
 

 

 

 

 

An Independent
Farm Magazine Owned and
‘ dited 111 Michigan

 

 

MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 6,1923

$1 PER YEAR

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Fit to Grace the Eqﬁipage of a King! ”

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Whatever else may fail

Linking city, village and farm, crossing mountain and
wilderness, the telephone system challenges Nature in
her strongholds and battles her ﬁercest moods.

Out on his lonely "beat" the telephone trouble-hunter
braves the blizzard on snow-shoes, body bent against
the wind, but eyes intent upon the wires.

North, south, east, west—in winter and summer, in
forest and desert—the telephone workers guard the
highWays of communication. Traveling afoot where
there are no roads, crawling sometimes on hands and
lmees, riding on burros, or motorcycles, or trucks, they
"get there” as they can.

When Nature rages to that point where few things can
stand against her, when property is destroyed and towns
cut oil, the telephone 13 needed more than ever. No
cost is too much, no sacriﬁce too great, to keep the wires
Open. If telephone poles come down with the storm, no
matter how distant they may be, no matter how difﬁcult
to reach, somehow a way is found, somehow -- in

blizzard, hurricane, or ﬂood -— the service is restored.

Whatever else may fail, the telephone service ~must.
not fail, if human eﬁ‘ort can prevent it. This is the
spirit of the Bell System.

W

W AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY

AND ASSOCIATED CQMPANIES
One Policy, One System, Universal Service, and all directed

toward Better Service

_‘_..—1—
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(To Rural Route Subscribers Only)

DETROIT TIMES

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BUSINESS FARMER
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Famousmma‘

new law has just received;
I 111' .

 

STATE TAx LEVY 6m ‘11 1111111101!
REDUCTION of 32, 000, 000. or

‘ . more in the state tax levy next
year is forecast in the closely
trimmed budget fer the coining bien-

nial period, which the budget com».

mittee of the State Administrative
Board was completing today.
Although no ofﬁcial announcement
regarding the budget had been made,
it was believed that the total fofTho
ﬁscal year or 1923- 24 would be ap-
proximately ¥2,000,000 less than the
state tax levy of more than $17,000,-
000 this year. Further reductions,
in the recommendations of the bud-
get committee, may be ordered by
the State Administrative Board be-
fore the budget is ﬁnally presented
to the Legislature next_ week.
A $30, 000 ,000 Budget

It is understood that the budget“

total which will represent ‘the' race
ommended appropriations for insti-
tutions and departments—With the
exception of the State Highway De-
partment which members of the bud-
get committee hope to ﬁnance from
sources aside from the general tit——
will be in the neighborhood of 830, -
000, 000 for the coming two years.

If that sum should represent the
total appropriations made by the in-
coming Legislaturo for which state
taxes would be levied during the
next two years it Would represent a,
saving of more than $7, 000, 000, as
the state tax in 1981 was more than
$20, 000, 000 and in 1922 more than
$17, 000, 000.

Two years ago the Legislature
was presented with requests total-
ing nearly $70,000,000, and the Leg-
islature slloWed but half the amount
requested. The budget, as it will
be presented to the Administrative
Board, represents only the tax clause
appropriations. In addition the cor-
poration tax brings in Moth-lug like
$6, 000, 600 a year, which gnu into
the general fund. It is reported that
Gov. Groesbeck will urge the Lexis-N
tutors to remove the limit of $10, —
000 provided in the ”Corporation Tax
Law and it the Legislature makes
the change the revenue from that
source will be considerably increased.
Whatever amount it is increased will
probably mean a corresponding cut
in the state tax.

Closing General Fund

The needs of the highway depart-
ment are understood to constitute
the principal Worry of members of
the budget committee. The depart-
ment, it is said, would dike a lots]
of about $8, 000, 000 or more-a year
for maintenance and the creation of
a sinking fund for hiskway bonds.
It will get $3,500,900 or $4,000,000
in 1923, from the automobile license
tees. In addition, if its requests
were to be met, it would take $4,
000,000 or $5,000,000 from the gen-

eral fund. That this amnout. will

not be taken from the general fund,
however, seems ‘to be the prevailing
opinion among members of the com-
mittees. A majority of them holistic
the legislature will enact a. gasoline
tax or boost the automobile license
fees suﬂiciently to provide the need-
ed money to take care of the high-
way department.

The prospective $2, 000,600 reduc-
tion in the state tax levy is based
on the state tax as it now stands.
The reduction may be much granitic?
——Irom other causes taken me buc-
get—before the Legislature con-
eludes its deliberations. It Will have

. tentatively More 112- s summon

from a special tax comm um
it abolish, {1r nearlyd 3111911113, E:
state proporytax, an on or

state with the 1199ch tax money
now being paid into the primary

' ', school fundwabout $12, 0011 cos a

Year-wand the corporation taxa—
about $6, 0,00 000 a year.

‘ in getting the electric cam
- of the state to supply them with
t and W

The ﬁrst of a number oI farm electric
03563? 3

males oars run

nude a remark:

113% r at 0 reasonable rate, .
have undertaken to do it themselves. >

0
no: 111 any de-

scribed area "the: county board

obliged to order. an election at which

is iiibiiilttiii iii; question or whatnot- - . ‘
.. the district shall bond itself to build "
'11 "inﬂiction

sud distribdﬂngj;_,
system. it a majority votes to the
unmade all that is necessary I!“ to .‘
invoke the powers of the am to
get the current.

CENT MILK

HANKS to the Milk Cddparaﬁvb

Marketing Company the people

of Chicago are saving thousands

01 dollars monthly on their milk bill.

The Cooperativemas broken the gr}
of a. consciousless milk trust, whi

was recently found to be dumping. ,

good milk into the sewer in order to
keep up the price by offering tile.
storeksepers in the great city any

quantity of milk to sell to thei edi-

sumers provided the price is koj’t
doWn to the cooperative levelrWhieil
is two cents a quart less than the
combine’s prices. Nearly 200 git}
cery and delicatessen stores have
taken advantage of the offer of the
Milk Co'operative and arernow selling
pure, rich milk for ten cents a quart

EIGHTH WEEK OF EGG LAYING

CONTEST

HE week of December 26': cos-

T cluded the second fourth weekly
period The standing of t
pens for this period were as follow:

Evergreen Poultry Farm, W. _.
170; W. H. B. Kent, B. R., 153;
J. A. Hanson. W. L., 149; Rolli.
Christophel, B. R., 147; H. unen—
ntson, B. R., 146;, Carterloa Farms,
W. W., 143; F. W. Sinks, W. W
139; L.W. Alstine, B. R.,
Brummer’s Poultry Farm,

136; Hot 90d Poultry Farm, . ,.
I... 181; A. Keister, W. W. 1 i,

, him. Show, W. L., 130.

Is EV Wyandottes have
good record for
the month the higk pen or the coil-
toct is still in the Leghorn class wr‘o‘n
J. A. Hanson’ s‘ Legkm'ns ﬁnished
with - Weeks total of 43 eggs; 3 eggs
belﬁsrgre’en bringing their total
up to e of 303 eggs. Shaw's pan
ot Lsgkorn s have dropped to second
place with total production or 29,6
eggs. In the Leghorn class Holly—
Wood’ a pen remains in third place,
Taonrs psri fourth.

Dennison’ s Barred Rocks still lead
this group with 279 eggs which also
puts him fourth place for the entire ‘
contest. Kent 8 pen with a produc-
tion‘ of 269 moves up to second place

' and holds sixth place in the contest.

Brummcr’ :1 Poultry Farm dropped to
third and Christophel remﬂns in
fourth With 257 eggs.

The “(rational good record main-

...14 by the Evergreen POultry
Farm has put this pen in the load in
the Wyandotte section. The produc-
tion of the An-cona class increased
very slightly but the birds in this
section are showing considerable im-
provement and we are expecting to
see an. Moose hers bolero vary long.

Dunning! Reds maintain their
position at the head of the Red sec-
tied and Mrs. Travis' pen beat the

' College Reds to second place when

they scored 25 eggs for the week
and a total to date oi! 177.

The Wyandotto section is loading
the Contest With 9. (50% production.
The Bari-ed Rocks snow 4% increase
over um Week. The” Access: 5 5113111
1W, am and mom
mwat cwwmmmu-
censuses: cm are holding their

ll B. Heston, director of the dairy
marketing department 01 the Amiga...

icon Farm Bureau Federation,
Bounced recently » 0111117131 "
' 02W

 


propose to

1m. 'a‘bsolu 'W

our columns! are open {2: #1::
‘ . due on o a ’M
> p alum: to the {gm bounces, ‘

 

’7'

“The Only Farm Magazine Owned and Edited in Michigan"

 

 

. Published ‘ Bil-Weekly}:

~

31 PER YEAR '

—.

Entered as second-class mat.
ter, August 22, 1917 at tho
cot—0mm at Mt. Clemens,
'ch., under act of March
3rd, 1879.

 

 

‘

 

 

, Mt. Clemens, Mich .

 

 

ys

some Tax, Will Solve Highway Problem

F.S. Newton, of Saginaw County, takes Issue with Horatio Earle who Advocated One Mill Property
’ . ' Tax as More Equitable '

“ ARMER” Earle is worried lest
the State Highway Department
have to' go to the legislature
‘ and “beg for money.’-’ '

He says .We support the University
of chhigan to educate the rich and
exempt“ the rich from
" taxes on their. land.‘ Who owns the

his cars by the way? The hard

pressed farmers. They are not, gen-
erally speaking sporting Cadillacs,
Winton’s and Paiges. On the other
,hand who are the majority of the
land owners? The dirt farmers——
net the dude farmers, like..the dis-

tlngnlshed advocate of an extra mill

test on real estate. .

Considerate isn't it proposing to

. the discouraged farmers to sell or
give away their property it unwilling
or unable to pay their over—weaning

taxes. . .

Again the clty “farmer” falls over
in his attempt to excoriate the gaso-
line levy in one breath as discrimin—
ating in favor 0! Henry “Ford and
against the small car owner and in
the next declalming it is a thrust at
the auto industry! That’s the cat
la. right out of the bag. The op-
pressed motor manufacturers aren’t

' concerned lost the owners of Fords
pot a dollar or two more e‘year to
help in the highway upkeep and the
buildings. Oh, No! They’re both-
ered about the possible check that
might ballot on the auto industry

» by requiring it to stand on its own
feet and pay for the roads itself de—
mands. Let them, in the words of
the noble Roman, “if they don’t want
to pay. sell or get out!” ' _

Too bad! That army of gasohne
collectors! How about the swarm
of employees, runners, up and run-
ners down, of our State and County

.. highway departments? Surely Hor—
atio should be-better informed than
to imagine such mountainous diﬁlcul-
ties in a tax collected at its source.

In this connection note that Ohio
and several of our neighboring states
hove adopted a gasoline tax. That
web as that the Michlﬁan people Who
drive across the stat
the roads of Ohio, etc. Yet we are
urged ' to impose no return tax on
Ohio tourists who travel over Michi-

’st 11 mm s.

3318 tbg 1813888, why should the

owners of land, who may not own a

car, pay for the_\hard surface type

of roadway heavy cars require, while
the benevolent owners at limousines
and 3 ton trucks are let ad free!

‘ Shouldn’t those who dance pay the

ﬁddler?
compel the poor farm and home own-

‘ers to ﬁddle and dance at the some.

time: _
Mr. Earle is a Detroit manufac—

turer, He farms by proxy and evi- *

dently is in blissful ignorance of the
desperate plight the agriculture-lists
are in. I would like to take him
over a six—mile section or a trunk
line in Atom County which tn»
, verses light land. Four ‘ .
only along the six-mile stretch hove
the pleasure of owning either Fords
'01- cars. Several live in log cabins.
A considerable portion have been
compelled to" borrow money to meet
recent taxes. Some are also lam
district of the Covert road and levied
on for that. O! ciourso they growths
‘ ,- am e ofﬁce as many, neon”
3311 ”their doorsrrkill their shtick-
eM ind menace their. chudm.--Per-

timings” or common sense to

 

 

The limitless Farmer has opened its columns to a general discus-
sion of the Gasoline Tax proposition believing it is of the utmost.

Importance to the tax-paying farmers of Michigan.

Mr. Earles article

referred to appeared in the December 9th. issue on this same page-

Now what do you say?

/*

 

 

drive us over. Once the farmers of
Michigan are forced to quit. we’ll
then realize that agriculture was in-
deed our basic industry. We can’t
go on much longer pyramiding prop-
erty on a single industry, and that
of a mushroom sort. As between
the motor industry and agriculture
it lsplain which way “Good Roads
Earle” leans. He says, “Let the
farmerssell out/if: How can they
when all want (if sell and no one
to buy? Where have his eyes been
as he tours about in his ﬁne ear,
that he has fail-ed to note the path—
etic “For Sale” signs on farm after
farm and it he ever drove off the
trunk line he’d see enough aband-
oned farms and not bad‘ones either,
to set him thinking in a more prayer-
ful mood. When the American
farmer's back is broken What do you
suppose will happen to the automo-
bile and tractor industry. _
“Good roads for the farmer” has
been a very much abused shibboletln
The program of our State Highway
Department has been to put all the
emphasis and spend all the public

,money on trunk lines with no re-

gard to farm and marketing needs
or with those needs treated as pure—
ly Incidental. Why is it that very
many roads thru our best farming
country are now, after this orgy of
spending, in worse condition than
in the old dirt road days? Because
the highway taxes are so over—bur-
densome that townships have felt it

unavoidable to cutoff at the one-

point possible and in ever so many
townships-of Central and Northern

Michigan no work has been done on
local roads for the past two years.

What beneﬁt having a $315,000
a mile concrete boulevard that the
produce can only reach by being
hauled thru trackless mud? Again
these pieces of state built pavement
thru our up state villages, which our
Highway Department designed to or-
nament the Dixie and other snake
trails, are of no use to anybody-ex-
cept the few contractors who were
enriched by the building. When the
farmer with his wagon reaches this
insult to his intelligence, his haul is
done. There is no escape from the
conclusion that our state highway
oﬂicials have been guilty of wilful
extravagance or worse. Had the
bond issue been suspended and the
petition of over 100,000 real Michi-
gan farmers for a road holiday been
considered by our State Administra-
tive board, we should for one thing
have witnessed a big come down in
the prices demanded by the little
pool of road contractors. The farm-
ing industry would have had little
chance to recover from the smash-
ing blows of 1920, and our State
would not suddenly ﬁnd itself sad-
dled with a billion dollar load of
highways built by federal, state and
county appropriations, but everlast—
ingly costly and difﬁcult to maintain.
We have simply gone highway mad.

But now the question js. How
are these collosal works which were
expensivel‘y, and as a rule, poorly
constructed to be kept in repair?
Ex—ofﬁclo Eearle shouts, “Let the
land owners foot the bill. \That’s

 

 

line pay for“

Don't for ' heaven's sake-

thin 111017 is worth mm tor-

Says Feeding Potatoes Will Save Market

‘ T is the matter that we farmers can not ﬁnd some way to
take care of the over-production of potatoes this year? Are
there not men among us that can start a successful feeding

campaign? '

We are told by our Experiment Stations that potatoEs are worth

from 25c to,30c per bushel for feeding to cows.

Now if people do

not want potatoes to eat suppose we turn them into buttertat. We
surely cannot lose anything by feeding them they are only worth about

13‘: a bushel and
more unless we do cod them. .

chances are that they will not be worth much

11' everyone would teed obout tour bushels out of every eight they
have there would be no potatoes, to throw out next spring and we
probably would get 50c or 75c a bushel for what we have to sell.

I am feeding all I can and intend to feed as long as they stay below

300 a bushel.
proﬁt instead of a loss.

Now if everybody would feed we could sell at at
Other businesses stick together and make

it pay, why can't we? Come on farmers, let us feed. W. N. Stephens,

Edmore, Michigan.

- ‘ ’ 9 , 0 ‘
Hints on F ceding Potatoes to Livestock
CCORDING to the U, S. Department of Agriculture, potatoes may
- be fed to livestock in small amounts in connection with other

. feeds.
While ,
before 4 as

Under'ordlnary {arm conditions. boiling or steam
method of cooking the potatoes for livestock.

val about ‘60 per cent.

the may be sliced and fed with dry reads, it is best to cook them
heavy feeding of raw potatoes“ will Amuse scouring.

the most economical
nor

Steam l cases their feeding

rotein content 0! Potatoes makes it advisable to teed them to con-

atively high in protein content.

Feedin

tatoes are fed with other feeds to

in momma. from 3%?) to 450

Jug wooequalto about 100 pounds 0
ui In, 1:81 11:10 poilindsiot corn.
flea-wanton- are pa 9 an we so
9 to_ ”11%;: ll undo a do
‘ third , w t in My.

. I“ t; . It a

row on m. red
~Ho '
lane!
_,to.abon
he,
should
~ It to“!
Get

at» "

corn.

July, suclhq’

undo of cooked potatoes have a feed—
w‘hllo from 500 to 600 pounds of

tor use as a horse teed. It
horses. are equivalent
tattoo- 8.

t0 WOT

Generic

u prom mour-
Ww. produces” mm: and butter or 2

nice. They paid for these monu-
mental works which have made many
a small man great and lined up in
favor of the road ofﬁcials all the
politicians thru the pork—barrel al-
lotment of bits of pavement to every
little town. Yes, dump on to the
hapless land owners more taxation.
They’re getting off too easily. But
don’t, for goodness sake, rub the fur
of the foreign tourist or the commer-
cial truck operator the wrong way.
They are performing too important
a public service speeding with heavy
loaded cars over our costly roads.
They- haven’t had enough unearned
favors with their snouts in the pub:
lic throug and _should be freely per-
mitted to get their feet in too.

What does H. S. say to the declar-
ation past passed by the Ohio State
Grange that land is too heavily
taxed? ‘

The fact that Brother Earle and
the writer are both non—resident
farm owners. But the writer, not
being a wealthy manufacturer, not a
high salaried state ofﬁcial (nor ex-ot-
ﬁcial) and also living out of the con-
ﬁnes of the metropolis, happens to
be closely in touch with the hard
working tillers of the soil. No one,
who knows their harassed condition
at the present time, can fail to be
impressed wth the fact that their
limit has been reached. After years
of hard sledding and a complete
smash in prices of everything they
produce with no corresponding drop
in the prices of what they have to
buy, they now see skyrocketing taxes.
They cannot stay on the farms- and
continue to produce if it continues.

What 'it means to our institutions
to have our land workers menaced
with extinction may be faintly im—
agined when we recall that in every
past crisis in our Country’s history

, the American farmer has been the

bulwark of liberty and of law and

order. They have been the saving

element in cosiety, without which it

would surely have gone on the rocks.

'What now is to save our social fab-

ric most seriously jeopardized as it

is by national and international

strife, if the independent yeomanry

of our nation is wiped off the slate—~—

' or forced into factory jobs? Is the

motor industry, with its breeding of

discontent, luxury and laziness?

Ill fares the land, to hasten ills a
prey,

Where wealth accumulates and arts

r decay,

Princes and lords may ﬂourish and
may fade,

A breath can make them as a breath
hath made,

But a bold peasantry, their country’s
pride,

When once destroyed, can never be
supplied.

It is a brilliant ﬂash of imagina-
tion to conjure up an army composed
of all owners of motor vehicles.
“Richmen, poor men, beggar men,
thieves; lawyers, doctors, merchants,
chiefs,” with the enraged washer-
woman of our households bringing
up the rear, and all this motely host
ﬂourishing bludgeons and broomj
sticks over the oppressive penny tax
on gas. But a clearer insight into

prevailing public sentiment of the:
times would have suggested that

a movement like the gasoline tax
which has in the short space of two
years been enacted by 18 states and
is being urged by farm organizations

throughout the country ls considered '
eminently just by a great number 0!,

owners of motor cars as well as plain

citizens generally, and like the lllust-
rlous old Roman from whom he took:

his name. Horatio ls apt to and hint
eel! lettalone todetend the ’
‘ N narrows

\

 


    

     
    
  
  
 
   
    
     
  

  
      
    
      
     
     
    

 

I I

1 worthy of note,

. remark in 1913:
”Department has necessarily increased

 

 

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FZ‘UE/‘ﬁqz— ”/0
ﬁﬂﬁ’g

cave rec/c 770”

  

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How your 1921 dollar was spent.

OST State Highway Departments
started from small beginnings,
probably none of them smaller

than the Michigan Highway Depart-
ment when it was ﬁrst organized,
July Lst, 1905. It then consisted of
a Commissioner with a salary of
$2,500 a yea1,a Deputy at $1, 800 a
year and a stenographer at $1, 200.
That year there was an appropriation
of $30, 000 of which $10, 000 was for
departmental expenses and $20,000
with which to pay state rewards on
roads for one year, but since only
20 miles of roads were built that
year there was plenty of money to
meet all the demands for state re-
wards and some money to spare.

It is also of interest to note that
as late as 1912, the appropriation
for departmental expenses had not
exceeded $10,000 a year. It is
however, that the
Legislature of 1911 passed a budget
allowing the Department $15,000 a
year but $5,000 of this was cut off

. by the Governor when he signed the

bill so that for the ﬁrst eight years
the department was obliged to scrimp
along with this small amount which
covered salaries, traveling expenses
and other departmental items.

This caused the Commissioner to
“The work of the

in proportion to the number of miles
constructed but on account of the
fact that no greater appropriation is

' , available for the expense of the De-
‘ partment than there was when or-

ganized, it has been impossible to
give the Commissioners building
roads, the detailed instruction which
is for the best interest of the State
and the community where the road
is being built. Many counties are
adopting the county road system,
nine during the past year, making
44 in all. Many of these are bond-
ing for large sums for improving
roads and unless careful supervis-
ion is provided to direct construc-
tion, much money will be wasted."

his condition of things existed
untll the Legislature Of 1913 made
an appropriation of $18,000 for de-
partmental expenses for the year
ending June 30, 1914 and $20,000
for the following ﬁscal year. In ad-
dition to that the Legislature of
1913 passed the State Trunk
Line Act which made appropriations
of $200,000 for the ﬁrst year and
$300,000 for the second year for the
purpose of paying trunk line rewards

and building trunk line'bridges and

“paying salaries and running ex-
penses incurred by this Act.” This

I; was the beginning of great things

‘was also directed

     
  
   
     

.‘or the Highway Department and al-

so marked the beginning of trunk
line highWay and bridge construc—

tion on a scale heretofore thought
to be impossible in Michigan.

I have before stated and wish to
again’ repeat my regrets that this
Trunk Line Act was not called the
Alswede Act, thus giving due recog-
nition to Senator Alswede through
whose untiring efforts in the Legis-
lature it became a reality.

Under .the provisions of this Act
the Highway Department expanded
rapidly. The Commissioner was in-
structed to “cause preliminary sur-
veys to be made and establish routes
of the several divisions of the state
trunk line highways herein provided
and he is empowered to employ such
engineers, clerks and other employ-
ees as may be necessary to carry out
the provisions of this Act,” which
was given immediate effect.

The State Highway Commissioner
“to design' all
bridges and culverts and construct

alllbridges greater than 30 it. clear“

span on state reward trunk line high-
ways,” which made the employment
of a bridge engineer an immediate
necessity.

In this connection it is again
worthy td note a recommendation of
Mr. Earle, ﬁrst State Highway Com-
missioner, in the ﬁrst Biennial Re-
port of the Department, which was
as follows: “Give the State High-
way Department the means to em-
ploy a ﬁrst class bridge engineer who
will save the state, through the
townships and counties, many times
his salary and expenses each year.”

As the result of the expansion of
the Department made necessary by
these new laws, at the close of the
ﬁscal year 1914, the Department had
35 employees and a monthly payroll
amounting to $2,673.52.

In 1915 the Legislature passed the
so-called Covert Act, Act 59, P. A.
1915, which provided an additional
method for improving and construct—
ing public highways, paid by a spec-
ial assessment upon the lands bene—
ﬁtted thereby. Under the provision
of this Act, petitions come direct to
the State Highway Commissioner for
all inter-county roads, and also for
all roads that might be petitioned
for in counties not working under
the county road system. At present
all of the counties of Michigan have
adopted the county road system and
all are functioning under it except
Oceana and Benzie which counties
have never put the county road law
into operation.

In 1916 the ﬁrst Federal Aid Act
in recent years was passed by Con-
gress which was followed by the
Michigan State Federal Act passed
by the Legislature of 1917. It was
impossible to begin actual construc-
tion of Federal Aid roads until the

0

'Michigan Act was passed assenti-‘ng

to the provisions of the Federal Gov-

Tax Money Went

The Question now uppermost in every Taxpayers’
Mind is answered by Frank F. Rogers, ‘ _ _
State Highway Commissioner ; ,3

ernment and also! appropriating
funds to meet Federal money.

This ﬁrst Federal Aid Act made
a cash appropriation of $75,000, 000
which was to be divided among the

several states, one- third according to ._

area, one- -third according to popula-
tion and one— —third according to post
road mileage. This provison brought
to Michigan nearly three per cent of
the Federal appropriation or a total.
of, $2,173,510.04

Under the provisions of this Fed-
eral Aid Act and all subsequent‘acts
up] to this time, .the states must
match Federal money, dollar for dol-
lar, in order to secure it but under

the terms of this particular Act the

maximum that could be received
from the Federal Government was
limited to $10,000 a mile. ‘

While Michigan, under the pro-
visions of the Trunk Line Act, had
been building trunk line bridges and
even now was constructing roads
under the provisions of .the Covert
Act, this Federal Aid Act made it
manditory that the states, in“ order
to secure this money, should take ac-
tive charge of the construction and
maintenance of all roads in which
the Federal , Government partici-
pated. In order to comply with
these requirements the Legislature
of 1917 provided an appropriation of
$225, 000 for the (ﬁscal year ending
June 30, 1919. This Act placed much
responsibility and all of the details
of construction upon the state and
the department grew rapidly until in
June, 1917, it had 67_ emplOyees and
a monthly payroll of $5,965.18.

During'February of 1919, the Fed- '.

eral Government passed another ap-
propriation of $200,000,000.’ which
made available for Michigan $5.786,-
785.48. By this time, however,.the
state began to see the necessity of

completing the state trunk line mile—r

age of Michigan which now. covered
nearly 6,000 miles under the pro-
visions of the Trunk Line. Act of
1913 already .mentioned in the ar-
ticle.

It became apparent, however that V,
funds were to be,
matched promptly and if the' trunk ‘

if the Federal

line system of the state was to be
completed within the lifetime of the
present generation, that work on
these roads would have to proceed
more rapidly.

Accordingly the constitutional
amendment ‘was submitted to the
people at the April election of 1919
which provided that the Legislature

might issue not to exceed $50,000.:

000 in bonds for highway constru3
tion. This money, for the most part,
was to be used in the building 01'
trunk line roads and bridges includ-
ing such roads as the Federal Gov-

in.
The bond issue carried by an over-
whelming majority at the April elec-

tion of 1919 which was followed by ,

    

ernment was willing to participate;

TRUNK .4 we“. ?
' F5053”; “”20

. .ﬁaﬁp

(0M5 mucr‘xow

   

- 73.34
Your 1922 dollar bought more roads.

\

the passage of the so-called Aldrich
Act, Act 19, P A. 1919, which pro-
vided among other things that “all
trunk lin_e highways established un-

_ der provisions of Act 334, P. A. 1913,

as amended, shall hereafter be con-
structed, maintained and improved
in accordance with the provisions
hereof under the direction and con-

trol of the State Highway Commie-h

sioner.

'The Federal Aid Act originally
passed in 1917 was also amended so
as to co-ordinate with the A’ldrich
Act just referred to, both of which
provided for a certain amount of ﬁ-
nancial 'participation from the coun-
ties on all trunk line and Federal
Aid construction, the ﬁnancial assist-
ance from the counties being the
same whether the roads were con-
structed wholly from the bond money
or partly from the bond money and
partly with Federal Aid.

These laws are still in force, hav-
ing been amended slightly by the
Legislature of 1921 but still ’call for
assistance frorn the counties as fol-
lows: Counties with a valuation er

trunk line mile of less than $50, 00 -

pay only ﬁve per cent of the cost of
building trunk line and Federal Aid
roads while counties with a valua-
tion of over $50,000 per trunk line
mile pay 25 percent of the cost of
construction of such roads. Coun-
ties of intermediate valuations range
in between these extremes, the rise
being by steps of 2% per cent in
each case as the valuation increases.

A third Federal appropriation of
$75, 000, 000 was made in November,
1921, which made available to Mich-
igan $2, 249, 532. 43 of additional
Federal funds, the total Federal
funds being more than$10,000,000.

"Again in June, 1922 the Federal
Congress made a fourth appropria-

tion of $50,000,000 of which'Michir

ga-n’s share was“$1,499,688.29. This
Congress also tentatively agreed up—
on an additio‘naL appropriation of
$65, 000 000 and $75, 000, 000 for
succeeding years but this money will
not be available until it has again
received the approval of Congress.

Under the provisions of the sev-
eral Acts above referred to, viz. the
Covert Act, the Federal Aid Act and
the Trunk Line Act, the State High-
way Department has already placed
under construction 2, 821 miles of
road at a total contract price of $46,-
886 421. 68.

"It goes without saying that these
millions of dollars worth of road
construction in charge of the High—

way Department each year during

(Continued on page .19)

 
  
  
  

 
 
      
  

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Here is the Loxodoncyclotis.——This “Pigmy” Sand, Mermaids, ’n everything.——-The Pollywog Rest- Latest portrait of Italian Premier Mussolini.—
elephant arrived in New York .on board the S. S. aurant has taken Greenwich Village, N. Y., by storm. Taken at Lausanne. Switzerland. where he .has
President Van Buren, and is seen with his calptor, for this new eatery on West 4th St., boasts of a sand been attending the Peace Conference. Mussolini
Captain Edward Cunningham. He is owned by the ﬂoor; charming bathing beauties await your slightest is reported to have stated that he had no inten-
Bronx Zoo, New 'York City. He is' one of the wishes. There are beach umbrellas, ﬁsh on the walls, tion of letting Germany get away without paying
only two in captivitY, and Weighs 400 pounds. " everything to give you that salt air tang. her war debt to Italy.

Mun »

 

L,

b
Seeing Washington by Airplane.—Everything centers around the Washing- What is the pig population of the U. S. A?—-Replies to 500.000 questionnaires
ton monument. 0n the lower left hand corner is the Bureau of Printing and distributed by rural mail carriers in a nation—wide pig survey are beginning
Engraving, in the background, to the right, is the Navy Department and to pour into the Department of Agriculture. Photo shows girls at work count-
Munitions Building. ing the “Pig Census.”

