
 

 

V _   'Independcni
!  Farmer's Wee '
7 , ,Edited in

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MT“ CLEMENS’ SATURDAY, '6E'TOBﬁz‘TJY1é—22

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FARMERS TO OWN FIRE FIGHT-
! IN G EQUIPMENT
IL recently when there was a
ﬁre in the rural district about
Owosso the farmers we
phone the ﬁre department of that
city and the ﬁre ﬁghting apparatus
would be rushed out to- extinguish
the blaze but nowfthe<city fathus
say this can be done no more. They
say they pay e and the
farmers nothing and what would be-
come of their property if a ﬁre should
break out in town while the trucks
were out in the country. This has
caused an agitation among the farm-
ers for the purchase by township,

attire trucks. equipped with chemi-

cal tanks and small pumps. Efforts
are being made by prominent farm
leaders to have placed on the ballots
at the spring election in the town-
ships, proposals to raise by tax the
funds with which to buy three trucks.

Vernon township of this county
has had a ﬁre truck of its own for
several months. Continued objec-
tion on the part of Durand people
to the sending of the Durand truck
into the country, and a ﬁnal threat
of injunction proceedings, caused the
Vernon township voters to author-

 

“  a It kept in the (ﬁre station

at Burundi and Durand ﬁremen 'man
it. The truck is equipped with sev-_
eral hundred gallons “of chemical,
hose. roof ladders, and other stand-
ard equipment. It has responded to
numerous calls and done effective
work. H

The city commission at Owosso has
stated that if the farmers. within
a radius of eight miles of Owosso,
wanttobuyaﬁretruck. itmzybe

kept at Central station there and"

in case of ﬁre [two men from) he
local department will be sent out-

LIVING m SOAR IN GERMANY
winter comes," has taken on a
new signiﬁcance for the aver-

 

age German workingman with a .

family. Not a single day pasbes with-
out the newspaper announcing. new
increases in the price of bread. pota-
toes, coal. and other necessaries-
Street car fares, newspaper sub-
scriptions. smokes and bee are ~go-
ing up e’veryfoth‘er day, w shoes

and clothing costs are almost “out of '

sight.” \

In addition to the cost of living
there also is beginning to be notice-
able a shortage of potatoes, sugar,

1 a '51!» I ' U I  ‘. ,.
(Own "mantles Let/pout

r.’-

city, which reactors:

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them in large qtra‘ntit‘iias.

 

343 ’times the pro—war standard.

 

1922  pnoomri ONLY 

FINISHED * .

' ECAUSE ‘01 a shortage of cement

for which the coal strike and
the car shortage are responsible
about 50 per cent of the road con-
struction mileage for which, the
State Highway Department awarded

contracts since Jan. 1, and which it

.vsas expected would be. completed

before Dec. 31, will have'to go over "

to 1928. This .is the report of de-
partment oiilcials. -

Worh‘on some of the 1922 con-
tracts which can not be completed
until next year are in the 16 conn-
ties of Calhoun, Clinton, Lenawee,
Bay. St. Clair, St. Joseph, Charlevoix,
Saumprenesee, Monroe, Sanilac,
Maconb,‘ Lapeer, Huron and Tus-
cola. ‘ . -

Since construction _ started this
year on department contracts, there
had .been completed in the state,
up to Sept~ 1, 98 miles of cement
roads and 317 miles of all classes

.  ratchet}:

them at cost price to; the residents,
can do so no longer asthe treasury
is empty.- The prices of food have-i

found necess’a .to ‘ t‘a ex’
gone up so that now they average". 17 n 9' ’

' constant to systematise the m

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ize the township board to buy a and other staples. The mayor of ofﬁroads.
I i T T” T I r l /
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“In...

Detroit
Michigan _

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

W hatAre YOU Getting Out of Life? .

A  living—or a better standard every year?

Success comes from saving; but how much you
get out of life is dependent not on how much
you save, but how much
for you.

You can double the interest your money is
making you—safely, easily and surely.
Let us show you how. We’ll give you the facts
--you be the judge.
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.

The Standard Mortgage &'lnvestment Company

 
  
  
 

your savings earn ~

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' Commerce. .

- wheat. now exists in India and 

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,," “"5 1&22:

 

 
  
  
   

 

     
   

make. .it possible to operhte'-SV1..‘
 the number at '

  
  
 
 
  
 
  

 

   
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
    
 
  
 
 

. M
Association to. he  .f 
Michigan Chester White Bing:
Breeders ’ Association and; 
oﬂcers as followm‘“ A. 1.. 
of Goldwater, president; 
Bodime of Reese, 
W. Alexander of I’Vassar, 
treasurer; Andy Adams of 
ﬁeld, Lucian Hill'of 'liekonsha
Norman Weber of Royal 
ecntive committee. ‘. ’ I

It is the purpose of the-«arm
tionrto promote the interests of.   :,
breedthrough holding public _ " _ LT. "
also in giving support to Boys. ‘ 1 r 34*”; ‘
Girls pig club work throughout _  ’
state; Membership is open to   
breeders got Chester Whites in   {77". I p
state‘and the dues is onh $1.00  f, r .7
year;- all money after paying ‘tﬂi'f’fffri;
small oiii'ce expenses will be used he {- 
promote the breed in this state. (.37: T . .1  K
is requested that all breeders of th _.   ‘ 4" .‘
Cheaters who believe in boosting the 7",. a ‘
breed, communicate with the   .’ ,y
rotary at once. , _.  ’

  

 

AMERICAN PIGS POPULAR.
CZECHCBLOVAKIA . . .
THE current year will show a tee-  --:;' , 
ord volume of purchases,   ,L 1- 7
 American lard and fat pork I"    
Osechoslovakim' says Special   
Dennis. ln-a cable to the Departm-t j” ‘ ,.
of Commerce. The recent rapid " ,
expansion is due to the scarcity   A ’6
butter and to the export embargo  
Yogoslavian tat hogs, also  1'
strength of the currency of ’-~I‘ ' - '
slovakia. Whereas before the .'. “ i. . '0'1' *

  

little or no fat pork, and less than ‘ '_ 

3,000 tons of lard were imported ' fl";
annually,.the estimatedme a. '  '
the present year will exceed leases  ~. . ,
tons of combined- lhrd and tat  , 1' 3 ' ‘
American tat pork is being .used'E'ih  .1.
increasingly large quantities by   _ ‘
borers inthe iron and coal mines,   * .  ,  *
by thb loggers in the Slavian tarsus. g. ;. V ‘9
The American laru is underselling‘  in: 
that from Hungary, Rumania, and; - 
Yugoslavia, and is actually being hasJ  
ported into the latter countrli‘    g
which have heretofore been” strong   ' " .
competitors as exporters of this pro— ' 
duct. Brague importers report 'dlft- i
ficulty in ﬁlling orders for lard. The _
country’s hog industry is unorgania-r ' ‘
ed and the native sides deﬁcient in
fat. Barring the approaching let up
in demand incident to the ‘ -
season. traders should work for con- '
tinned expansion in the American
pork products trade. ,

 
    

 
 

 

    
   
   
       
     
  

  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 

DUOING COUNTRY .

Next to the United, States and  
Canada, this year's wheat corp :od  
places that British Colony as the -~ 
greatest wheat grower in the world  ‘
for 1922.’ Karachi, the leadiix “ " ,
wheat port of the British emzpir'e.? ‘1 ‘33
says Consul A. M. Warren, Karacﬁ W -
in a dispatch to the Department] V

 

11mm NOW THIRD mm» m   
India amounting to 9,813,000 tons,
wheat port of India, is also that“ A  23:;

An embargo on‘the exportation dd I

this is removed it is feared that , ‘  "
inevitable surplus on hand willte' ; .j
to greatly ecrease planting nest -.‘~
year, there y risking‘a country-wide 
shortage should there be .insuﬁicleﬁm
mouse on. ‘ 

   
   

   
  

 
    

‘ Y m BIG 

The failure of the Kuwaiti!“
crop this year will necessitate has
foreign imports and It it “ti ’
by American Con!!! George“. '*

      
      

gs.

   


  
 
 
 
 

     
 
  

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//

 

 

 

~ October 14
1922

  

 

 

 

 

 

 ,seen -- them both—no
 ‘ But the fact =re-mains
that --there exists among the
Militias today two-distinct types
 county’tfairs-one. of money-
Mng; with its a shows, its aero-
pianos and lits'horse-racing, and the
,‘_ the agricultural fair, with' its
fish‘th «of ﬁnite, grains, ,dairy prot
1‘, ducts’t‘and" livestock. And after an,
 is :the latter type which really-
.  the purpose of a" county’ag—
 Miami; fair. ~ ~ ’ 7
* idiot that’ the agricultural phase
“is entirely over-looked in the fair
garnish features bore-racing,
, Z’V*’hi.ir'-ifafsers on- its hand-bills and
,4 3 posters. '- ~It coin be found, in varying
‘~_'q‘uaiitities, scattered throughout the
=.grpunds,"'some in this building and
I  in that, but, as a rule; one
 p "1 .hnfno break away from the amuse-
  A? _ nie'ntaseeking crowd to ﬁnd it, for;
'- :whe're’thrillegs and other entertain-
nest are-emphasized the mass of
 buyers 'are not interested in
, Aha pumpkins, .watermelons, apples,
4 .1 peaches, pears, cattle, chickens, etc.
3 '7 Which brings us "back to ’our con-.
tontion that, after all, will do a
y , 1., more constructive service to that
‘ ‘ 7 community than any- other type.
,‘One hundred farmers visiting the
fair, in ‘search of new ideas, better
.   and bigger results, must
,  , 5 Time}: ,mean more than one thou;
  and” .so-called city folk seeking
  f amusement and. entertainment only.
::   that is what impressed us
,  4about the fair held over in Ontona—
" g;._?g"‘on county recently. It was a real
 Vceunty‘ fair. 7 There wasn’t an aero-
plane ,on‘the grounds, and in fact
 I ~ the, only really disturbing element
. x. '1'“ was. a. powerful tractor which was
showing the farmers new ways
. and methods of plowing and stump
.  pulling, in an adjoining ﬁeld. There
wasn’t a show on the ground. You
, weren’t barked at to “Come and see
_, Nemo, the smallest dwarf in .the
World." There were no games of
_ chance. ~ You couldn’t lose your
  . _ 'mtfmer trying to ring a cane with-a
   v ring that wouldn’t slide over any
 ,“..,Tbne'of.the canes anyway.
 17"E‘Thei'e were no horse'races, tight
’ ,,rope_walkers, dog and pony shows
. ‘or,_‘ in fact, not a single feature;

  

 
 
   
  

 

 

 

 

 

" lunch counter or two and, perhaps,

" 7' i'band, which would tend to detract
.'-from1 the big business of the day—
the agricultural exhibit.

It is doubtful if many, or any,
county fairs throughout the penin—
 sula improved on that agricultural
'- exhibit. ' It was the result of hours
of pains-taking effort on the part
of those who had arranged it. In
athe .fruit section alone, .160 plates
s , were neatly-arranged,.each bearing
,  -‘its burden of some record-breaking
specimen ‘of the farmer’s art. There
Were apples, peaches, plums u and
, pears of the ﬁnest texture, shape and
- 5 color and widest variety.
‘ ' _  apples particularly-4111 grown
:3... Onto'nagon county, (consider-
.   the mosf fertile in the upper
" = L Flimnsnla‘of Michigan) showed up
 j’ltriklngly. There were the Duchess
“indwealthies, and a ha'[ a dozen.

 

  

'gfie‘gicat. red Wolf Rivers standing
j , *prominently along the top’row,
'j  jrivalling in. size and taste
the product‘ot California itself, were
glistejn abundance. \ p

In another section, but within the
.,;e:”‘building, were the, root and
, crops. Everything from ' the
 is bean 10,1116 ‘ huge, golden
. in, ‘ was neatly arranged in
» Here all might see and ad-

use  the handiwork, exhibit-
reign“? that community

  

and , -.

'tically every farmer in

,.with~ the possible exception of a ‘

ecu-more Varieties of soedings, With 3

,Couty Fair Minus Races and Midway '

ByL.D.TUCKER

o

 

 

folks like the midway?

of fairs.
—-Editor.

 

 

WHICH KIND OF FAIR DO YOU PREFER?

NNUALLY about 100,000 Michigan business farmers and their
wives attend the state and county fairs. Why do they go? Is
itto see the eﬂiibits, the horse rares, the aeroplanes, the midway,

—or just the crowd? The bigger fairs still have the midway- The
smaller fairs have tried to eliminate them because of the cheap and
often fraudulent character of the attractions.
Michigan State Fair has been under ﬁre for several years, yet at the
last fair, it was patronized by many thousands of people.
\Vould‘they still attend their state and county
/ fair if the midway was done away with?
tells about a county fair in the upper peninsula which boasted of
neither midway, carnival show, horse races nor aeroplanes, yet people
attended in large numbers and were satisﬁed with what they saw.
Mr. Tucker suggests in his article-7you have probably seen both types
Which do you like the best? A letter to the editor telling
what you like best about the state or county fair will be appreciated. .

The midway at the '
Do the farm
The accompanying article

As

 

 

 

 

ship, history and other allied sub-
jects- -

In fact it seemed that everyone
in the community—from the young-
est school child to the oldest indi-
vidual in the county—was in some
way represented in that display. It
was, indeed, a real, old-time county
fair, and I doubt if any, county in
the peninsula this fall could boast
of an agricultural display which
could equal that shown at the On-
tonagon fair.

Two days were devoted'to Onton-
agon's fair.
the com—
munity visited the display, and it
was not diﬂicult too observe that the
majority, and they carefully examin—
ed the various specimens, were reap-
ing the maximumof beneﬁt from
the things they saw. They came,
not to be amused or entertained,
entirely, ,but to learn what their
neighbors were doing and how they
were doing it.

Other communities could proﬁt
by adopting Ontona'gon’s example.
They had a. real, honest-to—gosh fair
over there.

 

M. A. C. ANNOUNCES ATTRACT-
IVE WINTER. COURSES
HE Michigan Agricultural Col-
lege has announced its. regular
winter short courses .to begin
this year on October 30th. The ad—
vantages of these courses to those
who cannot take ’the full four year
course are many, and it is surpris-
ing the amount of practical instruc-
tion which students receive during
the two, four, eight, twelve, or six-
teen weeks, depending upon the
course selected.

One of the advantages which will
appeal to many farm parents this
year is that of economy. The full
four-year course involves the ex
penditure of several hundred dol—
lars,.while the eight weeks’ course
can be secured at a total expense
of from $80 to $100. Many farm
boy’s who have. planned on taking up
the regular courses at the M. A- C.
this year have been disappointed be-
cause of‘ the low farming returns.
To such the short courses afford an
excellent opportunity for adding
materially to their fund of know—
ledge and giving them the contact
with college life and college people
which is so helpful in broadening the
viewpoint. y

The fall term which begins 0cob‘er

'30th‘consists of the following re-

quired subjects: Animal feeding,
types of livestock, farm crops A,
farm engineering, agricultural chem-
istry, gymnasium. The winter term
beginning January 2nd, includes
such subjects as: ‘Soils A, study of

‘ breeds,.drainage,_ gymnasium. Elec-
tive imbjects are; x
and testing, parliment'a‘ry law and

farm management, farm

use“ .7. in:
A .85;

During the time prac- '

Farm dairying ,

barn and herd man- ..

   

agement, potato production, hort-
iculture A, shop work, swine breed-
ing and management, bee-keeping.

Special courses are given in dairy-
ing, dairy manufactures, marketing
milk, ice cream making, horticul-
ture, poultry, truck and tractor man-
ufacture and operation.

All students completing the ﬁrst

,year in the 16 weeks’ course are "

required toelect one of 15 different
projects which can be carried out
during the summer following.
These projects include almost every
activity on the average farm.

In discussng the short courses,
president Friday of the M. A. 0.,
recently said: =

“There are twenty thousand farm-
ers in Michigan who should take
these short courses during the next
ﬁve years. There is one vital dif-
ference between a large—scale indus-
try like manufacture and agricul-
ture which is still carried on in es-
tablishments owned by a single man
and employing on the average only
one additional worker. Manufac-
turing in Michigan is conducted by
8.300 establishments, employing
550,000 people. The average man-
ager in this industry supervises al-
most seventy men.

“The volume of output is great
enough in most of these establish—
ments to enable the owner to em-
ploy the services of skilled engin—
eers, chemists, accountants and
salesmen. These professional men
sclve the difﬁcult problems which
present themselves for the manufac—
turer.

“The agriculture of Michigan is
carried on by 196,000 farms. On

'the‘ average there are two wogkers

to the farm and one of these is the
farmer himself. It is manifest that
each of these farmers must decide
what he will produce, what methods
of production will be followed and
how his product shall be marketed.
Clearly, in an establishment the size
of the average farm it is not econom—
ical to hire theaervice of a technical
expert who shouldanalyze and criti-
cize the methods employed, and Who
shall devise new. and improved meth-
ods for the conduct of the business.
The farmer therefore needs an all-
round training in the technical prob-
lems relating to his business; for he
must solve most of these problems
himself when they arise. This is one
of the reasons why every wide—awake
young farmer ,should come to the
Agriculture College. for training in
the Short Course. Unless he alc-
quires this technical skill for him-
self his farm will lose a. large por-

tion of the beneﬁt which would re—‘

suit from the utilization of the
scientiﬁc knowledge concerning ag-
riculture. ‘ , ‘

, There is another reason why the
progressive youn farmer should
spend at least one winterat the Ag—'

; riculture . College. ‘  ‘jare many

 

 

       
   

   

 

problems of agriculture which are *
‘so diﬁicult for anyone but a profes- .
sional expert to handle. The Agri-
cultural College employs such a
corps of experts constantly. Those

 
  
   

who are aware of their existence can
avail themselves of this special train-
ing when it is needed on any partic- 
ular farm. The man who has taken 

       

a short course at the Agricultural ' 2
College knows exactly what help he - f.
may obtain from the institution
when he has need for it. It is the
function of the Michigan Agricult-
al College to furnish to its 196,000
farmers just that skilled training
which the large manufacturing es-
_ tablishments buys for itself on a
commercial basis.”

r. E. B. Hill assistant to Dean
Shaw, is director of the short courses
and Mr. A. M. Berridgs, former mem-
ber of the State Farm Bureau Board
and a successful farmer in Montcalm
county, is associate director. Com-
plete information on the courses can
be obtained by addressing Mr. Hill,
care of the College at East Lansing.

     
       
  
      
       
    
   
    
    
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
   
   
 
 
   
  
 
 
  
 
  
     
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
  
   
 
 
  
  
   
 
 
 
   
    

« 
“4.9;. «—..

PROVES VALUE OF PURE-BRED

BIKES IN GRADE HERBS

HE LEER Guernsey Breeders

Association of Alpena County,

promoted by the American
Guernsey Cattle Club are exhibiting
at the National Dairy Show held at
St. Paul, Minn, ’October 7-14th.
V In the short period of time this
Association has made remaﬁkabye
strides in the work of improvement
if dairy cattle by the use of Pure-
bre‘d Guernsey sires. One of the out-
.standing features are that prior to
the year 1909 little or no effort had
been made to improve the livestock
in Leer Community. As a common
practice sires were selected from
their own herds and by that process ,
of inbreeding of scrub cattle the
herds were constantly degenerating,
producing as a result a very inferior
type of scrub cattle.

Finally on May 22nd, 1909, as a
result of the untireing efforts of Mr-
W. T. Raven, Dairy Extension Spec-
ialast, M. A. C., the Leer Guernsey
Breeders Ass’n was organized with
tWenty charter members who sub- .
scribed a total of 130 scrub cows.

A sufﬁcient sum was raiscd to pur-
chase three registered pure—bred
Guernsey sires. Each of the three
sires were placed at the head of herds ;
giving a total of not less than forty
cows for each group. A breeding fee
of $1.00 per head was charged by the
association. The funds obtained in
that manner were used to defray the

,expenses of maintaining the.sires
and to assist in replacing sires as it
became necessary to do so. To date
the association is gratiﬁed of the fact
that, small sum so obtained has been
found to be sufﬁcient to meet the
needs.

The herds of the association mem-
bers being. divided up into groups,
each sire is used two years in each
group. When the circuit of the 5
group has been made by each sire 
he is then replaced by another reg-is- ‘
tered pure-bred sire. During the
life of the Association to date eleven
different sires have been used.
Furthermore, each time a new sire
was secured for the association only
the best obtainable would do-

The good effects of that practice
is clearly shown by the desirable 7:—
conﬂrmation of the offsprings and ‘ ~ 
‘the attractive prices that have been ' 
received for the surplus stock which 
were sold. As a matter of; fact the
temptation to sell has been so-great
-—as to threaten the ﬁnancial af—
fairs of the association, because of
the reduced number of cows in the
present association.

Moreover, as another inﬂuential
factor, each year the asociation has
an assembly of their Guernseys, this
occasion is knoWn as the Leer Guern-

(Continued on page I!)

   
   
     
       
        
   
       
    
    
    
    
 
    
     
   
   
    
     
   
    
   

 
  

      
   
   
    
   

    


  

Note Lease, But Anjdeal Partnership-Plan- for  Owner and  i 

accurate count could be made at the sales; dates. of planting," balances?

 

Dr. C. L. Wendt. originator of the mod-
ern farm partnership agreement.

' EVERAL years ago an account
was published of what was
then. called “A Partnership

Lease” that had been originated and

worked out by .Dr. C.‘ L. Wendt.

The idea has grown since that time,

and now promises to revolutionize

the vexatious «problem of land ten—
antry in this country where nearly
half ,of the farming land is now
operated by renters. ;Many of these
move every year, and on the aVerage

all of them move every two and a

half years according to statistics of

‘the Census Bureau.

"This fifty—fifty idea is so vital» to
the welfare ()f the'entire Nation, that
the writer recently took a little
journcy to the home of Dr. VVendt at
Canton, S. D., and spent-some time
with him going over his latest ex—
periences and (plans, and visiting
two of his farms and incidentally
seeing a lot of the fine farming
country in Lincoln county. We feel
that this unodern and wholly Ameri—
can plan of farm partnership is so
valuable, that we call special atten-
tion to the general scope and details
of the plan as worked out-by Dr.
VVendt in his own experience.

And first, let us state that the
Wendt farming agreement is not a
lease but; a business partnership.
The landlord and tenant system has
not changed in a thousandlyears,
and this ancient “Master and. Ser—
vant” relation does not adapt itSmf
to American ideals. A “landlord”
is a lord of the land, and We do not
have any such in our country. “Ten-
ant” means a temporary occupant
and we all know what happens, to
a rolling stone. As the fifty-fifty
plan is based on the idea of perma~
hence, the words “landlord” and
“tenant” are considered out of date,
and we think our readers will agree
that “landowner” and “landworker”
more accurately define the relations
between farm partners, and that
these terms have a more truly Am—
erican ring.

All great movements and worth—
while ideas require a good deal of
time in which to ripen or .prove
themselves. Dr. \Vendt began to
think about better ways of farm
tenantry a score of years ago. About
fourteen ‘years ago he put his part—
nership plan into effect by entering
into an agreement with a young man
in' his employ—Frank Painter. by
name. That original agreement
stands today on the same footing
and promises to remain indefinitely.
Young Painter has prospered in the
meantime—and is not this fact‘ an
eloquent variant on the usual ex-
perience of renters? He .has now
,bought a fine farm of his own-but
does he live on his oWn farm? No,
he prefers to retain his business
. connection with Dr. Wendt, for he
has learned precisely what this
means to him in cold .dollars and
cents. But he does manage his own
farm on the fifty-fifty plan with an—
other .man who is also getting along
in the world, and who doubtless will
invest his accumulated earnings in
South Dakota land that he .will
operate as owner While still another
ambitious man takes the part of
land worker. 4 .

But the idea does not await such
slow methods of, spreading. In Line
coin county, where all the people
can see for themselves just how it
works, the' farmers-~ are practically
‘ “ill” s‘ol‘d’gon the: ﬁttyurﬁfty plan,“

,g t

.N_O';

time of our visit, but there are prob-
ably more than a score 'of farms now

being operated on the identical con-

tract that D,r.' Wendi; has developed
with so much..lthought and fore-
sight. You can almost pick out
these places in driving about the
country in Lincoln county, for they
are usually a little more prosperous
looking; just a little neater as to
farlmsteads; just a bit pleasanter and
more home-like in the character of
the improvements .

One land worker made a net profit
of «$21,000 in seven years on the
partnership plan, and then bought
and mOVed to a farm of his own.
That would seem to be about 1-00
per cent ideal from the standpoint
of most fanmers. But it is interest-

ing to note‘ that this man would now \

. like to get badk to the old system,

for he made more :money that way
than he has since. You can‘write
your own explanation of this appar-

By H. A. BEREMAN, Farmer and Breeder

owner invests his land‘ ‘ and the
worker invests his labor. The title
to the land. remains in the name of
theoriginal owner as a 'matter of
course, until suchltilme as the work-
er may wish to make other arrange-
ments.

As a matter of history—covering
all those cases investIgated by the
writer of this article—the partner-
ship plan almost invariably results

],in more profit to worker and own-
er. than is usually enjoyed by far-ms '

operated by their Owners. The value
of “two heads;"’ the advantage of
consultation between the man 0n the
land and the man in town; the bene-
ﬁts from having a permanent in~
terest in making the land productive
instead of robbing the soil or specu-
lating in real estate; the immense
value of feeding grain and roughage
to high class live stock that are
owned equally by both parties—

 

 

Partial view of the hog house

ent inconsistency in human nature,
but we suggest that the basis of ,it
is the old adage, “Two heads are
better than one.”

The curse of «peasantry as it is
known in Europe can not be over—
emphasized. For many years it has
hung over our own freeland with
its republican form of government,
and its absence of titles, landed
gentry and theliike. Many thought—
ful students of history and political
economy have foreseen the trendof
the times—the rapidly advancing
prices of lands; the drift to the
cities; the increasing number of
farms operated by renters who cared
only to .make a living; and the
growing army of absentee farm own—
ers awaiting buyers at fancy prices.
Much time and thought has been
put into the devising of better forms
of leases——especially leases for long
periods—as one solution of the
growing tenantry evil of this
country.

But we think it can be laid down
as a law of human nature and econo—
mics that all leases are bad and
some are worse. To illustrate this
point, we ask any reader whether
:f'fter signing up a lease———either as
“landlord” or ‘_‘tenant”—-he got up
from the table feeling the same”
towards the party of the other part?
\Ve never have found a man yet
whrfhas not admitted that he didn’t
feel quite the same; most of them
say that each party was trying to
get just a little advantage over his
opponent.

And that’s exactly what we mean
when we say that all leases are bad.
They nearly always bring men tow
gether on terms of mutual hostility.
The owner trys to make the tenant
pay another half dollar an acre,
while the tenant tries also to drive
a sharp bargain and to induce the
land owner to throw in something
over and above the customery usage.
The product of the old landlord and
tenant system is a feeling of an-
tagonism. There is no deep under-
lying sentiment of friendliness—and
Dr. Wendi: states that the element
of friendship .is the very heart of
his form of agreement. Unless men
are genuinely friends—trusting. each
other and co-operating in harmony
——neither of them can Iprosper no
matter how .much legal talent they
employ in writing the'lease.

The Wen‘dt system is a business
partnership between two men, each
of whom putsinto thelventure the

on the “'endt and Painter farm.

'— capital J hef- has. at: hand.‘ The land 

these are the levers whereby profit is
.pried loose from soils that other-
wise might not pay the taxes.

One of the important features of
the partnership plan is that accu-
rate books must be kept in which
to record operation-sfpurchases,

I velop ~‘ 011“ the

sheets, etc. Thisputs the process 
of ttiling the soil on} _ a business
basis; it «makes ‘ of its: commercial,

. Operation.thitifmustlofl necessity"de+,..ﬁ

_ 4 same plane as other]?
industries. ’  ’ * I}   -,
Perhaps ‘ the most serious fault , l'
with theyrenteré'system is that-ital
makes no provision for keeping up“
the soil’s productive .power;
renter has no inducements to enrich

the land belonging to another, for 

he may move .next year; the owner
expects to sell on a rising market—-
he should worry about soil fertility!
The result is that all over this broad
domain of ours the soil is steadily ‘
growing less productive; acre .yields

' are not increasingalthough popula-

tion continues to grow; fanminghs
still a process of soil exploitation
and will continue so until land.
values are measured by productive
capacity, and farms are made to pay
legitimate dividends on Capital and

labor “invested. "'

With this serious problem staring  ‘i

the American «people in the face;
with lands constantly rising in pricef
and with more farms operated every
year by shifting renters, it is high
time that farmers adopted a plan
that will build up the integrity Of,’
our soils and put agriculture on its
feet. A study of the partnership-
plan will show that it is ‘destined to "
accomplish the desired end, and' we
urge the co-operation of all earnest
people to spread the doctrine of
mutuality in farm tenures. *
Asan illustration of what natural-
ly follows, the Wendt‘ & Painter
farm of 160 acres has been greatly
improved in the fourteen years it has

‘ been operated on the fifty-fifty plan,

In that time the average yield of-
corn has climbed from 30 to 60.
bushels an acre,. and other crops
show similar increases. This fact
alone spells proﬁt in the place of.
loss, for it is one .of the corner

(Continued on page 16.) -.

Treatment of’Stinking Smut of Wheat ,'

I would like to know how to dis—
infect s'mutty wheat so that it will
make satisfactory seed. .Will you
please be so kind as to advise if this
can be done, and if it can, will you
state how I can go about it?—W. E.
H., Fowler, Mich.

HEAT in many sections of Mich—
vc igan has been injured by 'Stink—

ing ‘S-mut. This disease may
make a field of fine promise produce
only a low grade, ill—smelling crop,
which without expensive washing
and scrubbing is unfit. for human
food. "From an investigation into
actual condition inevery county in
the state, it is found that rStin‘king

.Slmut wastes at least 5 Iper cent of

the wheat‘crop of Michigan. Fields
with 10, 25, 30, and even 70 per
cent of the heads smutted are not
uncommon.

As his Wheat ripens,
notices certain heads which are of
dark-green or slate-green color and
which have a shape different from

. one wants:

the farmer .

the normal. The kernels in these

heads are' light and puffyand are

filled with a brown" black powder.

Such diseased stalks are not so tall '
as the healthy ones and, they (nay be

markedly dwarfed,—f‘Low .Stinking

Smut.” The smutted kernels have a,
vile odor, like that of rotted fishs
Sometimes such a field is so smutty',
that one can smell it from the road.

Threshing such a field is a job no

Smut arises from the

thresher in clouds endangering fields

—-—for smut can persist in the soil

until seeding tilinle not longer. It

is evident that the thresher' having

handled smutty grain carries smut

with it to the next batch of grain.

Similarly the cleaner once' loaded

with smut becomes a source of con-

tavmination. .

Although most of the smut balls
which are formed in the heads in
place of the "kerne’ls break'in thresh—
ing, thus dusting the grain with the

(Continued 'on page 20.),

 

 

 

The. ?_ iii: I


 

 

 

33 Mom FAR“ AND N:

0‘

 

 

 

4’. i ..
3 Now, :“ALI.:-

 

 

 

 

STINNES PLANS STRATEGIC COUP TO AID
GERMANY—~Hugo Stinnes, Germany’s industrial
leader, who according to developments in the negoti—
ations between the German government and the Be]-
gian ﬁnancial delegates over the question of repar-
ationguarantees. may again step in and show him—
self master of the situation by taking over a large
part of the guarantee demanded by Belgium. It is
Stinnes’ idea to give French and Belgian industries
8. large share in German industry, thus making it a
matter of necessity for those two nations to help
rather than hinder the Teutons.

I
5

 

man of London, will catch a burglar as well as give
of a ﬁre.

and when one of the wires is touched

same time the voice gives the alarm, over the telephone which
The open circuit on the same record gives *warning when
The alarm continues for twenty minutesJ

with the exchange.
ﬁre breaks out.

 

TOGETHER—Bandmaster Ape, a
no of Berlin, Germany, in his best conduc-
aton raised, hair wildly waving, a la
Genius, and eyes concentrated, is e‘ndeavoring to get
théirbcs ., results jrom his band. His imitation is de-.
chili-gaging 3311 who have. seen him as “wonderipi”—so
n -‘ '

trained—
tor’s manner,

ens . so ‘ lite-like. . _

N0 PLACE FOR A BURGLAE—The “Teleala‘m.” invented by J. R. Colts
It consists of a box containing a telephone and a graphoxihone.

The latter is connected with electric wires placed across all doors and windows
it starts the graphophone.

that you see.

BEATUY CAPTURES TWO CUPS AT THE
PAGICANT—Miss Thelma Blossom, or “Miss
Indianapolis” as she was known, snapped while
in her roller chair at Atlantic City holding the
two cups she won at a pageant recently held
there. She rcccivcd one of the cups for being
adjudged winncr of the rollcr chair parade and
won the other as “America’s most beautiful
girl in evening drcss.” Miss Blossom was
chosen from 57 beauties represented as many
different cities in Amcrica. “Miss Detroit,”
representing Michigan’s metropolis was second.

alarm at the outbreak

At the
is connected

is yours?

SHOVELING SALT IN A MICHIGAN RE—
FINERY—lt looks as though there has been a
big snow storm, now doesn’t it? \But you would
ﬁnd it a bit briny to your taste for it is salt
The above was taken in One 01
the great salt reﬁneries located at St. Clair,

extricated from the wreckage without being seriously
rescued them, say they have a charmed life.

PASSENGER RUNABOUT APPEARS ON
LONDON—Trafﬁc jams were to be
“hobbies” forgot

ONE
STREETS OF
found on every hand but even the
their troubles and smiled whcn this “automobilc”
passed down the streets of London, u‘ngland. recently.
Reports have it that these small autos are becoming
quite p0pular in Englaand. Prices range from $300
to $400. It would be dangerous business trying to
drive one on the streets of Dctroit. or other large
Amcricnn cities, owing to the heavy trailic but one
would be handy on the farm—son JOhn could 'usc it
to go after the cows.

