fall. Give one ounce Fowler’s
solution of arsenic morning and
night and one dram powdered Nux
Vemica at noon.

OBSTRUCTION IN TEAT

There seems to be a growth in one
teat of my cow’s udder, .I cannot milk
her by hand at all and only get a little
using milking tube. Your advise will be
appreciated—N: E. L., Elwell, Mich-

Have this crow examined by a
graduate veterinarian and he will
be able -to tell you whether the ob-

struction is in the teat or in the ud- __

der itself_ It is a bad practice to use
a milk tube, as sooner or later you
will infect the udder and then your
trouble begins.

PEGULIAR CASE

I have a. mare 9 years old that after
eating her grain will hold her head down
and put her tongue on the outside of
her upper lip and suck. It sounds like
a calf sucking When she ﬁrst started
I was graining heavy wih oats. It was
during hot Weather
fair flesh—S. F7. Kalamazoo County.

A bad habit; try painting lip with
pine :tar. Are you sure she doesn‘t
choke? Rather peculiar case, write
us again after trying the above.

 

 

lower the 0 st of production.
economy an

 

OWOSSO SUGAR c035
PRAIRIE FARM

More of the better kind of Draft Horses used on the farm would
Heavy Draft Horses on short hauls are
will lower the high cost of transportation. .

Buy Heavy Draft Mares and raise your own power on the Farm.
We have fifty mares in foal to select from.
blood that Belgium has ever produced.

Belgian Draft Horses are getting more popular.
as workers cannot be excelled by any other breed.

Before buying see the sires and dams and also see the largest breed-
ing establishment of Belgian Draft Horses in the world. Located at”

They possess the best
Their qualities

 

 

 

 

lost two 3

311T

Keep him quiet, not -

teaspoonful . t

Shewasandlsln.

.ingle C
5 00 eI
. .011 W

LAPI
. nseov

oocke
L. O.


 

ifs inserted under thii heading
pros! sell,- ’enou ute- by return

still
use“.

ts per line. por- into.”
A no The Michigan Business Farmer.

Write out what‘s": have to oﬂer end send it in. we will put it in type. send
Department, Mt Clemens. menu chit-n.

vertising

 

 

 

 

.lPoULTRr ' |

iD CHICKS‘

"IIIIHOMESTEAD FARMS
LEGHOBRS

We ere issuinga eBulletin
that describes the 1{rind 058.3:
fowl the farmer ow
wants Send for this descrip-
tion 61 our Pure Breed Preo-_

uoel Poultry.
- The highest class. practiced
J's;- stock in Michigan: ngw
‘ that each year is also totes
to ry farmers of other s
like

..N ‘ pow
*' the White, Brown.
3'1 Mahogsﬂlgl'lhr brwdins: they Kl"

~13." rred anl White Rocks. Beds. Wm!-
tons
OSTA'Psm FARMS ASSOCIATION
B 2 Kalunazoo, Mlohlgen

ORPINGTONS AND LEGHORNS

sets] to:

T” “m ”M for prom. wm. today

reedin othuc}. °‘ “Wins use. no, chicks and

' I s .

VOLE unrcusn oomrsuv. 149 Phlle em.
Elmira. N. v.

 

n

, RK conmeu COOKEREL81n SIRE”. 3"

1- 2 pound Cock. {36118-3
ELDRED v. CAMPBELL. Atkins. MM-

0. RHODI ISLAND WHITEC. GOOD
matingeacs

2. 001m setingt
John A. I'Isrt‘seI-nlk,up Iceland. Michigan, Box 61

CHOICE, SINGLE AND ROSE COMB RHODE
Island White Cockerels for sale. $4. 00 each.
JOHN J. COLBERG. Munﬂel'v Mich.

\ ORPINGTONS
UHPIHETOHS glﬁlgxwm'r:

HATCHING EGGS IN SEASON.

BRABDWSKE BROS.

Merrill. Mlch., R 4.

ANGONAS

slNGLE COMB ANCONA COCKERELS. Direct

descendents from pens Bstarted with the Worlds

CheEmpdon Layers so cautios. Prices right.
E. W. McEMBER, antwatcr, Mloh., R 1.

3000 EARLY APRIL HATGHED

FULLY MATURED ANCONAB.

BUBKEYE AIIO0IIA FARM

NEW LONDON, OHIO.

Heavy layers and show birds, none better. Ree.-
Rmable prices and quality stock is our motto.
Can furnish winners for any show. Ask for our
late winnings at Columbus, 0., Louisville, Ky.,
Cleveland, 0., Pittsuburg, Pa., Hagerstown and
Cumberland, Md. Cks, Hens, Ckis, Pu]. and
Mated Pens always for sale. Eggs and Baby
Chicks in season. 100, 000 Incubator capacity.

Write us and get the best.

 

 

 

F

INGLE come Baowu, WHITE AND BUF
'Leghorns, R. I. R White WyandoWas 391$
rred Rocks.o Eggs, stock and chicks 111

.-n Writef rprlces. Ml h
eder Lawn fli'oultI-y Fem. Damvllie. ° '

0R LE--8ILVER SPANGLED. HAMBURG
8"‘00 per setting. ROSEDALE FARM.
ort Huron, Mloh, R1, J. G. Phllpott.

MUD WAY AUSH- KA FARM

ﬂe-rs our: stock and a few mature breeders In
" its chgeu Geese, White Runner Duck: and
it?! seem 15.3.. 5.1.23“ m
ces on wh
DI HVE (Cr pMULLER. Dryden. Mloh.

0% Quality Chlcks, Spanish,
eds. Wye. nod ttes and Orr
'I'YRONE POULTRY FARM,

CHINESE GEESE. PEKIN DUCKS,
B ,1 .

MRS. rOLAI'DIA BETTS.

PLYMOUTH ROCK-

.ARRED ROCK COOKERELS AND PULLETS
' from America’s best prize-winning heavy-laying
trains, Winners Detroit National Show Dec.
921. of five First prizes Low prices
TOLLES enos, R10; 81.. Johns, Mich.

ARRED ROCK oookcrels
orman stmin, winners
,_ contest over all breeds.
ellows at farmers’ 32c?“

R1

Mlnorcas, Rocks.
Mich.
R. 0.

ns.
Fenton,

Hillsdelc. Mich.

 

 

from the farnous
Illinois egg lay-
Large, finely barred

R 1, Mason. Mich.