 

 

 

.. n ‘LDavid A. Brown ' .‘Detr'oit newsboy, now - ' igen”.rvisits Independence Ham—Georges Clem- , Smallest man in the wOrld.——Mzejor Mite"

9- ngtlo' . opiat, whom we menr _ ll,_“Tiﬂel'- of France," laces his hand. on the «me. How to l 28 h ‘ll ‘
" ' a ' ' . . I. I . ' at the :man who told - 'y"“Bell in 'Indeﬁendencevﬂall, Immutable Pa... ounds 1»:an i:)1ss' vow?“ 1?. “it “A {vale ' '
, . , V , , , . . g , y _ , p .y e ajor Mte is two,
. l. _ at < Russia; utter his . A h; mitmhe. dauseofzhis. 'eountry. ﬁle. last inches shorter“ than Tom Thumb.» At 'birth " ‘
' ‘ g 7 , . », ‘ in 'Amerlca:'was at the ‘A F B . . eonve‘ntlon. weighedfﬂ pounds. ' ‘ ‘ " ”“

 

 

I

 

 

 

 


MR. HENRY FORD

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Continued from Dec. 23rd issue.)

Before long others than Mr. Ford
were convinced that the horseless
vehicle was a practical commercial
proposition, and a company was or—
ganized in Detroit with Mr. Ford as
the chief engineer. But at the end
of, the year little progress had been
made in perfecting the machine and
it was decided to let Mr. Ford go and
employ another draftsman. This
company later became, the Cadillac
Motor company. Mr. Ford’s car was
returned to him and the inventor or-
ganized a company of his own. This
second venture likewise proved a
failure, but reverses served only to
strengthen Mr. Ford’s conﬁdence in
the future of his invention.

He decided to perfect a racing car,

sold his old macnine and devoted all
his energies to devising a car that
would establish a speed record.
Rumors of his new plans spread and
many Detroiters visited the Ford
shop to inspect '- the new marvel——
that was to be. Tom Cooper, the
champion bicycle rider, visited De-
3tr,oit and offered-his cooperation and
ﬁnancial assistance. Cooper later
was killed in an automobile accident
in Central Park, New York. An in—
tenesting story of this period has to
do with one “Coffee Jim” and his
ﬁnancing the Ford racer. The
story, sad to relate, is unfounded; a
man who operated a night lunch car
in Detroit took a great interest in
Mr. Ford’s work, but advanced him
no money. The ﬁnancing of the
racer, which was called 999, came
from the farms in Springwells and
Dearborn township.

Mrs. Ford has vivid recollections
of that period. “Expenses were so
great that I thought we never again
would have any money for our-
selves,” she said.

Work on the car went steadily on,
for a race had been arranged and Mr.
Ford was eager to win it. To test
the carburetors a steep grade was
necessary and the steepest the inven-
tor could ﬁnd was in the cemetery.
Here the ﬁnal tests were made and
the car was ﬁnished on the day set
for the race, which was held on the
Grosse Point race track, ten miles
away. For days Alexander Winton
had been on the ground with his car
tuning it up for the great event.
No other cars were entered, but a
hilarious crowd was present to see
the strange contest. The Winton
car was ﬁnely ﬁnished and the low-
slung, strange looking 999 seemed
outclassed. But the race is not al-
ways to the beautiful, and 999 won.

In 1902 Mr. Ford began experi-
menting with a two-cylinder car.
The work was carried on in a small
wooden shop on Park avenue and

‘ ‘ Grand River, back of the Parker and

‘ Webb building. The messenger and

.. handy man about the place was John

éy‘Wandersee; Gus Degner was the

mechanic, and C. H. Wills was drafts--

13mm: and “boss” of the
:The weges paid averaged twenty-two
' an hour.-
coal buyer for the
* ad devoted all his

“force. "'

Mr. Ford gave up.

Early Struggles—~Ford s Failures—Organising the Present Company

a prominent Detroit coal man. Mr.
Malcomson was greatly interested in
Mr. Ford’s project, and often visited
the shop. Sometimes he was ac-
companied by his bookkeeper, James
Couzens, in whose judgment he had
great conﬁdence. _ 4 -

One day Mr Malcomson remarked
to Mr. Ford, “Henry, my boy. you
are working mighty hard, but you
are not getting ahead fast enough.
What you need is a barrel of money."

Henry Ford’s gray eyes twinkled.
“I reckon I’ll have to make haste
slowly,” he replied. “I’ve tried two
companies. already and it looks like
I am too venturesome. I’d better
stick to the slow pace I am following
now. If we could build a lot of
machines and make them cheap
enough all of us workingﬂin this
little shop would be rich.”

“You’ve got grit and it takes grit
to put over a new idea,” declared
Malcomson. “I’ve had my eyes
open and before you know it Haynes,
Duryea and Winton will be so far
ahead that you’ll never catch up. It
looks like we’ll be obliged to organ-
ize a company—a big company. We
ought to get together a hundred
thousand dollars; that would be
enough to start the wheels going.
I would be willing to put up about
twenty thousand in cash. You can
put in old 999,” and he pointed to a.
corner where the machine stood.
“You’ve used up a deal of money in
experiments—l expect you have
spent all of seven thousand, and your
time has been worth a lot. Suppose
we start in as equal partners; I’ll
furnish the money and you the hard
work—and genius.”

Henry Ford, a joker himself, fear-
ed his friend was jesting. “And
then what?” was his guarded ques-
tion.

“Why then, we’ll move this big
working force of yours over to a
building in Mack avenue. I'm near-
ly positive I can organize a company.
Jimmy Couzens has saved up about
two thousand dollars. He is young
and level—headed and can afford to
take a chance. Besides, Jimmy
knows a lot about business. I’ll add
him to the force and I’ll peddle the
stock. We can try it anyway. If we
fail—”

“We won’t fail,” Henry Ford in-
terrupted; “we~ can’t fail. We’ll
either succeed or I'll die in the at—
tempt." He shut his lips grimly;
then a cheerful smile appeared and
he added, “we can have a lot of fun
doing the right thing.”

Even at the time it was Mr. Ford’ s
idea to make good cars in large num-
bers and for a low price. In a few
months the plant was moved to the
Mack building and Mr. Ford was en-
abled to devote his time to perfect-
ing his machine. The astounding suc-
cess of the Ford company dates from
that day.

It is interesting to note the rise
of the men who worked with Ford at
that time. As the business grew
Mr. Ford sent John Wandersee all
over the country to investigate and
study chemistry, and today Mr.
Wandersee is head chemist at the
Ford company. Gus Degner is sup-
erintendent of inspection at the same
plant. Harold Wills was sent about
the country to study steel. It is he
who invented molybdenum, the
toughest and lightest of steels. At
the time of. the Chicago. Tribune

libel trial it was testiﬁed that Mr.
Wills had received a salary of $80, ,-
000, a,year for some years. 1., Mr Wills
islpow a motor manufacturer him-
se .

did not buy stock in the Ford Com;
pany have been rewarded with sal-

aries'and bonuses that have made.
fthem rich.
Henry Ford’s prosperity just as if

They have shared in
they had shared in the original risk.

Mr. Couzens invested twenty-ﬁve
hundred dollars in the company and
organized and directed ﬁve depart-
ments—bookkeeping, time clerk,
purchasing agent, sales manager and
business manager; but he had no as-
sistants; he did all the work. Mr.
Malcomson found it more difficult
than he had expected to sell the com-

pany’s stock ,but ﬁnally secured the,

following purchasers:

John S. Gray, 3 rich candy maker,‘

who put in ten thousand, five hun-
dred dollars in cash.

John Anderson of the law ﬁrm of
Anderson &. Rackham, attorneys for
the company, who invested ﬁve thou-
sand dollars.

Horace Rackham, his partner, who
likewise invested ﬁve thousand dol-
lars.

Albert Shelow, who invested ﬁve
thousand dollars and later "sold his
holdings to Mr. Couzens for twenty-
ﬁve thousand

V. C. Fry and C. H. Bennett, who
bought ﬁve thousand dollars’ worth
of stock each and later sold out to
Mr. Ford and Mr. Couzens for twenty
ﬁve thousand each.

Alexander G. Malcomson, who put
in twenty-ﬁve thousand, ﬁve hundred
dollars in cash.

Mr. Ford was given an equal
amount of stock for his assets.

At the end of twoyears'the larg-'
est stockholders in the company were
Alexander Malcomson, Henry Ford,

”James Couzens and John S. Gray.

The Dodge brothers offered their
foundry for, the making of the car
parts and each invested ﬁve thousand
dollars in the company and became
a director.

Back of the selling of one block of
stock is an interesting story. Both
Mr. Anderson and Mr. Rackham were
young attorneys and Mr. Malcomson
was their client. He talked to them
of the company he was organizing,
and Mr. Anderson, at once put his
money into it, “taking a chance,
as he said. Mr. Rackham’s case was
different. ~He lived only two doors
from the Ford home and had nod-
ding acquaintance with the inventor,
but his health was poor and he could
not aﬂord to speculate with his sav-
ings. So he went to a leading bank-
er for advice.

The banker took him to a. window.
“Look,” he said pointing to the
street. “You see all those people on
their bicycles riding along the boule-
vard? There is not as many as
there was a year ago. _ The novelty
is wearing off; they are losing inter-
est. That’s just the way it will be
with automobiles. People will get
the fever; and later they will throw
them away. My advice is not to buy
the stock. You might make money
for a year or two, but in the end
you would lose everything you pi'it in.
The horse is here to stay, but the
automobile is only a novelty—-—a fad. ”

Mr. Rackham was convinced. But
a few- days later he met Mr. Malcom-

 

 

spend in bed?”
powers," said Mr. Ford.
rested.”

“Oh, it depends on a lot of

 

 

~_rule I like to go to bed early and‘ get up early.
9 o’clock sees me abed; sometimes earlier. ,
upatsoclock'inthemommg. nlfeelﬂnesndrestedlgetnp—n
Ican’thehbedﬂPmresteHndIlikefewthingngrthonn

HENRY FORD 0N SLEEP

“Don’t you think 10 or 12 hours a day is a fearful long time to
Mr. Ford was asked.

“It all depends on the individual—on his or her recuperative
“I have no particular rule about sleeping
except that I sleep whenever I feel Md and I stay in bed until I am

“How long does it generally take—your night’ 3 rest” he was asked.
things—and it varies.

As a general
Pretty frequently
Then, somedmem. I wake

good walk in the early morning—helps keep a fellow y”
“But if, on the other hand, I don‘t feel rested m

1.7:300r80’clock-é-weﬂthat‘sa11mtoo 5..

Enough has "been said here-«to #1
show that these men, although they.

1

wtheir small son, Edsel,

named Sorenson, :1 Dane. who

son who showed him facts and ﬁg-
ures and talked eloquently. Rack--
ham was convinced again-«but the
other way. He sold some real es-
tate and t

.son: “Here, take this money and

he money to MelcOm—~

buy the stack before I have time to

change my mind again,” he said.

Anderson and Backham drew the in- Z

corporation papers for the company
and each man held his stock, selling
it ﬁnally for twelve and one— half
million dollars.

. CHAPTER V.
The Story of ,Magical Success

On October 1, 1902, Mr. Couzens
took a trial balance—An pencil-
which 8 Wed that the Ford com-
pany after three months of operation
was‘making rapid progress. By Jam
nary, 1903, the ﬁrst commercial car
was sold, and soon orders began to
come in faster than they could" ﬁll

them. One hundred and sixty-ﬁve .

cars were sold that year. A larger

factory, located on Piquette street,

was secured and the work went for-
ward rapidly. In 1905 the company
began to pay 6 per cent dividends.

In this 'Piquette street plant a
young bookkeeper named Khngen—
smith was employed at a salary of
sixty-five dollars a month. Mr. Ford
advanced him rapidly and in time,
Mr. Klirngensmith became Vice‘Presi-
dent and Treasurer of the Highland
plant. He testiﬁed in the Tribune
suit that for several years his salary
had been $75,000 a year. The draft-
ing room at the Piquette street plant
was in charge of Carl Emde. a Ger-
man, who took out his ﬁrst naturali-
zation papers in 1902, and his second
papers in 1911. When the company
moved to the Highland Park plant
Emde was put in charge of the tool
room. This employee suddenly
found himself in the Spotlight of pub-
licity in the last days of the Ford-
Newberry senate campaign, as will
be told later.

Another employee at the Piquette
street plant was a pattern maker
[or
years has been manager of the River
Rouge foundry and tractor plant.

These are seine examples of the
way in which Mr. Ford has rewarded
the men who have worked faithfully
for him during long years. It always
has been a source of pleasure to him
to share his prosperity with his em-
ployees. .

l t t t

Following the famous race at
Grosse Point, when the Ford 999
defeated the Winton car, there Were
other races in various parts .of the
country, but in these Mr. Ford had
no part. Finally, however, he de-

‘ cided to rebuild 999 and make it the“

“fastest thing on wheels. ” Soon af—
terward it was decided to hold a race
against time on the frozen surface of
Lake Sainte Claire in' the ‘hope' of

'breaking the record then held by

Vanderbilt. The, race track was
built of cinders laid on the ice and
racing oﬂicials had come from many
cities to serve as judges and time
keepers. - Mr. and Mrs. Ford and.
had gone to
the lake the evening before and Mr.
Couzens followed them onV-the morn-
ing of the race. Mr. Ford was to
drive 999, for the event was all im-
portant to him.

Early in the morning the engine
was tested as a precaution, and to
the consternation of the ofﬁcials in
the factory did not run well.. They
toiled over it like mad and ﬁnally,
two hours before the time set for the
race, the trouble was corrected", and ,
the. start made' for Lake Sainte

. Claire, then considered a long way

out in the country, although only ten
miles from Detroit. Distances have '
shrunk since that day. The weather
was cold and raw, with a high wind
that added to the discomfort of the
spéctatdrs. Mr Ford huddled in a
short thick coat of black curly- astra~

'bgnland wished 999 would arrive. ,‘

 


   
 
   

 

mm output-'6 brine: Any
of these smashed-price bargains.
Merely give Name and Number
of each article you .want. When .
.goods arrive pay bargain price
and postage. If not delighted
with the money you have saved,
return the goods and we'll re-
fund'your money. Instantly.

  

  

  

——
———__
—-.—
-——-—
—.

Women’s Fur
Collared Coats

$59.8

A ract' 1
loofiin loam

 
 
  

and good-
: odel
preese

generous C
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fut. All—around belt
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16 to
31 to

98E-
end no
moneL Pay $5.98
and postage on ar-
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Sizes
women’s

Order by No.
5703. 8

Fur Trimmed
Coat for Girls

$98

Pressed Velour in
avy Blue or Brown,
.regular $7 value. Has
collar of genuine Kit
which buttons
around throat.

money. $3.98
and postage on arrival.
; ‘ . State size.
1 .9 ,

           
         
 

MEN’S
WINTER
UNDERWEAR

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'2“:

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long

popular
Random
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cotton
or

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9801280 Pay $1.19 and
plostage on arrival. State
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to 10 ears. Order by No.
96013 8. and

 

 

  
     
   
       

 

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Hi-Cut Shoes

Send for this hand:
some ric kid kiii
shoe in black. etc
the medium toes With
pretty imitation pert-
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perforation aroiund
vamp and on lace
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Order black by No_

Give Size

 

 

  

 
 

   
     
  
 
 

    
  
 
 

Fine ﬁnds . »
wool elt With

- combination insert of \
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are: .2 . were” .3. .. saw;
v ‘ sis .end postage on' arrival. . '

 
   
     
      

  
  
     
   
    
 
 

GUARANTEED !

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Men! Don’t lose a moment in orderjn

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near waterproof as can be inade~ ' .

through and through with full gminsoildgthgirnher
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$5_. . Two full. heavy double soles sewed and
nailed for greater strength. Extra wide full 1 th
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money. Pay $2.98 and pestage on arrival.

Men’s Special
Hip Boots

Men's pure 0

. _ _ hum
ililréots; friction
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I'snally retailed at
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$ 79
1 F?

State Size

  
   

 

pair
this
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Work . .
slice for men. Has soft, sirmiguppexs that reSist
barnyard acids. Solid leather insoles. All seams
stitched with waxed thread. Strong leather soles.
\Vide Widths. Sizes 6 to 11. Order by 0. 6A-
758. Send no money. Pay $1.98 and postage on
arrival. Order boys’ sizes, 1 to 5% by No_ 96A-
554. Price $1.8E. Order little gents’. sizes 9 to

2. b" No BABBSI Price $1.79 and postage

I1 8 -

on arrival. Ment:o z .
One-Buckle
Arctic

99c Up

In All ’8izos.

 

Order your
quick—will lc
offer

 

Heavy cashmerette snow-prod top. Genuine gum
rubber bottoms with heavy single soles. Full fleece
lined. Sizes for all the family.

Misses' sizes 11
to 2. No. 88A970. Price 990. Womfe'slies
2V: to s. No. A989. Price $1.19. Youth’s
“no.9 to my. No. senses. Price 1.19.
Boys' sizes 1 to big-No. benee1. Price 1.20.
Ian's sizes o 1.015, No. seneee. Price 1.49.
Pay bargain price

and postage on arrival. State

.ri ,.

 

«‘ liiiiiiliil

 
 

l
Iliiiilliiiiliillliim

_ lllllliiiiiun .
mmmmmrmu ;

 
    
 
   
  

Women’s Warm
Fleece-Lined
Comfort Shoes

 
 
 
   
    
    
 
 

\
You’ll never get cold
feet in these splendid
kid — ﬁnished comfort
shoes. are
warm, cream-
fleece Splendid
natural oak soles; low
rubber heels.
comfort last,
Wide widths.
2% to 8.

$223

Pay bnly
52.29 and
postage on
arrival.
oney back

no
satisﬁed.

Women’s Felt Everett ,

Be sure
mention
size.

to

 

Give Size.

Durable felt up-
of natural oak
felt. Pretty

For cold weather wear indoors.
Ibis. Combination soles, ontsnlc
leather and middle soles of warm .

ornament on toe. Low rubber heels. Sizes
21/2 8. \Vide widths. Order by No. 96A380.
Send no money. Pay 79c and postage on arrival.
State size.

MEN’S STORM BOOTS

l Ill-Cut Slol‘lll “(Nils (if Soft brown
galliilddﬁleather. absolutely «barnyard proof. Di.”-
ablc outsoles. sewed and nailed; Solid. leather m.
soles; durable counte‘rs; flirt-excluding bellows
tongues. Sizes 6 o 12. “ldu Widths .
Order by No. ,

A769.
money. _
and postage on ar- '
rival. State size.
Order boys’ Sizes.
1 to 5%. by NO-
96A570. P r | o e
2.48.

rder little
sizes, 9 o
b No.

    

boys’
V2 7
1 .

no
bargain price
postage on arrival.

pull strap,
and buckles.
leather heels.

Acid-proof, bellows tongue,
leather'inner solos, tow strap
oak leather outer soles iaiii
61 S 6 to 12, wide widths only. Order y

96 777. Send no money. Pay $4.98 and postage
on arrival.

Women’s Popular
Stitchdown Dark
Brown Oxfords

   
  
  
  
  

Class stitchdown Oxford for
womebh. Wonderfull comfort- . ‘ “ .
able and stylish. ppers of . .

k bro n leather. Smooth .
lggtrher iodine. Flexible stitched—down calf outaoles.
Low rubber heels. Sizes 2% to 8. Wide widths.
Order by No. 98A268. Send no money. Pay only

$1.98 and postage on arrival.

\

  

 

   
  

iii

l m on AiiiiiviiL -
Never before have you had the
good luck to see such astound-
lng money-saving values/You
will get the most for" your
dollars by buying everything you
possibly can NOW. Sharood ls~
proud to offer you these saving
OPPORTUNITIES. Make the
most of it. BUY—BUY NOW!

  
  

.f"”“Wiiuiim

ii

   
 
 

 

“Stylish Stout’ ’
Gabardine Dress

$98

  
          

of
Will
nL‘\V

   

Women large
see in
model
ideal dress.

to give
‘ slendering
\otd

        
     
    
      
    

  
  
   
 

long effect.
Attractive
e m broidery
on sleeves,
vestee and
panels. The
self-materi-
belt ties

 
       
   
      
      
           
       
 
         
    
       
       
       
        
      
   

  
  

   
 

 

 
 

Embroidered V
Gabardine j

Dress

$222}

This delightful model
is sure to be one 01
the favorites of

season. It is of beaut-
iful cotton garbardino
With vestee, smart
bell sleeves and fash—
ionable panels richb
embroidered. T h I

       
  

 

   
    
         
          

 

 

     
 
    
 
      

5.1435 mesa. u... -

       
        
      
 
  

  

    
     
      
     

self material bek
ties graceful] at
back. Sizes to
- 44. . Order N
by No. 96E55
Order Brown bv No.
96E6528. Send no
money. Pay $2.9
and postage on a
rival.

    
 
  

 

    
 

i

   
 
 
     

- :,~ i, ~\
s eh" sums»

      
 

g».
31‘

     
       
  

Men’s
F our-

Buckle

All Rubber
Arctics

$242

Stats Site

         

      
  
 

 
    
  

  
    
   

    

  
    
   
      

ru e r - ‘
buckle iii-out arctic for'
men. Made With double ‘ ‘
thicg Males sand selag'e t W”
rein oree . now-exc u i ensue. .
men's 8 to 12. Wide widths
value Send quick. Order [3 No. 96A . 3"
no money. Pay $2.48 on postage on

  
  

 
 
  
  
 

 
 
 
 

.

n... Mimi

    


 

I
1
i
I
l
I
l
1

- and we Will ship

 

1

NATIONAL

LIGHT

KEROSENE ,

Heat~LighL
Power ’

 

éFor Oil Lamps

Forty years ago the ﬁrst
National Light Kerosene was
sold for oil lamps It gave
a steady white, bright light
with a clear chimney and
a clean wick. Almost im-
. mediately it lifted itself out
ofthe ordinary CoalOil class
of oils and became famous as
a Kerosene with no smoke or
odor. People traveled miles
out of their way to buy it.

Today National Light
Kerosene is known as the
highest quality Kerosene on
the market.

For Oil Stoves

Use it in your oil stoves and
heaters. No impurities to
clog wick or burner. No
smoke or odor to cause ill
health.

For Incubators

Use it in your incubators,
its uniform heat will hatch
healthy chicks from every
fertile te. No 3%.: onous
umes oe gegg pores
when used 111 Incubators or
fumes to. kill little chicks in
the Broader.

F or Tractors
Use it in your Tractor, it will
develop more power than
ordinary Coal because
every drop is consumed in
the ﬁring chamber elimin-
.§:§anyc ance Of t eun-

portion diluting ubri-
eating oil in the ease.

ii For Lighting Plants

Use National Light Kerosene
for your Lighting Plant,
Lanterns, every purpose
where Kerosene is used you
will ﬁnd “National Light”
more satisfactory and eco-
nomlcal.

You can usea 113 more.
Mail your or or your
dealer cannot sup 3 you
m one
of our 96 Distrrbuting
Branches nearest to you.

Use Eager-6Q Méltm' Oil;

wrs"1...‘t...1r°“"d

., THE 1011mm. 11111111111; to.
704st 111m y

unmmnmmmur——

: £95m 5‘41 .ﬁlﬂgtnd. Ohio
slid? am. 523111 Whistles

Tami“, Ohio

 

gp01 i.nt
NM?” :aoucspg,otnosozocogg 31,115:

Address ...... ‘ ...............‘...... .........

. soda

 

county, for $5, 900%

=- terent due

 

 

 

 

‘(Amnzbopmmwforw
deem f m

mmm a“ m

m
”I" mulrmmmuommnnfodﬁmnmmdm

not used I! 00‘

 

-UNLAWFEIL FOR COUSINS
To MAKE!

Is it unlawful for Cousins to get
married in Michigan? It so, what
States is it. lawful? How old must
a female be to get married without
permit of parents?——-J. K., Zeeland,
Michigan. '

~—Seetion 11.356, of the C. L. 1915
prohibits marriage of cousins of the
ﬁrst degree. I‘ do not have a list of
states that permit cousins to marry.-
Act 195 of the Public Acts of 1917
requires written consent of parents

or guardian if the female is under »

18 years of age—Legal Editor.

KEEPING CIDER SWEET

What can I put into a 50 gallon

barrel of cider to keep it sweet?—

. 1). E. W., Hale, Mich.

———A ﬁfty gallon barrel of cider may
he kept sweet by the addition of 0.1
per cent benmate of soda. This per-
ounces of henmatc of soda to ﬁfty
gallons of elder.

Care should be taken immeasur-
ing thecider to which bensoate of
is to be added as too little
will resuIt in no preservative -ac-
tion, while if. too much is added it
might have a harmful effect.

Cider to which benzoate of soda
has been added cannot be used for
vinegar-making as vinegar is the
result of microbial fermentation and
the growth of microbes is inhibited
by the henzoate of soda.-~R. L.
Tweed, Res. Asst. in Bacteriology.
M. A C

ERROR IN “RIGHT OF TEACHER
T0 PUNISH CHILD” ARTICLE
111. the December ninth issue of the

Michigan Business Farmer on the

Farmers Service ﬁureau page, you

published an article entitled “Right

of Teacher to Punis’h Child” and in-

cluded in connection with this a

letter from me but you did not pub-

lish this letter as I had given it to
you I made the following state»
ment:

“The law..does give the school
board the authority to make and
enforce suitable rules governing the
external affairs of. the school.”

You, have given 11 111 such a way
‘13 to convey the opposite meaning
from what it is intended to convey.
111 your article it reads as follows:

“-’l‘he law does not give the school
ward any authority. etc.’

Will you kindly give the necessary
explanation and print this in the
turnout form in your next issue——
B. J. Ford

MtiRTGAGE

If A gave B a mortgage on 40
acres of land and A being a married
man and his wife refusing and not
signing the mortgage can B collect

~ the same by law; or is there certain

clauses that would make a difference.
——B. H. Boy-no Falls, Michigan

~—If the land mortgaged was a home-
stead the encumbrance would be
void The land would be free. If;
the land mortgaged was not a home-
stead the mortgage if not paid could
be forclosed and deprive the husband
from any interest erein The
mortgagee could hold t e land dur-
ing the life of the husband subject
only to the (lower of the Wife if she
lived longer than he. If she died
ﬁrst the mortgagee Would qbtaIn the
whole title. It the hushand gave a
note. witht he mortgage that the
1111c reg? ed to sign he would be
hgidIug 1%? Ihe note and it might be
ch IIected FFan other property of the
ushaud hesides the homestead.—
£98311“ E ﬁllEPF
“F ES
%¥Kug@t 1920
3?}? psceqlé
Gill 9

W111

ossesgioil in 116111,}; er.
9w here the ﬁrst use}! WNW-
339, Wild t 6 tags“? for tégt year, in-
aréh 11$lllN 0011';

interest in Mardh‘l that year.
at prices the way thin s are: we I‘ileel
we Ca not go on an pay for {lie

ape back gage , . .

or ‘t.

ﬁll
ill} pd houmht lib}?

and

aswehadtlreuseoftlseplaee,lrut
he had the use of the place in 1920
and wepaldthetaxeeslsotueslsst
year of course Will you please tell
meitwewillbemadetomtfw
for this year? We would like to loop
the place, but how can we wltipou

.tatoes at 30 cents, hay at $5 and $6,

etc.~? This man claims he had to
pay $28 to have the sale of this
place recorded, is this true? Can
such charges be medal—*6. 3.. Sears,
Michigan.

-—'-If the taxes of 1322 Worth assessed
to you and you have any personal
property from which. the? tax could
be made the town treasurer would
be under obligations to levy upon
the personal property to pay the tax.
If the tax was not assessed to you
then the tax would he returned
againstthe land and hold against
the land the same as a mortgage.
The owner can not compel you to
give up the land, without foreclosure
of mortgage, if you gave a mortgage,
or steps to forfeit the land contract,
it you gave a contract. You did not
say which. You do not tell what the
deal was in getting the,nlaee. If
you took a. deed there Would he rev-
enue, stamps of- 50 cents for each
$500. If there was a mortgage or
a land contract that would hay-e a
tax of 50 cents for each $100. The
recording fee, alone, would not.
amount to $28, but the. revenue
stamps and tax might amount to $23
on a. $5, 0010 farm. The purchaser

of a. farm. under contract or by ﬁtting .

a mortgage can not be received to
give up the DIOD““t’Y until. the time
provided by law fcr__torfereure in one
case and foreclosure in another.-—-
Legal Editor.

CULVERTS “1‘00 m

We live 0.11 State Reward Road
M10. When the builders, put. in the
culvertsrthey were internist; by the
land owners that the euphoric were
too small to carry of: the water in
the spring but they put them in just
the some. Gan we ask damages
done by water in cellars caused by
culverts being too small? It the
culverts had not been there the
water couldn’t do any damage as it
could get away.—~M. H. Hawks,
Mich. '

——You would not be in a position
to press your claim. for damages

You would‘reeoive more beneﬁt if‘

you would call the attention of. the
District Engineer or the County
Highway Engineer to the condition
which exists by reason of the in-
adequate culvert, asking that the
same be enlarged and it his conten-
tion is correct the request would be
granted —-—-H. H. Partlow, State
Highway Dent.

rm mm cost OF LAND
CLEARING 801106118

In a, recent issue I note a. query 1

asking as to who eye the expenses

of the land clearing special trains ;
rat- ‘

and crews which have been 0
ing in northestern Michigan. . also
note the answer which Mr Baldwin
of the Extension Department of the
Agricultural ColIege gays, which
nswers fully as the gags, at goes,
1.111 I believe the write 1'. (If gig ques-
tion would be It} greeted 1’11 1:9“ owing
that there is more I; @321 than
simply Mr £3?

For instag FIgring
QFmers

1 work
$32005. 91; In:
5?. a'nice saving

ggesult of the

Ed
$5.
in g’
0% 13’
W9? e1? win points out

an? Baye s oi Michigan
8.a. 13% 1:11? amountt.
~ 1111.011 12 0.119 per lchlar i
Where the County "Road Cdmlgfg£mb
9: re uired 8. ditch thmu

33% 15c ylgwpul’dl. ’gt1 hi:
.1 this 33!: 63:61:11

hour ’3 time arid with-s
of dynamite corrrpleted1 the ditch

' giviiig“ a “larger aﬁlf 'B‘éft‘er ditch

Anewhetkn'
pin 14 get e

be ”mandolin 1 I

techie charging“

1F generates electricity as
, thewh eel mutant hewind.
It angina

 

I’ll Save ”$131.1 Big
Money (7.311 "‘i‘his
Bezatlilflli {{r.ll“e

' Mental- '
ﬁgmgs are we talk
q! the Greatest

. n
’ [1mm enamel.
. from- factory

‘ 3 '1}. pricessa .2530

' ' Mail a Postal Today
' Get our prices now. Steelan'd
‘ imnmicaue got up Better_

, write t ay ,

 

New pessimism

like «me 1.3%

In hen house night Ind norain
Bum Kerosene or Gnso o '
Cleln. odorless, economical. Burn.
leu Luel than wick lumen. In ll: ‘
° ,

 

 

‘ " ' .Isazu.
728 u (fmcoumuv

 

 

 

 

 

 


b“ '
ndvm, ts

”til-led, getting «mus .
8 our of these ﬁélds and this .-

emjonstration work shows the best
ay that this cleaning up can be
“do“ and at the least oust—T. F.

