
‘ _ . --ndepndet '
Farmer’s Weekly Owned and
Edited in Michigan

 

 

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r’ r

 COUNTY FARMERS
  .' HTAKE DAY OFF

" ' 'EN investment, upkeep and
1 ' ; family overtime are rated, the
'i  average farmer of this county

f has been forced to, acknowlbd'ge a

pretty small return tor his time‘ in-
.vestment. and he is rapidly coming
to think that the cause and the
remedy both rest with himself.
Right in the midst of potato plant-

Q ' Ling when haying and other farm

 

g",

.r.

" "Others, under different

 

workare close at hand Oakland

 c'ounty families are-taking time for

a day’s drive into the sections east
and north of their homes to see the
1 country in the most beautiful month
in the year:

 Incidentally, they wish to know

 their own state better, but more

than this they desire to seb how
conditions,
are working out their life’s prob-
lems and so get a better perspective
of their own job. Thus, they are
placed in a better position to see
the vital forces at work in their Own
business and also those forces that
make for a better solution of the
rural problem as a whole.

1 Last year a tour was made of Oak-
land county. About one hundred
twenty-ﬁve men and women took

‘ 4

   

 to' set-- their]. own é‘é‘unty, iiiia,
beautiful vistas, attractive lakes, and,

some, of their county’s 'most out;
staﬁding farms. ‘

Upwards of two hundred folks
were scheduled-to take the trip this
year but the great help shortage at
sced time out the forces dawn to a
‘ quarter of the members who desired
to participate. ‘ \_

Things that especially interested
the party were a beautiful drive. to
Port Huron, a visit to the St. Clair
County Farm, a glimpse of the Port
Huron Thresher Works and the Dia-
mond Crystal Salt Works at St. Clair.
A picnic dinner at Lakeside ,Park,
Port Huron, gave every member of
the party a vivid idea of what op-
portunities are offered by a fine
landscape, 3. beautiful lake front and
the human element strictly in tune
for the occasion.- ‘

Top much: had been planned for.
the day and a visit to the Michigan
Busineserarmer, the Aviation Field
and the Detroit Creamery Company‘s
Farm at Mt. Clemens all had to be
hastily considered after six o’clock.
At that time a considerable part of
the tourists had been force'd to re
turn home to attend to the regular

evening round of details.

 
 
 
 
 

 

1

 

 

   

organisation bejcyoﬂej"  .,  8615* ' I
parents—O. 13: .'Cook,. County ARTE 

 
 
 
  

cultural Agents: pakland County.
SOIL SURVEY To BE Pm
» FORWARD ,
HE soil survey of the state which
i' was started a few years ago will
be pushed {orward , V
mer by the United States Department
of. Agriculture the state department
of Agriculture and the Michigan
Agricultural College. ' ' _
Van .Buren, Kalamazoo. Manistee,
'Ogemaw and Mackinac counties ‘are
included in this year’s survey plans.
The soil types and general topo-
graphy of the land will be mapped
and later the maps will be published
and placed at the disposal of the
people of the state. . ’
Experiments in different parts of”
the state have brought out the fact

 

that certain soils need more ofertilixé »

ers than some others. Also differ-
ent fertilizers are needed on differ—

ent soils. A map having the areas'

of these diiferent soils mapped out
on them would "be of inestimable
value to ,the farmer and the prospec-
tive settler in guiding his selection
of the right kind 'of land for cer-
tain crops and the "correct fertilisers

this sum-. '

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘ 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

When you place your money in a .
savings account at 3% or 4%-—.You I

 

    
        

This Man ’5 Money ‘Works For H im
come back as dividends—you get
double the uSual interest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

'HHH HH

 

 

 

   

divide the‘interest it earns with
some one else.

The successful investor loans

direct to the borrower, getting all ‘

the interest.

That’s what Standard Mortgage
oﬁ‘ers you. Your money is loaned
to home builders, and the earnings

The Standard Mortgage & Investment Company

. I" 
Detroit :3
Michigan '

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Let us- explain the plan to you;

let us show you how to get full

return‘on your savings..

Tear this advertisement out; write
your name and address on the
margin; then send it to us. .It
does not obligate you'and it may
be the means of doubling your
income.

Penobecot

Building

 

 

 

 

  
   
    
     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

" a.

“  A. Deane announces- th

Bureau of ﬁarkets. for a nae-operative
Marketing ~Repbrting -~ Service»  in
Michisan for the shipping; season. -

' The arrangements werecompleted - l

by W. P. Hartman. director, Bureau
of and Standards. ‘whohas
just returnedme Washington. ‘The

v

tentative plans provide for the main . ’

emcevin connection with the Depart-
ment, at Lansing. The ﬁrst reports

GM, IQHER-a of"; "

    complet; -
w “1'?!” much with the U. s.  '

willcover the cherry cram-the , daily '

markets wired to "the cherry produc-
ing centers Later, it ist’planned to
establish a sub-station-“at Benton
5. Harbor, or other center, to serve the
fruit? shippers, apples, peaches and
grapes, all along the west shore from
Berrien county to the Grand Trav-
erse region. _  ,

Later in the seasons; sub-omce
will probably be opened in Grand
Rapids to handle potato" and apple
shipments, and. perhaps. the celery
01701” a , ‘ '

Based upon latest available re-
ports. the present outlook for the
fruit crop jis ditty per cent greater
than last year, with a prospective

a:

value to the growers exceeding $26,— ,

000,000.

In recognition of this volume of
traﬂic, thean of handling the fruit
crop promptly and eﬂlciently coupled
with. the demands of the potato

growers, led the Department of Agri-

culture to take the initiative in soli- '

. citing the cry-operation of the Fed-

eral Bureau at Washington.

BETTER METHODS WITH CORN,
' . . LAST YEAR ‘ -
'1‘ least 94,896'.farmersrwere di:-
rectly inﬂuenced \to use better
methods in growing corn last

year because of the. demonstration

and other work of county agents em?
'ployed co-operativeiy by. the United

States Department of Agriculture,

the state agricultural colleges and
the counties. A summary of. yields
‘ produced on- demonstration terms as

, ’ compared with the average produc—~

tion of corn in the localities of the '

demonstrations shows that at least
one and one—half times as‘much corn
was produced to the acre on the
demonstration plats. In some in-
stances the yield was as much as 4
times the average. ”

. Seed corn selection has brought
a marked improvement in the qual-
ity of seed used in many communi-
ties. Reports, show that "as a re-
sult- of demonstrations about 1,600,-

000 acres were planted with tested _

and selected seed in 1921. l p

In carrying on. demonstrations;
improved cultivation methods were
given attention. The dry season of
last year made the results of such
cultivation stand out more conspicu—
ously than they might have done
otherwise. and -attracted attention
particularly in the south- It was
there that the greatest,’ contrast in
yields was noted. , ‘

In Brown county, Texas, where
the dry seasonis particularly hard
on corn, a former county agent in-

\

trounced a local system of cultiva-_

tion for corn which has proved very
successful in that county and which
might well" be tried in other 'similar
localities. Under this system corn
is planted in widely-spaced rows,
26 1-2 to 7 test apart, and. given
- thorough cultivation until the ears
are mature. A deep mulch is main;
tained by using a section harrow be-

tween the rows, after Corn planted,
'in narrowly-spaced rows is; too large “'
 to plow with _a- cultivator.  ' "

Tests show that the same number

of stalks on an acreai’n narrowly or -

widely-spa ed rows may yield about

-the same 11, reasonable 1 years, but"; 
that. in seasons with” _‘a light rai'niall,‘ ‘7 : I
v . o

m in 1931.;thsnwmeiy 1
given- latewuiu,  
ob. A _

 

 
   
   
 
  

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\

 .1 an...  Holstein  -

....L x. Breed“ a} “Black M Whites”

OLSTElﬁ' conventions

noted for " accomplishing
constructive .work. 1 Too
often much of their time
has been occupied. with
politics and in settling
personal differences. to the
exclusion of
"things. In
‘ the Thirty—Seventh Annual
0!!

Friesian Association

 

n. w. NORTON, 33.,
Lunch:

1’
Mr. Norton was elected u
on the board of directors . ‘ p
' a comphshed things.”

ing a long drawn-out ’ﬁght by modernisingw

new precedent. It _‘was
A convention that ac-
End-

its constitution; demonstrating the eﬂicis
ency ot the delegate system; staging a dairy
show and putting on a dairy program which sur-

passed anything previously attempted by a Hal-g

stein convention; providing adequately for Hol-
stein extension work; providing a bet-tor basis
for the judging of Holstein animals: aiding thru
its co—operative sale in the distribution of about-
200 good animals in the big Southwest °where
Holsteins are not yet well known—and putting
this across out in the so-called undeveloped H0}!
stein territory—constitutes a _program not at-
tained by any former Holstein convention.

For about ten years many of our bestﬂolstein
breeders have been quietly at work trying to‘ ef-

fect certain changes in the constitution which'

Would permjt the most eﬂlcient administration,
but it was not until this year at Kansas City that
they succeeded. It was, over this particular mat-
ter that the principal interest of this convention
centered. It came to a head in connection with
the Hackney amendment, which in effect changed
the “constitution so that the secretary, the treas~
titer and thesuperintendent of advanced registry
shall be elected by the Board otDirectors, in-
stead of by the delegates. , .
' In speaking of this amendment, former .Presi-
dent D. D. Aitken argued that the Board of

p - have not alwzllysfbe-s‘s‘n~

I essential -
' this respect .

Convention of the Holstein-'

‘America held in ’Kansas.
-City June 5 to 10, set a'

National Organization
Ir»pr J. H.‘ FRANDSEN

Directors should be in a position to control the

activities of the secretary and treasurer, and
that these oﬂicers should be responsible to the
board for their acts; as far as the association is
concerned. "The Board of Directors,” said Mr.
Aitken, “must be an authority over the employees
Of the association and if they are spreading virus,
the board must be in a position to tell them to“
cease. Put the board in a position where it can
control and govern employees. , All that the ofﬁ—
cials have to do is to make good to be re—elected.”

The vote was Overwhelmineg in favor of the
‘amendment. This presumably ends a ﬁght which
has been carried on for almost ten years.

There was much interebt in the amendments
affecting transfer fees, and the matter was ﬁnally
settled by the adoption of a compromise amend-
ment'which provides that if transfers are made

within three months after ,date 'of sale, the fee .

to- members shall be $1.50; non-members, $3. If
the transfer is made after three month from
date of sale. the fee shall be $3 to members, and
"ch transfer shall be used for extension work
in places and in ways approved for by the Board
or Directors. The adoption of this amendment
should provide the additional money needed to
promote the interests of the Holstein breed.

Purebred Sire Exhibit

~Possibly no exhibit attracted more attention
from visitors than the one featuring the value of
'the purebred sire. Many-a dairyman, who so far
has not been quite convinced that he needed a
purebred bull at the head of his herd was_found
intently studying the illustrated material and
copying inhis own notebook informati‘on‘show-
ing that in some herds there are scrub cqws‘with
an average annual milk production of only 3874.5
pounds of milk and an average butterfat produc—
tion-of 192 pounds. Where a sire 50 per cent
purebred heads the herd, the next generation of
cows is found to have an average of 6955 pounds
of milk and 266 pounds “of butterfat, or an in-

Mdke Several Important Changes in Constitution of Their

crease of 79 per cent in milk yield and 38 per _- .ﬁ 5

cent increase of butterfat yield. When a sire 75
per cent purebred is used, the result in an aver-
age milk production of 12,817 pounds, or an in—
crease of 231 per cent, and 486.45 pounds of
butterfat, an increase of 153 per cent.

These experiments were“ all with one
There were many other illustrations as striking
as the one mentioned. This exhibit, showing the
importance of, the purebred bull, grading up the
common dairy herd and improving grade herds,
appealed tremendously to dairymen in the‘Mid-'
west country who are not so very old as dairy
matters go.» The young man in charge of'this
work was kept busy answering inquiries relative
to the kind of purebred sires to select, what they
would cost and where they could be procured.
Much of the information in this booth came from
the experimental work of the Iowa Experiment
Station. Mr. Fred Koenig, in charge of the H01-
stein Extension Service, spent much time with
the exhibit.

The United States Dairy Divisibn, assisted by
the Holstein Association, arranged to have its
ﬁne exhibit, previously used at the National Dairy
Show, at this convention. This exhibit consisted
of 26 booths, including the entire government
exhibit of last year’s National Dairy Show and
two booths from the recent milk campaign in
New Orleans. In general interest and in educa-
tional value it was one of the very best displays
ever sent out by the U. S. Department of Agri—
culture. '

VThe National Dairy Council, under the sup—
ervision of M. O. Maugham, exhibited many things
of interest not only to the milk producer, but to
the consumer of dairy products. “Full of health
and pep,” “Milk three times a day,” “My, but
he’s a husky—boy! Milk three times a day did it,”
were a few of the striking signs featuring their
booth. '

Better Basis f0); Judging

‘The National Committee on Judging and Clas—
siﬁcations met during the convention, devoting a.
full day to a conference with interested breeders
relative to matters of (Continued on page 19)’

j l- l ' Ottawa Poultry Breeders Stage Tour and Round-Uni

TTAWA county is the largest poultry produc-
, lug county in the state. , Last year" ﬁve mil-

”lionchicks were hatched in that county and it is
estimated that the output for the present season
will. aggregate eight million, or ‘nearly three

times the production of 1920. ‘ The breeders in v.

this county have ﬁne flocks ot purebreds and it
was in the interests of better poultry that an
allrday poultry tour was put on in that county
.on June 8.-   

The tour started from Coopersville‘ promptly
at: 7 a. m. and the schedule was maintained right

through. There were 60 autds at the ﬁrst stop, »

Clyde Hollis’ White Wyandotte farm, Jamestown,

Where Mr. C. M. Ferguson, poultry specialist, M.’

A. C.", explained the prevailing type or. White
Wyandotte from standard and utility standpoint.

At the second stop, Walter Van .Dam,* who
operates , a combined fruit, dairy, poultry and
general farm and a ﬁne. apiary, 7 5 cars or 280
people were preseﬁt’. /
of thep‘oultry. department M. A. (3., gave a lec-
ture‘fon cuuiug‘chi‘cks'and selecting‘bree'ding,
stock. Particular latteption ' was called to the
~ ‘brooder equipment. 4 At Margaret Strick’s poul—
jtry farm the 20x80 Foreman ‘typeot house was
examined. 'Thisjhouso it is claimed is the best
mm house in the  ,mss Strick trap-

4‘?  eats her, hens. rstartingg;Feb'.‘-.10th, _one;,;White' 
031 eggs in 1110 days; longest]

  Racism? 1

 

Mr:~ E. C. Foreman, head .

Vard, gave his ever popular culling demonstration

at Thos. fBeyer’s pullet farm. Geo. Cabal], la
barred rock breeder, spoke to more than .400
people at‘his own place. His subject was “Mating
Rocks for color‘and utility purposes.” At M.
Wyngarden’s, Zeeland, Dr. L. E. Heasley, who has
charge of breeding work on the Ferris farm,
pointed out the need of poultrymen producing in-
fertile eggs. v

At Zelleland theAZeeland Poultry Association

1,-pro'vided benches and coilee and an enjoyable noon

hour was spent here. 115 cars with 450 people
participated. Mr. Milham, county agricultural
agent who arranged the tour in cooperation with
the four poultry associations in the county, spoke
on the importance or the poultry industryin 0t-
iawa, county and the relation of the chick hat-
cheries to the poultry industries. The Wolverine
Hatchery and Grandview Hatchery were visited,
these two being the largest in the county and in
the state. Facts brought but were as follows:
The combined capacity of the commercial hatch-
.eries .oi'Ottawa county is in excess of a million
and. aqhalf. eggs. ' This means that. more than

._5r0“o,-,ooo ’_egS‘B~,are".se¢t weekly by the hatcheries.

Members offthe  County Chick ,Hatchery
Association have already shippedw ﬁve and a quart-
”; _ ‘ .v‘

: er million chicks.

"M", Elidghead  Management De-
 M Aye“ spokeon management of‘poul-
' ' ‘  point-of marketing pro-

   
   

   

  

' in' the United States. It is rapidly reaching
lgoal.; ’ - ‘ ' J ,‘ "f ‘ '

will be a dominant factor in- the price of other
meat products. D. L. Hagerman, agricultural
and industrial agent of the Penn. R. R. also ad—
dressed his many friends.

The round—up was held at Simon Harkem’s
place near Macatawa Park. H. J. Stafseth, who
made a special study of poultry diseases, gave a.
very instructive and educational, lecture on poul-
try diseases. He demonstrated the taking of a
blood sample for diagnosis of diseases.

Mr. Bennet. county agricultural agent from
Barry county brought six loads of poultry en-
thusiasts with him. K. K. Vining, from Kent
county, Claire Taylor from Newago county, D. C-
Long from Muskegon county, I. T. Pickford from
Oceana county, Miss Clark, home demonstration
agent from Kalamazoo county, and Miss Wood—’
worth, home demonstration agent from Allegan
county, completed the list of “notables” from out-
side Ottawa county. ' '2 

The tour was a. conIplete success and another
will be held next year.
for a state poultrymen’s tour and a state chick
hatcheries tour to Ottawa county this fall. Ot-
tawa county is making rapid strides in commer-

cial production of quality poultry chicks and eggs A
and at the present «time a number of poultry. '
men are starting the production of certiﬁed chicks .

of known breeding. The college plans to sell pedi'.
greed cockerels at $3 each which will stimula ‘
quality birds in Michigan. Thesoil andclix'n'a
of Ottawa county is well adapted to product 
of fruit and chickens and Ottawa is aiming
the goal of the biggest and best poultry c‘o “

   

,_g!'\.‘

  

herd. ‘

Plans are under_ way 

      
    
  
   
   
   
   
   
   
  
   
   
     
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
   
  
    
   
  
   
    
   
   
   
  
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
    
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
 
 

.I'

,‘p

I mammal.  “9:.

   
 
 
  
     
   
       
   
   
   
  


 
 

  
  

 

 ‘ ‘HE private system of marketing produce from-

 

y‘private proﬁt. It was quite natural that this
should be the way in which marketing shouldde-
yelop for the reason that it has Only been recent-
ly that agriculture has been commercialized. Un-
til recent years the produce which went into the
channels of trade was the surplus gathered up
from the many sections of the country. ~This de-
velopment of the market system was a result of
necessity and the services Which have been per-
formed are essential. The well intermed does
not question the essential services of the middle-
man or doubt that he is a real producer. How-
ever, it must be admitted that this system has
been developed under conditions that made the
impelling force one of private gain other than one
of service. It is quite doubtful whether those
_things which tend toward private proﬁt and the
welfare of the individual are always for the best
interests of society at large. Proﬁt, which under
our present system goes to a separate class ‘of
middlemen, is the main motive of our market sys-
tem and those things which tend toward a great-
er proﬁt are the things which are desired by) those
who are in the business of performing market ser-
vices. Practices which grow up under-present con:-
ditions of marketing are not looked at through
the eyes of him who desires to secure the best
interests of producer, middleman and consumer;
but rather through the eyes of him Who desires
to increase his own proﬁt. The institution of
markets as now developed has back of it the in—
centive of private proﬁt rather than the incentive
of community or social betterment.

There is a realization among market middle-
men that there exists a certailr class interest and
every effort to encroach upon their domain is
naturally opposed. Certain standards of living
are desired and required. Every effort is being
made to maintain a reasonable margin of proﬁt
in order that these living standards can be main-
tained. The recognition of this class conscious-
ness among different classes of private market
men is evidenced by the existence of trade as-
sociations. The primary function of such asso-
' ciations is to improve the conditions within the

Rules Under Which Michiga

S a popular sport horseshoe pitching has en-~

gaged the attention of the American people
in general. but particularly those in the rural
districts, since the early days of the Civil War
when each company or regiment of soldiers had
their champion horseshoe pitcher the same as
each company or regiment of the present-day.
army have their champion athlete. in those
days there Were no set or standard rules by
which they pitched and it was not until the sixth
of May, 1914, when Kansas organized the Grand
League of American Horseshoe Pitclzri‘.<, that
laws were enacted and rules established to gov-
ern the game. The following year a tournament
was held at Kansas City and the first national
champion declared. However, it was not until
February, 1919, that ‘the game attracted much
more attention but from then on interest in—
creased and organizations sprang into existance
until at the present time there are some 30,000
organized horseshoe pitchers in the United States.
At the national tournament to be held at the
Iowa State Fair this fall over $2,200 premium
money will be given away as prizes besides a
trophy from each state represented.

When the Grand League of American Horse-

. shoe Pitchers was founded and rules adopted the .

pitching distance was made 38 1—2 feet. from
stake to stake, measuring from Where the stake
entered the ground. Since that time the rule
has been changed and the standard regulation

  
 
 

A Priljate Cain is cal-y- thMégt'

the farm has grown up under the'spnrot-r

‘ . g4.  and 61. stake should extend: it nous;

    

o

 

nt 
J.T.H0RNERV

 t of. Farm Economics," at. A. O.
. ’t' V V- 

WHY DO MEN CO-OPERATE?

J. T. Horner‘s accompanying article dis-i
cusses ,co-operation"among farmers from a
somewhat different viewpdnt. ‘ Private ;
gain is popularly believed to be the sole
advantage of co—operative eﬂort, but Dr.
Homer says not. Indeed, he'clalms it is
one of the least. He doubts if the. saving
through co-operative '. marketing can be
made sufﬁciently large to warrant the ef-
fort and the risk. But, he points out,
there are many other and more important
advantages to co-operation. These are dis-
cusses in this article together with a few
danger signals on the road to co-operative
success. Read his article. If you don’t
agree with all he says let us hear u from
you.-—Editor.

 

I
trade and,‘what is natural, to protect the ‘mem-
bers as a class from the undermining ’of their
station in the economic society of the day. The
great pressure which is brought to bear upon cer-
tain classes of these middlemen is such that they
must necessarily seek the most eﬁective and' eco-
nomic methods of doing business in order to sur-
vive. This is not bad. It is a good tendency. Any-
thing which increases efﬁciency in the production

'of the things man wants is desirable unless it

results in some manner in privilege or some other
injustice. The point here is that the market

adama- of _

 Attacks are :beipngl'rnade'against-other;  of X
. distributive agencies. "The mail order house, the "

.been viewed fronl‘the standpoint of how well ,'

chain store. direct\marketing'and'types of integ-
rated marketing are, vigorously- opposed by the
“regular” distributors. Actiou'along such lines
on the part=of regular middlemen is recognition
onthelr partrof the value of building up a class
consciousness through organization. The invert:
ance 'of a claSs censciduspess is” also evidenced‘in
all walksor life by the existence of [different types
of social, professiOnal,~religious, fraternal and
business associations. . ’ ' '

Tee Often, in the past, co-operative marketing

has been looked upon entirely from the economic
standpoint. The advantages of co-operation have

such a type of marketing could compete with that

of private “enterprise. From' the standpoint of
society in general thought must be given to the
problem of efﬁcient production of the things men
desire. Marketing is merely a part of the process
of production. Efﬁcient marketing is in a manner

which meets with the requirements of the con-'

sumer. However, because of the difference in the
nature of private and co—operatively owned enter-
prises there are factors other than those of the
pure business type which must be considered.
There are also items of economic eﬂiciency which
are not apparent at firstsight. It might be that
we do not have an adequate measure for eﬂici-
ency. Is the amount of profit to be used as a.
sole measure of efﬁciency? Is the money 'cost of

. performing a certain service to be the sole meas-

class recognizes a class. interest and is organized .

to protect that interest

our commercial and industrial system is such

that this type of market machinery operators are a

ﬁrmly entrenched. The problems of efﬁciency

‘were not so paramount to them until the “men-

ace” of co-operation and other types of market
distributive agencies began to appear. The ﬁght
which is made against co-operation is along the
most logical line and that is lack of efﬁciency.

3m.

 

3in

 

 

This illustration will enable. on to determine whether

)our horseshoes are standar size for entering your
county or the state tournaments. The shoes must not
exceed the dimensions shown, but may be smaller.

pitching distance is now 40 feet. For women
in contests or tournaments the distance is 30
feet from stake to stake.

Another rule that has been changed consider-
ably is the number of points to a regulation
game. Up to within one year ago the standard

\
40 Feet ‘

HOW TO SET THEE STAKES

1. Stake should be 1 inch round, 32 inches long;
8 inches above the ground,-Jcaning 1 inch forward to-
ward the opposite stake: 24 inches below‘ ground.

,2.“ The area for a‘ distance of .not less than ’86 inches
diameter ~lulu-(ulna the stake and 8
consist'of loose, ,wet sun
kept level and as soft L
» s. “Subunit—soon be, ofrnnythlng..y _ 

ptﬁltt3< nor dough. 5 '

,, , ' {'

, V ,

  
 

r: 16:1 x940 “$110! W

, x‘.

Vii». qur.lon‘ '3 

. (\L

 

   
  

 

The present make-up of '

inches deep. must
or, tampon; wet clay; always

11 Horseshoe Pit

' |

ure of the efﬁciency of the performance? Is "it
not possible that there are‘other considerations
which are of vital importance and yet not capable
of being measured by» any measuring rod known
to man? I I ’

, Group, life strengthened through media of so-
cial or economic action is a great factor in weld-
ing a people together into a'homogeneous mass.
Individualism is submerged by the domination
of the more important problems which arebeing
dealt with as/a group. In agriculture individual—
ism has survived longer than in any other line
of endeavor.

work with his neighbor. (Continued on page 16)

chers Will Compete

regulation galme calsisted of 21 points but this
has been changed to 50 points,rand~the contest-
ant firstscoring this number after all shoes have
been pitched, shall‘ be declared winner. In all
official matches or exhibition games between two

contestants eleven games of 50 points shall be a .

. series; ' the one winning six games shall. be de-

aa5*“‘

clared the winner. ' \ ., .

The grounds shall be level as possible. The
pitcher’s box shall be ﬁlled with Potter’s Clay
or any substitute ofa like nature? the clay must
be kept moist and worked to a putty-like condi—
tion and .to a depth of not less than 6 inches and
at, least 18 inches around the stake.

The pitcher’s box shall extend three (3) feet
on either side to the rear and front of the stake.
Said box shall be constructed of material .2x4
inches and shall not extend more than 1 inch
above the level of the ground. Where several
or more courts are constructed, a 2x4 inch shall
be laid the full length of- such courts 3 feet in
front of the stakes. In delivering the shoe 1nto
the opposite pitcher’s ’box, a contestant may
stand anywhere inside the pitcher’s box. I.

The stakes shall be or iron, one (1) inch in
diameter, perpendicular, inclined one (1) inch
toward the» opposite stake and extending, eight
( 8) inches above the ground in the pitcher s box.
On single courts, the stakes shall be set in the
center of the/ pitcher’s box. Where several or
more courts are constructed. the stakes shall be
not less than eight (8) feet apart, in a straight,
direct line iwhere possible.

No horseshoe shall (Continued on page 21)

 

   

    
   
   
     
       
     
 

The farmer has not learned t0'

\

 
 

  
   
 
 
 

    
   

 

 

  

u—ﬂzu-‘ai iii-Han- ‘h—.“

'5 Li

vﬁ :1-3

Egﬂc‘ﬁﬁﬁmagﬁ

 
 
   


 

 

   

 
     

—L. Whitney Watkins,

:

 ‘ o‘ FARMEB ‘should .
’ , think of visiting De”-
groit without- making an
inspection of the great
plant of, the Detroit
Packing Company which
stands at the interseci,
tion of Lafayette boule-.
yard and Springwells”
avenue. This I imposing
business structure ‘is the
answer to the argument
that'M’ichman live stool:
cannot be slaughtered
and packed in Michigan‘
:lor, Michigan consumers.
:For within the walls of
this modern and sanitary
plant thousands of" head .
of cattle, hogs and sheep
girom the farm’s of Michi-
gan are being slaughtered
and packed every month
and sold to Michigan con-
sumers. 5
For years men have
been asking themselves
what the sense was of
shipping -Michigan Iive
stock hundreds of miles
across country into
another state, in cattle
cars, and bringing it right -
back again to the point of origin in refrigerator
cars. Millions of dollars have been paid in
freight by Michigan farmers and meat consumers

merely because no one in Michigan had the court

age and foresight to establish a plant within her
borders which would turn live stock into'meat and
save ‘these enormous transportation charges.

This economic absurdity continued, however,
with everybody condemning it but nobody act-
ing to remedyit, until a couple of years ago
when a group of men with experience inthe
live stock and packing. business concluded that
the time was ripe to end a farce. and to build
within the fourth largest city of the United States
a modern packing institution. ‘ '

One of these men Was ’Edward F Dold, son
of the well-known Buﬁalo packer by that name.
Another was Frank L. Garrison, who was brought
up in the packing business. Still another was
Joseph Gardulski, with long and successful ex-
perience in ﬁnancial matters. And a fourth was
knowh‘ the length and
breadth of Michigan as a successful farmer, live
stock grower and busineSs man. With these men
in the lead the Detroit Packing Company was
launched, and following the usual vicissitudes
which accompany new business enterprises, be-

‘   C'Proviides Home Market to

gan slaughtering and packing operations theiﬁrs-t .

of January in the current year. 'The story of
some of the obstacles it has bumped up against,
of how it has overcome these obstacles andwhat
it has accomplished\.make interesting reading.
Not only is it interesting to farmers because
the'institution' is owned by farmers and man-
aged by men of their choosing, but because, of
far greater importance still, the institution pro-
mises to become the greatest single factor in the

UPBUILDlNG of the Michigan live stock industry.

_ A Business 'of Magnitude

During the‘ four'mOnths of January, "February,
March and April the Detroit Packing Company
slaughtered 1,659 head of cattle for which it paid

World Wheat Stocks

HE present moment the situation indicates,
says the Foodstuffs Divisiou of the Depart-
ment of Commerce, that world wheat stocks will
be lower than for several years by July 1, 1922,
as both Argentina and Australia have consider-
ably less than last year, the United, States carry-

‘ l

r

Section of Cooling‘RoomL’Detroit Packing Company

farmers $86,558.05; 1,543 head of calves. value,

$125,691.91; 2,102 sheep and lambs, value, $19,-
901.05; 17,087 hogs, value, $352,837.44, repre-
senting a total value of nearly three-quarter mil—
lion dollars.

Nor was this the extent by any means, of the
amount of business done by this concern during
that period. Each month thousands of dollars
worth of dressed carcasses and uncured meats
I are purchased and cut up and cured for the Michi-
gan trade. The Packing Company ﬁnds the de-
mand for hams vary greatly in excess of the de-
mands for other portions of the hog and conse-
quently prefers to make a- margin of proﬁt on
buying and curing fresh hams and other cuts than
to slaughter enough, w. for the purpose and
loading up With surplus minor products. The de-
mand for cured meats is in excess of present local
supply from daily cutting of hog carcasses and'to
e‘dualize outsideupurchases of cut meats which are
cured under “Detroit Star” formulas are pur—
chased.

Some savings to Farmers
From the time the‘Detroit Packing Company

announced that it would buy direct from farm-*

ers, certain commission men operating in the
Detroit stockyards have sought to place divers
objections in the path of the company. On one
or two occasions buyers for the Packing Com-

pany ‘were unable to secure any animals at the'

 

Bunch of Mich. Choice Beet Just Arrived for Slaughter

for July Promise to Be

over'will be light and only Canada has consid- -

erable stocks on hand. The upward trend of'
European consumption indicates a larger demand
than last year, whereas prospects are for a'small—
er crop. Until next February, [the international.
trade will belargely de’pe'nden‘t for supplies on
the surplus of North America and-alimited quan-

a wheat is)» in a; res

especially wool and cotton. All three commodi~
ties depended very largely in pre-war years on
Europe to absorb the world surplus. During the
war European consumption and' production fell to
around three-quarters normal and resulted in
considerable accumulation of surpluses at the end
of hostilities. It was generally expected in trade
circles. that the surplus would be quickly ab-
sorbed by Europe, but the reduced buyingpower
and the lower standard of living forced by war
conditions were not fully considered. As a re-
sult, the enormous surplus of wool brought a

, , . - Perpendicular. price 'drOp pin the dpring of 1920,.
tity from India. I? With Russia entirely. out of the;

followedfsoon by cotton, and in July, 1920, by

wheat}... The recovery * of wool _has been very -
" :T’grad “If:  ‘td'continued production. but is -

"n9#r‘sormal-.w * ,
' '   "'s""'onsidered during the

m...niip ‘rta a.

 
  

1' Stock at Gfeater Proﬁt t0" Producers

 
 
 

Lower than for Years 

' 1921, with apparently a strong tendency to re

There would, no , pro-war" normal. .

   

  
  

 
   

yards exceptate prem—

ium over the' market- On!

one occasion the cdmpany 
I

   

  
 
 

had to wire to Toledo
for several carloads of'
hogs to meet its orders al— ;
though there were plenty}
of hogs for sale at the‘
Detroit yards on that"
day. However, the com?
pany is not out to injure
or destroy the livestock
commission ﬁrms butfde- ‘
sires to work with them,~

as long as they show any

disposition to co-operate.

But the company ofﬁcials

positively declare that

they will not abandon

their policy of dealing

direct with farmers de—

spite the opposition of the

commission dealers.