I

JUST LIKE A MOVIE THRILLER—Aftcr this automobile struck a telephone
pole, crashed through a wooden fence and plunged down a 200 foot embankment
into a. deep ravine, the gasoline tank exploding enroute, enveloping the machine
in flames, its o'cupants Mr. and hirs. George Halland of Cincinnati, Ohio. wcrc

injurcd. Policemen who
“'e are of the some opinion, what

-BELIEVES IN LEAGUE 0F .NATIONS—Former
Associated Justice John H. Clarke who retired from
the U. S. Supreme ‘Court bench last month at‘ the
age of 65 says that it is his ambition to see America.
enter the League of Nations. It has been rumored
Ex-Justice Clarke may be the Democratic candidate
for President at the next election.

(Copyright Keystone View Company)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


  

 

‘- " _  I» r,‘\ mar: ruffle 3"“ V ‘  :1-  »  ' 1‘
~ 5 a » - . . r.  -
' ‘ l ‘ .‘r '
_ i

. ~ ‘ Aspirin

 

. Say “Bayer” and InSisti

  
   

 

Unless you see the name “Bayer”
on package or on tablet you are
not getting the genuine Bayer pro-
duct prescribed by physicians over
twenty-two years and proved safe
by millions for

Colds . Headache
Toothache Lu-mbago
Earache ' Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain

Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin”
only. Each unbroken package con--
tains proper directions. Handy boxes
of twelve tablets cost few cents.
Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and
100. Aspirin is the trade mark of
Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic—
acidester of Salicylicacid. (1)

OHEY

BIG M

MOBILE BUSINESS

 

  

 

who ‘ .' e to _

Auto School and et this tramin

couns his you to any a'ui‘om ve

g.a....ates always in demand, More than l8.000

graduates thruout world holding good Jobs or
in.businms for themselves.

Bake 82.000 to $10,000 Yearly

Our graduates are able to step into good

'obs as soon as Course is completed.

business for thsm~

men veer for him; Tirb
is“ 860.00 per week' We
( owe) making about {75.00
wee ess

.branch of the

math“; mm“ ‘idm‘m‘
881" a

rs, trucks. farm lightin pﬁr’i‘h

We teach by actual erg

 

—-eonstruction.
If autos, tree-to
and gas engines.h
once on see mac ‘ine. No {new work. Stu

evisit auto factories.

ecutivss an ac ,

End mm new rvice men

nah: where 79 .,
biles

 

 

m I M
r
“$3.4 N THE M. S A.
W“ pounce in But-
Repairmg, Tin
Welding

. Brazing. .
chine Shop Practice. All teaching dons

 

 

 

 

us courses and opporttttzn;
a -
tor Succees——let us help yet? “Write

Michigan State Auto School
2210 Auto Bida.. Detroit. Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

neurosis nnsmnss' rsnunn

 

. all men, had eve

 

“uni Jars: tapers! some."

 

. _ By James Oliver"CurioOod

Michigan’s Own and America’s Formost Author‘s! the Great Northwest "

 

 

THE SYNOPSIS ‘

. ./

WOMAN with a pearl-gray veil drawn closely about her face is one of

the many passengers on the train that connects t‘The’Horde”

with

the
civilised world. For eighteen hours she has been riding ste bound,

for Tots Jaune Cache, the land of “The Horde."
The train stops at a town composed of

friends and all will be strange to her.

where she I no

several tents and she inquires how long the train will stop and is advised

that it will not move for at least two hours.
bath she asks where she can secure them and is directed to

Desiring food and a
“Bill’s Shack”.

Bill's Shack is owned and operated by Bill Guide. leader of the lawless hand
of the town. When she steps inside the doorway she recognises him as a
brute but as she has entered and is very hull?! and‘ dusty she decides to go

through with her plan. Quads says

s. has a room she can rent and asks her

rfollow him. As they pass out of e room there appears a newcomer in
e doorway opening off the street.‘~ The newcomer is not of the kind of men
lounging about the room but shows in face and in actions that he is of the

wholesome living type.

He has seen the girl enter this place and believes she

h which the girl and Quads, has Just passed. n

has made a mistake and as g: stands in the doorway his eyes rest upon the
I

curtain-covered doorway thr

In but a moment the girl steps out. her face ﬂaming like fire and eyes filled

with the flash of lightning.

Quads follows her apologetically.
offer the girl a roll of money but before he can do so the newcomer steps to
the girl’s side and strikes Quads with terrific force. The Brute goes down in

He starts to

a heap and the newcomer hurries the girl outside and away from the scene.
The newcomer, who is John Aldous a novelist and known as a woman hater,
learns from the girl that her name is Joanne Gray. He takes her to the home of
a' friend and returns to Bill's. Shack warning Quade to leave the girl alone,
He returns to the girl and asks her to be his guest at supper in his cabin.

She accepts.

(Continued From Last Issue)
“3.71538,” said Aldous, deliberately.

“You are that Joanne. But you

possess what 'I could not give
her. Joanne of ‘Fair Play' was splen-
did without a soul. You have what
she lacked. You may not understand,
but you have come*to perfect what
I onlypartly created.”

The colour had slowly ebbed from
Joanne's face. There was a myster-
ious darkness in her eyes. a

“If you were, not John Aldorfs I
would strike you,“ she said. “As it
is——yes——I want you as a friend.”

She heild out her hand. For a
'moment he felt its warmth again in

his own'. He bowed over it. Her
eyes rested steadily on his blond
and again she. noted the

head,
sprinkle of premature gray in his
hair For a second time she felt al—

most overwhelmingly the mysterious ,

strength of this man. Perhaps each

took three breaths before John
Aldous raised his head. In that time
something wonderful and complete

passed between them. Neither could
have told the other what it was.
When their eyes met again, it was in
their faces. ' v - —

“I have planned to have supper in
my cabin to—night," said Aldous,
breaking the tension of that ﬁrst
moment. “Won’t you be my guest,
Ladygray?"

“Mrs. Otto—" she began.

“I will go to her at once and ex-
plain that you are going to eat
partridges with me,” be interrupted.
“Come—let me show you into my

workshop and home.”

He led her to the cabin and into
its one big room.

“You will make yourself at home
while I am gone, won’t you?" he in-
vited. “If it will give you any
pleasure you may peel a fey pota-
toes. I Won’t be gone ten minutes.”

Not waiting for any protest she
might have, Aldous slipped back
through the door and took the path
up to the Ottos’. '

CHAPTER V
S soon as he had passed from the
View of the cabin door Aldous
shortened his pace. He knew

that never in his life had he needed V

to readjust himself more than at the
present moment. A quarter of an
hour had seen-a complete and mir-
aculous revolution within him. It
was a change so unusual and appar-

_ ently so impossible-that he could not

grasp the situation and the fact all
at once. But the truth of it swept
over him more and more swiftly as
he made his way along the'dark, nar-
row trail that led .up to the Niette
Plain. It was something that not
only amazed and
First—as in all things—he saw the
humour of it. ~ e, John Aldous of
gone so far as to,
offer the sacriﬁce of his most im-
portant work. Frankly he had told
Joanne that the interested him more
Just now' than his book. Again be
repeated to himself that it had not
been a surrender—but an obliter—
ation. With a pair of lovely eyes
.looking quietly into‘ him, he “had
wiped .- slate? clean of.

  

thrilled  mm. «

g at the door.

    

ﬂip things

the laws he had made for himself.
And as he came in sight of the big
Otto tent, he found himself smiling.
his breath coming quicklyystrange
voices singing within him. '

He stopped to load and light his
pipe before he faced Mrs. Otto, and
he clouded himself in as much smoke
as possible while he explained to her
that he had almost forced Joanne to
stop at his cabin and eat partridges
with him. \ He learned that the Tete

‘Jaune train could not go on until

the next day, and after Mrs. Otto had
made him take a loaf of fresh bread
and a can of home—made marmalade
as a contribution to their feast, he
turned back toward the cabin, trying
to whistle in his old careless way.
The questions he had ﬁrst asked

himself about Joanne forced them-

selves back upon him now with deep-
er import. Almost unconsciously he
had revealed himself to her. He had

’ spread open for her eyes and under-

standing the .page which he had so
long hidden. He had as much as

' confessed to her that she had come

to change him—-—to complete what he
had only half created. It had been
an almost inconceivable and daring
confession, and he‘believed that she
understood him. More than that,
she had learned about him. She had
read his books. She
Aldousw—the man.

But whﬁ did he know about her

beyond the fact that her anie was
Joanne Gray, and that the on-swep-
ing Horde had brought. her into his
life as mysteriously as a storm
might have ﬂung him a bit of down
from a swan’s breast? Where had
she come from? And why was she
going to Tete Jaune? It must be
some important 'motive was taking
her to a place like Tete Jaune, the
rail-end, a place of several thousand
men, with its crude muscle and
brawn and the seven passions of
man. It was an impossible place fer a

young and beautiful woman unpro-j

tected. If Joanne had knowu any
one among the engineers or con-
ter of introduction to them, the tense
tractors, or had she possessed a let—
lines would not have "gathered so
deeply about the corners of Aldous‘
mouth. But these men whose brains
were behind the Horde—the en-
gineers and the' contractors—knew
what women alone and unprotected
meant at Tate Jaune. Such women
floated in‘ with the Horde.
Joanne was going in with the Horde.
Tfh‘iie lay the perilmand the mystery
0 .
So engrossed was Aldous i

thoughts that he had comen vélri;
quietly to the cabin door.

Joanne’s voice that roused. him.

Sweet and low she was singing a few"-
lines from a song which he had never: '»

heard- ‘ .
She, stopped when Aldous appeared

her eyes were a deeper, more won-

derful blue as she looked. up athlm,

and smiled. She had ‘1on stoma
for'an apron, and was peeling m
to”. ’ I \ > I" ‘

“You will have some unusual es;
’siiegreieti

chaos to make‘very econ;
ed  "We had a , visito —

  

 
  

  

H like.

‘ toes. ' -

knew J ohny

. And. '

It was ‘

‘ Afession to you is proof thatyou be e
It seemed to him that?
A  "rhe‘colcer in‘ bareback; ,.

“formed words: Which  7
»' strsnsolr: ‘  '

 

3! ,0? " Ya}, 

eyes that seemed about_ .|
When 'he sawrmért‘Ha p’oppe ., .-
' a rabbiu—and—audej-there? .
something he left behind in, 

haste! ”

 

   

Joanna’s eyes wereﬂooded  1
, laughter-baa she nodded at thevdoor.

on the sill was a huge quest-tome:-

"Ste‘ver’isl " Aldous, chuckled. “God
bless my soul, if you frightened
into giving ups quid of. tobacco: like

 
   

.y‘:'
1

that you sure did startleihim comet", ‘

He kicked Stevene' losﬁmpierty out,

with the toe of his boot randﬁturnedf"
to Joanne, showing her the fresh.

bread and marmalade. "Mrs. Otto

‘sent these to you," he said. ‘V‘And’t’iie _
train won’t leave until tomorrow.’.'.j 
In' her silence he pulled a chair in

front of her, sat down close, and
thrust the point of his hunting knife
into onset the two remaining pots;

"And wheh it does go I’m going
with you/j. he added. ,_
He expected this announcement.
would have some effect, on here As;
she. jumped up with the pan of potaa.
'toes, leavin the one still spouted on”

the end of is knife, he caught‘bnlyg.

the corner of a bewitchiug smileﬁ V I -
“You still belleve‘that I will be;

.‘f‘: 7*»
. ,

unable to take care of myself upat’i‘

this terrible Tete Jaime?" she askedg
bending for a moment over the table;,_
“Do you?”  '- . .2 «T5

"No. You .can care for yourself“;
anywhere, Ledygrey,” be repeated.

“But I am quite sure that it "ill be; 
less troublesome for me tasselthatt/
no insults are “offered you than: for:
' you to resent those insults when they.
Tote Jamie is full of Ouadesﬂ,

come.
he added. ~

The smile was gone from her face
when she turned to' him. Her blue;
eyes were ﬁlled with a tense anxious»!
' “I had almost forgotten

again?” 
“A thousand t—imes.’ ‘ -

The colour grew deeper in  
"I read something aboutng
you once that I have never forgottemgv _ 

cheeks.

John Aldous,” she said.’ _
It;

‘after you returned from Thibet.

said that you were largely made up of? \
contempt ' for -

two emotions-'—your
woman and your love of adventure;
that it would be impossible for you
not to see a ﬂaw in one, and that for
the other—physical excitement—éyou
would go to the ends of the earth.
Perhaps it is +bis——-vour desire. for
adventure—~that makes you want to
go with me to Tete Jaune?" ‘

“I am beginning to believe that'it “ i v

will be the greatest adventure of my
life," he replied, and something in“
his mum voice held her"silerit.
rose to his feet, and stood before her.”
"It is already the Gréat Adventure,"
hewent on. “I- feel it. And I am
the one to judge. Until to-day I'
would have asked my'life that no
power could have Wrung from; me
the confession I am 'goingio‘make’
to you voluntarily I have laughed at
the opinion the world has held ofme.
To me ’it has all been a colossal ioke.
I have enjoyed the hundreds of col-
umns aimed at me. bygwnited women
through the press. They have all
asked the same question: Why do
you not write of the good“ things in
women instead of alwayd the bad? I

have never given them an answer-

But I answer you now—here. I have
not picked upon the weaknesses of
women because- I despise them.~
Those weaknesses—the destroying

frailties of womankind—I have driv- "
en over roughshod through the pages, ‘

o'f.‘ my books because I have always
believed that Woman was the one.
thing which God came nearest
creating perfect. I believe

should be perfect.

should be theirs _I- have driven the,

cold facts home-as hard as Iceuld’..~
I‘liave been a fool and. an, mock-.-

oclast instead of .a' builder. This con-1

' a

brought” me face to face. gm,“

    

 
 
 

' trod in two bright 

  
 

  
 
 

  
  
  
     
   

the-tit,  ' 

man,» She whlgpered. , “And
mean that-you would ﬁght 

3'1}

He 5"

. 19': ‘
they;
_ And because they‘
have not quite that perfection which;

\ .

. x .-

 

. «.13.!

 

   
 

e

 

55'.

O

   
   
  
   
 
  
   
  
       
  

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
    

  
 
   
 
 
  
  

 

    
 


interesting stories from

three of our oldest .customers

1—. _.

“I received m ﬂrstMont-
omery War price list in
872, and l beCame a cus-

tomer almost immedi-

ately. The catalogue has

been coming re ularly

ever since, and have
been doing business with
Montgomery Ward 8: Co.
practically all of that
time.

“I wish to state. that
in all of those years there
has never been any oc-
casion to make a com»-
.plaint or to return any

oods wenhave ordered

 

Organ,
0 ﬁ .ery
m‘ail. r" "Wind “5::

2 Millions Buy from I
this Book on Faith in the Name

 “Montgomery Ward”

William, McCandless, Sloan, Iowa
A Customer Since l872

Montgomery Ward

was started. Mrs. Mer
rick has taken a keen in
terest in its develop~
ment.

“1 have been a cus-
tomer from the ﬁrst.

“I have always had the
most courteous treat-
ment from you." she
said. “I believe that
much of your success

has been due to yourun- .

falling Policy of fair
dealing.‘ »

 

Mrs. Emma E. Merrick, Malcolm. Iowa
A Customer Since 1872

Mr. Beatty is a real pio-
neer. He is the only man
now doing business in
Helena who came to

He ﬁnally settled in
Winston, Montana.

“1 have traded with
Montgomery Ward &
Co. for 45 years," he
said, “and I have never
found anything wrong
that has not been satis-
factorily settled. It you
continue_to deal as fairly

, with your customers as you have in the past
you will surely prosper.”. \

Mr. George Beatty, Winston, Montana

A Customer Since 1877

 

 

This book is saving many millions of
dollars for the American people.

Is it saving money for you and for
your family? Are you taking full ad-
vantage of your opportunity?

This book—our Golden Jubilee Cata-
logue—celebrates our 50th Anniversary
by offering you the lowest prices possi-
ble on everything for the Home, the
Farm and the Family.

_' It is ﬁlled with bargains—with mer-
chandise of high quality. And every
price is a Money Saving price for you.

For Fifty Years Montgomery Ward
85 Co. have earnestly worked to serve
the American people.

-Today millions of people are buying
from this book on faith in the name
“Montgomery Ward.”

And it is our policy to keep faith
with our customers. It is our policy to
sell only serviceable goods, to serve
you promptly — always to offer you
a saving—and to deal with you a1-

. ways in thefull spirit of the Golden

Rule. 2

‘Montgomery Ward 85 Co. begins its
second half -century of business exis-
tence. Yet today it is ﬁlled with the
spirit of youth; alert, looking ahead,
improving its service, ﬁlling orders
quicker, and offering lower and lower
prices.

To buy from this Golden Jubilee Cat-
alogue is to be guaranteed a deﬁnite

‘saving and entire satisfaction—and back

of this guarantee is the reputation of
Fifty Years of fair dealing.

Buy from this book. Fill all your needs from this book.
ConSult ‘ it daily to ﬁnd the right price, the lowest price
' for dependable, reliable goods of standard quality. *

a ,,  ~TheOldest Mair Order House is Today the Most Progressive

tgome ‘ I  Ward 8’

ilriKansas  ‘ saint Paul' ‘Fort   Portland, Ore.

.. .. . , x
. we .4. Th}; «as .95

 

 


  
 
   

 

    

  

350,000 Now Use It-

‘l‘hesimple, dependable Fairbanks-Morse “2" En-
ginehaetahcnmuchofthedrudgerymtcfthework
commethenssoﬁooferms. Don'tweste your own
thatthieengmecandoquicherendees'gr. Atpteeent
low pnees,itiethecheapest“hiredhelp”youcangct.
Themagneto eqtﬁpthEP.,3I-I.P.,end61-I.P.'

 

 

 

5

 

 

 

duoeshotsperk,startingcngine uickl ..Thrott1‘ use.” "
_ governorassures steadyspeed. Pr?ces,F§.rO. Bfnctor‘yg: Ewarin cutouts:
1%EP.-G71.oo emu-ores.” emu-sue... fnoeummixﬁ
Other“2”33¢ineﬂ muons. «
Write us [or 00312;“ details. ‘4822n0'3'pm
See the enginee um dealer’s. 1
FA] RBAN KS, MORSE 59’ CO.
Manufacturer: - ' Chicag o. '
—
.' ‘ - ‘ A : ‘:_' 
" Fr-.. . -«

WMMNWM g.— th—v’gzg  '  ‘ 
r    o‘\ \ \\'\\\ 5“? N 

    .. mi

   

 f. A . TION 
,, 1161’?- OF GOOD mops

‘ “As ye sow”——7_Solvay Pulverized Limestone—“so shall

p. ‘ ye reap”——bigger, better, more proﬁtable crops. Solvay

brings crops to quick, complete maturity

by making soil sweet; releasing all plant-

food to the growing crops. Guaran-

teed high test 95% carbonates;—

gmund ﬁne,  dried, easily

I spread. Crop nnprovement shows
est.

ﬁrst harv
Keep posted on lime and its use.
Write for Booklet—sent FREE.
_ THE SOLVAY PROCESS CO.
in wmrvmmnwmte: »

 

 

Make $13 More
Per Cow

Free Book for Dairy Farmers

' Tells How to Cut Out Waste;

.Givee Valuable Building Hints
Do you know that the manure produced
by one cow in twelve months contains
ng elements valued at $39? And
do you know that one-third. or 813 of this
amount is lost in the couree of: year
through i m p r o p e r
handling ? By pro-

 

 

They GiveBetterLightandLastLonger

 viding a eiuzinple easy-
. 5‘ to-build t outdde
l _ aromadeespecxall imueeonCoieman  tho bun. um I“.
fecu 'Lr‘itéllﬁgps 3.” L. “tn-“Ework .r' t can be prevented.
(2m- 1 an 211' "
intakye i_n ca‘xﬁle gower of  wm‘IW‘h" P".

roducxng 300
pine-white rilliance.
‘Ihey arcfullsize, correctly shaped, knit to
2 opermmhsaturatedwithmeetchemicals
special Coleman Pr thus insuring
pénty ofdear. natural. a light.
Colman Mantlee are made of long—ﬁbre
Egyptian cotton and have reinforced pat-
ented bottonis. giving double strength where

_ themanymoney-
,. saving sugges-
/ /" 3‘ tione it givee

' on the use of
concretein mei-
ermanent im-

 
  
 
   
 
 
  
 
   
   
   
 

gas pressure 15 greatest. movements. operly housed
Easy to attach. Best for use on all makes of ‘1‘!” “m. mm State“ 9'01“
g I. lighting dc . on the investment. This free book is rec-

' ognlxed u e eimpleguideto 100 1a efﬁciency
and economyin building onthede'lry farm.
Fully illustrated with diegreme end pio-
turee. Shows how to build barns, milk-
houeee, silos, icehoueee. cooling tanks,
paved beraynrda. manure pits. water eup-

     
   
 
   
    
  
    
    
  
 
   
  
  
 
   
   
   
 
 

5Use onlythe genuine. Look for the name
"Coleman" on the mantle: buy. Get
them by the box—12 to a-
If your dala' can’t supply you. order direct.
Price. $1.20 per dozen, postpaid.

 

 

 

 

 
   
   
 

m-unmeiwIV

u short-u winner

   

Dept n u Dir Int-me. etc. 7
THE COIévliﬂhihéN LAMP CO. . PORTLAND CEMENT
 mam" * “sow-mo“
‘ Dime Bank Building A
. DETROIT, MICE-l.
Saws 15 Cords a Day. ‘famhm “5me
Inn-sally moreeesilywiththilnelxn‘m ofﬁce.“ng an“ a

   

  

      
          
 
    
       
      
            
     

          
      
 
   
   
     
     
    
   
  
  
 
  
   
  
   
  
    
   
  
 
       
   
 
    
  
    
  
 

   
  

 
  
  

 

If you have poultry for sale
put an ad in ‘
The MICHIGAN
BUSINESS FARMER
v» I h"

 

rose—'—

hall :1 ocean-ens"? 
ell oo(mnle;lu.t's '3- m

 

 

:tor arsenal“

mucus for Information eddr‘e

     
 

 

you. All‘lnqulrlde mutt beeoeempe‘nledw to" n

' CLEAR OUT SWAIN

Jean you thru your Farmers Seri-
vice Bureau tell me how I can clear
out a. swale covering one acre, it is
covered at present with willow and
other small brush, as it“ at present
it only dries out for about six weeks
of the year and then not suﬂlcisntly
that _I can get a horse in to, pull
them. It is my opinion thatjil this
can. be cleared permanently I‘ would
be able to get a little pasture, or in
some other way use it.—R. F. P.,
_ Hastings, Michigan. ‘ ’ »
-—-I believe the simplest plan, it th
ground is solid enough to hold up
a team around the swale, is to use
a long rope with the team, on solid
ground for pulling. the willows-
Perhaps this will require tWo men
to do the work in addition to the
team, but,it is' a very inexpensive
way of handling the proposition.

Another suggestion which might
be made is that the = possibility of
draining this hole shouldbe investi-
gated, if possible to drain it would,
of'course, be possible to users team
on it at practically any time.--H. H.
Musselman, Prefessor of Farm
Mechanics,’M. A. 0. '

CANNOT RECOVER TAX

If a party didn't know whether he
had to pay tax on cut-over- ~land or
. not and had already paid his tax be-
fore he found out, would the tax
collector be obli d to give it back
to the landowne ?—Mrs. F. D. A.,
Edmore, Mich. '

-—No. The property owners who be-
lieves himself entitled to exemption
from taxes is supposed to make ap-
plication for such exemption. If
through ignorance of the law or
oversight he fails to do so and the
tax is levied and paid he cannot

recover_.-—Editor. ‘
MIDLAND MUTUAL INSURANCE
’ COMPANY

An agent of the Midland Mutual
Insurance. Co‘., of Columbus, Ohio,
states that they have deposited$75,-/
000.00 at Lansing to do business in
the state of Michigan. Is this true?
—‘W. R., Hoxeyville, Mich.

The Midland Mutual Life Insur-
ance Company of Columbus, Ohio,
has on deposit with the Superinten-
dent of Insurance of the State of
Ohio $100,000.00 for the protection
of its policyholders. The company
is not required to maintain a de-
posit in Michigan in order to re-
ceive license to transact business
herein.‘-—-H. B. .Corell, State ~Dept.
Insurance, Lansing. 4

LIQUID IN BATTERY MUDDY

We have a 32-volt electric lighting
plant that wehave had about a year.
The batteries consist of 16 glass Jars
with rubber plates fastened together
by bands. At first when fully charg-

/ed the liquid would foam and become

almost milky. Lately after bacon-J
lug milky the fluid becomes dark and
almost muddy, when fully charged.
Would overcharging the batteries
cause this or is the fluid or acid
worn out?-——«Subscriber, Mich.

——The dark color of the electrolyte
would indicate that active material
from the plates has been dislodged
somewhat, due to the battery being
charged! at too high a rate. The
plates in the cells may have deteri-
orated, somewhat, so that the bat-
tery cannot now be charged at as,
high a rate as when it was new. You
may use lights or other equipment
while charging the battery making it

 

charge at a lower rate or have your
agent adjust the plant to charge
at. a lower rate.—~F. E. rFogle, Ass’t
Professor of Farm IMechanics, M. A.
C . .

 

RATS GET IN CEILAR
l have trouble-with rat's getting

{in my cellar and digging holes.

 i K the

PHOW to; Destroy Rm.

What can I do to kell them? I got ‘
a trap set and put rat biscuits in it'
but they don’t touch the biscuits-—

‘ Mrs. I.‘E., Grand Junction, Mich.

-—-[t is difﬁcult to rid any place of
rats, it will be very hard to rid this
place. We have no printed 
but you can get,‘ a bull’s“: shitting.

"C‘s . V" ‘-

   

eme and county ilam'e pot

' ment ‘7 of Agricultural;  ; 3
..D. C. All/we can say isftb‘" _

of water.

dough. A third plan is to spread: 
the barium carbonate upon...ﬂeh...:
toasted bread (moistened), encoding
ary bread and butter. The prepared
bait should be p ‘
about a teaspoonful at a place. 
a single application of the poles
fails to kill or drive away all rats. 
from the premises, it should ,be re?“ "
posted with a ,change "of bait—4.,
Farmers Bulletin, No. 3&9, ms.»
Department of Agriculture.  1»-

from subscribers against telephone»-
companles which have not» yet re”- .f
moved poles which were felled 113:4“ :‘4
the ice storm last spring, or renewed ‘_ 
service on their lines.

, must... prom. .. >
2.1%“. thls‘demment. -.   *
usedlﬁe'e

    

  
 
 

poisou,‘ Which "you can" 
rats (Elms: ,_ There“ are a as“
on. the. market most of then:
either arsenic; strychniﬁh' 
phorons. One of: the; “the
poisons is Berinrnpr‘Garbcnate 

     

 
   
 
  
 

below as given by the 
Bureau mentmned abovg. India!»
in: with rats the main mingle ’
cut olthe food supply. Eitherm its
the premises rat-pioot. or keep“ 1:.
food in. rat-proof containers. 
will not stay where. they cahnbt'f‘g‘e
food. 21% one kind or trap.~:wiiﬂ"2ﬁ
satisfactory under ’ all "conditions
sometimes ten diner-ant kindl‘i
be tried in, order to catch  
and wisest rat—waiter B. Barrow
Professor of Zoology, it. A10."- ~-
One of the cheapestiand 13003-0115
tecthe‘poisons forgets and mice
barium carbonate. This mineral 

_ the advantage of being without taster-7:..-

Or smell. It has acorrosive'eotionv- '

on the mucous lining of the human, V.  , v

and is dangerous, to larger .‘aniin‘als‘l "

it 'taken in sumcient quantity. : :‘In: "  .
- the small doses ted to rats- snd mice:  J
.it would be harmless to domestic '  ‘
‘ Its action upon rates. lei-7'1;
slow, and if exit is possible they"?

animals.

usually leave the premises in search'ﬁi

placed in reruns...

FALLEN TELEPHONE Poms  a
We have received some complaints ,

plainfs have been referred to the}
Public Utilities Commission which

has Jurisdiction in the matter.

The

Commisslozi is now seeking inform-7,
etion on such cases in order that it

. K

may compel telephone companies to 1 ,1. ‘

remove their poles and renew ser--- w

vice.
such condition existing are requested * 
to report the full facts to the Com-{Kll
mission at ,
name and address of the company; "

Subscribers who know of any ‘ 

Lansing, stating the

township or townships in which the " "

l

a

I‘

move my tencekback 'two'rods more

a

The fence has stood there for near
three years. Can they compel .me
to move it back? I <would much a
preciate your opiniw upon
matter.—-A. L.
County, Mich. :
-—-Yon are not obliged
land whatever for. 
poses. '
premises. by a fence and 
has never been j in; t 

ines are still unrepaired and subs -»

scribers incon-venien" *
x and the extent of such
——Editor. ‘ 

    
 

inconvenience.

 

NEED NOT DONATE LAND
FOR HIGHWAY

I own a [farm that is located on ‘ :7.
Three years ago 
township had the highway surveyed 
out and I then built my fence allow;- . ’
ing two rods-and live inches-for the

corner.

 

oad. Now the township wants me‘to-

nd threaten to sue me if I do not;

\

  
  
 
 
 
  

Presque ~~

a p 4‘;

T.',

   

35¢

   
   

'11 you 

For this reason the pols-f"? f
,on may frequently.» though not an; 
ways, be used in’ hbuses without
agreeable consequences. ' » .M
Barium carbonate may be lodging
the form of‘dough-composed of fou j X.
parts of meal; or ﬂour and‘rone :M-gr " '
of the minaret A‘more convenient. 
plan is ordinary oatmeal with ,
one-eighth of its hull:~ of the on:
end, mixed with” water into until!

dis- 

  
 
 
   
  
    
 
  
   
    
  
  
  

 
   
   
    

    
  
     
 

    

 

 

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nth; .e n1 A‘HA.U.8”"”

‘ .;A , , ‘zv
...--‘V_.n‘ n-A—h‘ A.‘

 
      
   
  
 

  
   
 
    
 
 
 

    
   
 
   
 
   
     
  

  
     
     
   

   
   
  

   
       
  

       
   
       
    
   
   

 
 
  
  
 

 
 
    
 
    

 
  
  
 
    
  


‘  ind"  are 7 lukuria‘nt.

 ‘ ’ in Ber-
thgit August weather.

 favorable to the

_ at harvest, and thdugh, .
mush? about 434.0 per cent '
g at mgdast'year, the duals

sw' grain, is good“, being
 and above, the. "aver-

W‘53alns affected ad~ “

ﬁe ,harvest‘s
“Anmar-k,

in “ England,-
and Germany.

.thd'otracted

reduced the corn crop pros-
Italy ahd Jugoslavia; the

fv ,tion in the latter country
"-:estlmated at 30 per cent.- The
 ‘niasn Cornvcrop is now estimat-

? at_12,,9,0.0.0.000 bushels instead
meccacoo bushels as previdusly

’ '.-repurted.'based on an average yield

not. everila bushels per acre. with

" surlpus for export estimated at

mam bushels. It is estimated
“Shut: the new wheat crop [of Runiania

will furnish, 7,000,000 bushels for

 u". an ﬁat. which will likely be

 in the commitments already

9, in Finance and Switzerland.
0 estimated total yield for Ru-

 ..Blﬁlia’ Of all cereal crops is 9,000,—
~;-: Wovens. as compared with 6,993,-

Aside from Ru-
only

.5tens in 1021.
nia,‘ Poland is the

ﬁropeau country which shows

v gains ‘in the bread-grain

 over last year with ofﬁcial

 given at 6,568,000 tons

a” _._'tbis:season as compared with 5,412,-

 tons in 1921.

7 .3: 

 Needs 110,000,000 Bu. Wheat

. 1 ‘5“With a'poor potato and corn crop.

and a wheat yield 20 per cent under

‘ - that? of last year, Italy will need to

Wrt- woxmately 110,000,000
’ g of wheat during this cereal
 *The French wheat crop is
 below the crop of
xﬂfﬂflybnt probable imports are now
ﬁgured down to 35,000,000 bushels,

\‘ to compulsory long milling,

Imbidilution‘ of ﬂour and the falling
ofin" the \per captia consumption of
 d. ' ' .

. [Vs-Germany is reported as carrying
‘ ‘~§00,000‘ tons of government stocks

Vietwheat and rye, leavingcth'e total

’ .i.uiec;fessary imports of cereals by the

.‘st‘ate «at 1,400,000 tons during the

current cereal year.‘ Rye is making

~ better showing than wheatl‘in all
“the principal grain producing count-
’ pies, giving about an average return
“Hper'acre, but with the exception of
*ifolandthe acreage planted» in rye
Q's-is yeargwas less than last season.

mPrivate importations into Ger-

any, are dominated by the money --

:-»stringency, with the stocks of grain
 in the millers hands running low,
- and importers are .hesitant about

I -\.making commitments nwing to the

5 i.’

‘.

‘ fﬁ'gwould not seem

violent fluctations of the mark. To
see the country'through ,the coming
. Winter heavy private importations
V will be required. American sales
might be increased through more
liberab credit arrangements on this

“chide, to the effect that grain might

- be shipped to the big responsible
‘ milling associations, such as I exist
‘ Sin the lower Rhine region, at a stip-
"hlatedprice in dollars, with pay-
,me'ntdeterred until the grain actu-
;. "any arrives and has been converted
pintoflourf Knowing the dollar ex-
,change value of the mark on the
Lgdate the flour'is sold a price to the
{bakers could “be made which would

be:suﬂicient to cover the cost of the

,Zrain and. afford secure profits to ‘

"the importing millers. In‘ general
advisable for

4

” a: American, grains to be pressed for

gle on the European, markets at
 precise time.