,arston, No. Eastern Michigan De- f

. olefin-ant Bureau.

,CANWFROMALL

has years ago lad: 0911115 1‘1"“?

sod a farm of 80 acres, whirl:
" on encumbrance of three.— thou—
885,34 ﬁve hundred dollars in a men?
”.3 m long past due. Giving second
mortgage of ﬁfteen hundred dollars
to the some party that held go ﬁrst,
K n the {all I sold the place subiect
"to the encumbrance, after which the
place has its second owner after nav-
, self. No interest, taxes, or insur—
lance have been paid sincethat time.
said encumbrance amounting to
mom.Nea1-ly seven thousand dol-
late or more Now if this place is
sold at auction for less than the price
against it, is it possible for them to
' collect the difference from me, as
the other two parties are not worth
anything now?—V. A. H., Holt,
.Michlgan.

——A mortgage may be foreclosed in
' Chancery and the original maker of
the mortgage and note accompany—
ing the same, and all subsequent
‘.pQrel_1as‘ers who assumed the mort-
gaze and agreed to pay the same
may also be made parties, and if the
land does not sell for enough to pay
the mortgage, the mertgagee may
take Judgement against all who
agreed to pay the mortgage for the
balance and costs and require them
taxpay‘ it'll they have property from

which it may be collected above ex— ' ’

eruptions—Legal Editor.

, READJUSTM‘ENT 0N TIRE

{some time ago I bought a tire,
guaranteed, but after running it 200
mllss‘i‘t gave out. We took it to the
agent, who sent it to the company
for. readjustment. He gave me a
new tire in place telling us there was
a ﬂaw in the fire and did not think
Owe would have to pay for it. The.
ﬁrst tire was returned with a bi‘l
of $3.85 for repairs, the company
saying it was no fault of the tire.
Is the guarantee any good and do we
have to pay for the tire and read—
justment also?—E. W., Boyne City,
Michigan.

If it was not the fault of the tire.

you would have to pay for the repair
of the tire if you ordered it repaired.
It you did not and they were not
authorized to make any repairs you
can tell them to keep the tit-elf it
.was the fault of the tire you are
, entitled to be protected upon the
. guaranty and your dealer should as-

sist you.——~Legal Editor.

FUR DEPARTMENT

—-—-ED|TED BY A. R 11mm
America' 3 Parental Author and Trapper
‘f—"QUEQTIONS ANSWERED”
' RIDES AND FURS
Will you please tell me if it hurts
hide: or for to let them freeze after

skinning them? How to take care
of them ?—.vB. C. N., Lawyer, Wye.

 

-——F'reezlng does not, hurt or lessen.

the selling value of either. Hides——
cattle, horse, calf, sheep are usually
salted heavily a few hours after kill-
ing, using say twa gallons of salt on
a hide that weighs 40 pounds. The
object of not salting immediately af-
ter skinning is to allow the animal
heat to get out. In some parts of

the country—”Wyoming for instance},

where the altitude, is high hidestwill
cure without salt and are known as
,ilint but are not as convenient to
ship and handle as salt cured.

-' Fur pelts, such as fox, wolf, skunk, ‘

‘ mink, etc., are stretched on a board

” made shape of the pelt and nailed.

.‘ I’m-pelts do not need any salt. Sur-
: plus fat and ﬂesh should be removed.
The pelts can be removed from the

Mixing boards after they have
‘ “intently to hold their shape.

' m are placed on the stretching

teem pelt side ouHurin _

 

 

a...“ “ﬂ“..- “1...:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

’ ‘llfm

' .nmllx

 

/CHsVRoLET/

for Economical TransportatiOn

In 1922 Chevrolet jumped from the ability to stand up under
' seventhtosecondplace insalesof hard conditions.

all cars, and to ﬁrst place 1n sales
f full . They ﬁnd that Chevrolet, fully
o y equi]; I d modern cars equipped as sold 15 the best value

Purchases by farmers were the per dollar in the low—priced ,
chief factor in this remarkable ﬁeld, and neighbors tell them it
development. costs least per mile to operate.

 

Farmers are shrewd buyers They find it to , t
and study costs and values care- handle and rellabcll:1 y easy 0

fully.
The like its f1 h and
They want automobiles not only strea‘m lines. nis its long

of low ﬁrst price, but also of low .

later cost for operation and That is Wh th." farmerdemand

maintenance. for Chevro ets is daily 1ncreasing
‘ ’ its lead among modem, quality

They want room, comfort and automobiles.

Prices F. 0. B. Flint, Michigan

, SUPERIOR Two Passenger Roadster . $510
SUPERIOR Five Passenger Touring - 525
SUPERIOR Twoil’assenger Utility Coupe 680
SUPERIOR Four PassengeﬁSedaneme - 850
SUPERIOR Five Passenger Sedan . L 860
SUPERIOR Light Delivery — - - ' 5 10

Cheerlet Motor Company, Detroit, Mich.

Division of General Motors Corporation

Therearenovvmoroman 10,000 A l atio
Chevrolet dealers and service ﬁglﬁigh Egghgﬁgrosniﬁdtiﬁg
ut the world tory not adequately covered

 

 

 

 


   

 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
  
 

  
   
 
 
  

Shell and Grind . ‘. .i . . .

  
 
  

/’."
/

’
.l‘

  

/

   

’
’

 

   

with McCormick- Deering Shellers
and Grinders driven by Interna-
tional Kerosene Engines

VERY man who grows stock for profit should
be equipped to grind the feed. It is not hard
work when you have an International Kerosene

Engine hr power, and McCormick-Deering' Shellers
and Feed Grinders to do the work. Aiew hours on I

a rainy day now and then will give you a supply of
nutritious stock food that will add many dollars to
your years proiits.

if you will stop in at the store of the McCormick-
Deering dealer, he will show you International Kero-
sene Engines 1n 1%, 3, 6, and 10h. p. sizes. And
while you are there, ask him about McCormick-
Deering Feed Grinders. The shellers are made 1n
sizes ranging from hand shellers to 2 and 4-hole
and cylinder power shellers for custom work.
The grinders are built in sizes and styles for every
farm. Find out about these necessary machines,
next time you are in town. '

INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY

OF AMBRICA
CHICAGO m U ’ A
93 Branch Houses and I 5, 000 Dealers in the United Slates

  

  

  

 
        
      
 
         
 
   
     
     
     
       
    
       
       
       
           
   

 

   
  
   
 
  
  
    
   
   
     
    
   
  
    
  

 

 

 

1
liiil1\ll
I 1
11""
Y
‘I1 .
I 1.11

 

 

 

 

10111111111111, Y1» mfg-3‘ 1.57%. _: c m
/~/”:;_\%\ . ////// "\ \ \\\\\\\ ’hi‘i“ i111 r in] [HE—1'—

,1111 TIIE FOUNDATION
OF coop mops

“LEL “As ye sow’ ’——Solvay Pulverized Limestone—“ so shall

ye reap"~— ——bigger, better, more proﬁtable crops. Solvay

brings crops to quick, complete maturity

by making soil sweet; releasing all plant-

M food to the growing crops. Guaran~

- » teed high‘ test 95% carbonates—

ground ﬁne, furnace dried, easily

spread. Crop improvement shows
ﬁrst harvest.

Keep posted on lime and its use.
Write fer Booklet—sent FREE.

THE SOLVAY PROCESS CO.
:3?905?nulmiiig $3131? pining:

A FINE FUR COAT

 

 

Whyk sell cheap?
Mo re

Moneye tannin

 
     

—- fOéhOWn “111511.11:i

1 .al . Alum, rome c - .

1 iiaik. and Indian Tanning Mid. from Y0 II I' o W n
methods fully t e211'(p(l)ained in "a”. or cow "Id.-
Iiiiiw liiio%k' 2211‘qu fig! We make this coat to measure

from the hide you send. Write
us for special low price.

Any Kind of Skin
We make up any kind of skint»
'euit your ne

.... Also Ledlee’ Coats and

—price only .00. Descrip—
tive folder ree
A. R. HARDING, Publisher,

Dept. 6, Columbus, Ohio

 

   
  

Furs, Robeeinetc.
W h ve been in t
buginege since 1878 and guaran-
tee satisfaction '

moTI MOTI'IY

Bookof s lee of Men's
GreateetGI-assseeglvul no known. FREE and W go I f
ate, Aleike over and Tim WH“ form“ v‘m

known for hay
est 8'1"” you can

Reading ﬁshed: Tet-11mm Go.
non-151..

 

 

l.

 

  
 

Hf

MAKE Willi OWII dd“
11.341101,

udinzhu or‘

 

 

   

   
 
 
  

By James Oliver Caribou . - . ..
Michigan’ 3 Own and America’ s Formost Author of the Cm: Northwest
(Copyright by James Oliver Gin-wood .. - - * .

 

1
a.
‘

 

strange to her.

Aldous. a well known novelist.

SYNOPSIS

OANNE GRAY is one of the passengers on the train bound for Tete Jaime - , "
Cache. the home of “The Horde, " where she has no friends and all will be "
The train stops at a town composed of several tents, she,‘
goes in search~ of food and a bath. She is directed to "Bill’s Shack" md‘cig
here she meets Bill Quade who not only owns and. operates “Bill’s Shack” but...“
is also leader of the lawless men of the town.
can rent and that he will show it to her.
newcomer enters the doorway leading off the street.

Quade says he has a room she"
As they parts out of the room a"
The newcomer is John

He sees the strange girl enter the place and 1
believes she has made a mistake and as he- stands in the doorway his eyes

rest upon the curtained doorway thrmigh which they have passed.
mement the girl steps cut, face ﬂaming and eyes ﬂashing.

In but a
Quads follows

her apologetically. He starts to oﬂer the girl money but before he can do so,
Aldous steps to the girl’s side and ﬂoors Quade with a terriillc blow. Aldous

hurries the girl away from the scene to the home of friends.

Joanne tells

Aldous she is going to Tete Jaime to find her husband, Mortimer Fitangh.‘
Aldous decides to go with her to protect her from Quade and his partner

Culver Rann.
clares he has seen the grave.

Aldous believes Fitzﬂugh is dead and locates a friend who de-
Upon their arrival at Tete Jaune they are
met by friends of Aldous at whose place they are to stay during their stoo-

 

 

(Continued from Dec. 23rd issue)

CHAPTER XII
'For an'hour after Donald Mac—
Donald had pledged himself to ac-
company Jaonne and Aldous on their
pilgrimage to the grave in the Saw
Tooth Range the two men continued
to discuss the unusual complications
in which they had suddenly become
involved, and at the same time pre—
pared themselves a supper of bacon
and coffee over the ﬁre. They agreed
upon a plan of action with one ex-
ception. Aldous was determined to
return to the town, arguing there
was a good straegic reason for show-
ing himself openly and Without fear.
MacDonald opposed this apprehen-
sively.

“Better lay quiet until morning,"
he expostulated. “You’d better lis-
ten to me, an’ do that, Johnny. I’ve
got something under my shoulder
that tells me you’d better!”

In the face of the 'old hunter’s
misgiving, Aldous prepared to leave.
It was nearly ten o'clock when he
set back in the directioniof Tete
Jaune, Donald accompanying him as
far as the moonlit amphitheatre in
the forest. There they separated,
and Aldous went on alone.

He believed that Joanne and the
Blacktons would half expect him to
return to the bunglow after he had
seen MacDonald. He was sure that
Blackton, at least, would'look for
him until quite late. The temptation
to take advantage of their hospitality
was great, especially as it would
bring him in the company of Joanne
again. On the other hand, he was
certain that this ﬁrst night in Tete
Jaune held very large possibilities
for him. The dectective instinct in
him was roused, and his adVenturous
spirit was alive for action. First of
all, he wanted proof of what Mac-
Donald had told him. T‘ﬂ‘t an at—
tempt had been made to assassinate
the old mountaineer he did not for
an instant doubt. But had Joe De-
Bar, the half—breed, actually ,betray-
ed them? Had he soldhimself to
Culver Rann, and did Rann hold the
key to the secret expedition they had
planned into the North? He did not,
at ﬁrst, care to see Rann. He made
up his mind that if he did meet him
he would stop and chat casually
with him, asthough he had heard
and seen nothing to rouse his sus-
picions. He particularly wanted to
ﬁnd DeBar; and, next to DeBar,
Quade himself.

The night carnival was at its
height when Aldous re—entered the
long, lighted street. From ten until
eleven was the liveliest hour of the
night. Even the restaurants and
soup-kitchens were crowded then.
He strolled slowly down the street
until he came to a little crowd gath—

ered about the bear equestrenne

The big canvass dance-hall Ia few
doors away had lured from her most
of her admirers by this time, and
Aldous fou d no difﬁculty in reach-
ing the inner circle. ' He looked ﬁrst
for the half-breed. Failing to ﬁnd
him, he looked at the woman, who
stood only a‘few feet from him.
Her glossy black curls were a bit
dishevelled and the excitement of

lithe 1112111 had idded the yivid colour-
‘ing of her some“: 14933.11

ad. cheeks.
sinuous in
11:3

   
 

Her body was also]: and,

 

black eyes ﬂashed fires of deviltry ‘i

and allurement _ , /

For a moment he stared into her
face. If he had not been looking
closely he would not have seen the
swift change that shot into the siren-
like play of her orbs. It was almOSt
instantaneous. Her slow— —travelling
glance stopped as she saw him. He
saw the quick intake of her breath,
a sudden compression of her lips,
the startled, searching scrutiny or a
pair of eyes from which, for a. mom-
ent, all the lanquor and coquetry of
her trade were gone. Then she
passed him, smiling again, nodding,
sweeping a hand and arm through

her handsome curls as she ﬂung a‘

shapely limb over the broad back of
the bear. In a garish sort of way
the woman was beautiful, and this
night, as on all others. her beauty
had nearly ﬁlled the silken coin-bag
suspended from her neck As she
rode down the street Aldous recalled
Blackton’ 8 words: She was a friend
of. Culver Rann’ 5.
this fact accounted for the strange;
ness/of the look she had given him.

He passed on to the dance hall.
It was crowded, mostly with men.
But here and there, ,like so many

faces peering forth from living
graves, he saw the Little Sisters of
Tete Jaune Cache. Outnumbered

ten to one, their voices rang out in
shrill banter and delirious laughter
above the rumble of men. At “the
far end, a ﬁddle, a piano, and a clari-
net were squealing forth musie. The
place smelled strongly of whisky.
It always smelledof that, for most
of the men who sought amusement
here get their whisky in spite of the
law. ,There were rock-hogs from'up

the line, and rock—hogs fromdown ..

the line, men of all nationalities and
of almost all ages; teamsters, trail-

cutters, packers, and rough-shod nav- '

vies; men whose daily task was to
play with dynamite and giant pow-
der; steel—men, tie-men, and men
who drilled into the hearts of moun-
talus.
had looked upon'this same scene,
and had listened to the trample and
rear and wild revel’ry of it, marvel-
ing that to-morrow the men of this
saturnalia would again be the build-
ers of an empire. The thin, hollow—
cheeked faces that passed and re-
passed him, rouged and smiling,
could not destroy in his mind the
strength or the picture. They were
but moths, ﬂuttering about in their
own doom, contending with each
other to see which should quickest
achieve destruction. .

For several minutes Aldous scan-

ned the faces in the big tent- hall, .-

and nowhere did he see DeBar. He
dropped out, and continued leisurely
along the lighted way until he came
to Lovak’s huge black-and-white
striped soup- -tent.
and until twelve, this was as crowded
as the dance—hall. Aldous knew
Lovak, the Hungarian.

Through Lovak he had found the
keyithat had unlocked for him many
curious and interesting things asso-

ciated with that powerful Left Arm ‘-
of the Empire Builders—Abe Slang "
Except for a sprinkling or Germans. l 7

a few Italians; and now and then“
, Greek crawl ‘ -
. Lavok’ "

) Hassles

He Wondered if~

More than once John Aldous ‘

At ten o’,clock»

  
  

     
    
  
      
    
      
   

  
 
 
   

  
 

  
      
   
     
     
     
     
 
  
  
 
 

  
   
     

 

.
'13;

 

 

 

       

 

   
      

 
   

 
       
 

     
  

     
    
 

      

    
    
         
     
     
  
  
 
 
  


 

Mint ”Laval“
5WD hick he ~ semis, big, ge

’ rice, ' and cabbage, [got ‘ heel;

mutton, of everything procurable .

“out of which soup could.be made,
and, Whether or meat or vegetable,
smelling to heaven of garlic.
, Fifty men were eating when Al-
.> dous went in, devouring their soup
‘with the; utter abandon and joy of
the.Galic‘ian, So that noise they made
was like,» the noise ofnﬂfty pigs at
ﬁfty troughs. Now and then DeBar,

. ' . mohair—breed, came here for soup,
I , n-.,nnd Aldoussearched quickly for him.

'He was turning to -- go when his
- friend,f Lovak,
Lovak had not seen DeBar‘. "But
he-had news. That day the authori-
*~ties—-the police—‘had confiscated
twenty dressed hogs, and in each
porcine carcass they had found four-
quart1bottles of whisky, artistically
. imbedded in the leaf-lard fat. The
fdaybefore those same authorities
had conﬁscated a barrel of “kero-
VSene.” They were becoming alto-
, gether too oﬂicious, Lovak thought.
’Aldous went on.. He looked in at

a dozen restaurants, and twice as
.many soft—drink emporiums, where
.phonographs were worked until they
Were cracked and dizzy. He'stopped
at)a_small tobacco shop, and entered
:to buy himself some cigars. 'There
«was one customer ahead of him.
‘sHe was lighting a cigar, and the
light of a big hanging lamp ﬂashed
on-adiamond ring. Over his sput—
tering match his eyes met those of
John Aldous. . They were dark eyes,
neither brown nor black,.but dark,
with the keeness and. strange glitter
\of --a serpent’s. He wore a small
clipped moustache; his hands were
white; he was a man whom one
~- might expect ~»to possess the sang
.ﬁroid of- a devil in any emergency.
For barely an instant he hesitated
inthe operation of lighting his cigar
;,_asjlie,saw Aldous. Then he nodded.
3: “Hello, John. Aldous,” he said.

“Good evening, Culver Rann,” re-
plied Aldous. . ' .

" For amoment his nerves tingled—
the next they were-like steel. Cul-
.Yel'F Rann’s teeth gleamed. 'Aldous
smiled back. They ,were cold, hard,
rapierlik-e glances. Each understood
‘now that the other was a deadly
xtenemy, for Quade’s enemies were
also Culver Rann’s. Aldous moved
carelessly to the glass case in which
were 'the cigars. With the barest
touch of one of his slim white hands
Culver Rann stopped him.

“Have one of mine, Aldous,” he
invited, opening a silver case ﬁlled
with cigars. ”We’ve never had the
pleasure of smoking together, you
know.” . ‘

“Never,” said Aldous, accepting
one of the cigars. “Thanks." ’

“As he lighted it, their eyes met
again. Aldous turned to the case.

"‘Hal-f a dozen ‘Noblemen’,” he
said to the man behind the counter;
then, to Rann: “Will you have one
on me?”. . .

"With pleasure,“ said Rann. He
added, smiling straight into. the
other’s eyes, “What are you doing
up here, Aldous? After local
colour?”

,“Perhaps. The
. me. '
“Decidedly ‘And I understand
that you’ve played an important part
in the. making of it,” replied Aldous
carelessly. *

' For a ﬂash Rann’s eyes darkened,
and his mouth hardened, then his
white teeth gleamed again. He had
caught the insinuation, and he had
scarcely been able to ward oﬁ the
shot; ,

“I’ve tried to do my small share,”
he admitted. “If you’re after local
colour for your books, Aldous, I
‘possibly may be able to assist you-—
if you’re in town long”,

“Undoubtedly you could,” said
Aldous. “I think you could tell me
a great deal that I would like to
know, Rann. But—will You?”

5 There was a direct challenge in
his coldly smiling eyes. “Yes, I think

place interests

Ifshall be quite pleased to do 80,”.
'r said Rann.

:“Especially—if you are
long in "town.” There was an odd
emphasis on those last words.

He moved toward the door.

Andif you are here very long,”

added, his eyes gleaming sigma-M

anti (g; 3}th possible - that you may
Shiraz U or m f

ten“ cents “a. bowiésoiip' of"

pool-room.
.came out just as a woman hurried

came to 'him. No,‘

yOur own 'which/ .
~ ' 1 . ~ .‘theirjpi

d go’s Aldous lettered ”in
cco 'Shop'.‘5"r’l‘-hen he went

”1.

th’
%% iAil at 'once it struck Aldous:
,1 at he‘shouldj have kept his eye' on

Qu‘ade's partner} He should have
followed:<,.-,him. With the hope of
seeing him again he walked up and
down the street; It was eleven
o’clock'when he went into Big Ben’s
Five minutes later he

past him, carrying with her a strong
scent of perfume. It was the Lady
of the-Bear.~ She was in a street

Q dress now, her glossy curls still fall-

ing loose about her—«probably ‘home-
ward bound after her night’s har-
vest. It struck Aldous that the hour
was early for her retirement, and
that 'she seemed somewhat in a
hurry.

The woman was going in the di-
rection of Rann’s big log bungalow,
which was built well out, of town to~
ward the river. She had not seen
him as he stood in the pool-room
doorway, and before she had passed
out of sight he was following her.
There were a dozen \branch trails
and “streets” on the way to Rann’s,
and into the gloom of some one of.
these the woman disappeared," so
that Aldous lost her entirely. He
was not disappointed when he found
she had left the main trail;

Five minutes later he stood close
to Rann’s house. From the side on
which he had approached it was
dark. No gleam of light shOWed
through the windows. Slowly he
walked around the building, and
stopped suddenly on the opposite
side. -Here-a closely drawn curtain
was illuminated by a glow from with-
in. Cautiously Aldous made his
way along the log wall of the house
until he came to the window. At
one side the curtain had caught
against some object, leaving perhaps
a quarter of an inch of space through
which. the light shone. Aldous
brought his eye on the level with the
space. ./

A half of the room came within
his vision. 'Directly in front of him,
lighted by a, curiously shaped iron
lamp suspended from the ceiling, was
a dull, red mahogany desk-table. At
'one side of this, partly facing him,
was Culver Rann. ' Opposite him sat
Quade. -

'Rann was speaking, while Quade
with his bullish shoulders hunched
forward and his ﬂeshy red neck roll-
ing over the collar of his coat, leaned
aeross the table in a tense and lis-
tening attitude. With his eyes glued
to‘the aperture, Aldous strained his
ears to catch what Rann was saying.
He heard only the low and unintel-
ligible monotone of his voice. A
mocking smile was accompanying
Rann’s words. To—night, as at all
times, this hawk who preyed upon
human lives was immaculate. In all
waysbut one he was the antithesis of
the beefy scoundrel who sat opposite
him. On the hand that toyed care—
lessly with the fob of his watch
ﬂashed a diamond; another sparkled
in his cravat. His dark hair was
sleek and well brushed; his bristly
little moustache was clipped in the
latest fashion. He was not large.
His hands, as he made a gesture to—
ward Quade, were of womanish
whiteness. Casually, on the street
or in a Pullman, Aldous would have
taken him for a gentleman. Now,
as he stared through the narrow siit
between the bottom of the curtain
and the sill, he knew that he was
looking upon one of the most dan—
gerous men in all the West. Quade
was a villain. Culver Rann, quiet
and cool and sauve, was a devil. Be-
hind his depravity worked the brain
which Quade lacked, and a nerve
which, in spite of that almost effem—
inate immaculateness, had been de-
scribed to Aldous as colossal.

Suddenly Quade turned. and Al—
dous saw that he was ﬂushed and
excited. He struck the desk ,a blow
with his ﬁst. Culver Rann leaned
back and smiled. , And John Aldous
slipped away from the window.

His nerves were quivering: in the
darkness he unbottoned the pocket
that' held his automatic. Through
the window he had seen an open door

' behind Rann, and his blood thrilled

with. the idea that :had come to him.
He was sure. the tWo partners in
crime were discussing himself and
MacDonald-—and Joanne. To hear
what they were saying, to discover
{We‘lﬂd be.

he, .‘1 . ‘ 1t:

 

 

 

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BUSIN

SATURDAY, JANUARY 6,1923

Edited and Published by
THE RURAL Pususomm comm. Inc.
GEORGE M. SLOOUI. Praldsnt
an. element. ﬁlohlgan

“’“FARME

2 making it impotent.
-more easy to count the empty.

They will ﬁnd 1t much
factories and
smokeless chimneys of beet—sugar factories in
not only Michigan but California. and Colorado,

Represented in New York Chicago St. Louis “augmenting by if the present dissention within the ranks con—

the Associated Farm Papers lncorpora
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations.

Milon Grinnell . . . . . . . . . m . . . . .Mansging Editor
Grace Nellis Jenney ........... . . . ...... Farm Home Editor
Frank I) \Vells ........................... Fruit E "to'
J. Herbert Ferris. . . . . . . . . .' ...... . ........... Radio Editor
William E. Brown Len) Editor
Wm. lV. Slocum, . Manager
Hen ry F‘. llipkins .................... Plant Superintendent

 

 

7 —‘ C.
Address All Communications to the Publication, Not IntﬁYM-t

 

' ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR
The date following yom name on the address hbels shows WM
your subscription expires. In renewing kindly send this lsbel to
Hold mistakes Remit by check draft, money-01‘6"“
Miter: stamps and currency are at sour risk. We scknowhdt.
by ﬁrst- class mail— every dollar received.

Adevertlslng Rates: 45¢ per agate Fling. 14 lines to the
column inch, 772 lines tn #11. 1 n Flat rate:

Live stock and Auction Sale Advertising: We oﬂer 89801111 10"
rates to reputable breeders of “Va stock and ponm; ‘59 “‘-
Mm

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS
We will not knowingly accept the sdvertistnc of
any person or ﬁrm who we do rm! believe to be
thoroughly honest and reliable. Should any rude!
nave any cause for complaint against In: 3d
1n these columns the publisher would I.
immeiiate letter bringing rall facts in light. In
every case when writing any:
Michigan Business Fsrmerl"

“The Farm Paper of Service "

K»

it will guarantee honest dealing

A G RICUL’I‘URAL RESULTS

N increase of nearly $2,000,000.000- in
A the buying power of the farmers of

the country is the outstanding feature
of a survey of the soil crops and their“
markets for 1922. The valuation of farm
crops last year was $7,572,890,0(N), accord-
ing to the ﬁnal returns of the Department
of Agriculture, 3 gain of $1,842,978.000,
or 32.1 per cent. ., over the valuation placed
on the crops on December 1,1921. The
big increase in the wheat. yield—about
46,000,000 bushels over last year s—was
made on an acreage 2,466,000 less than
that of 1921.4—From n. G. Dun & Co’s.
Annual Review of Business, Dec. 30, 1922.

THE SLOW ROAD UPWARD

“EVENTUALLY, why not now!” is a famous

slogan.

it to the farm market situation. Every
month shows an improvement in the trend of
prices paid for farm crops. Every report shows
Europe buying more of our Surplus crops that
have hovered over us like threatening clouds
the past two years.

Things have undoubtedly
farmers of America!

But it is a slow grind up the hill. Reminds
us of the days we used to slide swiftly to the
bottom of the long icy hill. Once in a While
there was a bare spot or a stone at the bottom.
Then we stopped with a dull, sickening thud.
Climbing out of the scrambled pile, tired and
bruised, we had to climb the long hill again.
Sometimes our feet slipped and we seemed to
lose what we had gained. It used to seem 0, so
much farther back up the hill than it did sailing
swiftly down.

Now, its a long way up the farmers hill. But,
We are already three~fourths of the way back
to where we started in 1913. It does you good
to pause a moment and look back over what
you have passed thru these past two years. That
is why the thoughtful reader will get a lot of
boiled down information and some satisfaction
out of the Agricultural & Business Survey, the
second report of which you will ﬁnd 011‘ page
21 of this issue. Study it! /

improved for the

THE SUGAR BEET PROBLEM LOOMS AGAIN!

HY is it impossible for the two irﬁerested
0‘ parties to the successful marketing of beet—
sugar from the state of Michigan to get

together? Has it come to the point of an ancient
fued, which smells of dark—agesror Italian-ven-
detta? Is the whole industry in Michigan to be
sacraﬁced on an altar of false pridefwhich keeps
stubborn heads from getting together ss'sane
men should, laying the. facts on the table and
arriving at a. sensible and practical solution.

The Business Farmer speaks now for the ordi- ‘

.nbl'y, every-day sugar-beet grower Who. asks 6nly
a fair proﬁt over and above his actual cost of
, production. Surely the mam-beet factories era

“1 saw your advertisement in ﬁt

The farmers would like to apply.

not so near-sighted, but what they can sod M‘

unless ,Jey can continue to sadsfythe men who:
is

tinues much longer.

It is costing the factories of Michigan many
times what it should cost them to induce farmers
to grow beets. There is no excuse for this.‘ This
waste of effort is costing the grower and the
stock-holder money, which should be saved and
put Where it belongs if there was s. friendly feel-
ing between grower and factory.

Some one man is responsible for this “grower-
be—damned” attitude which, varnish it with prize
money as they may, still lurks between the lines
of every sugar beet contract written. This man,
wherever he is, is a traitor to the farming busi-
ness in Michigan, and we propose to hunt him
out and crush him as we would a snake. For
this service, we will. e‘thanked equally by the
men who grow the beets and the men who own
the factories.

Will you help us ﬁnd him? We’ll guarantee
to so present the facts to the board of directors
of the company that is hiring him, that he will

beﬁred on the spot!