LANGSHAN

DR. SIMPSON'S LANGSl-IANS OF QUALITY
Bred for type and color since 1912. Winter
laying strain of both Black and White. Have
some oockersls for sale. Eggs 1n season.
OHAB. w. SIMPSON
Webbervllle. Mloh.

TURKE YS

FOR SALE, MY THOROUGHBRED WHITE
Holland tom 2% years old 0‘0 ﬁne large bird
to head your flock. Price $15.0

Fred Feusnsugh, R 5, Chesanlng, Mlohlgan

G-IAIIT BROIIZE TURKEYS

Hens all sold. Have several splendid young
toms. Large type, well marked.
MR8. PERRY STEBBINS. Mich.

TWO LARGE BRONZE TOMS LEFT. PURE
Bred, weight 22 1-2 and 23 142 lbs. $10 each.
JOHN BUOHNER, Morley, Mloh., R 1, Box 29

 

 

 

 

 

Saranac,

 

 

rival guaranteed
S. C.
S. C. Mottled Anconas . . . . .
'Dom Barron Eng. White Leghbrns.

Selected
Start RIGHT

SUPERIOR POULTRY FARMS

 

EXTRA!
PURE BRED BABY CHICKS

From our tested and culled flocks on free range.
that money can buy, delivered to your door prepaid and liverw-

Prices for March and April delzlg'ery:5

American White Leghorns...---...«...
S.C.Brown Leghorns ..........--...-..--.... 3.75 7. 50

e e- e e-e'e's‘re’

by placing your ordeh'otoday for some of these HIGH GRADE
SELECTED BABY YICH C.KS Order direct from this ad or send for our FREE
CATALOGUE

EXTRA!

The beat

100
$141.00
15.00
16.00

16. 00

per

p53 50 $75 00

4.00 8.00

4. 00 8.00

BOX 2052, ZEELAND, MICE.

 

 

 

IF YOU ARE GOING TO BUY CHICKS THE
coming season write me: get description 0‘
pure bred S C W leghorns, S C Brown, Aneon-
rrod Rocks. Send your order in early for
1922 delivery Our prices are reasontiile. WI
give you a square deal
QUEEN HATCHERY, Iceland, MIOh_
D J. Van Der Koel

BABY OHIX. MARCH AND APRIL DELIVERY-
Prices: Barred Plymouth Rocks, R. I. R
gfcg5lggnorms, White or Brown Leghomﬂ 2

d
on 500 or 10000
.Grscn Lawn Poultry F‘arm, R3, Fcnton, Mich

 

QUALITY BABY CHICKS

DON’T placeu your order for chicks until you
have secured catalogue and
ROCKS, ANCONAS ENGLISH and
CAN WHITE LEGHORNS. Our (‘hicks are
hitched in the best machines, by genuine experts,
and our flocks are of the Ibest: in Michigan. We
guarantee delivery and

PROGRESSIVE WHATOHERIES

Box L, Holland. Mlohlgan.

WHY NOT

buy your chicks from egg— ~bred stock?

AIIO0IIAS 8 WHITE LEGHORRS

Come and see our stock if you can or send for
full description and prices
QUALITY HATCHERY, Box A11, chland, Mich.

 

OLLINGB BEST: PURE BRED WHITE HOL-
land Turkeys, Hens. 58.1113, $10 to $12.
M 8 ED. COLLING, Mayvllls, Mich.

MIGHIGAII’S BEST °'%'}.‘...3£§"‘§.$“'3§.’3
birds. Great in size; fine in color.
N. EVALYN RAMSDELL. Ionla.

 

Mich.

 

FOR SALE—MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS.
Write {so-r prices
HORTON. FIIIon, Mich.

 

. ARRED ROCK, from Parks
' ZOO-egg strain from stock direct from Parks
est pedigreed pens. $2 per 15, $6 per 5,0 $12
. -r 100 Prepaid by parceel post. No chicks
or sale R G Kirby. R 1, East Lansing, Mlch.

A-RRED ROOK8—-HILL'8 heavy-laying, rim-
1 nning sin . : 5, . .
repaid. LUCIAN HILL. 'l‘ekonsha, Michigan.

LEGHORNB

Eon SALE

White Leghorn (Ferris) cocks and cock-
..ls, big 112.1th“ mun mm m Satisfaction

1.1mm
WILLIAMSTONmmi POULTRY FARM

WILLIAMSTON. MICH.

.INGLE COMB RUFF
CHICKS. Order now for spring deivery,

:... circa 18.!
J.“ W. WEBSTER. R‘ 2. Bath. Mich.
ANGLE COMB BUFF LEGHORN COCKERELS
laymg ‘ each.

strain. 82.5
THELO GIFFORD, 0Wlnl'l, Mich.

L E G R 0 II II S
0°11" .21: mar... Geese“. c. .1»
..ch Wicn' start shipping Baby Chicks ill

LAPHAM name. Pincknpy, mom,“

RABOWSKE'S ..8 0. WHITE LEGHORNS,
‘ cockerels and -scock for sale.
.GRABOWSKE. Merl-Ill, Mlch., R 4

WYANDOTTE

OLOMBIAN WYANDOTI'ES. A FEW CHOICE
Oookerels from choice ﬂock, 85 00 each A130
ne female for. hound. nbredn to erican fax

83 .o 11 the
sun’v snoossnc. eJr., Reed cm. Mloh.. n a

HEIMBACH’S White Wyandottes

«11 silver cup for but ‘
allow be d deD:’ st Grend Baplds
”1162811 re 3. 5,
win 5. 1 cock andwln 1st. 56cockehrgls.
1 young pen 1st.1 old pen

and yearling hens

MR8. JESSIE B.
Hatching egos'

 

 

 

 

 

LEGHORN BABY

 

 

: ingle
00

 

 

 

 

 

few utilitz’dmd cockerels
Baby chi hatching eggs.
Comb tho e Island Reds of
Sen d for coining.
..W HEIMIACH,‘ Big Rapids, Mich.
G98 F’OR HATCHING, prize winning

White Wyandottes at $811 nd$5 per setting.
ANTHONY WARELE. Mt, Clemens, Mloh.