.Beet and» Potato Crops \
..,.The; population in Northern
airways assured heavier crops ,of

‘ lroot "and' potatoes. » This in-
e;, production of pctatoes- will
ggredt help-toward meeting the
airkdeficiencies. Owing to the
'o‘t'ipdtatoes in England the
albeing eluted.

Gé'i‘fman potato cropwill' hare-

p‘ass, 30,000,000 tons, as com-

' ‘ tons 'last

. growing

but  watts, sdmlhiny “Weath-

eriets ’inpthe roots will be defl-
cient in sugar content. The French
beets have prospered - under ‘ ideal
conditions. Sweden will
show a big drop in sugar production.

and; the Italian best ‘yield has been "
‘serliodsly‘hurt by the droutb.

Wei-q, .
memos on. A PW FARMCER
Sanilac Co. seat is active today.
it the'prtmaries orsthe; Farm Bu-
reau? Both I. believe».
. There are groupspf F. 15".L delegates
scattered about the streets. ‘
v ,Where do,_we eat? \See’ms to be
the big "question. -

That’s the fifteenth candidate that:

has presented himself for ‘my in-
spection.

j', 
 for him

Our table'manners

 are; limited tothe lengthof eurearm.‘ 

' A shbrt smoke for the smokers
and then to business. .

(order, credentials.

Resolutions, motions, amendments
steam-rollers and what not.

Points more than all. the lawyers
in Bohemia could handle.

The secretaryof the different 10-

“cals are giving some long figures.

Theyall report a balance on,the
right side of the ledger. Press for—
ward boys! And may the angels and
ministers of grace defend you.

county Agent Irving ofVHuron is
presenting some facts and figures
that’s getting under my pelt. He is
emphazing the importance of the
farmers'support in the coming mem-
bership drive. I‘ am going to sign
up. Though hades itself should gap
and threaten to engulf me.

._questions he answered during

.up front the president down to

6: award of  mass. ’1-

givtng us’a  "businessttlk

3.7»

[CO 'ntyv Agent}: Martin makes his r94

poi'ft. " It's accepted with thanks. . He
forgot to. i mention the six million
the,
yearpand- that he helped me get some
seed: "potatoes.

Elbotfon" of ofﬁcers. A good line--
the
janitor. " v  4

"Adjournmentuntil the picnic when
we will meet again.

She was a good meeting. Where
0 where are those'ba‘chelor delegates
that came with me? ."I‘want to go
home. “

It will be their business to explain
to Mrs. B. ‘when they drop me 01! at
the gate. I must trace up some
young ladies that would be willing
to co-operate with them.——A. P. Bal-

flard.

other

 

 

A

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

30ml!
""7

 

Plant a COLT "Gas We ’5 on your farm !

a, little igniter. . . . . on gees the light!
You use no matches. ' ’

The months of short days .and long nights
aré‘o'n their way. >

‘ Six months of evenings to be passed indoors

await you!

,. Will they be lighted by the dim, {eye-

straining ﬂame of a lamp—or the soft,

friendly -‘ brilliance of real light—CAR-

BIDE GAS LIGHT? -

Act NOW for real light! Get a COLT
Lighting and Cooking Plant-generate
this wonderful Carbide Gas.

Hundreds of farmers are preparing this
'month for bright, cheery evenings by in-
stalling COLTS. This is the great plant-
ing season for COLTS. More are being
installed this Autumn than in any other
season. Don’t risk disappointment—order
your COLT now, before Winter closes in.

The Health Light for Reading
Carbide Gas Light is pure white in color

- -—not yellow. Looks exactly like sunlight

—restful and soothing to the eyes. Read
or sew under it for hours—no eye weari—
ncss. The most beautiful as well as [the
most healthful of artiﬁcial lights.

' J. B. COLT. COMPANY .

l - K 301East42nd St.,NewYork

J How is the gas made? The COLT does

.. Oldest and largest mamfac-

 

 

I,’
.

. Ya I
s :64 
. 

Buried in the ground,
away ﬂour the tense,
inconspicuous as a '
clump of grass—(Ire
durable and depend-
able COLT insure: a
flow of Carbide Gas at
the ﬁnger? manual.

Carbide Gas for cooking, too—an added
feature of the COLT. YOur wife will
certame appreciate this. '

this automatically—mixes Carbide with
water.

Study Lighting Plant Costs. Result :
You’ll Install a Colt

Easy to install—within reach of all. No
continual replacement of parts, no adjust-
ing or tinkering necessary, no service
required—simplicity itself. The most eco-
nomical system all the way thru. Comes
from Factory to Farm. Sold direct by
COLT solicitors-no distributors or dealers
'to take a proﬁt.

Send Postcard for Full Story

You want good light—you want it in-
stalled now. Write for full particulars-‘—
then act for BETTER LIGHT!

8th and Brannan,  Francisco

turers of Carbide Lighting-and-
Coola'ng Plants in the World

 

 

 

 

 


 
  
  

 
 
 
   

 

 
   
  
 
   
  
 
 

. The simple, dependable Fm‘rbenks-Morse “2” En-
hastakenmuchofthedrudgeryoutofthework
on more than 350,000 farms. Don‘t waste your
that tinscngmecandoquicherandcasier. Atpreeent
low prices,it is the cheapest“hired help"youcan get.
The magneto equipt lKEP.,3H.P.,and 6 HP.
arereal kerosene engines,but operate equally well on
gasoline. Simple, high tension oscillating magneto
duoes hot spark, starting engine quiclrl
, governor assures steadyspeed. Prices,
1% Elk-871.00 3 Rik-$105.00 6 Elk-$168.00
Other “2" Engines up to 20 H. P.
Write us [or complete details.
See the engines at your d '

RBA‘N KS

  
   
   
  
 
    
  
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
  

y. ,
. O. B. factory:

 
 

‘482-°ros.rm

WORSE eco. "

 

 

 

Manufacturers“ Chi cog o.

 

 

    

W

 

_ Elna/v0.47 "
We: OF GOOD CROPS

 

, "As ye sow”-:Solvay Pulverized Limestone—“so shall
ye reef—bigger, better, more proﬁtable crops. Solvay
brings crops to quick, complete maturity
by making soil sweet; releasing all plant-
food to the growing crops. Guaran-
teed high test 95% carbonates;—
gxound ﬁne, furnace dried, easily
Crop improvement shows

   

V w»...—

Keep posted on lime and its use.
Write for Booklet-sent FREE.

THE SOLVAY PROCESS C0.

arm-MW- Wm,

 

 

 

 

Per Cow

Free Book for Dairy Farmers
' Tells How to Cut Out Waste;
.Givea Valuable Building Hints
Do you know that the manure produced
by one cow in twelve months contains
fertilizing elements valued at 839? And
do you know that one-third. or 813 of this
amount is lost in the course of
through imp roper
handling P By pro-
viding a simple easy-
to-buil

    

They Give Better Light andlastLonger

foruseonColeman

r m h ck L uwork [—
ectlywi te ' -itegas'pan air

grodugglg 300 candle power of
alliance.

 
  
   

 the barn, this loss
' canbeprevented.

A: j Write‘for this Free

~I..ite Lamps and

Theyarefullsize, correctly shaped. knit to on u" 0“"
om saturated with West chemicals
special Coleman Pr
ofclem', natural. s
Coleman Mantles are made of long—ﬁbre
Egyptian cotton and have ' p
ented bottoms, giving double strength where

gas presume is greatest.

Easytoattach. Bestforuae on allmakesof
gasolinelighting devices.

Use only the genuine. Look fa the name
“Coleman” on the mantles
them by the box—12 to a-

If your dealer can’t supply you. Order direct.
Price. $1.20 per dozen. po‘stpaid.

themanymoney-
saving sugges-

 
  

on the use of
concrete in mah-

  
 
 
 

alry cattle return greatest proﬁt
on the investment. This free book is rec-
‘ ognlsed as a simpleguideto 100$ efﬁciency
and economyin building ontheda'iry farm.
Fully illustrated with diagrams and pie-
tures. Shows how to build barns, milk-
icehouaea, cooling tanks.
“immature pitmwater eup-

THE COLEMAN LAMP CO.
Wichita. Kansas

' PORTLAND CEMENT
- ASSOCIATION

 

 

Canadian Factory: Toronto

 

Dime Bank  ‘
DETROIT, MICE.
 to Improve
User of Concrete
Offices in 23 0d..- Cities

 

 
  
   

Saws 15 Cards a Day

“ﬁfiﬁ'mml

      
   
  
  
 
   

 

' If you have poultry for sale
put an ad in
The MICHIGAN
BUSINESS FARM 
’ “it’ll  ‘

 

 

:v‘,;_.. 1

(A disarm.  tor farmers"
all oomplalnts
you. All lnqulrlée

 

 

 

' CLEAR OUT SWALE
Can you thru your Farmers Sor-
vice Bureau tell me how I can clear
out a swsle covering one: acre, it is
covered at present with willow and
other small brush. as “is at present

of the year and then not sumciently
that I can get a horse in to, pull
them. It is my opinion thatv'rif this
can be cleared permanently I would
be able to get a little pasture, or in
some other way use it.-—R. F. P.,
_ Hastings, Michigan. '

——-I believe the simplest plan, if the
ground is solid enough to hold up
a team around the swale, is to use
a long rope with the team on solid
ground for pulling. the willows.
Perhaps this will require tWo men
to do the work in addition to the
team, but,it is a very inexpensive
way of handling. the proposition.

Another suggestion which might
be made is that the possibility of
draining this hole shouldbe investi-
gated, if possible to drain it would,
of course, be possible to uses team
on it at practically any. time.—-——H. H.
Musselman, Professor of Farm
Mechanics,'M. A. O.

CANNOT RECOVER TAX

If a party didn’t know whether he
had to pay tax on cut—over ~1and or
. not and had already paid his tax be-
fore he found out, would the tax
collector be oblig d to give it back
to the landowneigi—Mrs. F. D. A.,
Edmore, Mich. '

———No. The property owners who be-
lieves himself entitled to exemption
from taxes is supposed to make ap-
plication for such exemption. If
through ignorance of the law or
oversight he fails to do so and the
tax is levied and paid he cannot

 

recover.——Editor. -
MIDLAND MUTUAL INSURANCE
CODIPANY

An agent of the Midland Mutual
Insurance Co., of Columbus, Ohio,
states that they have depositod$75,-/
000.00 at Lansing to do business in
the state of Michigan. Is this true?
—‘~W. R., Hoxsyville, Mich.

ance Company of Columbus, Ohio,
has on deposit with the Superinten-
’ dent of Insurance of the State of
Ohio $100,000.00 for the protection
of its policyholders. The company
is not required to maintain a de-
posit in Michigan in order to re-
ceive license to transact business
herein—«H. B. Coroll, State ‘Dept.
Insurance, Lansing. A

LIQUID IN BATTERY MUDDY

We have a 32-volt electric lighting
plant that we have had about a year.
The batteries consist of 16 glass jars
with rubber plates fastened together
by bands. At first when fully charg-
,'ed the liquid would foam and become
almost milky. Lately after becom-‘
ing milky the fluid becomes dark and
almost muddy, when fully charged.
Would overcharging the batteries
cause this or is the fluid or acid
worn out?——-«Subscriber, Mich.

——The dark color of the electrolyte

plates in the cells may have deteri—
orated. somewhat, so that the bat-
tery cannot now be charged at as
high a rate as when it was new. You
may use lights or other equipment
While charging the battery making it
charge at a lower rate or have your
f agent adjust the plant to charge
5 at a lower rate—«F. E. Fogle, Ass’t
2 Professor of FarmIMechanics, M. A.
; C , .

 

 

RATS GET IN W

I have trouble- with. rats getting
L in my cellar and digging holes.
What can I do to hell them? I got
a trap set and put rat biscuits in it ‘v
but they don’t touch the biscuit
Mrs. I. E., Grand Junction, Mich.
-—n, is difﬁcult to rid any place of
rats. it will be very hard to rid this
place. We have no printed mutter.~
but you can get a bulletin entitled,
,“ ,ow to, Destroy Rats” by w..-
the 13th   -  ‘

   

 
    

1v " troubles... from? " - '
or requests for lnfermatlou  muons-mama. 7
must heaosempa‘nled by full o am and warmer-ﬂame .not

it only dries out for about six weeks

The Midland Mutual] Life Insur-l

would in that active material .
from th ates has been dislodged
somewh t, no to the battery being
charged too high a. rate. The

County,-Mich. 'a _
-.-—You are not obli‘ged‘todonate'
land whatever tor highway
3—- poses.
premises. by a fence andili‘e‘
has never been 

 

   

  
 

  

We " ‘
used it so

    

   

ment of Agriculture, = Washing!
D. C. ‘Allwe can say isito use},
poison which ’ you can? "melts" ‘=
rots trite.“  There are a dozen? ,V
on. the market most ofthéi‘n coat

either arsenic; strychnllfé‘ pho -.
phorous. One of:   ' '
poisons is Barium 'Ga’rboneto WHEN

    
  

kills rats promptly.-. blit‘lh'v 3
_ doses tenet harmfulto' most ddm‘
‘tic sum. I am giving 
below as given by {the *Washingto 
Bureau mentiOned above. Inwitsslm.
in: with rats the main thingies ‘
cut on. the food supply. Either make
the premises rat-proof. or keep the

‘ food in. rat-proof containers. nag: g
will not stay where- ~they carcasses '-
food. ,Ne one kind 6! trap  hegggg
satisfactory under' all conditions}: ' -‘
sometimes ten dilierent kinds inst? *"

be tried inordsr to catch the-last
and wisest rat—Walter B. Barrows."
Professor of Zoology, H. A.  * *”

One oi the cheapest and most offs“ . ,
fective'polsons forgets and mice 
barium carbonate. This mineral,  .. 1f
the advantage of being without tasteh 

or small. It has a, corrosive, action»

on the Innocus lining of the stomach-1  k
V a11d is dangerous, to larger animals: : ,

it taken in sufﬁcient quantity. 2 :In}:

- the small doses fed toratsend mice

it would be harmless to domestic
animals.

usually leave the premises in search.
of water.
,on may frequently,- though not ala-

ways, he used in' houses without dis- 'v

agreeable consequences. . '

Barium carbonate may be lodging; v
the form of’dough composed of tour; 
parts of meal; or ﬂour undone 
A‘more convenient; 

of the mineral. 
plan is ordinary oatmeal .with about?

one‘eighth or its bulk. of the   3':
-8ral. mixed with“ water into .11 :stiifﬁ 
dough. A third plan is to spm."~ 

1

the barium carbonate upon .'
toasted bread (moistened), or ceding.
ary breed and butter. The prepared,

bait should be placed in rat 

about a teaspooniul at a place. .11,
a single application of the poison ~

fails to kill or drive away all rats .. 51'

from the premises, it should be 

posted with a change of beit’.‘-—-;.  \
3&9, ms. * ‘

Farmers Bulletin, No.
Department of Agriculture.  _

FALLEN TELEPHONE POIES 
We have received some complaints

from subscribers against telephone 
companies which have not yet re-   
sumed poles which were failed by: 

the ice storm last spring, or renewed
service on their lines. These com-
plainfs have been referred to the,
Public Utilities Commission which
has jurisdiction in the matter. The
Commissioa is now seeking inform-
ation on such cases in order that it
may compel telephone companies to

remove their poles and renew ser- w i

vice. Subscribers who 1110' of any ‘*

such condition existing are requested   : :
to report the full facts to the Com-. ‘

mission at Lansing, stating the _
name and address of the company.’

township or townships in which the
lines are still unrepairod and subs
scribers inconvenienced as a result
and the extent of sucﬁi inconvenience.
—-—Editor. ‘ .5575; ' ’ 7*

 

NEED NOT DONATE LAND
FOR HIGHWAY ’ , ‘

I own a farm that is located on.
8. corner.

out and I then built my fence allowi-
lng two rods and ﬁve inches for the, a

road' N" the tOWDShiD wants mate ‘1.  

move my fence ’back two rods more N
and threatento sue me if I do not“;

The fence has stobd there for nearly.
three years. Can they compel me-
to move it back? I (would much spa: f} 

1...; . .

preciate your opinloa\'-up0n "th

mutton—A. L. ’l‘._, Presquew ‘

  

  
 

It you have. 

 

township _ cannot. . o. 
.,.,exceht by 90:11.! ' '
, w«and .. "u 

 

 
  

  
 
    
     
 
  

  
  
 
 

 

 

\li‘

vnbeaéano

I Its action upon rats. is?  ‘
slow, and if exit is possible they 

For this reason the pols-.‘W,

Mics-Eb a a ﬂu  ..-

 

a
’ a

v , l
nil-i ‘A‘I‘u‘uﬂwﬁn

Three years ago the 1;"..-
township had the highway surveyed 5 ‘

   
 

 
   
    
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 


        
  

”

* and?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 
 

. _,_»’=th‘at_‘e,f- last year, the dual-4,
the»_,pew grain is good, being
in. ignite!) and above, the aver-
. E‘ ,.~ j'-’,rains aﬂected ad-'
. e, harvests in "England,
Denmark, and Germany.

. ,ty .of— the wheat, however,
 ingroved, ‘
_ smrotracted hot,rainless spell
 unit'redu'ced the corn crop pros.
 im'altaly and Jugoslavia; the
identiﬁcation in the latter country
“.aestimated at 30 per cent.- 'The
  ' nian Corn crop is now estimat-
V>e¢.,.-.a’t 123,000,000 bushels instead
02.1.34..~eos,ooo bushels as previously
reported, based on an average yield
I .gofrnotever‘la bushels per acre. with
 surlpus for export- estimated at
"3,343,090,000 bugshe'ls. It is estimated
stint- the new wheat croplof Romania
Lwill "furnish 7,000,000 bushels for
 ,‘ ts... all of which will likely be
“Qaysorhed in the commitments already
9 synmade to France and Switzerland.
3 _’;..~';$‘rihe estimated total yield for Ru-
0 mania of all cereal crops is 9,000,-
8=  r ~000jtens, as compared with 6.993,-
t; 4» .. ismltens in 1921. Aside from Ru-
Eff; , Sunnis, Poland is the only other
a .
s
r
1
P

 

 

  

 

  

 

 

 

  

  

 

 

 

 
  
  

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
     
  

   
 

x.

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

  

 

 

European country which shows
 .gains “in the bread—grain
, suns over last year with ofﬁcial
. . 1. estimates given at 6,558,000 tons

this‘season as compared with 5,412,-

000. tons in 1921.

Bab Needs 110,000,000 Bu. Wheat
"'With a poor potato and corn crop.

and a wheat yield 20 per cent under

thatgof last year, Italy will need to

timer t- approximately 1 1 0,000,000

 of wheat during this cereal

.I‘ '

I
,.,

   
  
 
   
  

 " The French wheat crop is
considerably below the crop of

; 1:531, but probable imports are now
,, ﬁgured down to 35,000,000 bushels,
,5 Wing; to ’ compulsory long milling,
\‘- thefdilution of ,flour and the falling
'go-ft‘in' the per captia. consumption of

bread.

rrIGermany is reperted as carrying
500,000 tons of government stocks
To! wheat and rye, leaving. the total
'.::necessai‘y imports of cereals by the
‘state at 1,400,000 tons during the
V .current cereal year. Rye is making-
.-. *hibetter showing than wheat“ in all
"the principal grain producing count-
ries, giving about an average return
 ,-‘per acre, but with the exception of
, HPolandthe acreage planted, in rye
 this year was less than last season.
 *f’rivate importations into Ger-
“many are dominated by the money
 stringency, with the stocks of grain
‘ in the millers hands running low,
and importers are .hesitant about

- gmaking commitments pwing to the
' violent ﬂuctations of the mark. To
see the country through the coming
winter heavy private importations
; will be required. American, sales
,1 'mzights be increased through more
_  j, v ‘J;_liberalz credit arrangements on this
 ‘, ' aside, to the effect that grain might
 é‘ be shipped to ,the big responsible
milling associations, such as exist

‘ ' in the lower Rhine region, at a stip-
".illated».price in dollars, with pay-
,-,ment deferred until the grain actu-
, 'allyarrives and has been converted
into flour.’ Knowing the dollar ex—
,» . change value of the mark on the
‘ ,_;date the flour is sold a price to the
_gbakers could' be made which would

v ~besuﬂicient to cover the cost of the

v 6.

ﬂ

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 the importing millers. In general
fﬁ‘ﬂwould not seem advisable for
,  ﬁmerican grains to be pressed for
'  ale on the European smarkets at
gals precise time.
,7 55,}; . .Beet and- Potato Crops
' 133:" -.=.-..Ths~,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

_ K 7 population in Northern

‘  “Oneal-e assured heavier crops ,of
‘-  Erect 'and‘ potatoes. xThis in-
easej- production of‘ potatoes will

 
  
  

 

 
 

'e .deiiciencies. Owing to the
" ofzmdmtoes in England the
8 being gluted.

 

tli

    
    

‘ﬂrpa‘ss 30,000,000 tons, as com-
with. 26,000,000 tons 'Iast

 

 

 
 
  

one that, of last sea-
bdalso a. Bl?»le
' ES 

       

.. growing conditions. Sweden will

seriouslyhurt by the drouth.

. mu? Both I believe.

   
  

   
  

     
 

\

beechosldvafia . are lunur‘ia‘nt,
» but unless 'Warm. sdnsfhiny “Weath- “d then to busmess-

er- sets in, the roots. will be deﬂ-
cient in sugar content. The French
beets have prospered ’ under ' ideal

show a big drop in sugar production.
and the Italian beet ‘yield has been

M V
WINGS OF A  FARMER
Sanilac Co. seat is active today.

There are groupspf F. B. delegates
scattered about the streets. ’
, ,Where do, we eat? \See'ms to be
the big"question. .

That’s the fifteenth candidate that; bership drive.

eniphazing the

spection. -

-  ‘ Ahl  is ready. Everyman
.   for himself here., Our table‘magners
‘ 5 ‘~  are limited to‘the lengthof eur»a.rm.j;

’ A short smoke for the smokers

Order, credentials.

Resolutions, motions, amendments
steam-rollers and what not.

Points more than all the lawyers
’in Bohemia could handle. _-
_ The secretary of the different 10-
cals are giving some long figures.
They all report a balance o‘n,the
right side of; the ledger. we Will meet again'
ward boys! And may the angels and
I! it tha~‘prmaries crane. Farm Bu. ministers of grace defend you.

County Agent Irving ofVHuron is
presenting some facts .and figures
that’s getting under my pelt. He is
importance of the
farmers’ support in the coming mem- the gate.
1‘ am going to sign
has presented himself for ‘my in- up. Though hades itself should gap
and threaten to engulf me. s'lard.

  of the VM. A.‘C. is
gliding use sound basin" esstaik,
county. Agent; Martin makes his re-i
v. port.“ .It’s accepted with thanks.
forgot to; mention the six million
questions he answered during the.»
year-Rand that he helped me get some
seéd‘ potatoes.

.up from. the president down to the
janitor. " l

“Adjournmentuntil the picnic when

Press for-
She was a good meeting. Where

0 where are those bachelor delegates
that came with me? g'I‘want to go
home. - "

It will be their business to explain
to Mrs. B. ’when they drop me off at
I must trace up some
young ladies that would be willing
to co-operate with them.——A. P. Bal-

    

Ele'ction5-of ofﬁcers. A good line--

 

 

The months of short days and long nights
are on their way. ‘

Six months of evenings to be passed indoors
await you! '

7 Will they be lighted by. the dim, (eye-
straining ﬁame of a lamp—or the soft,
friendly ‘ brilliance of real light—CAR‘
BIDE GAS LIGHT? .

Act NOW for real light! Get a COLT
Lighting and Cooking Plant—generate
this wonderful Carbide Gas.

Hundreds of farmers are preparing this

 

r stalling COLTS. This is the great plant-v"
. ing season for COLTS. More are being

' installed, this Autumn than in any other
season. Don’t risk disappointment—order
your COLT ﬂow, before Winter closes in.

[The Health Light for Reading

Carbide Gas Light is pure White in color
-—-not yellow. Looks exactly like sunlight

 

grain and. afford secure profits to ‘

a great help toward meeting the '

,w ‘ ei'thatbf’v'Belgium willrrun .'

. -restful and soothing to the eyes. Read
l or sew under it for hours—no eye weari—
ncss. The most beautiful as well as the
~ most healthful of artiﬁcial lights.

- '3osasc42ndst..NewYork

 

  

Plant a COLT "Gas Well" on your farm OW!

Comes to you at the twist of ﬁngers. Turn '
a’ little igniter. . . . . on goes the light!
You use no matches. _ ‘ r ‘

Carbide Gas for cooking, too—an added
feature of the COLT. Your wife will
certainly appreciate this.

How is the gas made? The COLT does
this automatically—mixes Carbide with
water.

Study Lighting Plant Costs. Result :

month for bright, cheery evenings by in-i

Easy. to install—within reach of all. No
continual‘rcplacement of parts, no adjust-
ing or tinkering necessary, no service
required—simplicity itself. The most eco-
nomical system all the way thru.’ Comes
from Factory to Farm. Sold direct by
COLT solicitors—no distributors or dealers
'to take a proﬁt.

You want good light—you want it in-
stalled now. Write for full particulars—‘—
then act for BETTé‘R LIGHT!

' J. B. COLT COMPANY ‘

8th and Brannan,  Francisco

. Oldest and largest manufac-
turers of Carbide Lighting-and-
Cooking Plants in the World

   

Buried in the pond,
my ﬂout the have,
inconspicuous as a
clump of grass—the
durable and depend-
able COLT incurs a
ﬂow ofCarbiJe Gas at
the ﬁnger? command.

You’ll Install a Colt

Send Postcardfor Full Story

 

 

 

r 31$VT‘SUCCBSSFU'L‘ Y‘EAR'

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

  

 
  

 

 

 

  

The household timekeeper

OLKS who used to set ‘i
‘ theirmindsnowset Big
Ben and sleep soundly,
restfully, conﬁdently.

They know that any
Westclox alarm will call
them on the dot; whether
it’s at 2 A.M. for the da‘iry‘-_
man, or later for ’tween
season chores.

After it starts the day
on time, it sees the chil-
dren off to school, times
the trip to town, meals or

whatever'else is needed.

It is surprising how often
Big Ben gets an inquiring
look, and satisfying the
way he answers it, day in
and day out, demanding
almost no attention.

That’s char: tteristic of
any timepiece with West-
clox on its dial. They must
be able to run on time and
ring on time before they
are allowed to wear the
name Westclox.

WESTERN CLOCK CO., LA SALLE, ILLINOIS, U.S.A.

Fartur}: Pern,lllinois. In Canada.- Wectern Clock Co.,Limited,Peterborough, Ont.

Pub! Bar
$1.50

Baby Ben
'$3~50

Squ-Muor
£2.00

Clo-Ba
32-5”

lad a'Lanurn
$3.00

America

“1 Big B:-
‘ ' $1.50

33.50

 

 

 

  

, neighbors

 

 

 

 

' has:ear-*-‘castbmers   

  

$120°°° n

 -  a ' ed

‘  ¥  

Read this letter from '
one of the thousan’ds of, Improved .
'customerswhonowhave 

Windsor Pipeless Fur— 6  0
June 11, 1922.

naces in their homes:

The Windsor Pipelessfur- “3 ‘uus‘m‘ef!
nace that I bought of you last December is
certainly all you claim for it. In the ﬁrst place
I saved $120 in price. Second, it gives you all
the heat thereis in coal. Third anyone can

‘ install it. It I were buying another furnace it
x ’ would be a Windsor Pipeless. None better
" > that I know of.
I. J. AUGUSTINE,
616 North 17th Street East,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Send [or this
FREE Book

Describes and illustrates
our complete line of Pipe-
less F urnaces. Stoves, and
other Hea Equipment.
High-grade lpeless Fur-
naces—only $52.00 and up.

Read about our easy-
payment lan. Write for
this Book oday. 1

Montgomery Ward & Co., Dept P-12‘ ' \-
Chicago Kansas City St. Paul -

‘Montgomeina (i3.

. ET_h_eOldejst_Mail_2r_derHouseisTomtheMosthgrcssive!
Lifeiie Bu ildinqsihaifosi less

Before you plan your next buildin , Write us for estimates on

azoo Tile, construction. he ﬁrst cost is the bnly cost—need no

‘ paint; will not burn or decay; warm in winter; cool in summer;
storm and vermin proof. '.- s

 .TILE ‘

alama 00511.03 AND BUILDINGS

make beautiful, modern structures, easily erected,‘ increase the value
‘ and appearance of your farm and solvelgour building problems. permis-
. neatly. Write for interesting bookleth alamnzpo GlaZedyBuildmg'ﬁle.
“‘77- Kalamnnoq Tank _&  €09  444: Kahlil!!!» ‘Mlch-

  
 

    
  

 

 

 

.1, 1.‘ 1., V ..

 

   

 

  

V55: €9.71?! ~WFF. m'm’

 

 

 

  
 

  

  
  
  

  
    
  

 
   
 

 

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THE cross on A PEACH TREE.
Wonld.y.’ou advise planting three-_

 

yearsold ‘peach trees? .One of- my
planted ~ three-year-old
trees in 1918, but I can't see that

they are any better than an orchard 

of two-year-old trees planted at the
same time—R. 'L A.,
County.

——As an answer to this question, let,

us look up the history of these
trees. _ _ ‘ a

In the fall 1919 there was a peach
ripening o‘n a tree, somewhere in
the‘mountains of the Carolinas. It
was small'an‘d white, but when full
ripe had a good ﬂavor. A wild tree
produced it, consequently it was
“natural” fruit. _ _

The peach, like thousands of oth-
ers was gathered by the mountain:
eers to dry for winter. The pit was
saved and sold to a dealer who
shippedlt to a northern nursery.

At some time during fall of 1916
that pit was planted.

was budded. During the next sum-
mer it grew into a tree and in the
fall it was dug and stored“ in a nurs—
ery cellar, to be sent out .for planting
in 1918. k '

The trees were graded and desig-
nated according to size as X, XX
or XXX. The difference in the
growth of peaches is remarkable. A
tree may be less than two feet high
or more than seven, the growth of
a single season.

Such a difference in the size makes
it is easy for an agent to claim a dif-
ference in the age of his stock.
However, the peach trees sent out by
nurseries are of one age, regardless
of the inequality in size.

In regard to the size far planting,
most orchardists prefer a medium
grade, claiming that they are more
thrifty than larger trees. Some sue.-
vessful growers, however, prefer
large stock and have good orchards
to prove their claim. Perhaps there
is less in the tree itself than in th
way it is cared for. _

GROWING SEEDLINGS -

How are apple. quince, cherry,
pear and swaimp huckleberries
started from seed? How are grape
cuttings made and when should they
bé planted?—W. E. S.

—Apple seeds are mostly obtained
from cider po-mace by washing. In
early spring they are planted like
seeds generally in rows far enough
apart to admit cultivating. Pear
and quince seeds are similar to the
apple.

Cherry pits, like other stone fruits
are planted in the fall. Planting is
similar to that of the apple.

The growing of huckleberries
from seed is not a simple matter. It
is really something which should be
done in a greenhouse, or a. hotbed.
The seeds are freed from pulp by
soaking thoroughly, then 'kept by

mixing in fine moist sand and storing '

in a cool place. The seeds in a.
greenhouse may be sown the latter
part of winter in boxes containing
a mixture of sand and loam, covering
slightly. cover with Sphagnum and
keep in a temperature between 60
and 65 degrees. The seed is slow to
germinate, but if kept moist some
of them should show signs of life 'in
a month, though others may remain
dormant much- longer, even a year.
Through the spring and summer they
are transplantedgthree times. By
the ﬁrst of September they should be
ready to harden'off for winter. Give
little water, but pi’otect from frost as
late as convenient. Protect through
winter with some covering over the
cold frame. Air the frames once or

'twice a month, a few hours at a

time as a protection from fungus.
The following spring they are plant-
ed out in beds of sandy soil and kept
well watered. Protection is- needed
the second winter. After that they
are planted out and grown as ordi-
nary nursery stock.‘ This is enough
to scare, anybody but a’hardened hot-
hduso man.

Grape cuttings are made from the
hard wood, during the winter or

early spring, using the trimmings.

from the vines. The cuttings are.

made long enough to include at least‘

two, better three, buds“

and is «cut - straight ,ac'

bundles.   “in J,

m

 
 

The butt

 

 

Oakland 1

In the spring ,
of 1916 it grew and that summer it "

it should be planted for

hint--

moist sand in a cool . cellai:.‘-~ By.
spring they will have calloused’and
may be planted out when the weather

permits; They should‘be deep enough " V V

so the top bud only is above the surf-’4
face.‘ ' ' _ "5 5  '

. , . . g , ,
,SPRgreaoB mainframes .
Would-you plant,fi=uit;trees in the ..
fall or spring? ..'This7 is the question,
that comes uniform-n an‘swerﬂe’very'T
year. ’ . ' ' e “ 

In the fall' there is time forﬂpriei-ﬂr 

  
  

 

paring the ground and “planting the 

trees. The, soil becomes settled
around the roots. In the spring the
trees will be ready to grow with the
ﬁrst warm weather. Nurserymen ,‘
are not rushed with orders, so that

shipping and delivery are subject '

to less delay. thanin spring.

But if the winter is severe the trees
may be injured seriously, in-which
case they would fare much better in
the storage cellar of -the nursery.
Fall orders are looked upon with
disfavor by nurserymen and some of

ping at that season.
tra expense attached to handling in
the fall, besides the results are‘ liable
to be unsatisfactory. '
In the spring the weather may be '
bad, soas to cause delay, the trees
may arrive too soon, necessitating
extra work in handling. They may
he too long on the way, so be injur-
ed. But all things considered the

  

  
      

 

      
  
    
     
      
     
   
 

 
 

      
    

   

‘ i

 

 
 

    
     
   
  
   
 

them charge an extra price for ship- ’ .
There is an ex- :7

*_

spring gives better results than/the, '

fall, at least in the latitude of lower
Michigan. Farther south, where
the winters are less severe, fall. plant-
ing is in favor.