SHALL THE GOVERNMTENT FIX THE PRICE

VER since the government relinquished con—
trol of grain prices following the war there
has been an insistent demand that this con—

trol be restored. The farmer has suffered sev-
erely the past several years because of the un-
stable condition of his markets and the low
prices, and it has been argued that it wouldbe
to the beneﬁt of the entire country for the gov—
ernment to create a subsidized board for the
purpose of purchasing grains outright from the
farmer and disposing of them as, the demand
would warrant. Nor has this suggestion come
solely from the ranks of “small—fry“ critics. No
less a personage than a former Secretary of Ag-
riculture has carried on an extensive propaganda
to create sentiment in fave;
and there are a number 0

this proposal.

Congressman Sinclair of North Dakota, 2. for—
mer Michigan boy, and not by the way a Non—
Partisan Leaguer, has introduced several bills
along this line. One or them was “pigeon—holed”
in turn at the last election. Sinclair expects to
re-introdu-ce his bill at the next session, and he
will have strong support from most of the mem-
bers of the "farm bloc.”

If the Senate ﬁnally puts its approval] on the
merchant marine bill, Congressman Sinclair will
have an excellent argument to present in support
of his own measure. The merchant marine bill_
is in fact .a subsidy to ship owners, and if Con-
gress can conscientiously and with good reason
vote to subsidize a few hundred private ship
owners it will have an embarrassing time explain-
ing why itmnnot also vote to subsidize six mil—
lion farmers, if in the ﬁnal accounting the sub-
sidization does not cost the government a. cent.

Until the aﬂairs‘of the world become a little
more ordered the prices of farm products will
ﬂuctuate over a Wide range. Would not some
kind of government control and price—ﬁxing prove
a great inﬂuence in stabilizing the markets and
restoring prosperity to the; farms?

WHAT “WILL THE POOR BUYERS DO?
WHEN crop prices got caught on- the 1511 of
the war-aeroplane, prices of farm lands

everywhere went up. Nowhere, however,
did they reach the fabulous prices which were

paid in Illinois, Iowa and some of the Mississippi .

valley states. Five hundred dollars an acre bought
only an average quality of farm land. Most of
the sales were made by farmers attracted away

from the forms by the prospects of selling their

In some locali-
like

homesteads at unheard-of prices.
ties it became sortof a wild speculation,

the “tulip—bulb bubble” of'Dutch history, when 2

the prices of”single bulbs,.-much sought—after,
passed from hand [to 119.1111, though they were
of little intrincic value, until the market burst
over night.

There were. hundreds of farms sold 111 these
states for prices so out of proportion to“ actual
producing value, that the buyer could never
expect, except" during peak-wartime ass to
make a. flut- Mt from his investment. '

Lib Me

of such a schemek'
intelligent men in ,
Congress who are known to be in sympathy with "

beets, mapper—mint, chicory and all fruits m
grown proﬁtably, which are unknov‘m in"
western states mentioned. America’s 1:

city is 0111‘- metropolis and still growing. .
cago, one of the world’s largest cities,; is but
a few hours Water—haul from our shores. W9
are but a few miles from the c'e‘nte!‘ of p,
11011. We have thousands or acres of as

land as America can boast. Michigan land
might with equal justice, have sold as high '
Iowa and Illinois land, but luckily for 113 now.
it didn’ t! . .

DANGER IN THE SHREDDER "

IT is a common thing these days to pick up a.
newspaper and read an account of some farm-
er losing one or both of his hands in a 00m
shredder. To lose one’s hands is not a pleasant
experience. Hands are very useful things to
have. Even the man Who works most with his
brain ﬁnds his hands convenient at times, But

for the farmer whose brain is practically useless

unless he can execute its bidding with his hands,

the loss of those appendages is certainly most“ "

tragic.

Most accidents are preventable. ‘
victims of the ordinary run of decidents who can- *—‘ .
not say, “If I had only been a little more care—
ful this would not have happened.” 80 with
the farmer who loses his hands in the corn
shredder or ensilage cutter. He would never
let his familiarity with the machine breed con—
tempt for its dangers. Danger lurks in every
mechanism driven by mechanical power". The
very Whirr'of revolving knives spells DANGER.
“Beware,” “beware,” they sing. But despite the
warning many stick their hands into the maw

'and the terrible accident occurs.

Take heed, dear reader, «it may be your him
next unless you are careful. Let safety come
before every other consideration, whatever your
work may be.

MICHIGAN CITIES PROSPERous

NE department store in the city of Detroit
is reported to have done a. business of $280, -
000 in one day during Christmas week. All
stores reported the largest business in their his-
tory. Detroit is undoubtedly the most prosperous
city in America today. Manufacturing plants, of
course, did it. Lansing, Flint, Grand Rapids are
prosperous too. All growing and will need more
fresh vegetables. fruit, dairy supplies, etc. ., train
our farms. They ought to help lower the taxes
too, if theypay their just portion of the states
expense. One way would have been a state in-
come tax on incomes over $5090. Things do ~
not look so bad for farmersiin'Michigan as they
do in other states. That is if we continue to
work together and are not led astray by rattle—
brained prophets of a farming business millenium.

'

" Clemenceau says that Germany is preparing
for another war. If the French Tiger should
contend that an egg which is crushed could
again gather its component parts together again
and mount of its own accord to its former rest—
ing place, we might believe him, for we have
great admiration for the doughty old Frenchman.
But when he says that Germany is capable of
waging another war now or a quarter of a century
from now, we know that he is talking in his
dreams. No egg was ever so helplessly crushed
as the German military machine.

# t t

The tax on gasoline to raise funds for highway
maintenance is a subject we are discussing pro
and can in these columns. It reminds us of the
sales tax discussion. The folks you expect to
be for it, are against it, and vica. versa. It is a
live issue in Michigan. YOu cannot avoid ar—
riving at a decision regarding it because nothing
can prevent its coming up for settlement by a
popular vote. We are presenting both sides by
the best authorities available, so if our readers
do not get all the facts, it will not be our fsnlft

t. t 0 ‘ ‘

one .Wl‘iter 833’” 'th Exits" we hm sold 5“" I
t. ,1. , .

' to Henry Ford,- snot
1d hi

term paper '

' obs-9n mi! _.

 

There are few ,'


 

l

,la

v - A,

._.._ a":

, - . “ \r‘ -. _ I

I I i . - , 7 ., On a $6 contract Wiltlh

' ' CONTRACT. ‘ ”$28.00 an acre, Can they' get I e

‘ -‘ - . labor for that? This .18 a poorer

, 3 I 3M enclosing A?) letter tgﬁcﬁh: contract than offered last year which

.. ,WOsso 3338585 ompany. t to all was $5.50 beets, and $16.00 an acre

Ia urnderstan . golne ”Ollrou will labor. Where can fertility and. man-

-nortgigeﬁxhcewgge $1133 ﬁdrsonal and as?” costs come in on Either. Of $326

is I think, an attempt to break the Svoalstsleaggantf' Mllgéhéznerman, .

stand, of the growers .,th.at are ‘ ’ .' d _,_

‘thrgugh “with raisin ' beefs. until a _It 13 high time for the gr OWNS?“ ‘ J ... 3‘ lg:

' fair 50450 contract gall be sedur‘ed. the beet sugar factories Of Michigan , .. " llllllllllgg
. ._ The Owosso Company is also out to get together on a plan which IS

" of the factory owners in refusing to

j . to‘the man growing the largest acre- CK. , V ”' ‘ ‘ I “i" 5”"
., _ - . _ i 11 also a 'ob meet with the organized growers was iw «
' $10.33.:entrant... 3’04 12.020.38.120.class?titers; - Use Square Deal
jweeks for a contract. Well you can , ..
say to the groWers, organized and un- either factory or grower go. gems? ﬁgggﬁﬁgrﬁﬁa EveryWhere
organized that I believe, we through to cooperate on a pan W 10 W '
work to the mutual advantage 0f - PRODUCTS Many thousands of careful buyers who know

the Michigan Sugar Beet Growers’ ., , . . .. , ‘
Association never asked for anything both. _. One ujthlng is certain. The HogandFleldFence-With ,ttguatilegglnomy%ﬁy Sguare Deald fercllceln preference
but what was right I will say as factories have 9x99” accountants famous“Square Deal”knot. full ' “8' ese ve poms 8‘” ethem'
f I ' d ' 11 ' who can tell them exactly what it gauge wavy or crimped_ strand‘ i—Full sense “mics are Stronger andlaSt
air as am concerne persona y t t roduce su ar from beets wrres,plcket-llke stay eres and 10118611118“ the Sklmped kind-

COS 5 0 p g ' always live tension. z-Good galvanizing keeps out rust and

that unless a fair 60-50 contract If they will go 50 50 with the grow d
c n e ff w ich ex resses he ‘ ‘ _ - 6633’-
'sgmebtoge egflairitless thapt the ccfm- 9‘3 011 their proﬁt, W9 1331191173 {the gﬁfgggdggﬁﬁt K6693 3-Sstgglgllargﬁlalvﬂ3‘: hotlgs slyly and
* - ‘ ' fled an t e ac- ‘ a 16> .ye exx e.gnp.
‘ pany 1n the en°1959d letter seems to grower can be satls '-~ - LawnFabﬂc-Beautiﬁes the 4—Stln’ stay wires act as pickets—kee
want the farmer to give their ,con-’ tory, thru 1955911914 (11052301? $3333;— home;costs little. 5 fancetight and trim. p
g _ on . W h dwin ng acreage, so 1c or ’ , __ ._ — ayy or prim-oped strand wires
tract labor, I am d 6 it gr g etc” will actually make more for gm'rlcgggcgﬁseAgf ﬁfgwﬁé Egglggggisglcngnmon that prevents bag-
g1 .

beets forever, to any extent at least, i k h 1d d sav their ,

under Present conditions- the r Stoc ' _0 ers an . e bl spacmg. "Square Deal" fence adds beauty; increases farm
Now‘we coine t the Old Old ues_ management all the , disagrees e Steel Posts-Last longer; values; iseasyto put up andeconomical becauseofits

. h c; i ’ 9Q W feeling which. has existed practically look better than_ wood; save long years of service. '

“(im‘ W at is a a r contract It the from the day the ﬁrst factory in “Dense and repa‘rs- Two Fine Books Free

W ll answer the question jus 6 Michigan started to grind beets. Steel Gates—Save labor;

same as we have always answered -——Editor won’tsag;aiwayslookneat. Ifyouownlandwe willsend you free

it. Let representatives of the grOW- ' ‘ , Tilting Gates—Can’t. bank 120%231133; (igrgpgésn 11913;; £23353?

ers and the factories meet together, . snow, freeze in or drag. 75,000 farm problems; tells how to
place their cards on the table, face TAX EXEMPT—WHAT IT MEANS! HandyPnnels—Necessities ﬁgure capacities of barns, cribs,
Silos; shows tonnage of hay stacks;

ggéngoe ogirghanlgcatloconggtlogsl that HAVE read the editorial in the for breeding andshow use. gives commercial law, parcelpost
g .3 ge M. h' B iness Farmer of Deo— Corn Cribs—Cheapest rates. Also Square Deal Farm
1‘3 18' 3.“ us ’ for temporary storage. Book that tells what fence is best

out a. contract and then go to it. .. ,, _
However, I have a feeling that the ember 9th'lleaded Tax EX?mPt- Barbed and Smooth , sultedforevervfarm need.
sugar beet. business in Michigan is I agree Wlth your sentiments wire,nailsandstaplw1, 'g Eggﬁggﬁglnéogjsﬁaég mm

on the decline and the greatest ef- thoroughly. Millions and millions and fencestretchersare

- c l h. th .
fort on the part of growers and fac- 0f dOHRTS that are usually available ggﬁgnghgygoggmarl’: , £3??? Sttee:g‘t“gre 90-!"
, - . n I! I1 ., , .

tories must be, used through earnest ‘ s _ “ma

for the ﬁnancing of farm operations

cooperation to ever bring'jt back to and industrial plants have been with—

where it Was once. draWn from active service and re—

W. H. Wallace says, “When you turned to the safety deposit boxes
try to ﬁnd out what the growers in the form of tax exempt securltles.

want for a 50—50 contract they head Naturally, the income from tax ex— DEMAND

off on something which shows they 9'th bonds is “Gt taxable.

don't know What they want!" You That was one of the principal . is...“ Wu..,_ ‘
see we never have- been together in points that we, tried to make With ‘\\l 4. r
a real conference, therefore cannot the farm organizations in the income »\\ lit...;;,,.,/// .
i - 6%

understand each other. All we can. taxv«campaign‘: 'A good many of the
do is to again come out in the press farm Organization representatives ._ . . ﬂ
with our claim. thought they might reaCh the income ' : ;. ' , POSIUVCly Best l‘lOUI‘ M oney
The grower has more invested in from these tax free bonds by a state ' ‘ _,
growing a ton of beets than has the income tax. Such, of course, is not ‘ 9%» ‘ . Can Buy.
factory in milling a ton into sugar the case, and an income tax for Mich- . .
and we employ six times the labor. - igan (had it been adopted) would w . A Trlal Bag Wlll prove!
Therefore, are we unfair in asking have fallen upon the shoulders of FLOUR I’, .
for one-half the sugar in a. ton? those who are already paying the THE NEWERAMILUNGCQ J
Take the last twelve years extrac- taxes, namely the farmers and manu— ARKAN TY KANS- . w. HARVEY & SON
tion and average it and you will ﬁnd facturers. In other words, most any * 5A5“ ' “’
there are 260 pounds of white sugar .form of taxation will be loaded on * 48”?!)meer (x Central States Managers
in. a ton of beets. We want a con- those who now pay them unless we V MA
tract Wthh Days 118 an amount equal . can change the situatiou'in reference RION: IND-
to the price of 130 pounds I. o. b. to tax exempt securities. We now
New York 01' one-half the amount re— penalize initative and genius, and ,
ceived by the factory,- an amount bnsiness ability, whether on the .
which is still not really all the grOW- farm or in the factories, by our form , ‘~ VICTORY PLANTS
er is really entitled to. We never of taxation. When, as a matter of PLANT
did receive any good from a guar- fact, the producers should certainly z ”,0 ,,.ve‘:‘;T.REEs,_s"Fuss“EVERGREE“
anteed minimum 80 why consider it? be encouraged rather than penalized. ’ . . "x1 pf-sl filiglxlgffrtmﬂlll?’ l’lljltlrt‘llﬂlﬂlllllldlllluelgs Gig;
The factories will have to hold the We encourage, by our laws now, the :5. , .. , worth of common kero«- ﬁéﬁhlillli p533}? (infl’ifﬁ’f‘l 310%, ”’“ford “We.“
80,000 acres they had this year and hiding away of wealth which should .. ’ ‘ Sg‘g‘gﬁalgﬂ‘qlllkeep :“ged 51340)“ in. $1.11“- 11'0‘0 .m‘i’v‘v‘ber‘geilnﬁt‘;
get 100,000 acres more to get th‘ém— be active—«John L. Lovett. Wayne 7 . . operationforgoﬁgrl: ,liicsseféff'gii‘ofl‘ll lil‘r‘iiiins"3."(iieéé‘l’f‘cé’r’étsg’ﬁl’é’é
Produces 300 candle mil let live [)I‘le‘S on everytlllng. Free catalogue.

selves back to full, capac1ty. Can County. . .
1 ‘ . power of the purest, whitest and THE ALLEGAN NURSERY, Allegan, Mich.

, -: best light known to science. Nothing

to weu;simple;safe;15 Dayo'Trial

 

 

llllllllllllifll

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

,. 7 o . - ; FREE Lantern .
_. Q @Q- S H . gt:crescent?Wren" .
-_ ‘ . N0 . teODFREE art: 1:: ﬁower unray :.’,; , Write forourfru
' l ,— J?‘ 323..., ”3‘11:- Llehtggvptllzcgm ,{Ef 31.332518th
* _ x — t r -
FARMER-LABOR FALLACY. some farm products, forced down , ,, oa'lz'elic;$:$£llfig$m°n and
the prices of others raised fuel costs "'E " 5
) 9 ‘~ W S" l , DOD. 3301 Chicago—J". , . , 2 ’
Agriculture Wallace’s annual report enormously and clogged the trans- M ~ c.,_-,.‘cw_c . “mu“eerle’BL'"e°fFe"°e’m
should not be lost on those who , from Factory at 40% lower prices. 3
they should have been open for the '. _ ' J 1- ‘ w" _ $3903 ctuzunnmmo I
* ation as “the popular third party of crops. ' -
the near future. , _
with Labor, th - ' SpeCializeinFieldSeed. r ,‘T- - , ‘i 2'5 - ~
. ey W111 have to get thy tand Alfalfa are stzndards ggfrpul'lgy), ’ . = \ Raise Sliver Foxes
that the‘ farmers nave gained nothing alliance T ey have no mean f ‘ W'sco ' t d
r" success in kee in its ' S 0 1 "8‘"? an SﬁrstinPedi cedar ‘ . .
from Labo s D g coercing Lab r, as Labor, by strig- WeollerPedlgreeNos.1,5and7852ts,Pe£;;:e , Wese" untried or f r monthly
above pre- war levels. On the con- mg, can coerce them. If they ever Corn.Nosﬁ’112,7,8and25.Colansistantand ‘ Write
. . urdock- SILVERPLUME FOXES
.ers have had to pay more for trans- partner, .not a taskmaster. They - and Flower s..a., Bulbs plum
Poultry Supplies. ' '
': , ', 3&3333 :eiimhiﬁggglsemgzgmbug; and at good wages. ‘But when wages ‘ . . Tells the rum.
.. ‘. , , A _ ' ‘ - . w ‘téf
. . are forced beyond the pomts where , . .mepkglgi‘gg’s‘tﬁnegﬂhkﬁmmf
’ .tmidtxnight have been added that ,. ,
. . tion h“ 41" thefariners’. , the turmertbecomes a victim of La- ‘ ’ ' Drawer 35 x
“be , _, M ., .. ~ . I" 3‘ - ' WWII. cup gadv-make a racing. Buy you
1 ; , , _ m . 'lookr‘iwith favor on any nation-wide” _ . .n and Will
', ,, . '1“ ‘ ; ~ ~ rmge‘rgto form a Farmer-Labor _- - ' ' mum” S’E'ﬁﬂhmﬁm‘"
.. _ i- . ‘ _ Mir l. m , , ,. xlTsELMAll —FEIIOE

or burn like a searc light. Write . . " 1 prices on quality
Two paragraphs in, éecretary of "WW: “mm" umrr °°' :57 omzcr mom rncronv.
portation lines with coal just when . , , , _ , Gntea'ROOﬁng'Pmm NOW ”Id .
dream of a Farmer-Labor combin- " ’ "musswmnlnuu co-
7 "If the farmers are to join forces Known for Reliabilita‘? We
In one paragraph it is’ declared , _
something better than this out of the L hardinessandhighgemunation. ' > Most P H bl Li t k
— rel a e was ac .,
wakes from 50 to 100 per cent, Barley, Wheat and Rye, Wisconsingrown Seed . _ paymenuwi'ilin yo trench.
. . . _ 0W.
tritry, as a. direct consequence, farm- Jom forces, it will be with a real Fa" "no 1 D. . -
. f l i l t 1 th ‘ 0 punk“. c'du‘ ' Box 8-31, Keeseville, N. Y.
rtation us In emen 3 co - want 8 . ,
_po , . D . , to- as Labor fully employed, , “our 02qu
O
“I‘hlﬂhel‘ prices 1°" what they- raise. . consumption of products is increased, _, .. LLOIdsSeedConpany
m “1317.4 and _ tamdwm, 43ml- b0 cupiﬂlty. ‘.He is not likely 10 _ g ' ouﬂiiﬁg ub'octtoeh-ngn. Have vgndonrgzlxg in
‘ « v " gear»: 11:.lu.“‘:ii:."..‘.i:n'l“mh'°'- “3"”
m
Indllﬁ
A. A. Barry 890d Gm. Box 121'. m'nulmj

 

'7 Ono-ﬁrm . . _ ﬂ
Ill-383mm. mags”: . _, V, .

“J"

 

 

 


 
 
 
    
      

    
   
  

'PARENT-TEAOEER ASSOOIA
TIONS " ,

[ PARENT-teacher association is

a voluntary partnership of par-

ents and teachers and ‘others

whose object it is to surround little”

children with the environment most
favorable for their development.

_ This organization brings parents
and teachers together to study child
life in regard to care and proper
guidance in the home, in the school
and in the community.

It aims to cooperate with educa—
tional institutions intelligntlyi to
work forppublic welfare with regard
to health, morals, playground facili-
ties, children’s courts, mother’s pen—
sions, etc.

What would it mean to the child-
ren and the schools of the United
.States if every school would have
the cooperation of a wide—awake, pro-
gressive parent—teacher association.

In the state of California there are
more than 1,100 of these organiza-
tions cennected with the public
schools, with an individual member-
ship of over 53,000 parents and
teachers.

State Superintendent Wood, of
California, says of the movement: “I
believe in the Parent-Teacher Asso-
ciation because of the good it has
done and the good it promises to do.
An association of mothers and fath-
ers deeply interested in the schools
is certain to improve not'onl‘y the
school but the entire community.
Our Parent— Teacher Associations are
little democracies devoted to the ad-
vancement of the interests of boys
and girls. I am deeply gratiﬁed by
the growth of the Parent—Teacher
Associations throughout the State‘
during the last three or four years.
Ere long we shall realize our aim to
have a Parent—Teacher Association
in every community.” This is the
testimony of the State Superintend-
ent of. Public Instruction in the State
having the-largest membership. In
the United States there are now more
than a half millon members in par—
"ent—teacher associations. There are
organizations in every State.

, Where does our State stand on
the list? Can we afford to let other
communities progress wh1‘e ours
stand still? Why not have a parent-
teacher association in every school
by 1924?

Call the parents together with the
teachers in the schoolhouse, and see
what can be done to make your
school district the model for your
State. Communicate with other or-
ganizations in your State and ﬁnd

out how they do it; exchange experi-
en-;ces cooperate; work together for
better citizenship, because the chil-
dren of today are the citizens of to-
morrow. '

 

BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU
ETROIT has a Better Business
Bureau and the bureau issues
a timely warning. This gov—

ernment is about ready to pay out
several hundred millions of dollars
'to the holders of war savings
stamps and victory bonds. The
parasites who make a living out of
'other people's misfortunes are all
ready with their get— —rich— quick in-
v,estments in which to place your
Amoney, promising a small fortune
in a short time; there are people who
will be taken in that is the pity of
it, in spite of all advice but be one
of the Wise and make no investment
that is against the best judgement
of your banker or of some reliable
,trust company. These agencies are
always willing and anxious to help as
prosperity for one man helps his
.neighbor and we are all neighbors
of each other, tho miles intervene.
. This is verily the age of inter de-
pendence and no man liveth unto
himself either in matters of business
life, social life or morality. The
'big ﬁnancial concerns of the country
are anxious that you reap the full
beneﬁt of your savings and that not
one cent be lost'to the unscrupulous
promoter. \. ‘ '

 

STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN, GIRLS
' T the Banker’s Convention held
A recently in New York City, the
, , wives .of the bankers were
'-'..beautifully entertained at In ch at
the homes of some of the we lthiest

'~;.and most exclusive of New York

_, women Their homes are most ele-
' tly appointed and the guests were

eJ1de'd .

ﬂ . ‘ - The Pattern is out
. . in 4 Sizes: 4,13%

unierable s rant in

 
 
  
   

  

-—-—-—-'-—~“cdited by MRS. GRACE

 

one of the hostesses in the receiving
line; but we are coming now to the
matter of real importance. These
Society women were no rouge, little
powder, hair done most simply and
eye brows au natural (not, plucked.)

A JUST= CRITICISM
HIS, is one of- Margot Asquiths
T criticisms of us and one we
might well take to heart.

“As a cemplete outsider with a'

short and hurried experience of the
United States, this has struck me
more than anything else. Beauty,
which is so obvious in the architect-
ure and other things, seems to be

 

 

T last the ﬂoundering carrier
bore
' The village paper to our door.
Lo! broadening outward as we read
To warmer zones th’ horizon spread;
In panoramic lengths unrolled -
We saw the marvels that it told.-
Its corner for the rustic Muse,
Its monthly gauge of snow and rain,
Its record mingling in a breath
The wedding-knell and dirge of
death;
Jest, anecdote, and love-torn tale;

THE VILLAGE WEEKLY

NELLIS JEN N ’

 

price of new books we havewdecidedr
to see what We could do about get- '

ting secdnd— hand books or perhaps
get in touch with some other Sunday
School that has an old library to sell.
We would greatly appreciate any
help or suggestions you may be able
to give. ——-Mrs. B. L. F.

——I am publishing this letter so that
if there are any Sunday Schools that

have found a way thru this diﬂiculty,-

they may give our subscriber the
beneﬁt cf their experience. Some
public libraries in the large cities
make a practice of sending out quite
a number of beeks, well selected, to
smaller communities *for a. stated

 

 

‘/
/

The latest culprit sent to pail;
Its hue and cry of stolen and lost,
Its vendue sales and goods at cost,
And trafﬁc calling loud for gain.
We felt the stir of hall and street;
The pulse of life that round us beat;
The chill embarge of the snow
Was melted in the genial glow;
Wide swung again our ice-locked
door,
And all the world was ours once
more. . ..
—-Fro_m Whittier’s “Snowbound”

 

 

underestimated, and where nature

' should dominate, I have been shock-

ed on every road that I have traveled
by huge billboards and advertise—
ments of the most ﬂamboyant kind,

which irritate the eye and distort
the vision of what otherwise would
be unforgetable and inspiring. It is
much the same everywhere. In
Chicago the ' Michigan Boulevard,
with the lovely lake on one side and
grand buildings on the other,1un-
ning at enormous width for a long
distance, is one of the ﬁnest broad-
ways in the world; but it is spoilt
by a vulgar erection at the end, ad-
vertising something or other against
the sky in electric bulbs of rapid
and changing colors.’

 

SCHOOL LIBRARY
I wrote you some time ago and
Wish to thank you for your answer.
Now I want to ask another question.
Our Sunday School which is quite
small has a small fund wish to start
a library. Considering the high

time and for a nominal sum, the
books to be returned and others to
take their places. The .Public Li-
brary of Detroit has such a service.
Why not write and find out what ar-
rangement can be made. That plan
would give you a circulating library
which has some decidedadvantages.
Address, Service Department, Detroit
Public Library, Woodward Avenue,
Detroit, Michigan.

 

PANCAKE RECIPE WANTED

I am a reader of the Business

Farmer and receive lots of help thru
the Woman’s Dep I would
like “to see a recipe for
that can be made in the
quickly and easily and in ti
breakfast.

I am having trouble with my
starch, after I have it boiled’as 6
directions say on the box and set it
aside to cool, it gets lumpy and- a
thick ﬁlm is all over the top; and
when I want to iron my clothes the
starch sticks to the iron, what makes

    
  

 

 

=___..___._zs.1Ds TO GOOD DRESSING , '

For Simplicity, Service and Style

Address orders to Mrs. Jenney, Pattern Department, M. B. F.
Catalog lino—Pattern 120

A Popular Day
Dress

4158. A frock of
this kind is neat and
chic, and simplifies
the work of the we-
man who makes it.
The model is in “sli
on” style. The be]
shaped sleeve is
comfortable and up-
to-date. Plaits at
the side seams, give
added f'ulness to the
skirt portions

This Pattern is cut
in 7 Sizes. 36. 38, 40,
42, 44. .46, and 48
inches bust measure.
A 38 inch size re-
quires 3 1- 4 yards of
54 in ch material.

with plaits extended
is about 2 1- 4 yards.

 

Girls’ Dress With
Sleete In Either
v1 _ Of Two Lengths

4204. Plaid suit-
ingwas used for this
'des1gn, witlix ruffles
of taﬂeta. Inserted
pockets are a
ing feature 0
style.

leas-
this

 

 

 

 

     

     
 
  

  

 

, and. 10 years.

The width at the foot.

year 3126 requires 3 "
d 1 36 inch '3 12:11? 81-4

  

A Comfortable r
Protective

« Apron

4193. Blue and
white check gingham
with rick rack braid
for trimming is here
illustrated. C r e p e
with a ﬁnish in
colored yarn would
be nice, as would a1-

so be percale of
sateen with binding
in a,‘ contrasting
color.

The Pattern is cut
in 4 Sizes: Smal ,
'34-36. Medium, 38,40,
Large, 42-44; Extra
Large. 46-48 inches
b u s t measure. A
medium size requires
4 1—2 yards of 36
inch material.

A Jaunty Frock For

The “Young Miss"
’ 4207 C h e c k e d
woolen and serge

would combine well
in this model. It is
also good for wool
knit fabrics, and for
velveteen. The sleeve 4207 .
may be in wrist or
el ow length.

he Pattern is cut ,1
in 4 Sizes: 6.}.
vand 12 years.
year Size requires 3
1- 2 yards of 32 inch
material. To trim as
illustrated will 111-"
of a ward» .1
2; nah material

  
 
 
 
 

.e- ‘

  

4:-
0 w"

 
 

.4.

  
 

 
  
    
  

. a'ec

. Wheat cakes »

l 6 firms we can have some- recipes ,
,, both

'1 , fknead \u

-13 we 6 "

-—Mix the starch with cold water and
then slole add the boiling water.
ﬁrst being sure that there are no

'lumps' in the cold starch, put on the
stove and boil slowly, carefully sur- ‘

ring all the time, do not allow it to
get too thick.

ness can be secured by stirring the

starch with a paraﬂn candle tWo or ;

three times. Use two or three table-
spoons of starch to one quart of hell-

ing’ water, a teaspoon of k'erdsene - '
oil to one quart of starch will also ‘ ’

prevent sticking. If any reader has'
any further 'suggestidns to Offer we
will be glad to print them. 1

 

ONE MORE DILL PICKLE RECIPE

I saw your request for dill pickle
recipes in the best of farm papers.

. I. have tried the following several

years but never had it fail.
Pack cucumber’e inlayers with dill

_ and a large grape leaf between each-‘ ,

Then cover wiith a brine made of 2
quarts of -water, 1 quart of vinegar
and 1 cup of salt. These can- be
packed either in open or sealed jars.
I pack some in 2 quart jars and seal
and they are good the second season
——Mrs. C. S. .. .

HUNGARIAN GOULASH RECIPE
Peel and cut into pieces, 2 Jarge
carrots, 1 white turnip. 3 potatoes,
6 large onions, let cook in a little
water until tender, then add .6 tom-
atoes or 1 can, 6 bay leaves, 1 green
pepper, sliced, 2 large apples, peeled
and sliced. Cook until tender, add
a good sized piece of butter and
thicken With browned ﬂour. This
maggs a good supper or lunch dish

 

FRUIT CAKE RECIPE No.1” ',.