~ RHODE ISLAND REDS

MAKER'S RED OHIOKS Both Bombs.
Blood tested for white diesrrh rrhoea

Oeillo
£3.15. Farm, .gerfw 14mins,“ Mich.

good

 

from

 

 

 

future delivery. 31. 50
. CE

 

 

MR . D.
HATCBING EGGS

 

EGGS $1 SETTING. Parcel Post Paid. Thor<
oughbreds. Barred Rocks. thite Rocks,
Buﬂ Rocks , White Wyandoettes, Anoonas, Buﬂ
Minorccs, White Leghorns. Brown Leghorns,
Rhode Island Reds, Buff hOrpingtons. PHILIP
CONDON, Wiest Chester, Ohio

DUCKS AND GEESE

M M
nucx seas...“..::" ssh: Pill;
stock A limited number of orders aceepted for

per setting
DAR BEND FARM, Okomos, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

BABY CHICKS

.
A:BY. CHICKS

 

 

 

The J. I. FARMS HATCHERY
8. C. White Leghorn Chicks. Best se-
lected awhno lay ﬁthOncﬁpeaity forBlcggsgls‘
which ey
ands. Write for terms.
LORINO AND MARTIN COMPANY
But huoetuok. Mich.

 

 

 

0H|0KS WITH PEP

you want chicks that

Wyando ttec. oépln to ,
Prepaid. Prices right 8313.-

Dos
HOLgATE CHICK HATCHERY,
Box 8, Holgatc, Ohio

BABY 0HIOKS

200,000 FOR 1 922.
Sheppards Anoonas. English
typo shorns

Leg horns Barr ed

Get them direct cfrom

cry from all culled

odoutlafloch'fz'ec Free and safe de-
0

KIOLLS HATGHERY

Holland. Mlohloan, R 8.

The ‘Old Relishie’ OHIO HATCHEE

70 , estOhlcks from

all leading verie es and at m.

, 013111stch 1: our Free Ost-

; ‘gwaliowm béfqre you °§d°1f1 0111mm
, 0 re. per cell ve

lino Gus your door.

1

 

DAY OLD CHICKS
It is now time to think about
next season’s chicks. You want
the best available to start with
It the right time, and at A
reasonable price. “’9 are here
to meet those demands
supply 'eﬁlciency chicks’
Ropks, Wmndottes,1pghorns
Ship them prepaid by special
delivery parcel post, guarantee-
ing delive-I'y You take no
chance. Send for our ctnaloguc for full infor-
mation and why you should buy chicks
CLYDE CHICKy HATCHERY, BoxEM, Clyde, 0

”5134.5. .v,».‘~'

 

GHEX FROM TWELVE LEADING VARI-

ietles of heavy layers on free range.
and order NOW

scone ble prices Get catalog
SUNBEAM HATCHERY, H B Tlppln.
Box 803, Findlay, Ohlo_
LOOKIS. 0 WHITE LEGIIORNS, 230- 264

' 682 strain Prices greatly reduced for
cHlx 1922 Satisfaction and
sees

 

delivery
nmmnteed Hundreds of satisﬁed
automers. Catalog FREE.
G’ERIG 8 LREGHORN FARM
Box 50, Auburn. Ind

BABY 0Hl0KS

S C_ Buff Leghorns, one of the largest
flocks in Michigan My price is in reach of
all, only $15 00 per hundred. Detroit win-
ners. none better
LAPHAM FARMS. Mich,

 

Plnckncy,

 

 

1.20% .13....

1V: MILLION9 2CHICKS Postage PAID 05 per
cent live arrive] guar-
anteed FMONTHZ’S caF'R with each or
der. Ahatch every week all year. 40 breeds chicks
4 Breeds Ducklings Select and Exhibition
Grades Catalogu Free, stamps appreciated
NABOB HATOHERIES, Dept 30, Gambler,0 .

BABY 0H|0KS

BARROII STRAIII

 

C.
Legho and Anco
. hi . $7. 205 r 50 m
‘ per 10028615 Erl- 500;
per 1000. ROSE AND 8.

$8.05 per 8013M $17. 00 per 100.

ad and ave

s’un ”sirens"

Box 500 Holland, Mlch.

BHIBISTHATSAIISIY

11th year.
Leghorn!

lish Type

qihom

 

hits

WOLVERINEW HATCHERY

all-AI. ‘0. mos. a s1 2

 

umux PHIBES SMASHEI

WilliamumummmmmnnmmmuIInmmmmmmlllIlmlms
gl‘his fwas the head-
sh..."
prices

smashed yet. butmi;
qua liter worth

Y
this season.
have ﬁve varie-
to choose from.
guarantee 97
per cent alive upon
arrival and pay pas-
cel post charges.
Satisfaction guaran-

5(IITY LIMITS HATGHERY

Holland, Mich.

GHIOKS for 1922 season from Michigan's old
reliable Hatchery. \Vhite Leghorns, Anconas
Barred and VVin'te Rocks and Reds, the popular
laying strains, High record, expert Hogan tested
flocks only Preference given early orders.
Chicks delivered Postpaid and full count strong
live chicks guaranteed 14th season Fine in-
structive poultry catalog and price ' list free
We want to show you that we deserve yoni

business
Mlch., R 1

HOLLAND HnATCHERY, Holland,
500, 000 CHICKS

at very reasonable prices
form our heavy laying
strain of English and
erican White Leg-
horns, Brown Leghorns
and Anconas_ Shipped
by parcel post prepaid
Special prices on 1000
lots (hitalogue free
Wyngarden Hatchery
Box B, Zeeiand, Mich.

Route

 

 

 

1:, BABY CHICKS

We furnish Pure Bred Chicks of the
ﬁnest quality from high egg-produc-
Ing stock. Flocks built directly from
lsyinl contest winners. We have
‘ seventeen breeds. Write for our free
illustrated catelogue and price list.

.I..W OSSEGE HATCRERY. Dept. 36 Giandori, Ohie

AFB. . “V
1gValueBaby Chicks
Eleven popular, money-making breeds.
Easy to buy—priced low. y to raise
—husk/v, healthy, vigorous. And guar-
antad Wn'tc today for FREE ataio.
showing many breeds 1n ful Icolors.

OHLS POULTRY YARDS and HATCHER!

 

 

1;

BOX ‘28, MARION, OHIO

 

a

OHIUKS

GUARANTEED T0 SAT-ISFY

Barron stmin White Leghoms and S. O. Bron
Leghorn chicks from Homized. heavy laying
selected breeders. Gan ship March 13th and lat-
er. Order at once. 14c each postpaid. 100 per
cent delivery guaranteed.

ROYAL HATGHERY

Iceland, Mich.