The objections to fall planting do-

not hold good in case of forest and
ornamental trees generally. They
are usually older and can endure the
winter better. Fall planting is usu-
ally preferred for them. Shrubs are
planted in the spring, unless they can
be protected when they are set.

 

~ NOTES

The Gideon apple has been in disfavor,
but that is not so much the fault of the '
fruit as a misunderstanding of its real
character. It has been described by
some prominent nurserymen as a. winter.
apple, but those who plant it in South-
ern Michigan with that in view, will be
disappointed. Here it ripens in autumn
Just about early enough to prevent rot-
ting on the tree. Farther north it ripens
later. It originated in Minnesota and is
a cold-climate apple. ‘ .

But the Gideon has much in its favor.
The fruit is not of- the highest quality,
but it‘is ready for green apple pie about
the middle of July and furnishes a supply
for this purpose during two months or
more. The tree grows vigorously, bears
early and often. For tap-working with
weaker w‘rieties it is one of the best. But

not for a winter apple.

_MICHIGAN CROP-S“

what. it is and‘ "

INCREASING RUST RESISTANCE m

0F WHEAT
ACT-year the disease known as
“wheat rust" takes its tell,
of the crop. Some years the
damage is comparatively small but
it is always serious enough to be a.
constant menance .

Wheat rust comes in two stages
—-ﬂrst, the summer stage as yellow
spots and then the winter stage as.
blackrspots. It has long been known

.that the common barberry bush is

an important factor in the propaga-
tion of the disease but it is only. of
late that anything approaching an
efﬁcient campaign from its eradi-
cation has been attempted.

The .spores gf the black rust can
infect only the commo barberry.
They cannot, directly infe t wheat.
In the spring, the spores produce-
small spots on the barberry leaves.
These spots are full of tiny orange
cups containing another crop of
spores. If black rust cannot find ,
barberry leaves it is renderedequite _
harmless and the loss of many
bushels of wheat per acre prevented.

It 'has been obvious that much  

damage could be avoided by hasten-
ing the maturity 'of the crop, for

rust is most virulent at the; latter
end of the growing peridd..--Fer‘tu- ‘1 
izers have been used successfully to“ 1:. _

accomplish that end. They not only

nourish the plant so that it is better 
able to withstand rust, but also ripen ‘

  
 
    
 
  
  

  
 

the crop earlier. V , p
 ile phosphoric acid
rem, this connectio

“y,

;\

   

  
      
        

l,

   
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
   
  
 
   
      
     
  
  
   
  
    
    
   
   
    
  
    
   
   
     
    
   
   
    
   
  
      
  
       

      

   
      
      

  
     


 
 

 
  

 

ash delays} the maturity of nearly
. all crops. Lack ‘of [ammonia may
ydevlay maturity or may resultin an
. ( abnormally early ripening and loss
g . of the crop. A well nourished wheat
plant will suffer much less from rust
and'other injury than will an un-
noui‘ished one. '

    

 

 “‘ USE, FERTILIZER WITH WHEAT
" I have a 5-acre' ﬁeld of some light

land and some is mixed with clay

and sand. I have had hay in the
’ ﬁeld for two years and now I want
~ -.._/to‘ ,put wheat in this ﬁeld. Would?
" fi't be'best to put lime or fertilizer,

and what kind of fertilizer would I
I. use? I can get lime at $18 a ton.
I A. 8., Bad Axe, Mich.

IBdV  —\Under the conditions you men-

 

tho  tion Would suggest using a fertilizer
the  with 'the wheat. It is likely that the
“an I" i uSe of two hundred pounds of 16%
hat _ i, acid phosphate; when the wheat is
set ' v sown, and a top dressing of from
\ , fifty to seventy-ﬁve pounds ~of.so-
9“ dium nitrate in the spring just as
1°11  - growth starts, would give the best
in . - results. On light land potash of-
'ry- ‘ ,' tentimes pays if a seeding is to be
“h < ' made in the wheat. Light soil is
or . quite likely to be acid and an appli-
19‘ ' a cation of two tons of ground lime-
ex' “ - stone would be found much more
in  economical than hydrated lime at
me $18 a ton.——C. R. Megee, Research
be . Associate in Farm Crops, M. A. C.
aes ,
mg  . FUR DEPARTMENT
lay ——— ,
Ill" _ TEMPERING STEEL TRAI‘S
the . \ Would you please inform me as
31.9. V j . to whether steel traps can be tem—
Ver, _ pered after going thru a ﬁre. We
are . have someblaCksmiths here that say
nt‘ the springs cannot be tempered. If
‘ they can be please tell me how.——F.
‘13 9 0., Swan Creek, Mich.
u -—«If the steel traps springs have

le'
y _ been overheated (or “burned” as
the blacksmith says) then they are

an-

u-e I useless, but, if they have not been

:an 1 overheated but have just had their
temper drawn through heating, they
can be tempered again.

. Owing to the springs being likely
31‘". ' heated and cooled un-uniformly it
tea? is best to anneal them ﬁrst to re-
by ‘ lieve all strains and stresses in the
ter- ' steel. The annealing can be done

th' ‘ from a heat slightly over the hard—

 

mn ening heat. After heating for an-
'°t‘ I nealing the springs should be packed
BI}: \ " in lime, hot‘sand or ashes and al—
lowed to cool of! slowly.
'°"- . j The lowest heat which will give
 the desired results should always be
ply used in'hardening. A simple meth-
01‘ r 0d for ﬁnding the hardening point of
a: ' _  to use a magnet. When the magnet
mt j‘ "lets go” of the heated steel, you
mt v» have reached the hardening heat
‘ ‘ for that particular steel, if it is
straight carbon steel.
a. ' To harden the steel springs, heat
'7 the entire spring in ﬂame of a clear
m ” ﬁre until there is just enough heat
to harden, on reaching the harden-
35 '_ ing point, cool off “dead cdld" in
all clean water. Polish the steel
he bright.
"1t Hold the spring edgeways about
* a two inches high over the ﬁre, do not
' blow the ﬁre but heat the spring
res ' , very slowly, moving it back and
JW forth, turning it over to insure even
as , temper. Watch the spring very
W11 closely until the color turns to a
is very paleb-lue (almost grey color.)
iar . Do not cool off in water but lay the
0f spring down where it will be free
an 4 from draughts of cold air and allow
Cli— ' springs to cool on.

When heating Springs hold them
an at the end. If they are held in the
[‘17- ‘ ' center the center will be soft.

312- Another Method

we ' '. Annea-l and harden as above- but
35“ - __ to temper, hold pring over ﬁre'plac-‘
ge ' ing spring in a very dark place, now
or and again until it shows a very dark
“‘1 -. red, just visible to the eye, then
“9 - i lay down where it will be free from
“7' — cold draughts and allow to cool off.
331' V l , ——-—Bert Daugster.

311' \ \ BAD COMPANY ‘

91' A ne'gro who had an injured head

 
  
 
 
  
 
   

\entered a doctor's ofﬁce.
’ ' “Hello Sam! Got out again, I see."
"Yes, sah. I done got carved up
“widua razor.”

f'Why don’t you keep out of bad

.  campany?“ said- the physician, after
 he had dressed the wound. I ‘
 “'Doeﬂtl‘d like to; but ain’t got

" ' to’ get a divorce."

   
   
  

 

Model K41—Two Ton

$2375?

Chassis Only—41H the Factory

GMCICImuia list at face ‘
tory as follows: One Ton,
$1295: Two Ton,
’ 32375; Three and One-
, half Ton, 33600; Fwd
Ton, $3950; tax to
be added

General

Haul Stock This Fall With a GMC

Flashing along the good highways at a fast speed and also
developing more pulling power in bad going than is averaged by
trucks of like capacity, the Model K-41, Two Ton GMC truck, is
the ﬁnest equipment yet produced for hauling stock and for other
heavy work on the farm.

Like the “Jim-Dandy" one ton GMC, this truck has exclusive
improvements that increase operating economy and reduce the
time and expense of maintenance. Model K-41 is equipped with
the GMC Two—Range Transmission, providing greater pulling
power in combination with more road speed—a combination
never before accomplished until the development of this distinctive
feature by GMC engineers.

The Two-Range transmission has successfully multiplied economi-
cal engine power into greater power at the wheels and has opened
up new fields for motor trugk use, both in the city and on the
farm. With this transmission a GMC truck will go anywhere
that wheels can get traction and on good roads will speed 18
miles an hour with solid tires.

It has 'such other advantages as GMC Removable Cylinder Walls,
Pressure Lubrication, Removable Valve Lifter Assemblies,
Instantaneous Governor Action, Magneto Ignition, Conduit Wiring,
Thermo-Syphon Cooling, Electric Lights and Generator, Provis-
ion for Starting Motor and many other reﬁnements not usually

found on motor trucks.

Write for an, illustrated lwooklet “GMC Trucks on the Farm.”

GENERAL Morons TRUCK COMPANY—Pontiac, Mich.

Division of General Motors Corporation

Dealers and Service in Most Communities

 

,-.(83.)..n

 

 
 
 

 
  
  
    

"R UP!

BIG SEASON AHEAD

and baits now. Send . 11 below

human scent). and A-SMEL (de-
stro skunk smells instantly). Get free ’I‘rapper’s
P showing 113 and new paste baits, game

allacason. All Free—send

  
  
  
  
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

IPaIdner "

ﬁe. “Inseam “Emilia?

 

 

 

 

 
 

‘

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

at one. to Me Fur Co., St. Louis, €017 lowest -
riaeoron supplies, get free cam les OXENT ,
REMOV‘3 '

 

   

laws. howh) 'angegrade furs. We keep you 
on market and send 5

   
  
 

 
  
 
 
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
  
     

_, rm; 

 
 
   
   

 

 

 

1% toGH. P.asyouneedit.The
one economical engine on
farm jobs to 6 H. P.
S a v e s investment.
upkeep, time.
Portable.

 
   
 
 
    
   

 
 

his wonderful farm. Many in

gasoline. No crank-

ing. Write for .2:
description and
factory I price.
THE EDWARDS

M'VI‘OR 00.,

. 884 Main St.
iSprumﬂeld. Ohio

      
  
  
  
 
 
    
 
 

 

MONEY FIJI!
Yﬂllll RAW FURS

 
  

Busiat

TEST fA farm. Wonderful
value at less than pro-
war price. Never was such

_ an engine bargain. Du-ect'
from factory to you. Learn about
helper. Kerosene or "I one

 

 

 

is your guarantee of satisfaction. We

a no co ion—and
d" m send money can.
for

IIEIﬂL/w
rite we booklet.  \
mar
ate. *

    
 
 
 
  
 
 
  

  
 
 

7°
“11‘ 91¢”
' mm" ~  

mm%. 93

 

 

  
   
   
   
   
    
    
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
 

    
 
  
   
  
  
 

  


   

    

 

5mm: 7 I 
dam l V 7 '
“Bevan .. , _ . ﬁlm“: _ '
"mun-Wanna". “"5" 4' ‘

 

 

SATURDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1922 '
Pubw m m h!
"E RURAL mum“ WI”; I.-
m, ,W ,
Wmmrm,onmuu¢usmu
the ted hr:-

 

 

A-eh - Pmu.
Member Audit Bureau at Ghanaian.

GEORGE ll. SLOCUH ......................mnmsm
FORREST A. LORD . . . . .................,.......mm

m w Slocum, .I L I: an}: M or
n . . r. ...- . . . . . . . . . . . .. e88 HIM!
Henry 1". Hipﬂnl . . a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “Plant gupeﬂnfdendent
6  . . . . . . . . ..’. . . . . . ... . . . . . . “Hanaan 
nee only sunny . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . .. H
Funkd). was .....................  r3? now
I. Herbert Ferris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “Radio Edim
William I. Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... . . . . . “Loni Em
on: YEAR (52 Inna) .snrwo was (104 lanes) $1.50
'l’i-lliE! "It. (150 Issues) SZH—‘WE' YRS. i260 Ismail $3.00

The date following your name on the address label Ibo" m
Your mblcripﬁon expires. In renewing kindly send this libel ti!
avoid mistakes. Remit by check, draft, money-order or redokfed
letter: stamps and currency are at your risk. We whom”
by ﬁrst-class mail every dollar received.

Ad°V°W8ina Rates: 450 be 1' . 14 lines to the
column inch. 772 lines to affrm’ﬂ Flirthams. ‘ ~

Live Stock and Auction Sale Advertising: We offer special 10'
rates to reputable breeders of live stock and poultry: WTW’ u“

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS
We will not knowingly accept the advertian o!
mpmon orﬂrmwhowedonot beiievsm be
thoroughly honest and reliable. Should any roads!
have any cause for complaint against any advertiser
to these columns, the publisher would appreciate an
~~ immediate letter bringing all light. In
every case when writing say:
Michigan Busine- Formal" It will mates

Entered u second-class matter. at postmﬂlce. Ht. Ginsu. Mich.
" The Farm Papa of Santa”

 

 

Fall Houseclcaning

IF you happen to know of anyone who has
had trouble getting the Business Farmer
regularly, as issued, or whose name has dropped
from the list or who has any other complaint
regarding our mailing. now is the time to send
it in. We are having a fall housecleaning 
our mailing department—Publisher.
So this is Fall

HAT canvas can portray, What silver-

tongued orator can describe, what imag-
inatiOn can picture the glories of the woods
which the hand of fall has painted with a
thousand colors?

If you would ﬁnd peace, lose yourself in the
woods one of these bright October days. Just
lay aside the cares of the farm or household
and go down in the woodlot and spend a few
hours with the gaily-colored maples, with the
birds and chipmunks, and with God who smiles
from every sun-lit leaf and twig. '

Here for a few brief hours, “the world for-
got and by the world forgotten,” you can get
acquainted with your better self. You can
see your faults and your virtues and the faults
and virtues of your children and friends and
neighbors in their proper light. And that will
be a good thing for you and for them. An
occassional communion with one’s own self
works wonders in the forming of noble char-
acter. The place to talk things over with your_

self is in the solitude of the woods and the.

time is the glorious fall.

Be on Thy Guard

ARMERS and farmer legislators who have
fought for the primary and believe in the
primary as a means of keeping the government
in the hands of the people should be on their
guard. For it is in danger. r

The primary robbed the political boss of his
power. No longer does he control elections or
sell ofﬁces to the highest bidder. He is a king
without a crown, a Kaiser dethroned and dis-
graced But, unless signs fail,‘ he is stag-
ing a come-back. So watch out. .

Only four hundred thousand out of a million
voters cast their ballots in Michigan in the
recent primary election. The political bosses
say that ’s an indication that the primary is a
failure as a means of interesting people in their
government and in the men Who arechosen to
run their government. They never used that
argument when nominations were controlled
by convention's BocauSe in those “good old
days,” the town hall couldn’t mopmodate more
than one out of ten of the registered voters,
and it took a mighty spirited contest to induce
.. more than one! out cit-twenty to plrticipate in

the election of delegates to the  conven-
: .  . ~ . ;,.~ . I a ,

 

a. was 

"I saw your advertisement in The '
home! dealing -

_ sumers' dollar ?

    i ;

   

.. fell 2
pwer.‘ What "theyyarelooking f
 to destroy the primary. . And
ﬁnd plenty of evidence that” the primary isn’t

, as popular as it "ought to be, and plenty of

goal men who  help to lay it tenderly on
the shelf. ‘

The next legislature will undoubtedly be
as]:ch “amend” the primary law, and there
arethosewhoarewilﬁngtowagerthatany
amendment which. will be satisfth to the
political bosom will in effect be.a-complete
emmcnlation. If you are against the primary

law your fondcst hopes may soon be realized. 0.

Bntyifyou revereitasoneoftheinstrments
of representative government he on the alert
to save it from its enemies. - v

 

Dr. Friday and the madman

“This is the ﬁrst time that I have-availed my
self of telling you that I am a subscriber and a
real reader of your paper. It is-said that every
man owes a part of his time to the upbuilding of
the industry to which he belongs. ,

“On the fourth page of the September 16th
issue Irread what President Friday of M. A. 0.
had to say at the State Fair in regard to the
middleman. If he continues such lines of talk
in further addresses the farmers of the State of
Michigan should petition to have him removed
at once. He has already impeached himself.

"It can’t be possible that he has read what the
Philadelphia bank has to say about the need and
value of farm organizations in the same issue.
I wonder if he does not think that the producer
is entitled to at least ﬁfty per cent of the con-
We would be very much pleased
to read an editorial in your paper as to what you
think of his address at the Fair. You have al-
ways appeared to me to be fearless and it is cer-
tain the Professor needs information . He fur-
thermore should be closeted with Baruch for a.
time—Marvin C. Haight, Van- Buren County,
Michigan. . 7

IT may as well be confessed, now that you
have brought up the subject, that many of
President David Friday’s best friends were
surprised and disappointed with his State
Fair addgess. ‘It was a distinctly un—Friday-
like speech. It bristled with the “two blades
of grass” theory, and contained no encourage—
ment for the co-opcrator. it rankled his
farmer audience even to the point of heckling,
which is bad for any speaker and particularly
for the president of an agricultural college.

If Pres. Friday really believes that few if "

any economies can be effected in the/market-
ing of crops, we must admire him for the
courage of his admission even though we do
not agree with him. It would; be bad for pro-
gress if our educators should preach a doc-
trine which they did not believe merely to sat-
isfy the whims of their hearers.

But does Dr. Friday really want us to be-
lieve that he sees no hope for bringing pro-
ducer and consumer closer together? We
doubt it. Or is he temporarily disheartened
by the failure of the co—operative movement to

cope with the problems of co—operation, and.
prefers to rest his reputation as an educator,

upon the more popular theory of proﬁts by
efﬁciency in production rather than upon the
yet—to—bc-provcn theory of proﬁts by eificiency
in marketing? This sounds more likely.

Men assume a tremendous responsibility
when they strike out from the trodden paths
and seek to ﬁnd a better. way to market. If
they encounter unforseen obstacles, as they
often do. and the way proves more difﬁcult and
costly than the old—travelled road, they must

humbly accept the censure which is so often ~

heaped upon them. Even the most ardent be-
lievers in co-operatiVe organization are begin-
ning to shrink from the role of leadership in
untried marketing experiments. .‘
Shall the President of the Michigan Agri-
cultural College risk ‘his brilliant reputation

 

 

NOTICE 1‘0 SUBSCRIBERS. ‘
Rather than curtail departments and
print incomplete issues. as some farm .pa- '
years have been tor-cod to do, we have 
ferred to issue The Michigan Business
Farmer, overyvoﬂler-weok  ‘ ~
Each issue; missed has been credited

to the subscriber, so that in would no one A
will» lose a' single issue for‘wh‘ich he has
paid. 0' respectfully -'a'sk‘ your “patience
- and-thank you tor your, loyalty to, ‘i' "

M.

  

e

o

 
    

   
  

   
   
  

 

orjnow are 0!   i ~

e'y v'ca‘ni commas. vim

g
i .

  
   
  

 

V ..,f;
.. 73+
'0

feet safety? 0 ‘

 

. about  of  the -.*'
ment   a 
will ﬁnd a crumb 'or...two high the
parative tax ‘leviesfor the  

  

. ' The 1921- expendimcsocﬂed mascara: 

cf $20,441,333”, Wm .313 1923M 37:
343.94. ,Ilnsst someom'may' sander. ..
‘ ‘iriggcrggin the woodpilc ’.’ <  i 
‘teresting to compare the  item in the
budgets.'TFer-eisn93peeial ' A"
saving in the state oﬁce building’expen , _
which last year was $1,107,500 and‘thisis
nothing. But there is sane signiﬁcﬁryiejinﬁ

comparison of the rcgnlar. running expemu (if,

theTstate as shown by the following  - i, _
as? ’

. August
Functional Division “.1921

 

Executive . . .n- .0 33,550.00 8 88,550.00 ., . .W‘

sass“ ~ was-:3 sass «a as
ave... , . - . . . 

Judicial . . . . . .. 404,515.00 , 402.5%.m s. .004“.

, Regulativo . 1,115,955.80 ' 545,860.00 170.005.“,
Educational. . . 2,170.30614, 1,645.7 0.05 038315.78 :

. Agricultural .. .. 585,809.00 445.! 2.00 0 .00.~
Defensive. . ..‘ 345,000.00 270,000.00 5. L00 ,
Tonal . . .. . . . . . 585,351.00 071,951.00 ' 7;! L00 V
Curative . . . . . .- 2,765,608.50 3,588,103.08 148,504,504,
Correctional and i ‘ . 1 .. -.

Charitable . 1,2913%.” 1.210.302»! 75,218.80”« ,
Protective 743.6(1.00 “6,017.00 10,900.00 
Constructive . , i ‘ 
General . . . . . . 160,643.45 1,000.00 150,634.45

TOTAL . . . . $11,427,583.” 31.938.343.94, $1,489,239..85,1’ '
Speciaiz— * '

University of Mich. ’ t
Mill Tax . . .  $3,000,000.00 83.000.000.00.

Mich.’~Agr"l Coll. ‘

Iill' Tax  1,090,000.00 1,000,000.00 . .
Highway Bond . -  r
Sinking Fund . .1,200,000.00 1,500,000.00 , '300.ooo.oo
Soldier's Bonus ‘ 
Sinking Fund 3,456,850.00 1,612,500.00 843,750.00. , ;
War Loan 191 - ‘ .. ‘ '
Sinking Fund .. 250.000.00 250,000.00
State Office . ‘ '- .‘
Building . . . . . .\ 1,107,500.00 1,107,500.03

‘ Increase.

After you have digested these  
secured what comfort youxcan from them,‘yon V

might dwell for a moment upon the insignifi—

cant sums that have been set aside both years i V r

for paying interest on the bonded indebtedness.

been retired. We have here an item of over

$3,000,000 or one—fifth of the total tax lexy for; J
with not a nickelvlaid aside  -.

interest alone, N V
retire the principal itself“ . ., .
»If the. reduction in expenditures
maintenance of the various state doportments
and institutions represents an actual economy-
in management it oifers cause for congratula-
tion, but common sense tells us that little if
any additional saving can be effected in this

direction. -At the same time it is short-sighted ~

economy to fail to make provision for the
annual retirement of a certain number of, the
state’s bonds. This provision must be made»

soon, and when it is made all ye who look for

lower state‘taxes for the next ten years may
as well abandon hope. ‘ . " ,,

 

Higher Prices for Reactors ,
THROUGH the oﬂices of the .- Department

of...Agric,ulturc the meat packers have .

been induced to pay higher prices: for cattle

which react to the tuberculin test. Every :
farmer who has had his herd tested and his rc- " g ‘

actors killed knows that the most buyers have”?

a rejudice'. against such animals and odor ..
on a. third to a half of what they are actually "

worth. In the “large majority of cases react-s-

ing cattle are as ﬁt for food as therent)n-rcactor,1‘N ~~

"but cattle buyers are either ignorant of the
; fact or deliberately take-adVantage ghee“

immense the norm  101‘ _j
has onsaoﬁjhe‘most ‘ ' ‘

mr'the way I)!  't. 

era. It the department he's really 

 

   

.~,. . _. 

 

   
 

 cm triﬂe".
d‘ m  ;1.

4..

.1“

TOTAL .. 39.013.750.00 $7,361,500.00 11.551.250.00.
Gd Total $20,441,333." umomuau “Jigsaws _ 

,1;  

rl‘he taxpayers themselves voted to bond the I 
state for $60,000,000 to build roads and pay the  r ’1 “
soldier boys 3 bonus. Most of the money has 
been spent, but very few of thebOnds have.

  

for,   ’

‘ I.

V D
. i I, ‘3‘: V ‘ 
r i , . 

- «r:

w s

.i 3i?)
. > i, V t

«1

  
    

 
 
  
        
       
  
  
 
   
  
  
 
  
 
   
   
 
 
 
  
  
 

 

ii,

.' 5‘
,. g .

v5 “.

.. 2. 

 

M! ,4.»
"I. '

,_,’v throws

 

 
 
  
 
   
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
    
 
 


   
    

 
 
   

HEN I Wrote you last in regard _

 l __ to‘the future of spuds and”
.9  rhesus 1 third "no" idea the
_ weather man was coming at “double
 we ” to help me. out in my tore-
~gusting. Western Michigan has had
more than two weeks of almost con-

_  In the past thirty years

‘ --we?have never had such a rainfall
 It'nthis time of the year (Sept. 15)
moav‘e‘than twice before. \ a

? Deane are pulled and have lain
"  in all this rain. They will run

‘ from ‘80 per cent to total loss. One
In had 40 acres just ready to haul

in when it commenced to rain,»

' Now part of them lay in water. One

‘ . man has 20 acres of corn to out by
w.  " hand and has got to wear rubber

'    - v * ‘boots and every time he steps he
will go into the mud six inches.

Part of his beans stand in water

' and part of his spuds are rotten. I
know'ot several ﬁelds which will not

be; dug.

Sp’u‘ds that are planted around

the tenth of June will not dig over

60 per cent or what they have been
animated" on account of being hit

with blight. One year ago bean

buyers paid the girls 8 cents per
“pound for picking, the same rate is

paid this year. Farmers will get
 nothing at all for their beans.-———A.
f A. Lambertson. Kent County, Mich. “

* ~’ -‘-8ince you wrote the above the
bean market has scored a substan-

tial advance and potatoes have tak-

en a turther drop. No doubt lots of
potatoes were mined in this and

other states by the September rains,

’ blitht killing frosts which hit many
, ot-the northern counties about the
23nd of the month. On the other

hand, many sections report a ﬁne

crop and weather the very last of
September and the ﬁrst week of Oc-

g tober was ideal for digging. All

- northern Michigan reports a good

crop of excellent quality.——Editor.

WHY INQUIRY HAS BEEN ‘

  

 

IGNORED
‘ HERE is' in our vicinity an-’ex-
ceedingly dangerous electric

v  crossing, the fault lying in,the
 fact that the highway makes a steep
. descent onto the track with view ob—
structed on either side by banks; a1-
so, to the fact that a‘ short drive
parallel with the track which might
be used in case of emergency was
closed a year ago when the Covert
-, , Road was built. This road was ac-
- n \ . copied by the Road Commissioners
, . . not withstanding the hazardous con-
. '  g ‘ dition of said crossing. Already one
. ' fatal accident has occurred at this
 i . . crossing and others have been nar-
f. “ - rowly averted. Many people in the
a  community feel. that the condition
l I should be remedied‘but do not know
how to go about getting it acqnnp-
lished. A .
, ' About the middle of July I ad- '
 ‘ . dressed a letter to the Attorney Gen-
1 g  » oral stating the conditions and ask-
- 1 ing for—information as to how to
proceed. I received a letter from
him bearing the postmark of July
21,7stating that he had referred my
letter to the Public Utilities Com-
._ , 1 mission and that I would doubtless
hear from them in a few days.

Days have lengthened into weeks,
and weeks‘jnto months and more
without any word from the Gros-
beck-appointed, Michigan P u bl i c .
Utilities Commission. Let us hope'

  , they are busy with more important

(T) matters than serving the people
who are working andscrimping to
secure money with which to pay
their salaries.
V V _ I amonly a woman but my vote
 it" . .' counts as much as a man’s and I
Ti“,  ,  think I voice the sentiment of the
 r : other farm women when I say I in-
tend to use it to, help secure better
 . returns for the money invested.
333;. . ‘ We" farm women know what “strict
  ‘ economy" is and when We use the
  : term we do not mean the Grosbeck
 « it; ,  . nor Harding kind of “economy,".but
,  our own peculiar brand with the-r
 ihomefmlad‘e‘ 'label. ~ -
 .. »-. 73.3; e p you may. be able to give ‘
 the “Farmers'Se’rvice Bureau
 {What the Neighbors Say" will
be greatly appreciated. ’Yours v {or
a better/oommonwealth.~——Mrs.- Chas.
 .. .mlhoun'County.‘ Mich,

 

   
 
 

 

  
  

x

.Veannot say, why.‘

 

 
    

 

‘ A j Now —- BALL- BEARINGS
‘ in the larger PRIMROSES!

 
 
 

 

 

 

 

NEW panvfnoss No. 5

BALL BEARINGS make it easy to operate
this big 1,100-lb. capacity Primrose by hand.
Cut out to show the six ball bearings on
ainon pinionshaft andonspindle.

:12: ﬂigheﬂ Development in CREAM SEPARATOR szftruc‘lion

For forty-ﬁve years dairymen have struggled with hard-
turning cream separators. Excessive friction caused them
much trouble in the hand operation of the machines. Now
the cream separator engineers of the Harvester Company,
with this problem constantly in mind, and the satisfaction of
the operator at stake, have designed and constructed a Ball-
Bearing Primrose Cream Separator which reduces the power
required to operate by approximately 35 %.

In this latest Primrose, the ball bearings are located at

       
     
        
       
     
   
    

points where the resistance is greatest in the opera-
tion of all makes or cream separators.

The Ball-Bearing Primrose is in no sense an
experiment. It has been tested and proved a re-
markable improvement in the hands of thousands
of farmers and dairymen in New York, Wisconsin,
California, Minnesota, and other dairy sections of
the United States. The unanimous decision of all
users is that it represents a development which has
long been needed, especially in territory where
large machines are in use, and where more would
be proﬁtably used were it not for the hard turning ‘
of the plain-bearing machines.

The International Harvester Company’s broad
and liberal guarantee stands solidly behind this
product. Primrose deserves its high reputation, not
only for its recovery of the greatest amount of but-
ter fat when operated as instructed, but for its

ability to do so with less labor.

The Ball-Bearing Primrose is one of the products
in the McCormick-Deming line of farm operating
equipment. It may be seen and studied at the
store of yOur McCormick-Deering dealer. Write
us for catalog if you prefer.

INTERNATIONAL HARVEst COMPANY
CHICAGO' 01' AMERICA U s A

(INCORPORATED)

93 Branches and 15,000 Dealer: in the United Stat”

      
 
      
     
        
 
       
     
     
   
       
     
       
 
      
      
        
       
       
       
   
  
  
   
   
  
  

 

 

 

and barns. Write forit and ask for

"  OWNERS

~  Ropp’s New Cal-

" culator. Figures
wages, .mterest, live-
stock  gram proﬁts; gives '
commerc1a1 law, parcel post
rates; shows capacities of cribs

Square Deal

never bags or sags; wh
tthquareDealLocE
‘» can never break or
slip. How Square
Deal always stands

I M fee much u mold‘etyl. wick lamp u d $1.25; 15 poun 3 $300. send no ‘

 undue! ”_°’"m' $013333! pay lell‘eil(l)\rf‘(§fil‘\’t}ll. KAHIMERS‘ ’I‘OBAC- 
m In! , (‘l‘ ASS C l'. muea. {y 

catalog. Tens ﬂ}, 5mm :1 Most Wonderful Light :
Deal out no along E'"D°“¢n°dF°r KENTUCKY Toeacco, s-vsAR-oLo LEAF. g
l

Lnod-p.
»Yeo.

801.

 

_Made $40‘ ,

 
 
   
    
   
 
    
 
 
  
    
 
 
  
  
  
  

. alone brought him $39

no»
mood Light. There
is so has not bother; no
wicks to trim; no chimneys
to deal. Lights

Initiated white lights only
on one and Ink

but approval wherein: shown.
You on make money showing this li‘h to
yo- ldeade nd ultimate. You

and sales experience. Complete mus.-

ds $1.75; 10 non s $3. 31
does show you easy way loom bl; “33d, 31 25 ' 10 pounds $2.00. Send no mo '
time pro Write today tor Lamp end ' I ed. B Wig;
lanter- ﬁh‘ and {toe outﬁt o‘er. §§IONYheBadugcgv Ky. To A000 GEO ’ '

= . we mom LAMP co;

   
 
  
     
    
 
  
 
   
  
 
 

  
   
  
  
 
 
   
  



0n trial. Easyrunning,easilycleaned. ’
Skims warm or cold milk. Different :
from picture which shows larger ca— ,

‘  In 39 Da ys !

 

. . ‘ CANDLE pacity machines. Get our plan of easy i
‘ gth'ssoo’m“ MONTHLY PAYMENTS 3
 in Farm Homes and handsome free catalog. Whether ’_ 

George Vivien, - Minnesota man, made 3400 in
39 days working spare time. One day'- eﬂ‘ort
. C. B. Hartley, an Ohio
gnu, made Over 51000 In few months. James
Connolly, oi Pennsylvania, and. over $300 in 3
do” showing The Diamond Light to neighbors.

Burns Kerosene or Gasoline

Hundred- an Ila-kin. from no to $40 a day
showing this wonderful 300 candle power farm
house light. It burns kerosene or gasoline.
It is elem. safe, odorless and costs only

dairy is largeor small. write today. Jami ’ ‘3 . 3
.

AMERICAN SEPARATOR CO. A,
Balnbrldgo. N. Y. '
Box 1067

 

 

T( I B :16 )CO

 

NATURAL LEAF TOBACOMHWING. U
pounds, $1.75; 15 pounds $4.00. Smoking. 5

' .. ., '_ ‘s A
. .tiLLA_A L.‘.‘.A¢LL‘_./....A v». lava.

 

 
 

Farm Home

 
 

when received. Extra ﬁne. chewing 10 a
smoldn 1 0 lbs. . medlum smoking 1 
1 .

’t send a penny pay for tobacco and posts 0
Don $2 50' lbs” 
be. 5 .25 FARMERS" IiNION. Hawesville. Ky.
Ci

     

with a match.

 
 

 

  
    
 

room as light -

so co‘ KENTUCKY'S “Tonal. Lu 
Ito elaplioilyaad beauty win TOBAO ’ Band I.

Mild. Mellow smoking 10 lbs. $2.26;
looted chewing lbs. 5!.00. Free receipt f _
preparing. WALDROP BROTHERS. Murray. Kyr

    
   
 

Too. Callie Bis-Money

 
 

 

 
  

do at "swears LEAF roemco. outwme a"
nd 8 chat 5-

   
     
     
 

 

 
 

TOBAOGO-g—K ENTUO‘KY'S ‘P'RID I.