2 cups sugar, 1 cup butter, 5 eggs
1 cup buttermilk, 2 wine glasses
boiled cider or some fruit juice, M
pound citron, M pound almonds,1
pound raisins, 1 pound currents, M
cup molasses, 1 teaspoonful cloves,
2 teaspoOnfuls ginger, 2 teaspoon-
fuls soda, 2 teaspoonfuls cinnamdn,
2 teaspoonfuls allspice and- 5 cups
ﬂour. The above is at “corking", gobd
recipe and produces three gObd sized
fruit cak.es

, Fruit Cake Recipe No. 2
2 cups brown sugar, 2 cups ground

4,

.dried apples, 1 cup molasses, 1' cup

ground salt pork and M cup short—
ening. Let all boil up until pork is
melted, spices, cinnamon and nutmeg
added, 1% cups sour milk, 1% tea-
spoonful soda, 1 pound raisins” 1
cup nut meats, citron, orange peel, if
you like, add the ﬂour.

Fruit Cake Recipe No.3

2 cups sugar, 1 cup lard, 1 table-
spoon nutmeg, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1
tablespoon cinnamon, part teaspoon
salt, M cup buttermilk or sour milk,
1 teaspoon soda (dissolved with
water) 2% cups ﬂour and 1 cup of
raisins or currents. ,

Bread Recipe ‘

1 pint of potato water, 1 pint of
milk, 3 quarts ﬂour, measured before
sifting, 1 cake compreSSed' yeast, 2
tablespoon sugar, 2 tablespoon short-
ening and 1 tablespoon s'alt. '
make your yeast, M cake ‘d‘ry yeast
in 1 quart of liquid will give the
same results.

Soak yeast with 1 teaspoon of
sugar in enough lukewarm water to
cover it. Scald the milk. Place the
rest of the sugar, the salt and the
shortening in the mixing bowl and
pour the scalding milk and potato
water on them. (The ater in which
two or three mediu
have been boiled may be used if one
has not saved the water in which the
potatoes were cooked for dinner.)
When cooled to lukewarm, add the
yeast and about half of the ﬂour.
Set it to rise in a warm place for a
half to three- quarters of, an hour,

then add the rest of the ﬂour, enough ‘ :v
to make a dough that wi 1 not stick,‘

with b t a slight ,.
sprinkling or ﬂotlr on the kneading '~

When kneaded

board. Stir in the mixing

11141 t__'

      
  

     
 
 
  
  

“Add a little turpen- ,
"tine to .the starch; to preventtth‘e trek
fi‘om sticking. smoothness- and glos- "

If you ‘

sized potatoes .~

  
 
  
   
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
  
   
  
  
  
 
    

 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
  

e.

 
 
  
    
  
    
  

 

. z
1 W1
I 3';
f n

  
 
  

    
 
  
     
 

 
    
 
   
 
 
  
 
 
 

 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
    
 
  

     


. REMOVING INK
Would it be possible for some of
your readers to describe how to re-
move lettering from ﬁnbleached mus—
lin feed sacks? I have tried various
. methods, without success—es. L. F.

. ADDRESS WANTED

.Will our Subscriber who makes
sleeveless sweaters please. send me
her address? It is wanted and I
2'; have mislaid it. 1 .

. NOT ADVERTISING
While we cannot use this column
"'5er advertising purposes, we will
ention, anything that promises to
e a mutual help.
has been the means of getting a
good deal of help to a number of
people, thru their making their
'Wants‘ known here.

3 J. D., Hastings,——-Your card with
the canning recipe did‘not reach me.
It you will write again I will gladly
publish‘it. Address your letter to
me, in care of Home Department.

It you will send me an addressed 13

envelope or postal card I will give
you the address of a ﬁrm selling
“Rust Proof.

Well I’m back again to thank all
those who helped me with my bread
problem and those who gave the fruit
cake recipes. I tried the bread re-
cipe and it proved very satisfactorily,
‘and ‘as for the'cake recipes I have
not used all of them but I am keep—
‘ing them for future use.———Nellie

Isles. 3

NANCY BANKS

, 1 1- 2 cups white sugar, 1- 2 cup
butter, 3 eggs beaten separately, 2
cups of ﬂour, 2 teaspoons baking
powder, 2 squares'Baker's chocolate
diesolved in 1- 2 cup hot water.

Icing for Nancy Hank: 1 cup
brown sugar, \1 cup white sugar, 1
desert'spoon vinegar, 1- 2 cup water.
Boil till this forms a soft ball in
"cold Water. Remove from ﬁre. Beat
in‘the Whites ot 23eggs (beaten)
‘put' back on ﬁre and add 8 marsh-
maIIOWS, stir until these disolve. To
be put on cake when cold.—Cana~
dian Subscriber.

GRAPE OONSERVE

1—2 peck grapes, 2 oranges
(juice) '2~lemons, 1 c. chopped nut
‘tmeats, sugar equal quantities as you
haVe mixture. Wash fruit, remove
gr-aipes from stems. Remove skins
from pulp. Cook pulp until soft.
Strain to remove seeds. Place the
strained pulp and skins in the prea
serving kettle. Add orange and
lemon juice. .

BEAUTIFUL ANGELS
‘ (By -request)

I» Beautiful angels are guarding us.

ever,
Sent by- our Savior above;
Beckoning earnestly t’wards
bright river,
Sweet guiding angels of love.
Guarding us ever as onward we
strugglet
Over life’s ocean so broad;
Vigils they’ re keeping thro' joy and
thro’ trouble,
Beautiful angels of God.

Coming with
' abounding,
Coming on missions of joy;

Life’s ﬂitting journey with bright-

ness surrounding
Coming its ‘griets t
And as we pass from
forever; I
Leaving its glitter and gloss,
When we arrive at the beautiful
river,
Angels will guide us across.

the

heavenly

destroy.

Angels will strengthen our faltering
footsteps,
..It their still voices we heed; --'
3 Sweetly. they’ll teach‘us the Lord's
. holy precepts,
Unto his kingdom they lead.
And, when at last, we, through p011:
, is of brightness, '
to: the mansIOn above,

- weather was ﬁne

This department —’

mercies

its changes’

their heavenly '

' . HE. holidayl season is just past an’
. gone an’ of course most of us
has had a great time. The
an’ everything
turned out’ as 3we would have it—tor
most folks any Way. An' I’m think-
in’ now of all the happy-kiddies
——happy ’cause Santa Glaus came to
them an’ gave them the very\t ings
they wanted an’ some of th m the
things they really needed.

An’ I am also thinkin’ of the little
tellers that Santa missed this year
jest as he has missed them every
year since/they were born Say
folks! Do you know I am sorry for
the man or woman that has no little

kiddies to‘ make happy when Christ— 3

mas times comes?

I know the joy that comes to one
plannin’ and buyin’ the little things
or maybe, bigger things to make the
kiddies glad.

An:3it takes so little to make a
child happy! So you see I pity the

-ones [who have no kiddies to buy

for.. An’ oh how sorry I am for these

‘ who have'little tellers an' yet, on

account of sickness or misfortune,
are not able to do what they would
like to do an’ have to tell the little
ones that Santa could not come this
year. I can feel for them as I pict—
ure the disappointment of the little
boys an’ girls to whom some of
them Santa never omes—to them
Christmas means nothin"—it’s the
same as any other day unless some
one with a big heart, who knows
conditions an’ considers it a priv’-
ledge to step in an' help Santa out.

Yes, I pity those who have ‘no
little tellers an’ I sympathise with
those who have an’ can ’t do any thing
for’ em. But I have no patience an’
no love for the man or woman to
whom God has given little ones—---
who are able to do everything [or
them an’ yet do nothin’. Such folks
don’t know the joy of livin’! They
care. nothin’ tor the happiness of
little folks; they forget they were
ever children themSelves. Some ot
'em are so wrapped up in makin’
money they pinch a dollar or a n1 icklc
so tight an' have pennies always
before their eyes so they can’t see
anything else an’ they don’ t wam to
see anything else ’cause money is
their God an nothin’ else coun‘s
with them.

It they lose a horse or a cow or
hog, they take on somethin’ awful
—an’ yet they neglect the most val
uable' thing they have on earth ex—
cept .the mother ot the little ones
an’ the chances are they neglect
her too.

I always look with suspicion on
the manor woman who has no love
for children. Theme is somethin’
wrong in their makeup. An’ some—
how, I always feel like puttin’ my
hand on my pocketbook—it I have
one—whenever I meet up with one
of the kind.

Children were given us to be loved
an’ it’s up to us to love ’em an
treat ’em right.
little tellers but every child for they
have the same right to live an’ enjrw
life ’as we have. we were all little
tellers once. Many there are what
act'as though they never were—
they have no patiencewith kiddies
——act as though they’d like to see
’em boiled an’ made into soap or
somethin’. An’ yet the boys an’
girls of today will be the fathers an’
mothers of a few years hencewthey
will be runnin’ things then an’ the
old curmudgeons who are so cranky
to them now will be in their second

childhood—it they are allowed to

encumber the earth that longhan'
will be dependent on the very kiddies
whom they now look on with disdain.

Well, anyway its been a great
holiday season an’ now as I get back
into the harness for another years
work I look back at the last few
weeks an’ ﬁnd that I stored up Ilap-
piness enough to last me for the
time until we go through the same

thing again.

If there is any one thing that I

am more thankful for than any other

it is—that God has given me child'—

. ren to live an’ a heart to love 'em:

.’An not only the ones He has given

to me but a. love for childhood in?

gen ’.ral .

An’ so here’s wishin’ for all that
is brightest an’ best for the little,
toliksa ..

 

Not only our own ,

Anon! .
gooér 30 or mtlhoor“ $3.7. "

 

ﬁll this 819942131151 0! outs;

 

 

A GOOD RECIPE FOR
MILK BREAD

3 quarts of Lily White Flour,
3 pints of lukewarm milk.
1 cake at Fleischmann’s
yeast. Set in morning in
warm place and rise unt1l
light. 3 teaspoons of salt.
1 tablespoon of sugar, 1
tablespoon of melted butter
or lard. Mix with Lily
erlte Flour until stiff, or
from 20 to 25 minutes. Set
in warm place and let rise
until light. Make in loaves
and work each I i” from six
to eight minui Set in
warm place until light.»
When light take warm milk
and sugar and put over top.
Keep good ﬁre and bake
slow one hour and when
baked wash over again to
make nice smooth brown
crust.

Our Guarantee

We Guaranteeyou will
like Lily While Flour,
the flour the boot
cooks (no " better than
any floor you our need
for ovary requirement
ofllome bolt int.

If for any reason what-
noovor you do not, your
dealer will rcfdnd tho
purchase price. ---Ho '0
no instructed.

 

Lily > .W hlte
“me Flo'ur the Best Cooks Use" I

Must. Please You

Lily White Flour contains all
the prime goodness of the ﬁnest
wheat grown in the world. We
know—and thousands of the
best “cooks for three genera-
tions know—that Lily White is
as good as a ﬂour can be milled.
It must please you.
sure that you will ﬁnd Lily
White unexcelled for the baking
of delicious breads it is sold un-
der a rigid money-back guar-
antee.

Why You Should Use Lily White

Bakes the very best breads

Breads baked with Lily White possess
everything you look for in a good
bread. - Flavor!
have that clean,
plus the ﬂavor of the superior wheat.
Lily White is clean.
light, ﬁrm of even texture, appetiz-
ing and easily digested.

You can join the growing army of
good cooks by telling your grocer to
send you a sack.

VALLEY CITY MILLING COMPANY

GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
“Miller: for Sixty Years”

 

 

To make

REASON No. 19

Lily White breads
wholesome taste

Breads are

 

 

 

 

 

mustn't Sun

I All the way from Nor- I
way is brought the I
' health-buxld1ng,v1tam1ne- I
bearing cod-liver oil
used in rich, nourishing

unit’s Emulsion

If you are rundown in'
strength, remember ,3. 3
it is the mission of 392“,- .
Scott’ 3 Emulsion to I!”
refresh the system .

and restore strength.

”Scott & Bowue, Bloomﬁeld N J 22- 473‘

 

 

worth of
common
koronono

r5 0 Cents

o hon—no coco—no "to £0 hulld. Abso-
Iu tely Info. ens: to light. oven temperature for cook-
ingo or baking, sully lnn'tnlled in any kitchen rnngs.

15 Day’s Free Trial

the Knight Burner for 15 d In your own
35'". Bo convinced that it is $1.13.: emcient
and economical burner you can
'WI'IIO TMII’W for fro: literature: and dotnllo of

KNIGHT "CHIP.“ 00.. Mmd B 301 MIN.

But some 33393311313333 331933

at low cash price for
tang-ad. No.1 mixed colors for $2. 00 or 40
ton-'1" ‘ aort- . 100 for

Q “3&3“ JK

 

 

’ 'J _0

Never Let
a Cold Gel

Break it up overnight

HEquickdirecttreatmentforcolds

of children and grown—ups too,
is an application of Vicks over throat
and chest at bedtime. Not only is
Vicks absorbed thru the skin, but its
healing vapors of camphor, menthol,
eucalyptus, turpentine, etc., are
breathed all night directly into the
affected air passages. Relief usually
comes by morning. Just as good, too,
for cuts, burns, bruises, stings and
itching skin troubles.

Write to Vick Chemical Co., 80:1191
Gmnnboro, N. C., Ibr A test sample.

 

Handsome. guaranteed time

keeper, given for selling only (0
packs ofve stable or ﬂower leads
(mention w ich) at 10¢ per Int-go
pack. Easily sold — EARN nun
MONEY OR PREMIUMS. Get
sample lot today. Send no money.
“I. trust you till need: on sold.

 

 

FREE—To Introduce our Podlgrood Euro-Zing
Strawberries we will send 25 ﬁne plains?

,fr'ee. MASON NURSERY 00., Piedmont,

 

 

“’l-Um' XVRITING ADVERTISERS

L“? *

 


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

Colds
Toothache
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-
acidesmr of Salicylicacid. (1)

-‘

'Headache
Lumbago

 

__

BREAK UlszHHAT COLD
INDIAN HERB TEA

Taken steaming hot at bedtime In-
dian Herb Tea assists nature to
quickly break up a cold and guard
against

Grippe, Influenza or Pneumonia.
Indian Herb Tea, a p .re veg table
medicine, contains only barks, seeds, -
leaves and roots. Pleasant to take.

Send for Free Sample. Laige Fam-
ily Packag , 50 doses, $1 by mail.

Money refunded if not satisfied.

fl;

American
Herb Co.,

Pittsburg, Pa.

 

“(9 u a ﬁn or!

 

 

 

Rheumatism.

-A Remarkable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It

ear 1898 I was attacked by Mus-
u—b Acute Rheumatism. I suffered as

thus afﬂicted know for over
three years. I tried remedy after remedy. but
Inch relief as I obtained was only temporary.
Finally I found a treatment that cured me
complelely and such a pitiful condition has
never returned. I have given it to 51 number who
were terribl afﬂicted, even bedridden some of
the izhty years old

11 the

solar and sub-acute

rheumatism to try the great value of my m— ‘.
ovsd “Home Treatment" for its remarkable
Keeling power. Don’ t send a cent; sim 1 mail
01? name and 9. dress, and I will so free
. After you ave used it. and it has prov-
en ti elf to be that long- looked for means of
. getting rid of such forms of rheumatism, you
(1 It‘llie price oftit. One Dollar, u,nlbut un

dentan o no wan our money on you

re perfectly satisﬁed to send it. Isn’ t that fair?
Why ,suﬂ er any longer w on relief 01:“ thus of-

fared you free. Don’ t delay. Writot

MARK H. JACKSON

265J Durston Bldg" Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above statement true

(swelling at the joinits)

1

Fine full- sized
mg'iggliilliﬁnii 7;

ﬂower coeds (mend on ‘

which)ut10clar epk. ,.

Gel: sample lot tod-y—sen no money. '0 “If you.
““5“" "I. cm. I“ V0104. W- m

1"? Our Quality Club—

CLUBBING OFFER NO. 102
We: Harald, mo. 32.00 111111 1...»

CMeCansbluuinenio. 1.00 $2 50 .

Mich. 311:. Farmer, w. 1.00

I lien or knows! slim... Send 8250' n
‘ - 7 '9”! order or mister-d letter.

an. aim. mach.

 

m. Intimacy-rm.

 

hold of a new year.

i try school.

Cousins.

 

 

EAR Nice» and NepheWI:——
Again Christmas has‘come and
gone and we are on the timesh-

Most girls and

boys go forward with shining eyes

eager to see what the future has in
store for them but the majority of
the older people like your fathers
and mothers or grandparents, or like

Uncle Ned, hesitate and take inven-

tory We stop a moment in our

daily work to balance the books,
or to count the good deeds we have
done during the past year and then

compare them to the bad ones we

did. Sometimes we are pleased with
the results but many times we are
not and then we decide that we will
increase the number of good deeds
and decrease the bad ones during
the next year. I know 'that many
girls and boys also do this but I
think it would be a great step taken
toward making this world of ours
a ﬁner and better place to live in if
everyone, both large and small,
would stop and take inventory every
now and then.

If you will notice the people that
pass your home you will soon be
able to pick out the ones that stop
each day to perform some good deed
and the ones that do not. And,
dear boys and girls, you will ﬁnd
that the tramp who calls at the back
door for something to eat and the
man known as "the miser” in your.
neighborhood are not of those try-
ing to make our world a little better
and brighter. Learn to stOp and
take inventory of yourself.

I certainly received a ﬁne lot of
Christmas stories. Some of them
did not arrive until after the prizes
had been awarded. I wish that we
had space on our page to print them
all even though Christmas is over
but we cannot. However, we will try
and have another contest soon so
that all those who lost out this time
can try again—UNCLE NED.

OUR BOYS AND GIRLS

Dear Uncle Ned and Cousins:—
Mav I snuggle in your cozy corner
and enjov “The Children’s Hour”
with you? I read our corner each
week and enjoy my cousins’ letters
very much.

I am ﬁfteen years old and I am in
the eleventh grade in school. I, and
a brother and sister go to the Elsie
high school. I am taking four sub-
jects, American literature, physics,
modern history and algebra II. We
have our semester tests in about
three weeks. I like to go to high
school better than I did at the counv
We have a high school
assembly each month. The freshmen
had charge of the assembly this
month and they gave a very ﬁne
entertainment.

I am taking piano lessons now.
I am in the fourth book. I like
music and so I get along all right.

I think Lydia Sounart’s story en-
titled “A Russian Santa Claus” very
good but I am glad our Santa Claus
drives a reindeer, aren’t you?

I am sorry to leave your corner
but I expect you will think I am
taking all the r00m. Won’t some
of the boys and girls who read this
corner please write to me. I will
try and answer all who write to me.
Well, good—bye Uncle Ned and
Your neice and cousin,
Margaret Cook, Elsie, Michigan.

\

Uncle Ned-wHello, every-
body! How’s the world treating
you? If I’m thinking correctly, and
I think I am, I said in my last letter
that I was dreadfully lonesome here,

Dear

, but it must have been my imagina—
’ tion, as it’s not a bit lonesome, now

’ at least.

If I had not had my age
down pat I’m sure I wouldn’t have

nown how old I really was, I’m not
sure yet It sure kept me guessing
for a. while to know how old I really
was. Those who guessed sixteen

were right, those who did notguess .

that were wrong (naturally). I
certainly like to read, and my favor—
ite author is zane Grey.
I like many more but I believe I,
enjoy his books the most. I intend
to spend my spare time during the
Christmas vacation reading. I wish,

some of the boys and girls would .-
‘ .1113an Viol}?

mate to mo. Did I hear you sigh

Of course“

I know I did! Yes, I'know Christmas
is coming on and you masts]! are
busy making gifts, but can’t you
sparer—WQII, say ﬁve- minutem-v—to
write to me? I assure you that I’ll.
answer back so prompt that you’ll

2 be shocked... Try it, will you} Well

I know Uncle Ned’ s eyes are tired
reading my scribbling, so we’ll say
“Au-rovoir”. Your neice, Venus
Gazlay, Sidnaw, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned and Cousins:-—
I just read the December 23rd issue
and though I would try ’my luck
again. I have described myself be-
fore-but probably you have forgotten
what I look like. I am five feet and
one inch tall, blonde complexion, and
16 years old. 'My birthday is the
17th of August. I wish thos who
have a birthday on the sa . day
would write; not only them but all
of the cousins around my age. I
will gladly answer all that‘ write. I
am a freshman in high schoOl.

How many had a merry Christ-
mas?
very good to me this year.

I am a member of the Junior Red
Cross. VOur school made wreaths
and calendars and sent them to the
hospital in Newberry. It sure is
great "fun to join together and work.
How many of the cousins joined the
J. R. C.

My fountain pen is soo poor to-
night that I mispelled almost" every
other word. I Would like to hear
from the cousins. A happy New Year
to all.~———Lillian Kuivinen,
Lewiston, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned:-—I am a farmer
boy and I am ten years old. My
birthday is on the tenth of February.
I go to school and I am in thesixth
grade. There are twenty scholars
in our school. For pets I have about
thirty rabbits and one cat. in is
snowing today. There is about
four inches of snow and in some
places it is about a foot deep, I
went skiing and sleigh riding.
are going to have a program for
Thanksgiving at our school. I
earned $8.33 picking up potatoes
this fall. We have taken the—Busi-
ness ‘Farmer several years and I
like to read it. I will close. from

your nephew, Hugh Evan Good,‘

Lake Ann, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned—May I join your
circle of happy boys and girls? My
father takes the M. B. F., and. I have
been a silent reader of the Children’s
Hour for some time. I would liketo
become acquainted with some of the
boys and girls that write to the
Children’s Hour. I am ten years
old and go to school every day. I
am in the ﬁfth grade and have about
one mile to walk to school. I- live
on a ISO—acre farm. We have 29
head of cattle, 6 horses and 14 pigs.
For pets I have a little puppy. and
a pony. I call my puppy collie and
my pony’s name is Baronet. I am
sending you a photo of our pony. I
have two brothers and. three sisters.
I would like to hear from some of
the boys very. much. Well I guess I
will close for this time. From your
friend, Alma Miller, Herron, Mich.

Dear Uncle Ned-«4 would like to
join your merry circle. we take
the M. B. F. and I like it very much.
I enjoy reading the children’s letters.
I go to the Spicerville school. It
is a little over a mile and a half.
There are 9 children in our school.
I am in the sixth grade. I have one
brother. He is in the eighth grade.
He is two years older than”I am.
We live on a farm of 80 acres. For
pets I have two cats. We have two
colts and two horses. We have one
cow and three calves, and some
chickens. We live a mile and a half
from town. From your friend,
Marion Wedon, R. 7, Eaton Rapids,
Michigan.

' Dear Uncle Ned'iF—I am pa. new L.

writer and like to write letters. 3 We

I hope you all did. Santawas ‘

Box '71,;

We_

. merry circle ?

grade. I an; four feet and ﬁve in ‘9
tall. I have a sister 9 years 01
and a brother 7 years and a. baby
brother 16 months old, which has
a head of Yellow curls. Well I will
close. Your friend, Hope Kramer
R. 1, Allen, Michigan.

Dear- Uncle Ned—~Weil it. is not so
.very long ago since I wrote my last-
letter. We are having quite onld
weather now days. .
what to say when I got up this morn. -
ing and the ground was all Covered
with snow. We have lots oFfun at
school if there is snow on the ground.
The boys make a big ring and then
we all play fox and geese. The other
morning we had a little snow. 01!
course the boys thought they could
snowball us girls, but the teacher
told them the ﬁrst one that threw a.
shoWball, would have to stay in all
their noon hour and recess all win-
ter through so we got along very
good. -——Esther Mann, R 1, Mount
Clemens, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Neda—How are you
these days? The most, snow we have
had this month is ‘1 inch and that
did not last only a day, but father
says we can go skating next Sunday
and I am as glad as can be. I got
a pair of skates last winter’ and it
didn’t take me long to learn to skate.
My sister and I went skating and we
had allot of fun. The ice on the lake
is about two inches thick. Good—
bye, from Jeanette-Sass, R. 1, Clay-
ton, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned:—~—May I join your
merry circle? My father takes the
M. B. F., and enioys it very much.
and I read the Children’s Hour. I
am a girl 13 years of age, am in
the 7th grade at school. I am tak-.
ing up a health course and in one
month I gained 7 pounds. My
height is 60 inches. I have two
brothers. We live on a 120 acre
farm. Hope to hear from all the.
cousins-”Mary A. Brassinger, R. 1,
Amadore, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Nedz—I am writing
just a few lines. I am a girl of 12
years of age. I am in the sixth
grade. My father takes the M. B. F.
Your niece, Leota Way, 213 Meek '
St., Caro, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned :———May I join your
We take the M. B. F.,
and enjoy it very much. I am 14
years old and in the eighth grade.
My birthday is October 26th. If I
have, any twin sisters or. brothers.
please write to me. If I have no'
twins I would like to hear from any
boy or girl. _I have two sisters and
one brother. For pets I have two
cats. I hope you enjoyed your
Christmas as I did mine. Love to
all —Helena E. Van Ouden, Web-
berville, Michigan, Box 96.

LAUGH 11' OFF -
‘ Are you worsted in a ﬁght?
Are you cheated of yOurright'!
Laugh it off.

Don't make tragedies of trifles;
Don’t shoot butterflies with rifles;
Laugh it off.

Does your work get into kinks?
Are you near all sorts of. brinks?
Laugh it off.

If it’s sanity you’re after,
There’s no recipe like laughter——
" Laugh it off.
—‘Modern_i Methods.

 

take the" M. B. F. and like it very ,

.well and I like to read the children’s

page.
7It‘hc answer to

 

 

I did not know “


a. , ., ‘ _
you an, Tekonsha, Michigan

‘ supplies

I 1

7 all you have

fddnuary 313:, 7: 30 p 1111., Cum-:
Mich! .

ma YOU AEMRGEII R'OU W
W AND Monomm
. order to” says. «mucous Writing
and the wait for a reply, the fol-
‘ lowing arrangement is . being
made "tenable "you to ﬁgure the
m: c to you for a lecture and
“maceration on Radio.
{ 1111. Railroad fare from Elberta

1nd return is to be paid.

‘ twenty dollars.

._ 2 him when .
~-er' to spend twenty dollars
that seventy-the 91' more in ﬁnding
out if an idea is of commercial value.
But 1 Would like to have someone
elses Opinion before investing eyen
'Hence this letter.

—-—’I‘he gentleman from Washington
may be all right and his malee a
good'plan, but we have never heard

of Mr. Green and I wonder why he

does not give his post—oﬁlce address

. so we, or you, might look him up.

.33 mag Board and lodging and
tation to and Home station ‘

for, one night.

' 317d. Estimated cost 01 necessary
and incidental expenses
Ehat are incurred in giving demon—

. . station, breakage of parts and wear

“I! test due to rough handling by
transportation companies, such as

vacuum tubes (each one broken or,

5 . burned out costs us 30.511 and this is

one item only.) Therefore a ﬁxed
charge of 310 is necessary in addi-
tion to items 1 and -2.

4:11. If dates are arranged at

places close to each other the rail-
road tare would then be divided and
the cost would be less, but this
would have to be in the nature of
a rebate to you.
' It is our effort to arrange the
VTschedule, in so far as possible, so
that raierad fare will be divided be-
tween two or more places.

You can charge admission to these
lecturesand in that way pay all ex-
purses and in fact make a little ex-
on money to put into your treasury

We will supply you tickets free, ..

to do is to ﬁll in the
date and time of the lecture.
What You Will Get!
1st. An actual demonstration of
receiving by radio, hearing music
and speeches or other entertainment.
wMid. First hand demonstration of
the working of a receiving set, act-
. u‘ally seeing it Work.
3rd. An opportunity to ask ques-
tions and receive ansWer's at once.
4th. Hearing 9. lecture (or talk)
in plain language that you will un—
derstand, about Radio, where to buy
your parts for making sets, What to
avoid and what you will need.
:» 5th. How to apply radio to your
actual beneﬁt as well as. entertain—
ment.

 

 

P UBLI‘SHER’S DES. K-

PATENT ATTORNEYS
I notice that you are handing out
a lot of good advice in eyer‘y issue,
so I come for a little myself.

I have an idea which I think might
be patented, and haVe been corres—
ponding with a man in Washington,
D. C., who says it is possible to
legally protect an idea before patent-
ing, so that it may be made knovm
to manufacturers and their opinions
solicited as to its commercial value,
or even sell it withdut running the
risk of losing your rights by making
the idea known.

I am enclosing a treatis sent out
by this man and would like your

’ opinion as to its soundness.

' better than gas or electricity, has .

' Oil lamps.

He also sent me a blank form to

/be ﬁlled out and signed by witnesses

and a notary public. »It also has

 

, New LAMP BURNS 94% AIR

Beets 51¢ch or Gale

A new oil lamp that gives an amaz-
ingly brilliant, 8011, white light, even

been tested by the U. .83: Gomrnment.
ahd 35 leading universities and
found to be superior to 10 ordinary
It burns without odor,
m or. noises—ma pumping up, is
Jim-a clans; “13.311?“ sites air
mum common kerosene (heal on}?
‘31! inseam, A: R}; Julianna, €119
1*; Late eh, carnage, 111., is adoring
lbw a lamp on 101183”! FREE
ive 2.1116 one! to

 

I am sure your state representative
at Washington would be glad to have
someone in his allies look Green up
for you or recOmmend a good patent

'attorney. Without the address I can-

not even ﬁnd him in a commercial
rating book.

‘ SONG POEM “BUYERS”
I sent the Loom: Company a poem
3. year ago, they said it Was good
and they wanted me to accept their
oﬂe’r, since then I have heard from
them several times. Now how can
I ﬁnd out if they will deal square.

I like ,to Write poetry and would like-

to make some money from my talent.
Can you tell me how to procede. I
ﬁrstread their ad in “Comfort.”

—-—I hope you have not sent the Len-
ox Company or any other any money.
Their Scheme is to get you to pay
for seeing your own poem in print.
Few cupies are ever sold, it any. We
have had several experincss with
thee people, but have never known
of anyOne writing a “hit” for them.
If you have real talent, send your
material to any legitimate song pub-
lisher, they are anxious to buy suit-
able material and will not ask you to
pay them ﬁrst.

,u

Tandoori ABoo'r HENRY 11101111
(Continued from page 6)

then the tires gripping the surface
of the track and the machine was
away like a shot. The hundred or
more spectators held their breath as
the little car tore along the track,
then cheered wildly as it crossed the
ﬁnish line. In a. few minutes the
timekeepers announced that Mr.
Ford had broken all records _by
making the mile in 39 4—5 seconds.
This teat made the car and its de-
signer known the World over.