In January 56 per cent
of the company’s live ‘
stock purchases were ,
made in the Detroit
stockyards and 44 per
cent direct from farmers. f
In February 70 per cent
were from the yards and.
30 per cent from the‘
farmers. But in March'
only 8 per cent were from the yards and 92'
per cent were from the farmers, while in April
yard purchases amounted to only 5 per cent and
the balance of the nearly 4,000 head of live stock
were received direct from the farmers.

All farmers who sold direct to the company;
were saved yardage commissions, etc., which ag-
gregated from $20 to $30 a car. The company
always pays full yard prices on stuff received di-;
rect from farmers with no offset except freight."

      
     
     
      
       
      
     
     
       
       
     
      
  
    
      
    
      
     
    
     
      
       
       
         
    

   
  
 
  
    
   
   
    
  
   
   
  
 
   
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
    
  
   
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
   
    
   
    
   
    

Big Field for Packing Business

Large as is the volume of business now being
.done by the Detroit Packing Company it is only
a drop in the bucket to what it can do and will ’
do as conditions permit the expansion of the
business. Nearly all of the products now being
manufactured in the plant ﬁnd a :ready sale in
Detroit in competition with the older established
packing concerns, but we are told there is a'
market in that city alone for several times the'
amount of products which the Detroit packers are
now turning out. ‘

As time goes on the company will require an '
ever increasing amount of raw material for its
plants. The ofﬁcers of the company are anxious
to form a [friendly and mutually beneﬁcial con-
tact with the live stock producers and believe
that Detroit can be made an important live stock'
center which in time will rank with many of 'the
other well—known packing centers of the country.
The concern is rapidly building a reputation for
itself as packers of ﬁne meats, its Star brand
bacon and cottage hams being in particular favor
and demand, owing to the ,delicate and appetiz-
ing ﬂavor imparted by special curing processes.

W.ith the continued conservative management
and conﬁdence of the farmer-stock-holders we _
know of no reason why the Detroit Packing Coma 
pany should not become the outlet in time for the
major portion of Michigan live stock, and by so
doing, lend an impetus to this industry which Wi'?’
make it one of the greatest in the state. ' '1

doubt, have been a serious world shortage during...
the war had it not been for three successive large 
crops from 1913 to 1915, creating a large reserva'
which helped to carry over the large drop in EurI
ropean production in [the two following year's“-
World production and consumption have been hot»
low average for the past .ﬁve years. 
It is probable that during the war‘ period the
world outside of Europe consumed nearly normal
quantities of wheat, but the apparent consum
tion of central and western Europe. fell Inc
about 2,000,000,000 bushels in 1913' to 1,20,
000,000 bushels in 1917. This was due to-afd
crease in both production and imports.
’1917 there has been a steady recovery'in
duction and in imports, the apparent con
tion reaching a2bouit 1,850,000,000 bus

 

    
  
 
    
  

  

     
        

  

        
   
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 

  

   
    

   
  
 

     
 


    
   
  
    


i,
l
5

i
i
g-
i
s
'l
‘l

2;
:.

 
  
  
   
    
  
  
   
  

‘ “ Fm  ’ 351’!)qu "
To!“ How to Cut Out Waste;
_ Gives vnubl. Building Hints .
.2 no you West‘s the manure groomed _
by c :o M in twelve months combs
r.‘ sin’g elements valued at 839'? '
you know that one-third. or Cl: of)“.
amount is lost in the course of.-

  
   
 

  

  

    
 
 
 
 
  

   
  

 the born, this loss
- csnbeprevented.
WriteforthlsFr-ss
“Concrete
 on the Dairy
u Fern" end see

    
 
    
  

    

   
 

  

, ssving Instru-
‘ tions it gives
on the use 0!
concretein moh-
ing rmsnont im-
provements. operly housed
dairy cattle return greatest proﬁt
as the investment. This free book is rec-
ognised nessimpiegnidetolooiﬁ eﬁoiency
end economyin building on thedsiry form.
Fully illustrated with diagrams slid pie-
tures. Shows how to build barns, milk-
housee, silos. icehouses, cooling tanks,
paved bnmysrds. manure pits.wster sup-
ply systems. etc. «

PORTLAND CEMENT
ASSOCIATION
Dime Bank Building
DETROIT, MICH.

A manual V Um” Improve

 
  
 
 
  
 

 
 
 

        
   
        
       
   
     
     
   

 

         

 

\

/ ////
’ Buildil§°¥ﬁ¥  ‘

FOR SILOS, HOUSES, BARNS AND
ALL PERMANENT BUILDINGS
Those patented corner braces (exclusive
HOOSIER features) nuke this tile the
strongest, most efficient block on the mer-
kst. _Exoells all others in loud-baring

      
   

capacity HOOSIER TILE are standard
iwmll dint-joint, fire-chy xi and
blocks . Prices reduced to pre-wsr

level. Put your farm on 's PERMANENT
basis with HOOSIER TILE dwellings,
poultry houses, hog barns. silos, etc. They
solve the upkeep problem. Write for lit—
e d prices. Pittman Yumished
free. Tell us type of buildhu you need.
Get our special agent's p on.
HOOSIER SILO GOMPANV

. MB_50 Albany, Ind.

HOOSIER
SILO AND
BARN
Proof against
fire, fros
mm s
vermin. Save
their cost
nnnuslb in
better hous-
ins and feed-
Ing condi-
~ , trons. Buy
__ :5 J NOW s n d

 

(men from actual photog: '1: mane"

(lured Her

Rheumatism

Knowing from terrible experience the suffering
osusel by rheumatism, Mrs. J. E. Hurst, who
lives st 508 E. Olive St, B—363. Bbomlngton,
III. is so thankful st having cured herse‘f that
out or pure gratitude she is anxious to tell all
other suffers just how to g‘et rid of their torture
by e simple wsy at home.

In. Hurst has nothing to sell. Merely out
outthismtice,msiliftoherwithyourownnsms
and addrcu. and she will gladly send you this
grumble information entirely free. Write her st
once before you forget.

2 95%
H

 

 

 

Upward CREAM

SEPARATOR :

On trial. Essyrunning,essilycleaned.
Skims warm or cold milk. Different :
from picture which shows larger cs- _~
138th machines. Get our plan of easy
MONTH LY PAYMENTS ,
and handsome free catalog. Whether “
dairy is large or small. write today.

AMER N SEPARATOB 00.
Box 10 Bel-Image. N. Y.

 
    
  
 
  
  

 

__,

' Take Your » Automobile Along—Auto-
mobile rates reduced from 15 per cent.
to 25 per cent. on D. . & C. Steamers
leaving Detroit daily 5:30 p. m., for
Buffalo; 11 p. m.‘ for Cleveland. on East-
ern time.Adv.- '

WANT TO SELL 3/
LIVE STOCK?

IT

     

“0'

 
   
  

B F‘ WILL. ‘iears. 5113‘ the'véﬁb

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

is maul ,

, « SON MISSING .

,I‘ would like to ﬁnd my son who
was in the detention hospital ‘in_
Grand Rapids, Mich., two years ago
last December, and have not heard
from him since. His name is Adel-
bert Hurd, height about 5 foot 7"
inches, light complexion, blue eyes,

‘ dark hair and a little near sighted.

Had a wife and little boy. He’wss
sent to Grand Rapids from the hos-
pital in Caro—Mrs. C. J. L, One.-
way, Mich. '

 

FARMING 0N SHARES

When a. man is farming on the once
third basis on a dairy term does he have
to furnish all of the help or part of it?
Is he entitled to a. third of the corn and
grain (the corn goes in the silo and it
takes all the grain to feed the cows)?
Would like to have some information in
regard to this question and. also on the
wages to be paid for farm help. They say
wages are $30 for a. single man and 840
for a married man. Is that for the sum-

' mer months or the year around? What

is a. married man entitled to besides
house and fuel? You will oblige me ‘by
answering these questions—R. 8.,
cheater. Midi.

The renter furnishes the labor,
team and tools and the owner half
of the live stock other than horses.
The landlord furnishes the land and
buildings and one-half of live stock
and in case the tenant cannot pay
for one half the live stock the land—
lord takes a note.» Possibly in your
case the landlord is furnishing
everything and giving the tenant one
third. The tenant paying the labor-
This is undoubtedly not an unfair
contract. ‘

Last year (1921) the average
wage for hired men in the United
States was $43.32 a month. without
board and with board it was $30.14
a month. Michigan wages ran
$50.50 and $34.30 last year. These
are average year around wages. Of
course wages vary up and down from
this point according' to the ability
and trustworthiness of the man.
Married men usually get house,
g’arden Spot, and some milk and fuel
if there is fuel on the farm.———How-
ard M. Eliot, Professor of Farm
Management, M. A. O.

NO STATE OFFICIALS IM-
PEACHED

Our class would like to know whether
or not any of our state ofﬁcers have
been impeached, and if so’ whatior, and
whom?——C. L. G., Holton, Mich. I

The state records do not disclose

that any ofﬁcial of this state has

 

  

'srtment for fsmsrs’ every my
“Jug: ,epsrtment. We are here to serve you. A

‘ beneﬁcial.——-C. R. Mcgee,

ever been impeached. Impeachment ‘

proceedings were brought against a
state ofﬁcial by the name of Ed—
wards a. great many years ago, but
the Senate yote was almost unani-
mously against impeachment.

The Commissinner of State Lgnd
Ofﬁce, the Secretary of State and
the State Treasurer were at one time
removed from ofﬁce after trial be-
fore the governor. In these cases
impeachment proceedings were dis—
cussed, but the legislature was not
in session, and the removal was
brought about in another way.—
Charles J. Deland, Secretary of State.

.

MEASURING oORN IN CRIB

Would you please tell me how to meas-
ure com in crib? Also grain?—~B. V..
South Branch, Mich.

The following rules from H. L.

Steiner’s book on “Farm Accounts”
regarding measuring corn in crib are
accepted as reliable:

On Cob—Two heaping bushels of

corn on thecob will make one struck '

bushel of shelled corn. Some claim
that one and one—half bushels of car
will make one bushel of shelled corn.
Much will depend upon the kind of
corn,- shape of the ear. size of the
cob, etc.

In crib—To measure corn in a
crib, multiply the length of the crib
in inches by the width. in inches, and
that by the height of the coin in the
crib" in inches. and divide the pro-
duct. by.2,748,‘*and the quotient will
be the‘numbergol‘ heaped bu els or

 
  

 Valli; 091?. the. top and
also. gt the   ‘

  

  

mun-m.  cm. Twmm’un , ,
, smuet be secomnnled by full-

sums together, and divide by 2.
which will give the mean width.
.Corn Shrinkage—00m will shrink
from the time it‘ is hushed in the
autumn, in well~protected_ cribs,
from 20 to 30 per cent by spring.
That is, 100 bushels will shrink to

_70 'or 80 according .to'ﬂhowvdry it '

was when cribbed.

To Measure 'Grsln in Blns——Mul-
tiply the'length of the .131an inches
by the width in inches, and that by
the height in inches and divide by
2,150 ' for struck bushels, and by,
2,748 for heaped bushels.‘The quo-
tient will be the number of bushels
Contained in the bin. - ' '

To ﬁnd the amount of grain in a
bin take four-ﬁfths of the number
of cubic feet—J. F. Cox, Professor
"of'Farm Crops, M. A. C.

 

s

comnurrn Pnonuors AND
SUPPLY COMPANY.

Will you Please inform 'me through
ur paper 1 the stock of the Concrete
gorilla! 00., of River Rouge, Mich, was
approved by Michigan Securities Commis-
$31-01? non—A Subscriber. Oakland.

The Concrete Products & Supply
Company of 42 Victoria St., River
Rouge, Mich., was approved by this
commission on July 10th, 1920, and
permission given. for the sale ,of
$30,190.00 of its unissued common
stock. _ . ~-

This company was incorporated
under the laws of the State of Michi-
gan on May 15, 1915, with an au-
thorized capital of $50,000, $19,810
of which was issued and outstanding
at the time application was ﬁled
with this commission—Michigan Se-
curities Commission.

\

CROP ON LIGHT LAND

Please tell me what can be grown ‘on
land that blows for pasture?——W. A. B.,
Morenci, Mich. '

.Sheeps fescue and Max-ram grass
are varieties well adapted to light»
soils that tend to blow. Orchard
grants and rye grass are sometimes
used and the seed is somewhat cheap-

er. In securing a catch on that.-

type of‘soil it is quite important that
a top dressing of strawy manure be
used, also a fertilizer containing
phosphorous and potash will prove
Associate
in Farm Crops. M. A. C. '

VOTE REQUIRE!) non INCOR-
PORATION on man

We have taken your paper ever since
the ﬁrst issue and write for a little in:

. tonnation on the incorporation of a. small

ores‘st' th sides. ‘7

village or country town. The population
of which is less than 500 inhabitants. Can
a. village of this size be incorporated with-
out_the vote of the people?—-A. 11., Mid—
dleton. Mich. -

A vote of the people is required
in all cases where certain territory
is proposed to be incorporated as a
village—Charles J. DeLand, Secre-
tary of State.

COLLECTION BOX

,-

'l'ho Purpose of this Moment In to pro-
tect our tuba-ﬁbers from fraudulent desllnsl
or unfair trestrnent by persons or concerns st
I distance.

In "on one we wlll do our best to msks
I satisfactory settlement or force action. for
which no charge for our services will ever
mm. proud! : ‘

1pm oi ls msds by s psidoup sub-
scriber to The Business Farmer. ~ ‘

2.—Ths claim I: not more then 0 mos. old.
aa—Tbs I: not lose! or between pen-
of one another.

 

 

 

attempted by mll.‘

Address ,sll letters, giving full peniwlan,
smountr. dates, sun. enclosing else your ed-
drses label from the front cover of any Issue
to prove that you are e paid-up ubscrlber.
THE BUSINESI FARIER. Collection Box

. Mt. Clemens. .
Endins June 5. 1922

 

 

 

A typographical error unpaired in i
3 \ the ,Qolloctlon Box last‘ issue, ,

~ sLarsensimultane-reée”~ be

 

    

Total mimber claims "I . . . . . . . . . .892
ﬁndmﬂgvelguﬁ .  . ... . . . 318411651:
umber a tied . . . . . . . . . . I.
Amount secured . . . . . . . . . . 310,082.64 {
.l’ .

. Tiler» *
EmOunt. secured": Fw'sss gives.“ ‘

y' ‘  LOGS AND TOPS

I recently bought an‘elghtysacre farm
. forty acres of"  was lumbe’red om
aJear ssothia» winter. The no men-
tion was nucleic-t .the time of the sale.
t2?” rogue: owner".i declare“: that he still
o,s co untops tarestillin
the woods. i; that is true ,how long may
he continue to enter my woods, and may
he cut any . standing timber  order to

remove the same?

The tonnes- owner had sol‘dthe stand-I.
lug thither, and all the good logs have
been removed. by the company who pur- .

in Are the remaining logs and

' tops still his personal property. and may”

be open any fence on my farm to re~

movie the samel—L. 8., Msndelona, Mich”

‘ The [right to the'abandoned logs
and tops is probably dependent upon
the original contract of the owner of

the land with the person who bought.

the timber. If ’a. speciﬁc time was
provided in the contract in which to
get all what he bought then the rest

would revert to the land . and such .

person who bought the timber would
thereafter have no right to enter the
land for the purpose of removal.

If the contract of purchase of the

O’timber had expired before the sale

to the present owner it would be

largely controlled by the intent-of ,

the seller‘- at the time of the sale of
the land. Afterthe sale of the land
«he would have a reasonable time to
remove the logs and tops and if he
does not remove them within a rea-
sonable time he would be presumed
to have abandoned thermto the pur-
chaser. ,If. he has gone beyond what
the average man would say was a
reasonable time to remove them I
would tobid his entering on the land.

If in an honest construction of the
time he has had to remove it would
seem reasonable to say that he has
not had a fair time to remove them
then I think he would have a right
to remove the logs and tops. He
would not have a right to cut any
timber whatever in, removing them
and would be liable‘for damage on
all he cuts or injures. He is bound
to get it out withoutiniury to the
balance. He would have no right to
enter the land except at such a place
as was provided for entering the
woods, if any, and if none provided,
he must enter-at such place as will
do the owner no. damage or he would
be liable—Legal Editor.

 

TAXES 0N GRANGE AND CLEAN-
« ER HALLS
Will you kindly inform us as to wheth-
:; gangs. anddGleﬁr‘rgr tgulls are subject
. . on un P 9——
R.. Kalkaska. Mgi‘ch. a te law. D. P.
Grange and Gleaner societies must
pay taxes on their halls the same
as on other kinds of real property.

———Editor.

 

CLOSIle HIGHWAY w
Can 9. contractor, a board of road

. commissioners or in fact any oﬂicial con;

nected with township county or any pub-
lic board close a. public road/for a period
of four or more weeks without providing
a detour or a. temporary road 16:- the
farmers whose only out or inlet is the
road under construction7—1A. B., Sagi-
naw. Mich.

Act 165' of‘the Acts of ,1917 See.
2 provides that no roads shall be
closed until a. suitable detour around
some or that portion which is closed
is provided and. placed in -a reason-
ably safc and passable condition for
traﬂlc. Notices shall also be posted
at either end of the “closed highway
or portion of» the same—State High-
way Department, Lansing. '

 

ASSESSMENTS AND} EXEMPTIONS

it a. taxpayer has. person’al property
to be taxed besides his real estate and
has‘notes standing against him, can he
have the.a.mount of said notes he owes
deducted from his personal tax? I l
. If the state assessor places a valuation

- On your realestate at a. higher 

than other adjoining property how' can

you proceed to get your valuation low-

ered? Our supervisor says that sin the

first of" last August he or the t' ship

board of review has no power to  ,»

the yaluation of real estate.

    
 
   
 
   

property. d be case" need ?‘-At

  
 

“expire f—«J
;, Under.

    

Is there an __ set 'thne when personal _
ime doesatlﬁg‘quor- ., in 
, ‘ s... glmlgﬁfch‘s  PM, 7 ‘

    
   
  
  
  
      
     
 
 

        
      
  

   

    
      
 
 
   

 
    
    
  
 

  
   
  
 
  
   


 

 

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Chart of Recommendations
Motor 0" Tagger“ Metal; 01!
a“? v1 6366;122:2213:
'dwiic ............. ..  H.
.1 “.1853, 12-35 1 .11.
Minneapolis, “and 86-70.E. H.
M iiiii'JIIIIIIIIIIIIZZIHZ
Monarch-Invitith ....... ..H
Nikon Juniortﬂniot ..... ..H.
Ohio ..................... ..H.
Oil Gas, 20-42. ......... ..:.E.H
OilGu. 25-50... .......... ..E.H.
Patrott ................... ..H.

. DmﬁiiéiIIIIIIIIIICIIIIIIHI
,PnirioDog. lO-lsondlﬁ-SOJI. .
Quadan ........ ..; ...... ..H.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AllModols ....... ..E. H.
WWSandlﬁ-ﬂ ...... ..H.
M2240... ............  H.
(ham-40 ............... ..E. H.
M9-16ond12-20.......E.
Ooh-mu .................. ..E. H.
mm.............n.
M I O I O O I O O O IIOOIOCOIOOQH.
MBhio“J".... ......... ..H.

.......... 
‘ ........... ..M.H.
ll-ﬂmd 16-30 ..... ..E.K.
I-lGond 12-20 ....... 
JunomQI'QIIIILIIIIIIi-r IL.
‘hquhar,15-25..............H.
‘r hr.18-353nd25-50....IH£
i'hw Citi'iéiii'o'rl ' ms. "" ".22 I In.
woman-so  H.
Pox. ........  ........... -.E. H.
ParWheolDtivom.....F-. H.
s o o o a u ooo.~ooo~,o-Eo no
Trick. l5-28.................H.
MMIIUDICO...“...COOE
Gniant. ...... .......... E
ami'v'v‘eiia.'.'.'.°.IiffIIIIIIn.
Ham—All .... ...E.H.
Bolder—Model "C" ....... ...H.
mes—quuﬂ'ﬁh ..... Wu.
Batman'm (5 Toii)’.'..2"

ﬁ ' (10 Ton)..... -H.
Holt (hid-pillar (l5 Ton)..'...E. H.
Wit Super Four"

Illumﬁupeanve.’ 18-305nd
22-40 ................... ..E.H.
W510 .........  *
International. 8-16 ......... ..H.
International. 15-30 ........ ..H.
J. T .................... ....E.H.
Kookan .......... ..E.H.
A  ........... ..
12-25md 15-30 . H.
u 12-18153 ibis: .... ..E.H.
. . . . . ..'.........E.H.
“1!mean H.
................. ..E.H.
use. in n.
mucus. 12-25.. .. H.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

:n.

' guesses

o . . . o . . o . u . s . . - n - c o . . n.

. a o 4 o a o o n c . o n o o s n o u c . s

o o a n . s s u u n a . . n . n . ..

 

 

o a a a u c u c a c u o o o e o o .-

 

 

 

 

 

- u n o a e a o a o o u u c . o u u o o-

: 'a 09mm: . . .
" eguipped to make lubricating 011S and Er
_ 0 I

 

 

 

    Avenue

\
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.;‘§§§§s v

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Behaving I

 

to SuitYou}

' HEN your horse gets an om’ry streak you

. know just how to handle him because you’ve

had years of experience with horses. But how

about your tractor? You see, a tractor’s a human sort

of thing. It has cranky spells whenever it feels it isn’t

being treated just right. And a lot of this mis-treat-
ment comes from wrong lubrication.

Oolarine

THE PERFECT MOTOR OH.

Use

 

Made in Four Grades

Seals Pistons Against Loss of Power

Did you ever stop to think of the great_ number of parts
to be lubricated; parts which can and Will go wrong With

. improper lubrication?

You don’t have to use guess-work in ﬁnding out which lubri-
cants will keep your tractor in good humor. The chart to the
left tells you what grade of Polarine to use to obtain the full
power the tractor was designed to deliver, to reduce your
repairbillstoa ’minimum, to give long hfe to your tractor,
and to effect the greatest savmg in fuel. _ .
For years the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has maintained
hensive laboratory With a department eSpeCIaily
eases. The chemists
this Company, working with the lubricating engineers, have
rfected a grade of Polarine which gives correct lubrication
gr every make and type of tractor. These men know Just
why it is best for-you to use Polarine, The Perfect Motor Oil.

. Staindard ,Oil Company
1 (MW) h” ' CHICAGO

   
   
    
     
  

 

  


  

  
  
 

 
  

package
of this
really

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V... .. .. v -. <.~<<«~ * a "
«‘1. .l..~.~<. mama» '4‘ 5 m I _ .

Also

 

The choicest teas and

2:21. reasoned why 'dgways Tea so satisﬁes the

    

the’most skilful blending are

  
  

makes you ask for more.
sold in I 15., V, 16. and V416. TINS

 
    
 

 

 

 

coin MEDAL Sunﬁam‘ls‘l'o 2

“The First Thing You Think Of”

       
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
     
 

'1
GM so PRIZE San Diego 1916

  
  

915

   
 
 

 

       
  
   

Standard Four
Cords. 10.000 mil

    
  

est. You cannot

 Standard Tires

Buy direct {nun us, nottehhwell the nvinz.
b
(lard tires are all xﬁrsts. new fruhstock. We do not handl

LEADER rm: co. nm It. 1800 Honnopln Av... mane-pom. Ilnn.

Fabric ;
7,500 Miles
Prices absolutely the very low-
ﬂrst grade of tires less anywhere.

.. smmn summit

Oversize Bea vy Hen Oversize . Heavy
00rd. ‘lises Non-Ski Cord; Tuba
81.35 34x4 313. 5 322.4 31.90

‘ 1.30 3214 ’ 17.95 25.96 2.10

3 11.95 1.85 83x4 18.46 26.45 2.15
15.95 1.40 3414 18.95 26.96 2.20
1.75 35x4 19.45 27.95 2.25

20.95 1.80 8624 19.95 28.85 2.30
21.95 1.85 8515 22.45 83.95 2.75

on- approvai——Sond r money.

 

 

  
  

     
 
   
  
    

IBERTY

~\' 0-. ll. '0- Marc 8000.8“.

  
 
   

Ink ‘- "our WM It.

GRAi'ﬁ" 'iiLownn  ' ' "

 gnaw-lunmos':
W“Mﬂ..‘2.muiu.m my,“

 

 
 
 
 
   
   
  
   

  

outta. etc.
 'l'llE BIN. J'ElcE .8:
W  Dept.

 
 

 
 
 

A4 278. Cleveland. Ohio
,.- M an-» —~-_.r—.

  
   
 

WIRE G...

 
  
 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 
  
 

 

4 FARMER
of Service’ ’

ABOUTII.

 

 

MICHIGAN BUSINESS
“The Farm Paper

TELL YOUR'FRIENDS '.. '

 

 
 
   
   
       
   
  
  
    

 

  
 
  
 
   

  
   
  

 

 

\

 

," (REAL-'ESTATE  ,
' RECEIVED a tew Copies ointhe'
Business Farmer and enjoyed
every one.of them._ Some time.
ago I read-an article on .“the kind
of advertising we don’t accept.“ It
was in regard to realestate grafters
who want to get $5 or 31'! from
farmers for listing their farms, etc.
No doubt many northern Michi-
,gan farmers have ,been‘ hit K with
these ads. and-I wish those men
could be put out of business. But
I will say this is nothing compared
to what has been going on here in

at least. \ Some real estate meii‘ here
will not take a certain per cent as
they do in the southern part of the
state for selling a farm, which is
from 2 ‘to 6 per cent. Nothing
unless they sell it. Here they
ask you to state the very lowest
price you will take. If you are real
hard up and anxious to sell you will
sell cheap. The real estate man
ﬁnds somexinnocent man with mOney
"in Indiana, Chicago or somewhere
who knows nothing about the good'
and bad land, the land which treats
out of season and the land which
does not. There is good land for
sale here. It «idea not frost and is
ﬁne for fruit and many other crops.
But the stranger does not know.

There were few'good farms sold
as the real estate man could get
the poor land for almost nothing,
which he sold for a big price.

One case I know of the real estate '
men put $1,000 on the owner’s price
as their commission. Another case
$300 was the farmers price for a
small piece of land. The buyer paid
$900.'The real estate men took $600
as their commission. The land. was
misrepresented and the buyer has
long since abandoned the place after
making many improvements. Many
similar incidents have” occured in
this vicinity. Can we put a stop" to
this?——A Reader, Benzie County.

There are grafte‘rs, we suppose, in the
real estate business as in all other kinds
of business, but so long as they do not
evade the law it is pretty hard to exposa
and punish them. Agents who misrepre-
sent property in order to make a sale are
laying themselves open to a civil action.

Any person Who buys a farm or any other
piece of property Without a personal in-

 

 
 
 

spection of the property has nobobdy but
himself to blame if he gets stung. But
that is no excuse tor permitting the graft~
ers to stay in business. The Bureau of
Agricultural Development at Lansing is
laying for the dishonest land company
and real estate agent and expects some
ggzgt to put them both out of business— ~
or.

 

MODERN DRESS _

AM’ an interested reader of your
paper and from time to time
have felt inclined to voice my
humble opiniontof some of the sub-
jects under discussion. Rhoda's. ar-
ticle settled it. ’I, too, am‘a woman,
and I cannot let her view be adopted
by our young men and young girls
(not to mention the older ones)
without protest. ,.
She chooses to style herself
“Rhoda.” would not Salome suit her
better? She says it matters little
how women dress. Now the fact of
the matter is, it does matter a great
deal, if we wish to retain our self-
respect and merit respect from oth-
ers. We canvall dress,neatly,-com-
tortably and at the same time mod-
estly if ‘we will.

I agree with the man from Ing-
ham county, would like to shake
hands with him. Rhoda recommends
Bible reading for him, so he will be
less interested in whatis going on
about him, in that she makes anoth-
er mistake for the more we study
the 'scripture the more hideous and
glaring present-day evils become, it
she Will do like wise she 'will never
again say that .God made the “ﬂap-
per.” .

Have 'we not “wrapped the mantlex
of charity” until some are willing
to appear before the public eye. at--
tired in very little more: it" is high

, time the decent. folks began to “cry

aloud and spare not}! arewe will-l I
ing‘ to bare our-growing sons and “I ;

daughters. caught ‘ in “this ‘ 

 

  
 

and

 

  
 

Benzie county for the past '10 years: ,

, of marketing conditions.

.gstsn aerate «he s M Y
, ﬁghtingforliberty of cons’cience,' 

tome she is‘ using;iliberti '
Surely anyone '

Witholit. conscience.
)With a"‘fconsclence void of chance
.toward' God and man,” the only
kind we are» justified in owning,
would not have ‘expressed‘such ideas.
And you, Mr. Editor, call her pen
clever and her wit matchless 'Then
it is the cleverness oi Satan and
doubtless he can match her wit. ‘

This is not written for argument,
but to help stem the tide of immor-
ality that is sweeping thru our land.

Yours for a higher standard of mor-
als.—A. .W.; Williamsburg, ‘Mich.

The more we discuss this subject of
dress the more bewildered “mere man"
becomes. t is an “immoral” dress?
Is a bathing suit immoral? Does the
garb of a circus rider suggest immorali-
ty? Does'the picture of a sleeping wo-
man, with bare arms exposed arouse
wicked thoughts in the minds of the be-
holders? Define the term, “immoral” as
applied to woman’s dress and we may
then discuss the subject with some degree
of intelligence. M regard for woman-
.kind in general lea s me to denounce the
allegation that all women who wear short
skirts, low—necked gems and other com-
fortable forms of dress are leading man
to his moral destruction—Editor.

 

WATER. OUT, ROADS WILL PAY,
SAYS FORD; PROVES IT
OR an amateur, which propa—
gandists say he is, Henry Ford
doesn’t do half bad as a rail-
road operator for the public, his em:
ployes and for himself. A
What he has done for the public
and workers is generally known. For
the farmer he has given improved
service at reduced rates. For the lat-
ter he has given improved labor con-
ditions at increased wages. For him-
self he is having a lot or fun with
the old railroad outﬁt and is making
it pay handsomely.

The ﬁnancial statement for the
ﬁrst years operation shows that Ford
has made a proﬁt of 12 per cent on
the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton bonds.
0n the preferred stock hehas had a
return of 80 percent on his invest;
ment. 0n the common stock, which
he purchased just a year ago his re»
turn. is 200 per cent. That seems to
be the answer to the criticism to,
which the railroad operator—manu-
facturer is now being subjected.

"I am not a miracle worker,” says
Ford. "I simply paid for the railroad.
I own what it was worth and no
more.” When the water is squeezed
out of the other railroads they also
will make big returns without ruin-
ing the public or starving their
Workersa—Copied from Labor by S.
H. Slagle, Harietta. Mich.

We suppose our readers have noted that
the Interstate Commerce Commission has
ﬁnally given Henry Ford permission to
reduce freight rates on his railroad. many
months after he a. plied. All'sorts of ex-
cuses are offered ,y other rail heads for
Ford's success with the D. T. & 1., but
none of them seem to fit the case. Labor
has probably suggested the reason. With

the water out the roads can pay reason-
able dividends.—Edltor. ‘

A DIFFERENT FARM PAPER
NQLOSEDﬂnd $1 to apply on my
subscription to the Business
Farmer. You are to be com-
mended for your just and— fearless
stand on all questions in which the '
farmer is concerned.

It is one thing to print the ex-
periences and various methods of
raising and increasing crop produc-
tion by the farmers in general but it
is quite another thing to dispose of
the same advantageously to the pro-
ducer. *Right here is where the Busi-
ness Farmer differs, in that it is con-
stantly ﬁghting tor the betterment

 

I am greatly interested in Mr.

‘Ferris’ radio articles and hope tobe'

able to' own eventually a receiving“
set of my own. . \ ,
Iwould like to add that the serial,

“Nomads ofthe V'Nort'h”. was well  '

worth theprice at t ell.  ~84 Q.
-:—.—V.  ‘ leis ~ '-

 
 
 

 

  
 
 



Wiil not ' more wives and mothers -
express themselveson this ‘subjecti‘w

   
     
           
       

   
        
       
  
   
     
 

   

 


  
  
  
  
  
     

  

‘   you would
infect tor-"publishing ,an Ontario

  
 
 
 

  

 - Lnr'eselutienlor'. not, yet, I feel like
2 ~encgprag'ing LrZ. 8., of Shiawassee.
‘ The (trot-his I copied his article and
the London Advertiser published it
and I also sent it to the. Farmer’s
Sun. I , .

I have been delegated" to attend
a convention of the Ontario Trustees’
and, Ratepayers' Ass’n, at Toronto
.and , am antique to secure all' the
..inforrnation I can on consolidated
schools in Michigan. I am enclosing
copy of resolution which was passed
. in- Garado'c township, Middlesex

county: .. _ _. ‘

“Reselved-; that we are opposed to the
gressure that is being brought to -bear
y the, Ontario Trustees’ and Ratepayers’
Assn for the general consolidation of
‘ rural schools as we consider the above‘
organization is not representative or the
rural ’viewpoint. Furthermore, We are
opposed to the generous grants that are
given to encourage consolidation, also to

~ the centralization of control and the abo—
lition of the present democratic system of

three trustees to ‘a section, as We believe

there can be no one Ore interested in

the —welfare of the children than their
parents.”—-—H. J. 1—1., Longwood, Ontario.