0Hl0KS

from stock that is true to
name in both plums,“ snd
tm Selected each mg
for health and high

production LEGHORNs,
ROCKS, ORPINGTONs,
WYANDOTTES, REDS

and MINOROAS
tive catalog free_ Get it
‘ before ordering "013.th
STANDARD POULTRY 00., Route 21

Nappanes, Ind.

 

Standard varieties Make your
list now ready
Mlch_ ,

Day Old Chicks
selections. Catalogue and price
H. H. PIERCE. Jerome,

 

 

DAY 0L0 0Hl0K8

From the heart of Michigan’s Baby Chick
Industry section. The two heavied egg
I.Leghorns end Amonu. Send few

JAMESTOWII HATGHERY

JAMESTOW'II. MICHIGAN

 

 

 

DAY OLD “CHICKS

fromseiectsdhosvy

 


TRADE AND MARKET REVIEW
ITTLE change in the general
business and trade situation has
been noted during the past week;
lie lack of uniformity in trade de-
velopment, in different parts of the
country, its the leading feature, lo-
cal conditions having much to do
with the volume 01! business trans-
acted. Good judges of trade condi-
tions express the opinion that the
country is at this moment rather
long on optomlistic sentiment and
short on read business. Cut rate
miles are stem the rule, the country
over, making it certain that busi-
ness will be rather quiet until this
muslin-«counter stuff is out of the
may. Trade sentiment in the cen-
m1 and western areas of the coun-
try, is lsv‘orably affected by the rap-
ﬁd nice in the smiling prices of farm
products which has occurred dur~
dug the past 60 days. Wheat is 40
,per cent higher than the autumn
'ﬂsow,” corn is 35 per cent and hogs
25 per cent higher, with still a fair
prospect of more appreciation.
The markets for nearly all basic
materiaﬂs are family active at prices
which hold ﬁrm with a tendency to
advance. Orders for structural
steel tare comilng in rapidly and
manuﬂacturers are making ready
ﬂor an messed production. Wool
h ﬁlrm and steady and cotton has
one cent per pound on spot sales;
In spite of better cotton prices, the
southern district is reported to be de-
cidedly dull, from a trade standpoint.
Reports, from the leading agri-
cu’itureﬂ districts of Michigan, indi-
cate a much better feeling among
ﬁarmens than that which prevailed
on (the opening of the year. In
many districts. the banks are said
to be giving more favorable con-
sideration to loans for production
purposes. While the supply of what
is termed “new money” is Rather
iimiited rﬂhe pressure, for immediate
payment on past due paper, has
been relieved and growers are mak-
.ln.g their usual place for spring
planting. The War Finance Corp-
crtaiﬂon reports that they have, had
three applications for loans to Mich-
Ilgran banks, one of which has been
approved. Inquiries have been re-

ceived from many bankers in the.

state and the prospect is that a
Marge number of «loans will be made
in the next 60 days.

The week has been decidedly
quiet in ﬁnancial and investment
(indies; the recent strength and gen-
eral firmness {in the New York stock
market gave way to a wave 01pm-
ﬁt taking during the latter part of
to period and the final business
was decidedly dull and featureless.
0am money ruled at 4 per cent with
a. weakening tendency noted in con-
nection with long-time paper. Lib-
erties and other bond issues were
strong and active. The weeks bank
clearings were $5,576,085,000.

WHEAT

Following a strong day Monday
and a strong opening Tuesday on

 

WHEAT PRIGEO PER B_U., FEB. 21, 1922
Grade [Detroit Icmcaqel N. V.
No. 2 Rod .. 1.48
h. 2 We ””1 1.40
#0 2 llxed 1M _.
PRICES ogfleiAﬂgwAﬁGOm

Mo__2_. RedL’ktoi‘Whltﬂm M‘xod
Detroit 3 1.94 1 1.92 I

1292
both the Chicago and Detroit mar-
kets when wheat prices advanced
from three to six cents a bushel the
close of the market Tuesday was
weak and unsetteied with prices
"down a cent or two. At that Tues-
day’s ﬁnal quotations puaced De-
troit No. 2 red wheat at $1 43 and
Chicago $1. 40. A prominent grain
dealer in the state oifers the opinion
that the present grain market is
purely a speculative affair and that
present prices cannot hold. At the
same m export business is on the
gain and there appears to be a gen-
’uineeonvictionon thepsrtetthe
trade that the world is rapidly get-
ting down to a. hand—to—mouth basis.
Among the more recent bidders on
gun: to: Mt were ﬁrms repre-

- We and Holland inter-

ham/.1: 112V:
118%

 

 

 

Edited by n_ n. MACK

 

 

MARKET SUMMARY

Grain market steady; demand good.

Rye higher. Beans

continue strong and in demand. Produce market rules easy with

demand and receipts light. Hay ﬁrm. Cattle

active.

steady. Sheep

Hog market shows much activity and prices advance.

Receipts of all kinds of live stock small.

(lots: The above summarized murmatien was received AFTER the balance of the mar- '
let page w. m in me. It contains last minute Information up so wlthln one-hm hour of

com: to press—Editor.)

 

I

ests, Japan continues to take a
goodly supply through Paciﬁc coast
ports. It would not be at all sur-
prising to see some temporary weak-
ness develop in this market. It all
depends on the amount of wheat
held in speculative hands. But it
there is very much of this wheat
held it is surprising that the recent
strong market .has not brought
about greater selling. If on
other hand the speculators can
withstand the temptation to unload
at this time and take proﬁts which
must be large, in order to wait for
higher prices it must be that they
have excellent reasons for believing
in higher prices.

CORN
The corn market continued strong
last week and new price levels were

 

CORN PRICES {ER 30., FEB 1922

. Grade

_ [Datmlt l c
No. 2 Yellow
Yellow

.62
No. 8
No. 4 Y_e||_ow__r __

PRICES ONE YEAR AGO—
IND. 2 YOHIHO. 3 VelllNo. 4 Yell

W.‘ I .78 I .70

made nearly every day. Trading
was liberal the entire week. Buy—
dng as an investment increased ow-
ing to the belief that consumption
of the grain this season is greater
than usual and that there will 'soon
be a fair dedline in the movement
of 00m from farm to market. For-
eigners were active aill week and
they took large quantities, the ma-
jor portion going to the United
Kingdom, it was reported, but the
Russian Relief Commission also
purchased considerable. Europe is
expected to be in the market for
some time yet. Country offerings
were mdemxe on all markets. Re—
ceipts a Chicago amounted to
8,906,000 bu. and shipments 4,922,-
000 bu. Reports from Argentine
have it that the crop in that country
will not be as good as mat of last
year, and that the holdiover from
last year is about all sold. This
augurs well tor the market in this
country if such be true. Although
there may be a temporary weak

 

52%! .76Va
.56 3Q

 

 

 

 

the'

spell in the market and. prices de-
cdiine slightly, we look for mild high-
er przices within the next few weeks.
The opening of the presnt week
hound a strong market and prices
higher.