That race and the previous one in
which he defeated Alexander Winton
were the only. speed contests in
which HenryFord drove his own car.
Shortly afterward Barney Oldﬁeld
drove 999, at New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles and other cities and won
many successes, but the company’s
racing was destined to end soon in
a near tragedy. Frank Kulick was
driving a six cylinder car in a race
at the MiChl-gan State Fair when a
rear tire exploded, ﬂew-oi! and struck
him-on the head. The blow stunned
Kulick and the speeding car crashed
through a fence. Kulick was ex-
tracted from the tangled wreckage
and hurried *to the hospital. As the
unconscious driver was carried away
Mr. Ford declared: “Never again will
I risk the life of one of my men in
this way." '

Never, since that day, has the Ford
Company enter a race.

Kullck recovered and is still in
the employ of the Ford company.
Likewise all the men who prepared
the cantor the race now hold im—

portant positions, with the company. ,
IA picture was taken of them when

the racer was completed. They were

Peter E. Martin, now general man:

ager of the Highland Park plant;
Charles Harmer, now assistant plant
superintendent, Gus Degner, now
superintendent of, inspection at the
Highland Park plant, Fred Rockel—
man, new manager of the Indian-
apolis branch; Fred Haas, now in

charge of all branches, and Ray Dal-
inner, who will be mentioned again

in the account of the peace ship.
This racerJvas the ﬁrst of its type

ever built. , ,
Fluthér' chat or. “The Truth

pter‘s'
About Henry mm* 111 Jan 20 issue.

BEES ARE ROSES
“There was a strange man here to

. ‘ see you today, papa” said little Ethel,

her rather in 111s: hall.
on?

Isbell’s have been improving seeds~ developing
hardier, earlier, bigger yielding strains—
adapting crops to northern soil—improving

methods of
‘ Seeds are thl"

eparing seed. That’ s why Isbell’ s
e favorite whefnever tested—why they give sure,

abundant harvests and withstand adVerse weather and soil conditions.

Hardy, Big-Yielding, Michigan Grown

FOR FIELD

Fame Grows”

FOR GARDEN

It pays to plant pedigreed seeds—the labor is no greater and the crop is
more certain; and often is double or triple the yield. Pure bred
seeds pay big proﬁt, for the same reason that thoroughbred stock
doesbgenerations of selections has built the strain.

Write for Your FREE Catalog, 'I'oday

Isbell's 1923 Seed Annual is ready and your copy will be sent on
request. It tells of seed, their growing, selection, testing and cleaning—
givee cultural directionentells what crops to grow and how. It' 18a
mighty helpiul catalog-and it is authoritative.

S. M. ISBELL

720 MIcHANIO 91'.

This coupon
Brings It

92
5
m

8: COMPANY

JACKSON, MICHIGAN

IIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllIllIlllllIll-IIIIIIIIIII‘I'II
S. M. ISBELL 8: COMPANY,
720 MECHANIC 51'.
Without obligation send me your 1923 Seed Annual.
quoting direcvfrom-grower .

JACKSON. MICHIGAN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

\

,/

 

/Wall Pa

ﬁr An Entire

Buys All the

REES"

Here 15 a big Montgomery Ward oﬂ'er! A DOUBLE
—-v,’ LENGTH roll of wall paper for only 6c. Enough to
paper an entire room 101112 for as little as 82c! This
includes side wall, border and ceiling paper.
Send for our new book of Wall Paper Samples and see the MANY

OTHER big values we have ready for you.
papers, leather patterns, fabrics.

—grass.cloths, tapeSEn’es, oatmea

It shows you our complete new assortment
And all at prices to

suit your pocketbook. Among the better grades, we have a big variety for only 50c and

up per DOUBLE LENGTH roll.

And remem

her, you get twice as muck wall paper

.in one of our 16-yard DOUBLE LENGTH rolls as in the ordinary 8-yard single roll.

Contains over 100 Actual Samples

Be sure to get a copy of this book be-
fore planning your Spring decorating. It
Is made up of _actual large-sized samples. With

, each side wall' 1s shown a sample of the border to

match. E83 and 1

pa erdthis wgy p easant to select your wall
‘en for this interesting and valuable b k

today. Ask for Wall Paper Sample Book,12100.

. 192301) Address our House nearest you.

MontgomeWrd 8 Co.

KANSAS CITY

CHICAGO FORT WORTH

r31 Healthy Qrcbords
ﬁlpnt M 1: hlgon Grown Trees

X1,
pr handsome, thrifty trees
j; ’. '- . grapevinos, berry bushes, msessn '
mum
oondltlon.

,. , alamrgzoo

famousw for y. well rooted
' stock We guarantee health! and

true to name. You ouzut to 1) an;
fruit trees this season.
Irate: if you order now.
Our hamhomo cotaiosol do end.
able trees free for the as

Celery City 11......
Box 302 William

more
6

 

 

PORTLAND ORE. SAINT PAUL

 

Cured Her

Rheumatism

Knowing from terrible experience the suffer-
lng caused by rheumatism, Mrs. . Hurst.
,who lives at 008 E uglns Street 0
Bloomington 111., In so thankful ai havlno
cured her-sellI that out of pure gratltude she Is

all all other suﬂ‘erel‘s Just how to
ggtmzlﬂ of thou-a] torture by a slmplo way at

Mrs. Hurst has nothing to so". More ymall
and this avlgluuble l {and ‘3; will '9‘
, n arms 11 -
_ “rush her at once before ”11%

 

 

 

 

 

 

.9..sz

 


    

  

 

  

  

 

  

The mnﬁww him—d

season.

 

I spent 80
years in perfect-
ing this Tonic.

GILBERT Hess.

M.D.. D.V.S.

nerve tonics.

Every cow in your herd can be made to pro-
duce up to her full capacity

——if you look well to her ration, her health,
- her appetite and her digestion.

Balance the ration.

corn, or their equivalent, cottonseed or linseed
meal, clover hay, alfalfa, silage—pasture in

Remember, the better the appetite the
greater the food consumption, the greater the
milk production.

Ml. HESS STOGK TONIG

Keeps Cows Healthy

It conditions cows to turn their ration of
grain, hay and fodder into pails of milk. ’"
It contains Nux Vomica, greatest of all
Quassia produces appetite, aids
digestion. Salts of Iron keeps the blood rich.
There are Laxatives for the bowels, Diuretics
for the kidneys, to help throw off the waste
materials which so often clog the cow’s system.

Excellent for cows at calving. Feed it be-
fore freshing. Good alike for all cattle.

Tell your dealer how many cows you have.
He has a package to suit.

25-lb. Pail $2.25
Except in the far West, South and Canada.
Honest goods—honest price—why pay more?

DR. HESS 8r. CLARK Ashland, O.

   
  
  
 
  

Feed bran, oats and

    
  
  
 

Makes Cows Hungry

  

   
 
 
  
 

GUARANTEED.
lOO-lb. Drum $8.00

 

  

Dr. Hess Dip and Disinfectant

Keeps the Dairy and Stables Healthful and Clean Smellmg V

 

BREEDEFSDIREC TORY

   

IllllllllllllllllllIllllllllillllllllllllllllll"l,‘

     

-1uuertlsements Inserted under this heading for reputabIJ breeders of Live Stock at special Iuw

rates to encourage the growing of

Is Thirty Cents (300) per agate lne per Insert

or $4. 20 Inch, less 2%

of month following date of insertion.
EE, so you can chew man
BREEDERS DIRECTORY,

LIVE STOCK AUCTIONEERS

WAFFLE & HOFFMAN
OUR SPECIALTY:

POTTED POLANDS AND
BIG TYPE S DUROC JERSEYS
We are experienced salesmen, Expert Judges and

molllghtzegtﬁlces. Write today for good dates and
u ther 0 us.
our temllllivl“.Fame?z lFILE, Goldwater, Mich.
JOHN HOFFMAN, Hudson, Mich.

ed-A Practical Competent Auctioneer
to" mum your next sale being 11 enciiss till
0

‘ the one Auctioneer who
theEnllllloy at a price in keeping with prevailing
conditions.

GUARANTEED or NO CHARG-
ESSMMishdllfn Terms $50. 00 and actual ex-
pensee per sale. The same price and service
no.
”legged“ in selling Polands,
Cheaters. Let me reserve a 1922
Wﬁl‘tengrv WAN EOKHARDT, Dallas City. Illinois

JOHN P. HUTTOII

VE 8TO0K AUOTIONEER
AID'VANOE DATES’ SOLICITED.
ADDRESS 113 W. LAPEER 8T.
LANSING, MICH.

CATTLE

HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN

Durocs, and
date for you.

I

 

   

- EPTIONAL FINE BULL OALF BORN
[KC 12 The Dania

cc. th- majestoowwhevec
~uA.B.O. £30:th “1:30.00“

oh't linger.
htmwllAPFIR BROS" R. 4, Oxford, Mich.

~

 

41m r011.” cno
‘ , olthcoIch
- .1»: 1111 ovum c ' 1’
’: F, ”It M3,.

ure-oreds on the farms of our readers. Our advertising rate
lop. Fourteen agate lines to
for cash If sent. with order "or paid on or
SEND IN V
lines It will ﬁll.
ICHIGAM BUSINESS FARMER, MT. CLEMENS, MICH.

he column inch

efore the 10th

OUR AD ND WE WILL PUT IT IN TYPE
Address all lette ers.

32 LB. SlRE——-30 LB. DAM—HERE S BULL
bargain that will be snapped up quick Born
Nm. 3rd 1921 ready for light service, nicely

malrlked.1 more whitte thug 1bleclk.
119 cam 21 grea gran -(aug1ter of Kin! S 13
and Pontiac Korndyke, was 2nd Prize Juéixioreg4
yr_ old inboth 7 1111111 30 day; dgvisionsiiOState of
; 1er recor 3 e111' 7
butter and 653 10 lbs milk 1nL 7 daysLand 124. 21
lbs. butter and 2779 90 lbs. milk in 30 days.

ills 32 lb. sire is byo a son of Pontiac De Nlj-
lander, a. 35. 43 1.b Michigan champion. The 32
lb.wdam 81f hés sire if also 111d2r%d dPrize Michigan
co in e cnior y2r. o a
1918 and her dam a 29.43 lb. coy division in

First check for $250. 00 gets him f b.
White Pigeon, Mich. Pedi ree and photo on
request. ALERT G.

180 N. WeiiEs Stheet. Chicago, Ill

 

FOR
weeks old. Dam
with 1,100
Will excléao

SALE—HOLSTEIN BULL .CALF, 8
28. 91 lbs. butter, sire 33 lbs

1b.ye.11r1 record. Price $300. 00 or
e for on table female

K 8.,R08 Fowlervlile, Mich.

 

FOR SALE—REG. HOLSTEIN BULLS FROM,
A R. dams readnlforse
WM. GRIFFI R. E, Howell, Mich.

SHORTHORN S

 

 

 

‘ﬂlilHUlNll SHillllHilHNS

ifer one red , low down,“ thick bull calf ﬂfteein
months old, also one roan calf ﬁfteen months old
A if taken at onoer.‘ Also a few young

\ cows witr calves at foo

C. H. Prescott & Sons
, Ofﬁce at ‘ Herd at
Tawas City, Mich. Prescott, Mich.

 

‘SNORTHORNB AND POLAND CHINAS—NOTNI

in; for sale owl: preee recent. Are oldinc for public sale
Nor. 16th. rite orcuteoguee.

\IONLEV 0R0!" e1. Louis. Mich.

R HID.
THOMN B ”lg-Ea

 

most from lice.

 

 

CONTROL OF CATTLE LICEV
ATTLE lice are more or less
common in all parts of the
United States. They are found
mostly on underfed and poorly

housed cattle,,although they often
occur on cattle in good ﬂesh and-
As a rule“

kept in sanitary quarters.
individual members of a herd are.
not infested equally, some béing in-
fested. much worse than others, be-
cause some cattle seem to be practic-
ally immune. Young and old stock,
and weak poorly fed cattle suffer the
Infested calves do
not thrive or gain weight normally

~during the winter season and will.

remain stunted until the coat is shed
in the spring at which time practic-
ally all the lice will disappear. The
loss in weight is sufﬁcient to warrant
adopting~some method of treatment.

Cattle lice live upon food obtained
from the body of the host. The ir-
ritation caused by their feeding is
shown by the efforts of the infested
animals to obtain relief by rubbing

and scratching, and one will often

see animals with areas of skin where
the hair has been rubbed off and the
part bruised and raw from rubbing
against objects.

There are three kinds of lice that
are usually found on cattle, and are
commonly known. was "Short nosed
cattle lice,” “Long nosed cattle lice, ”
beth of which are blood sucking lice,
and the “Biting lice of cattle,” whose
presence is not as serious as that
of the former. All, however, are
treated in the same manner.

In the control of cattle lice.
plenty of nutritious food are essent-
ial to success, whatever method of
control “you choose to adopt.

There are two Commonly used
methods of treating cattle for lice:
ﬁrst, hand applications and, second-
ly, by spraying. The method to
adopt Will depend upon the season
of the year, the remedies selected,
the number of cattle to be treated
and the facilities available. All ani-
mals in the herd should be treated
regardless of whether they show evi-
dence of being infested or not.

Of the hand applications, the com— I

mon prepared louse powders that
are on the market are useful in help—
ing to hold in check the parasites
during the season when the weather
is too cold for dipping or spraying.
Grease and liquid preparations
can be made up at homesvwhich are
fairly effective and practicable where
the farmer has only a few head to
treat and will give the matter his
personal attention. ,A small quanti—
ty of raw, linseed oil applied with a
stiff brush over the surface of the
body is very efﬁcient. ‘A mixture
containing equal parts of lard, kero-
sene and sulphur is very useful
when applied in the same manner.
An efﬁcient decoction can be pre-
pared by placing a pound of lark-
spur seed in a gallon and a half of
water and boiling down to a gallon,
this preparation has worked well in
the treatment of many herds. This
may also be applied with a brush.
For spraying the coal tar dips
will be found efﬁcient if in making
up the solutions you will add about
ten ounces of vinegar to each quart
("1f the coal tar solution. The vine-
gar is added for its destructive ac-
tion upon the eggs of the lice. As
soon as you have ﬁnished Spraying
an animal it is well to. rub the so—
lution in well with a brush. Fur-
ther information on this subject may
be obtained by sending for “Farm-
ers Bulletin'No. 909,” United States
Department of Agriculture, Wash-
ington, D. 0.——Edw. K. Sales, Vet-
erinaryr~Division,‘ M. A. C. .

 

MEANING OF “TANKAGE”
Please give me the deﬁnation of
the word tankage. I notice it so
much in Farm Journals but/it is new

to me. ~H. H. Lydn Manor, Mich.

—The word “tankage” refers to the
by-product from the tanking of dead
animals, and waste meat scrape,.such
as are found about abattolrs. All
animals which arrive at terminal

markets dead, those that are so so» .

verely injured as to be unﬁt for
human food, or are diseased render-

lng them unﬁt for human food, are x 1
heat skinned and. th ~

 

' Illinois to Michigan?

 

  
  
 
 

The grease is drained off and us (I,
for inedible purposes. The meat is?

« dried and then ground, the product-V

being called tankage,

     
 

—-——Tankage is in several grades. A
great deal of low grade tankage is \.

sold to fertilizer manufacturers, ,
Whereas the better grades of tankage
are sold for animal feeds. Tankage‘
is used almost entirely as a hog feed

not being palatable to

of livestock. In purchas
it is usually best to buy one of the
better grades of “digester tankage,”

the word “digester” indicating that.
. We alwaye- _

it is a feeding tankage.
buy the grade containing 60% pro-
tein and take pains to see that we
get it from an abattoir which has
Federal inspection so as to be ab-
solutely sure that it has been
thoroughly sterilized .—-George A.

Brown, Prof. of Animal Husbandry, .,

M...AC

 

WILL siLAGE DETERIORATE?
Does ensilage deteriorate in feed-
ing' value if thrown down in a pile

and let to heat twelve to twenty—four

hours befOre feeding—J. E. S., Ed-
more, Michigan

——During warm weathe1 silage
should be thrown out of the silo as
it is used, as it will deteriorate con-
siderably if allowed to lay in a pile

‘and heat from twelve to twenty-four. 4»

hours before feeding. In cold

weather, however, it will not deter- ’

iorate any and it is often adviéable '
to throw it down at least twelve
hours ahead of feeding, throwing any

,frozen of the top' of the silo down

ﬁrst and then some of the warm sil-
age from a little lower down on top.
If this material is then slightly pack-
ed in the silo chute, it will ofien
warm up enough to expel the frost "
from that which was thrown down
ﬁrst and the entire mass will be bet-.V.
for as feed. This last will only ap-

' ply where the chute is warm enough

so that further freezing will not take
place. George A. Brown, Prof. of
Animal Husbandry, M. A. 0.

 

FATTENING cow
1 have a cow to sell, one of our

‘cattle buyers offered 11/20 a lb. alive,

calls her a canner. I asked him what
she would be worth if I fattened her,
he said he would give me 3c. What
I Would like to know is if I can’t get
more for my corn if I fatten her ’*

~than to take 11/2c per lb. for the

cow and 300 per basket for corn,
have a feed grinder also. I have
never fed cows or fattened them.
How long does it take?—W. F. 0.,
Standish, Michigan.

It would not be proﬁtable to fate .
ten a canner cow with corn at pres-.;
ent prices. It would be much better .

' for you to take 11/20 per pound for

the cow and sell your corn at 300
per basket than to feed the corn to
the cow and later sell her at 30 per
pound.

The transaction, if you were to
fatten the cow, would ﬁgure out
something like the following: One
canner cow weighing 800 lbs. would
be worth at 1%c, $12. 00. To make;
her weigh 1000 lbs. and sell for 3c
per lb. would require in the neigh-
borhood of 800 lbs. of corn and 800
lbs. of clover hay, for each 100 lbs.
gain or you would increase the value;
of the coy);r from $12. 00 to $30.00,
or $18. 00 worth. To do this would,
1equire about 1600 lbs. of corn and
a like amount of hay, which would
be worth more than $18. 00. —George,
A. Brown, Prof. of Animal Hus-_
bandry, M. A. 0., v ’

‘ VETERINARY ,1
DEPARTMENT

 

' TO ANOTHER

TAKING CATTLE FROM STATE «

Do miyr cows have to be tested for.

tubercular'trouble when taking frOm
If so, for how
long will the test hold good? Do
horses have to ' . inspected 1h order '
to take them?-,—L. A. R., Cox-done,
Illinois. . .

...-.The lmpbrtauou of cattle into in;

, state for ggeding or dairy p? :p“

cept when
I;

that classes? .
sng tankage’: '

 
 
    
   

 
  
      
 
     
      
   
   
     
         
      
   
     
   
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
    
 
 
 
        
  
 
 
    
  
  
  
  
     
  
   
  
 
 

 
  
 
   
 

  
  
 
  

  
 
 
 
   
 

 
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
   
  
 

 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 

    
  
     
     
   
  
 

   
   
 

.f’;«V

   
     
      
      

   
     
  
 
 

 
  
   
   

  
   
  

    
   
   
 
 
    
   
 

  
    
       

     
  
   
 

  
    
    
    
 
    
       
 
  
 

  

 

 

 

 
 
 


Inspection and within? '
sixty prior to shipment said
cattle had been subjected to the
tuberculin test and were free from
tuberculosis. ~

The tuberculin test should net be
considered as holding geod for any
length of time. If an animal passes
a negative test, the result obtained
merely indicates that the animal is
not tuberculous at the time of the
test. . ~
' It is unlawful to import horses in-
to Michigan for any purpose except
when such horses have been sub—
jected to the mallein test by or under
the direction of a graduate of some
recognized veterinary college. A
certiﬁcate shall accompany such
horses and shall show the time and
manner in which said test was cen—
ducted. The certiﬁcate shall further
state that at the time of the inspec-
tion which shall not bemore than
sixty days prior to the importation,
such horses were free from any con—

thon!,,.,,, 201-

ﬁovlll that vibration oft}:

~whcn a cow
IlCCdS a friend

0
. - ' COW DOCIOY O NEED to tell you that calving is a severe strain
—this1s the title oi ageauino- on the vital organs of even the most vigorous
Iy authoritative book on cow dai cow In the shock and strain lurk many

 

U- S.“ '0

1116 :12: .11. 8.3.1.
.30. u.

M W. I” 8mm 33!!

EASY TO SUGAR IIIIIIE
‘ MEATS (III THE FARM

With Simple Mixture, Farmer Can
' Produce Better Hams and Ba-
con Than the Packers

Any farmer can produce high-pric-
ed sugar-cured meats, better than
packing house products, by using a
simple, quickly-prepared mixture. Be-
sides sugar curing ham and bacon,
the mixture preserves. spare parts and
makes cured mutton delicious.

To make it add a large jar of
Wright’s Ham Pickle to 27 pounds of
salt and use as dry pack or brine. Let
the meat cure 4 to 8 weeks. Then

smoke it with Wright’s Condensed
.Smoke, which will take only a few
minutes. and you ’11 have meat that
will delight the family or bring fancy
prices. Wright's Smoke and Ham
_ Pickle are fully guaranteed. They
‘ cost little at any drug store.

Send you name to the E. H. Wright
00., 850 Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.,
and receive, free and postpaid, a new
$1 beck, “Meat Proauction on the
Farm,” which tells how to cure every
kind of meat. This book is free to
farmers only. Write for it today.

 

 

 

 

 

0“?
annuity PAYMENTS. ;
anderoecatalomWheﬂn! ‘
dairyislarporsmderit-today. .‘
AMERICAN SIPARATOR co.
1.0! 1067

or more.
‘ ' In
. mmﬁgr! Dr ces— mi 1!.
BROWN FENCE & WIRE COM ANY
8901 W.

..... _,—_.._.__

H EM AVM E S 3331;: 21°33 cl'm'l'" 32. so.

back ll not satisfactory

'ONE can. at sl.2 oftsn sufﬁcient. Is mist 1111-1.

"W .... N swron's
.. ‘ l‘ Ave s unbound“:

‘ so yowq’ sols "

by algal .
ENEWTON 3111150160.. “I“ 01110

 

 

 

injured in some other way.

 

tagious or infectious disease—B. J.
Killham, State Veternarian.

COW SUFFERS FROM MASTITIS

I have a young cow that shortly
after calving began giving- long
strings of curdly, clotted blood from
one of her teats. The other teats
do not seem to be affected at all.
This is her ﬁrst calf. Would be very
grateful for information as to cause
and cure. Is the milk from the
other teats ﬁt for use?

We saved a colt by taking advise
given in your paper, and have pasted
all your columns in a scrap book for
reference. Thanking you in advance,
I am, A Constant Reader, Decker,
Michigan.

———The history indicates that your
cow is suffering from mastitis, the
causes of which are infection, re—
frigeration due to lying‘on cold
ﬂoors and traumatism. The milk
from the other teats would be ﬁt
for use previding the quarters are
not all effected. As there is no
speciﬁed treatment for, mastitis I
would advise you to ‘consult your
local veterinarian relative to treat-
ment as it is very unsatisfactory to
successfully treat diseases by mail.
——John P. Hutton, Associate Profes—
sor of Surgery and Medicine, M. A. C.

HOG LAME IN FRONT LEGS

I have a large 0. I. C. boar that
got lame in one of his front legs.
The shoulder is swelled badly but
the foot isn't. I can see nothing
the matter with it.—M. G., Clarion,
Michigan.
—It would be useless for me to try
to prescribe treatment for-a case of
this kind without knowing more
about it. The foot may have some—
thing in it or it may have gotten
If the
boar is valuable better get a good
veterinarian on the job and make a
thorough examination of the foot——
John P. Hutton, Associate Prefessor
of Surgery and Medicine, M. A. C.

WHJQRE YOUR IIIGHWAY TAX
MONEY W'ENT

(Continued from page 4)

the past few years, has made further
expansion necessary and during the
month of June, 1922 the Department
had 551 employees and a total
monthly payroll of $54,586.43
Notwithstanding this large force,
the total overhead of the Department
including surveys and supervision of
road construction this year, has been
kept down to 3.1 cents on the dol-
lar. In other words 96.9 cents of
every dollar has gone into the actual

construction of the roads, or looked.

at from a different angle, during
June of the same year there were 252
read and bridge contracts under con-
struction or an average of about two—
employees for each live construction
project. “Michigan Roads and Pave-

' ments.

(Editorés Note: The cuts used with
this article. are, by the courtesy of

” Michigan Roads and Pavements.)

when
his

‘ bmti tip! can to
“01» he Just went broadcastin' down

" the road.”

“And us: did the poor mt“: dog do,

 

diseases, and how to success-
fully treat them at home.
IWe want you to have I copy
this book. and will send it
tree on request. We merely
ask you in return to give us
the name of your local dealer.
DID; a a postal today for your
copy. The book has been worth
hundreds of dollars to many cow
owners by telling them lust what
‘ so do at critical tunes

hazards to has th and milk-giving.

The genital and digestive organs. carrying the burden
of this function, need help. They need a real Inend—
before, during and alter

Here is where Kow-Kare comes in strong It contains
the medicinal properties to build up the genital organs to
vigor, and regulate the digestive functions as nature re-
quires. Because of its success 1n bringing cows safely thru
call birth in perfect condition its use in this emergency
is known in most well- regulated dairies.

The use of Kain-Kare 1s neither expensive nor difﬁ-
cult Just a tablespoonlul ol the medicme 1n the feed twice
a day for two weeks belorc and lor two or three weeks
alter call-birth. A few cents spent to assist nature w1II re
pay you with a healthy, productive mike! and a v1gor-

on: call.

Kow- Kare is equally eﬂec‘live 1n treating Retained
Afterbirth, AbOI'IIOR Banenness, Securing, Bunches Milk
Fever, Loss of Appetite, etc Many dairymen Iced Kow-
Kare one week each month to every cow, and realize big
increases in milk y1eld thru the added Vigor ol the herd.

Try Koanarc and you will use it always Feed dealers,

general stores and druggists sell 11.

large 5121: $1 .25,

medium, 65 cts. Sent prepind II dealer is not supplied.

DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO, Inc.

Lyndonville, Vt.

 

 

11o rumors

FOR SALE—FIVE REGISTERED DURHAM
bulls ﬂfrom ten months to our year old I have
s'sn few female Durhams for sale.

HENRY J. LYNOH, Msyvllls, Tuscola 00., Mlch.

 

AYICSHI RES

FOR SALE—REGISTERED Avnsmns
bulls and bul‘ calves lichen; and heifer calves.
Also some choice cows.

FINDLAY 31105.. MM,

 

R 6. Vassar.

 

 

 

ANGUS

WE HAVE SOME FINE YOUNG ANGUS BULLS

from International Grand Champion Stork at

arguable prices. H. KER R a 00.. Addison,
c

 

 

FOR SALE—SIX YOUNG ABERDEEN- ANGUS
cows and heifers. \Ve‘Bl bred, good individuals
Prion;3 E$800. F. O.

H TI-IAWAVB 8: MSON, Ovid, Mlch.

SPECIAL PRICE ON BULLS, HANGING 4:
ago from 8 to 11 months, until Jan 1st 19 .
RUOSILL BROS" lot-rm. Mich

 

 

 

GUERNSEYS

“RED POLLED

-—. f
RED P0LLE££QTLI6§K#:2231353? 3311:"
Will a. 11. 1, West Branch Michigan

BROW’N SWTSS

BROWN SWISS BULLS FOR SALE OR IX-

change for females of like qualit Don c

693 calved 3- 8 20. sired byN NglIi Ilies Stage: 31311131
thampion 1'01- 11122-23. Owned by Manhall &
Sons. Darn it direct decendant of College Barrera
world's champion Swiss cow. Also calf dropped

-4- 22. Sire Don Stacie dam Mnrybclle No. 8141
These bulls are «f exceptional breeding and
quality. MAX JENNINGS, Okemos, Mlch.

Cottlo,

 

 

FOR SALE—REGISTERED GUERNSEY HEIF-
are at reasonable prices. also choice bull calves of
May Ross breeding

H. W. Box 52.

WIGMAN, Lansing, Mlch.,
:lEtgunam YOUR NEXT BULL FROM ONE

 

A. It Sire and Dam. I have whati you
want. I also offer 11 few choice females.
A. M. SIM TH, Lake City, Mich.

GUERNSEY BII med Heifer- Yenrlina

Heifer. Heifer calf. Best
of breeding. 31mm gomlMProducers. Price right.
Write G. A. GENT Iervllst, Mlch.

 

 

 

JERSEYS

 

RIO. JERSEYS, POGIS 99th OF H. F. AND
Maj elty breeding. Young stock for sale Herd
fugue accredited by State and Federal Goveinment.

uor visit, for prices and rlesrription.
F011 SAL

WILBUR. BELD Mlch.

—-YEARLING JERSEY BULLS
Shopie 19111 Tormentor breeding.
MORRIS. Farmlngton. Mlch.

 

 

 

HEREFORDS

 

BUYING, FEEDING
AND SELLING FAT

uloo much like

GAMBLING

All experience proves Baby-Boo! wing

'THE BETTER WAY ’

GROW HEREFORD BABY BIEVES
B‘éirat'T'tm" 6".“ cmwtf" t” ”a.” by
ac 111 0 0111mm on, ar e,
and all 01:11ng tra y grtaidc
are on
pro 0115th
no other
arsed. 111:th

l

*FOR SALE~REGISTERED BROWN SWISS

bull Grit No 8919 born Sept. 14 1:)
till? Elsie: as a Begin: fcalf at the Steal; Kl?
o cows an i
Herd federal accredits de. ers Of equal merit,
WIN R. MOORE, Osseo, Mlch.. R. 3_

Auction Sale of Registered Brown

tons, heifers and bulls. All tlibemilhrswgeic‘gdlg
m1 t11e17t11 1111. of .111 n.1923. Farm located 3
miles south of Irn inty, Mich. John Ulrich, Prop.

rt)? BAIaE—REGISTERED BROWN
111 crs an cows also one bull. Ilerd f —
credited. ELMWOOD FARMS, Sebewalﬁfradllgh.

 

 

 

 

‘DURoos

DUROC JERSEYS

NELLS LITTER; SIREO BY LIVIN
PRIDE fairowed H1111) :34 these pi. s 031181;)?"1186
01-11;.Nell has farrmied .19 pigs in four litters.
PRUDI C’I‘ION is the big word of today, better
get a boar out of this litter. and start on ro-
duction. PH HAM FARMS, Plnckney, loh.