We are always glad to hear from our
i Canadian readers on any subject, and to
learn their views on matters in which we
‘ are mutually interested. Keep us ad—
vised, will you. of developments in the
consolidated school question in your sec-

tion ?—-Editor., - r

' . TAXES AND CONSOLIDATION

CONTAGIOUS disease without a
A remedy is sure a bad state of
affairs.‘ I have been a reader
, ‘ of your paper for a little over a
year and have been somewhat inter-
ested *in the different remedies of-
fered for the existing burden of taxes
tion. Many of us have had painful
experiences with quack doctors. No
one eVer had a disease, however
dangerous, but nearly everyone had
a remedy. So 'it is today with the

tax problem. ,

All over the state of Michigan, in
every town, on every four corners
where there is' a gathering people
are airing their views but getting
nowhere. A hard row" of stumps
sure. I have lived in both Ohio and
Michigan and paid taxes in both

     
      
      
      
    
  
 
 
   
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
    
   
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
   
 
  
  
  
   
  
 
   
  
   
   
   
  
  
 
  
  
   
   
   
  
   
      
    

 

states and have had a chance to ﬁnd :

out something, about both systems

of govern-mentAand have compared..l

the valuations. I ﬁnd the taxes at
present are about one—third lower
in Ohio than in Michigan. One would
“ naturally favor their government.
They have as many if not more costly
roads than in Michigan.
I noticed a short time ago our
board of supervisors were much op-

posed to the commission form oi‘

1 government for counties. No,wonder.
They would sure miss a great many
good times and a few turkey feasts.
The supervisors a few years ago did
their work in about onedourth the
time that it takes them now. A
great many people in the south part
of the state 'don’t see any need of
this hseless throng oi dog-trotters
traveling over diiierent townships
every spring mixing up valuations.

Another needless expense lathe
way taxes are collected. In this part
of the state we believe the collec—
tion of taxes for all purposes should

halt July 1st, payable at county soat.’

There is certainly a cause for this

, excessive high tax. Remove the
.cause and we will have the desired
effect. I can .hear someone say this

ments at all. I don't expect to pay
‘  ’ the same taxes today as I did 15 or
16 years ago. 7
times the amount on the same. Dro-
perty that, I did 1-6 years ago. _

I am very‘much in‘sympathy with
Mr. E. F. G., oi Avoca, Mick, con;
cerning consolidated. schools, the

 

   
 

‘ still our legislature ' says [that school

 
 
  
 

4 Normal school or
' ' '  g-AMlher-aycase

 
   

  

   

.‘W

alloys the state can

   

 
 

we farmers ~b

I be .put ‘on'; a; paying basis by dis-

posing vot all unnecessary oﬂlcers.

,Whil'e everything has been- up in the

air and tarmere’waluations at pres-

~ out are abovepcash value and his, pro‘

fits. cut in half, salaries ot'state ot-
ﬁce'rs"‘ have stayed right up. Take,
for instance, our circuit judges. Cut
their salaries from $6,000 to $2,500,
and others in. proportion.

No one seems inclined to -sacri-
ﬂce anything "but rather to study up
some scheme—to sustain the present
hi‘gh salaries ~and even create more
oﬂices." When an individual. town—
ship; county or state starts down
hill it-s'eems' hard to apply the brakes

' ,' that l   war

  

the funeral march.-,-“Uncle Joe" Can-

' non,”i madam County, “Mich;

Don9t yen think you are unduly pessi-
mistic, "Uncle Joe”? And don't you think
your comparison of things of today with
thirty years ago .is a little unfair? You a
know as well as I that conditions of liv-

'ing are altogether different than when

you were a boy. Men must be better
equipped today than then to grapple with
the problems of life no matter what voca-
tion they may follow. You are enjoying
comforts and leasures which your parents ‘
did not know. Would‘vou swap the con-q
veniences of the twentieth century for the
hard conditions. of life which prevailed
back a hundred years ago. No, you
wouldn't do it. You’d rather pay the price
of modern comforts, yes. even or modern
extravagance,tha.n to return to the “good
old days” when dad farmed with a team.
of. oxen and mother made homeé-spun.
Just as you wouldn’t want to put up

, y; Isis gasped _'
' mire-:2 string for 

.. at .ch, rein. 
m. ., good-c; suggestions, ' but ‘ y ,
11"- by- suggestions that are» no

   
  

 
 

of circuit com-(Judges

 
 

and many-lean years in the practice of

law in order to equip themselves for their ‘

present job. They would all uit be:

cause most anybody with an e ucation_

now-a-days with the exception of the
farmer can get a job at more than $2.500
a year. We believe as firmly as you
tax retrenchment. but we Wouldn’t para-
Iyze the administration of government
111 new sq pmom crow 'spue .mo ares 01
efﬁciency than could possibly be gained
in dollars and cents. None of the things
you have mentioned is the primary cannot
of high taxes and taxes cannot be greatly
lowered by following out your every r004
ommendation. The total tax has not in~
creased out of proportion to the increase
in wealth nor the natural increase in the
cost of government. The real secret of
high taxes on real and personal property
is tats lactk of any Eastraor at1 least a who“.r
ma equa e .ax on n ngibe ro rt
proﬁts—Editor. D De y and

seawereduce the salad-ls. ,,
who have sspenff
thousands oi! dollars. on their education

be made one-halt Jan. 1st and one- '

old logic doesn't believe in improve- .

Last year Ipaid ten .

biggest tool. Drownition yet, and ,

teachers must” so through » the. states
he  aside; 


r—"‘—.

 

 

       
   

 

.A good mechanic can set the COLT generator,

no}:

 

 

~ RE is a cross-section of a farm house show-
ing haw the pipes carrying that wonderful
carbide gas are run to every room from the COLT
Lighting and Cooking plant. .
Even though no provision was made for piping
when the house was built it is a simple matter to
pipe it now for Carbide Gas.

pipe the averagln house and attach the handsome
polished brass ﬁxtures in about three or f our days.

--—without cluttering, upsetting and disturbing
' the whole house.

He works quietly from room to room.

Pipes are usuallyrunbetween thepa'rtitions andun-

     
 

 

F . How Simple to Install
‘ the Marvelous Colt “Gas Well”! .

 

0 o
m. , .
3-~ as -. >-

.. .7
“$23! I ..; '

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Ll Li
r qr;
ll 1.!
 ____.;:..  m
1"; 12:0: \\:\$‘=J
. Ma

 

light ever discovered in your home. The clearest
light to read by— the very easiest on the
eyesight of the whole family.

And instantaneous ﬂame for cooking at the touch
of a ﬁnger. Even, sustained heat for a gas iron.
With a water heater, piping hot water for wash-
ing, shaving and bathing.

And no more lamp-cleaning, ﬁlling, trimming or
carrying—no insufferany hot coal or wood range
in the kitchen during the summer months.

And you’ll have a cooking and lighting system
that is unequalled for simplicity, economy and
little attention. The gas is made automatically
by the generator. No expensive parts needing
continual replacement-a lifelong in-

 

der the ﬂoor—always concealed except

in some caneswhere possibly in a room or PAY IN vesunent.

   the A YE Interesting? You should hear what
. . I ' __ "341,000 farmers say about Carbide

For illuminating the bamand outbuild- NO lighting. Space won’t permit us to telL

inks a shallow trenchis dug from genora- you the wonderftu fascinating story

tor tobam,’piﬁeiaid and covered. After MONEY of carbide lighting and the COLT—so

that, you can have the most brilliant, DOWN just drop us a postcard and get the full

story. ,

 

 

 

softest, whitest and ' most~spreading

»  J. B. COLT COMPANY

,"30 East 4an st, New York

V

 

  
 

p

Oldest and largest manufac-
turers of Carbide Lighting-and-
Caolz‘ing Plants in the World.

8th and Brennan, San Francisco

 

 

resusnsn .1891

 

  
     
       
   
 
  
   
   
     
  
    
 

  
   
  


  

  

 

 
   

  

 

  

 

COSTS
NOTHING
TO TRY

 

 

 

enter the contest.

2. All answers
July 29th.

 

11. In. case of a

(6m nts.

IMAKE SURE OF WINNING. SEND FOR A

Observe These Easy Rules

1. Anyone living outside of Minneapolis and St.
Paul, except employes of The Rural American and
their relatives or former first prize winners, may

All subscriptions must be mailed by
August 15th, 1922.

8. Three Minneapolis business and professional
men, having no connect'on with The Rural Ameri-
can, will act as final judges and they alone will do-
cide the_winners. Participants agree to accept the
decision of these judges as final and conclusive.

All answers will get the same consideration,
whether any subscriptions have been sent in or not.

10. Lists of the prize Winners and correct words
will be published in The Rural American shortly
after the close of the contest.

tied for will be awarded to each of the tieing con-

 

such as barrel, boy, bone, bicycle? If you canﬁnd the others,
or nearly‘all the others, you can win the big $1,000.00 prize.

Come on. folks! Join In the puzzle game. You will find it loads of fun.
Get mother and father and brother and sister around the table ton ght
and see who can find the most. Yes, and grandmother can find some, too.

- to ﬁnd the words.
must be malled’by. midnight,

necessary to send In a single 5

 

How to Win

Here is the plan on which we are r

subscriptions to The Rural Americ
$1,000.00 in cash Instead.
Rural American—an independent we

tie, the full amount of the prize

QUALIFY IT!

 

Address All Communications to K. M. GRANT, Dept. 16, The Rural American, Minneapolis, mi

LARGER, CLEARER PICTURE,'{REE '

can You Find liior 20 Words in This Picture SlartingWiiii ‘B’

the Big Prize

er campaign.., If your answer wins firsltzprize. you will be
given $20.00 in cash, but if you have'e’ent in five l-year

It is our aim to introduce The
every home in the country, and we are willing to pay these

big rewards to those who help us advertise.
age of this big chance ' Send in your answer AND

 

NOT A SUB-
SCRIPTION
CONTEST

 

 

 

No Hidden Words

You don't have to turn the picture upside-down
—all the objects are in plain sight. It will be easy

Make a game of it In your family or in your group of
friends and see who can find the most.

It won't be
ubscription to earn

 

 

3. Write list on one is.de of the paper. Number one of the thirty prizes, but there will be extra
your words consecutively. Write full n’ame and ad- large rewards for those
dreasln upper right hand corner. "you wish to who help boost The Rural WI", no wm‘s
Write anything, use a separate sheet of paper American. Subscrlp- subscrip-
4. Words of same spelling can be used only T - “m” "m"
. . . . he answers Will be .
once, even though they designate different oleS. judged and the winners 15: Pnze $20.00 $1000.00
Each object must be named only once.' Chou" by J. A. Taxman, 2nd Prize 10.00 500.00
5. Words shown to be obsolete, archale or hy. ubrarian, Minnesota Stat; . _

, phenated In a New Standard Dictiona'ry, or words Historical society; Dr. A. 3rd Prize 5'00 300'00
formed of two or more words. each of which 'ls in c_ wankers, Mp” Faculty 4th Prize 5_00 200.00
itself an object, cannot be used, nor can the singu. University of MInnesota .
lsr be counted when the plural is used or vice versa, and “Mr. w. w. Bram”. 5th Prize 5.00 100.00

6. The answer having the nearest correct list of Professor of Engligh' west 6th Prize 3.00 75.00
names 01 visible objects shown in‘the picture that High School, These gen. 7th Prize 300 50.00
begin With the letter "8" WI” win first prize, etc. Heme" were chosen to 8th Prize 3 00 40 00

7 More than one member of a family may act a. Judges because of 9th? . 200 25'00
compete, but only one prize will be given In any their we” known repuga. nze ' '
one household or group where two or more have tion for fairness and in. 10th to ) i
bu" workmll together. tegrity in their community 30th I 1.00 10.00

 
 

 

unnlng this big boost-

an, you will receive

 

ekly newspaper—logo

Take advant-

  
 
 

   
  
 

  

    
          
     
     
       
      
        
    
    
   
     
   
     
   
           

    
 
    
  

       
        
     
      
       
  
    
     
 
   
 
     
     
       
 
   
 
         
 
      
  

  
    
    

 

  
  
 
   

customer full protection.

low prices. Brand new-

price on that Guarantee.

ting the sizes and number of tires

7 "W “m” D. Pay after you have examined.

0
roving our tires not
:0 be strictly Firsts

KVVUARANTEE

Our Guarantee and challenge assures every
You can’t afford to
overlook these wonderful (iluality tires at such

8.00
MILE

igh grade—cord;£

guaranteed 8,000 miles and adjusted at l

0
S

  
  
  
  
 
  
  
   
    
   
  
    
  

THESE PINES IIIGLIIDE llEVl PURE 29M 1'“ FREE
0

. I. 8 33 ‘ 11.10 141-2 23.
$2: has:  2%.. an“ as
- . X ‘ s -
31:4 . . . «.10 33141-2 22.00 sue '. .'. so.
32x4 15.95

No money in 'sdvance. Ins!
write today to be pure of get»
you want. All tires shipped

mason TIRE co., Dept. 926 3253. met. CHICAGO

 

W

in

  

here; sold on

' ' ’- E TRIAL
so DAY? yPtbReEou-n their own cost » . I I I
. more by what téxey save. Postsl I) us Free } I , I

one plan what b
0: Folder. u}! frol-

the New Beneﬁt; No. 2
“Wing”; ‘33.: ’

mew 3011mm n... _ . .
whine-arrears...“  ,- . I . Y .

the mu detail};

TO PAYH

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

0 Aerial wire,
'ins‘ulators,

 
 

 

. Barker Fowler Electric Co. I :
~31 e. MIcH. AVE.. LANSING. MIOH. ' i

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

magnet wire, I
receiving sets. "'

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

mhlne Rail
an ‘ economical

. . .15 to
rates.

 
 

  

 
  

D. & C. Steamers leave Detroit
t-6z30 p. m. for Cleveland, East-

 WHEN _WRITING TO ITS

and Water Travel—
summer trip to points

 

25 ‘ per. cent reduction

Saginaw Silos

Produce the Highest
Quality of Insilsge

The Saginaw line 0!
silos is the largest and
most complete.
20 years of experience
and experiments have
made_ Saiginaw Silos
superior it every ay
—the last: word invgilo
construction. ;
i Learn more aboutSagi-
" new Silos. Their prices
i and terms will interes

' you.

Write today for. full

Oven

information.
Dept. 2 3 C.
THE Me CLURE
COMPANY
Saginaw, Mich.
Cairo, Ill.

oIIIGAN BUSINESS ‘FARMEB
“The? Farm/Paper of Service?

‘ i I Tell your friends about it

soon THE IIICIIIGAN

 

ADVERTISERS ‘ ‘  ’
"BUSINESS

   

amuse

,

 

.. NATION  AGRICULTI’IBE-
RADIO SERVICE

market reports~ are being bread;

cast daily from the Arlington
and Great Lakes wirel'éhs stations of
the Navy Department.

agricultural reports by radio thru

out virtually the entire United
States and is the most imporant
step yet made in broadcasting agri-

A. Wheeler, in charge of the radio
work for the department.
service started June 15.

Continuous wave .radio telegraph
is being used to broadcast the reports
but it is expected that there will *be
considerable re-buildlng by radio
telephone so that any one in the-
eastern two—thirds of the 'United
States saving radio. telephone re-
ceiving sets may be able to receive
the messages. _ -

Use Government Stations

The use of the Arlington and
Great Lakes stations is part of an ex-
tensive plan to utilize existing gov-
ernment facilities for \establishinga
dependable, Nation-wide system for

broadcasting agricultural news by
radio,
It is said that under favorable

static conditions both the Arlingon
and Great Lakes stations can be
heard over the entire country, but
that under avera/ge conditions the
range is about two-thirds the eastern
part of the United States. The re-
ports will be received by the state de-
partments of agriculture andgagr’i-
"cultural colleges for broadcasting 'by
radio telephone; local and Iiprivate
stations licensed to broadcast agri-
cultural reports; county agents,
shipping associations, and other
farm. organizations; and local arma-
teurs who make a business of copy-

the agricultural reports broadcast by
radio telegraph.
Schedule Is Completed

Extension of the service to all
the high-powered stations mentioned
is restricted at the present time only
because the leased telegraph wire
system of the Department of Agri-
culture over which the. reports are
dispatched for broadcasting does not
reach some of those points. However,
in the‘late summer or autumn when
atmospheric conditions are more fav-
orable for radio work a. move may be
'made to extend the service by relay-
ing messages to the various stations.

The tentative schedule of reports
being broadcast from the Arlington
and Great Lakes stations follows:
After two weeks trial a .ﬁxed lechedj
lule will be established.

report of live stock receipts at five'
markets will be dispatched at 8 a. m.
At 9 a. m. the weather reports which
the Arlington and Great Lakes
stations have been sending out for
some time will be released. A brief.
report of the hog markets will be
flashed at 9:15 a. m. A report, of
fruits and vegetables shipments-and

 

 

 

 

*~ (comma senior  a“

 

 

«the out! in

   

OVERNMENT weather, crop,» and r

This makes possible the receipt of ~

cutural information, according to W. '

The new"

ing for local individuals and agencies ‘

From the Great Lakes station a. ‘

       

_t.ji ~“blipricer: will go out at ’10s. at.
_ Jollowed by a; New York and Chicago
daily report at 10:40 a. m.. From
11 a. m."1‘to 1:1)5 p.7m. Complete‘live-
stock reports of _,the -
‘sas City, St. ,Louis, St. Paul, and
Omaha markets will be sent-out. A
report of the grain markets will go
‘ out at 1:45 p. m.; a report of the
fruit arid vegetable markets at 2:30
p. m.; ay and. feed imarke r ,
at 3:45 p. m.; 1: sports
report.at 4 p. m.; dairy‘and, poultry,
reports at 5 p. :m.;' a summary of all
lmarkete at 6 p. 
report at 9:50 pm. Arrangements

are also being made to dispatch crop
information. - ' '

 

. _, PORT . 11E, RADIO .
HE Chevrolet Motor Co. has prov-
, ed that the radio equipment op-
, crates satisfactorily in an‘auto-
mobile Without the use of a. “ground
WIre." - ’

The possibilities that this portable

radio receiving station offers include
an almost limitless field of use and
with such tremendous strides as
these made in its development, it ,is
bound to become one 01' the indie-
pensible utilities of modern civiliz-
ation.
. With a car equipped in this fash-
101} it is possible for a family to
drum anywhere within 100 miles of
a broad-casting station and picnic
while the radio in.their car amuses
or instructs them with‘music, ser-
mons, or wireless telegraphy. Edu-
cation and entertainment can be
transported to wherever rpeople con-
gregate. With a few cars equipped
as this one is, a minister could talk
to a do_zen congregations at once.
If the United States' Department of
Agriculture had similar radio equip-
ment in the hands of its county
agents, department 'extperts’
talk to thousands of farmers at once
and thus bringthe tremendous add—
ed benefits to our agriculture that
would be made possible through a,
greater broad-casting of its work.

The‘installation of this equip-
ment in the Chevroleycar is so sim-
ple that it is possible to adapt it to
many uses, and therefore we may ex-
pect to see many cars similarly equip-
ped in the future. It is also only
a matter of a few moments to remove
.the radio equiment from the car
when it is not desired for use there.
It can then be used in the home or
the office, or any other place'de-
sired. -

Just «as anywhere on the high
seas Ships can 'keep constantly in
touch with ports and other ships thru
the use of the radio, now the automo-
bile—the. land ship—can immensely
facilitate distribution or informas‘
tion Lto the great benefit of mankind.

One ingenious amateur, by util-
izing the power of the generator/on
his car, not only receives messages,
but also transmits them.

Such equip-ment makes possible
the use of motor cars as scouts 01‘
reporters of crop, weather or news
messages from any part.“ the
country. ’

 

      
     
   
     
 
    
     
      
         

 
 
   
 

Chicago, Kan-e." .

a special weather ‘

.; and a. weather.

could .

    
   
 
    
    
    
   
  
    
 
  
  
   
   
   
  
  
    

hH-JA‘nL._

QHMBHMHHMMJQHAHAH.AHKHH.

1"

(30"!

   
    
 
 
   
 

  
  
 

  
 

 
 
 
  
  
 

     
 
     


  

1’ r  w, real: estate
. “ ye a1 .pro’perty be-

- disease debtedness thereon. .

I . rlﬁga'ny 1 person feels that ‘an as-

 sessment made by the tax commis-

' .sionv‘is at more than the true cash

. value :01 his’p'roperty, we will be

’ . very glad indeed to have him write

us, giving his reasons for believing

the property is overassessed and We '
will take the matter up promptly

with the assessing ofﬁcer of the dis-

trict in which it is located. Weare

very~ anxious to correct any errors
which have at any time been made

in our work. ' It will be equally

satisfactory if the person will take

the matter” up with the supervisbr

of his township and request him to

write us, recommending what change

if ‘any, should be made in the as—

sessment. ’ . ' .

Personal property is assessable at

its actual value as of the second

‘Monday in April. 'llhis does not

mean that the assessment must be

made on the second ‘ Monday in

    

  
        
     
      
    
   
 
  
   
   
   
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
   
  
 
   
  
  
  
    
   
     
      
      
 

\

isted at that date should be assessed
to the person owning it or having.
it in his possession at that time, ex-
cept that Section 17 of the Tax Law
provides that, ‘fno change of location
or sale of personal property after the
ﬁrst day of May in any one year shall
affect the assessment for that year.”
This section is intended to enable ,
a supervisor to cancel an assessment
already made Where the person re—
moves from his district or trans-
\ fers property from his district to
V another district before May ﬁrst. If
' proerty is removed after ‘May ﬁrst,-
no change can be made in the as-
sessment on that account. — B. W.
Burtless, Secretary Board of State
\Tax Commissioners.

 

sonooL SECkETARY OVER-
DRAWS SALARY

.Has a secretary of a school board a
right to overdraw his wages? If not what -
can be done with him?—-—-T. N., Oscoda
County.

The law provides that the treas-
urer of a school district is the legal
custodian of school moneys. He has
authority to pay out‘ money only for
amounts properly . audited -by the
school board on orders drawn and
signed by the secretary and counter-
signed~by the president or modera-
tor. He and his bondsmen are per-
sonally liable for the‘payment of il-
legal orders, those for purposes not
authorizedby law or those exceeding
the amounts authorized by law.

.The , salary of school officers is i

3 provided for by statute. The pro-

\ vision is different for districts organ-

ized under diﬂerent acts. The secre-

tary has no right “to draw an amount

in excess of the amount legally ﬁxed.

He is restrained by xlaw from draw—

ing an order for purposes not au-

thorized by law or for an’ amount

exceeding the amount authorized by

law. He can be required to refund

any such amount.——G. N. Otwell, De-
partment .Public Instruction. '

 

DRAIN CON TROVERSY

B. C and D had a county ditch
voted through their farms. The ditch
was sold in March, 1918, each owner,
except A, taking the job on his own
land. A and B had their ditches dug
during the summer of 1918 and D dug
xhis during the summer‘of 1919, but C
refused to dig his part of the ditch, and
the drain commissioner. though notiﬁed
of the danger being done on D’s farm,
did not force him. Finally, when D threat
e‘ned with a lawsuit, C’s ditch was sold
to another party, and dug during the
summer of 1921. . ‘
But it was not dug according to speh
ciﬁcations. in fact it .was dug so shallow
. that it did not drain the water out of
' D's ditch, and this spring, when the sides
caved in some, the outlet is obstructed
’ so that D's ditch actually overﬂowed at
a' low spot, and there is still some water
- seeping onto the farm and small pools of
water standing‘atwthe present date. The
ditch is so full that the land along the
edge of it is soft and unﬁt for crop pro-
duction. C’s water is running into D.
What Can D do to‘get his farm drained?
Can he resort- to courts and force \the-
county to. provide an outlet for his
water}! .Can he. sue for damages? What
proof. of damage would -it‘ be necessary
to furnish irr mural—Subscriber. Genesee
County,xMich.   , ’ 
.5...Under’mtxl)1e 'statement, of facts as
rth _. should

,“ A,

      
   
    
        
      
  
 
    
 
 

    

 
   
 
 

 
   

    
 

   
 

 

3April but that property which ex- ,

.take f this ‘matter V ' 

«releta',_i-n:  , ‘
visions of the. statute. y
? ~It is thegduty of the county drain
commissioner to, inspect this 'drain
and see that same is constructed in
accordance with the speciﬁcations as
outlined by him in the contract and
he has no legal right to pay for the
costof the-same until the drain has
been inspected by a competent in-
spector and found‘to cemply with
the speciﬁcations.

The writer is of the opinion that

g‘D' would not have an action for dam-

ages but could only compel the drain

' commissioner to perform the duties

of“his omce or preier charges which‘
might bring about his removal there-
irom._——State.; Highway Department,
Lansing. r ‘ "
. . ‘
TEACHER AND CONTRACT
A school teacher hires out for nine
months and obtains a contract. At Christ-
mas time she has an entertainment and
loses some school time in preparing for it.
No complaint 'was made until after

Christmas when the school bcerrd claims
she has violated her contract by not hear-

\

  
 

' any rig-ht to put

_ hours whether this

'be held accountable

8 Wm 
 um er“ *
3:163  ‘ agitracts‘;

:16 Can ' ,sh'e

.. a
forceifthern'w pay for that week? Did'she

  
  
 
 

contract? ’Has the board
anything .in a teacher’s
contract in regar to a teacher’s conduct
out of school hours and would a con—
tract containing such restrictions be
valid?—-A. F.,* Edenville, Mich.

I would say in reply that as this
teacher signed a second contract she
must now be governed by this sew
cond contract. While she has both
contracts in her possession the sec‘
and contract signed would be the
one that would govern. If the en-
tertainment for which she prepr'ved
was a general nature and a ream 1-
able amount of time was used in pre-
paring for this entertainment she
did not forfeit her rights as a teach-
er under her contract. -

The school board cannot regulate
a teacher’s conduct outside of school
. is attempted
through the contract or‘otherwise. if
a teacher does anything outside oi?
school hours that would bring her
school work into contempt she could
whether this

Violate, her first ‘

  
 

  

   

was deﬁnitely stated in the contract
or not, but to determine Whether or

either also
‘9 does this .

 

     
 
 
  
      

 

    
  
     

\

‘ ' '  'ow satis L
onwsgrlidgrrgld‘llrgvlﬁghssis gif; ' fair shape '1?
sour? Would it make pasture?-3H. B.
Vermontville. Mich. ' v -

Orchard grass does best on richék
loam, but will do well on sandysoﬂ”v
if this is fertile. It does poorly on
the poorer sandy soil. If well estab-
lished it will endure considerable
drought. It makes excellent pasture; 
and is earlier than timothy.—E.2A.' ,
Bessey, Professor of Botany, M. A. C.

     
 

   
  
  
  
    
 
    
 
 

 

GROUND CORNCOB NOT GOOD,
FEED : ' '
Are cor'ncobs good feed for horses!
Am feeding ground cobcorn and the res
sults are not very satisfying—Subscriber
Wilber, Mich. .
The practice of grinding corn and
cob together for feed is followed by
. many. There is no feed value to
speak of obtained from the ground
cob. It does help lighten the ration
and helps to make ﬁller but it re—
quires as much if not more energy . .
to digest the ground cob than is
contained in it.——Editor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

,Its' owners like it—thc
best test of all

 

A Few of the Mom"
Praise It

miles easier.

and price. I do not know of a
inves
. FRED EL BODIE.

‘ oars
der Essex" Coach.
portunity to test
- admit everything is
’ side of, the ledger.
/ , ,keep, satisfactory

' and power and speed aplen
a ‘delight', from eve stan point.”

itswo ,

 

\ '\
I

 " Touring Car, $1095

 

O r
"This little Coach is a revelation
Ha runs smoother than

our
whereéegoii get as much'for‘ the money

inooln. Nebraska

,“Afher owning various mum-cylinder
. .. I was a bit skeptical whether. I

' could be satisfied with the four-cyhm

. Have d ample on
and must
on the favorable
Economical in up-
gas and oil mileage.
. In short

. .  s .
253 w. Utica Sin, Buffalo; N. r.

Driving an Essex is so

=10 ' free of fuss and effort

that every owner
praises that remarkable
The hours

:é’i‘ili ‘3}? £15.? ﬁfth}. “I.” are: difference.
11. ' V . .
“a J.enks & 'Mgffnléfls 00 Detroit  Spend 11.1 thelr
‘ . H b 0 V e all are
gngeharev'highgK pleasewtg {43:3 E95151! ‘Cars, 3 ,
r I ’
1:11ch} ens: 1111 8695:3101). gas mileage comfortable h 0 u 1' S .

Controls are easy and
natural. One is hardly
conscious the hand di-
rects them. Gears shift
--as. easy as lifting a fork
at table. Light—steer-
ing as a bicycle. Light
pressure operates
brakes and, clutch.

 

Cabriolet. $1295 Coach, $1345

 fMOTORS—DETROIT, MICHIGAN

(

 

 

 

And so reliable that
thousands go out from
the salesroom and
serve for thousands of
miles Without return—
‘ing for even a minor
adjustment. That, too,
is an experience not
common to motor
car owners.

, Drive the Essex. It is
altogether different
from any car you have
ever driven. It Will de-

' light—and tempt you.

' Any dealer will be glad
to arrange such a ride._

. ' Freight and  Extra

  
   
  


 V ,Bepresented in New Yo
' . the Aesooie

  

   

": " .‘   I V‘ g: m.
  sarcasm-u .. -~. i ..
_ SATURDAY JUNE :4, 195:;
Published ma aturday hr .
rue RDBAI. PuaLlemua some". m
illehben

It. clement. - .
Louis and museum!!! by
marched

 

 

China». at.
hm Papers. Inca
Manber Andi: Bureau of (hauls

Clone.»

M

 

 

“Emmi” M- SUK’UH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. stream:
manner A. LORD  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “1?.1501'1'03
: Assoam'rns: ‘ ~ .

 ri- sks,“ 51'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Mousse:
Milan Grinnell . .  ...................................  3.23:1:hmn en
Graft” gfmlav {91139.7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Farm, Home Editor

- 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .' . . . . . . . . . . ' , . i z

' Herbert Fen-is . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3311; 

William E. Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I . . . ' . ' . . :. . . .Lenl Ed

' A Mt .......  . . . . . . . . . . . . .Veterlnsry Editor
“5 YEAR (52 Issued sumo use (104 Issues) $1.30

11;“! YRS. "(156 Ihsues) 82:FIVE YRS. (260 Issues) $8.00
be date following your name on the address label shows "‘1"
3'0!!! lubﬂcrlvtiou expires. In renewing kindly send this label h
,ercld mistakes Remit 'by check, daft. money-order or neutered
2 Stamps and currency are at your risk. We “howled”
by ﬁrst-class nun every donu- received. .-
uyonmnu Ram: 40 r t" lln. ’14 lines to the
column Inch. 772 line: to the pgeefnllﬁet rgtes.
Live Stock and Auctlon Sale Advertising: We offer Ml 10'
Him to reputable breeders of live stock end poultry: m ‘3-

‘ RELIABLE ADVE RTIB'ERS

. We will not knowlnrly accept the edserﬂslnl of
In! person or ﬁrm who we. do not believe to be
thoroughly honest and. reliable. Should any modes
have any cause for complaint against any advertise!
In these columns. the publisher would appreciate II
immediate letter bringing all facts to light. In

every can when writing say: "I saw your advertisement in
Michigan Business Farmer'" It will guarantee honest dealint

Entered as second-class matter. at post-ofﬁce. Ht. Clemens. Mich.

" The Farm Paper of Service ”

Another Word About “Missed” Issues
Friends of the Business Farmer:

-From the letters which come to my desk I
learn that there are still a number of our good
friends and readers who have not read my re-
peated explanation of “misse ” issues.

Although conditions over which we have no
control have made it absolutely necessary to
issue the Business Farmer, every other week,
instead of every week since March 25th
——every issuethus missed by our subscribers

has been credited to their paid up sub-
scription!

So in the end no subscriber will “miss” a
single issue to which his subscription entitled
him. ~‘ .
Naturally, we are as anxious as you to see
The Business Farmer, back on afrcgular every-
. Saturday basis, and hope to accomplish this be-
fore September ﬁrst.

In the meantime, We ask you to be patient
and we are trying to make up in the enlarged
issues every other week, what you miss by not
getting your copy every week.

You know, of course, that this weekly is own.
ed and edited entirely in Michigan and by
Michigan men, and we depend only on the
support of the business farmers of this state
and are therefore, responsible only to them.

Standing thus independent of foreign Own-
ership or political control we believe The Bum-
ness Farmer, can be maintained as the‘leader
of courageous thought and action in the service
of the farming business in this great state of
Michigan! -

 

Horse-Bits or Horse-Sense

NE evening two weeks ago the writer sat in
' the gallery of the United States Senate in
the city of Washington. It was a very hot
evening and everybody from Vice-Pres1dent
Coolidge lolling in the chair, to the sleepy page
boys on the steps looked worn-out and ready to
give up the ghost. , I ‘

In the senate chamber were ﬁve senatorsuone
was on his feet talking, one near him might
have been listening or sleeping, his gaze was
' riveted on the ceiling, the other three were
reading, writing, or fumbling over papers piled

high on their desks. ‘ . ‘

7 . It was a typical schate me

warm days in Washington! I ' p I
_, _ Finally the senator speaking broke off to ask
1 permission to “reprint in Whom, s-large

‘ volume of important ﬁgures, without reading,”

during the

.-q,.;»the chair woke with a start, uncoiled his legs I *
and mumbled something about “there being -~
3110' objccshun, so ordered!” the page bOy galva-~

«nixed into-action,  for the «papal»; ,. and

organ"

A g the kind ofghorsesthat‘wo  ,, H ,  _ ( ,
 buyers who-bought them auditing  of sell. ,.