 

Lamp Bldg” Akron. mic ‘

 

 

 

   

1!!» h 10 lb.. $8.00,
91.35%? lit. 33.50. rams Cine.
0 .« u - .

  

a

 

 

  

 

   

names  inc moan; Busmsss " Manna
 '  T. '0 1'53". ADV   .. 

   
 

 

 

  
 


'7'“; 3': xx". ‘ff’ "u' 'j'.‘.:‘ V

.m: 7.17;. m,- .

. w

.1”

 

-a pang of pain such
ever suffered before,

31‘1": v... n r-s“ I: .._~r x ..

 to bake them for two or three hours.
.When we have a reasOnably cool
‘ day I bake a couple of pans full and

r

{HIE EYES OF. SECOOL
./-"CHILDREN._ 
1' ORE attention is being paid to-

4 day to the health of our child-

ren than ever before. Threats,
teeth, ears and eyes are looked after
with more care in both homes and
schools. A child can not do good
work in school nor be a good, happyr
Child anyWhere unless he or she is

' in good physical condition. ,

C It was recently said by a prom

.inent educator that of the 24,000.—

000 school children in the United
States not more than one third have
received eye tests and that many
whose eyes have been tested have
been found to have been ﬁtted in-
correctly. This statement if true is
most discouraging for it is doubtless
true that 80% of the so-called dull
or backward children have defective
vision not defective brains and can
not be held responsible for their
dullness.

The manner in which a room is
lighted has some eﬁlect upon the eye-
sight of those living in it. Low
shaded lights are not only more ar-
tistic‘but are much easier for the
eyes than a high bright light which
gives a most unpleasant effect. It
is true that a light falling on the

book from behind the left shoulder‘

is the best direction for the light to
come from altho why it is left in—
stead of right has never to my
knowledge been told. Perhaps for
the same reason that we must throw
salt in that direction to avoid a
quarrel.
Cross-Eyed Mary ,
“With golden curls and rosy
cheeks she skipped joyfully to
school. It was her ﬁrst day, the very
ﬁrst that she had ever been away
from home. She was six years old
now and was going to be a.little
lady. The rapture she felt as she
thought of the other girls she would
meet and play With. Her cup of joy
was full and over—flowing.
“Reaching the school she formed
in line with the other girls who
stared at her —some grinned, some

7‘smiled, some laughed at her and said

“hello, cross eyes”. For the first
time in her little life she suffered
as she had
for she real—
ized that she was different from the
others—she was cross—eyed.

“The day at school dragged on
and on. It was so long. It seemed
that ,she would never get away from
it.’ But, when the day ended she
hurried home amid the jeei's of the
boys and girls calling after her-—
“Cross—eyed Maary”. Her dear lit-
heart was broken and all the joy she
felt in the morning was turned to
tears.

“She persevered at school day af-
ter day until she could stand it no
longer. Then she went to her
mother with big tears in her eyes
and told her all her trou’ries. She
begged her mother not to send her
back to school because she wasn’t
the same as other girls.

“And, it was not until those chub-
by little arms were clasped about
her mother’s neck, with the big tears
rolling thick and fast down her
cheeks, that the mother realized the
injustice she had done.

“MORAL: Many heart-aches and
sorrows can be kept from the dear
little ones we love, and many hours
of regret from parents, if they
watch carefully over their children.
Little Mary’s eyes should‘ have had
attention when the first tendency of
trouble became apparent. Many of
these cases merely require lenses to
correct the defect which causes the
eye to cross—The Eye Sight Con-
servation Council of America.

 

CANNING BAKED BEANS

WONDER how many readers have
I ever tried canning baked beans?
We are very fond of baked beans
but during hot weather when the
’oil stove is used for codking, it is
too expensive to cook them as i like

 not a pressure cooker I think-

'  would need tobo steamed for,
“ hear, or more. {mhave never had '

enactment refute w it:

Eddith n}. n 

GRACE

NELLrs, Jn‘tv

 

 

 

the slightest trouble about their
keeping when processed 20 minutes
altho this was original as there was
no receipe given in cook book that
comes with the cooker. They are
one of the best things ~we keep on
our emergency shelf. I always add
about a spoonfull-of brown sugar or
molasses to a panful of beans, not
enough so they will taste sweet but
it adds a great deal to their ﬂavor.
——Mrs. Claudia Betts. ‘

 

A SHORT SUMIVIARY

KIRTS are coming down, a short

distance anyway and if your

skirts are too short,put a yoke
around the top, Wear an over blouse
to cover the short yoke and no one
will be the wiser.

Over blouses are much worn—in
shades to match and contrasting
colors also.

The white shirt-waist with colored
skirts seems to be tabooed this sea-
son.

However, women in business will
wear what seems to them suitable
and useful. Soft clinging materials
are again favorites although many
taﬁetas are worn.

Odd and striking combinationsof'

colors are seen everywhere but for
the woman of moderate means quiet
colors and combinations are best.
One does not tire of them as soon
and the fact that a dress is worn for
several seasons is not so apparent.

I do not believe that the uneven
skirt at the bottom will hold in favor
very long it has a little untidy, rag—
ged appearance that some hold oi)-
jectionable, especially for . street
wear

It is certainly an extreme of fash-
ion. A recent fashion exhibit
clothes for different purposes *were
shown. For the women of society,
for the business women, for the
home women and many extremes of
style for the young girl, who in all

____AIDS TO GOOD DRESSING

 

r

reason should be dressed most in-
conspicuously and simply. -

It all goes to show that if we
dress moderately following the gen-
eral trend of the fashions we will
not feel out-of-date nor unusual in
almost anything we want to put on.

The sport clothes are very attrac-
tive, plain as to line and most com-
fortable as to cut; made of soft
wooly materials that stand hard us-
age" and look well. For dress shoes,
patent leather comes ﬁrst, then
satin and suede.

LEAGUE ILLUSTRATES CITIZEN-
. SHIP BY PLAYS ...

HE Massachusetts League of

Women Voters is preparing a

series of plays for citizenship,

education. Mrs. Frederick P. Bag-
iey, first Vice-President of the Mass-
achusetts League, has written the
ﬁrst play to be produced—“How
Maggie Mac Taggert Became a Cit-
izen." Mrs. Bagley is former chair-
man of the National League’s com-
mittee on American Citizenship, and
her long experience in this work,
both in the League and in the State
has given her a great fund of dram-
atic and colorful stories for these
plays. Mrs. Bagley's play was pro-
duced under the auspices of the Cit-
izenship Dramatic Club by the Dux-
bury Leag’ue of Women Votersand
netted them a nice sum for door re-
ceipts. .

Gm'rs ' FOR CHRISTMAS
IT is not too soon to begin to make

 

plans for our Christmas giving.
When one has time to spare
most acceptable gifts can be made
such as dainty aprons, bags of all
kinds, and whoever has enough of
them? Pretty underwear, caps and

doll dresses also, for the new or old A

dolly must be dressed up freshly at
the holiday time

Then there are the,cunnin'g stuff- '

 

 

For Simplicity, Service and Style ~

New Fall and \Vinter Catalog 15 Cents
AH Patterns 12 Cents

Address orders to Mrs. Jenny, Pattern Department, M. B. F.
° A word for our patterns from one of our readers.
We enjoy the M. B. F. in our home very much, and hope it may

continue in its good work.

I have used the patterns with good suc-

cess, and ’am sending for another, Also, the FashiOn Book. Please
send me the 1922-23 Book of Fashions—Mrs. George Douglas.

A Pleasing Separate
Waist and Skirt
St is
4109-4014. Plaided
rat'ine was used for
the skirt, and crepe
de chine for the
waist here illus-
trated. One could
have both waist and
skirt of either nia-
teriaJ. The surpiice
closing is becoming
to slender and stout
ﬁgures. The skirt is
a two piece model,
with plait inserts at
the left side, Where
also the closing is

affected.

The Waist Pattern
4109 is cut in 7
Sizes: 34, 36, 38. 40,
42. 44 and 46 inches
bust measure It
will require 3 yards
of 32 inch material
for a medium size.
The Skirt 4014 is
cut in 7 Sizes: 25.
27, 29, 31, 33, 35 and 37 inches waist
measure, and will require 2 5-8 yards of
40 inch material for a 29 inch size. The
1-4 yards

     

‘I-ﬂf

4014

width at the foot is about 2
With piaits extended. '
r A Servicable
Garment

4029. This is a
popular model it is
good for muslin,
cam-brie. flanneiette,
soisette, madras and
silk. The neck may
be ﬁnished with a
standing or a tum-
back collar.

The Pattern is out
in 5 Sizes: 32, 36,
40. 44 and 48 inches
breast ,measure. A
4’0  size requires

    

m mailed ‘ to

V . Paths
my address .on receipt of 12c in silver

Drama.

5. Unique and Pretty
' N egligee

4129. This model
is attractIVe in
crepe, satin. cordu-
roy. printed crepe de
shine, and georgette.
Beacon cloth, ﬂannel '
and eiderdown may ._
also be used for it.

The Pattern is cut
in 4 Sizes: Small,
34-36; Medium. 38- ’,
40; Large, 42x44
Extra Large, 46-48
inches bust measure.
A Medium size re—
quires 6 1-4 yards
of 27 inch material.

 

A Popular Style ‘0'
the Growing Girl

40 84. This makes. 3
a. ﬁne costume for
school. Pia—id Buit‘

mg could be used
for the blouse and
plain serge (for the

skirt. One may have
the sleeve in wrist 40”
or elbow length
The Pattern is cut
in 4 Sizes: 8. 10-, .12
and 14 years. To
make the model 11-
lustrated, for a 19
year size ‘will require
2 1-8 yards of 82
inch material for ,
the blouse and 2 _
yards for the didrt.‘
Pattern mailed to
any address on re-
ceipt of 120 in silver
or‘ s a.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

c.

- ad;Saniiiisisigisgtk‘iii; airtime-46%»: 

"so well. 3,  . 
 We have patterns for all 5 use»: ‘ ;

articles pictured in our new catalog.

I can choose them for you if you
wish me to“but it: is really better to
have the catalog and make your own
choice.

BOILED CHRISTMAS PUDDING
' NE quart seeded rainins, pint
currents," half pint citron cut
- up, quart of apples peeled and
chopped, quart of‘ fresh and nicely
chopped suet, a heaping quart of
stale bread crumbs, 8 eggs beaten;
nutmeg, teaspoonfull salt, ﬂour fruit
thoroughly from a quart‘ of flour,
then mix remainder as follows, in a
large bowl or tray, put the eggs
with sugar, nutmeg and a cup of
milk, stir in the fruit, crumbs and
suet one after the other until all
are. used, adding enough ﬂour to
make the fruit stick together which
will take about all the quart. 'Dip
pudding cloth in boiling water,
dredge on inside a. thick coating‘of.
ﬂour, put in the pudding and tie
tightly, allowing'room' to swell, and
boil from two to three hours in a
good sized pot with plenty of water,
replenishing as needed from tea-ket~
tie. When done turn in a large ﬂat
dsh and send to table with a sprig
of holly, or any bit of‘ evergreen
With bright berries stuck in the top.
Serve with any pudding sauce.;This
recipe furnishes enough for twenty
people but if the family is small,
one—half the quantity may be pre-
pared, or it is equally good warmed
over by steaming. For sauce, cream
a. halfpound sWeet butter, stir in
three quarters of a pound of brown
sugarhand one beaten yoke of an
egg, Simmer a few minutes over a‘
slow ﬁre, stirring almost constantly.
When near boiling add a half pint
goggled graﬁitil juice, and serve after
r ing a ' ‘e n
face—Mrs. J utmeg on the sur-

a.“
COLD PACK CANNING OUTFIT
I NOTICED in a recent issue of M.
13. F. a request for information
in regard to a cold pack canning
outﬁt. I purchased the “Hall Cold
Pack Canner" made in Grand Rap-
ids and I gave it the preference over
all'others, for the reason that one
gay caln 2 tqhuarts; 1 quart or pint
us a a e
deSires. same time if one so
vanized iron and is about
111831 and 12 inches in Maggot?“
he can can 12 uart
buinir of an oil stage. 8 over one
ave canned meat, ve ‘
and fruit and never lost 2. issues"
I Will give the readers of this
page my recipe for making hard
soap: To one can of lye add 2 1-“
pints of soft water (cold), and cool
to 80 degrees F. by your thermo-
meter. Melt 5 1—2 lbs. of cleansed
greae and cool to 120 degrees.
When ready to mix add 1 cup of
ammonia and 4 tablespoons full of
borax to the lye, pour grease into
the lye stirring constantly until the
mixture drops from the paddle. as
thick as honey, and pour into a

 

‘wooden box lined with heavy paper,

and when it sets out into bars.

The secret of success is not to stir
the mixture too long, as t will sep-
arate. I have never had a failure
and the soap is as white as any you
buy when cured.——Mrs. M. M. H.

 

CANNED FRUIT SPOILS
'I am interested in your paper.’ I
am a young girl of seventeen and.
have kept house for my father for

two years.

I have trouble with my fruit spoil—
ing. I,use new tops and rubbers
some new cans, my daddy turns
them tight and I seal them with
wax but yet they spoil.

My cellar is very damp, would
that cause fruit to spoil? Do cans
have to be hot when” the fruit is put
in? I read in a— magazine that if
you- put a silver knife in' the cans.
they would not need to be hot.. " I
never break a can that way. ‘1' won-
der if that would make them spoil. ’

' I 'would 'like‘ house plant slips if

some—Emil Randall, Br’ ‘ -‘
Mich., R 2. y’ , . own Clty'
L-.Wash your cans well with hot-
soap-suds then" scald them with boil-
ing water and ‘turn them upside
down to exclude germs from ,thexalr'

._‘which often. lodge in; these“ and ‘
cause perfectly well] ”  
,5 "mm c T  '

It is made of heavy gal-J

,rx

‘rs-vapp "a.  , 4-. ~ .

 

    

 

  


'  them' in.
ready to use them. When you are»
ready to ﬁll a jar set it o'n'a plate .

 ‘coveaiiwith boiling water, leave

the water * until you; are

on which is spread,a wet cloth, put
one cup of fruit in and let it warm
the can then ﬁll the can ﬁrst hav-
ing adjusted the rubber and ﬁtted.
your top so that there is no delay
when the can is \full. Fill the can
.to overﬂowing and put on the, top,
,_ screwing it down tightly. Boiling
fruit can have no germs, if your
cans, tops and rubbers. are sterile
‘ then it looks as if the mischievious
germs came from the air. .
Of course, it you process your
fruit the method is a little different
,but‘ the same general rules hold
.‘good. Perhaps you know
Emily that soap-suds themselves
are a disinfectant and I believe in

. using plenty of .soap whenever it is\

, required. Itlove to see dishes come
out of nice, white, foaming suds,
clothes also and last but not least
soap-suds is ﬁne for our skins. I
take it for granted that you know
all this [but there are some much
older housekeepers than you who (1

not. '

V Now in the end do not put any
food products in a damp place. I
would say better have it a little too
warm than damp. You know can-
ned fruit is kept in stores that are
always warm without trouble, that
is because it was put up sterile

(without any germs). Will ‘be glad .‘

to help in any way.—Mrs.

SEEDLING GERANIUMS
I saw in your paper recently a re-
,quest for some one to/write their
experience with seedling geraniums.
In the spring of 1921, I procured a
packet of geranium seed from a seed
house and planted out of doors. I
guess ~they all grew as they came
up very thick and grew fast, but
.I had to put them in pots as the
cut worms began taking them. I
kept them all summer and not one
of them blossomed though. They
grewio be ﬁne specimens. I had

something like ﬁfty of them and I

kept them around all Winter and
only two blossomed. They were
both single scarlet; This spring I
set the whole lot out of doors and
they have been full of blooms all
summer. Everyone was single but
there were» several shades of pink
and one varigated pink and white
but more scarlet than any other
color.

Last summer I hand tertilized

some of my double geraniums and
this spring sowed the seed. Only
one grew and is now about a foot
high but I expect to have to keep
it over winter to see it blossom.

This summer I saved the seed
from my seedlings out of doors and
will try it. again next summer. If
“Subscriber” will send her name
I will divide with her. -

Can anyone tell me how to keep
geraniums in the cellar over winter?
Will they live if the cellar is dark?
Alsorhow much if any moisture do
they require.

Does anyone know if a ﬂowering
maple should be kept down in the
cellar or not in the winter.——“An—
other Subscriber.”

SOUP RECIPES WANTED
I would again like to come to your
page for help. I ﬁnd so many good
recipes there, I would like some
good recipes for soup, especially one
'using green and red sweet peppers,
also some vegetable soups, am send-
ing my receipe for chowder; those
not caring much for ketchup or chili
Sauce will ﬁnd this excellent to
serve with’ meats. .

L Receipe for Chowder o
I gallon green tomatoes, measure
after ‘chopping ﬁne, 12 onions, 12
sweet peppers, 6 green and 6 red,
(remove"all seeds), 1 cup of salt,

chop all ﬁne, I use a food chopper, ,

then mix these ingredients together,
let stand two hours; then drain oﬁ
Juice; 2 quarts of vinegar, 3 pounds
of brown sugar, or half brown and
half white, 1 teaspoonful of whdle

cloves, 1 tea'spoonful/of whole all»

spice, 1 teaspoonful of coriander
seed, 2 teaspoonful tu'meric, 2 tea-
spoonful of celery seed and 2 tea-
spoonful ot mustard seed, tie all
the spices in a piece of cheese cloth,
put in (vinegar, add sugar, let boil
.w‘ell',~>'then' add drained vegetables
and b -‘j1.._1‘-2_to. 2.hours until’ten-

. 1" per ‘month. (Adm)

038,

- duce it.

V‘keep. their. original fresh colors not
"turning; into a“ dark dirty, colOr that

bl'ﬁbmqf'recipes choWder seeins to.

‘rhankngyou‘ all for past favors, I

am, Sincerely,~ Mrs. John Voner,
Jasper, Michigan, R. 4. .

HONEY CAKE
One pound strained honey, one
one cup sour cream, one-half
teaspoon soda, any kind of season-
ing that 'is desired, and enough
ﬂour to make a good stiﬂ‘ batter.

I Miss Inez Ruth Foutch.

CORRESPONDENCE COLUMN

I will send the name of the‘com-
pany making the pressure cooker to
any one sending me a stamped and
addressed envelope.

A subscriber asks for information
in regard to the‘ Auto Knitter. ill
some of our readers who have used
the machine write and tell us what
success you have had with it an?
whether the investment paid ﬁnan-
cially?

Egg Tester Wanted

Would like to know where I could
get an egg tester with magnifying
glass. I would like to hear thru
the Home Department.' I know a
number of people who would be glad
to know where to get one.——Mrs D.
C. M.

-HOME SPUN

Brown or -gray crockery bowls of
medium size are very nice forvput-
ting away leftovers; They may be
put in the oven when you wish to
re-heat the food.

Disinfect drains. with a solution
of 2 oz.»of chloride of lime to 1 gal
of Water.

Usie a‘ strong solution of washing
soda in boiling water in the kitchen
sink two or three times aweek, this
keeps it sweet.

Plenty of pulverized borax in tip
water in which daintily colored
dress goods are washed will keep
them from fading. ‘-

Cayanne pepper is very offens1ve-
to mice.

Keep potatoes under water when
peeling them this will leave very
little stain on the ﬁngers. It ap‘
plies also to Onions.

Use. wooden tooth-picks for test—
ing cakes. They are much cleaner
than broom straws. -

ERRORS!

Two typographical errors in the
last issue should be corrected. Dr.
Coue’ is the name of the French
doctor. ,

The prescription for colds should
read—Acitanilide 10 grains not 10
drahms.

THE HUNTED WOMAN .
(Continued from page 6)
drew a deep breath, and went. on. her
eyes full upon him, speaking as it
out of a dream. “The Great Adven:
ture—for you. Yes and perhaps for
both.”

Her hands were drawn tightly to
her breast. Something about her as
she stood there, her back to the
table, drew John Aldous to her side,
forced the question from his lips:
“Tell me, Ladygray why are you
going to Tete Jaune?”

In that same strange way, as if her
lips were framing words beyond their
power to control, she answered:

“I am going—to find—my hug.
band.”

' (To be continued)

HEW LAMP BURNS
94% Am

,Beats Electric or Gas

A new oil lamp that gives an amaz-
ineg brilliant, soft. white light, even
better than gas or electricity. has been
tested by the U. S. Government and 35
leading universities and found to be su-
perior to 10 ordinary oil lamps. It burns
without odor, smoke or noise—no pump-
ing up. is simple, clean. safe. Burns 94
per cent air and 6 per cent cominon kero-

The inventor, A. ,R.‘ Johnson, 609 W.
Lake St., Chicago, is offering to send
a, lamp on 10 days’ FREE trial, or even
to give one FREE to. the ﬁrst user in
each locality who will help him intro-
Write him today for full par—
ticulars. Also, ask him to explain. how
you. can get the agency, and, without
experience or money make $260 to $600

' sene (coal—oil).

( .

 

 

 

 

1y

\

W

“The F the Best  Use"

delicious—4hr; kind you will en-
Joy'makmg and everyone enjoys
eating. The reason for this is
the perfectly uniform granula-
tion and the absolute cleanliness
of Lily White.

Why You Simian... my White

 

We Guarantee you
will like Liy Mite
Flour, 'the flour tho
best cook. usc' bet-
ter than any flour
you over used for
every requirement
of homo baking.

If for any reason
whatsoever you do
not, your dealer will
refund the purchase
priceu-nHo’o' .0 in-
ctr-noted.

. .

 

‘* Scientificaﬂy Milled from the

behind 0f ' g .

of the ﬁnest wheat grown in America.
The grain is cleaned,
scoured eight times. It is milled by
the six-break system.- It is untouched

ﬂour is the result.

VALLEY CITY MILLING COMPANY

GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
“Miller: for Sixty Years”

REASONNotO

Best Wheot

LilyWhite Flour. hinting!
washed and

One Sack Will Convincc You

!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Money saved 15 as good as money
earned. Save 25_to 40% on your stove.
range or furnace at Kalamazoo. Our cata-
log shows you how—send for it today.
Learn about our big special offer to old and

new customers.

t..

in

Over 50 styles
and sizes

 

 

Kalamazoo, Mich.

Cash or easy payments.

Figure it out for yourself. Who can make prices as

low as the manufacturer? No matter where you buy

your stove, range or furnaCe someone must ﬁrst get it

from the factory. .Why don't YOU get the wholesale

manufacturer's price and save money? The Kalama-
zoo (,ata'logfshows you the way. 24—hour shipments.
30 days trlal—money back guarantee. Pipeleu
Furnaces $52.95 and up.

Semi for Calalo No. 777 -'.‘.‘ :-2 '. .
K'ALAMAZOO s'rovs co -‘ ATKalama 1—0—9

' "ears Direct to You"

 

Wear a Truss

We Guarantee

‘ Your Comfort
with every Brooks’ Appliance.
New discovery. _Wonderful.

No obnoxious springs or ds.
‘ Air Cushl’gns.

0.3.In.|nvr “9‘ ° °
 tationaLkortad
bearing portrait and signature at 3‘.) E. Brooks kghlg
appears on overy_Applianoo. None other muini

Brook}   Stat. 8L, Men. M

l

 


iONEYEAR' 

s

new surrsam 3.3mm":

mm in: dur

Metlmo not defects In material and wot T -

bl . Ida also in (our, lines

o. 8 owl hero; on
30 DAYS’ FREE TRIAL

“assume 3'31 ‘ﬁﬁﬂﬁi‘ﬁ'n
§ou Folder. Buy from. the m

can money.

30‘“ 00: 2200 WC. M
_ . . ‘

" l

WHEN warrmo 'ro anvnnmsnnai

hymns]: MENTION 

l ..

f

 


 a}

 

if?  loan bad mums. hence the law "ICC.

 

" nuanmn Eightweeksto

.g~—_£vrnv

Iii-II Real Money In the

Auto slractor BusineSs-

‘ Cane'to the great shogs of Rahe where
thousands 0 dollars ave been s ent
in the latest tools and equipment. tay
only eight weeks, then step out as an

My training made LouisBeuner
a oreman at the age of 24. It started
0. l-LJustus in what is now a big busi-
ness. It enabled E. Rushfeldt to earn
$10 a day. It has helped hundreds of
otherstodoaswellorbetter.

Big Firms Need Men
"stall-everyday Battery
A to Repair“ . Welding Shops, and
bigidkywe:eedtrahndbf mmy' andl
' men
thcyknewwheretocomeiorﬂiem. ‘

. Railroad Fare and Board FREE

That‘s my  foreskonﬁmoul to
helpﬂltheee vacancies. Evenmatismtyall.

m an about the rest in my letter. If.
moneeleehaeeverdone.
Get This Big Book

mango“ Itttilql: tin'ngs

aresu . many

you ought to know about Au
and Tractors. Write for it and

slung-time offer now before it
 expires. Wnteﬁorittoday. .

 

  
   

 

 

  

Rheumatism

A Remarkable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It

r 1893 I was attacked by Mus-
ub—Acute Rheumatism. I suffered as

 
        
   

Ini'he
culnrnnrl
only

    

to eighty ears old. and
my own one.

I want every sufferer from any form of milk
cular and subocute (swelling at the jomts)
rheumsinmn to try the great value of In im-

ved “Home Treatment" for its remar ble
Railing power. Don't send a cent; :1ng mail

ur name and address, and} will sen t free
. After lyou have used it, and it has prov-

    
       
       

t.

    
 
 

 

 
 

you
are perfectly satisfied to send it. Isn’t that fair?
Why suffer any longer when relief is thus of-
{ered you free. Don't delay. Write today.
MARK H. JACKSON
265.1 Dursion Bldg. Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. J acksongs responsible. Above statement true.

....

 
       
   
  
 
   
   

 

 

Glazed and 3‘
Mat Face
Bulldlno (

_ . _ ermancnt Buildings. Standard
:Jclinoher )ommg 5-wall glazed. blocks. Cheap
{‘38 lumber to use,_proo against ﬁre. frost.‘
 moisture and vermm. Practically indestruct-
ible. Building suggestions: Garages, store
rooms, cwelllng houses“ barns, hog barns,
Foul-bra muses, etc. Estimates of cost gladly
urnils ed. Write for free literature.
HOOSIER 8ILO CO. ‘
\Dept. M356 Albany, Ind.

 

 

{Edcson RadioPhones 
, AdnstahleDmphragm Clearance , I

t We nan-rec ulisizcrion. or your nun-y

.5.“ The Adrianne!“ lamre plan our

hence on I par with (hr world's W nah:

5- .ka plan eliminates dealer’l 9-059 and
iron '

 
   

Baler phones cannot be mad; Immediate
ddivuin‘ Double 3000 Ohm Deng $3.93; 1500
Oil- linglc In. $2.50. Circular kw ,

Dept

EdeSonPhoneCueneacist F-84 I 

 

 

TELLER HOSPITAL

For the Treatment of Chronic Disease;
by the New Teller Method.
Muslim, Neunlgie. Neuritie, Brighi’e
fleece Diabetes.
OROFICIAL SURGERY
296 S. Graiioi Ave., Mt. Clemens. Mich.

 

 

——i

 

., Can use M. B. F38
Breeders’ Directory
 , to gr”! advantage.
if ‘ Run your ad. and
' ' watch the returns
come in

* . Have You  Offer?

a...—
‘.

 

 

’ ‘ ' I‘am writing this two days he-

. EAR. .Neices and Nephews: As

fore our bird contest closes I
cannot decide who is the winner but
to date a boy is leading and he has
written such an interesting letter
that it,Will be hard to beat. The
boys seem to be shdwing more in-

’ terest than usual in the contest. I
‘ have received nealy as many letters

from the boys as I have from the
girls. Next issue we will know who
is the lucky one and I will announce
it.

How many of You are out to win
some of the prize money M. B. F. is
giving away ’in its picture contest,
which I told- you about last issue?
If you have not entered Yet-there
is still plenty of time. It is just
like getting paid for playing so you
better enter by using the picture
printed at the bottom of this page,
or if you want another picture just
write to the Contest Manager, Mich-
igan Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens,
Mich., and he will send you one by
return mail. At the same time ask
him any questions you desire an-
swered regarding the contest. I
hope some of you Win.'—-UNCLE
NED. '

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS

bear Uncle Nedz—How are you
these ﬁne days? I hope lovely the
some as I. I go to schoOl. We
have a nice teacher. I am some-
where in my teens. It might be
thirteen, fourteen, ﬁfteen or sixteen.
The one who guesses my right age

-ﬁrst will receive a good long letter

from me, about my pony, kitten and
I for we have some great times. I
am going to tell you about my trip
to Lake Michigan.

One lovely Sunday morning at
five o'clock we started ‘for Lake
Michigan. We went in two care.
And did not have any car trouble
going or coming back. We stopped
at two places and got a drink and
rested for we got very tired riding.
We had thirty miles of paved roads.
It was certainly a nice road. But
just the same We got tired of riding
on it. We reached Muskegon at
eleven o’clock and then we went all
through a bi~g.boat that was an-
chored to the shore. The boat was
two hundred feet long and was just

“as nice as any house.
dinner with us and ate our dinner

 

Children's nose

some. . 555:3 

  

on the shore. They hadra merry-
gmround, many other things tor
children to have tun with, In the
afternoon vaent in bathing awhile
and then rode on the merry 
round. The shores of Lake Michi-
gan are nothing but pure white sand
with some beautiful buiidings built
upon " it.
the sand around here. There were.
great big sand' hills quite a" ways

'out in the lake which looked beauti-

ful: We walked out ona dock for
about a halt a 'mile. The light
houses were built on it. [We walked
along the shore for about a half a-
mile. Then we started for home
and when we were coming through
Muskegon we saw an auto accident.
The auto turned over two or three
times. We did not stop to see it
anyone Was killed. We stopped
at a little place coming home and
ate Our supper and then came on
home. We reached home at eight
o’clock that night. And were tired-
and sleepy—Bernice Lee, Barryto

Mich., R. 2, Box 76. ‘ —

Dear Uncle Ned:——I was quite in-
terested in this contest, '30 I thought
I would try to win a prize. My
birds names are:

Robin, sparrow, wild dove, barn
owl, screech owl, wren, woodpecker_
swallow, blackbird, raven, nuthatch,
crane, stork, vulture, sea gull, eagle,
ground bird, quail, oriole, canary,
bob-o-llnk, whip—poor-wlll, chicken
hawk, snowbird, lurk, bluebird,
bluejay yellewhammer, goldﬂnch,
martin, bat, thrush, magpie, cow‘bird,
catbird, crow, chickndee, humming-
bird, pigeon, ostrich, snipe, nightin-
gale, warbler, sepsucker, partridge,
gfacock, pheobe, cuckoo, kingﬁsher,

ourning dove, condor, ﬂycatcher,
and kingbird.

The bird which I like best is the
robin, he has a. pretty red breast
and is quite a tame little fellow..
He always lets you know when he
is in danger by his song. This sum-
mer a father and mother robin de-

cided to build their home in our'

wagon shed. They were busy every
day from early morning until dusk,
gathering sticks, straw and clay,
with Which they built their home,

7 "mi 

-We  o'ur "

   

.Manistge, Mich., R. No. 1, Box .58.

The sand is nothing likes

.‘that work for him.
is running strands and helping.

‘ —Lerslie Hillard, Cadillac,

use”

.Ihink I new? Thm'nttﬁitb¢1’ﬂ.. f _
:.W1de 0W’~"~m§“h3.,¢‘m":  "
to their parenterderzitoeda-fwiw 

tors and I sat about ﬁve test am.
from the nest and watched, 

       

Your loving neice, Jennie Fain,

 

Dear UncIe Ned:—-‘-‘—Hére urge.  VI... 
Sparrow 911195111”! ‘

birds I_ know:
canary, bluejay,’ catbi'rd', thrush.“
hummingbird, quail, ‘- hobo-link,
black bird, . stark,“ ,kil‘ideer, 'frdbin.
wr‘en, m‘eadoyilark, rimdhen, few-I,

low, chickadee; sapwood, 'pbedhe‘.“

Woodpecker, hawk, owl, - but,»  ‘
- poor-will, ,
crane, 'eagle, oriole, 'lark, peacock:

mockingbird, ' king-ﬁsher

and magpie. _. -. ,

I like a canary best because 
can have it for a pet. ' It is yellow
and has black "on‘ its 
it sings "very nice." They eat "seed

and drink water.-—Edith Sharpe."

Glare, Michigan, R. No. 4.
-—-—-—-4

~Dear Uncle Ned—PI ‘went to join. 5
I like to read

your merry circle.’
the letters in the M. B..F. My.
father owns 160 acres of land but
we aren’t living On it. He is work-
ing out building roads for the coun-
ty. My mother cooks for the man
My occupation

mother wash dishes. ,We are going
to.farm next summer, and I'm going
to help. I am 15 years old.
brown hair and brown eyes. my
name is Leslie. Now guess which
I am, a boy or a. girl. Who guesses
correctly ‘will receive a long letter.
Mich.,-
R. No. 2.

 

Dear Uncle Nedt—Here are the
names of the birds which I saw to
and from schooner“! the one I like.
best: ‘ 7 , ,‘

Bluebird, lark, wren, sparrow.”
partridge, thrush, crew-
crane, killdeer, quail, cat-.kird. wood-
pecker, chickadee.

The most beautiful birds I think
are the Canaries.
pretty singers and nice colors. black.
and yellow. We have some weeping
willow trees by our house and the
canaries make their nests in them.
Early in the morning they ﬂutter
about, and look so pretty. Your
neice, Beatrice Meyette, Pinconing,
Mich., R. 3, Box 108. '

 

 

.1

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eeeeocoe...¢J

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(a)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1

 

 

 

   

list of all the objects in the above

 

V . ’ .4,‘ V .‘ r V i V,
HOW MANY OBJEC'IS CAN YOU 'FIND IN THIS PICTURE? THAT BEGIN WITH “B”? v

Look up the September 30th issue of the Michigan Business Farmer-“and see the tall announcement of. the great
$600. puzzle contest, openxo anyone who is not an employee of  paper. ‘
picture which begin with “Bf'. for instance “book, bear, hell,” 
YOUR LIST AT ONCE and we will mail you at once complete list. of prizes ’ '
. anywhere or all the talks in your trunilyeen minute up  2w  "
IGAN BUSINESS FARMER,‘ Mount Clemens, Michigan.   ‘ '

  

It you have
and names of judges; etc. r "A
"GONTES Q’I-m

 
 

n’t enchandy. make I193
 g!