SEHSATIOH ”Ans Sirednew herd boar.

by "Msrsi"
Reserve grand champion National S
1922 We are taking' orders for 'tsWihlreid 83:12::
for spring farm“ bred to this wonderful boar.
SCHAFFER BROS" Routa4, Oxford, Mlch.
PEAGH HILL mm .1813 H... We
uroc
sex. Priced "vergn reasonable. Write “pigs, either
IN B.ROS. Romeo. Mlch.
HILL

ST DUROOS, sOPERRI
We are c'breedi tw ndNTON “Mlcuﬁ
a son 01 GREAT 0t ION WISE“1\ISA:'ITTI)Nn
boars. NEWTO

Ing, spring aInd fall 34":
Form 4 “ﬂ ‘MWILOR'
-Gratlot 00., ml" Oh!

I
FOR SALMUR OHOIGI WHO
boars from Agriculture College hard? £382“
for December se
Huau “I“. Mord,
O. I. O.

 

Our

‘ south

 

 

 

 

IIOIST‘EBED Q. I. O. BWNI 3“” m
mm- waatsamu

 


   

  

omens

Bargain Prices—Write
Quick. Best paying,high-
estquallty,Pure Bred Tom
Barron and Hollywood
White Leghoms—Egg Reco

   
  
   

2*

rds 270 to 300

   

', eggs in one year—Brown Leghorns, A-nconas,~

Barred Rocks, Rhode Island Reds. White Wynn-
dottes. Book orders now—get liberal discount.
Valuable catalog tree. ' .

We guarantee to save you Tunney—give.

you strong. healthy. perfect chicks, the best that
money , can buy. Warantee live delivery. and
absolute satisfaction. Write today sure.
SUPERIOR POULTRY FARMS
104 - Zeeland. Michkan

CHICKS

‘ THAT GROW, LAY AND PAY
Barron English White Leg-
horns, Brown Leghorns and

Anconas.
PURCHASE THIS

YEAR’S CROP
OF CHICKS from tested layers .headed
b |Iarge vigorous 260 to 288wﬁedigl‘eed
ass.

'OUSTOMERS REPORT BIG PROFITS
with these wonderful layers. Write today
for our large illustrated catalogue. It
tells all about them, it’s free.

WYNGARDEN HATCHER}
Box B, Zeeland, Mich.

 

 

Certiﬁed

from Michigan
Stock. Heavy Laying Strains
of English hite Leg-

  

horns, Brown Leghorns and
. ~ Anoonas. Ask for our .“1'
" 'i: ‘; terest'ing catalog describing
' . i- our strain also showmg you
~‘ the advantages ‘of buying
. :liicks direct from our
large poultry farm which
. is moatcd in the heart of
the famous poultry district. LIBERAL DISCOUNT
allowed on all chick orders booked now but you
must ACT QUICKLY. Get your order in now at
this low price and avaid the usual costly delay.
100% live arrival guaranteed.
Rural Poultry Farm. Dept. B. R. 1, Iceland, Mich.

mums BABY: CHICKS

 

 

RhOdO l- Red! Hardy free range stock—n Pure
\A’yandottes Bred Practical Poultry especml-
Orolngtons ly adapted to the farmer poultry-
Leghorns— man; stock that .has proved of
Wh-v BPnBUﬁ exceptional practical value on
Anoonas Michigan farms.

Minorcas

PULLETS _
A limited number of S. C. White and It. C. Brown
Leghorns, and White Rocks. Write for quotations.

’ STATE FARMS ASSOCIATION
202 Chase

 

Block, Kalamazoo, Michigan
LOOK—76,000 GHIX 120 AND UP. TEN
purebred. certiﬁed egg-tested varieties.‘ Hatching

free.
Grand Rapids,

eggs, . circular
FARM. R. 1,

CHICK

4mm: come BUFF Leenonus

only Strong healthy chicks from good

laying stock. J. W. WEBSTER. Bath, Mich.
WHIIIAKEB’S II. I. IIED *Miflili’iﬂéi
Color and EgéhStrain. Bred from winter layers

for 13 years. mks and eggs. Write for free cat-
alog. lnteriakee Farm, ox 4, Lawrence, Mich.

Mich.

 

   
  
     

 

 

LAWRENCE POULTRY .

 

Imported
Whit.
Leghorn:

   
  
 
   
  

  

From grand selected flocks on full range.
orous chicks » t Will prove

51%;)?“ lawn. Culled 33de certiﬁed by

poultry expert. Fine cataloLfi-ee.

SILVER WARD HATCHE. RY .
Bo’x 420, Zeelang, Mich.

Tlll ill] BHIEKS

Strong, sturdy, S. C. White
Leghorns (English s t r a i n )
from large, vigorous, yearling
hens, raised on our own farms.
That lay and pay. =Barred
RoCks and Rhode Island Reds,
from best laying strains. Send
for our illustrated catalog, free.

Hillcrest Poultry Farms .
and Hatchery _ _ .
~Holland, Michigan.

  

   
  

 

 

 

 

R.R.2

 

 

 

‘

GUARANTEED BABY CHICKS -

 

TOM BAR N ENGLISH
S. C, WHI LEGHORNS
1 F00 breeders on our farm.
H’adtch every Tuesday starting
March lst. 'Write at once for
new catalog and prices. 100%
delivery guaranteed, shippe

postpaid.

NS POULTRY FARM
.D?.WD. 1, Washington, Mich.

 

 

 

WOLVEIIINE BABY CHICKS
ABE CHICKS THAT SATISFT

Bred for egg production 13 years. Vie
llalcliel and shipped chicks for 1.2 years.
This assures you success. ENGLISH TYPE
WHITE AND BROWN .LEGHORNS
safe arrival uaranteed. Write for
ca aiogue. It's free. OLVERINE

HATGHERY, . R. Zeeland, Mich.

.Eﬂlﬁkﬁ

2’

 

 

 

“W s‘.‘ as °“ is. is:
r e. eec . ogan . -
“tillglns, W. & Sil. W andottes,
0, $9.25; 100, 1 . Rocks,
Reds, Minorcas, 50, $8.25; 100,
16. Anconas,hea brmlers. §0'
$7.25; 100 $14 ghorns, d_0,

. 7; 100, 5’13. Mi'xed“ all vane—
ties. $11 per 100 straight. Post-
paid. Safe delivery. Circular free. Bank reference.
Mlddlepolnt Hatchery, Middlepolnt, Ohio, Dept. B.

BABY CHICKS—FROM SELECTED FLOOKS
Six leading varieties. Po ular prices and guaranteed
delivery. Write for cats 08 and price list.

H. H PIERCE, Jerome, Mich.

 

 

PPOULTRY BREEDERS’ DIRECTORY

 

issue.
you have to offer and send it in.
rates by return mail.
Department, Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

Address The Michigan Business Farmer,

Advertisements inserted under this heading at 30c per agate line, per
Commercial Baby Chick advertisements 45c per line.
We will put it in type, send proof and quote

\Vrite out what

Advertising

 

 

 

PULLETS. HENS AND COCKEBELS

S. C. White Leghorns and S. C. and R. C. Black

Minorcas. Must make room before cold weather.

About ready to lay. .
LAPHAM FARMS, Pinckney, Mich.

FOR SALE—PﬁZE WINNING BIG BLACK

Inngabans. A few cockerels and pens. Won l‘st
l'et. 1st lien, lst and 2nd pen at Monroeﬁo.

oult Show. Eggs in season. Write for prices.
,MrTIS. ETHEL BURGET, Maybeo, Mich.

 

 

LEGHORN S

LEGHQRNS

. . Buff Leghorn Hells, Pullets and Cockerels.
gang and pullets $250 each; cockerels $3.00 to

 

 

 

‘5.00 each. Show birds a matter of correspond-
:nce. LAPHAM FARMS, Pinckney, Mich.

FOR SALE—R. c. BROWN LEGHORN‘
cockerels, the big kind. These are extra good.
$2.00 each, one or more. E. EBAUGH.
462 Marshall St., Goldwater, Mich.
PEDIGREED ENGLISH W. L_ COOKERELS

300 e" record Price 2. .
275 tIothHN W. MORGAN, Yae, Mich_

 

 

 

WYANDOTTES
WHITE WVANDOTTES—amnn'nu STRAIN
'Mlchigan State Fair Winners, 1922, Cookereis
and puliets, $3 to $7

wsvus OHIPMAN, Washington, Mich, Route 2.
_HIGH ems: 'Wi-IITE wvsu-
53.90 gig-ER. C. Ithode Island lied- molten-ls—

h ntil January
z?'oiou.“l‘iI-:I&ssou. R.

; . . , PLYMOUTH noon.
1-...B‘IIFF IICCK COCKEBELSﬂlfui'y‘F'gI

. ‘ it of y rs of care i breeding.
NWﬂ’olﬁrii’e gimbals. M, tillo, Ind.

'zQN STRAIN BANNED BOOKS—DARK
_._ .so . law '

1.
1, Big Rapids, Mich.

 

 

 

 

d dork cock role 3.
D”. “f. chﬂﬂgi, “LE-’0

'3

 

RHODE ISLAND REDS

RHODE ISLAND REDS, TOMPKINS s‘Tiﬁi‘i
Both combs. Stock for sale after September 15th.
WM. H. FROHM, New Baltimore. Mich R. 1.

SINGLE COMB REDS DARK RICH COLORED
cockerels $2.50 each. IHeiins etmin
LOUIS MORRIS, Mt. Morris, Mich., R. 1.’

TURKEYS—DUCKS—GEESE

WHITE HOLLAND TURKEYS OF QUALITY
Toms, $15.00 hens $10_00, trio $30.00. Tou-
louse geese $8.00, gander $19.00, trio $20.00.
Order direct. from this ad to insure ﬁlling order_
We ship nothinf but No. 1 stock.
ALDEN WH TOOMB, Byroncentor, Mich.

We Specialize in White Holland Turko
birds of best. breeding to offer of Nort. em Grown
tock. Toms $10 to $12. Hens $8 to $9. Birds
will be well crated and satisfaction guaranteed.
Foote’e Turkey Farm. Garden. Delta 00.. Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

\ _ .
3225' BOURBON IIED TIIIIKEYS
MRS RENA MEEKS, Belmont, Mich.
r I
BOURBON BED TIIIIKEY "“5535?”

Eg s in season
THOS. 6. CAL AGHAN. Petra. Mich.

l
MICHIQAN'S BEST GIANTBRONIE TURKEVS
Large, Vigorous birds of splendid color from world's
best strains. Unrelated stock furnished. '
N. EVALVN RAMSDELL, Mich,
BOURBON READY
ehipmegt, for

RED TURKEYS
‘ ,. address
W. ROBOTHAM. Hesperla. Mich.

Ionla,

 

FOR

 

prices. etc.
FOR SALE—GIANT B ONZE TURKEYS FROM
Michigan’s best strains. rge healthy birds. MR8.
LAVERNE BROWNELL, R. 1. Belmont. Mich.

MAMMOTH .. ariouz: rpnxsvsg START
buying strong. vmouroue. pure bred

rite for cell .
PERRY s‘i'ssdms. Saranoo, Michigan.

OHOIOE wane PEKIN
FOBS‘LE and drake-e and ma! "EDITORS

. Ia. .
CEDAR ,BEND FARM;. Okemu. Mich. ‘

G '85 “AR! . MONEY MAKE .
one: less raise the tone“ f 1m.

 

 

   
 

car

'edly pork cracklings.

s and have .1

-first attempt. '

 

 

   

VALUE OF MEAT .
SCRAPS . '

-I have a ﬂock of Barred Rocks
which I am anxious tohave lay thru
the winter. I can get the meat scraps
from one of the local -meat markets
free. How would you prepare them
for the chickens? Some say, just
throw them out as they are, but
seems as though there would be a
better way. The use of these scraps
will save the buying of commercial
meat scraps and cut down expenses.
Are the commercial scraps that come
in big cakes cooked or raw?—Mrs.
F. E., Flushing, Mich.

——Meat scraps are extremely palat—
able and stimulating. The common
method, however, of feeding the
green bone is to run them through
a regular bone grinder which reduces
the bone to smaller particles all of
which can always be taken into the
digestive tract. There is a high
feeding value to the bone, which, of-
course, is lost, unless the bone can
be finely ground. There area num—
ber of commercial bone grinders on
the market and frequently the
butcher will install one if sufﬁcient
people will show interest in purchas-
ing the .green bone. The green cut
bone is used to advantage in forcing
early maturity, or heavy production.
This has an extremely stimulant ef-
fect on the entire digestive tract and
causes ovarium activity. It should
not bevfed in Quantities above 35
ounce per bird daily. One should
be rather cautions in feeding it dur-
ing warm weather. It is frequently
unsafe to feed the regular commer-.
cial beef scraps because I have noted
numerous cases of cannibalism Where
feeding of raw bone Was practiced
and suddenly this ply was curtailed.
The commercial scraps that comes in
large cakes referred to are undoubt—

FEEDING

not the feeding value of the beef
scrap and are rather inferior for
poultry feeding. The beef bones
and scraps are/.morepalatab‘le and
have a higher feeding value—E. C.
Foreman, Associate. Professor of
Poultry Husbandry, M A. C. , . 7

 

AND CALVES IN SAME
~ BUILDINNG

What do you think of housing
calves and turkeys in the same .build—
ing with just a light partition be-
tween? Is it harmful to either one?
J. W., Levering, Michigan.

TURKEYS

——I believe you could house the
calves and turkeys in the same build~
ing if partitioned off. Turkeys do
not require a particularly warm
building as long as it is airy and
well Ventilated. I do not believe
there will be any dangers arise from

this house combination. Turkeys can

not, however, be housed with poultry.
very successfully. I have ,noted in
practically every case where chickens
and turkeys are housed together that
the turkeyvstock is low in vitality
and rather a. high death rate occurs
in every case. It seems to me as long
as the turkeys are housed separate
adjoining the calf pen that. they
could be maintained in a healthy

vigorous condition—E. C. Foreman:

Associate Professor ‘of Poultry Hus—
bandry, Ml A. C.’

MONROE COUNTY POULTRY, AND

- PET STOCK SHOW ‘ — .

URING the week ~that closed De—

cember 23rd the MonrOe County

Poultry Association held its
ﬁr show. The exhibits were of
h gh lass and there was a plentiful
showing in all classes. The majority
of the winners .were locate in-and
around Monroe but the show attract-
ed.breeders from Ohio and Illinois,
and exhibits from those two states
carried away some of the prizes.
Other Michigan Winners were located
at Ida, LaSalle, Maybee, Strasberg
and Royal Oak. Awards included,
over 100 ribbons besides several
offers by individuals, companies and
banks. Attendance» at the show was
rather disappointing to many but as

.a ,whole the members of the associa-

tion. feel. well satisﬁed with their

 

‘ ,“BEs'r'In 'rnn new i
"I don't grant to," lain
‘e'M’. wail

  

These have -

‘

 

 

 
   

      

is Mask H...;.r

.in drinking water.

When

or are not satisﬁed for any reason.

will

 

Any poultry raiser can easllzy'anﬂ-
quickly double his proﬁts~by4 don
bling" his egg yield th‘rou ' the fir-'99.
markable discovery of M. _ .

  

d1

, ._ , Y
hens lay‘lego:
in‘ winter ﬂush.
in summer»;-
and' perfected
. . a. formula that
,- ‘ turns
into‘ layers and proﬁt makers.
Within five or six
which is called Ditto Egg Tablets, will“
rejuvenate yourdlock. .,Your hens will
go strutting and cackiing about with red
combs and full of life and pep. Every,
nest will yield an egg nearly every day "
in the week, which means a lot, since
eggs are certain to sell for 60 cents or
more. This
100,000 successful poultry raisers' testify
to the value of Mr. Smith’s products. ,

 

    

Although different from anything you. I

ever heard of, Ditto Egg Tablets fare
easzly administered by simply dropping

So conﬁdent is Mr. Smith you can
double or triple your egg yield, that ,he
offers to send two large $1 packages of ‘
Ditto Egg Tablets (enough for a season)
to any reader who will write for them.
If you are satisﬁed they cost only $1“
on this introductory offer, otherwise,
nothing. ' - ‘

Send no money—justyour name and.
address to M. B. Smith, 1261 Coca Cola.
Building, Kansas City, M0. The two 31
packages will be mailed immediately.
they arrive, pay the postman
only $1 and postage. 'Use the tabletsli)
days. If you are not getting more eggs
simply
money
immediately wl out

return unused tablets and your.
be returned
question.
.. rite
today before this introductory offerfis
Withdrawn, as you can sell one package
to a friend and thus get your own free,

A

PRICES WAY W‘
Oniladio Round. Hoteliers

Cut rises now on the famous Radio-Roundjlou- .
betel-,3 of all sizes. Cost no more than cheap incubus .
tors. Radio-Round has 16 wonderful patented,
features make it practically self-operatinﬂ.
3minutes aday takes care of everything.
gs Newwlgy
RadiouRoundis ui troundlikehhn?! ‘
l . F'iliom 1 es 1 J-
E‘Jﬁi’g‘l ﬁﬁgiamigbn 5.2.3.3331 out:
ea r. -oper ‘ ,
if- i V ri I I I At.
5.; starts. All; mum’s...-
Book Free gammy ﬁg?“
patented features In] rivln
new low Factory

  
  
      
    
      
   

 
  
 

  
    

 

if not p

 

 
 
   
      
   
       
  

More Chicks-- Less Cost

This broader is a chick—saver and aplenty
m or. It raises more and b chicks, at
less cost than other broodere. Stove i . st
in the world to hold ﬁre—air ' ht an no 1
regulating. It burns loft coal , e Chen
brooder ‘fuelfperfectly. ut
. fuel costs in half. ove m
- also burn hard coal, wood,
~ coke, etc. Regulator main-
- taino even beat night and
day. No trouble. '
for 500 or I000 chicks“
law I: ' Write TODAY.
F.M.Bowers 8: SonsCo.
1418 W. Wash. St.

 

   
 
 

  
 

- ill/hm.
~‘30Dnljs'TridI

Shipped complete, set up ready to use.
140 Egg Incubator and Broodor
180 Egg Incubator Alone ,. - -
180 Egg lncubitor and Breeder
250 Egg Incubator Alone . 'f -
259 Egg Incubator and Breeder 31.0.9
Made of California Redmod—ias'tn lifetime. Positively
the beat vaine on the market today. Order the siuyou
yvant direct from this ad 80 days trial—money buck "
leased. If not ready to order now. don't buy.- \
until you get our new 1928 catalog. . _ .
WISCONSIN IICIIBATCI CD. ill-I38, Basins, "IQ. ’

 

Ills
N
2°
9]
0

 

 

 

Detroit

lo-lu’ Ila. Guaran
Ioubte walls, copper tank. full-silo ,
nursery an ‘

 

 

 

  
 
 

Incubatoh1$

  

i
..

 

 

 
 
   
  

  
        
 

leater's _‘

days this discovery,- ;"

is not guess work as over -.

A big Kansas City bank} arr ~
antees the reliability of this offer.

‘gazh‘ﬁmsg.wm.mc31 . ~- ” ‘

 

 
 
   

  
 
  
     
  
 
 
   
        
    
  
 
    
    
 

 
 
  
  
  
 
   
 
  
  
 
    

 

    

 

 

 

 
 
 

 

 

 

  

 

    

 

  

‘ 4.;

    
     
 
   
   
     
   
   
    

  
     
   

 

  


W3 future agricultural operations.

)

Vi understanding of the ﬁgures on this page as they are revised and pre-
Feach month, enables the. farmer to see the positiOn of thenmportant‘fac-
hich indicate the trend of business and prices and .give a basis for )udgment

“its

\

MARY: , ‘ . . .

. For the United States as a lwhole, tlzie agricultural outlookhis encouraging.

1‘ f " ch in ,owor of agricu ture is 0 er ce‘nt stronger ‘t an a year ago,

$90.32;; 4:51 :vfr 25' per ce'nt'ﬁnd’er 1913." The rising price of English drafts

‘f‘adtor in. favor'of higher prices for exports. Farmers are reducing their

.7 “ {time borrOWings. In \spite of big crops, the present price ratio shows a ‘
"flights-sin for farm commoditieslofver the low point in December, 1921.

..iiafopucnou nun TRADE:
combined sales of Montgomery Ward and Sears Roebuck for the ﬁve months

ending November 30, 1922,"are 16 per cent more than for the corresponding

, period in 1921.

"/

vTh'e ‘n‘umber of building contracts awarded in 27 states is 40 per cent

7 Irate?- so; the ﬁrst eleven months of 1922 than for the same months in 1921.

‘ . lu basis the increase in 1922 is 45 per cent. November, 1922, contracts
31:1: :13; per cent gain in number over November, 1921, while October, 1922,
showed an 18 per cent advance over October, 1921. \

'- iii ” FOREIGN TRADE:

' \

f

;/2

C

/

. 8281:1550?

{of drafts on British merchants and /banks.

.moverseed, bu.
, Peanuts. lb.

.Corn, bu; (2)...............

» 9869:915qu 27’
0‘ “sum: )1:

“Encouragement in the outlook for foreign trade is found in the rise in price
Great Britain is the. outstanding

purchaser of American exports. Exporters, knowing that the drafts which they
draw will sell for more dollars, are able to offer higher prices for goods which
they buy to send abroad. Agriculture as the leading export interest shares-

’ ' ‘ th' 11 .
largelz Idiniftuo‘h vcsmlfdandon business man or bank to pay 1 pound sterling sold
,

'1, Production‘and Trade. 8. Mail Ordsr Sales:

I. Agriculture: ‘ 1922

\

U. S. Production—000,000 omitted. Montgomery

Preliminxiry‘ ........
Dec. lst

. 1922
Average Estimate
1916-1920 percent

2831 102

'107

85

94

139

107

Dec. lst
1922
Estimate
Preliminary
891

\

1921 , :

3069 I Exports
815
1078
155
62
14
362

(from. 0“-
Wheat, bu.
oats.-.bu-. .
Barley, bu.
Rye. bu._ ....... . .....
Buckwheat, bu.
Potato”, bu.
Sweet" Potatoes, bu. . . .
Hay," all, tons.........
Cottaa,‘ bales
Tobacco, lbs.
linseed, bu.
Elbe, bu. .............
Peaches, bu.
Pears, bu. .
Apples, total, bu.......
Apples, com'l., bbls...
.gsnBeets, tons,....
Cranberries, bbls.
Ileana, bu. .'.

onions, bu.
dsbbsge, tons.
sorghum5=Slrup, gal... .

cuisine-Joel.

Commodity.
Grand total,
Beef and veal, lb ........

lard,

lb.
Cheese, lb. . . .......... . .
Hides and skins ..........
Corn, bu. ’ .............. .
Meal and ﬂour, bbl ......
Wheat, bu. .......... . . . .
Flour, bbl. . . . . .
Oats, bu. .
Meal and rolled, lb. .. . .. .
Fruits and nuts ........ . .
Veg. oils and fats. . . . . . . .
Sugar, lb.‘ .
Leaf tobacco, lb. , . . .....
Cotton, bale . . . . . ........

2. Imports:

.sses.‘-.-
/

... ...

...»...1.

. .. ....... 624' -
gaps, lb. 2 32.1

. G .
50;; percent rand total, all imports

Beef and veal, lbs......
Pork, lbs.
Butter, lbs.
Cheese, lbs.
Hides and
Corn, bu.
Oats, bu.
Wheat,
Flour,
Fruits and
Veg. oils and fats ........
Sugar, lbs.

Leaf tobacco, lbs .........
Cotton, lbs.

Wool, lbs; ...... . .......

3. Prices 01., Foreign Drafts:

omitted. '

1921
3,069
3,781

773
2,759

818
2,445

14.1

4... ...........

World Production—000,000

1922 1909— 13
. 3,058 2,890
8,57 2
3,008

882

066

Wheat, bu (1)

nesssssnoeaososse

3.
Cotton, bales (7)'-....‘.......-. , :. ' 19.0
1) Russia ,and Mexico excluded.
"'72)'317.‘countries. (3) 18 countries. (4) 27 countries. (5)

257countrles. (6) ‘16 countries. (7) 500 pounds net, linters

9x9! . .
2. Mining:
Figures express production as a per cent of normal. In esti-
mating, normal production, due gilowance is made for seasonal
atlo 71nd 'ear to ear rowt .
"n" n -» y y ‘ 0ct.,1922 Sept.,1922 Oct.,1921

‘ 94 ‘ 61 85

0

England
France
Germany
Belgium
Italy
Spain
Austria

Denmark
Norway

Sweden
Holland
Argentina
Brazil
indie
Japnn'

Par of Exchange

Anthracite coal . . .' ...........
Bituminous coal
Copper . J,
Petmleum s
' Preliminary.
8.: -'-Manuf’acturi_nu:
Wheat ﬂour ......
Meat ...... ,/...... .....
Sugar .
Cotton . .
$3111.10“ t” . . . ..
ee ' , ngo . . . .
be .'

C ...--
...-.....o...
.

19.8c to 1 franc
19.3c to 1 lire . . .
19.3c to 1 pesota

20.3c to 1 crown

26.81: to 1 crown .
26.8c to 1 crovm
26.8c to 1 crown
40.2c to l nor-in .

20

Its...
Ilene

n'nssleon-Iaeeseoeo-el

noses-so

32.4c to 1 milreis
48.71: to 1 rupee .
49.9c to 1 you

no...-

4. Manhunt Rate of the Bani:

9c. ., 1922
0

III.

Cement .
‘Not available.
6,‘ Bulldog:

‘ ~ - November Eleven Months
1922 1921 1922 1921
' i.
' ' ‘ 000.000

(14w. Dodge Co.)
_ her . . . . . . . . ..........
Yolue (000,000 omitted)...‘
5. Transportation:

100,558 72.042
63,131 $2,162

9,0719. .1
244

0188.1
8 192
\ Week Same .
Ending Week
Dec. 9, Month
1122 Ago
_ 919, 28 953,909
grain products. 55,608 52,501
38,170 38,001
I... .. .. . . . .200,505

188,312
12,273
roducts 63,195, 60,892
9,870
lie, (n 1419001.}; .539,_420
.mrcentaso of Week 2955.819
.,z_2

United States

’ Sims , ’Week
Week
Year

A80
742.926
48.680

United States

lance-suns s

. "might Car Loadings :

Tota1\deposits in National Banks

2. Gold Movement: ,

assesses-

. 01-15- of gold......$17,591
'_ . b s j $305. :02 5010...... 20,856
‘ -.0cto er, ”09991315.". August,» 3. Fed rat. . esorvor Ratio:

.1923.) ‘1922i_,.1922f~"t‘ I 7 '12" g? r,

a” . 5.. ,,1n....,...-’56 1 48-_ 1mm ’ ‘1. ~

- was... . .7 2.. .. 1° ..
' .1, , . ' ”itles‘combined
~ V A 4| 5 : ’ “a V l ‘
19.31,, J, storest itstss ;
13 8 61115
90

1 9, 8
563.947

1),, e. --..

, " centers " 5919101111611:
, mum, o _ J

 

commercial; paper. . . . . .
11:} comments! Wt

. November

ard $11,003,750 8 7,581,069 8 80,844,890 8 68,531,523

Sears Roebuck.. 20,196,559 15,186,495 161,409,528

11. ‘ Foreign Trade
000 omitted

1922 1
all exports..$366,l77 $336,949 $3,051,177 $3,978,511

September

1922 ,
$228,795 $179,292 $2 181,386 $1,872,696
. 10,533 2,06 26,998 22, ‘

Nominal Gold Value
84.87 to 1 52 Sterling. .

19.3c to lfrsnc
23.8ctolmsrk .....

...-o

42.5ctolpeso 4
Canada .......100 ctoldollsil'tzrlz

Month Ago
3%

Money and Credit
Gold, Currency and Bank Deposits:

Stocks of monetary gold in the
Total supply of currency 1111 the

' . - 192
Deposits in- New York City Banks.$3,830

000 omitted
October

, . 711.144.535.213 deposit
and lanai-spinesme-dm llqbur __ . .

.33.“:5-3‘4".‘;.":.‘..’.‘.--'75.1% 7“ ' 75.2% 72.0%
Nov.,1&22 Oct. 1922 mum-1

,.4.-

 

11]“ E88 iOﬂaﬁ partment :fmhﬁlzsed’rychmdf 130-

5155- m B...
for $4.49 November 20, and for $4.61 December 19, a gain of 12 cents in on.
month. It has' 26 cents yet to go to reach par, namely $4.87., The price of
London drafts has shown a gradual recovery since the low of $3.38 in February,
1920. ‘ . -. '

Ill. MONEY AND CREDIT: ' .

The Federal Reserve Bulletin forNovemher says: “From the peak of credit
expansion in. Nevember, 1920, up to July 26, 1922, member banks in leading
cities liquidated their indebtedness to the federal reserve banks much more rapidly
and completely than did member banks outside of, the leading cities. During
recent weeks (namely, up to October 25) the resumption of borrowing from the
reserve banks has been almost entirely by the city banks, the country banks in
all districts except St. Louis reporting further liquidation.”

lV. PRICES: . \ , ‘

From their low point in December, 1921, prices of farm products increased
\much faster than prices of other commodities up to March, 1922. At this peak
farmers had least to sell. From March until the present time other prices have
advanced much .more rapidly than farm prices. For the whole period, from
December, 1921, to the present, farm prices show a slightly bigger increase, ’
the purchasing power of farm products ﬁgure, representing the relationship of
the two-sets of prices, having advanced from 62 to 66. This ratio was main-
tained in face of the third largest crop output ever produced in the United States.
The estimated total value of farm crops for 1922 is 32 per cent higher than for
1921. The ﬁgure for purchasing power of farm products, on total value instead
of price basis, computed on December crop estimates and prices, and prices of
other commodities in November, is 73. This is over 25 per cent under 1913 but
20 per cent better than last year.

On December 19, compared with the month previous, 15 out of 24 farm
products advanced in price, 8 declined and 1 remained unchanged. Compared
with' a year ago there are 19 advances and 4 declines while 1 remains stationary.