OATS
Cats are in poor demand and im-
prove only slightly as other feeding

 

QE_PRIOE8_PER 30.. FEB. 21. 1822
Grade Detroit 10:ka N. V

MIND ... ‘2' 4”'
White ".1265 /2 “5
W“ ...

PRICES one vanaungo
(No.2 wane: no. a whim no.4 1am...

Detroit I AMT!” .48 | .415

grains advance. Best quality oats
reached 43 cents at Detroit Monday,
but dropped down again a half cent
by the close of the session. Receipts
are fairly liberal and demand is
poor.

 

‘ lo. 2
No. 8
No. 4

 

 

 

 

 

RYE

There was a good demand for rye
the tone paint of last week and by
Wednesday the price was up to
$1.04 for No. 2 at Detroit but
later [there was a temporary weak-
ness and a decline of one cent. This
was gained back on Saturday and
the market was steady.
go the price went as high as $1.02
ﬂor this grade but before the close
of the week it was down to 99 1-20.
This period of weakness was due in
the markets. We never have a
steady period of strength or weak-
ness without reaction. The pmt
condition of the market warrants
ﬁwrﬂher advances witlnim the near
future.

BARLEY
A slightly stranger tune is noted
in the barley market and prices at
Detroit are $1.20@1.25 per cwt.
Chicago prices are 60@64c per-bu.

BEANS
The bean market is shaping up in
ﬁne style. For some time the De—
troit market has shown unusual ac—
tivity with prices advancing rapidly.
Other markets, like Chicago, New

 

‘4 -

 

Mo'nihtaollfd

and south from St.
northwest to“ that show: day-sand
math shat 2 days. Straight P.
temperatures; crooked line above warmer,
:hesvy line severe storms and melt

WASHINGTON, D. 0., Feb. 28, 1922
——The week centering on Feb. 28 will
average about normal temperance on
meridian 90 from Gulf of Mexico to tho
far north; The high tanperatnre of
that, disturbance will be in northwest-
ern Canada about Feb 26, in Michigan
March 1. and in eastern section March
,2. A cool wave will be in northwest-
em Canada near March 4, Michigan
March 7. eastern sections March 2 A
cool wave will be in northwestern
ads. near March 4. Michigan March 7.
eastern sections March 8.

Mb temperatures will average
near the average of the past four
months or somewhat colder. Two
principal storms will stir up the
mosphereseverelysndthatistheonly

«the month ﬁver-aging colder

.ThE WEATHER FOR NEXT
As Forecasted' by W. '1‘. Foster for T he Michigan Business Farmer

WEEK

than the past six cropweather months.
’Ilbe storms upset the atmosphere and
bring the cold, pure, upper ozone down
to the Sin-face. These storms will get in
their work during the weeks centering
on March 16 and 27. Both of them
Will be near the h equinox when
the sun will be over the earth’s equat—
or That event surely adds something
to the severity of the stmrns, tnoft
as much as many have supposedu
The storms of the week centering on
March 16 will be exceedingly severe
and will begin to affect the mther
near larch 9. Better prep-no {or
rough weather and carefully study the
weather (but, so as to understand
when the storms are expected to read:
your vicinity {the other storm will
center on Math 2.7
Between the middle of April and
May .1 croweather conditions will
change from the average of the past
ﬁve months to an entirely diﬂuent
makeup.
The cool wave of March 4 will be a .
severe cold wave on northern parts
meridian 90 and will work south-
ward and eastward slowly across the
Badt stomns will come on-
the northwed
Feb 2.? or 28. Don't neglect prepara-
ties for these storms.

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘ *—

(Yorkand Boston tailed to

, will be curtailed.

At Chica- .

‘me o drag on

follof
suit, at least in any Where near th
$31110 degree. Not being able -
clearly understand the forces

work on the Detroit market we ha. -‘

 

BEAN PnIcEs PER own. m. 21. 1022
eras. looms new...“ I. v.
c. H. P. ....--.. m 0.1!
Red Kidneys H. I’? l
PRICES on: YEAR soo
lo. a. P.
..| 3.35“

 

 

been puzzled to know why this mar
ket has been running so nine
stronger than any of the other
There is no doubt but what the bee
jobbers of the state are very snxiou
to secure an increased acreage an
are using such means at their com
mand to boost the price of bean
at this particular time. The an
of last week, however, found othe
markets responding to the improve
demand and gradually declining sup
plies and the Boston market tone :1
$6. Prices at Detroit gained all 13..
week and closed Tuesday of the cur
rent week at $5.95, a. gain of 4
cents over the previous-week. W
advise our readers to watch . .
market very closely from now 0
We do not expect prices togo ve ‘
much higher. They have already ad
vanced more in proportion than th
prices of any other comparabl
food, and the natural thing to ex
poet is that they will soon reach

point where buying for both can,
ning and immediate consumptiu

POTATOES
The potato market is giving hold
em some worry. For two weeks

 

‘ spuos PER CWT., FEB. 21. 1922
.141
ghettolt‘

0M0!”
New York .....-..- ...
Pltuburg _

PRICES on: V1517: one

........ I150!

2.20

 

 

has been unsettled and price trend
have been downward. The feelin
of conﬁdence that was so prevalen
.a few weeks ago has given way to :
feeling of doubt. This has no doub
been caused in large measure by th
bureau of markets recent estimat
of potatoes still in the hands of farm
ers. These estimates placed som
20 million bushels left in Maine, 1'
million in New York state and larg
quantities in other states, or a tota
yet to market of 141 million bushel
It is generally believed that the»;
estimates are greatly exaggerate
and that no such amount of potatoe
remain at country points. A lar
New York shipper who has a num
ber of stations throughout the s -
declares that there are less than 1
million bushels back in New Yor 1
He says.