 

    
 

another senator, with a ﬂowingmustasl}? d”  .
Arhiir'oicertp match,  hngmdty from . ,

  

(rs who sold them. , , 7

It was. proposed tovinclude them in airevised
amendment which addcd~a 60 per cent adva-
lorem duty, to this the' democratic, sonata:
from North Carolina objected. He
motion to cut this tariff to“ 30 per cent, or to
take it oﬁ all together and not  the bit-

buying public, at the, profit of the__,bit-manu-. .
facturer, to this the republican tariﬂ leader

strenuously objectcd, naturally.

From an authority we  the” ﬁrst "

month of tariﬂdebate just closed brought out
a total of 1,492,000 words, occupying'TdG pagps
1n the Record and Only 35 of the 438 ..pages

in the tariﬁ bill" have so far been coasitlercd. ‘L

From the discussion we heard on horse-bits, we
Jassumed that the May record will be broken in»
11118.  ' ’ ’

When our collar had melted down complete-
ly and We were alone in the spectators gallery,
we arose from our seats and went out into the
clear Washington evening. The stars were

shining just as they do back in Michigan, folks.

seemed to be going about the things of ordin-
ary life. just as though they had no thought
about what the heated senators under the big
dome up there were going to do with the tariff

on ‘ ‘horse-bits’ ’ !

And then for some reason we kept thinking
about one of the big catalogs the Chicago
houses send out in which they list most of
things used by humans in their homes, on their
backs or in their stomachs and we wondered
how important a position “horse-bits” occu-
pied anyway in the catalog of human necessi-
tics! . For if, thought we, it takes an hour and
a quarter to discuss the single item 01? “horse-
hits,” how long will it take to pass this tariff
legislation! ‘

In themeanwhile, President Harding may
beg for his ship subsidy, the American Legion
for its bonus bill. but the congress must argue
over “horse-bits!” r .. , ‘

If they sold pink-lemonade, ‘ peanuts and
ticketsfor “the wild-west and feed the animals
show immediately after the big performance”
in the gallery of the senate it would be a circus
to go there even on a hot night! ‘

 

Nero Fiddlcd, While_Rome Burned!
T is summer time in most of the United
States, the birds are singing and we are glad
to get in the shade and drink a big dipper of
ice water from the bubbling spring—in other
words it is warm here and therefore we are
not burning coal for heat.  " :

F1 om past history, of which we seemgto haVe
a convincing amount of evidence, it will Within
six months from this date be cold in mostof the
United States. The snow will be piled high,
lakes and streams frozen over and the window
in the bed-room where we arise will be frosted
over—in other words it will be cold here and
we will have to havo‘heat or We will freeze.

These two facts as We have stated them seem
to us undeniable. Most folks whom We know
would accept them without challenge, although
we admit we do know some who are always
ready to take the negative on any subject.

But admitting, for the sake of argument,
that the United States, which includes you and
me, will be in great need of cohl within six
months, it would seem that the government,
which is supposed to be our paid agent for‘the
protection of our interests would be looking
far enough ahead to see the inevitable result

if the coal'strike and theresulting nOn-producv ‘1

tionvof coal are allowed to continue. "

Congressional investigations g and depart-“L
7 ' “ .~ ._ sense measures employed about! the   ,
lessen the ravages of  ameng  .-— 

NOTICE To sunsonmmns “ ,
,Since March 25, 1922, we "have been ’
forced to issue every other summy' an"?! . 
' Leachissue thus "missed" has been 
-_  date of eves-ya  ‘ '

 

 

 

 of“-..

oﬁeréd‘ a.

   

 

Michigan. Wheat and rye have attained an ﬁx-

cellent growth and cats are  far behind. ~

Corn will be. well up over 

conditions have made a wonderful Start.
is rich for angunprccedented era of prosperity

for Michigan farmers. But unfortunately, the * V

reverse is often the case. ‘Thel'Anmrican farm—
ers have not yet. learned how to prevent an
over-production of crops, nor to store, dry or
market the surplus at a‘proﬁt. Until they learn
how to do  and‘have the necessary
credit and marketing facilities-good crops my

continue to mean losses, for the farmers and -

hard times for the country. ‘ ..
However, there need  no fear of an over,

crops as wheat, rye, corn, oats and beans. The
rest of the world is. still on a near to starva-

tion basis and with the world acreage of grain , _

crops the smallest it has been m «years, every
bushel of grain that can be raised from Ameri-

can acres will, ﬁnd 'a market. But the world .

food situation oﬂ’ers little hope for the sur-
pluses of fruits and vegetables. r '

No matter whatthe harvest may  it '
should not as some farm papers haveintmmted _

lull the farmer into a state of forgetfulness of

What has happened in recent years nor blind .

him to his future economic welfare. Organized
agriculture must not sleep fo'r a moment nor
neglect the means at its “command to right the
wrongs "that have been perpetrated upon it.

The farmers have made some, progress econo-

,mically in recent years but they have a long
road yet to travel. To permit themselves to be
talked into astate of passivity and to fold their
11 ands now when the ﬁght has just begun would
prove a blunder for which they" would sonic day
pay dearly. ' »

Agriculture has a deﬁnite mission to per-
form; The plan of action has been Outlined.
The purpose is to insure for those engaged in
farming a permanent prosperity which cannot
be wiped out by one or two bad years. Good
'crops mayﬁll the farmer with optimism. but
they will not alone insure prosperity. It is
what\the' farmer has left after he—has sold his
crops and paid his hills which counts.

- For Cleaner Milk

 

HE Chicago Milk Eroducers’  has
. begun a campaign among its members *

for cleaner milk. \The Association bellows the
lime has come to stop trying to killbacteria in
milk and begin keeping bacteria out of milk.
Disease is the natural edspring of ﬁlth.
Filthy premises where‘ milk is' produced Will
surely contaminate the milk and ﬁll it with
bacteria fatal to both bovine and’human health.
Most of the diseases ivhich’ animals suﬂ’cr have
had their origin in ﬁlthy surroundings. The
price which dairymen have paid for the cares
lessness of some of their members would, if
calculated, make s’staggering total. The ease

-with which milk is contaminated and disease.

germs spread-among dairy cattle have discour—
aged many farmers from’“~taking the precau-
r tions they shOuld, but thousands of dairymen
have. demonstrated that milk be kept pure

. . .

by. simple and inexpeuSiVe measures. ,

q

The! crammign'rimsuiated; by , the; mm. ff 6;.
“"fm’m *’° this emilimamimam“ ‘ enviable

     

 ﬁll-Wﬁf‘w‘"
~- 6. 

  

 

 tomard to one or] 
' . the best yearsjn their history. The hay  »*
crop has been bounteous; in wall sections of,

'hi ”  by the Fourth of   pot’aé“ .
toes, beans and sugar beets planted  Ideal  

If cropsmeangood‘timlss thﬂ promise .-

production. this year of such non-perishable . -

' Justus Simple health rules promulgated by. '
,‘departments of health reduced  and ~
death among humans; so can a tower; -. on,‘

   

    
     

 


  
  

 

  

   
    
  
 
 
  

Fth‘e‘i‘e 1*an

, "1; to :be ,iou

 “ hing that’s happened out'
. "the" last. year". or two. W .I
say: its an awful place an’ maybe i_ "

  

'ﬁl/ﬁlﬁaﬁt-Walys there’s been’a lot of .

golnj on out there an’ nobody seems
to know what its all about. An’
then there’s Congress!  VI’m. jest
wonderin’ if there ain’t swell doin‘s
there? :What has our. Congress been
doin’ in the last year .or two? Bonus
bills, Tariit":bills—;-lmost every kind
(tithing has came up in Congress"—

..  «party nigh ﬁghts has.
-- took "place. Men that have 'been

'.,,elected to malice our laws and. who
are drawin’v good money for their

‘ labor,'are jest 'sduabblin’ an' fightin’

tosee who can talk longest an' loud-

They go back to the war an’ even
before the war, they cry fraud, profi-
teering, graft an' meet every thing
immaginable, they appoint investi-
gatin’ coamtmitties that never git any'
where. They argue 'bout the soldiers
bonus, while the aforesaid soldiers

.are destitute an’ in need of help. 4

They draw their money an’ jest lay
On their oars an’ for why? Well
dear friends,- here’s why!
soon now another ’lection’ll take
place.‘ If every thing wus cleared
‘up, if our Congressmen had done
their duty, there should be no dues-—

I tion left unsolved. But—an’ here’s

’the big idea. They must have some
thing to bring’before the voters next
fall or at/the primariesan’ so you
see. they jest bring in a lot of unfin-
ished business! They send out a lot
of cheap garden seeds ’bout this
time of year—Jyour seeds will have
,“compliments of your Congressman.”

Tommy-rot! Your Congressman
never seen \any of the seeds you

' get. Its a bunch of seeds that’s ‘sent

in frdm diff’r‘ent seed houses an' the
secretaries send" 'eun out with “com-
plimentsxf : I ,~

Let's get“ some good red blooded

' men downthere. r Men ‘who’ll do the

work an’ not think that a few pack-
ages of garden seeds ’11 compensate

“ for the $7,600 they get, mebbe

they get more’n that, but that’s their

" salaryany way. You know some of

’em spend. a fortune, $175,000 even
to get a seat in Congress. What’s it
all for? -Do you know that if we’d

‘ ‘Jest git after them iellers, tell 'em _
what we want an’ what we demand, .

give ’em to understand they are our
servant’s an’ not our masters, tell
’em to get busy on make some laws,
You know Congress is—or‘ is sup:
possed to be, our law makin’ body.
' Congress is great, ain’t she? Now if
'I could. be allowed- to use swear
‘words I could put 'em in right here.

. _ I don’t use. ’61:: so I can't express my-
. “half, but I guess you’ll know ’bout

What ,I think of congress an' say
folks, farmers: What‘re you doin'
about it! I Are yOu doin’ your duty?"
.‘Are you goin' to ’lection? Are you
votin' for the men you want? -
What’re-you doin' any way? Now
lets get in theharness an’ tend .to
business. Its up to us an’ lets-be
there on all fours. Cordially,—
UNCLE RUBE. .

FRUIT and ORCHAR

‘EDlTED BY FRANK T. WELLS

 

. AN APPLE TREE PEST-
OMETIMES white, woolly spots
7. are found on the trunks of

limbs of apple trees. usually in

l , crevices of the bark. By examining

with a small microscope it will be~‘

seen that "they are colonies of small j
fdiiuted' iimefsuiphur spray is effective.
 t .cangbe' used on apples and pears. at,
the rate of a gallon of the commercial

aphids or3},:plant Jiice having bunches

' ‘ ’of woollen their]backs,,The insect

is the; woolly “apple aphis, a pest
that '-at‘ times does considerable in-

éjury', to; the tree's. , ,'

'_"Th’e insec, 't~ is most’iifublegome. "

'on’Thewlylpla’nted tree's  onies are ’
nd on the leaves,
I m ‘ . _.

   
 

' actors an’ actresses. « , ' ' ‘
'nie berths scandals. murders _

Purty »

» or, where half a dozen or

should not be spr

 Young Lil m"me' , ‘
“Amer-iced!)

     

about the

have an nterest infthem and some
"other kinds of aphids.

.‘ ,The habits-of the insect make it
dimcult to'cOntrol. They do not be-
long to thebiting or! chewing class,

 

so. arsenate of lead or any of these

pbisons: are useless. A'contact spray

palone is effective. Kerosene, emul-

sion, orbett’er still a nicotine appli-
cation wnl kill them. Black—leaf 40
at the rate of one'pint to 100‘ gallons
of water is, used as a spray in' orch-
ard-s and n’iii'series.;The addition of
four pounds of ﬁsh oil "soap, dis-
solved in hot water makes it more
effective. Common laundry soap may
be useTif the other is not at hand.
The best time to apply it is in the
spring as soon as‘the insects appear,
but any time while they are on the
trees will do. -

The "aphids on the roots are a
more d-iﬂicult problem. Probably the
most effective treatment' at present
is to remove the earth about the

. trunk of the tree to a depth of four

or ﬁve inches, and for a. radius of
from one to three feet, according to
the size 'of the tree, then spread to-
bacco dust, stems or refuse from a
cigar factory, if it can be obtained.
For the large area six or seven

.pounds of dust or stems is advised.

Cover this with as much soil as was
removed. As the rain soaks through
the tobacco and comes in contact
with the roots the aphids will cease
‘to cause trouble. .

‘ Woolly. aphids “do most damage in
the nursery, where blocks of trees
are sometimes ruined. The“ greater
injury is to the roots, which be-
come , brittle and lifeless. Little
swellings characterise the work of
"the insects. Such trees are discarded
by reputable nurserymen.

But while vnurserymen who care
for their reputation destroy trees in-
fested with woolly aphis. it is im-
possible to get them all, besides
there may be eggs on the bark and
these are not easily seen; So the in-
sect should be looked for during the
first and second years after planting.

ORCHARD INSURANCE
I have an apple orchard and wish to
know if there is any pally that in-
sures su'ch property.—-M. ., Barry Coun-
ty, Mich.
The Michigan Mutual Hail Insur-

,nnce Company, Lansing, Mich, may

be 'what you want. It writes insur-
ance for farm. garden and orchard.

'NozrnanD COMMENTS

Last spring demonstrated the value of
bees in the orchard. When the peach-
es were in bloom, the weather a. art of
the time was fayorable for the ees to
work. As a result tin ﬂowers were well
pollenized and the trees were full of
promise. But when the apples were
blossoming the weather was cold and
damp. Few bees ere abroad. A large
proportion of the b ossonls were, not
fertilized. or so weakly that they were
of no account. Many of the apples that
did form have since fallen. This was the
result through a considerable portion of
Michigan. One or two apples to a clust-
‘ more were
promised. But a loss this year may be
a. gain next. .

One’ of the hopeful signs of the future
is the interest now taken in the buckle-
berry. Owners of swampy land, diffi-
cult or expensive to reclaim,» are ask-
ing themselves why they cannot put it
to good use by planting the high bush or
swamp hucklleberry. The bushes grow
rapidly and soon bear abundantly. There
is a ready sale for the, berries at a
good price and the outlook is good for
the future. Thousands of acres now
little better than worthless, might be
made profitable in this way. "

The first brood. so called, of the San
Jose scale is moving by the‘iast of June.
When, these yellow mites are ‘ in evi-
dence, so small that they are .not read-
ily detected :wither a microscope, the

solution. to 38, gallons of * water. For
cherries and Eu’ro‘ or “,Domestic
plums make. it, a ,l ttle Weaker. about
A ,to Peaches andaiap'anese plums

  

    
   

  

while the: foliage "11,911, as

. l V , a "
Solution} Will   leaves. t: “1.0352319

5110 be.’
‘ . 11 set

slithewinter. and.

  

he spring. by ants, who .

"1.131%:le '

m” 
“If?”

r6015 '

 

    
  
 

   
  
  
 

  
  
 
 
  

   
 
  
 
 
   
   
   
   
  
  
 

  
 

é  The Emblem 

   

of Value’lj

/ e

: Keen Kutter on any Tool signi-
— ﬁes not only those merits expert 3
 1 workmen demand, but the prac'-“
 ""' t'ical strength and usefulness
 needed by men on the farm.

» ‘That is why a Keen Kutter
Drawing Knife, with its one-piece
blade of ﬁnest steel, gives long
years of hard service and stands
endless 're-sharpening.

Depend on Keen Kuti‘er tools
to prove the best value for your -
money. Sold by leading Retailers, ‘
everywhere.

 
      
 
   
      
   
  
  
   
  

  
   
   

 

   
 
  
  

 

          
   
      
 
         
       
 

 
      
     
       
       
     
     
 
       
   
   
 

“The recollection of QUALITY
remain: long aﬂer t/ze PRICE
1': forgotten” -E. C. Simmon:

Trade Hark Rec. U. S. Pit. OR. -

    
     
 
 

    
 
  
     
 

Simmons Hardware Co.

  
         
   
   
  
 
   
    
    
    
   
   
    
      
    
  
  

Our prices on all Keen Kutter tools have been reduced.
‘ Ask your ‘Hardwnre Store about today’s values.

K EN KIJTTEK

Look at your u/Ileaﬁ
befbl'e harvest.

  
     
   

   
  

,., ’4,

 

Has it long, full heads of sound grain ? For six years wheat fertilizers have
In the straw at“! anough to smd ? contained little or no Potash.

Will it yield as much as you hoped T Potash prices are now much lower.
lithe clover or grass stand in it good 7 Enough Gem‘n Potash has now come
1" not. think over the man" of “Sin! I forward, so that those who wish_can buy
War that will hdp you. wheat fertilizers with

4 TO 6% POTASH,

Go at once to your dealer and tell him what you want and insist that
he get it for you when the fertilizer salesman makes his ﬁrst call.

Potash Pays

SOIL AND CROP SERVICE POTASH SYNDICATEJI. A.HUSTON,Manuger
42 Broadway New York

       
     
       
   
     
      
 

 

 

 

 

THE AUTO-OILED’AER

{‘A Real Self-oiling Windmill 3*, 333,3" 

oiled. Every moving part is completely and fully
oiled. A constant stream of oil ﬂows on every
- hearing. The shafts run in oil. The donble gears run in
oil in a tightly enclosed gear case. Friction and wear
are practically eliminated.

 in, the lightest breeze because it is'correctly d
oiled. To set everlasting windmill satisfaction, buy the Aermotor,

has... W. ’ moron co. mes

ayed' with lime sulphur ‘ '

   

': 6.1 ﬁlm domestic or. 1 '
“1d

   subscriptions fer the Business F arme‘r.‘ 

 

   
  
    
   
  
  
  
  

    

   

Oil an Aermotor once a year and it is always

  
   
  
   
   
    

\

      
  
 

  
   

 

 
 

 

AGENTS WANTED _ ,. 

 

  

    

alco'mnlission or salary and expenses. Write Ag
ﬁe Basin .88 Farmer; Mt Clemens. 

  

 

  


 
  
   

   
   

. aprons _  ,
.ﬂ-nurserymen', RoChoster, N. Y.,
, wen-meme very best spray for
ing‘ “insects that'I have ever used.
ea‘n‘make- it yourself and as I
, o pass every good thing along
 t is: g ‘

.Dissolve 1-2 small bar of' Ivory
_ pin 1 quart soft hot water, when
cold add 1-2 pint kerosene oil, whip
or 10 minutes as you beat eggs.
When creamy add 3 quarts of soft
“water. add the strength of 4 ounces
.of smoking tobacco steeped in 2
.‘quarts of water, making six quarts
of the mixture then add 60 drops
of carbolic acid.

. Mix. thoroughly 24 hours before
using- Keep in a cool place‘in a
.corkedjug. Shake well before using
and apply with a sprayer in a mist-
~form. This, spray gets better the
. longer it stands and will keep trees,
‘p’lants, shrubs and vines free from
all insects.

  
 
 
 
    

 

  

    
   
   
   
  
   
  
 
  
   
 
  
   
  
 
  
 
 
  
   
     
  
     
   
  
  
  
    
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
  
   
 
 
   
   
 
 
   
  
  
  
   
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
   
 
 
  
  
  
      
    
 

WHO ARE OUR GREATEST
DOZEN?

* HO are the greatest twelve
I women in .the United States?
, That is the question the ‘Nati-I
r onal League of Women Voters needs
‘9 help in answering. What twelve liv-
ing women in North America best
deserve to serve as examples and in—
spirations to the women of Chile and
the rest of South America?

Senorita Graciala Manduiano, of-
»ﬁcial delegate from Chile to the Pan
.V American Conference of Women, has

rasked the League, at Whose invita-
tion the conference was held, to se-
lect for her a dozen women about
whom~ she will write articles for pub-
lication in the newspapers of Chile
which she serves as correspondent.
They must be living women, she
stipulates. Chile has her heroines
of history, her women patriots, her
women of devotion, and our Anne
Hutchinsons and Hannah Dustins
have nothing to teach that Chile
does not know. What Chilean women
need is the lesson of life of the mod-
ern woman, the woman who has suc-
cessfully dealt with conditions of to-
day, can teach, for the women of
Chile, with all their keen intelli-
gence, their sound educations and
their famous wit, are still in need
of exactly the kind of incentive the
life-stories of soundly useful women
of the United States can give them.

Who are the twelve greatest wo-
. men in the United States? Who are
,the twelve women our Chilean sis-
«ters may best adopt as guiding
lights? The League of Women Voters
asks everybody’s help in answering
the question. ‘

Note—Mail your answers to me
if you wish and I will send them on
or send them direct to the League

. '0’“

WARM WEATHER FOODS
(Requested)

Baked Codﬁsh
~_Mix well 2 cups of ﬂaked ﬁsh,
freshened, 1 cup of mashed potato,
1 egg. 2 1-2 cups niilk,,1—2 cup of
butter. Mix all together and put in
baker. Beat 1 egg, add 1-2 cup of
milk and‘ 2 crackers rolled ﬁne,
sgiroad over top and sprinkle mn-r
with 1-4 cup of grated cheese. Bake
about 30 minutes in moderate oven.

Sahnon Loaf
Free the salmon from skin and
bones and break in‘pieces using a
‘silver fork. Cook 1—4 cup of bread
’crumbs in 1-2 cup of milk, until
smooth like a paste add scant 3—4
teaspoonful off salt and 1 beaten
egg, add salmon and pour in a well
‘ buttered baking dish, set baker in
la pan of hot water and place in oven

to bake" about 30 minutes.
; -*;’I‘his loaf may be'served hot or

 cold.

  
  

 
 
   
 
 

    

' Tunny Fish Tut-hot

‘ Make one pint of white sauce. add
.the‘juice of 1 lemon. Use 1 can of»
"white tunny, place a layer of ﬁsh
iin baker then a layer of sauce then
(1 rolled cracker'crurnbs. Fill the
lab in this manner with crumbs?
. p‘and bake 30 minutes. .

(recipes and joined . chiken

    
   
 
   
  
   
 
 

 
  

 

e1 lobster? ﬁnall-

 .  
. ok r‘Bro ers.

. in a good sand bath.

of Women Voters, Washington, D. C., ‘

_;,_ne,nt freeholso recipes ,

  

respondents column.

 

“Edited by  onion  

Dear Friends of “Our Page"—Jn§t a little personal word to you
today. I want to thank those of you who have responded so graciously
to my requests for poems and for the good suggestions and ready
responses‘which have come in, in answer to our queries in the cor-

I cannot thank each one personally so we will just broadcast our
appreciation, and speak not only for myself but for all those Who have
received help or light on some problem. We will be visiting you every
week again before so ve.y* long and in the meantime we will not for-
get that we are members of one big family and all'in'terosted in each
other conﬁde your perplexities we will  to. help and when you have
found something of value pass it along—Editor. “‘

 

 

CORRESPONDENTS COLUMN

Subscribers-For one aﬂlicted with
salt—rheum the following suggestions
will be found beneﬁcial:

Three tablespoons of sulphur, 2
tablespoons of creameof—tartar, 1
tablespoon nitrate of potash or salt-

peter. Mix- and put 1 teaspoonful in p

a little milk or syrup and take at
night.

Put 3 tablespoons Epson salts and
1 teaspoon of carbolic acid in 1
quart of water and boil 5 minutes,
bathe hands in it. .Witch hazel is
also good. At night rub lanoline 'or
sweet oil, 1 ounce, with ten drops of
carbolic acid, into the hands draw-
ing on a pair of loose cotton gloves
to keep bedding clean. The hands
should not be kept in water any
more than is necessary, strong soaps
and washing powders are very harm-
ful. Loose gloves should be worn
when dusting as dust irritates.

To keep the hands in condition
always rub perfectly drv after they
are wet. Imperfect drying cause‘
much trouble. .

 

Mrs. M. E.—-—Absolute cleanliness
is the surest way of keeping lice
and mites away. If the hen—house
and r‘oosts are kept clean the chick-
ens will rid themselves of body lice
It is the small
lice in roosts and in pests that weak—
en fowls so that they are unable to
rid themselves of the body lice.

 

 

When a bald-head has reached
the shiny stage there is nothing for
it but resignation, nature’s own
covering will never return. Close-
fitting hats and fur "caps tend in the
direction of baldness. .

 

Who can send‘me the words of
the song called “Lilly Dale?”.

 

E. H.—An inexpensive material
and desirable for dining room cur-
tains, is just plain white lawn made
with ‘a deep hem and hung straight
at each side of your windows, es-
pecially good for a rodm inclined to
be dark.

cnn'ro, A NEW PREPARATION
What is Certo?

Certo is a pure fruit product and con-
tains, in a highly concentrated form, that
necessary element. Pectin, without which
you cannot make jelly.

Some fruit juices have
greater or less degree.

Other fruits, such as cherry and straw-
berry, contain no pectin at all.

Partly ripened fruits contain more pec-
tin than fully ripened fruits; that is why
most cook book directions say “choose
incompletely ripened currants and grapes
for jelly."

A dry or wet summer will affect the
pectin content of fruits.

What Does Certo Do?

With Certo you can make jelly and
jams from all fruits, even jelly from the
pectlin-less cherry, strawberry and pine-
app e.

With Certo you use the fully ripened
fruits and. berries with their superior
ﬂavor. ,

With Certo the jelly always “jells.”

With Certo the boiling period in jelly-

 

pectin in a

 

AIDS TO GOOD DRESSING___

For Service, Simplicity and Style 1

Address Mrs. Jenney, pattern Dept, Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens.
Do not overlook our patterns if too busy to sew at present, choose your

a

you are at liberty to sew.

for the “Stout”
Woman

3948—3727. Figured
and plain foulard
are here combined.
This style would a_l-
so be attractive in
the new .prmted
voiles, or in. .
gingham combined
with organdy.

The waist pattern
3948, is cut in 6
sizes: 36, 38, 40. 42,
44 and 46 inches
bust measure. The
skirt ‘3727 is in 6
sizes: 24, 26, 28. 30,
32 and 34 inches
waist measure. To
make the dress as
illustrated will re-
quire 4 1-8 yards '
ﬁgured material and
3 7-8 yards of plain
material, for a 38
inch size. The width
‘ of the skirt at the
foot is about‘Z 1-4 yards.

TWO separate patterns mailed to any
address on receipt of 12c for each pattern
in silver or stamps.

 

A Dainty Up—to-date
Morning Negligee
3974. Here is a

charming breakfast

coat for my lady of
leisure, which will
serve also as a. negli-
gee. It is pretty in the
new printed voiles : -
tissue ginghams, as
well as in dotted

Swiss and crepe. As

illustrated printed fou-

lard and lace are com-

‘bined. Cotton, crepe

with a ﬁnish of hem-

bust measure. A moo

 

  

tissue .

stitching is equally ,
attractive. ‘

The pattern is cut
in 4 sizes: small. 34-
36; medium. 38-40;
large, 42-44; extra
large, 46-48 inches

diam [size .l'oquirél' .8'
7-8 yards ct,“ inch
material. gush 

style and send for the patterns. You will then have them all ready when;
You may lose the paper.

A Becoming Gown ’

A Smart Suit -for
Sports, Beach or
Country

3846—3787-3946, 3
stylish models are
here shown. that
may be developed
separately, or com-
bined to make this
attractive “s‘u’i t.’
The sleeveless blouse
3787 may bex of
paisley cretonne, or
Jersey, and the
'guimpe, .3846 and
skirt 3946, of sports
satin, crepe or ﬂan-
nel.

The blouse and
gmmpe are cut in 7
sizes: 34, 36, 38. 40.

bust measure. The
skirt. in 6 sizes: 26,
27, 29, 31, 33 and 35
inches waist
urn. Tin skirt re-
quire; fl E~8 yards
of 44 inch material. Its width at the
foot is about 3 ,3-8 yards. The guimpe
requires 3 1-2 yards of 27 inch material
and the blouse 2 1—4 yards of 36 inch
material for a medium size. Each ‘12s.

 

 

A Pleasing. “Lingerie”
Model

3967. For this char-
ming style crepe do
chine, radium silk, ba-
tiste or crepe could be
used. Embroidery lace,
or' simple hemstltch-
ing is effective for
trimming; The .
may be ﬁnished With-
out the- dainty bib
portion shown in the
arge view, ’and its
fulnes's .may be cen-
ﬂned at the, waistline

   

  

    

    

  

   
  
 
 

Vwit'h ribbon drawn
through slashes. .
."l‘he pattern is cut

   
     
 
   

in 4: sizes: small. 34-
' 38-40 a

extra

inches

 

inbust measure.
 diam size
k2. yard of a .. .
m to ' rice 

  

.. . .A mes-z
requires. 4~
‘ vv 2 .inch

1 page of the M. B
.. many I
' but' it , is surely meeting the


it
:5, 
El

others , that

23

the farm women. In answer-Ute A- 4
in Marla-issue the warm school hm
a God-send to ‘many  in
rural schools, so many have such
appetites and so little tempt th .
eat that a warm lunch seems to ﬁll
bill. I blaze triedty f
soups w p on o _
relished by children than anything

the mar
terials and we prepared. them at school,

9

3e
Er§§

g
E
52
it

however. if the mothers 'would do this at.‘
home simply to be reheated at school-

it would save the teacher a great
ff troglolaetspelcially where there are no
urge rs 0 ep. 

The consolidated school is being dis-

' cussed so freely I believe it would be a
childrm if

42, 44 and 46 inches,_

1116.38. ‘

\

gown .

- a story.

glorious opportunity for farm
it wasn"t for the hardships in transpor-
tation at least for the small ones.

Is there any middle aged lady among
our readers who 1 free to leave homo
for eight or nine months beginning with
the school year? If so I would like to
hear from you, you may get my name
and address from Mrs. Jenney. Please tell
ﬁgs. experience and~if you care for chil-

en. ‘

Hoping I'may hear from a number and
wishing Mrs. Jenney all success in
Sepatﬂnent, I am, truly yours—Mrs. W.

 

WANT-S LOAN 01' BOOK
"I am a reader of the M. B. F. and have

seen so many requests that I have yeah--

tured to write one myself. If any of the
readers of the M. B. F. have the book
called ‘The Story of an Error," written
by Charlotte M. Braeme. and .would loan
it to Mrs. Frank Howard, and she will
return it in the best of condition or send
something in return. Thanking you in

vManﬁe.—Mrs. Frank Howard. Millbrook,

ic . * .

WILL PAY FOR CARPET BAGS

I am wondering if, some of the Women
who have kept house longer than I
haven’t some rags. suitable for rag car-
-pet. more than they need; I have three
little tots but their clothes don't made
manyrrags. only being 3 1-2 years,- 25
months and 10 months cf age. If some
have rags to spare I do wish they v'
kindly pack a few pounds in a 'box and
parcel post them to me. I am able and
very willing to pay for them any reas-
onable price and also arcel post charges
if they will 'iust send a card along with
name and address. "

I do want some so badly and I am
willing to return the favor in any way
I can. I will write again soon with some
good recipes. Am cleaning house now,
have had sickness here all the month 0
may and I am behind with it.

I will close, thanking you in advance.
Sincerely, I am.—Mrs. Arthur H. Shoultes.
Bentley, Mich, R. .

BE CONFIDENTIAL - ‘

 

I have read with interest Mrs. C. ‘E.

B.’s letter, also Mrs. C. F. M.'s. I am vary
glad tovknow of other mothers interested
in the way of teaching children about
their own bodies as they ask the ques-
tions. Surely no one else can talk to a
growing child as a mother can. There
are so :nany things onthe farm to com—
pare a child’s life with and a child will
become as interested in it’s own makeup
and more so than'in any other kind of
I am the mother of two grow-
ing boys and one growing girl. I answer
all my children’s questions truthfully. I
try to be an interesting listener ,to all
their little stories and troubles their
minds are ﬁlled with. when they corn'q
home from school, and I hope to always
be their conﬁdent as they grow up.

I think there are too many mothers
who are not interested in their children’s
notions (as they call them) and as the
children grow older they wil sooner we
to anyone else' than mother for things
thev want to know. Also a. father can
explain to his son the things he ought
to know better than any other grown-
un..boy or man. It is grand for father
and'cons to be chums. I have been‘sa
silent reader of the M. B. F. for a long
tim'n and like it very much.——‘Mrs. H.
Walt.

P. S. Will you kindly send me the
stocking foot pattern?

 

 

WHEN A BOY I USED TO DWELL ‘
When a boy I used to dwell in a, house
- I loved so well, '
Far away among the clover and the bees,
Where the morning glory vine ’round the
- cabin porch did twine.
And the robin red-breast sang among
._ the leaves.
There I spent life’s golden hours roving
wild among the ﬂowers.
In' my boyhood’s happy home down on.
the farm. ’
Chorus

Many years have passed since I saw the '

old h. .ome last, - -
But memory still steals o'er me like I

c . . -
In that od familiar place every kind and
loving face, ‘ ‘ ‘

In my boyhood’s happy home down on'

the farm.

*But today as I draw ne'er the old'home
‘ I love so dear, .