I have ,

pigeon}

They are such. —‘

  
   

 

 

 

 

      


  
  
 

 

 

 
   
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
   

    
  
  

    

  inseam 

 much above th’eayerage.
With no community. of - interest
landlord and renter are not 'con-

 corned in ~_rsising purebred live_
. pluck. For this is a' process of long

years 7 .of continuous improvement,
only cones ,as a rule, where
or vision work for a definite
pattern of perfection. ‘
_  On' the weudt d: Painter farm—
snd en the other farms owned by
 Wendt-:tyill be feund pure bred
anihals._ Frank'Painter gives his
attention to high class Durocs.‘ On
another farm Poland China swine
unite. with Holstein cows to turn
feed into food. With good breeding
j dock selling at. substantial advances
above market. quotations for com-
mecca, it is easy tosee how Mr.
Painter made a good living for‘him-
self and family and bought a good
farm with his profits; and how the

ﬁller land worker we referred to,

actually put away $3,000 ayear
clear profit for seven years—an al-
most unheard of procedure——for it

‘ must be» remembered that the land

owner shared equally with his part~
nor in the profits. i
The general policy of all the part-
nership farms we know of, is to sell
nothing but live stock—pure bred
and market hogs and cattle, dairy
and poultry products, etc. When this
policy is consistently followed for
a number of years, it is easy to see

him profits for both partners are .

likely to exceed those 'of the aver-
. age grain farmer.
The Wendt farming agreement is

“-/ short and simple in form .but it

represents the most painstaking, care
in the wording thereof. It is not
lately that the lawyer called upon to
write a "partnership agreement, could
orgwould give to the task as much
' thought or as much actual experi-
ence .. ' ‘ .

Some have attempted ,to improve
Upon the terms of this contract, but
nearly always such experiments re—
sult in disaster. For the agreement
as it htands is based uponabsolute
justice to land owner and land
worker, with the idea of cementing
their friendly co-operation for a com-
.mon purpose. It has been studied
from every angle for. more than
fourteen years and'where it has been
tried by men willingly to play the
game fairly and honestly, it has
brought prosperity to the combina-
tion . -

This suggests that no agreement
will. succeed where the principal fac-
tors there to are. not of the right
kind; which is the same as saying
that partnerships, corporations, gov-
ernment, family life—any farm of
’ co—operatfve effort will fall where. all
the parties are not in harmony with
> the central idea of service to the
institution.

Dr. Wendt himself is a man of
broad human sympathy. His work
in his home town is an example of
what a man of vision and power can
do to make Sinclair Lewis' picture
of "Main Street" look ridiculous.
He is a substantial member of the
community where he has spent his
life as a physician. His natural
caution is combined with a dream of
high ideals of life. His work in
that commnlty in building for'per-
manent progress in everything that
is worth while, deserves a story all
by itself . ' .

V It is only natural that a man of
. :thlsw calibre understands the "tech-
nique of Mention. He has an in-
» stinct for gettiil‘g along» happily with
those around him, and this is simply
due to his readiness to live by the
Golden Rule. He-isn’t always try-

ing to get thebest of the deals- Ha I

is willing to make a profit- but he
knows that he can do so only where
his co-laborer also makes a profit.

0n the other hand, it takes a man

rather above the average in skill, 4-

lntelligence, and general decency to

make a success as the "party of the.

first part”-—the workerwho perhaps
brings to? the partnership only his

two strong hands and his thinking ‘
‘. Jrain—an invincible combination,

. by the way, in any situation in life.

’ ' x  g The»?- ordinary renter, who merely

to  s . shrewd bargain

  
 
  

    

,g .7 . .
, _ _ economicsethat profit
lies-in. raising bumper crops—0r at ,

I o heme.» to. hold
w" stand» out a

     
 

 

hug:

example of the right kind of
mentor the 30b. is F1'ank Painter,
whohas some original ideas in addi-
tion .to his training in the details
of running a farm.‘ .‘He is smart
enough to breed high class Duracs.
for instance, and has now a herd of
extra good ones that are steadily

improving from year to year.

On the very day we were there,
Frank said to the Doctor, “Don’t
you think we should sow some rape
in that ten-acre corn field? We can
always use more pasture.” ‘

“Sara? rallied the doctor after
a moment’s thought.“ "How much
seed do you need and when?" .

And right there a little detail in.
good farm management was disposed
of in less than half a minute's time.
That’s the way it works; two heads
are better than one.

Another forward-looking farmer,
Mr. B. L. Pruett, .is also making
good on one of the fine farms in
Lincoln County. He added an extra
twenty pounds of pork per head to
a bunch of hogs by shifting them.
from field to field as they grew in
weight. When they gore young and
active he pastured them in a distant
field; when they got a bit lazy he
put them into a field close to the
barn; and finally he gave them a
three weeks finish in the feed lot
where they got practically no exer-
cise. This is a simple matter-——but
how many hog men have thought
of it? I _ ‘ A V

The Wendt farming agreement
provides in effect that the land
owner is to furnish the land and
keep a good set of buildings in prop-
er condition to do business .The
worker gives his labor and furnishes
his own teams and implements. All
the live stock—other than work ani-
mals—are bought and owned j_olntly
by the partners and each has an
equal share in the increase. No
sales or purchases can be made with-
out mutual consent. ‘

Where a few milk cows are kept,
the product is divided equally, but
Dr. Wendt is now working on a pro:
vision that will permit the worker
to own as many cows as he is will-
ing to milk, the feed to be furnished
by the‘ partnership, and all of the
cream to be sold for the account of
the. worker—the skim milk to be
fed on the farm.

 

wmr INQUIRY HAS BEEN
IGNORED
(Continued from page 13.)

'of the Public Utilities Commission,

the majority of members of which,
by the way, were appointed by Gov.
Sleeper and not by Mr. Grosbeck.
On the other hand the inquiry may
have been referred to a clerk who
paid no further attention to it. I
havecsome times thought myself—
that men in public‘ positions, es-
pecially ones, who consider. it be-
neath the dignity of their ofﬁce to
be bothered with complaints from
the ordinary citizen, and the fort
that the Business Farmer receives
scores of complaints which have
been referred to such officials with-
out results, is evidence of the fact
A more active interest in politics
by both men and women will help.
no doubt to secure greater efﬁciency
and courtesy in public ofﬁce.—
Editor. \

 

A rare. opportunity to buy a bar-1
gain in a skunk stole from a lady
going South. Apt. 4, 1354 Monroe

.St. (after a p. m)—Washdngton

Evening Star.

 
 

srsrsusur or TH: susmo .
EMEII'I' emcuuﬂon .. ﬂagella?
or or sun or 12:.

 
 
 
  

 
 
   
 

 

 
 
  
  

 
   
   
   
   
  
 
   
  
 
  
  
  

 

 

  
 

 

   

 

 :55: ~ 
 the centre “that” legallyﬁbound
_ him .to another. '

- McCormick Bldg,

 

  
 
    
     
    
 
    
    
   
      
 
  
 
 

  
 
 
 
 

, V3 *m... W...

per dollar . a 

Blast % More S tumps, Clear % More Land this Fall

N Dmhoritc, the newest 'du Pont dynamite,
the purchasing power of your dollar has
been increased 35 to 40 cents.
Dumorite has approximately the same strength
as 40% dynamite, stick for stick, shoots with
the slow heaving action of 20% and you get
% more sticks per dollar.
You can use Dumorite right into winter-time
without danger of freezing. It is non-head-
ache. Order your Fall supply now from your
hardWarc or general store. V
Send for free lOS-pagc Farmers’ Handbookof Explo-

‘ slves, giving complete instructions for all kinds of farm

blasting work. ’
E. l. DU PONT DE NEMOURS & CO., Inc.

 

Hartley Bldg, ~
Chicago, “I. Duluth. Minn.
NON-HEADACHE ‘   NON-FREEZING

DU  o- ITE”

 

 

A d

 

l I! vaun FARM on couu-rnv Hons Is
.r sale. Write us. No commission aha ed
CLOVERLAND FARM AGENCY, Powell.

. H b
 n; ,s . - ’ ,.., ~,:  ,v -. .- , z 
' “3‘44: #«znsx -. MM? » ‘~ ', ’ 5‘ V“  I « ‘ 3'

 

hr-gwoorszo Q’ORES AIDE ONI 140 r AOREI
s sas y owners. or ‘ mam writs
WM. ALBRECHT, Camonville, iidtl).

 

‘ ron “195.24g agnhss have; 

new land a care , oo ouse, rge c mo - v

basement barn, two w is of water and two wind-  eg‘ggdb‘ggnm no“ weu' “mu om
runs '

Price $75 per acre; 85,000 of this is
covered by Farm Land bank loan payable $180
six months for 30 years which pays interest \
l the balance can be handled by pay—

dowu. with 80,000 mortgage, all the 1
balance so want The above price

and team of work horses. New havy

about 80 tons. of he: straw, oats, been pods, silo
full of Hensilagzi1 etc. r‘tl‘ghe increase on ostﬁle talonﬁ
"will pay 8 mo age lll one year. us so .

uce. do not ouster unless you luvs at least on 3'0 b01113 Mvzﬂlm “
6000 to pa down. Addre. THE CITIZENS

 

to es from school;
thm one corner Address FRANK GLAWE, ocquenc,n

FARM FOR SALE—180 AOREHO “R

 

 

yearling steers, cows

7
When the ‘Baby
Laughs — ‘

When the sun shines. when the

‘0‘"‘9‘3 Chm Miqh- ﬂowers bloom. when dinner

 

sends out its inviting aroma--

FOR SALE—SO-AORE IMPROVED FARM
.H. I duh ‘ mm “on. L2 mu; when any one of a. thousand things
school. good roads. mail route and telephone
ems. for particulars, write owner.

happen to attract your attention,
you are being advertised to.

BELL. I-Iarrisville.. Mich.
The purpose of any advertisement

 

$.20!) BAROAINSI JDST OUT! E UIPPED

l
momma. e {lick of 38 states. Cosy free.
Oll'l'“lf‘Ahf_lvM .GENC-Y, 814 BE F‘o Bids”
. to man.

. FOR SALE—400 ACRE FARH LEVIL.
four miles on gravel mead to Clare. Mich; his
end house. large garage. and other build-
acres seeded, price $8.000. Half cash,
co all the time
HICKNELL. C re, Mich.

is to attract your attention Ind
sustaiu- arouse your 'desire; to sell you
what is new And good; to guide you
to something you ought to have;
to make you happier and more com-
for-table; to save you money and
make life easier for you.

So, read 'advertisements. They will
give you the latest ideas and im-
provements. They will help you to
live better and dress better at less

50.000; bu w on; so

u want. Write MB.

 

LMNOlOI FIRM. WILL L0-
" Good

0., an 00 . Good
"ﬁrmi‘wﬁu ,0, ,"g‘m, w You’ll be surprised at the world“
R._ PF. Alt. w interest and the wealth of new ideas » a

cost. ;

nlverine. Mich.

that you‘ll ﬁnd in reading the 

 

' 120 ACRE? MUM-IR 0"! LAND 
buildincs t. tbu .

vertisesnents in this puhﬂcﬂon.

her. 0 mil
tile 30 em 13:01: Advertisements are daily records

 

 

educate the boys in the Universiit? Write for
our farm bargains. JEROME P 0381'. Ann
Arbor: Mich. “ . .

dgvhnqﬁggghm .Chr. n of progress. They are the reports
. . L. r . hie - m to you of manufacturers who work
sou sue—1o acne TRUCK FA“ noon ‘°' 7°“ “"133 “h” “"59" 00‘- r
‘ ; or funicular wma C. it EOUSR. compliihed for your beneﬁt; Take
Mt. Pleasant. lich. advantage of them. . . ,
FARM new ANN ARBOR nun . _,..;.

Don't let an-issue leave your  

 

 

A IARGAlﬂ—‘O‘o

“0,758.. “008;, .AR without reading the salvel'tiselnsntss~
m. ,2... us ~ . g . .1

 

 

 

 

 

    

 

     
    


 
  

 

 

 

l nillllliii‘lliliilllililll'ililillillllilillllllliilllllllilillllilllllllllil'lllillllillillli illllllllllillllillllllllllllliilii

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘.
i conflicting dates we will withou
0081;? llsvto ghe date of any live stock salemiir-i
Michigan If you are considering a salad ‘
Vise us at once and we will claim the rise
for cu Address, Live Stock Editor. .
It, t. Gielrnens 7
Oct. 18—Holsteins, Alexander W. Copland.
I ABhoTtidlghm' Mégu'thern Michigan
‘ ms,
00". 18 Shorthng Breeders' Am'n, Hills—
dale Mic. . _ ..
— ’ ‘ , West Michigan Holstein
Get. 18  Ass'n, Grand Rapids.
Mich.
— .' II well Sales 00.. of Liv~
oat 19 'HMStiims unCty, Howell, Mi
Oct. Iii—Poland Chimes, F. E. Haynes,
Hillsdale. Mich. &
Oct. 19—l'oiand Chinns. W. Brewbaker
Sons, Elsie, Mich.
Oct. 20—Holsteins, Shiawassee County Hol-
stein Breeders’ Ass n, Owoseo, Mich.
Oct. 28—Ilolsteins, Corey J. Spencer, Eaton
liapidlsl, M]ch.nd Poland as
a , Chin .
Nov' 15—19%; Gilli-$3., St. Louis, Mich.
,.

 

 

ll”llilliiiilllliiiiill|I|IillIlllllllllllillllllllllllllilllllliilliillllilllilllilliilllilllliiillil‘H

' advertisements inserted under this heading for reputable breeders of Live Stock at SpBOidl low
‘ rates ’to encourage the growing of
.Is Thirgy Oents (300) per agate lne. per insertion.
- j ens-I. 0 per Inch, less

-- - “of month following date of insertion.
"FREE. to you can see-how men
BREEDERS DIRECTORY.

h If sent with
2% for caSEND IN YOUR AD AND WE WILL_PUT IT IN
lines it will ﬁll. ,
IOHIGAN Busmssa FARMER, MT. CLEMENS, MIOH.‘

 

ure-‘oreds on the farm: of our readers. Our.advertislng rate

Fourteen agate lines to the column inch
order or paid on or before theT1Ygt£

Address all letters

Richland Shorthorns

We have two splendid, white yearling bulls by
Imp. Newton Champion, also some young cows
and hmfers that we are offering for sale. Wnte
for particulars to

c. H. Prescott & Sons

Herd at Ofﬁce «at
Prescott, Mich. : Tawas City, Mich.

FOB POLLED SHOHTHOBNS

Shropshire, Southdown and Cheviot rams write to
L. O. KELLY & SON. Plymouth, Mich. '

 

 

SHORTHORNS AND POLAND CHINAS-a—NOTH-
mg for sale at present. Are holding for public sale
/Nov. 15th. Write for catalogues.

SONLEY BROS., st. Louis, Mich.

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

FOB POLLED SHOPIIl'li'HOBillS

Federal Accredited er .
PAUL QUAOK, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

LTVE ,STOCK AUCTIONEERS

WAFFLE & HOFFMAN .

OUR SPECIALTY:
SPOTTED POLANDS AND
  DUROC JERSEYS
We are experienced salesmen, Expert Judges and
moﬁiﬁhi‘egfigée. write today for good dates and’
our terms, fiddWeAngthEGf goldlaater, Mich.
JOHN HOFFMAN, Hudson. Mich.

-Need-A Practical Competent Auctioneer
bou insure your next sale being a success.
Employ the one Auctioneer who can .111]

the bill at a price in keeping with prevailing

" s.

wigggpaction GUARANTEED or NO CHARG-
E MADE. Terms $50.00 and actual ex-

per sale. The same price and service
Mavens.

pedalize in selling Polan'st, Duroce, and

mists“. Let no reserve a. 19 2 date for you.

wlidrRR’rYﬂfe‘ECKHARDT; Dallas City. Illlnols

JOHN P. HUTTOH

LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEER
ADVANCE DATES SOLICITED.
ADDRESS 118 W. LAPEER 8T.
LANSING. MICH.

' CATTLE
ﬂ HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN

BARGAIN
Purebred Registered Hol-

stein Heifer Calves
1 month old $50; 6 months old $755-$100
Federally Tested
HOWARD WARNER, Pennington, Mich.

 

in .3

\\~.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

GLADWlN COUNTY SHORTHORN BREEDERS
offer the best in beef and milk strains. All ages,
both eexm. W. 8. HUBER, Seo'y, Gladwln. Mich.

 

 

ANGUS

ODDIE FARMS mucus at both sex fOI‘ me.
D Herd headed by Bar-dell 31910. 1920 Inter-
Champion.

Martin A Son. North streetLMlch.

 

national Jr.
Dr. G. R.

HAVE SOME FINE YOUNG ANGUS BULLS
30%; International Grand Champion Stock at
reasonable Prices- H- KERR & 00., Addison,

 

.1 lo ,.

 

 

 

HEREFORDS

 

  
 
 

Money f Making:
 HEREFORDS
ﬁf’éf At St. Clair; for sale and

:s

    

'n
,‘y 7

  

ready for immediate
delivery.

Registered Cows and their
sucking Calves

Re istered Bred Heifers—Re lstered
chore—Registered Grade owe—Unregist-
ered and their Sucking Calves—Good Bulls,
various ages.
Our Detroit Packing Co. Hereford Baby Beef Con-
tract and the Sotham Hereford Auction System
guarantees our ustomers proﬁtable (nah outlet {or
all increase an we can help . responsible
purchasers. Come. wire or write. right now

T. F. B. SOTHAM & SONS

(Cattle Business Established 1835)
Saint Clair, Michigan Phone 250

AYRSHIRES .

FOR SALE—REGISTERED AYnsmnE
bulls and bull calves. boilers and heifer calving.
Also some choice cowl.

FINDLAY BROS" R 5. Vassar, Mich.

Yearling

 

 

 

 

 

001'. RANGE BALE. WE ARE OFFERING
cl-EAa.nd bulk. Bea _ liftidggilig‘m S1re

near
7 mikee im'WB” s 0.00 and up.
WOLVERINE DAIRY FARM
Pinup—H. o. Booth Oladwln.

II" PAY MORE? m... How 1......

«(m dohn. Circulars free. OONDON’S
mmmii CREST, Wat Chester. Ohio.

r

Mich.

. PUREBBED REGIS-

 

snonrnomvs
IIILKIIIG STRAIN SHOBTllllllll

'tered stock of all ages and both lax.
ed by the bull, Kain-cot:
“mt 25th, 648,5 Prices reasonable.
LUNDV BROS" R4, Davlson, lion.

 

S
“v?

CONSIGNMENT SALE
Registered H

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1922 AT THE WIFST MICHIGAN STATE~
FAIR GROUNDS, 'GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN

 

 

Including a 28.51 lb. four-year-old;
cal-ling daughtou and heifer caiva
ichlgan and several young bulls and

Illolcs o cringe:
The 81.12 lb. 3 yr. old bull, Goldmine

’ID. yearling bull cut of a Junior 4 1'.

D. G‘months old bull calf. Good A

 

l. 84.71 lbs. bred to

A number of very desirable heifer
In of the 82.52 lb. bull, Lonawee Po

high class hui

irate  arena Rapids. Mich!

  
  

an

 

 

This Is the Annual October Oomignment Sale of
Association and 69 head of good Registered Holstein
There will

be four thirty pound bulls sold In the sale, several good A. R. 0.

fresh cows,

out of come of the

bull calves of excel

Kornd It F no. sold to

old ydgm.” A , 80.80

V' and two year .2: heifers out of bulls iron-l danie with

O

calves .out of 80 lb. bulls. Including 9 good heifer calves
. ntiac calam y King.

Some very desllyﬁe heifer calves for foundation stock, for Dell clubs and for starting new

Remember the time and place, uneasy, October 10', 1022. at the West Illohigan state

If interested. write for a Sale Catalog.
w. n.  ﬂannel}, medievme, Michigan

GUERNSEYS

FOR “LE—JfEGISTERED GUERNSEY. BULL.

in of cod bree , gen
8 ya:I‘AICEM'DE COER, R. . Marion, Mich.
Ymrling

B Bait .
ausnllsn smoking as, ..... B...
iiaiéma. a Widenir, “Km-33$ unit?" “‘h
T RED POLLED
RED POLLED liliTTLETt ‘Ezsféﬂfﬁ 23:.”
ROVSTAN STOCK FARM,
Will Conn, R. R. 1. West Branch Michigan

FOR onus—OUR RED POLLED HERD BULL.-
Cosy Ella Leddie few heifer calves.
PIE

 

 

, and a
ROE BRO’S.. Eaton Rapids. Mich.

 

L ’—

I ' i
olstein Cattle

r

The West Michigan Holeteln‘ Breeders
Cattle will be sold in this sale.

cows,
and cows and heifers econ due to freshen;
var: best bred Holstein bulls in West
Ion breeding. Here are. a_ few of our

avoid ln-breeding. A 81.26
lb. yearling bu . A 80.50
and epringors. Gho

. 0. records from 8

;

yearlings

fresh cows.
A. R 0 lbs. up

It

 

 

 

. W. _

. a

R. 1.
ll

  

"cow’s body,

 

.‘   

 

FEEDING THE DAIRY COW
00‘ many cows are 'underfed.
V A .cow weighing 1000 pounds
needs each' day for the main-
tenance of her body, an amount‘of‘
food equivalent to that supplied in
8 pounds of clover hay, and 20 pounds
of good corn silage. She must have

that food regardless of whether she ‘

produces any milk. Food used for
milk production must be in addition
to that required to 'keep the cow’s
body. A IMO-pound cow produc-
ing 20 pounds of 4 per ’cent milk ‘a
day, if properly fed, devotes about

.half of her feed to maintenance and

half to milk production. Obviously
when a .dairyman has gone.to the
expense of -Supplying that half of the
food required for maintaining the
lt.is poor economy to
withhold any of the other half, all
of which goes to produce milk. A
cow then requires‘fe‘ed in accordance

. to, the amount of milk she is able to

produces. The heavy producer ‘needs

the most feed. -. a
“" Farm grown roughages (silage,

hay, etc.,) furnish the cheapest-food
nutrients. However, a good dairy
cow cannot eat enough roughage to
supply her needs for milk produc-
tion She must have» some grain.
Therefore, to feed with the most
economy the following. rules must
be observed, sun the University of
Missouri College of Agrculture.

1. Feed all the'roughage a cow
will eat. She will eat more if fed
three times a day instead of twice.

2. Feed grain in proportion to
the pounds of milk produced. To a
Jersey or Guernsey cow feed one
pound of grain for each 3 to 3%
pounds of milk produced.

To a Holstein, Ayrshire, or Short-
horn feed one pound of grain for
each 4 to 414 pounds of milk pro-
duced.

 

THE LIVESTOCK SITUATION
IN EUROPE

HE following summary of live-
stock conditions in Europe has
just been received by cable
from Alfred P. Dennis, special rep-
resentative of the Department of
Commerce, now in Berlin. Mr. Den-
nis explains that owing to the lack
of ofﬁcial census returns there Is
liability of error in making too high
an estimate of the number of Euro-
pean. livestock at this time.
Though the ﬁgures for some coun-
tries are lacking and for others are
not reliable, estimates for twenty-
three countries in Europe have been
made based upon the best available

returns.
Cattle

There have been heavy losses in
the cattle herds of Belgium, Austria,
Hungary, and Germany, but those of
Great'Britian, France, Italy, and Po-
land 'are approaching normal. The
drought of 1921 has halted the re-
covery from the low point of the
year 1918, but the industry has re-
cently been revived by the past wet
spring and summer which has re-
sulted in abundant pasturage. The
present stock of cattle is probably
not more than 3 per cent under that
of 1913, but the ratio of young, thin,
and undersized animals is much
higher than in the period prior to
the war. ,

Hogs ,

The hog industry has suffered ac-
utely more than any other branch of
animal husbandry, but the recovery
since 1919 has been rapid, except
in the case of countries such as Ger-
many, France, Belgium, Austria, and
Italy, which are dependent upon im-
ported feed. In Great Britian, Den-
mark, Sweden, and Poland the pro-
duction is approaching normal, and
the number of hogs in Spain, Ru-
mania, Jugoslavia, Holland,d and
Syritzerland is greater than before
the war. The total number of hogs
in European countries is now esti-

mated at 12 per cent below normal.

Sheep and Goats ,

Sheep depending upon nature.
pasturage rather than upon arable
farming suffered less than cattle and
hogs. There is afwide variation in
recovery in this industry. In Po-i
land the sheep resources are off. 41
per cent compared with t 0 pro-
war 'ﬂgu'res,‘ and in France It ere” is
‘ .Iedmiiln~~-9§:~J§§ 

~known to be poisonous.

once in heat since. Otherwise

   

has increased the number of sheep
by 50 per cent, and the docks are,
well maintﬁlned' in Switzerland,

Italy, and Rumania. .An aucuratea

census of the total number of sheé'p'

in all European ,countries would '

probably show the number has ap-
roachedto within Beer 7 per cent of
the pro-war ﬁgures. '

’In all the important countries the" g a
“stocks of goats are reported as

showing gains over pro-war,_stocks=
except in France. These animals,-
except where commandered for mili-_
tary purpose and for breeding, are?
being used in increasing numbers
for milk supply in the place of cows.‘
The total number of goats in the-
countries of Europe is estimated
at 18 per cent above the pro-war
totals. ‘ . '
Consumption and Trade

Compared with pro-war years the
national meat consumption; in Eu-
rope shows a rise in France, Italy,
Rumania, Spain, and Poland. It is
fairly.’ well maintained in Great Brit-
ian, Holland, L and Switzerland.
There is‘a sharp decline in both
gross and per capitapconsumption
in Belgium, Austria, and Germany.
The European demand for American
hog products reached the propor-
tions of a boom during the war and
has since receded somewhat, but ’1"
is still in excess of the pre-war vol-
ume in France,Belgium, Italy, and
Great Britian. The needs of Ger-.
many for American bacon and an-
imal fats are urgent, but the dim-'
culties attendant upon ﬁnancial ar-
rangements curtail purchases.
There will undoubtedly be a further
expansion in the European demand
for American lard as the general
economic conditions improve.

;.
I

POWDERY MJLDEW ON CLOVER ‘1

Please tell me if the mold on Mam-'-
moth "clover is harmful to cattle
or horses. Almost all clover in this
section is in the/same way—’A. 8.,
Bad Axe, Mich; - - ‘ . V
—_The white substance found on the
clover is known as powdery mildew.
This is a fungus disease and is not
The hay
should be well cured before feeding,

 

or in case» partially cured hay is \

fed, it should be fed in compara-
tively small amounts. Large quan-‘
titles of partially cured hay, when-
fed to livestock that has not been
getting bay for sometime, is likely
to cause trouble—C. R. Megee,‘Re~
:eargh Associate in Farm Crops, M.

' VETERINARY, '
I ' DEPARTMENT

REQUIRES SKILLED VETERIN-
ABIAN ‘

 

 

\

I- have a cow 6 or 7 years old that
was fresh last December and was” no}:
the best cow. What must I- feed her to
get her in heat'I—H. B... Lathrop. Mich.

It is my opinion that the trouble
in this case is due to a persistent
corpus luteum. This could be dis-
lodged by a veterinarian who is skill-
ed in such work, and the cow then in
all probability would come in heat
within two or three days.—-—Edw. K.
sales, Asst. Prof. of Surg..and Med.,
M. A. C. . ‘

 

PIGS CAN NOT USE BIND LEGS '

, W'hat ails m pigs? They were all
right when I ed them l night. this
mornlni some of them "t walk on
_ their h d Ie . They have good quart-
ers to sleep and a large yard for ex~
cruise—C. M. ., Charlevolx, Mich.

One of several conditions might
all your pigs. The p a r a l y ti o

condition may be due to infection j

with the Botulinus organism, or it

may be due to lack of’minerals or ‘-
vitalmins in the feed they have been 
getting. Occasionally it"seems to be:

a result of constipatién. You ought

to make sure that the condition is;.
'not Cholera as pigs often become
very weak and unable to walk during?!
outbreaks-.—-—Edw. K. Sales, Division,.;
Dept. "or '.'
Surgery and Clinic, M. A. C.  ‘ i

of Veterinary Medicine,

 

A. bullet from a   "
velvet passed through one-
h

. . 4

"right hips and entered

.é: 1‘

I e
’ ‘ ._—‘ .V‘ '1 ‘. "I l '
A. a {.O‘;.: _f,. - \
.. /

\"> "

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

.- gas-ml“ .

  
  


 

       
; \ SAL E.—-.--o CT.
.  Good, High on... Registered Cows, Heiférs and Bulls

Including a few cows of the dual purpose or milking strain.
This sale will be held under the auspices of the

} ~ I SOUTHERN MICHIGAN
SHORTHORN BREEDERS
 ASSOCIATION

All stock is sold on consignment from members of this Association and is
of quality whichme attention.

HILLSDALE, MICH.
Wednesday, Oct. 11%, 1922

For particulars and catalog, address W. C. OSIUS, Sec’y, Hillsdale, Mich.
' ANDY ADAMS, Sale Manager.

\

 

" ’(eiy 19

 

18TH

 

 

 

 

.4—Complete Dispersion Sale
. Birmingham, Mich., Oct. 18, 1922

 - Purebred Holstein Friesian Females 
-  Daughters of King Korhdyke Echo Sylvia 
5 Daughters of Hardy Pontiac Segis 5

3 ~ Daughters of Aristocratic Pontiac 3

 

I  \ Daughters of Segis Cynthia 

Most of the females bred to a son of a 31.8 lb. cow that milked 742 lbs,
Several bred to a son of Sadie Gerben Hengerveld DeKol (First 40 1b,
cow under the .new rules).

Several bred to King Kerndyke Echo Sylvia,” who is a son of Avon
Pontiac Echo from a 29.11 1b. jr. three year old daughter 02 Pontiac

, K'orndyke Het L00. 1
Sold with usual breeder’s guarantee and subject to 60 to 90 day retest.
Terms can be arranged but must be done before the sale.

For catalog address,
Albert E. Jenkins. Sale Mgr.

’ Alexander W. Copland, Owner,
Oscoda. Mich.

Birmingham, Mich. 1

Friday, Oct. 20, 1922‘

AT 12 0011001: (NOON)

 

Shiawassee County Holstein
\ Breeders Ass’n

W'ILLHOLD THEIR

2nd Annual Consignment Sale
‘ of 75 ~Head of

Reg. Holstein Cattle

AT THE FAIR GROUNDS AT

OWOSSO, MICHIGAN

This sale consists of heifers and young cows, either fresh or due soon.
sired by and bred to 30-lb. bulls of show ring type. Among the offerings
are a few extra good young bulls, among them a prize-Winning son of
King Ona. AIl herds tested and most of them fully accredited. All
animals sold under 60-90 day retest privilege.

, SALE OOLDIIT'I‘EE
Earl Vanderkan, Owosso.
J. R. Monroe, 0woaso.

I C. 8- Baldwin, Bennington.

COL. D. L. PERRY, Auctioneer.

R. AUSTIN BACKUS, in the box.

Write to C. S. BALDWIN, Bennington, Michigan, for catalogue.

L_

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘ mum onoionsT mLIEdrION OF BUIth IN MICHIGAN
«' THE GET 0F - '

~ Model King Segis Glista

FAMOUS” FOR SHOW TYPE  BIILK PRODUCTION

Grand River Stock Farms

EATON name‘s MICHIGAN .

Sale, Saturday, (October 28th.:
, 39- Select Registered Holstein;

11' 0F 21 YOUNG BULIa'ANn 18 FRESH FEMAIES

> i '   Grade Females Bred to Registered Holstein Bulls. All

7-  e Tuberculin Tested and Sold "Subject to 60-day Retest.
 of Nine Months Will be Accepted. 3
a i  _‘ irorruam'degusmmtp . OWNER

 

htheBox

OER . 8. T. WOOD.

 

 

 

OCT.
19th

OCT.
1 9th

Howell Sales Company of Livingston County
Will hold their

' I, 9th Annual Sale

85 Head of Registered Holstein Cattle

at the

Thursday, Oct. 19th,

At Ten O’dock

. Sales iPavilion on the Fair Grounds at
I Howell, Michigan

This sale Consists of young cows and heifers due to

freshen this fall and early winter. Sired by and bred

to bulls from dams with records from 30 to 45 pounds

also a few open heifers and several good bulls, includ.

ing a 31-11», 4-year-old, son of Rosie Mercides Butter

Boy, 210357, with a yearly record of-nearly 1,000 lbs, .
of butter; also three sons of King Ona Champion,

257513, from 29-30-32-le dams, mostly from 

ited herd with 60-day retest guarantee.

Catalogs October 10th _ . '
Auctioneer, J. E. Mack 'S.T. Wood thebog
Wm.  Sec" , Howell,  _ L I 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

specializes in Mediterranean varies";
ties, Althoughthi‘s‘bpééd isiﬁgtsd'ee .
scribed in the Standards! Protec—
tion this judge’jcou‘ld give mappin-

LARGE TYPE Pounc- cumWBBRING PIGS ' "
 ’ sired'byU’s Olansi'nim', now rears to ship. Writ. .
for particulars. ‘ ' .

W. CALDWELL & SON, Sprlngpon,‘ Mloli.

_  . 
,. 6R 'éIiLE—AIER‘sEv BULL a YEARs‘ OLD

‘ ble to r istration in the American Jersey
'Cartle Club. .