 

.,\

its”

9'

1

Discount Rates of the Federal Reserve Banks:

Dec. 1, 1922 Nov. 1, 1922 Dec. 1, 1921
Range of rates for the twelve
banks on commercial, agri-
cultural and ilveswcx paper.4-41,é%

Stock and Bond Prices:

5.
Eleven Months

1921 1022 1921

44% %. 454-514 %
Dec. 9
1921 '

$79.60
74.35
83.99

159,934,008 6.
Nov. 10
1922
$97.50
89.50
89.30

Dec. 8,
Average price— 1922
20 industrial Stocks .......... $97.88
20 Railroad Stocks.... ........
40 Bonds

Business Failures:

Ten Months
1922 1921

—-October——
921 7,
» ——Week Ending——
Dec. 8, 1922 Nov. 9, 1922 Dec. 8, 1921
......... 462 591

374
387 587

36,544
659.715
752.544

2,844
41,116
56.885

28,224
563,888
626,032

16,503

10,012

4,367
3,278
151,330
534
144,438

11,968

17,066

88,686

53,772

10,898

1,822,041

54,167

4,648

Bradstreets

see-see

l. Wholesale Prices oi Farm Commodities:
Quotations at Chicago except as noted.
_ . Dec. 19, Month
1922
Fat hogs, cwt., average ............. 8 8.05
Beef, steers, good native, cwt., av.. 9.60
Fat lambs, cwt., average ............ 13.85
Fat sheep, cwt., average ............ 7.20
Wool, Ohio delalne unwashed, lb.
(Boston)
Butter, 92 score,
Cheese, No. 1 twins,
Eggs, fresh ﬁrsts, doz ..............
Poultry, hens, 1b ...................
Wheat, No. 2 hard, bu .............
Corn, No. 2 mixed, bu ..............
Oats, No. 2 white. bu ...............
Rye, No. 2, bu ............ . ........
Barley, bu. .6725
Kaﬂr, No. 2 white, cwt. (K. C.) ..... 1.68
Hay, No. 1 timothy, ton....' ........ 21.00
Flax. No. 1, bu. (Minneapolis)..... 2.72
Cotton, middling, lb. (New York).... .262
Beans, white, cwt. (f. o. b. Michigan) 7.75
Potatoes, northern whites, cwt ...... 1.00
Onions, midwest yellow, th ........ 2.50
Ap les, winter varieties, bbl ........ 5.25
Hi es, No. 1 native heavy, lb". ...... .2025
Sugar, ﬁne granulated, lb. (N. Y.).. .0705
2. U. 8. Department of Labor Relative Wholesale Prices:
Prices in year 1913 equal 100
‘ Nov., 1922 Oct., 1922 Nov., 1921
All commodities (Weighted average
or General Price Level) 141
139

A80
3 7.70
9.85»
14.45
7.40

.565
875 5.186 .3235

Nine Months

1921 1922 1921

435 2915
2,735
26,241

358,765
97

1,271
14,321
55

398
2,571
32,806
, 3

02

81

4

5,268
3,822
315,999
, 0
3,181
14,592

48,529
26,474
4,747,517

67:091
288,114

.051
278,527

Price of Demand Drafts
Nov. 20, Dec. 16,
1922 1921

, $4.49 $4.16
7.4c 7.78c

.01%c .050c
6.96c 7.48c
4.75c 4.50c

15.381: 14.54c

.0014c .04c

20.18c 19.55c
18.33c 15.37c
26.78c 24.50c '
39.35c 36.32c
36.60 33.256
12.65c 12.886
29.95c 17.75c
48.356 47.88c
100.00c 92.7c

154
138
140
188
226
135
183
124

Farm products

Food products

Cloth, clothing,

Fuel and lighting ................
Metals and metal products .......
Building materials

Chemicals and drugs ....... ,
House furnishing goods .......... 176
Miscellaneous 120

3. Prices of Farm Products at the Farm Relative to ”“3:
Prices in year 1913 equal 100
Oct., 1922 Sept., 1922 Oct., 1921
181 161 143

69
120
101
192

81

98
229
151

95

noon
ssoes
eso-

‘ ‘ ' ' 3790,, Commodity :

12.15c
30.956
48.950
99.430

of England:

104
115

98
108

92
110
156
134
188

4. Relative Purchasing Power of Farm Products:

The quantity of various commodities which a given amount
of each farm product would purchase at prices prevailing in 1913
is put equal to 100. The ﬁgures given represent the percentage
of this quantity which the same amount of farm products would
purchase in October, 1922. Prices at the farm are used for
agricultural products, and wholesale prices at central markets for

other commodities. '
All Com- Cloths, Fuel, Metals, Building House
etc. t .
96

Year Ago
5%

omitted
N 0v. 1,
1922

.8 3,902

4,570
Sept. 15,
192
. . $16,599

Nov. 1,

Oct. 1,
1922

8 3,874

4,521
June 30,
192
$16,321
Oct. 1,

Nov. 1,
1921

V 3 3,505

4,610
Sept. 15,

1921

$14,561
Nov. 1,

1921
$3,800

moditles
Cotton . . . . 1%8 ‘

1922
$3,910’
' Potatoes .
Beef cattle.
Hogs
Eggs
Butter 92_

Wool . 125 110‘

Average purchasing power of all farm products in termfof all
other commodities. Same basis as above table.

13%: ..... win lJJecember,nlzil321 .............62
........i....... BDUIII, ..s...........-
1915................106‘ . Lurch “ 7 65,
May

£916.,”.,...,,h........' . J J p ,
I “1y ssoossssiossosssooi‘ses-o".
‘Anunmt 3‘.

72
127

Ten Months

1922 ‘ . 1921

3 30,735 8 21,122
230,422 608,283 .

1 . . . . .
8 7,576
47,106

Dec. 13. Nov. 15, Dec. 14,
1922 J 1922 1921

1917....’..;..........106 - . "
1 8..'..............112
1819._.,...; .~.»:.....'._111
. ".','""'_"»"':' :33. .1

‘1 ....

o-gnn-svsss' .

‘r ‘4 3.;-
sﬁVi' ..

, '... ,\

 

 


    

FOOTES MARKET REVIEW—_
ANOTHER NEW FEATURE

ITH this issue we introduce to

readers of The Business Farm-

er,Mr.W. W. Photo, ofChi-
cago, who will have a letter direct
from the Chicago markets each issue
on general ﬁnancial conditions,
world grain markets, and most im-
portant, a direct review of the Chi-
cago live stock markets from a man
who has been in intimate, daily con-
tact with that market for more than
thirty years. Mr Foote has volun-

our readers addressd in care of The
Business Farmer. We want the
best that can be had served on these
tables for the consumption of our
folks, so we editorial cooks are glad
to move over one place to make room
for Mr. Foote, who will hereafter be
responsible for a very important
course in the Business Farmer’s bi-
weekly banquetl—Editor.

IMPROVED BUSINESS OUTLOOK

RINGING about a return to nor-

mal ﬁnancial conditions in the

war—stricken countries of Eu—
rope is not as rapid as might be
wished, but the outlook is at least
better than it has been, under the
prevailing sentiment is more opti-
mistic than a year ago. Even under
present unsettled conditions, we are
exporting large amounts of commod-
ities across the Atlantic, these con-
sisting mainly of grains and meats.
As soon as it becomes deﬁnitely set-
tled how to establish credit in Ger-
many and other countries it may be
taken for granted thatnnr foreign
commerce will show marked im—
provement. The United States is
now by far the richest country in the
world, and we are large importers,
while our home trade is extremely
‘ large. Nearly everybody in the
' middle west is at work, and more
money is being spent than a few
months ago, while savings deposits
._ in the bank are ahead of a year ago.
1,. ‘ Farmers are buying more foods than
for months, and the Chicago mail
. order houses have closed the year
1~ with net gains in sales over 1921,
i the gain of a leading ﬁrm being
,: around 20 per cent. ‘Labor is active—
‘ 1y employed as unusually high wages
throughout the country, and the high
wages offered in the cities are re-
sponsible for many farm helpers
leaving for the cities, thereby creat-
.2 ing a scarcity of agricultural work—
!' ers. Farmers are obtaining high
. prices for most of their products, in-
cluding grains, live stock: etc., and
" these are selling much above values
of a year ago. Country banks gen-
erally are doing their part in helping
farmers needing assistance in carry-
ing their crops, and the reserve
banks are accomplishing great
things, reasonable rates of interest
:7 ' being asked. The railroads are do-
jg; ing a much larger business than a
'5 year ago, and enormous shipments
of grain have taken place during the
mouth of December. Two important
events are the burning of the Live
Stock Exchange Building in Chicago
and the merger of Armour and ”Mor-
ris packing companies in progress.
The Exchange Building is to be re-
placed by a ﬁne eight story building
in the spring.

Large Demand for Wheat

The large domestic and foreign
demand for wheat which began to
develope several months ago has
been gaining in volume, and recent

" sales have reached extremely liberal
proportions. There is p etty unani-
mous agreement that al the wheat

We can spare is going to be wanted
by the importing countries ‘of Europe,
and it is estimated by the best au-
thorities that Europe will require

, approximately 400, 000, 000 bushels

_, from exporting countries during the
‘ﬁrst half of this year. The wheat

crop of the United States has been
ark‘eted freely, and it has gone into
mumption at home and abroad so
1y that it was found a few days

. that the stock held in Chicago,
.8118 City, St. Louis, Omaha and

,osoph aggregated only one-half

‘ 'hoidin t

 

 

 

 

 

  
 
 

  
  
 
  
 

 

tcered to answer any questions from'

We months ago .

The weekly exports of wheat and
ﬂour from our shores have ‘been for
many weeks far heavier than a year
earlier, and rye has been exported
with unusual freedom because of its
relatiVe cheapnou, Germany taking
especially large supplies. A short
time ago it was reported that Greece
wanted immEdiatoly three million
bushels owaheat from this country,
and on the same day sales were an—
nounced of 600,000 bushels of Maui—
toba wheat for export. A great deal
or corn and cats are exported from
this country in the course of a year
but for some time past such exports
have fallen off in volume. Corn is

being largely fed to cattle and hogs ,

on the farms at the present time
some 27 per cent more cattle being
held in feeding districts, it is esti-
mated, than a year ago, while hogs
are known to be in largesupply.
The visible wheat supply in this
country is unusually small, while
that of corn is placed at 14,788,000

bushels, comparing with 21, 586,000 .

bushels a year ago. Quite recently
sales were made on the Chicago mar-
ket of wheat for December delivery
at $1. 27, comparing with $1.12 5— 8
a year ago; corn at 73 1- 2 cents,
comparing with 48 cents”a.year ago;
cats at 43 1-2 cents, comparing with
34 1—2 cents last year; rye at 91 14
cents and barley at 63 to 74 cents.
Clover seed sells at $15.50 to $20.50
per 100 pounds, timothy at $6 to
$6.75 per 100 pounds and ﬂax seed

at $2.61 a bushel.

Decline in Cattle Prices

Early sales of beef cattle on the
Chicago market during the two days
following the Chrlhtmas holiday on
Monday was very slow, and despite
much, smaller receipts than usual,
prices declined from 50 to 75 cents
below the lowr time of the previous
week. Recent supplies were mainly

short fed offerings, having been fed

from 75 to 100 days, and on most
days there was a lack of prime
heavy steers. By Thursday there
was a rally of about 25 cents under
small offerings and a better demand,
and some 900—pound yearlings
brought $10.50. Choice heavy cattle
have been selling at $11 to $11.90,
with strictly prime bee-ves pretty
much nominal at $12 “to $12. 50. A
pretty good class of steers which
averaged 1, 500 pounds brought
$8.50, and medium grade lots sold
at $7.50 and over; with sales of
common to fair light steers at $6.10
to $7.25, and a few inferior little
steers at $3.60 to $6. Butcher stock
had a better demand at higher av-
erage prices, cows and heifers going
at $3.75 to $9.50, while canner and
cutter cows sold at $2.25 to $3.60,
bulls at $3 to $7.50 and calves at
$3 to $11.50, light vealers selling
at $9 and over mostly. A limited
trade is going on in stockers and
feeders, sales being mostly at $5
to $7.25. Dairy cows have sold at
$40 to $60 per head mostly, a few
Holsteins being salable up to $.75.
A year ago the best steers sold for
$9. Beef steers sell mainly at $7.50
to $10.40. Prices broke 25 cents
on Friday, no cattle selling above
$10.25.
The Hog Market

Prices in the Chicago market
broke from 5 to 15 cents on Thurs—
day last week, when the reCeipts
mounted up to about 60,000 bags,
but prior to that they advanced on
moderate receipts, Monday being a
holiday. The Thursday receipts
were among the largest of the year.
Eastern shippers are most of the
time very good buyers, and at times
speculators take a hand. Hogs are

  

.coming to market in good quality,

at $10 to $13.

and the bulk sell within a range of
only 15 cents, prime light bacon
and heavy butchers selling the high—
est. Recent receipts have averaged
232 pounds, ”comparing with 226
pounds a year ago. A good demand
for trash pork prevails, pork being
much—wheap’er than beef, and pro-
visions are exported much more
freely than a year ago. Hogs are
Selling around $7. 60 to $8. 60. com-
paring with $5. 90 to $8. 25 a year
ago.
Big Prices for Lamb!

These are times when farmers

who have stuck to raising ﬂocks of

'sheepthank their. lucky stars that

they remained in when others—were
abandoning the industry because of
the unsatisfactory returns. A short
time ago a young Michigan farmer
who is in the habit of buying feed-

ing lambs in the Chicago markets--

said he had fed lambs" for thirteen
years, and in all that time he had
lost money only once. Lambs are
coming largely clipped at this time,
and the packers prefer the'wooled

ﬂoéks, the latter selling at $13.25 to.
$15.40, while feeder lambs sell at

$14 to $14.75, with few offered.
Lambs avering 90 pounds and over
have to sell at a discount, and sheep
are marketed sparingly. ,Breeders
are scarce too, owners keeping them
for breeding yearlings are selling
ewes at $2.50 to
$8.25, wethers at $7.50 to $9.35 and
bucks at $3.50 to $4.25. A year ago
prime lambs sold at $11.75 and nine
years ago at $6.60.-—-‘W. E.,F°°te-

 

WHEAT

The market closed last week with
the bears in charge and holiday dull-
ness prevailed. Receipts have been
large anddeclines in the price plenti-
ful. Every - decline brought out
many buyers but not enough to cause
prices to advance to their pro-viola
level. The Detroit market lost 2 1—2
cents for the week. Milling demand
was slow but a few inquiries were
received from seaboard and some
business was reported from that

source. Eﬁuropean‘demand for Amer-.

ican grain is curtalied owing to the
ﬁnancial conditions. If Europe's
credit is improved through giving
her more time to pay her debts de-
mand will imprnve. Heavy receipts
are expected'this week and the tone
of the market will be about the same,
or easier, dealers believe.

Prices
Detroit-Cash, No. 2,
No. 2 white and No. 2
$13435.

$1.361;é;

mixed,

Chicago———No. 2 hare, unsung)"

$126115.
Prices one year ago—Detroit. No.
2 red, $1.17; No. 2 white, $1.14;

 

CORN

Corn followed the trend of wheat
last week the greater part of the time
although the tone was stronger at
the close in corn than in the later
grain. Corn lost only 1c on the De-
troit market during the past couple
of weeks. Indications point to a
good export demand in the near fu-
ture. Foreigners are trying to buy
on the basis of 70c for May corn.
Receipts at Chicago last week aggre—

gated 3,667 cars compared with
1,411 last year.

, Prices
Detroit—Cash No.2 79c; No. 3,
780; No. 4, 77c; No. 5, 75c. '

Chicago—No. 2 yellow, 741/3@
750; No. 3, ’71@73c; No. 4, 706
71c.~

Prices one year ago—Detroit, No.

3 yellow, 530; No. 4, 49c.

 

 

MARKET sown-11v
Wheat quiet. Corn and oats steady with some grain going to seaboard.

Rye inactive.

Beans firm; De'mand for potatoes improves. Butter

and em easy with demand fair. Poultry in demand and receipts small.

Large receipts weaken cattle marketi-

‘ my.

‘Hogs strong to higher: Sheep

 

(Hm: The above summarlud Information was resolved mm ”M.
'0 ' Inlnﬁ Inform-ﬂop up to withln one-halt. «W

hat page id as

O Ontdll 1-0
_ colon“ ' .

   

«the own _
h-

  

4H. P., $4. 30 per cwt.-

,a slight improvement in the demand

~ tion of most Leeds is fairly good and.

,_ Receipts and movement good.

 

    

, OATS ’4 -'
The out market is in 3.110110 L I
same condition as it was when _
last report was node. can "
houses and large elevator in
centinu ”to support the ‘
Shipping demand is better t
hu- been for some. time min
reports coming tram Chicago a a
ping, Sales of 340, 000 bushels.
Prices _'1~ "
Detroit-No. 2, white, ’
N03506: No.4,48 1'
Chicago—~No. 2 white, 44 45“ "or .
No 3, 42%@43%c. @ ”1’5
Prices one year ago—Detroit, No,
2 white, 40c; No.3, 38c; No. 4, 358.

RYE
Rye also followed the trend other
grains the past fortnight and the.
price is slightly under that quoted
in our last issue. The market. is~
steady in tone with nothing to 111.—
dieate any immediate change. -
Prices

Detroit—Cash No. 2, 930., —

          
       
 
  

 
 
 
 

 
 
  
 

   

  

 

  
      
   
     
      
   
       
    
       
     
     
      

 

  
      

  
  
      
     
     
      
      
     
       
        
    
         
          

Chicago—Cash No.2, 88% ,
89340. . ‘@’
Prices one year ago—Detroit,
Cash No. 2, 90c:
BEANS

        
 

A decline of 100 took place in the
Detroit bean market during the past
fortnight. The decline was not due
apparently to any decrease? in con;-
sumption or heavy receipts but Was
a result of theholiday dullness in ,'
the grain market. The tone remains
ﬁrm. ’ "

  
         
      
    
     
   
 
     
 
       
 
   

" Prices _
Detroitl—C'. H. P., $7.40 per cwt. -- ~
Chicago—C. H. P., $5.06 $9.00, ~

per cwt. '
Prices one year ago—-—Detroit, C.

     
     
     
      
      
 
 

 

"" POTATOES
The condition of the potato mar-
ket shows further improvement-

This commodity is steady on the ,

leading markets of the country but: ‘

continues to show some weakness,

at northern points. Supplies arei

moderate and demand is on the gain.
Prices

Detroit—Michigan, $1. 00 @ $ 1.10.

 

Chicago—~Northern Whites, 79@
90c.
Prices one year ago-«Detroit,
$2.25.
HAY

A quiet tone prevails in the hay'
market. Receipts are generally light ‘
and country loading is nearly at ,a.
standstill. Prices are practically un-
changed and demand is for current
needs only.

1.

Prices

Detroit-No. 1 timothy, $16506
$17; standar , $16@$16.50; light.
mixed, $16@ 16.50; No. 1 clover,
$14.50@$15.

Chicago—No. 1 timothy. $200
$22; No.1 light clover mixed, $19
@$20; No. 1 clover, $16@$18. . ,
~ Prices one year ago—Detroit, No. 1"”
1 timothy, $19@$20; Standard timi
ot11$y1,8$18@$19; No. 2 timothy, $17

   
        
     
       

 

      
 

OFFICIAL U. S. MARKENRAM
U. 8. Bureau of Agricultural ' .
Economics . ~. '., .

Washington, D. C. ,——-For the week
ending December 30,1922. ', ,
FEED—Western markets report

  
      
   
     
       
     
            
 

but eastern markets continue dull.
The interior demand in light and-
stocks in hands of dealers appear
ample for present needs. Produc—

 
        
        
       
      
 

storage stocks appear burdensome in

  
        
 
  

on increased production and light
demand is oriented at low prices
Other quotations generally at

  
  
 

  

 
         
    
  
 

29.111100114161111, BranSBSLJM
$250. E1011: Middlings t2

 
 
  
  
   


:iree sellers and in some cases
ted concessions to keep ﬂoors

_ rod of accumulation. Arrivals
New York included fairly good
.merits or Danish butter Closing
prices, 92 score butter: new York
5; Phila 55c; Boston 540; Chi-

, £9509. Cheese markets steady a1-
dugh trading is very quiet.- Bet-
demand looked for after ﬁrst of

» Cheese prices at Wise9'58‘n
December 29:

Clearance of 5.58 WQIUW

derWear, mad/.8 in! U. 5. -

' c this.
Order Shirts by No. 570
Order Drawers by No. 571

d?::ﬁ:..........59
Brand newAli Wool Sli Over Sweeter.....$l 2

Brand new Fear ‘Buc 1e. All. Rubber Arctic.r
Sizes6t012(OIdu-Na.m 3
“PM 8299)

Braidbnew ﬁ1e$6h
' ' ‘ oilﬁmw‘WXﬁ
mm.

bm13$meobolls Min

:_:| FOR SA 1. E

‘l. 3 year old
Percheron Filly

4 10 year old

Perehorn Moses

2 5-9 your old

. Belgian Mares

4 9-11 year‘dd ‘

“ Percheron Geldings

Ilichigan Ag’iﬂollege,
as WON, Fan’u M

m! i“ , _‘ IE‘N 1!

Fm ONE 013 'ﬂlUSTY T9
42.009 SAP”?! 1' 8 YEARS

A grow like this ~means an- '

with orwithou
.128) 2.9

 

 

 

 

m whence; at once, it is a 1
. dandy. Reasonable prices and
satisfactio guaranteed. Order
early to void delay in ship-
ping, \as many were disap-
.porn‘fed last season.

CITY LIMPLB HATCHERY
‘ ‘ _\iHolta‘11u,mch. ‘

W »‘ a . .....

 

 

 

mm
«mm

nod 7 got hold or com th'
e mg
I . Wm cured me. \Yesrs
«ls-i '
h

 

«the mm M ms! -
em doing hard work as s corp-
. u no operation. no lost hima,
Whove nothinc f0 sell. but will
"tion about how you yﬁnd
‘ ms ti

 

est dealing Plume «sand for mu i .

I

A.“

B
49
lty. 4024312

 

West creamery, 111 tabs
488 set 15.
WHrosh, according to dual-
per dos; refrigerators,
dos
PPLES4—Greenings, $- 501/; @
1 751 Bolwins, $1. 25@1. 50; Spy $2
@2. 59; Jonathan. $1. 75@2; other
varieties, “@150 per 511.; western

boxes, $2@3
POPCORN—4 41.49: Little Best.
431‘, 7% 8.8 per
‘ ONIO Sm” 75 per sack 9! 1.00
lbs; 395114111142. 2 ‘15 991’ crate
DRESSED HO 0 £43 130 lbs.

11@128: 130 to 169 Ros. 9.6108;

heavy, 5591’ lb.

DBES El) CALVES—C’hoice.
@1515 medium, 12@14e;
coarse, 5@1oc per lo.

DIVE FOULTRY-m-Best spring, 22
@238: 1951195118, 15@16£; large tat
hens, 23@24.e; medium hens, 29
22432922318411 liens, 14@15c; old re
ore, 148, geese, 18@29c;

ducks, ”@242 small ducks, 20@21~;
heavy turkeys, 35c;
258 not lb.

HONEYmnComb, 23@258 per lb.

CELERYmMichigan, 40@758 per
dos; square, $1.25@$175; Cali-
fornia celery, Jumbo, 75c; extra
Jumbo, ﬁQQSl; mammoth, $1.10@
1.25 per den.

15

. WOOL
The mid—western Wool trade closed
the year 1922 with a ﬁrm tone pre—
vailing, recent sales being reported

at top quotations in several of the -.
Leading lines, and with dealers show.- 1 ‘

in: a feeling (it optimism in regard
to the future business.
in inquiry from mills is reported,
tending to help the tone of the mar-

ket. tin-mash prices are quoted 2911-:
changed. '

 

\

 

average temperature

is expected to range below

normal. Temperatures for the ﬁrst 1
half or the month will also average .‘
with a downward trend but more;
moderate conditions will occur dur— ,

ing latter half.

At the beginning of this week
temperatures will be cold with little
variation. especially on the upward
movement...

About 91191191» or Wednesday in

mousing 51551911591111, snow hurries

and 57919418 will West Michigan and
continue in tlhe state user the middle
days of the week. About Thursday
stnong west and .11th winds will
sweep sever Lakes Superior £1141 Mich-
igan into the lower bell-Mauls. of the
Mitten state sending thexmerclury in

the thermometer way down. 'Temp— g
costumes 4.11 this {leads will WW‘

cola 1191' she season during the bal—
‘ance‘ of the week.

. _ Week of January 14
Average weather ..conditions for

week beginning January 14 will be.
.wi-ndy with pnecipitation about or

above normal. Weather conditions
may be expectedto be full of ex-
tremes, more especially in tempera-
tures rather than precipitation. In
the latter case, rain or snow Iall is

expected to be as heavy and monthly .

heavier than during the ﬁrst week

of 5m
During the early part o": wool;

temperatbres w’ill rise in Michigan‘l

and during this same period some
rain or snow Will {all in most seb-
tiojis of the state While during mid—
dle days of week we sweet .a reater
amount 0‘! rain or. now. 9‘ a last
hm (Sf week MY he so 01 moisture
with clowAibos sun me. temper-
airlines.

ﬂout my df ﬁlls Week mo
-ar'e cementing a rest movies of
temperature in this state. ’ ,

Less Moisture Last ’Half Month

We do 1101: look ror as much gen-

- . oral precipitation Or as severe stormy

Weather in Michigan (1‘31?ng last half

large ,

large ‘ '

light turkeys. .

An increase ;

SEND l0 Mlllﬂwn Em

your 1.3011036 Wy
return your money Don' t delay. Order now

l’lus Postage

78¢ Brawers 1118th

y
out is medium Weight but.
1y woven, Which renders it.

mas a mucli heavier garment. .

88% is a mregulation Army Winter issue.
We are selling them for only H their
octugl aim all sizes 780 Plus Postage.

4- BUCKLE ALL
RUBBER AMTIGS

' 15% 12.99599;

reclaimed heavy friction cloth
lining: pure gum rubber uppers:
don 091-. ted rubber soles;

ams.

\vggc little

you w nt 4!.
shoe or I
préce of a pair of rubbers,

‘ or or yours ayas
maxi T11

is
411.598.31.29811181’95‘3139.

Y9
are
'(Svei‘:t
n 4150

U S SALVAGE CO.

spec I11. Pm cuts’

museumenot

have mreo

.. ,... g... m on 11111111

orethesrti eyoumtlssoidmt.

All" HORSE
MKETS

M: % Price

PW
POSTAGE

3% new Government Horse Blankets. Made .
g _ gunllty duck; lined. This blanket
. Angst $4.50 each. Our special price
' .Home

9. i. UNI.
”ATS

5189.25...

8800 would not dupli-
cate this value US
Army 0. D. Wool
blouses, slightly used
lit. in perfect condi-
ion, in fact practically
as good as new.
or fine wool serge and
melton, with tour pock-
ets. Si 205 34 to 42.
Older yours at the low
rice or $1. 89 Plus
ostage.

ARMY WOOL SOCKS

27619 953

heuristics Army Hear-y W001
Socks. All wool, heavy weight.
extra length. On account of
the cm length they are suit.-
able tor sportsmen or any per-
son to wear with boats. Resins
or shoes. This regulation wool
sock is easily worth 750.
Order several pairs at the price
.0! 4 salt for 850

"Magic, Bscanner 10th
ST- PAUL. Mm. SOTA

 

in :
Michigan beginning January 7th

 

 

 

BREEDERS" DIRECTORX-
(Continued from page 19.)

 

 

. museums.

A clump: 1‘0 GET e £5191.
shines. Boar pigs, sired by . on lung
gilt £263.36 Ti ton, Messenger All Overs-10th

are 211 and other zea'tb Writes
.th 115 ,pride’s )1 N: CRMAMI‘RY 110G
3R , Route 7. Mt. Clemens,

”Aggig

HAMPSHJRWPRING BoARs AND snéo'

grlts 1101112.) sows to select from P‘ace yom
.crolar 11‘"va or you may be4 to late. 10th

ear.
snvoan, R. St. lloﬁn’s.

Ich.

seems" as“

 

. stones
rams d 1‘
size. riced

#3

as escrow sieves .

1 1'
DAN “0011811683313 “3”... . 15h.

' .mm W
11
mg ﬁlm’wpggp EIR,S9\vld.. 1W0”

 

OOTCH GEL. [ESI SABLE AND
white or W519 Sbeautifuuj phlso and white From

he ldnvfﬁcNEST KENDRA-'8. Gladwln. .Mlch.
gmum

2139811595 FARMERS HBHAIIEE

E Ads Under this Head 100 per Word, no? Issue

‘illilillllllllmnmn

 

 

 

my? 'gv-oun imam-cow Am)
fq m- coats and tubes. (low and
into Harness or . -olc Leather (‘nrt-

" uest. We repair and 011111111) 111
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HIDE. TANNED “OR EXGHANGED. LEATH.
or sold farm COCHRAN TANNERY,
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CORD-WOOD SAW FRAMES '

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NATURAL LEAF TOBAOGO CHEWING 55

ovnds $1. 75; )o uds ‘. oking.

1Dub 3 $1.25,1&0p01ln s T$2§§Cgm §%ﬁ%\llmter:
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no mono lay when
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CHEWING 5
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COOPERATIV E TUBA 033
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thE PAY i200 MONTHLY SALARY. FURN-
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PLANTS AND SEEDS

 

AME R‘RY P [ITS—«$4 PER T US-
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Catalog‘é‘Gr Selec F
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LOVER, NZICEEPURPLE

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ce,tt1e grqpe
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THE GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY HA8
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on stock raising. EYE rm mwmg

Wat-11,1 Development Agent I”Dept. 95,,1 fat. Poul,

 

”IF JVOUR FARM 0R COUNTRY HOME IS
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Wt iet obs
CLOVERLAND FARM ‘AGENCY. Powers. Hick.

 

EIGHTY AORES OLAY AND GRNVEL LON“, ' I, -
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Double Wear Cert
Metal-to-Metal Does I

RITE for the free Harness Book which tells you convenience in putting on and taking off the harness
why Olde-Tan harness wears twice as long as any is essential. No place where there is excessive strain
other high grade harness. or pull will you ﬁnd a buckle on Olde- Tan harness.

Every Spot where there is excessive wear, strain or You don' t have 0 w r
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Puts This HarnessM
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‘ ' - send you an Olde-‘Tan Harness absolutely no money, ‘ 'tion. A11 pull stram and wear 19 on met I
should know. The Olde-Tan Harness book tells how Olde- , down- After the ﬁrst payment of $7. 50, you may pay the a
Tan Leather is tanned, all the different processes from balance‘ 1n easy monthly installments. .

1

 

Bahson Bros., Dept. 330.1
19th Street and Marshall Blvd”: Chicago. Ill.

Please send me free your Olde-Tan Harness Book and
all about your $7. 50 down and easy monthly payment
offer on Olde- Tan Harness.‘ .

\.

Ask for our free harness hook. Get . .
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cOupon today and free} beck will9th be "11 you at once.

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