“According to reports given b
the same bureau up to Januar
there were about 18,000 cars mor
shipped to date than there were .-
year- Now, according to the r.
cember ﬁnal report when the cm
was all grown and gathered'the to
tal crop was 346,000,000 bushe
When you add the 40,000,000 bush
els already shipped more than is
year, the 76,000,000 bushels sh'
that the total crop estimate shows
how in the world can there be sue
an amount of potatoes leiit in -.
United States?”

This gentleman blames these a
leged incorrect reports tor the pre
en't condition of the market and ’= =r-
that were it not for this demanl
would be better and prices higher. ‘

The Business Farmer has not l .
conﬁdence in this market by a»:
means. We expect to see higher p
tato prices.

‘HAY ' ‘
Thereisn Wessex-e ”-
in the My market than at our les
wriﬂngowdmgtomoﬂﬂoﬂering' .,
Helm. 'Iheipour mass

them:

cannot be secured,
ushers
the

 

3 3 0 'e]
g dl
. all!
u en’s
-‘ mil:
‘ noun
» - eap
1! e ’11
a eetii
p d s
s 0 "G
The
I is ill
~' here
:u'ite
ohlitciaig
: : ttlho
n adie
Lewis
he cl
rom
w-es,
U100:
roug]
.118 SC
" ig‘hi
~113 p4
hicag
-. 1.1 O
:1 d 111
1 = ; in:
3 man
mg in
:v: me
0 -lit in
The
H o »; .; q

u arke


he 5
‘ th ’-
8 0

ha
{22

rend
eelin
Valen
V to 2
ioub.
uy th
imat
farm
som
le, 1'
larg:
tota
she]
(the.
:rate
tatoe
lar
nnm
an 1
Yoru

an b
we '
mor
e ;
e I”.

am
he to
she ..
bush
1 la
Sh '
we
| sue
n U

so a
pre

anion
er. ‘
,1; H...

3.4:.

Now an
, Huston

in. "If; ‘

' . Mix; l‘Oloﬂ'nllx. I ﬂows

to" d”@191§.~. ‘ .115

x {.00 211l830 1011-0001.
2‘ l. g

 

.0. 20 22.0! 24
18.5. 1 9 20.56 0 20.50 0 21

 

 

LIVE STOCK MAIKET
The genus! (live stock situation
gaining enough, any day, as
"me goes on. Live cattle and
ressed beefhsavebeenmt‘ostart
p the line but the ueme‘ndous
;»:in in hogs and lambs is sure to

, ave an effect upon selling prices

M the other leg of the live stock
mangle. The eventing. last week¢
.. the cattle dilution of the Chicago
market, Was rather was]: but on
very other day in the week, except

day, prlices Were firm with an
--vwncﬁng tendency; me man in the
teer division was from 40 to 50
outs per "cunt. for the week. Ar-
ivaﬂs in the Windy City were 3,000
n ger obtain for the week before but
he quality was just about the same
vth very few extma killing loads 'on
1161'.

Exporters sent out about 1,250
attle, last wee'k,»running largely to
medium grades. The eastern beef
rad-e showed strength all the week
.I 9 close being at a gain of $1 to $2
or C'Wt.
mun support of the Chicago mar-
st and even ﬂhe packers were more
”no ﬂhlam on any other market
ince the beginning of the year.
ong yearlings, sold in Chicago, last
week, for $9.25 per cwt.

Whllle steers were rather
most active, all grades shared the
dvialntce, a fact, that usually devel-
pes .whenever the market begins to
dynamic as a result of other kinds
.f meat going higher. Stockers and
novel‘s are meeting with a widen-

.g demand and values are harden-

along the line. Western cattle-
uen’s needs are far in cream of the
.- pplly and prices we sure to go
.igher Whlﬂe ltlhe crowd is scurrying
round trying to buy something
Heap to consume grass. During
he nexit mIonltih several live stock
:4 eetinlgs are to be held in the west
. d some “price-fixing” is sure to
u no out of them.

The sellers are surely in the sad-
Is in the .sheep mlarkets every-
here and the end is evidently not
suite yet. Last week’s receiptsr-at
ohicago, were nearly twice as large
:: ttlhoee of the week before but the
. adle was out after the wooly fel-
mwis ‘aud 'tihe week’s glalim [from
he close of the week before, was
rom 50 cemts to $1 per cwt. Fat
-wes, in fleece, brought $8.25 and
- llolald ltihlat lhlad been clipped
rought $7 per cwt. Mature weth-
.ns solid up to $9.25 while light—
.. iglrt yeanlﬁmgs turned the trick at
13 per cwt. The top for lambs in
hicago, last week, was $15.85 being
-. 1.10 Higher than the “previous week
:. d the highest price paid since the
milnnﬁlnlg of August, 1920. The
-mtalntd for dressed lamb is grow-
.g in activity every day and the
me dan be solid of the wool and
a : it markets.

The decided upward trend of live
um: and the speculative provision
narket have resulted in bringing
bout a situation that is unpreced-
~ ted for this time of the year. Ship-
«ens continue Ibo set the pace in all
estern. “markets but e‘ven the big
.. kers have come into the market
“manometweekand made lib-
.. .5 Was. Hogs are gaining
:' ->:‘,o»e-.- In weight bull. it is a uni-
. .. averolgsgsdnandnotthere-
;.t of: large (umber of heavy
.ws, sprinkled thru the arrivals.
:v; m we beginning to “get
xt" and one holding onto every-
..linlg with maternity instincts. The
oarket looks stronger to the writer
.m. on any proceeding date.

OUS *MARKET
QUOTATIONS

, Detroit, February 21st. .
' BUTTER—Best creamery, in tube,
4@34 1~2c per lb. .
‘ EGGS——Fresh, current receipts,
'7, @28c per dozen.
k*.’Av;r;l’1.]3lS-—— Greening, $3.25@

tool's Red. $3033.60; Bald-

Order buyers were the ,

the

'5’? . 33.50034:-

DRESSED CALVES—Cholce, 160;
medium, 12@13¢; large coarse,
5'@10c per lb.

LIVE POULTRY —- Best spring

chickens, Smooth legs, 27c; leghorn
springs, 23c; large fat hens, 28@
290“; medium hens, 270; small hens,
25c; old roosters, 17c; geeseLZOQ
22c; ducks, 35c; choice largo turk-
eys, 35¢ per lb.
, SUGARS — Eastern granulated,
$5.85; non-caking mixture, $7.15;
XXXX powdered, $7.05; No. 8 soft,
$5.50; Michigan ' granulated, $5.65
per cwt.