 

‘ and the faces ll {Heem strange. v
Not a loveduong to meet..meas of
My mother (1 ‘ ‘- th -

{treats ute’ shed
a {_  

    
 
   

a! 
i a; 

ii

‘A. stranger comes to meet  at the‘door. .
Around the place there's many. adchange ‘

  
 
  
 
 
 

 

 

“Au-nu...-

  
    
        
   
      
   

   
  
     

     
      
    
    
   
   


   
 
  
 

 
   

  

  
  
  
  
  

/

\

'three people and what

 

 

 

 

AN you write a story? Have you
ever tried? I am going to give
away ten prizes to the writers

of the ten best stories about the
above picture that I receive within
the next 2 Weeks. ‘ There are ﬁve
prizes for the girls and ﬁve for the
boys and they are well worth work-
ing hard for. ‘

All you have to do to compete for
one of the prizes is to study the
above picture and then write a story
around the people shown. Do not
describe just what is going on- in the
.picture but write a complete story
centering your plot about these
they are
doing.

Now for the prizes. To the girls I
am giving a needle case containing

’nearly ﬁfty needles of different sizes. .

It is very beautiful and if you girls
do much sewing, or belong to a Gar-
ment Making Club it would be very
handy for you to carry about from
place to place. And we'are not giv-
ing away just one to one girl for the
best story but will give ﬁVe to ﬁve
girls for the ﬁve best stories. Each
of the ﬁve boy winners will receive
a leatherette pencil case containing
four assorted pencils, a penholder
and a pen point. This case is a
beauty an can be carried. in the
pocket so t at you will always have
a pencil‘with you. The top of, this

“case fastens down with a [snap and

there is a small. pocket or purse on
the side of the case that has a top
that fastens the same way. You
can carry money or inany other
things in this pocket. The case will
be just the thing when you return to
school this fall. The names and ad-
dresses of the winners will be pub-
lished in the Children’s Hour along
with the stories—UNCLE NED.

 

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS -

Dear- Uncle Ned—It has been so long
since I have written to you that I thought
I would write. I wrote on the «eighth
grade examination this year but did not
pass. I have a. sister older than myself,
she wrote, and paSSed. All the ﬂowers
are in bloom now and northern Michigan
is very beautiful. We planted one thous-
and seven hundred and sixty-six hills
of melons this year and they are- all up.
People come here from Kalkaska and
other places after melons. My father is
sixty-three years old and is still farming.
He has only three chil on at home, two
girls and one boy. Last Sunday we were
over to Loon Lake, east of our home, to
a baptising. There is going to be a lot
of fruit this year. We have a small grape
vine that will yield about two bushels
of grapes. I will close. From your
niece.-—-Thersa Lamb, Lake City, Mich;

Dear Uncle Ned—I am 10 years old,
am in the fourth grade. How are
and my cousins? I am ﬁne and hope yrm
are the same. I have 25 little chickens
and two bantams. I would like to hear
from some of my cousins. Good-bye
Uncie Ned—Irene Jarvis, Rodney. Mich.,

 

Dear Uncle Ned—May I join your
merry circle? I am nine years old. I have
four brothers and two sisters. My mother
died the, 20th of T“nuary, 332m I _vy,a§

  
 

 

 

 

 

  

 

  
  
  
 
  

   

USELESS
‘ Bird —- N ova
“ .\ M ‘what on earth .
" doee any one

$.74 want. to duet
" 7' their feathere'

 

r.  This ‘ particul
-w rk‘ ' " ’.

‘ '2nd of February. I passed on test into
the fourth grade. We have 5 cows, 4
horses. 5 little pigs. I have a new adopted
_mother and father. Our school was out
the 26th of May. We h d a picnic din-
.per so all the neighbors could come and
eat. I love my new father and mother
I like to go to church and Sunda school.

I have two and a half miles 0 go. I
'wish the boys and girls would write to

- me.—L01a C. Davis. Port Hope, Mich.

I ——y—o'——

’Dear Uncle, Ned—May I join your
merry circle? I am a. girl eight years old
and will be in the ﬁfth grade when school
starts again. Our school let out the
4ninet enth of May. My mother’s birthday
is t'h ‘nineteenth of May, my bir day
is the sixteenth of March. We received
the M. B.‘ F. today. I will send a riddle:

t turns but never moves? Milk
turning sour. We live on a. forty-eight
acre/ farm. - Good—bye.——Norma Torrant,
Napoleon, Mich., R. 1.

Dear Uncle Ned—I see lots of boys
and girls are writing letters for the Chil-
dren’s Hour page, so I thought I woiilrl
write one too. I am ten years old. My
birthday is Oct. tenth. I wonder if any
of the girls and boys that have written}
to the children’s page have their birthday
on the same day as mine? I live on a.
farm about ﬁve miles from town. We

. have three horses, five cows,‘ and three
calves a ca and a dog, named‘Jin- l x
is a. ‘little‘shaggy fellow but we have
lots of fun With him. I have two sisters
and three, brothers. It is my sister Eth-
el’s birthday today. She is 14 years old.
My other sister is 15 years old, her
name is Helma, and my brothers’ names
are Rudolph, Carl and Oscar. Our school
was out last Friday. We had a. picnic.
I like to read the letters in the M. B. F.
I will close now. hope some of the boys
and girls will will write to me. Your
friend—Gladys Carlson, Omena, Mich.,
Box 49.

Dear Uncle Neds—I am a farmer girl
14 years of age. I have written to you
before and also have received some let-
ters from some M. B. F. friends. I also
hope to .get more. I wish some of the
boys and girls would write to me for I
love to get letters and also. love to get
acquainted with other M. B. F. friends.
I have to iron today so I think I shall
close. Wishing Uncle Ned and all the
cousins good luck and the best of health,
I remain a true niece and cousin.——Cln.ra
Weber, Freeland, Mich., R. 3, Box 52.

Dear Uncle Ned—‘1 am a farmer’s
daughter. My papa has 210 acres of land.
I am 13 years old, just past the seventh
grade in school. We have 8 pigs, 6 calves.

cows and 3 yearlings. I help milk
‘night and mornin . My two sisters and.
one brother ard myself are cultivating
ten acres of corn twice in a row with
one horse. Papa gives us one dollar a
day. We have a garden. Also have 2
cats, 1 dog, 100 chickens ‘and 50 hens.
We will have to pick cherrie and rasp-
berries pretty soon. I think iss Frances
Inman is 16 years old. My papa. takes
the M. B. F. and likes it very much.
Couldn’t get along without it. I will close
honing I guessed Miss Frances' age right.
I am your niece.——Clara" Kempton, Grant,
Mich., R. 1.

Dear Uncle Ned—I am another one
that wishes to join your merry circle.
I am a farmer boy 9 years of age. I live
on a 40 acre farm. We have two horses
and four cows and three young cattle.
We sold two steers last fall and gave
away one. I. had a pair of pigeons in a
box and yesterday I let them go. One
ﬂew 'away about a half an hour after I
let them out and one.ﬂew away in the
night. There was a mpther and father
bird with two more eggs’ a little wnv
from the other nest which was the other
pairs nest. Good bve Uncle Ned and
friends—Wm. C. Wismer. ~Bad --Axe,
Mich., R. 6.

 

Dear Uncle Ned—I am a farmer’s girl.
My age is between 14 and 18 years. Who
guessesmy age will receive a long letter
from me. I will describe myself. I am 6
feet 3 inches tall, light complexion, some
freckles, reddish brown hair. My birth-
day is on Ground-hog day, Ha! Ha!
Have I a twin? I took the eighth grade
examination in town and got my di-
ploma last Thursday. I am going to high
gghlo'ol next year. Frances Inman I think

age s years. Don’ '
long letter. t forget that

I like to read the Children’s Hour. I
am going to ask the cousins to do me
a favor. Do any \of you boys or girls
know Caroline Stark? She lives in Resort
townsh1p.. If you do will you please send
me her address for I would like to hear
from her? I hope some of the older boys
and girls will write to me. will answer"
all letters. With love to all.—Elizabeth

  

is, 3-

placed :"in , 7 any” 1 of ' the __ "contests, ,- in
which he entered. The: next year

[he did. better and the third year he-

was. a winner in both ‘ca-lf andpig
club classes, winning ribbon after
ribbon'and a‘lmOst forgetting what
.it was like toebe defeated. In 1922
we ﬁnd that this club member is at
the head of the National Organiza—
tion of Club Boys and ‘Girls. His
name is Joseph R. Caputo, of Iowa.
He regards patience and persever-
ance to be the habit which we must
have in .order to succeed with our
projects. He says that .while we all
like to win a blue ribbon and be
successful by winning honors in our
particular work that if you lose and
have honestly tried,- don't feel “blue”
with the idea that you can never win
“and decide to quit and not to give up
no matter how hard you try. The
World doesn't love a quitter, but just

keep making the best better, until

 
  
 
 

ﬁreﬁght he ‘wé’uid his ﬁght, was...»

 

{* - > a s .
, ‘ _ , I at Q!“ you getthe]
i‘ornot. I -  , ~ 'g. :f.‘
 alga considers the three folio“
factors *to be of great help in .e
to- win: . _ . 
_ First, you must decide 
oproject which you will like, as
‘will do better \with something, 
enjoy doing than if you went at you
work with a drawn lip. ‘ 
Second, if an animal project, get;
the best animal possible to start.
with and decide to' give them the"!
best of care. 7 -.  1”;
Third, have an ~objective. Have
some sort of an idea of What you are
striving for and what you Wishto
become. A fourth is also suggested
by spelling “work” with all capita
letters. 
Working for these furnishes good.
training and is not without value,
also 'it has taught this club meme
her his vocation in life and as a
result of the work he has decided
to attend his state college of Agri-,
culture after which he intends g-o-
ing back to the farm.

 

 

   
  
  
  
 
   
  
  
  

Furnished in Wide Widths
Sizes 21/2 to 8. Give elze.
Order by No. 4JA268.
SHAROOD COMPANY,

‘Stilchdown?’

Oxford for Women
' Ladies—here’s a shoe bargain you can-
, not afford to miss. Simply unmatch‘
v able anywhere else in America. -
. See for yourself. Send only no. e and address. When
I _ shoes arrive examine and
not satisﬁed and you aren’t out a cent.

'4‘". 0 Money Now

--

Dept. 41

ing

them on. Return if

.\~ we want you to see this classy‘
 ‘ Stitchdown.” Just give size and ’~

’ v when shoes arrive. pay bar-

gainpjrice,$l.98.

s m o o t [1
leather in-
" soles, low

1' rubber he‘ele

, and extremely ﬂex-
, .Ible stitchdown oak out-
soles. Positivel y worth $3 today. I!

, you don't think you have saved 81, re.
turn shoes and get your money back.

Mlnneapolis, Minnesota

 
 
      

----—v

 

 

How to Make

Jam and Jelly _
With Positive Success

New Process Requires Only
-1 Minute’s Boiling and
Never Fails
By‘ Ann Proctor

 

 

 

 

.The greatest cooking authorities in this
country—Good Housekeeping Institute,
Boston Cooking School, Modern Priscilla
Proving Plant. government experts, do-
mestic science teachers, ctc.——-and house-
wives everywhere are hailing with delight
the New Certo Process of making all
kinds of jam and jelly. Anyone, even a
child, can now make jam or jelly of excel—
lent quality, with any kind of fruit in a
few minutes. Only one minute's boiling.
is required, and the result is one-half
more product from same amount of fruit.

Certo (Surejell) is a pure fruit prod-
uct, contains no gelatine or preservative.
It is concentrated pectin, supplied by
Mother Nature in some fruits, now bot-
tled for household use. With it, jam and
jelly making is a fascinating pastime—
no guesswork or worry. Cooking authori-
ties call it "the short—boiling process” be-
cause you boil only one minute. This
short boiling saves the natural color and
ﬂavor of the fruit, permits the use of
fully ripened fruit. and makes one-half
more product from the same amount of
fruit because no juice is boiled away.

With Certo you can make jam or jelly
from any fruit. Peach, pear, or rhubarb
jam, blackberry, elderberry or cherry
jelly, orange marmalade, etc., are easily

 

Steiner, Conway, Mich. \ _
A“
SUCCESS IN’  WORK
By Donald H. Shepard, Charlotte
Winner of 2 county championships, 1
state championship. a trip to State Fair,
trip to 1920 International and tripto At-
lanta as a member of Michigans team in

\

. _ S the title suggests a rather wide

ﬁeld and difference of opinion.

I will only attempt'an outline.

of how an Iowa boy who is strong"
in his belief in the good the work
» can do arid support-that he, Siveg,‘
regards; thei‘jwog; gland} '.-'something .

about his success. s a club. member.1
started fish

    

 

I Certo

and quickly made and keep perfectly.
“jells” any fruit juice. It simply
supplies the necessary pectin to 'jell" all
the fruit juice. ' '

Certo is what you have been looking
for. Be the ﬁrst to use it in your neigh-‘
borhood so you can tell your friends about
it, and show them the excellent results
you had. You can get Certo from most
grocers or druggists, or we will send it
to you by parcel post prepaid, with Book
of nearly 100 Recipes for 35 cents. Be
sure to include your zrocer's name and
address. Then We will see that he car-
ries Certo for the convenience of yourself
and'friends. Try one bottle of Certo—ins.
vestigate the new. the .highly endorsed
Certo precess ,of making jam and jelly—

 save hours of time and worry and
frequent failures _of.,
.» Pectin. Subset)

 
  

the old method.

You Save More Money
When You Buy/

PENDERGAST FENCE; :5...

,4-

         
    

This year you will buy fence
where you can get the most for
your money. Pendergast Fence
prices are low in keeping now
with farm product prices.

The same high quality that has_
pleased thousands of farmers Is
maintained. It's all guaranteed.

Write for New Folder: and Prices

vendelqﬁ“ R‘ﬁce

      
   
   
   
   
  
     

23‘ Eclon Si. 432 Division St.

 

 

 
  
   
 

 

 

Inc. ’69? East-Ave” ’

Elkhart, Ind.

  
 

Fort Madison, la.

330 Main St.
Simulation Minn.

PUT THIS NEW
MILLON YOUR

Albion ﬂed and wood India are mid
and powerful One-third the work-
mg parts of any other mill.

Only mun Pilman beam. Ibied lo

wear. This in oillcu, and ally to
placeeblc. Coven“ by W

weight M] ham spring. Flu any 4-1301
uceilower Whynotshonenyourrhon ’
houn now with - (cod Wnénl' )

This is your chance—F. O. B.
Albion. Elecl n yourscl. you

dealer. or write dared to

‘ UnionNStsezel Products Co. Ltd.

8 N. Berrien Slreel.

‘ ALBION, memo/m, u. s. A.

 

 

COMPLETE STOCK 0F DISHES
IN SECONDS -

Boye needle! and supplies for all sewlna machines.
Ladle: silk hose with clocking at $1 pair.
Men’s sllk' hose wlth clocking at $1 palr.

Nemo corsets $3.98 Home clrclet: 31

Dark Percale Bungalow Aprons to size 50.. $1
All' colors in Flelshers Knlttlna and Crochet Yarns.
HOFFMANN'S BAZAAR,

Mt. Clemens, Mlch‘.‘ 

ITALL xrmumun mu. mmu'.‘ mawvmur
m’rw km mu; mam", nor-or I750 Lw
(ZAPSov zoeo wrmom'un His-I'M»: I‘IUZI’IHH
ORDER A mu mm. mum Hm UilAN’l'l‘l’Y “Hum
ll! Alillﬂl I!“ to co zﬂﬂlillllislilll SlAllDll. IUﬂlLIlGﬁ.

 

   

If you have poultry for sale

 
 
 
 

put an ad in .1
The MICHIGAN, 

BUSINESS mama/R
 ’ You;

   

 

  

  
  
  
 
  

   
  
   
 
 

 
 
 
 
    
 
    

  
     
   
     
   
   
  
    
  

 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 

  
  
 
  
 
 
 
  

  

 
    
 
    
   
   
 
   
    
   

  
 


   

 6‘ smn'e‘ﬂ

*mmry -

rains
. 814-3. E. Ford Bldg., Detroit. Mich.

V FOR BALE*-0NE 'OF THE BEST 80-ACRE

‘ {of ale. Write

the Tighter Everedy Holds.” Every

. A hon) rm: Issue—s Insertions tor-10¢,” -m
‘ : us. not accepted for less than 3 times.
In this dents-sent. v p n _
‘se one word one]: initials-d sadism-p otﬁglm, boa. in and, o: 
.1- addrou. Copy must be in our hands, bolero Md.
 week. The Business Farmer. Adv. Donia. Mt. Clemens, 

formed.

 

 

 

 

10 (httle. Poultry. Vehicles. r'mis.b§;(lyy.
.. h wn in. on improve .

meﬁf th? town. Adapted Alfalfa, Clover
Oats. Wheat. Peas. etc. About”l 1000  13:22.

rd, 6~room house. m. p0 .
0min ﬁbility forces sacrifices. $4950. only
page 87 Catalog
STROUT FARM AGENCY,

118.

82000 down. Details
1200 Be Free.

.7 'SALE 400 ACRES SANDY CLAY
to.“ A real, shepherd’s home. 8 miles mm
Killersburg. Small clearing. Comfortable house.
Schools and good roads. $12.50 per acre. 160
acres 3 miles from Miller-shun; $11 per acreuNo
improvements but easy clearing. _300 acres hmvy

y 0am. One mile ﬁrom Millershurs. small
clearings all fenced, $17.50. 10 per cent cash.

Yearly alfalfa or clovnr seed crops will care for
payments. JOHN G. KRAUTH, Millersburrz. Mich.

180 ACRES OF GOOD LAND. $500 DOWN
About 100 acres-rimmed. not all stumped,
productive land. produces good hay-corn, wheat,
clover. beans and potatoes. etc. 5 1-2 miles from
g lined town. on good state award» gravel
road. good neighborhood. small home and hymn.
ﬂne orchard. and prime vineyard. Possession given
this fall. Price $25 an acre. $100 or more each
year until paid for. Write W. F‘. UMPHREY,
Evert. Michigan.

farms in Northern Michivcn. extra zond buildings,
silo, wind mill, lame orchard close to Petoskev.
“heap for (mick mic. en” toms. RURAL TET-
TER OAP‘RTFW! No. R. “WWII. Petnskcv. Mich.

 so none FARM 'For: SALE. ,MARTIN 
'fFIﬂTH. Rhodes. Mich.
“ISO-ACRE MICHIGAN FARM, snore.

 

FOR SALE—100 ACRES FINE LOAI SOIL
on main road. 3 1—2 miles from Hillsdele. good
buildings. 2 inrma hams. electr‘r “chin. Priced for
quick nle. Address J. B. ISBELLE. Hillsdsls,
mohiun. R. D. 1

IF YOUR FARM OR COUNTRY HOME I8
' oommimion charmed

us. No .
CLOVERLANT" FAWII AGENCY. Powers, Mich.

 

FOR SALE ONE OF THE BEST 225 ACRE,

black , cla bottom. level and fertile farms
in mam yS

 

n. 125 per acre. nus. Owner,
M. A. BAMS. Coleman, Mich.
140 ACRES. BEST SOIL, LARGE HOUSE
and barn. All buildings good.

mile rom
town on hard reed. Write RUDOLPH HASB-
R. 4, Sandusky, Mich. .

FOR SALE-80 ACRE FARM 1 1-4 MILES
from town. Good Buildings. Good well. For terms
write ARNOLD CHAMPION, Wheeler, Mich.

 

GOOD FAR‘HS ARE WANTED: SEND PRICE
Sand description. ORDEN OECHSLI. Windsor,
0.

EISCELLANEQIQE

BEES AND HONEY

SECTIONS, COMB FOUNDA-
Completo outﬁts for begin‘

 

 

BEE “IVES,
tion. smokers, ctc.

' ners with or without bees. nts for A

Root Co. goods in Michigan. .end for cahhoa:
Beeswax wanted. M. H. HUNT a SON. 608 N.
Cedar BL. Lansing, Mich.

LIGHTNING RODS

LIGHTNING RODS. OLD LINE INSURANCE
mpenies now giving a ' per sent out
on our make of rods—making it an agents
Ernest. WRITE TODAY. L. D. DIDDIE 00..
rshiield. Wis

 

 

 

 

 

 

GENERAL
ALL AIEN, women. sovs. man oven
17, willin to accept vernment Positions
3135. (stationary or traveling) write Mr

Oment, Dept. 355, St. Louis. Mo.. immed-
iateiy.

(KODAK FINISHING, PRINTs.
ﬁnish any size 30; developing roll any Bile. 10c;
expert work. é bom- service. xive us a trial.
Isl us your films. THE LANSING STUDIO,
Y, nti. Michigan, R. B Musing, Mgr. (P)

 

GLOSSY

 

‘FOR CISLIE’.t§HBEAP  lCASE BEIZIJItRA-
M, Bull‘s I eaner. n good con on.
GEORGE TROOP. St. Johns. Mich. (P)

TIRE SALESMEN MAKE BIG MONEY. $100
per 'Week and up. .All or spare time. No exper—
ience or capital needed. Sell best guaranteed Akron
standard make cord and fabric ﬁres below dealers'

. ve auto owners money. Dizniﬂod, pro-
fitable work. FEDERAL RUBBER GOODS 00.,
Akron. Ohio.

WANTED: AGENTS IN OPEN TERRITORY
for concrete. tile and wood silos. Good Proposition

ri .S BARTON, 327 Brown Street, 8. E..

rand Rapids, Michigan.

- AGENTS—CELL “EYEREDY TUBE PATCH"
repair kits to dealers. auto owners. All Rubber

toll. " If Vukanizing—Cementloss-No—‘HeatrNo
line" 500 and $1.00. Salesman avers z
8100 to £200 weekly profit; You are dm n
t with manufacturer “The Hotter the Road
unman-
packa s and

 

 

 

bod

 

Write lands. for free trial
toms. HEREBY I’ATCH‘ 00., Clevelan , Ohio.

ministers
OI"

L ‘..\ .i I ,-
Ossh w-smmmy m
autos-day 'tor quo ‘

~

o—esmzens In women son oo-bI-sn;
ative on Clubs’. 1.. .~ w

tlon. Pie-mot work. No delivering.

in . Expor‘ n not necessary. Ad YELLOW
Sim pn'iucx‘lmo worms. 1133 must. Bids.
cam.

 

REAL ESTATE—WHEN WAITING TO BUY
or sell in Cit of Detroit consult us before doing
so. HALL— YLE 00., 217' Majestic Bldg"
Detroit, Mich.

I WANT TO BUY coon .ssooun- AN
cider press. Write me full particulars ROQEB
H. wonco'r'r. Mt. Morris, R. 2. was.

RELIABLE IIDDLE AGED LADY WANTS
position as house keeper. where more is
no other woman,‘nm also
innf ﬁr pictures. It. SKI . Salem Hotel. Salem.

c

 

SIDE LINE SALESNAN WANTED TO SELL
r1 (1 lam. Earn a
coal to your trade in ca oa gracuhn “be.

k’ in an‘ hour. For
Wﬁsirngadros GOA/L .00.. 3 5 So. Racine.

hicazo . .

BARREL LOTS SLIGHTLY DAIAGED
crockery. hunts] Scll'iinaezlvargl Elgar“. :lyumit;

' . . mp _rect hello
3:33:53. 6Write for mom . n. BWASEY

a: 00.. Portland, Mane.

LET US TAN YOUR HIDE—COW AND
Horse hides for fur coats and Robes. Cow and
Steer him»; into Harness or Sole lather. Oat-
alog on request. We repair and remodel worn
furs; estimates furnished. THE CROSBY FRIS-
IAN FUR 00., Rochester, N .

OVERNMENT NEEDS RAILWAY MAIL
013m $133 to $192 month. Write for free
specimen (1! one. COLUMBUS INSTITUTE,
0-4. Columbus. Ohio. ‘

SEND US YOUR HIDES AND WE WILL AL-.

low on the amount of oak mess or sale leath-
er th’ey will make at 35¢ per pound. Full market
price mid for Hida. Buy your leather direct
from the tanner. We sell any amount you want.
COCHRAN TANNING (30., Greenvlls. Michigan.

D: AGENTS IN OPEN TERRITORY
(orally-recto. tile and wood silos. ood Proposition
Writs I S. BARTON. 327 Brown Street. 8. E.,
Gnnd Rapids, Michigan. -

PRINTED STATIONERY. 5006335501118, 1&0

with or name an a .
“web” THE Basra PRINT sum). Kalama-
zoo. Hichigan.

USED AUTO PARTS. SAVE ON -GUARAN-
teed used parts. We have used parts for Buick.

' Chevrolet, Omw-Elkhart Don, F'hnders,
E. M. F. Ford, Krit. Maxwell, Monroe. Overland,
Oakland. Patterson. Studebaker. Saxon. and most
makes 0! cars. We can suppy tops, cushions.
Windshields. windshield glasses. springs. wheels,
tires. reﬁners. magnetoes. generators. starters. calls.
motor parts, ears. bearings. transmission parts.
rear axle parIs, ition parts, accessories and
supplies. If its an 0 parts you need, write us to-
day. E. BERMAN & SONS. Ithaca. Michigan.

 

 

TUB!“ )CO

 

KENTUCKY TOBACCO——DON'T SEND ONE~

penny, pay for tobacco and postage on arrival.
Extra ﬁne quality leaf 3 years old nature cured.
Chewing 10 lbs. $3.06- smokmﬁnlb lbs. $2.50.
FAR-MERS’ UNION, b123, weanne, Ky.

TOBACCO, KENTUCKY'S NATURAL LEAF,
Mild. Mellow smoking 10 lbs. $2.25; Hand se-
lected showing 3 lbs. $1.00.
preparing. .WALDBOP BROTHERS, Murray. Ky.

 

TOBACCO. SPECIAL SWEATED LEAF.
Chewing. select 3 1113.. $1' 10, 3. Chewm .
smoking , I .50 . Good smo ng 10, ‘ ;
regular 1.50. Guaranteed. CO-OPERATO S,
Murray, y. (P)

 

IIOMEgg’uUNt SMOdKIING 0R5 CbIIEW Nae) T106
1) . so on elver . s. . '
is?” $2.50; 0 lbs. yum). hummus
ASSOCIATION, Paduoah. Kentucky. P)
KENTUCKY TOBACCO—“SPECIAL BAR-
guins.” Send no mone , pay for tobacco and

tags when received. 0 lbs. 8
$5. $1.00. FARMEBS‘ GRAN
3'.

NATURAL LEAF TOBACOG—OHEWING,
5 lbs. $1.50: 10 ».1bo.. $2.50. Smoking; 6 lbs..
$1.25; 10 lbs., 32. Send no money. ay when
received. TOBACCO GROWEBS' UNION, Ps-
duoah. Ky .

TOBAOCW-HOHESPUN SMOKING, 10 III...
$2.50; 20 lbs., $4.00 Fins chewing, 10 lbs.,
$8 .00. FARMERS CLUB, Hayfield, Ky. V

For Comfortable, Economical Travel——
Take D. & C. Steamers leaving Detroit
daily for Cleveland at 11 p. In. All steam-
ers leave Detroit on Eastern time, Third
Street Wharf.

our old smok-
Gﬁ. Hamvilll’e),

 

BBEEQIBS’ ITTEITIOI

If you are planning on a sale this your.
write us

now and GLAIII THE DATE!
This service is free to the live stock in-

dustry in Michigan to avoid conﬂicti-

sale dates. '

THE BUSINESS

OLAm IOU}! DATE!

LET“

 

magsimss 3/4

{theorize TWINE co.. MINNEAPOLI$ ; cede ‘

.  Yo, ‘.

,nvi; STOCK communes

High class proposk'
collect-

innist, for good dano-‘

  

in. the agricultural
certain type: of culture which is rural
in characteer not interior to that
.of the urban communities. , Rural
communities must be solidiﬁed ' into
groups7which will aid . in the im-
provement of their power tor econm

characteristics of Our economic and

meat of our civilization is to con-
tinue. These can be secured by pro-
per .group study and instruction.

It is tenacious to think that co-
operation which tends to unity the
rural community and develop a class
consciousness is to the detriment of
other classes of society. It is the
unorganized community whose
thought is permitted to follow wrong
channels which is the menace. By
group action prOperly directed the
great mass of rural people can be

telligence and their actidn directed
along rational and constructive lines.
The attitude taken by the mass of
the farmers toward the economic
questions of the present time has
been more. rational and sound than

 

formerly. Thisvis, no doubt, due to a

I certain extent, to organized thought

headed by the extension divisions oi!
our colleges of agriculture and the
larger farmers’ organizations.
Saving the proﬁts which usually
go to the. private market agencies,
is looked upon by most farmers as

tive eﬂort. If this profit could only
be retained by the producers of farm
produce it is presumed that the mar-
ket problem would be solved. .It
is very questionable whether this
saving of proﬁt is ever going to be
of sufﬁcient importance to result in
a very great beneﬁt. (Io-operative
organizations Would probably not
Survive very long if their survival
' depended upon the beneﬁts of saving
or proﬁt. However, in connection
with other beneﬁts this is one‘which.
Kmust be taken into considération and
given its due importance.

 

Free receipt for,

simmers" r

‘ 'Imands.‘ is working”

J o  ‘N‘ C L A Y -&7=Ci  A  

 

> plagues? mane 33‘ it
’3  I

From the economic viewpoint the
real essential beneﬁt which is pos-
sible from cooperation is the im-
provement of the product. The
manufacturer studies his market and
makes goods which the consumer
.wants. Consumer demands are
studied so that ,the producer may
kDOW‘What kind of things will ap-
peal. The successful manufacturer
learns the demand and .theu goes
about to meet it. Being an indivi-
dual concern which operates under
the direct supervision oil-one head
the product can be made just as de-
sired. In agriculture a different con-
dition prevails. ~Production is scat-
tered and is under the direction of
many different individuals. Many
farmers are producing the same pro-

These things go into the market in
a rather haphazard way. They are
products of many different varieties
and kinds. Quality varies.
I products are bought by an individual
middleman who desires to make a
proﬁt. Whether this proﬁt comes
from selling a (good or" poor quality
product/matters not. . The’tarmer
grows produce which. be especially
likes to grow or a product which
does especially well on his land.
There is no correlationbetween the
market; ‘ demand and production.
Since the far-mafia working isolated
he is not in .a. position ‘to secure
market information. .
know what. the demands are as to

dude.  The farmer. unlike the'mahu-
lecturer who “knows the market de-
kzthe .darkgmhe

   

"more efﬁcient

individual  mark
. _ t

1.10,.

 

There "Is necessity‘tor building'up I ‘
communities a.

mic- as well as social actions Cor-f
root ideas, concerning the, essential

social institutions must be held by
the mass of the people it advances-j

brought up to a high. plane of in-.

the paramount gain from co£opera-‘

duct each in his own individual way.‘

These 4

He does not'

quality, variety and quantity of pro--

   

1,-5 brought; to
 know snore

grown in theprop‘er quantityto meet
the. demand of menopause“, 11nd

that a price' is not which '1
makes production proﬁtable. The ,,

reason for the. inadequate  is
due to the fact, no doubtfthdt the
consumers wants are‘not being prop—
only: met. ~In other words, there is

something wrong with the kind‘ ’of

produce, its quality. the method of
preparation for market, or‘the' quan—
tity onered on the; market at par-
ticu-iar times. The consumers de-
mands are not being met in a man;
nor that will result in a proper price.
This is a problem which can be met
in but one “way and that is through
community action. The «co-operative
organisation can make the "market
analysis and then 30" direct to}, the
farmers giving them the facts con;
(Sowing the market demands and
specify just what kind of variety oi!
produce they shall grow and in what
manner they shall prepare it for mar-
ket. This is a service which is basic
to market improvement. A product

I

well. grown and prepared for market ‘

is more than half sold.
the farmer gives the market demand
side of his business suﬂ'icient atten-
tion then goods will ﬂow to market
in a more orderly manner and there
will not be the wastes through de—
terioration of goods and glutted mar-
kets as we now have. _ , .

It is evident that marketing will
be eﬂ‘lcient when the right kind oi.“
goods are brought to the right mar-
ket at the right time and in the right
quantity to satisfy the demands of
the consumers. ‘The right kind of
farm produce, will never be brought

to the market at the right time and

in, the right quantities so long as it
is left to individual action. The basic
thing is that the right kind of pro-
duce be grown. , In order.td do this

' eﬂectively there must be co-opera-

tive action and organization or pro-
duction in the various communities

Whenever -

instead of the individual type of pro: 1

duction ,which' now prevails. Private ’

enterprise does not- have sufﬁcient

control over” production to get the

right kind of produce on the market
This improvement of the' product

'must come through-co—operatlve ei- '

fort and is going to be the greatest
beneﬁt which results from oo-opera-
tive marketing. This is a service
which is going to result in an in—
crease in the farmers income}. but
just,how much/of this increased in-
come will be due to co-operative et-
fort can never be measured. It is

going to be one of those indetermin,» .

ate beneﬁts of ' cmoperation which
can never be totaled and set on the
credit side oi! the ledger to offset the
disadvantages which can be ’meas-
ured in dollars and cents, in' the

form of costs which are higher than ‘

those of private enterprise.