/

 

0. Showennan, Sunﬂold. Mich.

 

 

 

  —YEARLING JERSEY BULLS
, 8110 ie 19th Tormentor breeding.
.' J

. E. MORR 8. Farmlnoton, Mloh.

 

 

 

 

 

'_ BERKSHIRES \

 

FO'R- SALE—REGISTERED BERKSHIRE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
  

 
 

THE FARM HEN PAYS WELL

 
 
 

ion as to type‘v‘and col‘o'r‘to” use “for
either show purposes or in' the
breeding pens—E .‘C. FOremanpAs-

   
 

    

  

 

  
 
  
 

boar twr years old, $215; also a few np‘n gilts, $2. . .
FOR SifALE—QERSEHLS, thgLIrszlﬁREga TMAiI; 5'. R. WILSON, Ellsworth, Mich. HAT a farm poultry ’ﬂock is soc1ate Professor of Poultry Hus-
, .‘J. ageing "Pairing, R.y8. KalamazodLNIlch: HAMPSIHRES I one of th‘ebest paying parts of bandry’ M° A- C- , ' j V a: 4*
Wg~m .~_ﬂ__. a farm business is shown by ~ ' ’ ,. . " ‘ '
’. ‘i‘éﬁ‘ A CHANCE TO GET SOME REAL HAMP- cost and production ﬁgures ‘on' 39 GET PULLETS OFF RANGE   ’
‘   Shires. Bout pigs, sired by Gen. Pershing Again. f - EARLY . _ ., .11..
i . :Gilt Edge ’l‘ipton, Messenger All Over 10th. Gen. aﬁms “,1 Lenaweﬁ: JaCkson and ARLY f u . th t. .  -.-* v
r ’ ' {’emhinﬁ 2min and 2‘1"” Ere“.b°;~”5- Ygteglgg Shlawassee Counties for the twelve  . a 15 e 1111.9... .1685? . ’ .
_ DUROCS Piggﬂﬂf “53,3887;  ‘e' _months ending March 31, 1922. The above all Others When_,911119§5‘ ~
‘ HAM? I E AND HORTHBRNS MARCH ﬁgures are taken from records care- b must hetnursed. carefgnyialongi.
su R. p . s , _ —-, _‘ . _ eca'use W111 er e ro uct on is
" BEG: DUBOG-JEBSEY SWINE “Nil-9“” “3 We‘gl’i'” 10” “’h'lmi iilg'cetldg flluly kept L! the farmers and SUD largely dependent ggn Ithe condition
ring and Fall Hours of quality sired by 1921 “(1&0 9.8003“ “lit ﬁnd 03.“: “Lite “is, Inﬁll-an 81V Sed and summarized by the Farm . . l »
loll: Gigi-id? (ﬁliamgioéihand granélson of I{Sclilssors 01 - Paﬁsuégbmi‘g.lNrgtvisl-atﬁéop  U L Management Section of the Experi_ 0f the young stock when it is placed , ,
’ ‘ ' I ' ring, ‘a an i . .. _ . ‘
Erngg lsows $4?!“ giigxigtmztfpopep mt bfgezdz- "WW merit Station, M. A, c, 1111:.t permanent 1liaymg unaflters. tl'll‘oio .;
.  888 l. 18 Vllfl e 08. 8 . 011.! pm a ‘ ‘ Hampshires A. few choice Bred   bOill' pig   on    O     a   r A I
its, 8 n of Um 11 Sensation, world's 1921 ‘ y' . I _ ' Ml h, ~ . ' ,  '
, Junior :Chgmrmg P5113532“ inspeftion l"audited. no km to “m John w snyder 3‘ mm c . aged 3. return of $200.28 above feed buds to run on range‘ until (30”
. , . , ,
. Em s a. s , Dav son. 9 . and other direct costs. That the weather comes. Nature s chicken , 4'

 

 

, g flock is shown by the fact that these - i 
 REGISTERED SPRING GILTs . , .y y ._ . . . v _
: A nloo assortment to select from at Farm Prices argmcriflﬁngﬁg‘]; b3‘i‘esé’ranzn‘fg’cémifn flocks averaged 118 hens. The av- her nlght' Delay In bringlng the . ‘_-
    I’honc. OTT'o a. SCHULZE, Nahsville, Mich. erage return per hen was $1.70. puuets Off the range was the mug? rd ‘
 ~ Thirteen of‘the flocks show returns or an unusual amount 0f 'roup laSt ‘
.2» GEO. DOIIM. Mgr. WASHINGTON, MIOH. 0 i as SPECIAL PRICES ON FALL PIGS b 1 W $1 50 h b fall according to G W Hervey of
.’ fur Oct. 15th (lclivcrv also spring boars e 0 .l per en, seven a 0V8 ’ , _ ' _ '
 pURE BRED DUROC.JERSEY BOAR flI'I'_llllIll(“(ll-llt(‘ shipment. l l'a'l sure you money. ' _ the UanGI‘Slty Of MISSOUI‘i College
~ Pigs of April and May farrow. sired by Brnuk‘ ‘th CLARE v‘ DORMAN' Show" MIC“.  {ﬁfe hfeiglliigd nlneteen fell be Of Agriculture. ’ Allowing them to ‘
I: water Sensation and Model of Orion; Musler- - _ r -
 piece. Mace you, order now, prim right mm. 0. I. C. TRUE To NAME, PROLIFICV‘STRAIN, one of the Strikin facts of ou1t_ run on range late means added ex- ‘ p
1 w 1 . open grills bred mlts bnnkvna orr‘i-rs for \cplcnabcr g p ' ' ‘ ' '
 liltiiiﬁ‘lﬁilallY HOG FARM, Route 7. Mt. hm. W1 sow piggﬂw wife, o, ‘p.‘ Air for (10- ry management brought out by the pense .to the feed bill. The _b1rds . 7-
 r , . i ' ' t 4  - ’1 ‘n . ‘ , r ' ' _
.,-» ashram animal‘s, his. was: his. study of these ﬂocks was the effect 09115111119 more gram and an mum -.
 'I FINE SPRING BDAHS 8 WE...  of Protein feeds upon both egg “0' “lent-mm ~°‘ 5‘” mash" Feed
Sired by Sclilihros Top {.‘Ol. (lst prize spring pig   0 i   (:g' ~-.umn:l ducrion and net returns per hen-  at 18' consumed.’ InStead 0f roupd- ‘
1021 at Springﬁeld Fair). All our stock double- 5, v_ BlLyeu. powhagam Ohio The averacre egg production per lng the pullets In to laying condi‘
heated for Cholera. $20.00 each, rcgisterczl in h V 1 ’5 f f . . h tion is used simiply to.<maint'ain en-
, your name. Schaffer Bros., Oxford. Mleh.y R. 4. REGISTERED o_ I. c_ SERVICE BOARS AND GIL 011 9 even. arms Qedlng elt eri' er ’ re uirements a am t
- DUROO YEARL'NG AND FEBRUARY AND um (Il'llsnpn'vc’ to wi tankage or skimmed milk was 96.8 gy .q g 3 exposure'
Springf mill? walimalrs, silt-ml by Pagﬁfmigr Chiog VA" FTTEN' c'mmd' Mm eggs per year. The net return per ggﬁg‘inls 3° S‘flré’ilus tot de‘égte fto the
Inn 0 ( aqln er; (ams rtr een er am - '. I '0 ssue 01‘ orm -
Fancy Jge Eoiiﬁisﬁhﬂ plums riﬂﬁtvil in the best.   S  , ., beighin the  gastric was $2.59 and tion Ofgeggs e a
. C . oscow. o . ~« " in e secon . . ' ’
w H m - - - i ‘ i
M  .._.- .. The accompanying table gives the
BOAR PIGs BY FANNIE’S JOE ORION AND . ~ TREATMENT OF STINKIN SMUT "'
Pathfinder Orion. Priced m sell. Satisfaction HMIPSHIRE direct costs and returns in sum- OF WHEAT G I .
guaranteed. \Vrite, H. E. LIVERMORE & SON. mary form _ (C ti d f 4) ,. , ,
Rmn‘m' Miph' ,_ llampsliircs. I Ruins all ages. V u ' 0n nue rom page ' 4 l u
 M... W... ,....i “Wm. mat of F’l't'mp‘FG Record 9“ Poultry sooty, black powder, some persist
HILL CREST DUROCS; sows AND GILTS. Firm-(limit.I'l‘lcesl‘lﬂllh w.w.cAsLER.OvId.MIch. .Thlrty—nlne farms in Lenawee, and can be found in the threshéd ~ \
both MM and oiwn. ill-<0 svrvwe b“M's-"llEWTO'" “‘"’"""" Jackson and Shiawassee counties - '
Four rvilies straight south of Middlei REGISTERED HAMPSHIRE AND DELAINE ‘ , ' grain. The amount. may vary from a
ton, Gratlot 00.. Mich. l;{1]l;.‘l:alsoSUIHUAIIH»;[r£:bl~Gri;l#Efllr SHIO Plump, Year endlngs “larch 31,  trave to 1 2 or 5 per cent The ,-
E ‘3" 9 - - ' ‘ "anyv M'Ch- Total number chickens 4 595 ' ‘ - ’- ’ - ' 3
DURoc JERSEY—WE HAVE A CHOICE LOT __ ,  7 ~- _ _ miqed 4 528 ,, ' ’ characteristic fishy Odor can be de- '
of 0mm gmwl spring linars really for scrum; slllp- SII‘RVOI)SHTRE " ‘ ‘ ' , tected 111 511011 grain. Badly s'mutted, '
pea onFillsl’FB‘Elo-iji‘jlilail"l‘”“ Mimﬁmfigeﬁ Average number laymg hens, 118; wheat is not bright red or golden '
. . . crime. 0 ., . . v _
THE BIG SHROPSH!“ RIAIYIS__‘CH?'CE ytEARLINGS raised. 116. Direct (‘0th color, but dull and oft-times sooty, _  ,
FINE BUNCH OF DUROC BOARS. .Eum an . ".wu inn is. 'ri u I » i ' H " , '
: kAiIid. $l0.00 and up with pi‘rligrvo. I DAN BOOHER, EVPPt, Mlch.. R. 4 Average per farm eSpeclauy at  erSh end. l -
' T' A” LAMB 8‘ SON’ cassopous' MICh' FOR SALE SHROP‘SHIRE TL'NIS COTSWOLD Items Amount Cost Thls is Stmkmg [smut or Bum I i
D LINES END and linroln llams. ‘A’lm virus, All brI-ells. All I Whlc.h eyery farmer rlghtly fears'
DUROCSt—PePﬁlk‘l‘ﬁVPI-R? “URN. *5”.me rw'urdwl. L. R. KI'NEY. Adrian. Mich. Corn .........  2,568 lbs. $24.83 Stinking Smut of wheat is caused. L
walls I) u; . I . , I -.‘ .* ‘ q , . . . ' \
(3E; ASS’N. V. leL’ill‘d Sec.. llasperia. Michigan.  . 'T . _ —‘ n ‘9 - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - -- £052 ibs- 10 50 by a DaiTaSItIC fungus WhICh enters 
GOTSW’OLD Wheat  .06 b8. 11.96 the grain at sprouting time and — i .
Yr VA liai'ley ............ .. 354 lbs. 4.51 grows inside the young, plant, kee-p— " ‘
POLAhn CHL ggtrgnggs“ Riva: ANI‘JI ESE/IlEtsfmﬂLL GgEs. Misc. Feeds .815 lbs. 11.91 ing pace with its growth. unseen and
v ‘ .’ . . " :"' ‘I‘ , . r ' ' '
f collie pup. A. M. BORTEL. Brltton. Mich. Silage  """"" " 1    unsus‘peCted until the Wheat begms \
a 1m 1 ...... .. , S. . to head. Then the smut fungus en-
* -—-ANNUAL SALE P It td- h d 1'
OXFORDS ou ry, ne 8 ters t .e eve oping kernel and pro- ‘
. . _ crease ...... .. 11.10 duces in place of the normal grain ‘ ‘
 Large Type Poland China Swme REmerHED OXFORDS- FOR SALE_ENTIRE Equipment, net its own kind of fruit, the black smut I f at;
’ \ 1d, .1. {jug-ks! [Girl{(lyxﬁidgmlgzngh lambs. Also reg- decrease 1.23 powder already mentioned. Under ll '
S i' HI ID ‘ I .: , g .. - . . _ ‘
New Stoc avnon, [mm c. McGAm-y' Bad Axe, Hum, eon mm Specml Labor ,1.98 the. microscope this powder is seen ' '
Hillsdale County Fair Grounds- . ~ ~—-- Miscellaneous __ 2.06 to be made of minute, spherical 8
Thursday, Oct. 19,1922 _ ——-——— grains, so small that one smrutted
DELAINE Total Direct Costs $83.37 kernel ‘may contain 5,000,000 of

 

DUBOG JERSEYS

 

 

 

0. l. C.

 

25 LAST SPRING BOARS, GILTs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

50 Head 52238622“

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FOR SALE—IMPROVED BLACK TOP DELAINE
Merino Rams. MI h
c .

F RANK ROHRABACKER. Lalngsbura,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ﬁgures apply to the ordinary farm

'"Poultry raised” means the number of chicks
hatched that lived. It ‘does not mean that they
were all raised to maturity, for some were sold at
early stages for bimlers. etc.

house is not the right place for a
pullet to be roosting on a late Octo-

 

the-m. These are .the “seed” of the
smut, which, dusted upon the wheat
grow when the wheat'gerrminates,

 

1‘; Better than ever. . Egg-Sales ...... .. 453 doc. $125.80 bore into the tender sprout and thus _ ‘
"There’s a reason.” hill-R3315, mishusexggvlfnﬁrias?I’rﬁlfleglllfmeﬁiﬂEEP Eggs for home start the Smut of t.he next years '- L
F. H. CONLEY a. sON. Maple Rapids. Mich. use ,,,,,,,,,, n 213 doz, 56.42 crop. This life story is repeated year  ’

F E H A Y N E S Meat for home after year and it is evident that with . i

 . - ° . . RAMBOUILLET. use ........  100 lbs. 22.04 each crop the smut gets worse. A I

 Hﬂlsdale Michigan ' Poultry, net in- ’fleld With little smut one year may }’

 ,, . . P. .. Rémbouinet Rams registered yearlings and crease .................... .. 71.47 be heavily smutted-the next, great

.- P138“. is? W slmrem best Oftggmfgg' gigargghamg Manure ............ .. 3.93 ton 7.86 is the power of this fungus to in-

; But Haynes, P183 is Hogs. w. liar-t, R. 2, Greenvllie. Mlch.. Gratton Phone. Miscellaneous ________  .06 crease. It is also clear that the

 FOR %AL(iE—?PtlfJREAthRED ’RAIMBOUILLET _ ———‘ ‘——“‘ :‘pm‘t‘ﬁing htimte isi)'tne dangér time

3 C mmf’i. MfOEAO-QEIR.‘ Howell.urllllll(:r?., it“? D. 6. Tom! Money Yleld ----  ---- -- $283155 (gimme—206i: ' wegogegsrgg‘émg 1(3):};

   Eliot: Farm Management! cause the wheat to start slowly,

‘r
.

 

I

 

ANNUAL SALE

~ BIG TYPE —-

Poland Chinas

Several tried sows, some with
litters of pigs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FliAllGlSGO FARM POLAND cHIIIAs

Biz .tretchy spring boars as good as grow. Pairs
um moo not akin. Can spare two or three of

 

\

I: '1'. P313. $15-$20-525

red I:

. -m<pm 5t abovegrices Top fall gilt: bred

‘1“ my  “win .a CLINE .
um I; T.- Hm. St. Louis. Mloh
a" {'7 ‘ l  '   : -- .‘

 

 

Auction Sale

OCTOBER 25th AT 9 O’CLOCK

8% MILES SOUTH OF BEAVERTON,
GLADWIN 00.

Power

1

 

 

 

 

__
BHEEDEHS’ ATTENTION

If you are planning on a sale this year.

dustry in Michigan 'to avoid conﬂicting
sale, dates.

THE BUSINESS uranium"
CLAIM YOUR \DATEI

LET “

. .

 

 
  
  

 

 

SICILIAN BUTTERCUP CHICKENS

Can you tell me the original mark-
ings fo the Sicilian Buttercup chick-
ens? Some of ours are light yellow
with a few black spots on their
backs, and black tail, they are quite
pretty. The others are darker in
color and all black from the neck

tercuips are not a standard variety
and therefore a description of the
color pattern of this breed has been
omnmitted. The darker colored birds
are the ones that are usually pre-
fered by the professional judges of

munication directly to the Reliable
Poultry Journal, 'Quincy, Illinois.
care the Question .Box Editor... un-

  

doubtedly yOu could secure an. 93-,
- pression_._trpm, ‘one  the iudses'wlio

   

lalfew men in a community were

give the smut a greater chance to

.get in the wheat sprouts.

The Control of Stink Smut

Stinking Smut control is based up-
on the fact, that the smut enters he
wheat at sprouting time.
smut, the attempt is made to kill‘the
smut “seed” on the wheat before
it ‘gets into the sprout. For this
purpose, a chemical treatment is em-

method of ‘ridding Wheat of smut.
Many farmers have taken advantage
of this method and Have protected
their wheat crop.
deny that the of

great majority

far-mers,have felt thatvthis precess’

. r s t . '
E” "9“ he“! so“ bred or W ember i . ' exhibition poultry. They are almost took too much time and have ne~
. P. P. POPE 3J° 5:;  THE DATE - an orange yellow color rather than glected the treatment. Millers and
Mt. Pleasant Michigan on“, gel-vice is free to the? live stock in- a light yellow. By directing .a com- elevator men have stated that only" A,

   

treating their grain. - _
It was tound that
nil; .

    

In fighting "

But we can not '

 

SPRING SPRING F M 11. down My husband. thinlks those -
- . , . , ployed, which when properly ap-
2 GIUIS  BOARS    il'rehttrueSt 1“ C(t’aoer’ butti,t11tlnk ,IEEe plied does not injure the grain but .
 . Wallace Tractor 15-25 H. P., Interna- 1;; er ones _  pre ies. e kills the smut bodies. For years, A .
 All (33018;? tfmtlmgl‘: Wlth g$§§a$¥§3riilighzgidlgauged??? (11:32:33,. KOOSteV—i are (“Ute dark- I won” plant pathologists have recommend- K
i 0“ 9.1“63‘  '1, E18. in Wipguggetgcggg asrglmggtggehugleWaélif‘gf like to know which ones are the best ed soaking the grain in tubs of di_ .'
on farm? 1’“ 95 we” 0 » le mill0 and Port Hui-lop Edger; I’L‘lriliné inn. tYlJG for I want to take them P0 the lute Formaldehyde, 1 pint to 40 gal-' ,. "
Write for catalogue giggliognplileeﬁerfglcihclulﬁfggaggxerllggmg‘gv fair as they are a new breedHin our Ions of water, skimming _ oﬂ .the .
W. BRE\VBAKER & SONS ﬁguhggrymgghn Deere _24~inch Grub neighborhood—Mrs. T. F., owell, floating smut balls, covering the  -; r
Elsie - - - - Michigan ' . Mlch- ‘ 7 grain for 2 hours, drying and plant-  f_
‘ P. F. HINES, Proprietor —~1 might say that the Sicilian But— mg. This is undoubtedly the best ,'_ '1'.-

 

 

 
    

 


  
  

 

-\

\a

 

 

. L‘i .‘

 
 

 

  

t.

.snd should be put

' ' ’ BUFF
 Hatching ass:
' AUGUS ows

 

3.)

 ~summing

*--DlRECTORY--__———-
Advertisements inserted under
this heading at 30c per agate line,
per Isihe- Commercial Baby Chick
advortisements 460 per agate line.
Write out what you have to odor
and send it in. We will put it in
type, send proof and quote rates by

return mail. Address The Michigan '
v Business Farmer, Advertising *De-

partment’. Mt. Clemens, Michigan. '

 

 

 

BABY omens-

; JUST-RITE
 Batu emu

POs'rAGsl: PAID 923/3 and“
snare. .
irhivrhis FEED FREE
with each order. 40 Breeds

 
 

   

 

 

 

a
every week
all y

 

e‘“ chicks, 4 breeds-ducklings,
' sele'gt and exhibition grades.
Catalog free. stamps app cisted.

NABOD HATCHERY, Dept. 80, GAMBIER, O.

 

 

room‘s)!

POULTRY,

' hay few hundred Pullets in Leghorns,
limzi'véziylgitocks,e €Vhite Wyandottes and Omingtons.

The most of these Pullets are near laying age
into winter laying quarters
soon.’ If you want a flock of mnter‘layers, write
us now.

Also Cookerels, Bronze Turkeys, Toulouse Geese
and Pekin Ducks. ,

STATE FARM ASSOCIATION
Kalamazoo, Mich.

PlILLETS. HENS AND OOGKEBELS

S. C. White Leghorns and S. C. and R. C. Black

Minerals. Must make room before cold weather.

About ready to lay. '
LAPHAM FARMS, Plnckney, Mlch.

F (iii SAL

rize winning stock of ~
Wyandottes liaylng strain.
win for you.

CASE, Rochester, Michigan

——-160 WHITE WYANDOTTE
Gockerels and pullets. All from
my 1) very best American
White They Wln for
me. ‘They will
0. W.

 

ﬁ

LEGHORNS.

LEGHORNS

. ‘. lff Le horn Hens, Pullets and Cockerels.
Isieng slid pulleis $2.50 each; cockerels $3.00 to
$5.00 each. Show birds a matter of correspond-
ence. LAPHAM FARMS, Plnckney, Mlch. \

4| . Eal
BUFF LEGHOHHS—ii'ﬁfhlég 8331.311... ”
-1 J,

W. WEBSTER. Bath, Michigan

 

 

 

RHODE ISLAND BEDS
WM- "w -7...___A.

ISLAND REDS TOMPKINS STRAIN
Itoglﬂggigs. Stock for sale, after September 15th.
Will]. H. FROHM, New Baltimore, Mich R. 1.

HITTAKER’S R. I. REDS, 200 SINGLE
001‘in red puliets at $2.50 to $5.00 each. Also
both Rose and Single Comb cocks and cockerels.
Write for calatog. Interlakes Farm, Box 4,
Lawrence, Mich.

u

 

*—

ORPINGTONS

WHITE. BLACK
irE) ~sesson. '

Box 41.

T GRAB

'Nlerrlll. Mlch.. Route 4,

\

PLYMOUTH ROCK

 

I OKs—Bronze Turkeys—For 20 years
:10le  on» a. Sons, Bx. M, Saltlllo, Ind.’

 

 

TURKEYS

WHITE HOLLAND TURKEYHHOICE PRO-
ductive stock. large and Vigorglus. Wgeauufulbegglb;
- h . r1ce reasons y. e me

bl‘er‘s andAFné. ISTEGENGA, Lyons, Mlch.. R. 1.

PUREBRED BOURBON REDS,‘LARGE, VIGO-
rous. Evans strain. Hens $8, toms 10.
MARY BEAOOM, R. 4. Marlene. Mich.

HIGHEST pmcrs

. V 1- (1 Fresh Eggs. A
Dress‘d eaCme. McNEILL & CO.
325 W. 80. Water St. Chicago, Illinois

 

P A I D F 0 R L I V E
POULTRY, All Kinds,
square deal alWays.

 

POULTRY RAISERS—TIME TO TONE UP
our flocks for winter laying. THOMSTEE EGG
TONIC means this. Healthy, busy hens laying more
eggs.‘ Send dollar bill ‘toda. for this provcn tonic.

 

Receive FREE trial TIN MSTEE MICE DE—
Eiﬁoﬁﬁbc?“85%..‘333Wdﬁﬂm° °°" 55"
IF
YOU _ .
HAVE
Pom/rev
FOR

SALE

IT WILL PAY YOU TO

ADVERTISE IN THE
MICHIGAN BUSDWESS

 

 
  
   
 
  

 

control. * '

.good, a whole lot is better.

 

y,

“to 4,0 _. gallons Of WaterI covered ~2;

hours and then-dried would give a
crop praotciglly free from "smut. This
is one of the methods recommended.
It is simple, cheap and easy. With
cleaned grain it is effective.
Three years ago. the farmers of
Kent county put into practice a. still
simpler method for seed treatment.
This is the concentrated treatment
which had ‘been almost universally
adopted in this state for Oat Smut

Its great simplicity, however,’ led
some farmers to use the treatment
carelessly in 1917 with the conse—
quence that damage to grain result-
ed. The results this year were di—
rections were followed were satis-
factory, nO injury to stand being re-
ported. The directions given this
year are hedged around with caution
in order to impress farmers—not
with the danger of treatment—but
with the necessity of strict adher-
ence to the rules given for treat—
ment. The world seéms too full of
people who always double the dose
that the doctors order, working
on the. principle that if a little is
Both
methods outlined are as strong as is
advisable to use on wheat and safety
lies in strict compliance. ‘

Methods for the Control of Smut

Secure clean grain of good va-
riety. Smutty grain is unsafe seed.

Fan thoroughly to remove all
light, shrivelled grains and smut
balls.

Disinfect the drill with the For-
maldehyde solution.

Avoid infection from Old sacks.

Treat by one of the following
methods and plant at once.

Do not treat more than you can
plant in any one day.

‘ Dilute Formaldehyde Method

Sprinkle the grain until thorough-
ly wet with solution Of 1 pint of
Formaldehyde to 40 gallons of wa—
ter..

Cover with blankets or sacks for
two hours. _

‘Formaldehyde treatments are ne-
cessary for crop protection but they
must be given carefully and with
scrupulous attention to directions.

Allow for swollen condition of the
grain.

Concentrated Formaldehyde Method

The convenience of this method_
is its chief advantage. Only those
who will follow directions carefully
should employ it since considerable
loss resulted .during the .cold. wet
planting season of 1917 through im-
proper handling.

Apply Formaldehyde, f u 1 1
strength, with hand sprayer while
the grain is being shoveled over and
over.‘ Use at the rate of one pint
to 50 bushels, 1-2 pint to 25 bush-
els, 1—5 pint to 10 bushels, etc. The
proper amount of Formaldehyde may
be diluted one or two times with
water to aid distribution. A dose is
a dose—this is as strong as For—
maldehyde can safely be used on
wheat.

Cover or sack the grain four hours
—absolutely no longer. Then spread
to air in a warm, dry place for an
hour or two. It is unsafe to leave
grain covered or sacked over night.
Formaldehyde cannot be thoroughly
aired out of grain. Therefore plant
at once. Treat no more grain than
can be sown on the same day.

I

THINGS TO THINK ABOUT

34th anniversary of the Great
Blizzard—Many remember the Mem-
orial Visitation of the Fluffy Ele-
ments—New Canada, Con., Adver—
tiser.‘

That afternoon the dead woman
visited her home and said she would
come back later.— Philadelphia
Bulfetin. * ' '

At the week’s end, little Willard
Thompson was kicked in the fore-
head by a horse, which was tied
Where the youngster was playing—-
O’Neill, Neb., Frontier.

Mr. and Mrs. Staley Powers, of
Milwaukee, are visiting on the par-
ental roof in this villager-‘Racinen
Wis, Call. / .

“Willie, give some of‘the uses of
the bones". »

“To keep our insides in, and to
protect the brain and other cavi-

ties.”———In an Overton, Nebraska
Scho'olroom. v ‘

Teeth-Cleaning Today— Only——
$1.45. ~litegii-larly $3.00. No del-

ivery. --

union .;_Dental.. Oﬂic'e. 224
8' Wabash A's .

sleaze Tribune. 

I

   

l

  

 

 

 

Feed

Vcs.urss

  
 

CROWD yournoos ._ _

for the

 EARLY MARKET

Keep them healthy-—
Free from worms-—
Their bowels active—-
Fit for thrift.

Conditioner—Worm Expeller

It contains Tombs—That give a hog a
healthy appetite—keeps his digestion good.
Vermifuges—To drive out the worms.
Laxatives—To regulate the bowels.
Diuretics—To help the kidneys throw Off
the poisonous waste material. -
NO clogging of the system under the‘pres-
sure of heavy feeding, where Dr. Hess Stock

Tonic is fed. “*
Little chance for disease—every reason for
thrift! '

Tell your dealer “how many hogs you have.
He has a package to suit.

25-11). Pail, $2.25

Except in the for West? South and Canada.
Honest goods—honest price—why pay more7‘

DR. HESS & CLARK, Ashland, Ohio

STOGK mmc

 

GUARANTEED.
TOO-lb. Drum, $8.00

years in perf -
ing this Tom'c.

GILBERT Hess

M.D.. D.V.S.

    
     
     
   
   
   

 

oiled. A

bearing.

‘ mi:

The shafts run in oil. The double gears run in
oil in a tightly enclosed gear case. Friction and wear
are practically eliminated.

Any windmill which does not have the gears runningin oil is only
half oiled. A modern windmill, like a modern automobile, must have
its gears enclosed and run in oil. Dry gears, exposed to dust, wear rapidly.
Dry bearings and dry gears cause friction and loss of power. The Aermotor
pumps in the lightest breeze ‘because it is correctly designed and well
oiled. To get everlasting windii'iill satisfaction, buy the Aermotor.
Write today
for Circular.

constant stream of Oil ﬂows on every

A year's supp? of
oil is sent wit
every Aer-motor ‘

Des Moines

’ AERMOTOR C0. gincsi‘éacny Minneapolis Oakland

   
 
  
  
   

AUTO-OIL 
A Real Self-Oiling Windmill s 

Oil an Aermotor once a year and it is always
oiled. Every moving part is completely and fully

 

u

¥

KANSAS

CHICAGO, ILL.
OMAHA,

BUFFALO, N. Y.
SO. ST. JOSEPH. M0.
DENVER. COLO. ‘

SIOUX CITY, lA.

NEB.
CITY, MO.

JOHN CLAY &.CI'OMPANY

LIVE STOCK COMMISSION AT TEN MARKETS

50. ST. PAUL. MINN
EL PASO, TEXAS
E. ST. LOUIS. ILL.

 

.1

 

 

 

Fleece Wool Wanted!

Traugott Schmidt & Sons

Are paying the following prices f. o. p. '

' Traugott Schmidt 88 Sons
508 Monroe St, Detroit, Mich.

I

 

—-.

Detroit, Mich.

Cars Detroit

DELAINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 440 who lives 8"-
FINE, CL . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34¢ B|°°m|n9t°m
HALEBLOOD 0 me . . . . . .. 400

'r R E-El H s comsmo 33o Mm". t0
gUARTEBLOOD comsm . . . . .. 37c . Pi
EJEcTIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 300

“‘80.

tell all 0' er sufferers J

Cured Her ’

Rheumatism

d of their to re by a simple way It

. Mrs. Hurst has nothing to sell. Morer mail
you own name and .
sen {go this valuable Information entirer

rite her at once before you fonn.‘

address and she will gladly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

————-
—
—-—-
—-—
.——-
—_
.—
——
u—u-
——
—
-—
—-

 

  
  
  
  

. gnnmlilmﬂl—Lmll-HN““unwl"lililllllllliiilllllllllillllillll||||l||l|lilillilillililiiIlllllllllilli|m|iiiIllliumiliiliiilliilmmilllilﬂlillililiiilllillililllllillli " H
_ MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER» ,
‘ “The Farm Paper of-Serviceﬁ,’ I

LL, your ,..r.R_Ist Anni“ II _.

_—
...._
_—
_—
_.__
——
.—
_..__
—-
—_
_—
..__.
.—
a:

 
  

 
 

..TE

 

    

   
       
    
        
        
         
     
    
    
       
     
            
    
            
       
       
         
        
     
 
        
                  
        
       
      
     
     
            
   
    
  
  
  
   
     
     
 
  
      
  
    
 
 
 
  
   

          
        
         
    
  

 

 
  
  
 
  
    


    

   
 

  
  

r

 


I . - REVIEW

I ' THE industriahoutlook has chang-

ed but little since our last issue.

’ If anything it shows improve-
ment- For the ﬁrst time in a long
time there are actually more jobs
than men to ﬁll them in certain lines.
A few months ago the want columns

.of the” daily newspapers were full of
“situation wanted”

ads. Now the
“help wanted” ads predominate.

Railroad employee are rapidly re-
turning to work under wage agree-
ments with the rail operators, and
in most cases. without the reduction
in wages which was at ﬁrst threat-
ened. With the assistance of the
high freights and a volume of busi—
ness very close to the maximum
ever recorded, the railroads are grad-
ually getting on their feet and their
books begin to show some heavy
balances for distribution to stock-
holders. Railroads having bond is-
sues to dispose of are quite extrav-
agant with their claims of large
earnings, which seem hardly consist-
ent with the hard luck stories they
have been telling the Commerce
Commission and the public“

Stocks and bonds are experienc-
ing the usual fall demand and prices
are generally upward. There is plenty
of money available for investment
and speculation at 4 per cent inter
est in New York and slightly higher
rates westward.

Two weeks ago we expressed our
conviction that there would be no
war between England and Turkey,
and that those who were looking for
increased prices as a result of the
disturbances over there would prob-
ably be disappointed. Recent devel—,
opments seem to substantiate our
belief. , t

The two discouraging factors are
the coal shortage and the low price
of farm products, both of which bid
fair to exert an overshadowing in-
fluence before the winter is far ad-
vanced. It seems quite possible that
we can have a winter of even average
prosperity and employment with coal
prices so high and farm prices so.
low. Gov. Groesbeck has called the
legislature in special session to con-
sider legislation to regulate the
coal supply and keep. prices down.
Now if he will only exert himself, to
regulate the flow of farm products
and keep their prices up we shall all
be very grateful.

WHEAT

The wheat market has shown
quite unexpected strength during
the past fortnight, due, say the mar-
ket dopsters to the war‘clouds across
the water. Personally we don’t be-
lieve that the possibility of war has
had very 'much to do with the chang-
ed trend in wheat, but it sufﬁces as
an excuse for thgse who are in con-
trol of the market and think the
time‘ripe for higher prices. But no
matter what the reason or excuse if
the farmers are to secure any bene-
ﬁt from advancing prices let them
m‘ount. The higher the better. We
still maintain, however, in Case war
does not actually develop, that
prices will react -somewhat from
their present level and rule steady
for a considerable period of time. The
past week has not only seen some
slowing up in the marketing move-
ment, but also some clearing in the
supplies in primary markets, and the
general tone of the market is very
much better than it has been for
some time.