HIDES —— No. 1 cured, 6c; No. 1
green, 5c; No. 1 cured bulls, 4c:
No. 1 green 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, $2.50; No. 2 horse-
hides, $1.50; sheep pelts, 25c@$1;
grubby hides, 2c under N0. 2. No. 3
hides lc under N0. 2, calf and kip
1 1-2c under N0. 1.

BOSTON WOOL MARKET

The Commercial Bulletin says:
“The demand for wool in the east-
ern markets has fallen off consider-
ably.and some of the low grade
scoured wools are held less strong-
ly than they were, although the
market generally is steady. The
goods market is reported as some-
what' erratic, overcoatings having
sold fairly well, but staple suitings
having dragged early. Every one
seems to be pausing at the moment
to determine so far as possible just
what the future has in store."

The Bulletin gives quotations as
follows:

Domestic—Ohio and Pennsylvania
ﬂeece: Delaine unwashed, 48@50c;
ﬁne unwashed, 38@39c; 1—2 blood
combing, 42@44c; 3-8 blood comb-
ing, 40@42c.

Michigan and New York ﬂeeces—
Dolaine unwashed; 44@45c; ﬁne
unwashed, 34@36c; 1—2 blood un-
washed, 39@41c; 3-8 blood un—
washed, 39@41c; 1-4 blood un-
washed, 37@39c.

WEEKLY MARKETGRAM

U. 8. Bureau of Markets and Crop
Estimates

WASHINGTON, D. C.——For the
week ending February 18, 1922.

FEED —— Western feed markets
strong, Eastern markets steady but
inactive. Offerings of wheat feeds
for prompt shipment light but con—
siderable pressure to sell for March
and April shipment. Production ,of
wheat feeds in southwest improving
and oiferings are better. Linseed
meal strong, production light, offer-
ings smalll. Cottonseed meal ﬁrmer,
supplies good, demand light. Gluten
feed in good demand, production
heavy. Hominy feed steady, offerings
freer. Alfalfa meal demand and of-
ferings light. Receipts" and stocks
generally good, demand light. Quot-
ed Feb. 17; Bran, $25; middlings,
$25, Minneapolis; White Hominy
feed $22.50, Chicago; Gluten feed.
$32.15, Chicago; 36 per cent cotton-
seed meal $37, Memphis; Linseed
meal, $46, Minneapolis; No. 1 Al-
falfa meal, $17, Kansas City.

DAIRY PRODUCTS—Butter mar-
kets irregular at beginning of week
but steady to ﬁrm at close. Closin
prices $2 score: New York, 38;
cago, 36 1-2; Philadelphia, 37 1-8;
Boston, 37 1-2 cents. Cheese man-
kets ﬁrm with higher prices at-Wls—
cousin country points. Distributing
markets also show partly increased
strength. Prices at Wisconsin Pri-
mary markets Feb. 17: Twins, 21c;
Daisies, 22c; Double Daisies, 21
3-4c; Longhorns, 22 34c; Square
Prints, 22 3—4c; Young Americans,
20 1-2c.

FRUITS AND VEGETABLES —-

Potatoe markets slow, dull and near-
ly steady during the week. New York
sacks round whites weak in Phila-
delphia. Steady in New York at $20
$2.15 per 100 pounds. Northern
sacked round whites down ﬁve cents
in Philadelphia at $1.65@1.90.
Colorado and Idaho rural: down 15
cents in Chicago at $292.10, Maine
Green Mountains in bulk steady in
New York at $2206235. Down 10

.cent's at shipping points $1.41 0 1.46. ,

Round whites down 4 cents I. o. b.
western New York shipping points

, ing paSSed.

,4- ’ S -_

hold steady. 'Boxed stoc advanced,
New York Baldwinsat 2 1-2 range
$—7@8.25 per barrel in leading mar-
kets. Michigan stock steady in
Philadelphia at $8@8.50. In produc-
ing sections ﬁrm f. o. b. wire orders
at $7.25. Sales 1!. o. b. cash track up
25 cents at $7@7.25. Markets for
old cabbage slow and dull. New
York Danish type stock weak in New
York city at $35@38 per ton bulk.

GRAN—All grains sold at new
high points on crop during the week.
Principal market factors were:
Strong Liverpool and Buenos Aires
markets, improved ﬂour and milling
demand, bullish crop reports from
southwest and Argentina. Closing
prices in Chicago cash market: No.
2 red winter wheat $1.37; No. 2
hard winter wheat, $1.35; No. 2
mixed com 57 cents; No. 2 yellow
corn, 57 cents; No. 3 white oats, 36
cents. Average farm prices: No. 2
mixed corn in central Iowa, 44 cents.
No. 1 dark northern wheat in cen-
tral North Dakota,$1.32 1—2; No. 2
hard winter wheat in central Kan-
sas, $1.20. For the week Chicago
May wheat up 7 1—4c; closing at
$1.40 3—8; Chicago May corn up 3
1-2 content 62 1-2 cents; Minne-
apolis May wheat up 6 3—4 cents at
$1.43;Kansas City May wheat up 7
cents at $1.28 3-4; Winnipeg May

‘wheat up 10 1—2 cents at $1.38.

FARM BUREAU NOTES

The Transportation Department of the
American Farm Bureau Federation an-
nounces that all farmers having claims
for damages, loss in transit, etc. against
the U. S. Railroad Administration must
ﬁle them in the proper court before Feb-
ruary 28, ,

Congress recently grew weary of wait-
ing for the house committee on Inter-
state and Foreign Commerce to report

out the bill, H. R. 64, commonly known -

as the Truth-in-Fabrio, which the Ameri-
can Farm Bureau che tien and other
farm organizations are terested in see—
The Agricultural Bloc and
others recently introduced a resolution
that the house of representatives resolve
itself into a. committee 01' the whole of
the house of the union. for the purpose
of considering the bill.

I like your paper very much. I don't
see how any one can get along without
it It is food for thought and it will
make you think whether you want to
or notr—Fred L. Babbit, Clinton County,
Mich

We couldn't do without your good pa-
per. Keep it coming always, and I as-
sure you, your efforts in behalf of the
farmers are appreciated—Bert. S. Fau-
sett, Isabella County, Mich,

 

or Healthy Orchards
”Eight Michigan GrownTrees

Celery City Nurseries

3.1216 mm

Nursery to sou, At PreWarPrlces

 

 

BEFORE YOU SELL YOUR
EGGS, POTATOES, CABBAGE,
APPLES AND OTHER PRODUCE
who at nod organization tolllnu
'1th have to cell.

a lane warehouse in Detroit and an
debut saith: o woken! usur-
rou of best service.