The co-operative organization is
not always ,a success.
suits ,for many. reasons. Too often,

such an organization is started at a

time— when enthusiasm was at its
height. . Too much was expected.
Themes. prevailed that the savings
of the proﬁts or the. “parasitic” mid-
dlemen would result in a great re—
turn to ‘ the co—operators. Unscrjnpu-
lous and uniformed organizers have
capitalized prejudice and precon-
ceived ideas. The true economic

» situation has not, in many instances.
been studied at all. Many compara-

tive enterprisemhave been the result
of some ones desire to organize
something. ' V » L‘ 

‘All the, weaknesses of co—operative

Failure re- '

organizations will not be deait'with '

here. The most outstanding ones
seem to be ' l '

{Qiiﬁf direction
1!;

  

No ~ COrop'erati ’,

‘ lack .ottproperrunder-j .. ‘ “
standing as to the nMajot‘the: com; I;
’ munity and lack. of p ' ' v A ' W

~Av_- «.0 l

. L-»~.<a--,_.e_._..w

 

 

 

 

‘ a

        

   

1..

u“...-

x
M

ﬂoﬂimmdl-S'QHAUA.

F..-
be

see as 3‘9: 31

535-5- E...

 
  

E

 



V


  
   
  
   
    
    

.._W_ev- W-W.W~. w.“‘.w W--.

_v‘.

  
 

, I
.. .m three attacks of azoturia.

7 cred ‘ with

 
  
  

 

   

   

(Bataan

   
  

not .,-ta

the enacted joint, or
a cause pain; Innama'tionwillalso-‘be

present. Provide good dry quarters.
- _ where the anhnal will not experience

wide variations of temperature with-
in a. short tine.  not keep aniinal
on cement and provide plenty dry

f 1' ~ ’straw: (fivethirty. grains of P11611117:

Salicylate morning and night.

.. WARTS 0N TEA'I'S
'Would you please inform me how to
Rt rid of warts on a cow's teats_ ?—-F'.
. Gaylord, Mich. -

 

of _Fowlers'solntion of Arsnic morn-

ing and night, also apply the same U

to the Warts once a day. This can
best be done by the use oi a small
cotton swab. ‘
.

have an eight-year-old gelding that
He neVer
went down before he had the last at-
tack. I plowed with him for a week then
for two days I drove him four miles a
day and then had him in pasture for two
days. I was'feeding four quarts of cats,
and two ears of corn. Is this too
much feed or is there’ anything else I
 do for him?-—A Subscriber, Pigeon,

 

To prevent azoturia cut the feed
one half while idle. Feed plenty salt
and‘giVe lots of good Water. _-‘

RING WORM

, I have a few calves which have sore
"ends. the hair around the eyes coming

I. and showing on the bare spots some kind

Shall do for this disease?—-0. 13., South.
A ‘ rich. 'Mich.
This is an anection of the skin.

‘It is commonly ‘- known as “ring
worm." The form of ring worm dis-
ease, which is most (common in cat-
tle is ‘slightly different! train that
in other" animals. The disease 'com-
,monly is infectious, usually affecting

if a scab. Would you kindly advise what

I

' Ia number of. animals in a herd. The

disease is slightly more prevalent in

'young cattle than in old ones, and

occurs under all conditions of hous-
ing as well as at pasture. _The scabs
should be, removed and the underly-'
ing base is then painted twice daily
with pure iodin tincture. Where" the
scabs cannot be easily removed they
should be soaked several times daily
with olive oil; after aiew days soak-

“ing- the scabscan be removed with-

out trouble and the expOsed active
‘area is \then ’submitted to the.iodin
treatment twice daily ‘ until cured.
When the formations occur' on the
upper eyelid, where‘the iodin appli-
lions cannot be made, powdered
odoiorm is pressed into the act1ve
area after-the scabs have beanie-
’moved.
apply the iodin over an area, con-'
siderably larger than the seat of the
tgéuble. ’. '
BUNCH'ON FORELEG

I have a horse’ that has a
on. his foreleg caused from its being
umped on the neck yoke. The bunch is

,t on the'knee and it does not look
ivory good-4. E. M.. Gaylord, Mich.

This enlargement ' should he

 

“opened under strict aseptic condi-
tions to prevent

7 infection, , nfter
which "it - should .be packed with
gauze soaked in Tr. .- iodin and cov-
cotton: and bandaged.

.

 

   

 

’ m. u";   ,. _ .
exam m 'x’i'oui'should have applied hot appli-

uth to get its ‘reath? He: is , , . ,
cations in-place ct the-blister, this

I .  I  V ’ " ~ O
was... mafdma. "17 a.” .1 ﬂy"?
‘  Articular rheumatism is the cause _
of :the lamenesssand pressure over ,
joints will

These germs are carried in the '
blood stream and in order to get rid '
of them permanently the blood must‘

’ be‘treated. » Give two tablespoonstul -

large 

;m,ents developsloxli and-a usually

 only; in - young pigs. __ become.-
“ I 2 ‘ :~' '

 

   
 
  
  

  

 ‘dof‘all “that” fnu'be? done with ex-
,‘ ,  of a little- support
‘ in’5»_the"tray cut/splints and'bandage.

was, the worst thing you could do.
I 7 I ransamis

 

.' " ll wh iwron withmy
Phantoms, at! stain”

00d t

no rule of their legs. Hays

titeraeem to be in good orer. I eed

 ..carrots,andrye.'nxey

haven'dry to sleep—Mrs. . 8.,
-‘Gai‘lerd. H 

Thin-may result _' irom a number
01 causes-,Juch as an. acute infec-

tiousdisease. poisons, or sists in the

\-'brain.' In lambs it is associated

with eclampsia of the ewe, caused
by‘poor food, exposure or the infec-
tion that causes aportion.
caused by sists in the brain, (in
which case nothing can be done)
iodid“ giv’e'n in » an ounce of water
about’i‘our-_times,.d’aily will do‘ as
much good as anything.

runner!

 

“What is good for! thrush mil: horses feet? I

i—Subscriber, Onaway, M

‘ Thrush results. from an irritation
set up in connection with some of the
sensitive structures of the foot, and
more especially a diseased condition
of the fatty frog, and is character-
_._ized by‘a discharge of the purulent
character from the cleft of the frog.
Thrush may be caused by. standing
in ﬁlthy stables, or running in ﬁlthy
barn-yards, hence it occurs more ire-
qnently'in the hind than in the front
foot. Remove the cause. It the ani-'
mal has been running in, a ﬁlthy
stable or barn—yard. he should be
placed in quarters free from ﬁlth
and dampness; remtwe the shoes,
pare down the frog and sole gener-
ally; thorbughly cleanse the parts
with Kreso dip and water, after
which apply a poultice of linseed 311d
bran, for a period of twenty—four
hours. at the end of which time, the
poultice may be removed and the
following mixture worked well down
in the cracks morning and night:
Calumel one dram, 'cupri' sulphate
one'dram and sulphate of iron one
ounce.
better treatment can be used.

 

TUBERCULOSIS

Would, you please tell me through your
paper what is the trouble with my hogs?
They seem to have a hacking cough. I
lost one last year that would weigh 160
pounds. Was nearly fat when taken. Got
poor and died. One of my brood sows got
it but got over it. Had sevan pigs and
three died at about three months old.
Our local veterinarian said it was caused
from a- hair worm in_ the throat. I am
feeding corn and ground feed. Have given
charcoal and ashes without result. —-
Reader. Genesee County, Mich.

Tuberculosis has been recognized

. from the remotest time in‘ the hist-

ory of man as a prevalent disease
and is becoming very prevalent
ameng swine. This is due to the fact
that the dairying industry is becom-

‘In 811 088% it isewell to x. ing more extensive and the by—pro—

ducts of milk are used for swine
feed. A. relatively large percentage
of, dairy cattle is tuberculous, and
the infection gains entrance to the
milk on ﬁlth that is‘_contaminated

with infected discharges, such‘ as‘

saliva and feces. ' The organism‘may
also be eliminated direct from the
mammary gland . into- the milk.
_Swine from some sections of the
United States have been found by
experience to be so extensively tu—
berculous that some packers will buy

them only subject to postmortum in—

spection. . Themosttrequent channel
cit—entrance oi'_ the organism in swine:
is the digestive tubegjthe intect’ion'thz-

iing introduced, Juiced ’ er‘lw'ater.

herculosisvis seldom-noticed in the

early stages but is essentially a chro-

nic disease. “‘The digestive’ldera'nger

  

  

silos“ box/animators will;

Unless I

b
I Wm. Waiﬁe. Goldwater, Mich
“1'. Wood

Mix well together and 110'

 

AL'ssm- a. want. White Pigeon. Mich.

   
 

 
 

  

- (I? '0
PM"?! I'
Mr. Copy
Bales advertised

 

 

 

To avoid conﬂicting dates we will without
lbtdumuan livestoehcaloln
«Ideal

. can. If u no a sale no-
Vhousatomzosndwowlllcl'ammm
for on. Marcos. Liv. Stock Editor. I. I.
F" . Clemens

 

 

LIVE STOCK AUCTIOHEE as

Andy Adams, Litchﬁeld, Mich.
Ed. rs, South Whitley, Ind.
B. L. in, a , l
Oolestock, Eaton Rages.
Harry A. Eckhardt Dallas
0. s. romeo, m. ‘r ,t.
Holman H

 

 

 

. Mich.
inson, Plymouth Mich.
'v

 

. Liverno-‘l B

S.

 

 

 

PURE BRED LIVE STOCK AUGTIONEERS
WM. WAFFLE J_ T. HOFFMAN
Goldwater. MIch_ Hudson, Mloh.
on the block. ' In the ring.
We make a specialty of selling pure bred big
type Poland Chinas. Spotted Poland has and
Dune Jerseys. We are experienced. We sell
'em and we get the money. We are expert hog
judges. We are booking dates right now for
1922 sales. We would like to sell for you. We
have em price for both of us and it's right.
Select your date; don’t put it oﬂ; write today.
Address either of us.

'U-Need-A Practical competent Auctioneer

to insure your next sale being a success_

Employ the one Auctioneer who can fill
the bill at a price in keeping with prevailing
conditions.

Satisfaction GUARANTEED or NO CHARG-
B‘a MADE. Terms $50.00 and actual ex-
penses per sale. The same price and service
to everyone.

I specialize in selling Polands, Durocs, and
Chesters. Let me reserve a 1922 date for you.
Write or wire,

HARRY A. ECKHARDT. Dallas City, llllnols

JOHN P. NUT'ION

LIVE STOCK AUOTIONEER
ADVANCE DATE8 SOLICITED.
ADDRESS 118 W. LAPEER 8T.
LANSING, MIOH.

' (SATTLE
HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN

FOR. BALHO YOUNG HEALTHY,
milking, registered Holstein cows. Also
Maxed Holstein heifers. .

M. A. SAMS. Coleman. Mich.

 

 

   

 

 

HEAVY
14 reg-

(P)

 

 

' SNOW BIILL

Shed by a Pontiac Aauie Korndyks-Henur—
void Deer bull from a nearly 19 lb. show
cow. First prize junior call, Jackson N1,
1920. Light in color and stood individual
Seven months old. Price $125 to make

'. l Il.l'.h'." "I'liHj‘l ,II'W ’1“ 'H llllIm'dM'H'II M‘LI’IJH ("'"W‘lllnll '1' "

Isl. save-meme narrower“, um mum to sum  "
, . W. "to out what on have to sau- lot on out It.
 you a proof and tell you what it will cost {or 15, 20 or 52 times: . You can '

not It here at s .
BRIEDIRQ' DIRECTORY ,THI MIOHlaAII Dualugussmrlﬂag,

":1 mm .x .. .lil::!ll!l.‘l|"'|1‘4i‘l -‘

hues-u a“...

or changes must be received on.

It. Clowns. Michigan.

tested herd. Prices are right. "

~Detrolt. Michigan.

> I I 
- ask m them. erio Wt)

‘ LARRO assesses FARM. Box A North 

 

Sam’s eooo mun; neols'rsnan
en cows. ' ‘

_ coed bulls and due from 511503. 62%....
'hMmLRO.swchbumlb
' one guaranteed m II

tube
I. J. IIOOII -

“may. Mich.

 

 

FOR SALE

8IAN BULL R03! for
111 k hon

to
. Herd Federal accredited.
Write for particulars. '
ITHLEA FAR-8
Herbert L. Smith, Prop.. Shiloh. Mich. I
OLOTEIN CALVEB, 7 week! old,
pure. Tub. Tested. $25.09 each, are

shipment anywhere. Satisfaction
EDOEWOOD FARMS. Whitewater. Wh-

SHORTHORNS

 

SHORTHORN CATTLE AND OXFORD DOWN
sheep. Both sex for sale.
J. A. DeGARMO, Muir. Mich.

FOII POLLED SNOIITIIOBNS

Shronahire, Southdown and Cheviot rams writs b
L. 0. KELLY & 80". Plymouth, Mlch.

muclsco- ms suonrﬂdnls

FEDERAL ACCREDITED HERD

One .red Scotch bull may (or sernce.‘ Two

bull wives ten months old. Poland—China wean»

ﬁns visa ready to ship. .

P. P. POPE

Mt. Pleasant, Mich.

SHORTHORNS and POLAND OHIKAO. W. I"
now offering two ten-months-old bulk.

red hell 1‘, and two ten—months—old heifers.
b SORLEY BR08., St. Louis. Mich.

INI'IEIIITED SNOIITIIORN OIIALI'It'hY.

Our pedigrees show a Judjclous mixture oi
best blood lines known to the breed.' Write to
JOHN LESSITER'S SONS,

Christen. Mich.

OLADWIN .COUNTV SHORTHORN .BREEDERs
offer th. best in beef and milk strains. All ages
both sexes. W. 8. HUBER, Sec'y, Gladwln, Mich.

_ileme 3mm snonmonus

Registered stock of all ages and both sex. Herd

headed by the imported hull, Kelmscott Vis-

count 25th, 648,563. Prices reasonable.
LUNDY BR08., R4. Davlson. Mich.

HIGHLAND SHOBTHOBNS

Special offer on two white yearling Bulls from
IMP. Cows and sired by IMP. Newton
pion. .
Also several other real Bull Bargains.
Don’t overlook these bargains.

 

room. Hurryl
Herd under Federal Supervision.

Jsoss‘ou. mos.
'Hohtdn. Breeders Since

SOLD AGAIN

Bull cal! last-advertised sold but have 2 more

that are mostly white. They are nice straight lol-
sircd by a son of

a1 {b.2xr.olddamsndtheotherisirome

20 lb. Jr. yr. old dam. she is by s son of

friend {Inggﬁ’vold De Kol Butter Boy, one 0!

[rec .~
JAMES HOPCON JP... Owem'lloh- R 2.

190.

 

 

 

 

 

 

FOR BALE—TWO BULL GALVES, A HOL-
tein and Durham about 3 months old. Both
have heavy milking dams. Not registered. 850
each it taken at once.

CHASE STOCK FARM. Mariette. Mloh,
son UICK SALE we in: orramno
Rout oics of nearly1 50 purebred Holstein.

a all cows and alters. Bred well, yearly
reco res from t. b. Priced riht. Breeder
slnce 1913. W

rite us our wants.
WOLVERINE DAIRY F’ARM, Olldwln, Mloh.

WNY PAY IIOIIE a... House. heifer

calves. fifty dollars. Circulars fie . GONDON'S
15018116113 OBEST._West Chester,e Ohio.

\‘ In,I.IdOLS'I'EIN BIILL BARGAINS
Beck Korndyl'e De Milander. a 82

 

.PUBEBBED REGIS-

 

3 b 7P 1%0dwlt 3‘10? lied Ball:
. r1 ‘ . ‘
tested Write for list ‘ up. on

 

    
   
 
  
  
 

  
   
 

= : f“*:-Iuisonfsrocx Hill

 

   

Breeders of Registered Holstein
“inﬁll IBGTIQMW H.033- ' .
V withing", write; ‘
 wantsor’co'me‘ 'and see” I

    
  
 

  

 

 

solnnslu FARMS . v

Phqélilbabam dsbmlatersoths
eds Pontiac. a s u. I" ' ,.

C. H. Prescott & Sons

Tawas City, Michigan

MILKING SNOIITIIOIINS

 

Bull calves 1 to 12 mo. old from_ sons and
daughters of General Clay. ' Glenexde Dairy,
King. Glenside Bill Boy, Glens'lde Roan Clay.

and Doris Clay. These are good calves
to sell.

IRVIN DOA", Croswell, Michigan

 

 

 

 

RED POLLED

 

W0 YOUNG RED POLLED BULLS Fan
sale. Sired by Cosy Ells Lsddip. H. m

the prize at six Stale Fairs.
PIERCE BROS., Eaten Ranlds, Mich“ ﬂ 1

 

Ilia POLLED cum: "all as:-

E. 8. CARR, Homer, Mich.

DEYARMOND HERD OF.
REGISTERED RED POLLED CATTLE

Not merely milk or beef. (little. But milk and
beef cattle. I have two bulls for sale eight and
ten men old. Big massive follows from heavy
milking strain. Will sell it taken soon. Write, phone

or come a see
JOHN DEYARMOID & SONS, uh, M

 

 

 

GUERNSEYS
GUERNSEIS

OF MAY ROSE AID GLENWOOD BREEDING.
.No abortion, clean federal inspected. My,
Iires dam made 19,460.20 milk, 900.05 (at.
Their mother's site‘s dam made 15,109.10 mill .
778.80 (at. Can spare 3 cow; 2 hikers and a
beautiful lot of young bulls.

T. V. HICKS, R 1, Battle Creek. m.

 

 

ausnnssv euLLs nssov m
  service and bull calves 
u of blood o! my heifer Norman's 
3.] Boos, World Chainpion G. G". 81nd by 
in Dams Mullins; ‘ sill-Id“ A. B;

' a. I. ssuﬂl. Lalo‘ any. 

 

 

REOIITERED HOLSTElI-FRI-
m

31m
ted tel

 
 
  
 
 
  
 
     
  
 

HOLSTEIN FBIESIAN'”£53?F£»:‘£§  A

    
   
   
 

i

  
 
    
   
   
  
 
  
 

     


   

  
    
  
 
    

 

       

 

 

 

The reward of pure breeding; the ac-
complishment of quality, Success has
again contributed more iaureie to the
already remarkable record of

‘ THE SIRE SUPREME

At the International Live Stock Exposi-
tion. where gathers each year the elite
~‘qNorth American Cattledom to com.
note for the covetous awards, ﬁve mom
honors have been bestowed upon the "get" 4
M Edgar of Belmont

You too may share these honors. A bull
by this world famous sire will prove a
most valuable asset to your herd

Write us today.

WILDWOOD FARMS

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ODDIE FARMS ANGUS of both sex for sale.

Herd headed by Borden 31910. 1920 Inter.
mﬂonal Jr. Champion.

" . R._Mart|n & Son. North street, Mich.

 

REGISTERED ABERDEEN - ANGUS—BULLS,
Heifers and cows for sale.
Priced to move. Inspection invited.
RUSSELL BROS.. Merrill. Michigan

 

AYRSHIRES

FOR SALEwREOISTERED AYRSHIRE
bulls ‘end bull ,celves. heifers end heifer come

some choice cows.

FINDLAY BROS.. R 5. Vassar. Mich.

HEREFORDS

 

 

 

ASSOCIATION. Hereford, Shorthorn. Jersey
d Holstein cattle ; Duroc—Jersey, Poland China
‘ Hampshire Oxford. Shropshire and

Hampshire sheep.
A place to buy good breeding stock at reason-

ble prices. -
FRED B. SWINEHART O. E. ATWATER
Ml h Secretary
6 .

ELADWIN COUNTY PURE BRED LIVESTOCK
en

begs ;

President
Gladwi n.

BEEF
’ PRODUCERS

Michigan Produces the

Beef at the Lowest Cost.
Raise far better Cattle
than you can buy. Gm Dairy
Bea! when gains cost least. In
feed and labor. Avoid costly rail hauls with
their shrink, hmlsee and loss.

SOTHAM’S 'EARLIRIPE
w BEEF CONTACT

selves your problem—insures your success. A
fair intelligent, satisfying system evolved from
.31 years conscientious service to American Cat!
.tle Industry by three generations of Sothams.
GET THE FACTS. Write now or wire. Address

T. F. B. SOTHAM & SONS

 
 
  
  

 

Phone 250 SAINT cum, momoen
FOR SALE, Choice Hereford Bulls. bargain
prices. A. L. SMITH Ec or. Mi Farm
eight miles south of Mariam. Mich. (p)

 

 

SWINE

POLAND CHINA
L T. P. C. $15-$20-$25

 

 

dvrlnz Dies at above prices Top fall gilt: bred ~

 

for summer fan-ow, priced right.
HAR é..- OLINE
Address F. T. Hart, St. Louis, Mich
Big Type P. a. Bear Pigs, they can't be beat
in Michigan. Sired by Big Bob Mastodon an
Peter A. Pan a son 1,075 Peter Pan. 0. E

GABNANT. I‘hton Rapids. Mich.

 

   

 

 

BRED,, BONGO-JERSEY »
l and May furrow. sired by. Brook-
water Be ctlon and Model f Orion: Master-
Piece. Place your order now.
ROIT CREAMERY HOG F

M, Route 7. Mt.
Clemens. Mich. s '

 

OUROO JERSEY‘ WEANLINO BOAR PIG
weighing 40 pounds. from large ii 1'. , 12 to
$15. JOS. SOHUELLER. Weldmn, Mich.

AM SELLING a once-r orrenmo or

DUROC BRED SOWS ANDGILTS 

March 4th. mostly mated in Orion rGia’nt Col..j

 

a son of Ohio Grand Chainpion. 'Get on maill- .

int list for catalog. . _.
‘ W. O. ‘TAYEOR, Milan. :MIOR.'

PIIIIE—BIIED D9800 ‘JEIISEI‘v MES:
We usually have Igoodmboars ‘an‘d ,eowe of all_
ages for sale. Reasonable prices. ‘
LARRO RESEARCH FARM, Box A North End
‘ Detroit. Michigan. -

BOAR PIGS BY 'FANNIE’S JOE ORION AND
Pathfinder Orion. Priced to sell. Satisfaction.
guaranteed. Write, H. E. LIVERMOBE 8; SON.
Romeo. Mich. . ' .

E OFFER A FEW,WELL-BRED IELEOT.‘
ed spring ,Duroe Boers, also bred rows and.
Gills in‘ lesson. ‘00. or to ' '~ -- a i 4
McNAUGHTON a 'FORDVOE. It. Louie. Mien.-

'ILL cheer" bu‘nocFBﬁ'Eo‘ 'soWs "ALL
H sold. .\ A [ﬁnehne of boars, .weighing *fmm..160:

Farm 4 miles south of..Mi d n,g
NEWTONG; BLANKHPcrrin Syrian. g;

 

 

 

 

pounds up.
Gratiot Go.

 

FOR SALE—4EPTEMBER OlLTS—-OPEN OR

d, sired b . Model 0rion King. Call or.
35in. cues? F. r RICHARDSON, Blanchard,’
Mlch- I ’

 

 AlTarcthioglg,‘ "far 13.59.53”;

to 15 dollars, registered. Satisfaction or money
b X.
M a. E. KIES, Hillsdaie. Mich.

85 FINE SPRING BOARS

all sired by Schalros Top (701. a grandson of the

famous Welt's Top Col. We want the room, Send

$15.00 and get first selecting of these fine boars.
BOHAFFER BROS.. Oxford, Mich., R. 4.

OR SALEl. ONE DUROC BOAR
Breakwater breeding stock. Choicespring pin,
JOHN ORONENWETT. Carleton. Mich.

 

 

 

HALIPSHIRES

A CHANGE TO GET SOME REAL HAMP-
shires. Boar pigs, sired by Gen. Pershing Again,
Gilt Edge Tipton, Messenger All Over 10th. Gen.
Pershing 2nd,, and other great boars. Writes for-
list and prices. DETROIT CREAMERY HOG
FARM, Route 7. Mt. Clemens, Mich. ‘

 

 

HAMPSHIRES. A FEW GILTS TO OFFER.,

Place your order for spring pigs.
J. W. SNYDER, St, Johns. Mich.

 

 

O. I. O.

O. I. c. SWINE—MY HERD CONTAINS THI
blood lines of the most noted herd. Can furnish -
you stock at "live end let live" prices.

. A. J. GORDEN. Del-r. Mlch.. R 8.

REGISTERED O. «'l. c. SPRING BOARS
Sired by R. 0. Big Prince. Write for prices.
DETROIT CREAMERY HOG FARM, Route 7,
Mt. Clemens, Mich. .

 

 

O. l O & CHESTER WHITE .SWINE
Choice boars

of Feb., March and April furrow.
Advance Type and Busters Giant Bloodlines.
Clare V. Dorman, Snovel'.

Priced to sell .
Mich .

BIG TYPE 0 I (I PIGS 8

E. V. BILYEU.

CHESTER ANHITEB FOR Bail-f :1' REASON-
ebl rices. pr. pigs register n uy‘ers name.
Wii1l§hip O. o. D. ' preferred RALPH 00
ENS. Levering, ZMic'hizen. ~

‘ BERKSHIRES

 

WE EKS 0L D
Gus mnteed.
Powhatan, Ohio

 

 

 

 

WE’HAVE A FINE LOT OF, BERKSHIRE

ring boars for sale. sired by "LOngfellow’s Dou. -

up
ble, Bob and Duke of. ncheeter. DETROIT
CREAMERY HOG FAR , Route 7, Mt. Clem-

 . __ SHEEPW '
HAMPSHIRE SHEEP

A few good yearling rams end some Inn
lambs left to offer. 25 ewes all ages for sale
for (all delivery. Everything guaranteed as
represented.

lOLARKE U. VHAIREL West Irahch, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

I»~-——FOR SALE, LARGE TYPE f .
POLAND IiiIlIiA  
igans r. mp on oar. an
192 Smooth Buster 895823, Michigan's   
dough ht:  ﬁe"??? Emit; Inﬁnuna. it); We have a few good Shetland Ponies for sale; -
or see the: 6Free 113;; to vie‘iars.‘ r pricssoﬁaﬁl $452003? nil-11306 M‘Ivhlte
' ‘ e v 06 g r c 0
A. A. FELDKAMP
M‘"°"°“°“' R R' "°- 2 "M'- SHETLAND PONY, s 7mo’n1’ue' OLO.‘ see.
a . H. W. GARMA-N a SONS. Mendon, Mlch., R. 8.
REGISTERED B T P 0 SPRING sows —THOROUGHB '
Aho ‘ boars at $15 each. JOHN W. AMOR-i   pups fungi? c1355:

‘ ' / 9W0
. ‘ EGAN. Kale, Mich

healers. E. J. .MAORER, Marshall, Mich" R_ 5_

 

cLAiISMAl 3" TYPE-POLAND eumne

“the! “1‘ ready to ship. $10 and $15.
ll. W. OARMAN & SONS. Mendon, Mich.. R. 8.

 

 

~ . DUROos
W noo cassava—43...: s. d I
~ “1' gut, %§M‘£gﬁw. 1' :3: gang”?
' "' ' on e. ..
 snowed. r. .I. Drodg, m, “Mk3;

"rearranging; m. 
im‘h‘ V W

 

 

 

 

  
  

El

0., x. 7133.: l}?

m

 

LEVERY
BBEEIIEB ‘

on  B.VF.’S

' Encodere’ Directory ,

I. , to good] advantage;
 nonuyonr 

 ‘  

- . '  {conch ,; " j,

   
 

\.

 

seen

rices iright. DET- ,

FROM 1

no danger to the consumer. The most
frequent source of tuberculosis —in
swine is from. tuberculous
Swine becomes infected from infected
cow’s. milk, feces, nasal discharges
and the carcasses of tuberculous
cattle that are given them for feed.
A limited number of swine become
infected from garbage that contains
the human organism. This has been
especially observed in swine fed up‘
.on garbage from tuberculosis sani-
tariums or‘rhotels. li’is possible \that
.infection may be transmitted ,in the

swine. Tuberculosm is' a préveatv
able disease and the lessee from it'
could be avoided, ‘or at least ma-
terially diminished, _by proper con-
trol of‘tuberculosis in cattle. The
judicious use of skimmed milk, in-
fcl‘u'dinlg pasteurizing milk from sus—
‘lpe'cted, cows will materially di-
minish tuberculosis ,in ' milk—fed
swme. ' ' ‘ " _ ‘

v

 

V BOOKING EWES
Have some-ewes with long tails. Ewes
are four or ﬁve years old. Would there
be any danger in docking them? What
:thilrjm;l should it; be done?—-—W. S., Merrill.
c .

, Ewes may be docked at any age
and in any season of the year with
little danger of serious results if

would be advisable. however, that
this be done soon and by all means
before ﬂy-time. Before docking
these owes a. strOng'strintg Should be
tied tightly around the tail' abOut
3-4 of an inch above where it is to

  

   

' ICOLLECTOR!
BRUSH

  

EXTRA HEAVY
GALVANIZED
STEE L TOWER

\

'OR the ﬁrst time in history elect-
ricity is being generated by a

g . wind-driven plant. Years ago
scientists started experimenting with

wind.
tried. .

However, these early experiments
all took the same trend, the power of
the wind being transmitted to a gene
eratOr, which was placed directly un-
der the tower.~ This again was con-

All serts of devices were

long vertical shaft and bevel gears.
Other plants, too, were made on
which 'a belt was placed on the rim
of the wind wheel and around a \gen-
mtbrmulley’: With these a; 14-foot
wheel ands four Inch ,Dulley served

 

so thls'to 

 

I 51165

cattle. "

exhaled air from infected to healthy '

reasonable precautions are taken. It.

SPECIAL WESTING
GENERATOR

TT ROLLER
BEA

.00...”- b-.-

 
 

-00.”.-- a.-

electric generating units driven by'

nected to’ the wind wheel through a.’

to mete the.an reduction, in“
speed: The 'mrheit didmot mod.

1 murder adverse‘flveeth ,Vco‘nditrbne' _ 

   
 

, well. “The. string should be removed

from 12 to; 1.8 hours after the opera-
tion is performed but if bleeding
starts again'a'n , her string should
be tied aroundthe dock tightly and
left for a. few‘ hours—W. '13. Ed-
wards, Ass’t Prof. of Animal 'Hus-
bandry, M. A. C. = _.

MILK. FROM

 

ONE
QUARTER "
I have a. two-year-old heifer, freshened
March 10th, about two weeks ago began
giving bloody milk from one quarter. It .
started suddenly, being much worse the

BLOODY

~ ﬁrst night than it has been since. Some-

times it is quite noticeable, sometimes ap—
parently normal. We thought at ﬁrst she
might have bruised the quarter. or hurt
it some way, but it does not seem to be
tender, and there is a. little lump forming
just above the teat. The heifer had a.
caked. bag when she came in, and that
quarter which was the worst didn't give
near as much milk as the other three for
a month or so. Now it gives almost the
same as the other quart rs. Can you
tell me what causes this, and if it can be

- cured? Is the- milk from this uarter fit

to feed oalves?—‘——H. C. D.,
Mich.

There is- very. little that can be
done for a heifer giving bloody milk
from one quarter. This is caused by
a rupture of one of the small blood
Vessels and there is no method of
treatment. This occurs frequently
shortly after calving when the udder
of the cow is caked and consequently
more liable to injury. Usually this
will stop after a time without treat-
ment. Milk from such a quarter is
satisfactory feed for calves.——J. E.
Burnett, Associate Professor of Dairy .
Husbandry, M. A. C. 4 ’

liamston.

Free Electricity For Every Farm Home

PERKINS l4FT. STEEL WIN WHEEL

\

  
    
 
   
     

N65

IRES FROM

 
     

-

  

a

  
     

\' ..,:: . 

  
 

\

PANEL BOARD

I o '
o“ ' - 0.11:2:

     
 
 

ﬁt with a. specially-designed electric
generator which will give" an almost
constant voltage through a. range of
750R.P.M. to 2,500 RPM. In other
words whatever he the speed-of the
wind, the generator will work effici-
ently'and give the same rate of volt-
age. ‘ A
s The: “Aerolectric” as it' is known
is a 1 Kw plant and thé battery has
an intermittant capacity of 280‘am-.‘
peree hours or an eight hour rate of
240 ampere hours. j , ' . '
This plant has capacity enough to.
light the house, barn and . other
buildings, pump water, operate ,the

vacuum‘,sweeper, electric iron. else-35' 
elm  .ﬂ  "
- electrical '

trio cream‘ee'

1113 machine

    

mien? ‘
1 ' other

         

        
 

 

 
     
  

  

     
    
 
 
 
  
  
   
    
   
  
  
 
  

 

\

     
  

  
   
 
    
    
  
    

 
    
     
 
 
 
 
   
    


 
 
 
 
 
  
  
   

 
 
  

graphici location.

This is

lot. Production to Income from Dairy

‘lished by the Unitedetates jDepa‘rtr
ment of Agriculture. ‘ . '
\,\

7 - on a study of data" supplied by 96
a . ‘ cow-testing associations in various

better feeding, better breeding. and
better care, cows owned by associa-

mated production per head of all

milk and 160 pounds or buttertat a
, year. The; association cows are
' about 50 per cent better, producing
an average of 6,077’ pounds of milk

and 248 pounds of butteriat.
According to ﬁgures based on
18,014 yearly individual cow to-
cords, .as butterfat production in-
creased from 100 -to 400 pounds
there was a ,regular increase oi.’