 

Prices
Detroit—No. 2 red, $1.16; No. 2
white and No. 2 mixed, $1.14.
Chicago—No. 2 hard, $1.09%.
Prices one year age—Detroit, No.
2 red, $1.28; No. 2 white and No. 2
mixed, $1.25.

, " CORN
The healthy tone the corn market

enjoyed during the middle of last

 
 

I log two weeks before.

month again prevails in the 'corn

 market after several interuptions by

news from the war zone of Europe.
As a result prices after declining
came back and gained over the open-
Total gains
 Detroit last week aggregated 4

cents. 7 Demand dealers report that

’ 0

TRADE AND MARKET '

 

 

. ,_»MARKETSUnnAnv J -
Wheat steady. 'Corn  oats in demand and ﬁrm. ~Rye and,

\

 insane show no change. "Butter and-eggs in demand}. Poultry
 Demand for dressed'calv'es. Potatoes active. Apples easy.
Cattle range from active to dull and lower. Hogs and sheep show

advance. 4

 

 

(Note: The above summarized lot-mutton was received AFTER the

of themarr

MOI“
ket page was set in type. It contains last minute Information up to within one-hall hour of

_colng to press ﬁEdlter.)

 

 

they have bids from eastern points
but are unable to secure the grain
to make the sales. This would in-
dicate that farmers are not anxious
to unload their corn on the market
at prevailing prices which will go
far in establishing higher prices
if‘ farmers will continue to hold-
By orderly marketing is the only
way .that-farmers can expect to get

anywhere near what their products,

age worth and the sooner they real-
ize it and put it into practicethe
better it will be for them.
Prices

Detroit—No. 2 yellow, 73c; No. 3
yellow, 72c;No. 4 yellow, 70c. _

Chicago—No. 2 yellow, 66 1A, @
67%c; No. 3 yellow, 66% @ 67%c.

Prices one year ago—Detroit, No.
2 yellow, 61%c; No. 3 yellow, 50-
1kc; No. 4 yellow, 47%c.

 

 

OATS

Oats continue to gain in strength
with wheat, advancing to 46 cents on
the Detroit market.- At present
prices oats look like a. good buy.
Supplies are veryclose to demand
and there are reasons for believing
in substantially higher prices before
another crop. ’ '

Prices ~

Detrpit—No. 2 white, 47c; Nb. 3
white, 45%0; No.4 white 42c.

Chicago—No. 2-white, 40 Mac
42%c; No. 2 White, 401/20 @ 42%(3.

 

Prices one year ago—Detroit, 'No.
2 white, 38%c; No. 3 white, 36c;
No. 4 white, 32c. ‘ ' 

 

am
After a spell ofwea'kness the

early part of the last two weeks 'the'

rye market firmed up and prices
turned upward along with those of
other grains. At the close of last
weeks the price at Detroit was 2
cents above that of two weeks ago.
I’D-{reg
Detroit—Cash, No. 2, 77c.
Chicago—Cash, No. 2, '729éc.

Prices one year ago—Detroit, 900. '

 

c

POTATOES

-The potato outlook is very dis-
couraging. Prices have taken a pro-
nounced slump the entire country
over. This has had the eﬂ‘ect of
checking the enormous marketing
movement which followed immedi-
ately in the wake of digging in
the principal potato sections. Only
such farmers as absolutely need the
cash will sell potatoes at prices rul-
ing the past few days. We look for
an abrupt drop in potatoes offerings
which should have
ing the slack out of the market and
encouraging better prices. Within
another fortnight when potato dig-
ging will .be pretty well completed
we shall know .considerable more
about the size and quality of the crop

 

L

THE WEATHER FOR NEXT‘

As forecasth by \V. '1‘. Foster for

W E E K
The VMichigan Business Farmer

. - FOSTER’S WEATHER‘CHART'FOR 047-, ~,.,-,,,,_

 

 

Ill I : .I-ii
L2N6 7 s 9,10%14315

 

l

 

i l I I i = -’ '
1617,1819 20 21‘222324 2526 27 f

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘ [r : Y: ‘ m ‘ . A

are year folr tong]  deCrooyed hnes' above normal Dem mes. "men
r section .nor 0 stitu 4 . between meridianSO and Rockibs —

is for east of meridian 90. north of latitude 47—3. between latitudcscfligshnd2

Rockies crest—4. cast of meridian 90. between latitudes 39 and 47—5. south of latitude 3

£90 and Rockies crest—6. east of meridian 90, south of latitude 39—«7, nath of latitude

(zest-:8. south of latitudel‘ijiit to Mexican line and west of Rockies nest. '

   

_ isthe average of same d
lines mean warmer; below, cooler; that mark;in ('1’:

lion 2 on my section map
between meridian 90 and
. between meridian
it. west of Rocha}

Washington, October 14, 1922,——The m isture will continue ‘to come
from the Caribbean Sea, but it and perciphtation will be in decreased
amounts in America and Canada, particularly immediately north 0!
Boston .and Ozark Mountains and north of the high lands that extend

eastward through Tennessee and North Carolina.

will gradually increase.

Further north rain

September rain shortage, north of the high

lands of Tennessee and North Carolina, is a good lesson on the effects

of high ridges on crop—weather.

In other sections much improvement

favorable to winter grain for pasture, is expected by the end of Oc-

tober.

But I am not now publicly advising about crops for 1923.
I reply to all inquiries from subscribers of this paper.
Foster’s Weather Bureau, care of Michigan Business Farmer.

But
Always address
My

public advices about selling grain and cotton have been good; . Severe
storms are expected to cross continent. October 14 to 18, and during
that period an increase of moisture. '

Forecast for Michigan:

Temperatures below on 14, above on 18,-

normal on 20; average warmer than usual; more rain than average

of past month.

The word electricity, when used aIOne, includes magnitism; they con?

stitute a pair that can never be separated.
passes from the sun to each of the \planets. 4
in motion, does net carry Other matter, when. static, or not moving,

Electricity, in all cases,
The electricity is matter

is the same kind of platter but iscalled the ‘ele¢,trosphere_;and is com-
posed of elecrons, the same as electricity, which is electrons in motion. ‘
In all cases in which electricitycomes from the sun, magnitism, a ﬁner

grade of matter thanelectricity, passes, in a spiral, around the electric
That magnetic spiral carrlen line grade of m’at-
The electriccurrent from sun to Earth

current to the sun.
ter——sun food-.— to the sun.

enters at our magnetic nerth pole, spiral around that incoming'electrlc

current the. carries matter from
of all the planets. ‘ .

.m—i
#,

 

the Earth to Jan. The some “true

‘ and prospects for better 2"

‘ potatoes. "

the eﬂect of tak-z

. ﬁrst four

. unevenly

 

   
   

 

3%

at [the present stage of the" ,_

no one but the daring, "

tor would gamble on the int
Detroit—$1.30 per cm. ,'  ’“
Chicago—960 per cwt.?"  '
New York—41.00 pét;t‘cwtk""

“C95 0116 year ago—Detroitmggﬁa
; Der cwt. > r , . p-‘L  I

 

K BEARS -*
The trend of the bean market the

dicates that the farmers are using 
their heads this year and markets”?
I ing their product slowly. As 

before it is most unusual for a  ’

ket to advance as the bean market;
has. during the very height of, th‘e’,
normal marketing season. . This.
should be/ highly encouraging- tti.

bean growers, as it indicates still‘ '

better prices as the season advances,
Detroit—C. H. P., $5.50 per- cwt.‘

Prices one year ago-'—DetrOit,_ 0. ~ I

H. P., $4.45 per cwt. ‘ r

HAY . ' ,,

Market in general are Showings
ﬂrmer_' tone. Receiptm have been
not large during the past couple of
week and owing to shortage of cars

 

at leading points they are expected

to be still smaller this week. Good

hay is in steady demand and a short- '

age in the supplies of this grade id
causing a. cleanup of the poor grades
which have accumulated on many
of the larger markets. ‘
Prices
Detroit-8tandard

’ 1.»: .31..

  

e

tilinothy‘alisllﬂ,

light clover, $15.50 a $16; No

,3“??? .

clover, $14 @.$14.56 per ton.

Chicago—No. 2 Timothy. $261267. 5 I 

$21; No. 1 clover, ‘ $14
ton. \ , ‘ ~
Prices one year ago—,—Stanardd'

@, 81‘s 

timothy, and No. 1 light clover m!!! j j -‘

ed, $19 @ 320;..No. 1 clover, 814
@ $15 perton. -. v , _

 

CHICAGO LIVE  ’

Liberal daily runs of cattle met; a"

set of uneven and weak to lower mar-
ket last week at Chicago. Best long-
fed steers and yearlings enjbyed
good action most days and top cat-
tle advanced 25@45c during the
days.

declined almost daily, . and, with
.Thursday's sharp break, values stood
50c@$1.5.0 below

Medium grades, ,
.which comprised the bulk of receipts,

week’s close. ‘Extreme declines were 

noticed on pretty good steers and
yearlings ,the latter particularly be-
ing hit hard, and some of the $10.50

yearlings late looked. like $11.50 or:

higher yeaﬂings week before.
Receipts of‘ cattle to: the” week at
Chicago total 76,600, or around
1,400 more than arrivedweek before
last and largest for any week since
the third week in January, 1921,
when 77,601 cattle weremarketed.
Recent warm weather tended- to

slacken demand for dressed beef, and '

with an accumulation of medium._
grade beef .on hand, prices broke
after mid—week and suifered “sharp
declines. Weak to lower dressed
markets were evident locally, as

a- ,3

last , '

Well as in eastern centers- Orders 

were mostly for ﬁnished steers, .and
on late sessions not many orders for
anything were present.' ,

An oversupply of light‘and light
butchers resulted in 8. 25¢ lower‘top

price last'week, with best at $10.45, ‘

being $1.75. above a,year ago, $5.80
below two years -ago and within
$1.70 for the eleven-year average.

‘ Indifferent ‘nutside demand serv-
ed as an outstanding weakening race.
or on the local trade, with the weeka
total shipments

two years. Shipments at 13,301)

show a decrease of 4,900,118. 9911- 
. pared with a year ago and 7,500; as“
' Compared with

corresponding .

two, years ago.

Daily top prices last‘week.5in -

- 11. 3.x

being' smallest in. Y

1108 market ﬂuctuated within 9. 55¢;  ‘

extreme close

to .-m,-46—,ini_t:ia1.sex-
’ j   ,d?

“Timid.” ranging item» 39.90 at m, ~..: 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
  

  

 
  
 
  
     
         
   
   
 
 
 
        

 
  
           
 

      


  
 
 
  
   
   

  
 
 
 
   

 J   average cost
‘ W to 38.75. Rs liberal supply
   after: V mid-week

  

 
 
  

h  but served to up—

at “.05, as against $931.6 pre-
 .  largest week's otter-
:  . ' months ansWered a
54  indiferent demand,
 e sharp price reactions,
  and 30c decimal??-
"  m. Total V at ,-

l: lid stall olh‘ 1,800 larger than a
 ,...iiii.MIbowanincreaseot
 I — ~ 10" ee'uieenperedwith a‘yeer ago,

  
  

  

 
  
     

’-  12,800 above the eleven-year
I "  7- “average.  - I
" 5., l ' ' ,  in , last week's sheep

 

, mar, ' totaling, about 05,200 bead

- a values sharply. iorcing tat

‘ the lowest level’in

' ' over two weeks, while-feeders slump-
ed.  We to 31-". Although
receipts were larger than trade re-
quirements at the present high

' price level. they show. enormous de-
‘ term conquering with correspond-

 : ing periods in recent years,_ being

“i ' among the smallest on record for this

. season of the year. ‘

' The improved. aged and yearling
sheep quality upheld prices in face
of several sharp lower sessiOns, to

- both packers and country buyers.

‘ The latter‘were large interests of the
trade during the ﬂare part of the
weﬁ,_,sec'aring several laggs doi
fwd'y lings at-26 c is—
bnzuneglected practically all

if v ‘ ’clssses after midweek- Native and

' run, states contributed more lib-

erally to the sheep trade throughout

3* " . " , aged wetbers sold within a
i 1‘ unsceeos'm, with country”
. ,  a of

    
    
  
   

  

feedersa't season», wins nap-v

ward tenaoo for best yearlings.
Range y'earlings carrying desirable
 moved at 31050011950,
with l'nide prices taking best, at the
close. Native ewes cashed dovmward
 from $6.16 for local slaughter, with
’ ' - 2 and 3 year old breeding stock sell—

ing“ at 80.006830. Fancy yearling
~ breeding ewes breaght $11.50 intial

 

 em m LOOK
Bangor, Ia, Oct. “uh-JEN. P0-
sltustien in Aroostook county as

.v will about one—half
inmosahttlebetterthan one-
et last season’s crop: yet when.
realises that last years crop was
' as a. crop and shall com-
?  with a normal crop it would
 . show that with an estimate of one-

i
s
l
i
E

  

, in gutting their tubers out or the soil
and.  The climatic con-
ditlm have been excellent during
 'two months and with the
 season here the conditions

could not be any better meant the»

present time. ‘ Men are housing
their crop freely and there is no
congestion in the storehouse. 0n

“matron ﬁlteucarsare

 out of the state and the

~ am " “W “‘tl‘www‘ﬁk

 ’da ago e» _‘.&g

‘  {'arrel and as time goes

‘ " arcinhopesteharveatair
what they  to offer. aft

iambic):  that e.

-  darkest days have been past they

' "t. . 'think,‘and a ste'adynartet at stair-
 . ly good-price“ h‘maintained-

.g  MARKET“
,   pmnﬂs in the. but-

). x

 week.

    
 
   
  
   
   
 
  
   
 
    
 

‘I

  
  
  
 
  

'vH

        
  
  

 
  

 
 
 

.    sce‘erhlb.“
" evadithe Lowest '
~35 40c; refrigerator
 as, m  
'gi’the'iener’al-‘average cost, which »

week’s top and average .

v. “Minuet
’AP

althohgh . Ass

.mn_-

'  10th.
creamery, in tube.

EGGSe—Fresh'; current receipts.
32 ' 35c; fresh candled and graded,

firsts, 261,5
-@283§c per dozen.
CABBAGka grown, 50 @
75c per bushel. ' '
Popcorn—4% @ 5c; Little Buster,
7% 08‘s per lb.
“omens—ti.” @ 2 per sack of
.\ ‘ .
1‘0

1201“:
coarse. 6310c per lb.

LIVE POULTRY—Best springs,
83.3312:  18@19c; large
m hens, 35c; medium hens, 22@

33c; small hens, ITOISc: old rooSt- ,.

era-153‘; geese, 1601?; large, ducks,
23 42c: mall ducks, 1892“;
1; eye, 25c per b. _

, 3203‘5c par
and $8.50 83 per bu.

HAW—Utah, $2@2.25 per
bi; New York, 81.50031.” per bu.
FEARS—Bartlet“. $2.25 @8216
per ha. I
d QELERYHMichigan, 20t@30c per
oz.
HONEY—Comb, 2962“ per lb.

 

MOP REPORT ‘ .

The semi-monthly crop notes is-
sued October 4th by John A. Doelle,

Commissioner of Agriculture and ‘

Verne H. Church, Agricultural Sta-
tistician, U. S. Bureau of Agricult-

ural Economics, states that the lat- ‘
ter half. of September was generally .

favorable for harvesting crops and
the {all seeding of grain.

The greater ‘part of the corn crop
has been cut and most of the silos
have been ﬁlled. Very little dam—
age has been done by irost, except
in a few northeastern counties. and
the crop is generally good-‘ The
yield'was shortened somewhat on the
lighter soils by dry'weather in Aug
est. ‘

There has been a tendency in some
sections to decrease the acreage ‘of
wheat and rye seeded this tall, ow-
ing to unsatisfactory prices for
these grains. lilowever, the greater
part of the large bean acreage has
been or will be sown to these crops.
The greater part of the seeding has
been completed and many fields are
showing above ground.

Much damage has been caused by
rains during the harvest season in
the saginaw valley, reducing the
yield and lowering the quality. Else-
where the damage has been only 10-
cal and the crop was secured in good
condition. Yields vary widely but
will average slightly below normal.

Digging of the late crop of pota-
toes has commenced. Yields are less
than expected in many sections. The‘
tubers are of good size but the set
was lessened by dry weather at the
critical time. There has been some
frost damage, blight and rot in
northeastern counties. In other sec-
tions the quality is mostly good.

 

PEOVES VALUE OF PURE-BRED
SIRE IN Glam HERBS
(Continued from page 8) A
sey Breeders Association Fair. At
this time'the individuals shown are
classiﬁed according to‘age and plac-
ed by. an expert judge, who like-
wisegiveshisreasonstortheplao—
lngs. By this measure the members
of the association are constantly up
to date and guided in the selection

of their breeding stock. ,

Special cilort is now being made
and fortunately the plans are nearly
completed whereby each of the mem-
bers is going to be the proud own-
erot at least one pure-bred Guern-
sey instead of all high-grades.

Furthermore. the organisation or
a cow testing association is likewise
nearly completed so that production
records of each individual maybe
made. ‘

Uniortnnately the only Sixty-
third Sixty-tonrthblood born to date

. proved=to be a male-

AI_,-constant improvement in the
cattle is shown by the succeeding
generations, and as a result or the
enortaof Hie Leer Guernsey Breeders
_ ‘ociation there are‘ now approxi-
mately twelve hundred grade Gum-a

dlstribnted throagheathupena

ow, 810$ .50 per bu. __

 

   
 

 

l1!

 
  

costs a little more.

I. longer.
And the price?

‘ 1 prisingl y small.
l

trademark.

 Costs More  but Worth a Lot 2:}
 . More than the Difference 
:35; » Why beat about the-bush?

Weunnt buyers to know that our ,réoﬁns '

more because we put materials and workman-

We want them to know also that it costs- ll
, I,
. . . l
Ship into it that make it stronger and last

sur-

Well, when you compare MULE—HIDE
goods and prices with other goods and prices,
you'll ﬁnd that the difference in cost is

Get MULE—HIDE. Satisfaction for you

’2 is wrapped up.“ in every roll and bundle of .
rooﬁng and shingles bearing the famous old v

THE LEHON COMPANY

MANUFACTURHS
44thto45thSLon Oakley Ave. ::

.3 V , “NOT A KICK IN A MILLION. FEET” l

mum-Hm?

'chr A KICK ”
INA HILL/ONFEET‘ ,
ROOFING

SHINGLES

 

 

 

 

CHICAGO, lLL 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

following week.

 

BUSINESS FARMERS’ EXCHANGE

 A WORD FEB ISSUE—Cash should accompany all orders.-
’ as one word each initial and each group of ﬁgures. both in body of ad

and In address: Copy must be in our hands before Batu-d. f ,- 1
The Business Farmer Adv. y o .u‘o dated

Count

Dept“ Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

CORD-WOOD SAW FRAMES

IANDRELS
ry etc. cl

 

- Bun “W Emil. BLADES.
beltjm. Dollies. neg-working n1
ev daemons. w non. ram
083m free. Write 8E0. lg
AGE. D Fayette. Indiana

wISCILLANEOLJﬂ

UEN EﬂAL

t shipments.
ETTS( IHUR—

 

 

usual. LOTI SLIGHTLY DAMAGE?
crockery. hi ' ware inc-are. Illum-
nnmware. etc. Shipped direct from factory to
consumer. Write for partlculnl‘l. E SWASE'Y
& 00.. 'I’ortland. Mama' .

 

LET us van voun mos—cow duo
Hersshidu iminreoats snd Robes. w and
.hidss been

 

Vii-ZN WITH TEAMS on A0
Steer Earns. or Sole Inatber. Oat- w'h M1 S M ‘ . T08 WANTED
abs on . We repair and memorial worn for “ {ram-I 90- Products in aunt tan .
inn: is ﬁnished. TH]! cnossr ms- 19‘ . "3 address SAGINAW mm
IAN mm (‘o ,hl'int'hester. N. Y. V ' 00' Sm“ Wh-
. WANTED—MARRIED “A” WIT
“mn's NEW INTERNATIONAL DIO- n m
ﬂonary. Merrien~Wobster Only Webster's fully un- gigffmn‘mzwork °n hf“- E- JONES. Gil-tor. '

bfld duUle to win $500 prize. Greatest crim-
. ‘6 factor for the home. Basin-am hinting
$18.00 Mid. Money order PETERS‘ 800
WWW. Peters'hlru, Mich. .

WANTED—T0 GET IN OORR'ESPONDENOOE 

with art amped! 1!:
Illinois,  Indiana. Michigan. Write or
telegraph FRANK R ‘R-A Mnmn. Mich.

 

500 “18% ION—8K") TIRES. OUR agree- |
Lane. Guaranteed Free.

Bea 6.85.
Cash with ads: SLAB! KUBBEB 00..
Michigan. .

ALL usu. women. sove. arms 11 to co,
Government Positions, $117 to

- to use“
190. traveling or stationary. Write MR. 0
'l', 855 ‘Lonh. W.

 

 

SAL [—1 200 E00 (BRIDE!
$1820. morn;
l.

hater '1
Tnv FARM. rennin,“

W: “swarms:  in,le
“ u . n ' I . D a .
mite JOBS. Ilsa ‘ .

INCU-
POUL-

 

 

‘ Lake, Mich.
not! ALL KIND unease. ME
dab, Rat Pups on
mval P ‘ SLATER. ' .onee.

 

  

  

l

l

 

imam. :

 

m SALE—KIRSTLN HORSE POW
stump 1’. half price. Turning l the I ER
tools. Each mt; HUDGINS, mien uﬁlﬁfc‘ﬁ'

 

"IDES TANHED OR EXCHANGED LEATH-
er sold direct to f
G ﬁne. Mi lairmen. COCHRAN TANNING.

HELP WANTED MALE

 

EARN $110 To 50 -
penises paid. as Bail “narrow: 
or men refund
write (gr! ee Boo
Bl SI. 8 TRAINING INST, lluﬂalo. N. Y.

SALESMAHRE VOU LOOKING
product to sell to farmers? Every fameﬁoseed‘s
our product. It hits a large re at business. No

investment r uired.
x'MlTH (L?0..eqPortlan§,O £311.19 om to make' v'

 

 

 

MARRIED MAI
mouth or would rent equipped

AUGUST ZIENENT. listen

1
Hands. Kick.

 

 

 ruins "Inner

‘ We are In the Met ‘
l either medium or M Ragga":

We feel sun
mm Debs.

SIOUX om m 00.
‘ Millington, mg...

 

 

 





you'have poultry for sale
put an ad in

The MICHIGAN .
' BUSINESS FARMER 

 
  
 

     
    
    
 
  

3 W‘ W .
m ‘.

WRIT! Potl‘I'IOI IV l
'Addr-

 
 

  


     
  
   

  
 
 

    

 Heather Brown , -

Polo Cloth \ 
Co'at ~

for Misses

Coney Fur Shawl
Collar ‘

  
 
 
   

 
 
   
  

rManchurian
Wolf
Fur
Scarf '

‘ Order on
‘Approval

 
  
 
  

    
   
 
 
 

"*«Amerlca “f :5; 

Don’t send one‘oent. Just let

ou an; of these smashed price bargains. Mere

tate lze and Write Your Name and Address ii
Plainiy to Avoid Delay. Pa nothing till goods or-
rive—then only the.amaz no he aln price and
postage. Money cheerfuin refunds if you with.

 
   
      

  
  
   

      

See what Immense savings you will make on every-
thing that you order from this pa e. Posltivel the
most sensat onal price smashing o ers in all mer-
lca—-quaiity considered. No reason to hesitate. Se-
lect whal articles you want and we will send them
all to you on approval. You take absolutely no
risk. Money back instantly if not satisﬁed.

    
  
   
     
   

ter or postcard bring

     
 
 
  
 
 
   
  

  
 
 
   
  
 
   
  
 

 

Walt—just
wait i: i ii

      

     
 
  
  
    
  
 
    
     

  

  
 
 
    
  
     
   
   

   
  

    
   
   

 
   
 
 

    
 
    
    
     
    
   
     
 
  
    
    
   
    
  
       
     
     
      

 
 
  
  

      
   
  
       
    
  
   
  
  

    

    

- F ii d a . . . 
a1 1
at C0 are you. c... Exquisdely
' 8e? da'llld to t 0 ’
sp en 1 warm x < . » '
Pressed ure. .01 its: rich. EmbrOHlered .5,
geatber brolwn €8.10] 3
.. -' 0 y——— e o .
V l C There isn’t a Woman any Wonderful ,warmth G b d y t
e our oat where that doesn’t want of its . large deep a at lne
- and need a handsome fur Coney I fur shawl
 A scarf. And Sharood. offers. an collar. We positive-
unusual value at; a price Wit}? 1y guarantee that—~ '
_ in the reach of everyone. This quahty for quality 
Now  scarf is about 46 inches long and 12 inches Wide. . -—-—there is not‘ the ,
It is stylish as. well as warm. . - equal of thi s garment ‘
The lining is good quality satin, and. there is under $12.00 a. ywhere ‘
an extra riiching laid around the neck inside. 80 else ‘11 the countig. Note
as to grotect the fur from .wearing. Only the most the snappy A, lines—the Always
expenswe fur scarfs have the features which we self—material belt, the I
oferl you sit' thisﬁbzggali‘n prsicéeémgiéderobéackbMan'; side pattfch Iliiorilsretts and mention
0 ur an wo sca o. . r er row, Wmu _ poc e e31 es. .
by No. $655194. ySendl nlo li’leOllety. tIlii‘gayd only. Masses sizes, 14: to 20 a": When - ‘
v‘r--. an pos age on arr va . no sa s a you on . I z > ti
money will be refunded. Be sure to state color OrderNo.98E5651. Send or e n“
’ wanted. 23d mongiy. Pay , $9.9?
Sharood again proves 9°” 39° 0“ 3"" Va -
y {35. Claim Am .iInv’vest . . State size. i“
rices in nierica’ in "
presenting this beaut- F F . ‘-
ifult Dressed velolur  e ‘ ‘ . (1 Men,  ‘
ooa. . left) 8 SG  
coutizd yctiu tﬂhiid such :3.   Tm d l. htf l d l
coll a. is price - ~ , S 818 u mo e
tollﬁsm‘mtl‘zi m3; COA l  Underwear insulates" 39° .12; '
pressed 17010111: witlfi . '3  ‘ ' egai‘ion. t{at is ofbbegut-
generous co ‘m‘ 0 ~ 3 ‘ in CO on ga ar ine
real brown Coney fur.   Ill \ ‘ in navy blue or ”
All-around belt of , 9'. i C brown. The vestee,
self material and but— on] fl ' smart bell sleeves
flog ttl‘lélblllifllg. Sizes y H i r aild fashionable pan-
, ‘ , _ .- B ' -
li‘or gromeii 0§4l¥égzeg. $    They are the best bargains groideﬁﬁaﬁl. n’i‘llllg 219111“ I . .
giggi- nigo.m3ree25133.   You’ll find at uni/thin near grggggﬁll been btles ;
on! $5 98 and" osaty _ 3' “11.9 85916 pnce' ea-vy Sizes .- ato ad"
a 8’ '8'“ I p ‘ l weight ilat knit union suits Order N b 4-
9 0" Va' of selecili 103g ﬁbre cotton 965552.?” 0". d'go';
- in popu ar aeger or grey '
a?" slmllllal' Style V59?“ A sensational bargain .- :Random color. Heavily  sbeynd'h- 935' ,
lug: b°° All" £32576: —a handsome _coat of brushed fleece lining on °y_ [say $2 308 mend- .4
gensd V 0- P - Pressed Velour in Navy ~ inside. Wrists. and ankles postage on in." '3"
GIVE $4 98 n: d mom?“ 35' ‘ Blue or Brown. Regu- , r are elastic knit. Sizes, ’32 3-
YOUR arrival n p05 3.98 °" lnr $7 value. Has col- to 46 chest. Buy a ear’s
SIZE ' lill‘ of genuine Kit supply » right now— oday.
Coney, which buttons Jaeger color No. 9801279.
snugly around throat. Grey Random No. 96c-
Beit all around, two 1280. Send no money. Pay
{wreltly ttopockets baand 9'9 git: plostage on arriv-
' n . a . s ze. '
:33... ‘i n? 1’? mail. goits' frfiat Kr”: utrtiion 3"“ with"
Order 8 . u s o no qua y co on.
Men’s and 96E5595.mvgrdery Navoy ﬁlms 9301 35; 8.P(}rder19bv an”

, ~_ b No. 98E5596. s d (L - r08 0- >
Boys H1 "3:, money_ pay $3?38 Pay 19c and postage on Work Slioe “,
Ollt Storm and) gostagei Olrl arrl'vall. arrlval-

r er s m er s y 9
Boots with handsome plush Be ,
. Double .0 a k collar, sizes 2 o 5””? ‘0 M
soles, sewed a No 98E 581.  s V

 

and nailed, bel- State Size
1 o w s tongue.
Roomy In s t .
Order Big Boys'
sizes 1 to 5.
gy No. 96A570.

.r l $2.49

      
 

Price either color.
$2.98. Send bargal n
and postage. Send no
money with order.

Cotton
Flannel

Shirts
890

Just the
shirt that

Price $1.98.
State size.

   
 
  
  
 
    
 
 
   
  

   
 

Splendid b to W n-
leather work shoes.

large num- Heavy durable up-
bers.‘ and of- pers; extra strong
fered at ab- solid oak leather

soles; leather m- .

33%;? p.313: soles; low broad leather” heels and reinforced
in America! leather back stay. Roomy last. lzes 6 to 12.
Khaki. or Order by No. 98A158. Send no money. Pay $1.98
age on arrival. Order boys’ sizes 1 to 5V:

Immel. one by No. 98A554. Price $1.89. Order little boys'
pocket faced sizes 9 to 131/ b No. senses. Price $1.19 and
sleeves: rein— Postage on an- va. Mention size. » ‘

 

10 Yards Fancy  
S Outing Flannel —'
ame style . ' . I
. i . . Ideal weight for nightgowns and. undergarments. n
 Shillmlmnxl. fziiicv stripes, » checks and .. Laids, white grounds
~ h’iwut’ for With pink, blue or tan deSigns. 26-inch Width.
1 . men Size's ’6 to State pattern and color. Order by No. 98E8425 forced oke
12. . Widd Widtm Send no money. Pay $1.49 for 10 yards and double Bitch: ’ .

Order by No. 9611769. Send no money. Pay $2.98 pas‘age 0" arrlval' ' ’ d 8 ea m'ﬁ Women 3 Kld
and postage on arrival. State size. . '

e
‘ , throughout.
   Yards 36-“l’crrcale af  the very best “kind of wear. Order a v)llltllr’s 531:1; comfort Shoe

   
      
  

               
       
    

     

while gulcian girth thgmoatd this bargglir; grief“. iszgs
Ve choice sitterns in fast colors.‘ In white . . ' nee an. r or are 3 r y o. -
Men’s pure gum hip are]; L‘alcuttap and Indigo blue with neat stripes: 32 5. Order khaki color shirt Y "0- 9832476. $ 8
—
. o

    

. . . , ﬁgures 01. dots. State color and pattern Order Send no money. Pay 890 and postage for either
{23% Oﬂ’r‘fﬁgied 113‘}; iy No. 96F8408. Send no money. Pay $1.49 color on arrival-

and heel; guarante'e‘] for 10 yards and postage on arrival. v - 1.

{lhrgt &u§lit%bst.Mlalbci)egf ‘ - ‘ ' - 59 Rare Value in Strap Pump
Usually sells at $5. Be  _Yarcls 36-in. Challiee  _ Patent Leather or ,

angel to orderyflur pair _ Mahbgany Calf— \-\
W ‘e “1‘” great mvmg Persian and floral patterns. Predominating colors Finished Leetlier

olfer lasts. Sizes 7 to
, 12. Wide widths No “’wvyﬁy Dillilf’ red' tan' green or blue groundﬁ

‘Order 96F3404. Pay $1.69 and postage
an” s‘zes' 0M" for 10 yards on arrival. State color. $ 
y "0. 97A949. -

   

Soft, kid-ﬁnished shoes.
the best kind for se-
vere weather” Warmly
lined With thick cream
fleece. Roomy shape.

  
 
         
       
  
 

Iﬁend $2079 money. '

a ‘ . .

pogtase on arigivnal‘l  Yards Unbleached Milslin 
State size.

Unbleached muslin of excellent wearing (ﬁnality;

unmnaled for domestic uses. 36-111. Widt . Order

medllum weight by No. 96F3630. Send no money.
_

wide widths.

Order by No.
96A396. Send
no money. Pay
$1 .98 and

     

Pay 890 and postage for 10 yards on arrival. 8”“ size.

 

Sizes 2% to 8

Yer Bleached V Wide widths

1 as k Fl 1  In black patent leather—a stunning one-strap.

aiVE ‘ She er anne — Ugldil with iifnitattign legield tip and bigedallion,

An extraordinary price for fine quality Shaker e 80 "By per 0"“ e ' 3 .me “m1 m er heal-

S'ZE Flannel. Ideal for children’s winter undergarments. 1%me £18“? 'ﬁghegeb 7go'8996372' 31'98' 0rd”

. Order by No. 96F3636. Send no money. Pay $1 989 “yd y“ ' o l'l " n° m°"°’-, P"
$1.39 and postage for 10 yards on arrival. - ' ‘ 1 9° “9° " "l. “'

 ~tissues?“$323212? S H A R O O D  O ' Dept.» MINNEAPOLIS; 4  ‘
 . tliiaPazeDirectto  '  _. , '  . 96.2 \

.V...~ w;

     

          
     
  
 

    

 

    
    
 

 