PROM!” a
Grand Rlvor a Lorraine ,Avo.

CONSUMERS co.
Dotrolt. Mlch.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Born .MICHIGAN
5‘ FARM WEEKLIES

THE MICHIGAN BUSI-
NESS FARMER

WEEKLY. $1 PER YEAR

THE MICHIGAN
FARHER

WEEKLY. .1 PE. YEA.

$1 5° ..

Abbolnuohmuwhotherneworro-
order.

Send money
§m‘"%“ u. mannaj

 

 

 

W Y“. Shogt a“: ‘

"own-doom

 

 

Wm Ar Once

6-,“; an open... I.

SEED DEPARTMENT

BOX 51

MICHIGAN STATE FARM BUREAU
Lansing, Michigsn

 

 

4 HEMSTITCHED

PILLOW CASES

Here’s your chance to not
Just what you want not only
at n reasonable price but a:
a real amok N PRICE!
This mrdlm odor is
possible on) because of our
enormousvo ume of business.

We’ve made a: these sets
of 6 carefully emstitchod

illow easel in full size _(42:
E6 inches before bemstxtch-
lnz) , lndthcy are the quullt!
formerly priced at $2. Now.
no a special sprigs: odor.
they’re marked at

 

Juﬁﬂhudnnﬂwtﬂa

SATISFACTION COUPON
Dent. 380 Yolkm,N.!o

whit. "homey plﬂovsvsslslos'.vyI-'

. ' p u o‘-

u I'l’go’t ”M?" return th-

turn promptly my money plus 9‘-
. than.

 

 

(Nata; andar aural“

 

JOHN Lewis CHILDS-INC‘
BLUE .
LACE. .
r“\ "331‘
FLVWER .

Clusters of delicate light blue blossoms, in size and
color like the Fornt-nc—net. borne on long slender
Items. Texture resembles Queen Anne Lace.
Exquisite with cut ﬂowers.

Chine-e Wool Flown-Jew clusters, mu-
lilvicf feathery balls of brilliant crimson, blooming
ti root.

W W Milli ’rod
new types and can never cred. ‘c. many

A150 2 FAMGUS VEGETABLE
Matchles- Lctluc'c, remarkable for crispness
and juicy texture. Grows somewhat like Romaine.

m (I... GO-d k d. E '
all. hrp. "on and “1.30:“ egoo uhut “

All Five Packets for 25¢

All tested novelties and easy to grow. Bond tor
big colonists catalog tree. Complete stocks of
sods, bulbs. window lant- rennials, hula.
lorries and special love ties. clues cxccptlold.

John Lewis Chllds. lnc.. Hon] Pukﬂ‘.

 

 

 

Choice Strawberry Plants “Jim (“g
3m- at $3.75. GEM“ I

a

 


 

   

 

26 Prizes

for the best,

most attract-

ive and
carefully
‘ made
descriptions

MORE MIlEAGE SHOES

 

5 What is

‘ Your
Conception
of a
. Good
Pair of
Shoes?

BlG CONTEST NOW ON!

Read the List of Prizes and the Rules of the Contest

THEN SEND IN YOUR ANSWERS

There is yet time for all to compete, as this con-
test is open until noon, April 15th. The prizes
are very much worth While. The effort to com-

pete is not taxing.

But do not delay. Read the rules, given below,

 

 

 

use: "

‘1-
a.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

YOU CAN'T GO
WRONG 1N WEAR-
ING BIRTH-KRAUSE
MILEAGE

 

' noun
snons FOR MEN——
wow—CHILDREN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More Mileage Shoes
[Are Coed Shoes

We have been in the leather tanning and shoe manufacturing
business for three generations. Through all these years we have
marketed a full line of shoes for men, women and children. Our
shoes have been known for ﬁt and comfort, for goodxstyle, 'ior wonder-
tu'l wear and for reasonable prices.

That is OUR conception of good shoes. What is yours? We
believe the clever answers we receive in this contest will teach us
many new and interesting ways of expressing our thoughts about the
shoes we make and sell.

Maybe YOUR particular answer will be THE ONE to win one of
the CASH PRIZES. Give it a try. And do it soon——-the sooner the
better.

Watch for ﬁnal announcement of names of prize-Winners, to be.
made by dealers, who will post bulletins in their store Windows.

giving names of the lucky ones. If you do not know name of your
nearest mrth-Krause dealer, write us for it.

Go to a Hirth- Krause dealer and see

these shoes before you try for a prize

 

 

 

't'l'llbutod by HIM-K

and forward your answers to the Contest Editor.
He will answer inquiries from those
do not fully understand the rules.
dealer in your town Who sells H irth-Krause

MORE MILEAGE SHOES, see them.

help you‘write a better ansWer.

LIST OF PRIZES

First Prize $25.00 in cash.

Second Prize $10.00 in cash.

Third Prize . $ 5.00 in cash
and a pair of $5.00 More
Mileage Shoes.

Twenty-three Prizes of a pair
of leth-Krause More Mile-

. age Shoes—the kind that

retails for, $5..00

 

 

RULES OF CONTEST

contest la open to everybody. Opens
Tali?" 28th and closes at noon April

Answers limited to 25 words. "when-
ated weeds counted as one. '

contestants mpermltted to and three
answers—no

In oa'aa otm a: tie. both parties not full
:omxl'x'nt‘refwggzo st be i i l

mu pany addressed

Contest Editor, HIRTH- KR
arms! Rwlda'. Mien. A08! co
_ nnoﬁ o tn prizes ll

nouncod in bu|lio ns posted l'l'l Incl: WT:
down or rtn-ltrause deal ion. and
through oimulara distributed by said
magenﬁn'om their stores. on or about

Both cash and the. prizes will be dia-

dealer.

n
named received from Contest
Editor. ll shoes“ desired are not in stool
dealers take size and stool: number and
got them from us for delivery to the
winner, when taken from dealer’s stock
to can time. dealer sends on size and
ateot number and replace same
without any out whatsoever

This is to be the meet iiiotly contests:
prize contest we ever staged. Band

anti-em "like will be In:

at the lucky oma. .

HIRTH- KRAU' E CO. -

Tanners- Shoe Manufacturers

Grand Rapids Michigan

 

 

 

who
If there is a

It will

     

      
    