. per cow for every 50 pounds of in—
crease in average production of but-
tertat. As the yield or'butteriat in-
creased irom 109 pounds to 396
pounds, the returns above the dollar

 

expended {_or feed increased from 35

cents to $1.52. V

'The coWs having an average milk
production .of 3,260 pounds showed
an average income of $32.26 over
the cost of food, while. those produc-
ing 13,250 pounds showed an aver-
ageincome~ of $21849 over feed
cost. The cows in the latter group
produced about 4 timesas much as
:th'ose in the other group. and their

average income over “cost ,of feed .

was nearly 7 times as great. ' The in-
crease in incomeuabove i'eed roost
grew regularly with the increase in
production. . , . '

A study of these records that it

- ' pays best to put feed into big pro-.v

ducers, even though they are big
eaters, says the department. -

A copy of the bulletin may be ob-
tained upon application tofthe De-
partment of Agriculture, Washing-i
tonn, D. C. . '

o

 

DANGER SIGNALS 0N (IO-OPERA;
TIVE HIGHWAY
, (Continued from page 16)

/' tors upon ~entering into an orga-
nIZation must realize that the bene-
_ fits which come from it must be paid
for in some manner or other. 00-
operation isgnot .a cure-all for the
evils of a'community nor-A does 'it do
, 7 the miraculous thing .01." furnishing

results without work."  ' '
The
business management must be fol-

'_lowed by the co-opera'tive associa-'
, .. tion as strictly as by any other or.

ganization. . No business unit, re-
gardless of its type at ownership, can

., be successful unless it is ‘properly '

‘ directed byxsomeone who knows how.
This deficiency of ,management,
however, is not a deﬁciency or the
type of business ownership but rath-
‘er ‘One' of - internal management.
There is nothing characteristic about
the. co-operatiye type of ownership
which should render the
ment any more inefﬁcient than that
\ 01 other types. Other things being
requal,‘ the management of the co--

, opegative concern has an equal op- .

pertunity the corporation tor
eiiicien‘cy. Thejact that in; the past

in’connection" with coz—oiierativés need
I , Th‘e .. present tendency is toward
  ,ithej organization of more ,cogoperao

not thatlit’will continue‘to j

 

 
    
 
  

gitétinssit,  .
 ,0peﬂtivehption I is the only means

j the impdtant'points brought out in
 DepartmentuBulletin 1069, Relation.

Cows,,b'y J. C. McDOwell,_just‘pub-“

\ _‘r aservice’s.
The facts in the bulletin are based 9

parts of the country. z'Because of. 

' the dairy cowsrin the United States .
is approximately 4,000 pounds of

about $16 in income over teed cest';

fundamental ' principles of '

manage- I

inefﬁ'cient'_managoment’  prevailed »

Those who are in- :5

  
 

., ﬂ _ ‘ am
 _, . st cy

detects in produc-
j‘oduetlv’e processes are
--reasons'for poor mar-
l‘luite" ' probable— that 4co-

whereby "improvement can be se-
cured. II this improvement can come
through co-operation. along other
lines than marketing it may not be
essential to ..take,’over the market

 

Pneumarvns IN CHARGE AT

:IH' 1.8mm CONVENTION,
.‘ ~ - (éontiu’ued from‘ page 3)

" changes in classiﬁcation and how to
‘ - ‘ ' ' uon members are "tn-Ch better than; 'hestjlx in the minds of breeders the
" ' ‘ the-general run 0! cows. ‘ The estik ' ’

essential features of ideal Holstein
type. Among the recommendations
unanimously adopted by this com-

f mittee were: .

classiﬁcations of calves under 6
maﬁa of age be eliminated. That. no
rises be awarded except where merited.
T ce 0: all A. _R. 0. records be
ﬁled‘with the fair secretary. That cows in
the 805¥day class be eligible for competi—
tion with cow's having completed a full
year’s record. That fair secretaries use
greaterscare in checking all records and
ages or ranirnals entered in the various
classes. That all discredits on the H01-
stein score card be eliminated until more
satisfactory score cards can be developed
and‘approved. , ,

«At the co—operative sale held in
connection with the convention, 175
headset Holste‘ins coming from prac—
tically every state in the Union were
sold. _ The best .pr-ice'paid was for a
40spound cow which’sold for $3,200.
The average for all animals sold was

$470. I
i .Oiﬂcers‘ Elected
Ofﬁcers elected - for the coming
year are: For president, Frank O.
Lowden, former governor of Illinois
‘and prominent Holstein breeder at
Oregon, Illinois; for vice—president,

v

, John M. Kelly of Wisconsin; mem-

bers of the-board of directors: W.

S. Moscrip, Minnesota; W. G. David-,

eon andsJohn A Bell, Jr}, or Penn-
sylvania; H. w. Norton, Jr., of Michi-
gan; E. B. Armstrong, of New York;
G. E. Fox, of Illinois; T. E. Elder.
of Massachusetts. ‘

After "adjournment [of the conven-
tion, the new board met, transacting
considerable routine business and
elected, according to the new consti-
tution provision, the following oﬁlc-

""ers: For secretary, F.. L. Houghton,

of Vermout; for treasurer, Wing R.
Sni'ith, of New York: for superin-
tendent of advanced registry, Mal-
colm H. Gardner. ' V

, The convention had before it in-
vitations from Grand Rapids, Michi-
gan; Cleveland, Ohio; Richmond,
Virginia and Los Angeles,‘Calii'.., but
decided to hold its 1923 meeting in
Cleveland, Ohio.: '

1
J

m: EXPERIEIIGE POOL

Bring your everyday problems In and got
the oxporlonco of other farmers. Questions ad-
dressed to thls department are published here
and'answered by ou.-our readers who are
Graduates of‘tho mar of Hard knocks and
who have their diplomas from the College of
Exporlonoo. If. you don't want our edltor's
advice or anoXpert's advice. but Just plaln,
everyday. huslnoss, farmm’ advice, send In
row quatlon , w. wlll publish one
each woo . If ‘you can answer the other
ofoilow'l question. please do to, he may ans-
wer one of yours some day! Address Exper-
lenoogPool. cm, The Business Farmer. Mt.
Clemens, Mich. .

 

 

 

 

 

 

BREAK 8 Doc 01%“ EATING seas

Tell A. V. S. my wife- breaks a dog
of eating eggs, by feeding one. every
meal, fried or boiled, 'with his feed.
The dog will soon begin'to leave the

egg to“ eat last. finally not at all.——--

E. I. W., Mt. Pleasant, Mich.

 

V  men 0151 noes ,
"float 'oneﬁujp oﬂgrease, add two
cups of kerosene. {shake and apply
to hack andpides» o'i'. hegs'with an

’ old horse-brush.‘ Repeatiin menth or

so. if needed—+0. Y., ,All'egan, Goun-
,ty.x'Mich‘.  ‘  r . -

 

.1 "I‘Or‘uo Brion-'1‘ I . ‘  a

Rat ' the Potato.“
- , Depart!“ t _mone' back. Will lay in August and all through

in: “

  
 
 

There is a no
and style of De
Laval Separator
for you. no mat-
, tex- if you have

one or a thousand
cows.

1

  

machine made

stood-o'eot

ford Cook, living near Foyil,

cream from . . . . . . and then one
from the De Laval, and changed

weeks, the result being that the

pounds more butter-fat per day,
and he is milking 12 cows. This
amount at 35¢ per pound makes
70c per day, or $255.50 per year,
more than twice as much as the
new De Laval was worth. Mr.
Cook said we could use his name
and this information, and it

make an aﬂidavit to that effect.”

This was taken from a letter
from _one of our agents, but
there 18 nothing unusual about

NEW YOIK
165 Broadway

 

Don’t Let Ts

“Last week we replaced a

, y
which had been used only ﬁve
years. Our customer, Mr. Craw—

Oklahoma, shipped one can of

about in this manner for four

De Laval got him exactly two.

they didn’t believe it, he would.

The De Laval Separator Co.

cum/loo
29 E. Madison St.

Sooner or later you will use a

 De Laval

' Cream Separator and Milker

       
    

 

 

 

 

Happen to You

it. We are constantly receiving
letters of a similar character
from people who say they
waited too long before buying
a De Laval. .

0n hundreds of thousands of
farms today theré is an enor-
mous amount of butter-fat being
wasted by inferior or worn-out
separators and by hand skim-
ming. Perhaps such waste is
going on right on your farm.
Stop it: at once by getting a new
De Laval. It is not only the
world’s best cream saver, but
lasts longer and is easier to v
clean and turn than any other.

Call up your De Laval Agent
today and ask him to bring out
a new De Laval so that you can
try it, or write us for full in-
formation. Sold on such easy
terms that it will pay for itself
while you are using it.

SAN FRANCISCO
61 Bella St.

5

g.
l

 

 

 

 

 

proof and quote rates by return mail.

POULTRY BREEDERS’ DIRECTORY .

Advertisements inserted under this heading at 25 cents per line, per issue.
Write out what you have to oﬂer and send it in. we will put it in type, send
Address The Michigan Business Farmer,
Advertising Department, Mt. Clemens, Michigan. \

- 35%! my.

 

 

 

POULTRY

WYANDOTTE

 

 

PULLETS

If you mathng Pullcts for fall and winter on!
we can u .

Leghorn. Anoonas. Rocks, Rods. Burt Orplngtons
Eightwocks and three month old ; also other

b ' Yearling Hans and Gockerela
Write us for description and price list. We will
send you stock from our Pure Bred Practically
Poultry—stock that will make money for you on

 

 

 

 

your “2' AT: FARMS ASSOCIATION
202 Chase Bulldlng, Kalamazoo. Mlchlgan
Top Quality Chicks. Spanish. Mlnorcas, Rocks.
Reds. Wyandottes and Omlngtnns.
TYRONE POULTRY FARM, Fenton, Mich.
PLYMOUTH ROCK

06$ for hatchlng. Norman

BARRED ROCK E RS. JES-

la inn, prize winning strain. M
gllﬂvyB. LEAN, Mason, MlCh., R 1.
e F ROCKS-43mm. Turkeys—For 20 years,
 c. Gllpp a Sons, Bx. M, Saltlllo, Ind.

ﬂ

 

LEGHORNS

s. c. sure Lsenonu one! CHICKS.

' t the ne bree .
W. m3. Jlxlsl. WEBOSTER..-Bath, Mlqh,

LEGHOBHS

. Comb But! Leghorns, 1000. Chicks for
giggleﬂrst delivery. It will cost you not 2 cents
to ﬁnd out my plan how to get 10 sby Chicks

'LAPIIAM Foams. Plnclmey, Mich.

 

   

'/ l I A - . . . ' o
Willi! mm  sewage?
litmmx’éo {iii’taﬁwr‘iﬂmwal‘ns sfunmuo: o.

in n . moo who arts are the es.
  33331:! monsoon" FARM. Balding, Michigan

 

"Allan-Er, mum enemas
a “‘5‘

at ’stmin. March tch
“each I,

 

 

   
 

 

'1.

he. rose ﬁnnedn’lolfluiy
  2-3.“ »‘ . 

.HEJMBACH’S WHITE wvnnoor‘rss. Ex.
hibition and utility—~Rhode Island Reds. Chicks »
all sold for the season. Hatching eggs half price

W. HEIMBACH, Big Rapids. Michigan. 1!. N V

 

 

KUUUE ISLAND REDS

 

HITTAKER’S RED OHIOKS Both Combs.
Blood tested for white dioarrhoeg Mich.
igan’s greatest color and egg strain, Catalog
free. lnterlakes Farm, Box 4, Lawrence. Mich_

 

 

BOSE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS. Hat0h<
mg Eggs reduced to $1 per setting. MRS. Alp
BERT HARWOOD, R. 4, Charlevoix, Mich. (P)

 

RHODE ISLAND REDS, TOMPKINS STRAIN,
Hatching eggs and baby chicks. Eggs per hund-
rgd, May. June. July $8. vgthicﬁs twice the price

 

 

of eggs. Both combs. FROHJJ, New
Baltimore, Mich., RI.
ANCONAS

 

3000 EARLY APRIL HATGHED f 

FULLY MATU RED ANGONAS.

BUCKEYE ANGONA FARM

NEW LONDON, OHIO. ' .3.

Heavy layers and show birds, none better. Rea-
somble 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.. »Pittsburg, Pa...
Cumberland, Md. Cks. Hens,

Hated Pens always for sale. Eggs and Baby
Chicks in season. 100,000 Incubator capacity,
Write us and get the best. "- '_

 

ﬁ
ﬁ

ORPINGTONS

 
  

F.  ‘ ‘ ,,
unpluaro‘llsunfhgx  ..=-...:::°"

A .. _
Merrill, Mlch., Route '4.

   

 

 

mm . ewes”

 

,ili'lidﬁiiﬂifm


    
    
   

  
  
   
  

.‘h

3—15, $1.50:
train. Postpaid; guaranteed.
0N, R. 2. Kingsley. Mich.

 

 

f” ’ - BABY CHICKS .
clllclls wml PEP

Y BIG JUNE AND JULY
‘ - PRICE REDUCTION
Try some of our full blood—
ed DON‘T STOP LAYING
KIND, of chicks for June
and July. They will my

 

 

Safe delivery. .

Prepaid. in.
HOLGAT CHICK-Hlitgﬂg‘hvog
Box B, Jioleato, Ohlo

CHICKS

Thoroughbred varieties of Tom Barron English
'White Leghorns. S. O. R. I. Reds. Parks Bar-
red Rocks. Strong and healthy chicks from
tested heavy producing stack, correct in plumage
and color as well as being excellent layers. 100
~ - per cent. live delivery gimmnteed. Order your
‘_ “ June and July chicks now at my new low prices.

~ White Leghorns $10 per 1'00; Barred Rocks, and
S. O R. 1. Beds, 512 per 100. Special prices
on large lots. At these pri es We advisc‘plncing
your order as soon as possi le. Interesting cat-
alog free. Importer.

BRUMMER'S POULTRY FARM
Box 28 Holland, Mich.
ieties of heavy layers on free range.

 Reasonable prices Get catalog

NOW.
“d SOIIILCBEAM HATCHERY, H‘ B, Tippin,

 

 

:1

FROM TWELVE LEADING VARI-

 

Box .303. Findlay, Ohio
CHICKS. ALL STANDARD VARIE-
tai2s3¥t reduced prices for June delivery. Satis-

anteod. 100 per cent live delivery.
gagitliionfofugilrices. HOMER HATCHERY.
Inch

WHY NOT

your chicks from egg-bred stock?

All‘iiolllls & WHITE LEGHOBNS

Come and see ourd stock if you can or send for
, ' t' prices.
SISAEI¥YDIITTSYHERL Box A11. Zeeland. Mich.

mer.
(P

 

'

 

 S. B. White Leghorn: -

‘Bm:3'“i::l.‘;"‘"'i.:3:..
_ 'S- C. Brown Leghor’ns

Here we are, just a few hour-strum our
door. with baby chlx from the st ,
breeds Our growth from one small in-
cubator to 22.000 en capacity has been
Steady. and denotes honest dee . Get
‘our prices on chicks from our eslthy.
free range, heavy layinf stock. Send to-
day-for handsome cute oz in colors.

CITY LIMITS HATCHERY A POULTRY.

 

 

 

   
 
 

   

. 8'5
' ' ' Bilge" m’ﬁI‘leldn
- ev
and July Order direct 1.55330. Prom? I

mentwby insured Parcel Post prepaid to ‘your
door. Full oount strong l'ivel'y chicks on arrival.
For quick service end an entirely satisfactory
den send us your order.‘ Fourteen years reliable
dealings. Fine instructive catalog free. '

HOLLAND HATCBERY

 

     

YARD, Route 5. Box 11; Holland. Mlch- ’ R. ’7, k Holland, Mich.
D . . 'BABX'GHIGKS

' .  8 FULL LIVE COUNT GUARANTEED
, y , . From hens of heavy laying stain. s.
‘ ' . O. Whitesng Big;an ‘1 0:11ng 183d
' o flock lth re bred chicks that  nae. or ; or ;
ﬁgllgar‘lpgn‘dr ottomqbeﬂpu duelit‘Y. 14331101118-   121" 50 I" 500' ' ‘ . eds E“
Books Iteds, Wyandottes, Anconss, Minorcas. a, trod Rooks. $6.00 for 50., $13 for
ofﬁngmm_ silver Spangled Hamburg Eggs 5 . 100: $62.50 for 500. Prepaid Par-
32.00 per setting. We deliver at your door. et 3,337 cel Poet right to your door. Order
N" "1°" 1m and it“ “mo-3‘ V'INSTROMnoggllIOSRﬂYh ﬁlm a HATCHERY
J. G.  ' z”land' Mich. '

Port Huron, Mich,

Box 74

R. 1,

You ought to have some or
our certified I‘lefficiency
chicks" to make you money
'this fall and winter. We are
making speciﬂ June prices on
our stock. White and Brown

S. .
$14 ‘pcr , White
dottes $15 per 100. Sent par-
cel post prepaid With guaran—
. . .. teed delivery. Order from
this ad. .

CLYDE CHICK HATCHERY Box 5M, Clyde, 0.

EXTRA 600!) GHIGKS

Plan now on more eggs next winter. Order chicks
from pure bred record layers. Tom Barron White
Leghorns, Brown Leghorns, and Anconns. Post-
paid anywhere. Catalog free. Ask for May and

cures. "1.11an01
MICHIGAN

ZECLAND.

 

 

  

 

 

prepaid. 100 per cent live. delivery guaranteed.
r reducing chix that please. July
our 12th "the? less. GREEN LAWN POULTRY

g‘jclgllﬁc IEMS. Fenton, Mich.

I BABY GHIGK PRICES SMASHED

ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LEGHORNS
now $9.50 delivered. Anoonas $10.00. Specie]
prices on larger shipments. Not ordinary stock
but genuine egg pedigree stock. Our quality cant
be beat at twice the price. Our free catalog Will
will prove it

PROGRESSIVE POULTRY mm

BOX L

 

HOLLAND MICHIGAN

' l .“ED' time?

Get our low Jul ccn err v0 gun .

Y  prices. July chick: I MONTH’S FEED FREE

 f m m t tor January layers. w‘itlliy ew‘l‘iekordlflr. Watt 

, one _ o e rges I e a I ‘
fsi‘ocig‘ iguﬂMicll’eii‘lzzggirmMy price is in reach .01 —",———.—-Breeds chicks. 4 Breeds
all only $15 00 per hundred. Detroit .Win- lJluckhngs.eSelect and Exhibition Grades. Cat-
, aozue re.

new. EggeﬂkﬁteIEARMS. Plnckney, Mich NABOB HATCHERIES, Dept. 30, Gambler, o,

ABY CHIX MAY AND JUNE DELIVERY.
    010v 0lll0lls

M‘ recs. 1 g o o . .
2.131;“? 50 {or $10.00 or 100 for $16.00

 

 

200.000 for 1922, Shepards Anconas,
English type White Leghorns and Brown
Leghorns end Barred Rocks. Why Buy
two prices when you can buy direct? or
chicks are from strong Vigorous ocks
of ﬁne quality and excellent layers.
Chicks are sent prepaid With 100 per
cent live arrival guaranteed. Order now
or send for, free catalogue.
KNOLLS HATCHERY, Holland Mlch R12

 

 

N
Day Old Chicks. StandardRVal-letles. Make your
selections Cntekvmie andt rice list now ready.
H. H. PIERCE, Jerome, Mlch.

 

BABY CHICKS, 20 breeds. 110 up. Pure bred
stock. Prices on request. English Leghorn: too.
MIDL ND HATCHERY. Midland, Mich. jP)

 

 

- . L
. I ' ‘

«lid Reliable’ OHIO HATCHERY
S. C. rWhite Leghorne, S. 0.
Brown Leghorns, and S. O. Buff
Leghorns $3.50 per 25; $0.50 per
50; $12.00 per 100; $110 per
1000. Barred Rocks. Mottled An-
conss. end S. C. Black .Minoroee,
$4.00 per 25; $7.50 per 50:
$14.00 per 100; $130 per 1000.
 White Rocks, White Wyandottes,
uff Orpingtoris, $4.50 er 25; 8.50 or
50: $16.00 per 100. R.p0. R.$I. fields,
$5.25 per 25; $10 per 50; $18 per 100; Light
Brahmas. $7.00 per 25; $13 per 50; $24 per
190. odds and ends. $3.00 per 25‘
$0 Dog 50; $10 per 100; THE UHL HATCHERY'
Box 002, New Washington, Ohio.

    

 

 

BABY CHICKS

.FROM SELECT, HEAVY LAYING
HEN I 8 C. HITE A

S N . W ND
BROWN LEGHORNS, BLACK
MINORCAS, ANCONAS, BARRED
ROCKC ND RHODE IS. REDS

JUNE PRICES: s. '0. White and Brown

Leghorns and Anconas. 50 chicks, $5:
100. $10; 500, $47. 0. Rocks, Reds
and Minorcas, 50, $6.50; 100, $1300:

500, $62.50. Postpaid to your door and-
full live count GUARANTEED. Order
from this s and save time’. REFER-
ENCE Zeeland State Bank. Instructive
Circular Free. r
COLONIAL POULTRY FARM

Iceland. 'Mlohlgan

w Egg Bred Chicks

CS
 l

Selected thoroughbreds. Prize9 winners at National

 

 

 

 

 

Egg Laying Contest, Mo. June and July
chicks mike November layers. Now is the time
to buy._ . . Anconas: $13, 100; $7, 50. S.
C. White Leghorns: $12, 100; $6.50 50. Er-

Us. Star mating. Sheppard Anoonas: $10, 100;
$8, 50. Barron Eng. White Leghorns, $14, 100;
$7.50, 50. Thousands ready for shipment every
Tuesday. Parcel Post Prepaid. Guaran
and healthy at your door. Catalog free.
B FRANK A. VAN BREE

Box Iceland,

 

,Plcase Mention the M.  F.
When writing to Advertisers

 

 

 

 

BLOOD WILL TELL

v ry best layers.»

very reasonable price.

8.
We ship chicks by parcel
.book your order it you sen

   
 

 

 

DAY OLD CHICKS

Special for Jane and July

$10.00 AND $12.00 PER "100

Our English Type White Leghorns and Brown Leghorns are the great-

est laying strain .of today

Eleven years of breeding has made this stock good.
‘With long deep bodies 'and the large combs, they have the egg pro-

ducing qualities in them.

S. 0. English type White Leghorns, nextra‘ selected ....

S. 0. English type White Leghorns

S. C. Brown Leghorns, extra selected ‘
O. prown Leghorns, Standard ...._ ‘ - r I g

' d , nd

. :hfdirt’t’oihhrﬁttn‘l’m’l’h {$50.32; in h

' ' ——ol-d . to ' "tlme.‘end we will write you at ono'e w on to look

‘ ‘ »   youw‘llIman-ms: commit». or Write M_‘omloeue before enderlos. .

*r was WQWERINE HATCHER’Y  -'  i113 1’ " Wieseé3r9llﬁit°f

t has never been our aim to p11 V .
layers and bring our customers a good profit.
We have been in the poultry business eleven years a

PRICES FOR JUNE AND JULY, 1922

Eleven years of hatching and shipping chicks assures you good first class chicks.
arrival and satisfaction, or your money back.

17,000 Chicks Every Week Till August l5t

S. C. English type White Leghorns are .good and profitable layers, and our extra selected are'o‘f the

 

 

 

Per 25 Per so For 100 For 500 Per 1000

$3.00 $6.00 $12.00 $57.50 $115.00
2.50 5.00 . 10.00 50.00 ’ 100.00
3.00 0.00 12.00 > 57.50 ' 115.00 '
2.50 r 5.00 10.00 50.00 100.00 A

 

rantee safe arrival.

t out-cheap chicks, but to give our customers chicks that will be good

nd are offering you chicks of the bést layers at .a.

.a balance ‘just befompchioks are to be ship ed

We - guarantee, safe

Our terms are; cash gloom. but we will

 

for the 9mm and  will! mail

“'3 . PULLETS '    .- 
re IT’SQréelly- surprising the amount:

d alive

Mich '

 

 

 

   

 

   
   
 

 >"..».

“‘0! literature thatisj‘spread broad-

"cast fallﬂover the land about
winter feeding land housing to get V I . .
eggs, but never anythingsaid about ‘ ' 1
summer and fall care of thev'pullets. 7. ' “ I
It’s very necessary to have good 
houses and feedinteligently, butpit’s‘
vastly more importent in winter egg V .
production to giVe the pullets proper  1
attention 'during the summer and " , ‘
ran menths. This is especially true ’ l
of the fall months. I will venture- \ l
the assertion that ninety percent of v ' I
the egg supply in winter is reduced ‘ T
by miss-management of the pullets ,9 l
in the fall. They are allowed to .l I
crowd up in the brood coops or in ’ l
the buildings, - contraCt colds and x .
soon develop won and sore-head.
When pullets have been, suffering
with roup and sore head it’s next to 1
an impossibility to feed them so as to
get eggs during the winter months.
Good houses 'and feed are very es-
sential but it’s more important to
keep the foWls healthy and “coming
along" during the fall menths in
order to have them laying by the
time they reach the 5 1-2 months of
age and in some varieties they
should be laying at from four to
ﬁve months of age. A correspond-
ent says he taught his pullets to
take to the roost poles by the time
they were two months of age, never
allowed them to crowd up in the -
brooder house at any time and al-
ways fed them cautiously and kept .
plenty of bran and other growing _
foods before them continually. This ~
convinces us more and more that
the fall care and management of the
pullets serves more to prompt the 6‘

     
        
   
   
     
  
   
    
   
   
  
  
     
   
   
      
   
    
   
  
    
     
   
  
 
   
       
       
     
    

\
Al

Would-Lube

I

Hi l'rlﬂ’dGn-«HUHr-fnwi-t

pullets to early winter laying than 3!
all the fancy houses you could ll
build. Fancy houses are expensive. F
but the loss of several hundred pul- w
lets and the absence of eggs when .11
eggs are high is much more; expen- a:
sive. You do not have to give the t]

pullets but a. very little more extra 0‘
care and feed and thereturns are

    
  

     
   

three hundred per cent more proﬁt. ,3,
Whatever else, you neglect, never 8]
neglect the health of the growing ‘
fowls if {you expect to make .good a
with them during the winter months. ‘
If pullets are well grow, carefully gt
selectedrby the “Hogen” system of A
picking outtthe layers, you can easily 1
build up a proﬁtable laying strain 5
of fowls. You can not get any 0]
where, however, if you allow you-r v‘
fowﬂs to crowd up in any old plaCe, ‘31
at night during the fall months to I“
become over heated and stunted 1"
with colds and roup. All the ex- 9‘
‘pert selections will avail nothing‘ Pi
with sick' roupy pulle‘ts. Proper in
early attention, you give them in the 10
’fall that counts for eggs during the ed
winter months when eggs are high. 813
You read all kinds of “dope” on y si‘
feeding, but it will do you no good vs
with sick roupy pullets. Proper ﬁx
feeding is necessary, but amateur‘ 'g]
breeders should be taught the es- al
sentials of keeping the _fowls in \br
prime conditionthroughout the fall sh
months and have them reach the th
winter months in a healthy rugged 8h
condition and then your good hous- en
_ ing and practical feeding will bring
you a rich harvest in eggs. Turkeys, h
chickens and eggs are the salvation 8
of the farmers and poultrymen'these to
days. I know personally a farmer in b0
my .county, would have been com-
pelled to let the-mortgage take his th:
farm had it not been for a good crop _ an
of turkeys and 300 ﬁne hens shell- f0]
ing out the eggs. when eggs were 105
at a premium." This neighbor ac- BC‘
knowledged this fact to the writer
last winter,‘ so I know he told» ‘1' ’ in
me the truth.‘ He had judgment all
enough to keep his pullets in ﬁne co
shape during the fall months, and _ BC(
brought them into laying early: in,  0 int
October and the same was true of pl:=
his turkeys, consequently the sold str
,his turkeys before Christmas at a or
ﬁgure that'ﬁmore .At‘hsn paid rhisJ'in-s coi
terest, taxes and re. nioe‘ilttle sun! so:

theme, 'rtsasesr ,.  - 

 

  
 


   
  
   
  
   
  
 
  
 
  

  
  
 
 
  

" ﬁelded tojkinghe .
' off? she‘ weighed

 

G .-

Errén. the nest, and de-
r After the feathers Were

hf. W.. Hart. Mich.
The crowing hen .which you de-

‘ scribe would come 'under 'two classia
ﬂoations: she has either developed
permanent atrophy of the. ovaries in

'which case masculine qualities would
develop including a number of mas-

/

culine characteristics
' high upstanding comb,

such as the
masculine

‘ voicenor the lien is the type de-
' scribed as Incomplete Hermaphro-

i V ditism. This latter type did not have:

‘th

'8.

e male or female organs developed.
I am cf the opinion, however, that
diseased condition of the ovaries

has developed and the yolks were

to

not delivered into the oviduct duel
These yolks‘

some _, obstruction.

would accumulate in the body cavity
until a condition such as describe

is

'th

hens of this

CO

present. ‘

In my culling work ’throughout
6 state .I‘ h’aVe frequently found
description, and of
urse placed them among the culls

because‘they would never regain a

‘ heal-thy and productive

condition.

Nothing can be done to correct this

- trouble and there is no danger of.

in
ca

fection to other individuals, be—
use this is an inherent condition

peculiar' to this one. individual—E.

C.

Foreman,~ Associate Professor of

Poultry Husbandry, M. A. C.

A‘RULES

exceed

 

UNDER 'WHICH HORSE-
SHOE PITCEERS COMPETE
(Continued from page 4)

the following regulations;

seven and one-half (7 1-2) inches in
length, seven (7) inches in width,
two and one-half (2 1-2) pounds in

weight.

No toe or heel calk shall

. measure over three-quarters (3-4) of
an inch in length. Opening between

~ th

e calks shall notexceed three. and

one-half (,3 1-2) inches, inside meas-

urements.

No horseshoe construct-

ed in a freak design will” be consid«

ered regulation.

th

1

No contestant shall walk across to
e opposite stake and examine the

position of his opponent’s shoes, be-
fore making his ﬁrst or final pitch.

All‘ contestants sha‘ll‘ pitch

both

shoes from the'pitching box, into the
oppbsite pitching box, or forfeit the
value of one (1) 'point to his oppon-

ent. 'All contestants shall.,. .when

having first pitch, after delivering

both shoes,

evenwith the stake and out of the

pitcher’s box.

in
to

ed.

g to comply. with this rule shall
rf‘eit the value of such shoes pitch-
Any contestant delivering his

shoes landing outside of the oppo-

site pitcher's box shall forfeit the
value of the pitch.

wrapping the

.ﬁngers with tape, or the wearing of

gloves shall _be permitted in any or
\all games.
broken, such

If at any time a shoe is
as striking another

shoe, the frame of the pitcher’s box
the stake or other causes, such shoe
shall be removed and the contestant
entitled to another pitch.

,2

to

Any shoe to be’ scored as a ringer

shall encircle the stake far enough -'

permit a straight edge to touch

both heel calks and clear the stake.

th
’ to
so

-3" . in

,‘ .1

BC
0 r in
pl

   
 
   
  
  
   

 so

. ' considered

A foul line shall be established
ree (3) feet in front of" the stake,

and any pitcher stepping over the

ul line in delivering his shoe, shall

lose‘ the value/ of his pitch, and'no

ore shall be credited to him.

A shoe‘that does; not remain with-
six (6) inches of ~ the stake, in

 " all national tournaments and match
contests,

shall not -be- entitled to
ore. (This does not apply to
formal pitchin’g or games'where
ayers decide otherwise). If, a shoe

strikes theframe of the pitcherfs box
or» other object, (such shoe shallbe' i
a foul shoe and shall not 

ore. ' z   I . 

 
 

"asses we once had?

 Slpounds but after she
- . fwas'opened up a big lump, about the size
r 614 or 5 eggs. and quite hard, and the .
.‘colorpf beef liver, .droped out, broke off
from where the egg bag should have been.
The hen was always healthy and hungry.

stand back of a line

Any contestant fail-

 
 
  
 

each an qu, V istance .. fromié'the
stak‘ef, or: against the stake or ring-
erg. theyshall be counted tie and the
next closest Lgshoe shall score. In
case of an four shoes" being tie or
equal .distance from the stake; o_r
four ringers, no score shall be re-
corded and the contestant who
pitched last shall be awarded the
lead. ' , .
All measurements shall be made
by the §use of calipers and a straight

edge. - .
. No' contestants during the pro—
gress 'of a game, contest or tourna-
ment, shall coach, molest or in any
7 way interfere with a pitcher in .any
manner, except that in four-handed
- games, partners shall have the right
to coacheach other. I
‘ At the beginning of a game the
contestants shall agree who shall
-have the first, pitch, either in single,
three or four-handed games, by the
toss of a coin, the winner to have
his choice of ﬁrst pitch or follow. At
the beginning of the second game,
' the loser of the preceding game shall
have ﬁrst pitch.

In case of any dispute, or where
the rules do not speciﬁcally cover
a disputed point, the referee or com-
mittee in charge shall have full pow-
er and ﬁnal jurisdiction.

Any shoe that does not remain
within six (6) inches of the stake
shall not be scored or counted.

The closest shoe to the? stake
(within. six (6) inches) shall score
one (1) point. If both shoes are clos-
er than the opponent’s, they shall
score two '(2) points.

A “ringer shall score three (3)
points. '

A ringer and a closer shoe shall
score four (4) points.

A double ringer shall score six

(6) points and is the highest score,

a contestant can make.

In case of each contestant having
a ringer, the next closest shoe shall
score and all such ringers shall be
credited as ringers pitched, but not
counted asa score.

Ii" each contestant has a double
ringer, both double ringers are can-
celed and no points scored.

If a contestant ‘shallu have two
ringers and his opponent one the
pitcher 'having two ringers shall
score three (3),_points. ‘

In case of a tie of all four shoes,
such as four ringersor all four shoes
an equal distance from the stake, no
score shall be recorded and the con-
testant who pitched ‘ last will be
awarded the lead.

Where ringers are pitched and
canceled, they shall be credited to
the contestant who pitched such
ringers and no score shall be credit-
ed as points scored.

All equals shall be counted as ties

and no points scored.

Any shoe leaning against the stake
shall have no advantage overa shoe
lying on the ground and against the
stake; all such shoes are ties. If a
contestant has a shoe leaning
against'the stake, it shall count only
as a closest shoe.

Booklets containing the rules giv-
en here and others, oﬂicial layout of
horseshoe counts and layout for

ideal backstop may be secured from'

the Horseshoe Editor of the Business
‘Farmer. Fill in the coupon pub-
lished in the last 'two issues of the
Business Farmer and we will enroll
your name in the State Horseshoe
Pitching Tournament and send you
,a copy of the national rules free of
cost. ' - - '
“More county agents have advised
that their counties will be in i'the'
. tournament and the total number of
names enrolledat this oﬁice for the

/ state tournament is increasing rapid-

ly. Sent in, the coupon yet?

  
 
  
   
   
  

 

 

  
   
  

' , JSWAMPED ‘WITH » ORDERS

,. Please chaﬁge our 8.0.1“ we are ~

swamped with orders and sold out

I  our output of, Brown Leghorn? ,.

and R. I.  Wears more hon

~ pleased with the,“ are! re Trace rod ..
Iii-4mg]: ‘ap'er.—- ‘ i- notch. ’

   
  
 

 

  

  
   

of Superior I ,

3.1.. Chicks  8 Week Pallets

Tom Barron English White LeghOrns, Brown. .'
I «Leghorns, Anconas "

 

Read This-—

‘ The World's Greatest Layers ___._.___._...

0
Mrs Geo. Sawyer, Read This
of Dansvxlle Mich , Mr. W P Miller
s..ys:———-' “I received of Morris, Minn"
my chicks the 24th says: “Our baby
and they came in fine chicks arrived
condition. A11 any. alive. I have never

and 1doing fine]. t: can
say or your 21 her

that they are the nicy-
est eh
bought.
'or your great pains
in selecting the chicks
d for

seen such nice chicks

healthy. I would like
200 more June lst.

icks I have ever 200

I thank nother

th.

and

you
J 11110 1

 

the extra

01185 .

bargain prices.

NOW is Your chance to buy superiorbaby chicks and pullets at these
Order direct from this ad and save time. We will write

YOu at. once when you can get Your chicks or pullets.

BABY CHICK PRICES ._
JUNE—JULY—AUGUST
' ‘ P81; 50

0

Per 100 Per 1000

American S. C. White Leghorns . . . . . . . . . . .. $ .00 $10.00 $50 00 3100-00
i. G. Brown Lezhorns . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5.00 10.00 50.00 00.
S. C. Mottled Anoonas . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . .. 6.00 12.00 57.50 110.00
Tom Barron English White Leghorns

Extra Selected Stock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.00 12.00 57.50 110.00
om Barron'Ex. Spec. Pen Star Mating Ped. 8.00 16.00 75.00 . . . . . .
I railnr or mixed c? f k. . . . . . . ..- . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.50 8.50 40.00 80.00

I

money can buy.

Remember these are not ordinary chicks, but selected stock. The best that
Shipped prepaid to your door. We guarantee live arrival and

complete satisfaction.

 

Box 2052

EIGHT-WEEKS-OLD PULLETS AT BARGAIN PRICES
Write for free bargain list today.

Superior Poultry Farms and Hatchery
Zeeland, Mich.

all,

before.‘ They are all,

 

 

   

  

  

.- «5,... '1‘

i

TEN‘WEEK OLD PULLETS
BEST LAYING BREEDS ON EARTH

25,000 large, strong, super hatched chicks eve:y week from
Hogan tested flocks culled out semi—annually by our Poultry

    

experts. .
PRICES FOR JUNE AND JULY
8. 0. WHITE LEGHORNS . . . . . . . . . .. Per Per Pea- Per

ENGLISH WHITEEéhEgé-I'SJSRNS . . . . . .  50 100 500 1000

. . BROWN . . . . . . . . . ..

g. 0. MOTTLED ANCONAS . . . . . . . . .. $5.25 $10.00 $41.50 $95.00

BROILERS (Odds and Ends) . . . . . .  $4.00 $7.00 $35.00 v

EXTRA SELECTED STOCK AT $2.00 PER 100 HIGHER
Thousands of Satisfied Customers Make Big Money

 

Mrs. Wyttcnbuch, Amherst, Ohio.
writes: “I sold $357.30 of eggs in
two nronths from 200 pullets of your

J

Mr. F. L. Hess, Chicago Ill., writes:
"I averaged 112 eggs a day from 140
of our pullets and sold, ’sl58.00
Wort . of eggs in February.’ stoc

Raise Good Stock and Reap a Golden Harvest

do not take chances with ordinary stock. Our enorm-
money makers at a price that posmvely cannot be

 

 

Intelligent chick buyers of today
one output enables us to sell these

equalled. We  Thousands Of ChiCkS Each Year

pm is sent b Prepaid Parcel Post and We guarantee 100% live delivery.
gig: gilii‘eeterii‘om ad. cry send for illustrated catalouge. »
' WRITE FOR PRICES 0N PULLETS

Wyngarden Hatchery, Box B, Zeeland, Mich.

 

«v

 

 

  

_ BOX 500

ETC. WHITE LEGHORNS. ALSO HEAVY LAYING

     
         
     
 
      
        
        
    
         
 
 

 

 

BARRON STRAIN

ANCONAS

REDUCED PRICES FOR JUNE

5 C. Emmi, White Leghomand Anconas. 50 for $5.75; 100 for $11; 500 for $52.50r » y
10v for $105. /

LIVE DELWERY GUARANTEED BY INSURED AND PREPAID PARCEL POST
Order direct from this ad. and save time: Circular frog

 

 

STAR HATCHERY “Quinn, m. .‘ i :,

 

   

 

 

MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER
~“The Farm Paper of Service”.
TELL YOUR FRIENDS 'ABOUT‘ IT 

,I.

BABY CHICKS

 
  
 
 
 

 
 
  
  
  
 
    
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  


 

 

' :2 mixed, $1.25.

 AND TRADE  _
‘ labor ann- _'

"HILE prospective

culties are tending to-create, an
atmosphere of uncertainty in
,«some business circles, the general

cial'a‘nd industrial. ﬁeld in the west
is to look for further improvement.
The majority view is that labor dif-
ﬂculties will be cleared up satisfac-
torily and that with good creps the
improvement in general business
conditions will go on steadily. It is
admitted that in the event of a gen—
eral rail strike there would be a
serious backset to the conditions,
but it is heped that such an eventu-
ality will be averted.

Outside of this one feature the
general prospects are good. Build-'
ing operations are increasing in ex-
tent, and the erection of many small
homes and moderate-sized ﬂat build-
ings in nearly every city, town and
village is causing a demand for ma-
terials exceeding anything knOWn in
several years, and the general em-
ployment of labor is, creating in
turn a more extensive demand.

The employment situation is good,
and is improving. The farms are
taking a lot of extra laborers, and
while the idleness at the coal mines
is discouraging in other lines there
is little lack of employment. Money
conditions are no tighter. There is
plenty of money for all legitimate
enterprises, and there also appears
to be a plentitude for investment
purposes. There is a broad demand
for bonds, and the stock market ap-
pears to be absorbing liberal amounts
of money as the demand on the dips.
according to western houses, is good,
and loans are expanding.

    

,tendency of leaders in the commer—‘

\

In the general merchandise and a

dry goods lines there is a fairly ac—
tive demand, with mail order busi-
ness said to be showing further im-
provement. Barring some restric-
tion placed on the steel trade by
the coal strike, last week’s reports
of western activities in this line were
favorable.

WHEAT

June 20——The wheat market con-
tinues its way downward, not how-
ever. without occasional advances;
in fact, during the past two weeks
the market has been higher one day
and lower the next with total of ad—
vances amounting to less than de-
clines leaving prices at a lower level
at the end of the fortnight. Re—
ports of crop damage came from the
wheat sections which helped the hull
side of the market but on the other
hand poor export demand and large
supplies had a bearish effect on the
trading. Another bearish factor was
that Argentine wheat was quoted at
3c under American. Exporters have
bought in a spasmotic way and do-
mestic milling demand is [very quiet.
Receipts at Chicago last week ag-
gregated 238,000 bushels and ship-
ments amounted to 1,650,000 bush-
els. The close of last week left
wheat ﬁrm but on Monday, June
19th, improved crop weather in the
wheat belt caused the market to
open at lower levels and it did not
return to Saturday’s close at any
time. ‘ ‘

. , Prices

Detroit—No. 2 red, $1.18; No. 2
white and No. 2 mixed, $1.16.

Chicago—No. 2 hard, $1.13.

New York—No. 2 red. $1.26; No.
2 hard, $1.27; No. 2 mixed. durum

. $1.29 1-2. ' '

Prices one year ago—Detroit, No.
2 red, $1.30; No. 2 white'and No.

CORN
June 20—There has, been a ﬁrm
tone to the corn market during the
past couple of weeks and only,.on'e

or two days did the market show ‘

y inclination to follow the trend.
Exportdemand 'ngtinuﬁs;  I].

V " wheat.

 

 

rmnmnsmumn

\

Y

Wheat steady after recent declines." Corn  oats  Old
potatoes ﬁrm and scarce. 1 Beam steady. Butter and-eggs in de-
mand. Strawberries lower and cherries easy. Poultry  Cattle

slow. Hogs and sheep active to
hogs,

higher. Provisions advanced with.

 

(Note: The above summarized woman“ was received AFTERhthrbgienoe of mum.
‘ within mu ‘ hour or-

ket me was est in type. It contains last minute

going to prose—Editor.)

information up to

 

f

some time. Re‘Ceipts have been lib- f
eral but they are not expected to‘

remain this way as country offerings
show a decline. ‘Chicago received
2,805,000 bushels last week. Ship:
ping demand was light at this mar-—
ket, only 1,015,000 bushels being,
shipped. The opening of the current
week found prices slightly lower ow-
ing to report of increased . visible
supply. Government reportsshow the
growing crop in ﬁne shape when
considered in a general way.

Prices

Detroit—No. 2 yellow, 65c; No. 3
yellow, 63 1-20; No. 4 yellow, 620.
Chicago—No. 2 yellow, 61(@62c.
New York—No. 2 yellow, 78 1-2c.
Prices one year ago—\Detroit, No.
2 yellow, 62c; No. 3 yellow, 610; No.
4 yellow, 550. I

OATS

June ZO—The greater part of the
time during the past two weeks oats
have followed the trend of wheat
but during the latter days of last
week the market developed some
strength owing to renewed buying
both domestic and export. On Mon-
day of the present week prices de-
clined and the market was easy.
The tone of the market has been
easy, with the exception of two or
three days, since our last issue but
declines in prices only amount to 2
cents where the market has been the
easiest. We must repeat that we
can see nothing in the near future
of the market that would warrant
much lower .prices. But ' should
they go lower there are several rea-
sons why they should return".

, ' Prices ‘
Detroit-No. 2 white, 400; No. 3
white, 38c; No. 4 white, 34@36c. ‘

' night.

2

Chicago—No. 2 white," 35.@.39
1-2c; No. 3 white, 33 1-4@34c.

New York—'-—No. 2 'white, 45 1-2c.

Prices one year ago—Detroit, No.
2 white, 41 1-2c; No. 3 "white, 40c;
No. 4 white, 37c. , *- ’

BIKE \

June ZO—Rye prices-continued'to
slip downward during the past two
weeks and on Saturday, June 17, at
Detroit rye was 7 cents lower than
it had been two weeks before. At
the present time the grain is quiet
with prices at Saturday’s close.

_ Prices -
Detroit—No. 2, 90¢. ,.‘
Chicago—No. 2. 86@87c.

\ Prices- one year ago—Detroit, No.
2, $1.26.

 

 

BEANS

June 20—Beans have established
another high level in ‘spite of the fact
that the trade was. not active and
consumers were reluctant to pay the
prices._ At Detroit the market ad-
vanced 350 during the past fort-
During this period Chicago
prices advanced until they were from
15c to .45c higherthan the Michi-
gan market. .

Prices

Detroit—C. H. P., $9.65 per th.

Chicago—C. H. P., $9.80@10.10
per cwt.; red kidney, up to $9.90.

Price one year ago—Detroit, C.
H. P., $3.50 per cwt.

 

POTATOES

June. 20——Old potatoes are hold-‘-
ing steady with receipts declining_

rapidly. The- new stock has‘ been
coming to market in fairly large
quantities which is causing prices to
decline and consumers are gradually

 

 

THE WEATHER_FOR nnxr WEEK
As Forecasted' by W. T. Foster for The MichiganBusiness Farmer

A

FOSTER’S WEATHER CHART FOR

 

3 4 5 6i 7 8 910:1112113114

glean-l
l

 

forelinndbollatitnde
vend Rockiee‘ snow-elu—
,Vend mete! m4 ‘ “ ""“"" "" '

L

vpeoted for July for the weeks can

as they cross the continent in about
your section. Rainfall for the states
be near the average of

16 l7il8i

JULY 1922

   
   

21:22:me 25mmva

1., ‘44

' _ / ‘ «' ... .../" , .
WASHINGTON, D. (3., June zz—rrw principal severe storm periods are ex-

on 3 and 28. To locate storms

use days read the division forecast for
past ten years.

rovince’e east of Rockies crests will
at for your immediate vicinity the

general long slipce will modify the amount of moisture which will come from

the vicinity of a. line drawn from non

Rock of Gibraltar. On all long «in

point at South America to the
slopes more than average rain

may be expected and on all northeastern slopes less moisture than the ten ._

year average.

The severe storms of the week centering on July

3 will be »'

   

r potatoes

 
   

'29.

rhubarb, 30'@ 40c per

 

‘ am: to‘ theirwinter wheat.- -That country wiil
'wse. rollover" ‘ ‘

most severe of the month and very severe storms 'are expected near July 1.
Heavy rains are exnected on southern slopes from both storms. Best crop-
weather. of the month is expected during the eleven days centering on 13. That
good weather will came during harvest time near latitude 40-. Not much rain
during July west of Rockies crests and less than usual, rain in Arizona and
New ' exico.
northern South America.

 

s'r DIVISION—Low temperatures near July 1.1onqwed'by'aioagﬁ

lo 5,. . Cropweather.average' good withva' few exceptions.
ﬁcﬁWEgTHERee-Rain,. shortage ‘will  in}  V

' _ , get fonrrnentheirahrshort-
,ivlong‘ destructive dmugh..._1tsrvepon§1ﬁm nabs much ,
"  mauth in Emcee , start .1 some

.' Vl‘

slow upward  Severe storms and mostrain near .6, Most;ra,1xrbn;seuthem
and, western ~ A
«WORLD c

r

e‘ but   mg.

 

Rain shortage expected in all the West India inlande and 4 '

smug;  ,. _

          

old stock  mammal.) sh

present levels; long;- ;»  '_ I .   _
Detroit—$2.50 per: cwt. sacked.
.,.Chicago~$1.575@2 per; cwt. .
Price one year ago-F—Detroit, $1.02

per cwt. sacked. . .‘

on

 

‘ HAY 1

‘i-snne "zo—ReCeipts: or hay and

{his 156 recline in: are. ' "

country loadings are‘ehowing a de— .

‘ciine‘. The Detroit market has ad;
vanced some in r-prices during the
past two weeks while Chicago prices

have worked to lower level. 

.Prices '

.. {Detroit—Standard timothy, $21.50-

@22; No-2 tim-othy',.§16@17; light
mixed, $21@22; ‘No.,1'clomr. $16

.._@17.' ' ,

Chicago—' No. 2 timothy, $19@
21; .light mixed, '$20@2~2.; No. 1
clover,’$16@18. \ w e- ' '
' New York—No. 2 timothy, $270

Prices one year ago—Detroit,
standard timothy, $18@19; No. 2
timothy, $16@18;. light mixed, $18
@19; No. 1 clover, $13@1’4. ‘

DETROIT PRODUCE MARKET ‘
June 20—Butter_ and eggs are ac-

' tive and in demand. Receipts are

\

large but what consumers can not —

use now are going into storage.
The market is being overloaded.
with strawberries and as a result

prices are declining. Trading is ac- ‘

tive. Homegrown cherries are be-
ginning to appear on the market at
prices about equal to those of south-
"ern varieties. .

Live poultry is, quiet and steady.
Dressed calves are easy with a good
supply on hand. , ‘ V

Prices . -

Butter—Best ‘creamery, in tubs, '

33 1-2c per lb. - _

Eggs—Fresh current receipts, 2'3
@23 1-2c; fresh candied and graded,
24¢ per doz. ’

Apples-gilded winter.
$2.75@3.75 per; bushel, western, $3
@4 per box. .

Cherries—Califonia, s 3.2 5 @ 3.5 0
per ﬂat; Michigan, $3.25@3.75 per

-2 4—quart case.

Strawberries—Michigan, $ 3.7 5 @
4.50 per 24—quart case for good fruit.

Asparagus-+Michigan, ‘$ 2.7 5 @ 3
per case. ~~ ;
Cabbage—New, s 1.50 @ 2.50 per
v_ crate;

Onibns—‘—$2.25@2.40 ' per crate. L

Live Poultry—Broilers, 2-lb.‘ and
up, 42c; small broilers, 30@32c;
large broilers, 30@32c; large fat
hens, 24c; medium hens, 24c; small
hens, 22c: old roosters, 15c; geese,

13c; ducks, 20@22é; turkeys, 30¢.

per lb. .

Dressed Meats—Small hogs, 12@ .
13c; heavy hogs,310@11c;
calVes, 14@15c; medium calves, 12~
@13c; large calve, '10@11c per lb.

New Vegetables—Beets. 50@60c
per doz.; carrots, $2.75@3 per ham-
per; turnips, 82.250250. psi? 1111.;
(102,; green
and wax beans, $2@2.25 per ham-l
per; green onions, 30040:: mr‘xdoz:

green peas, $3.75 @425 per hamper;

radiance, $1@\1.25\ per bu. , __
Celery—Jumbo, ,65@75c; extra

Jumbo, 90-@81;_ Michigan” 80®40c

per don. ‘ ‘

 

’  swoon 
Steers, aside from the few best '
grades, sold lower practically every ,

day last week. The decline M011?
day, June 12, reﬂected almost all

with light- iossee   _.
there. was a motion “tn
10""?  . .

grades, but the better'kinds 

varieties,

choice .

p,

I".
._T

   

     

‘ 'a
dHHﬁmAA-lu--_._x

ﬁddle-151nm:

Qwesaouoxs

 
  


 
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
  

 
 
  
   
  
 
    
   
 

 

Ts . .,
U) 51 ,
or. but the other"

  
 

‘ igli

-‘ ’ Era es varying from 25a to 50c low-t
 ‘  with .ome ;iight, short _fe’d,kfor.
‘ r. I, gtrassvasteers and. light,

 flﬂﬁl‘linss around $1.00 lo’wun’l‘he'
" “‘Cpgfd.‘ widened materially to":- the. ,_ f,
. k .w' i V - v. i ,‘

unﬁnished

Daily. top hogsl‘last  ranged

.Tfrom $10.65; to [$10.80, while aver-
age costs ranged,  I. 51030 'to .

11.054.0- , .
failed to cause. the  sharp

breaks, with packers active huyen’ V
of. light” and  Iqight- butch-.- 
ers.  statue m- '*

“level. as choice nun. " m a":
preference for m In” m, 33-.

‘ _  week upheld   - 3

 : sheep desirable for

,\

  

  
  
  

Best heavy steers, dry....$ 8 50 0 2
Best hdy wt butch steers. dry 8 00 9 2:
Mixed steers-&_hei1ers, dry 7 50@ 8 00
Handy light butchers, dry 7 00’ 7 25
Light butchers  5 00% 6 00
Best cows . . . .  500 600
Butcher cows  4 00@ 4=75
LCutters  825@375
Camera ....  . . . . . . . .  2 50@ 3 00
Choicerbul’ls, light dry-fed. 5 . 50@ '6 00
ologna bulls  4 00@ 5‘50
tock bulls  -3 50@ 4 oo
eeders  600@700
Stockers“v................. 500@000
7V Milkers and springers .4... 40 00@‘70‘ 00

van . .

Best grades  . . . . . ...$10 006210 50
Others V.........él.l......... '0‘0@ 50

'7. . ‘ . e
. 7. Best “lambs '........?.....;12 50
I . air lambs _ . . . . . .  9 000310 00
ight to common lambs... 'I Q 9 00
earrings ....._.._.,_...’.......> 500010.00
gﬁifs‘ﬁnﬁmaﬂﬁp'"“” i828 ‘ °“
 ouqog‘wisoe-i-hvsni;  
W

\.

Heavy packers and“ mixed “" _ I
tremely slow .selling, m "a m LMMRQ M New

f has»; such day last week- were‘ q;

hoidover. after each session, conﬂ—
ing mostly oi.’ these grades. 
.. bought up practically all ohm
’except weighty packing classes at "a
, slight decline. r . '

Receipts of hog/shat Chicago last ‘

week at approximately 171,200 stand
largest. since middle .or February
and comparing with corresponding
periods” stand third largest in over
eleven years. ,-This week’s supply
shows an increase of 9,800 over pre-
vious week, a decrease of 700 as
compared with a year ago and stands
21,300 larger than the eleven-year

0 average. -

Last week's average weight of
hogs stands unusually heavy for this
time of the year, with the eatimate
at 244 lbs, being heaviest in over 11
years, comparing with the correp-
pending periods. Corresponding
average weights during the past ‘11
years range from 227. lbs, in 1916 to

242 lbs. in- 1913, with the 11-year,

average" at "235 ins. Last week's aver-
age weight shows a gain of 4“ lbs.
over the week previous, 6 lbs. aver-
age a year ago and 8 lbs. over two
years ago. ‘

Strengthened considerably on each V

session last week by competition
that formed among country buyers,
all light and medium 'weight young
breeding pur-
poses showed only little change as
compared. with previous week, while

._ _other “classes declined. Heavy, unde-

sirable weights and several transac-
tions of aged ewes and wethers in
good killing ﬂesh bought for local

slaughter at the close showed un- _

‘even declines of 25a. to $1.00 as
compared with the week previous.

 

~~ *uvn s'roox'ouo'raﬁons
The tollov‘ving prices were ai ‘
trait on Tuesday,..llme 20: p* d at D...
Cattle

 

   
  
   

Lack of  demand _

 

sessions last.  maﬁa the use. ‘

’ -  mnmnnmu

I'hog prices declined 5 to

, 81.75@2.25 lower.
' orally ﬁfty cents lower. Hogs closed ﬁrm

5 to 10 centszhlgher than Thursdays aver-
. . 5

a $10.80:

. weight veal calves, _$7.75@9.25;
limbs, $11.50@12.754 Yearlings, 38.2560

' tom lost $1024 for the week; lamb, 52’

“need from $1@1 lower. Mutton and

.buying is from consumptive demand al-
‘- has occurred over a million pounds daily

1008.
rhiseets

ours comp ‘
1 1921.- The gradual
,- _- and}! V , .Bound
,hgehubmn in' February was
, ast‘ 'Week in May when prices
51:2 @150 the lowest -p¥nt of
n." An. advancing marks, than
prices. to' a range 01' $1.50@

 

 

 
  
   
  

 
   
   
  

the? .
_ Week '

.. we.  . , -
 ply? potatoes have moved in fairly !'

eady volume. Shipments -to June
"i st season‘fo same date. The movenmt.
"from..1i‘loﬂda "of 5.107 cars Was m:
" double'the total shipments from that
state tor theentire 1921 season. .Sodh.
Car-clinixoo- with 4.071 cars exceeded last
:7 rs interment by 1,500 cars.
a. my” Vii?” ""i’d" “‘° “2. m'
i .s cars move can.
 1 1 V 1921-1de
' W

_ ' n
. 74m!!! to June 10.

 

  
  

 

J audition Inns 1. is

.m'sd’ with. r 18,965,, cars a
r ; .8. ‘ real or Markets and Crop
'w m . Estimates

WASHINGTON,‘ D. 0.. for the week
\ending June .16. 1922.

' LIVE STOCK AND MEATS—~Chlcago
10 cergtsfneté for
th week. Medium, and good ee s eers
seller-ally 5 to 15 cents higher with butch-
er cows and heifers 25 to 50 cents lower.
Feeder steers weiare 15 t?  centls loygegs;

d medum weg vea ca. ,
Light an Lambs ranged from
31.75602. lower ‘while fat eweswere gen-
on' the 16th on good grades and mostly

to 50 cents lower. Beef

age.
steers and better grades of butcher cows
and heifers were steady. Veal calves 25
cents lower. Better grades of sheep and
lambs about steady, others weak to low-
er. June 18 Chicago prices: Hogs top
bulk of sales

Medium and good beef steers, $8@9.20;
Butcher cows and heifers, $468.50; Feed-
er steers, 35.75.@8.75. Light and mediFu‘rr‘i:

a

11.25; Fat ewes, $2.50@6.50; Stocker and
feeder shipments from 12, important mar-
kets during the week ending June 9
were: Cattle. and calves. 30.927: hogs
11.998; shee'D- 22.991. Pork Ioins and mut-

veai. $2ﬁl: beef weak to $1 lower. In
eastern.-wholesale fresh meat markets on
the 16th steer beef ranged from 50 cents
higher to 50 cents lower than Thursdays
average with the demand generally poor.
‘Veal was steady to $1 lower while lamb

tresh pork lolns were weak to '91 lower
per 100 pounds. June ‘16 prices good
grade meats: Beef. 313001550; veal, $13
@15: lamb. $20@25; mutton $136314.
FEED—Wheat feed market continues
weak. Considerable pressure to sell prin-
cipally bran. Some manufacturers quot-
ing Gluten in eastern markets lower

which has slightly stimulated buying. ‘

High protein feed slow. Quoted June 18
Spring bran Chicago blank; Philadelphia
$21.75; Standard middlings, Philadelphia
323: winter wheat bran St. Louis, $17;
linseed meal New York, 353.

‘ DAIRY PRODUCTS—Butter markets
steady to ﬁrm. Demand active. Bulk oi.’

though considerable buying for storage

having moved into storage_ in the four
markets the past week.» Closing prices
92 score: New York. 3.6; Philadelphia,
36 1-2; Boston, 37: Chicago, 35 3-4 cents;
Cheese'markets steady with trading quite
active on all except small styles. Sales
included numerous lots for storage al-
though the.’into-storage movement is rela-
tively slow. Prices at Wisconsin Primary
markets June 15: Twins, 18 1-4c; Daisies,
18 1-4o‘:_ Double Daisies, 180; Young
Americas. 18‘ 1—2c; Longhorns, 180:
Square Prints, '19c. ‘ ; .

 

.GOVEBNMEN'I‘" BULLETINS 0]:- ma:-

EBEST IN JULY

Farmers Bulletin 766,, The Common
Cabbage Worm; 825. Pit Silos: 872.v'1‘he
Boolworm‘ or Corn ‘Earworm: "903. Evap-
oration and Drying‘ of Fruits: 914. Gen-.-
trol of the Melon ‘Apvhls; 984. Farm and
Home Drying of Fruits and Vegetables:
1007, The, Control of the Onion-Thrins:

 
  
   
 
  
 
  

JuMng Beef Cattle; 1086. ~How-

a .
9.1" 
mum”? 35“““1 '
an y... r or 6, Use of Porn
Products: $31} The Installation “(3
Dust collecting. Freudian . ing‘ M3
for Prdventtm. of Explosions an
Grain newsman, ’f p  , 
beamed, free ’ by“ ad-
6.!   ‘ ~

 
 

   

   
  

artg'a‘wwnh- "

i
,.

, 2.3.5
in price of the saspn the so”!

cars compared with-12,810.z

w...
V

$10.05@10.15. '

    

1

—-AN

 

     
 
 

n

necessary.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘NOT‘A

SHINGLES

.MULE-HID?

KICK

IN A MILLION FEET“

ROOFING

D...

A Can Trust

a.   recom’
 Rooﬁng
 with a clear
conscience. ' He is  He makes
no mental reservations, none are

For he knows that MULEIHIDE is
,' ‘ dependable; he lmoWs from experience
that its stamina and strength make it 
more weather resisting; that it always  _
affords reliable overhead protection for ' 
a longer period. He has compared and
weighed it and never found it wanting.

In any building material you purchase
from him you will get the grade you
like and you will like the grade you get. l

"Not a Kick in a Million Feet ”

LEHON’ COMPANY of CHICAGO
Oﬂices and Factory:

   

  
    
  

 
  
  
  

       
       
     
 

 

 
       
    
  
   
 
  
  
   
  
  
  
    
  
   
    
  
  
    
 
   
  
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

44TH T0 45TH STREET ON OAKLEY AVENUE ’

 

' I

b 7 These free
booklets on
Farm Sanitation
tell you how to prevent
disease among livestock

and poultry and describe
in detail the many uses of

KRESO DIP No.1

(STANDARDIZED)

Parasiticide and Disinfectant

 

 

 

No. ISL—Fm SANITATIDN. Describes and
. tells how to- prevent diseases common to
livestock.

No. 157—906 sooKLEr. Tolls how to rid the
"  of ﬂeas and to help prevent disease.

No. 160—306 BOOKLET. Covers the com-
mon hog diseases.

No.‘ 13m willows. Gives complete
‘ _ directions for the construction of a con-
crete hogtwallow.

No.’ 163—?00111". How to get rid of lice
k and mites, also to prevent disease.

Write Iflor these booklets.
V I  W

. DAVIS & co.

 

 

 

 

' ., unionism
w I!  Au. ensue. stones

’  ulcuIcAu  ._ '

l

 
 

~.

 
   
  

   

 

-\\~' I

‘ t \§~wl_ll_|~\\*ll_'

l—

_._L

1000 Rooms
Each W it]; Bath

Rates

44 rooms
at $2.50

174 rooms
at $3.00

292 rooms A
at $3.50

295 rooms
at $4.00

249 rooms
at $5.00

 

       
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 

in the Heart ofﬁe 

Convenient to all theaters,
railway stations, the retail and
wholesale districts, by living at the o

' RISON HOTEL

Tm: HOTELOFPERFECTSERVICE
' --'andMsd

  6mm. .

m ' u/ ‘ 2w —
e u r: v ‘ 
‘ ‘8 1.» 1r '
_ p ' . u ,‘ JC-
.. ; . ~\""“~4- I I j.
 v;' W"- “‘A' 7
* _

‘\ ._Il_\\—I—II_

4

      
  

\\

 

   
   

   

is

.‘It

 

. d~s


 

 

 

 

 

 

/

The famous “Red Baby” Speed Trucks ~
of the McCormick-Deeringdealers are ?
making millions of people sit Up and take 
notice this summer. They are brightening I
up the landscapes throughout the country, j

ﬂitting everywhere, covering many miles in

few minutes, delivering machines and serv-

ice, and helping to speed up Prosperity. The

dealer’s red speed truck is the most useful

live wire in thegcommun‘ity. It has earned
, the title, “NatiOn’s Service Truck.”

This International Speed Truck, which
is putting new life into the implement in-
dustry, is the ideal truck for any farmer
and business man who wants fast, depend-
able haulage at low cost. ASk the MCCor-
mick - Deering ‘ dealer about the “Red

INTERNATIONAL
1 Chicago

 

Speed Truck,0pen Body  FullTop’

 

9 Your Choice of themed Baby’s” 
.BI'Others _« $1500  i 

Baby’s” brothers. For $1506, f. o. b. factoryﬂ
you can get an International Speed Truck
complete with any one of twelve different
body and cab combinations, and with tires,
power tire pump, electric lights and starter,
fenders, etc. Liberal terms if you haven’t .
the ready cash. . ~

Flag the McCormick-Deering dealer as.
his swift ,“Red Baby” comes along, or go
to his store to pick outthe truck and body
style you need for your work. The closer

‘ , you investigate this speed truck, the better

youwill like it. If your hauling is on a larger
scale, remember that the International
Motor Truck line is made in eleven sizes
from the ISOO-lb. speed truck to the 10,000.
lb. heavy-duty unit; Write for catalog.

HARVESTER COMPANY
of Anierica V

(Incorporated)
92 Branch Houses and I5. 000 Dealers in the United States

'USA

 

 

 

. F OR 4.1.10 W: 

',
x. ’
"J :.
”

.’\; ,-
‘\

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

