
An Independent
Farm Magazine Owned and
Edited inMichigan

SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1923 1:§;?_§E§§g 3;

 

 

 

“Man Works from Sun t'o Sun,

But a Woman’s work is Never Done!”

 


- Lower Shoe Prices to You!
—bccause our shoe factories
are located so close together

All the E] tamu'ies and factories are
located Widi'm a circle whose radius is
only .6 miles. This eliminates an ex-
pensive nansfercosmmmn tanneryto
factory, from factory to train), so that
we can supply your shoe dealerwith
good shoes at minimum prices.

If you are buying shoes for boys this
shOuld be especially interesting to you.
It allows you to get high quality shoes
at prices you would think impossible.
Remember this “six'mihe circle.” It
cuts downyourshoelills.

Atmdealer’switﬁanE—Jsignin the»
window. Boysslsoesateconoorypriees

Euolcorr-J’ouuson SHoEs;
Made With Smiles

 

 

‘ of agriculture.

 

 

NEW SUBSCRIPTION RATES
77w Mohegan "
BUSINESS FARMER

(Eilecﬁvo Ayn 2nd. 1928)

ONE YEAR .............;........................ .60
TWO YEARS ..... ... ..... $1
FIVE YEARS. ..... $2

VERY subscriber at the above rates is entitled to ALL
E the Departments of Service which have made The Busi-
ness Farmer famous, so long as the term of subscription

138%011 know The Business Farmer is the most practical,

and fearless because it is the only independent farm paper

I enclose S ....... . ........ for a ........ .. . years subscriptim,
this entitles me to every department .of Business Farmer
Service, without further cost for the full period of my sub-

. VMoolooosooooioooooooaoooanooaoaoooao-oaanaoooooOUCOMOHOONOOonosoooso RFD N°nooouooq

STATE....................

' m h mummmmmmuu
wam’h“ﬁ

 

 

 

E! or "tour. government soil V
experts and ﬁve or six reproach-

totivcnotthe

, m1 conege will collaborate one

year in continuing the, soil testing
work in which the soils department

of the college and bureau of soils of ~
1 the United States Department of

Agriculture hare co-opcrated for the
last three years
continuation of the work has jut
completed between Dr. H.101.
McCool or the college and a federal
representative.
“Presque Isle county will be the

{ﬁrsttobecoasidamdiathe work

this year, the work in that county,
started last year, being completed.
The tour or live counties to be enter-

between Pralessor McCool and the
government, the largest force over

: working in Michigan will be in the
‘ ﬁeld.

SUMMER. TERM DATES AT
M. A. C.

UMMER session at H. A. C. will
start June 19, the day after
commencement and continue

until July 27, according to the an-
nouncement made at the omen lo!
Prof. E. H. Ryder, director of the
summer school. The courses avail-
able tor students are outlined in the

TH! Mention at 108,008 acres
or wild land in We within

the next six months is predicted
by oﬁcials ot the 'state department
Since the passage
of the Moggison certiﬁcation bill, re-

, quests have been made for the ex-

amination or over 10,000 acres of
wild land with additional applica—
tions for information as to the cert-
iﬁcation of several thousand acres in
scattered tracts.

It is predicted that practically-all
the land to be certiﬁed will be an-
cultivated tracts. Nearly all the op-

. outing tax-ms, which have been pur-

chased during the last tow years,

; have been bought by practical tarm-

ers from the middle states alter a
personal examination, and it is be-
lieved, by dealers, that such being
themit wilibounnecessaryto
go to the expense of certiﬁcation.

L‘EIGHTWMENTOAT-

TEN!) 110m CONVENTION
IGAN Holstein breeders will
be represented by eight dew

Cleveland, Ohio, June 8th. The dei-
cgatol elected are: D. D. Aiken o!

.Fllnt; MMKWMMG—rnnd

thawed. The '

of 23, 000 inembers. Michigan is
represented on the Board of sixteen
directors by H. W. Norton Jr. at
Lansing .

0

W5 03'

INTEREST IN JUNE
SMALL list of Farm, ers' Bullet-
ins and Ciroulars .01 general in-
terest during J une is believed

taboo! value to our modes-s. Copies

,may be obtained free by addreSSing
“PM!!!

A contract for the .

ak-Bulletin on Department

‘ Farmers’ autism ass, HT".

"8.

of European Fonlbrood; 97'},

Caps; 1’84,me and Home m
0: Fruits and Yeast-31m; if”, e-o- ,
troi of Apple Powdery Mildew; _
1198 Swarm Control; 1811, Shy '
Green Bug or Spring Grain Aphis:
1225, The Potato Leaihopper and Its
Control; 1290, The Bulk Handling

Incline- for Prevention
at m and m and Grain
Cleaning; 214, Pas-stun Taber“
or Potatoes; 217, Aatbraeno'so a!
Mmhndlons; 833. II. 8. Grades for
Pontoo- Recommended by the Unit-
a-BtatconepomcntotAgricultura

m

Petcskey—Conu‘acts awarded tor
15 miles highway to com $90,000.
New laconic temple purchased at '
cost of, 825, 09!.

Lansing—Estimated number cattle - ” "

on feed in state 12% unease over

last ymr. Farmers increase this .-

year mango 1n corn, oats and barl- 7
State mm at farm hbor not

cabal to demand. .
for armory chosen

W

and 885 sec approprhﬂon sought

tel-building. Btdacsnod [or build-i
his new annotate highway. Radio
club «mailed at Ollvst college.

Coder hie—Ham completed for
God-:- Inks Wagon 8270, 00!.

Gem accepts sits
tor new community mg.

Ann Arbor—Now null: or gum-sea“
hmne at onto mm to cost
8850 0‘00 -

Fremont—Paving operations ’ to

£011me paving contract
awarded involving $298,108. Plans
being completed tor six-story hotel
at cost at $250, one.

Standish—rim cow testing staé
don omniscd in Aranac county.

Caro—Tuscan road commission-
ers plan new highways. Shorthorn’
breeders of Tuscola county organize.

Flint—Pore Marquette Railroad
to build new belt line track. Busi-
ness interests want extension Michi~
gsn Central Railroad.

Saginaw—Odicial of Pore Mar-
quette Railroad declares ﬂame in-
creasing. Work begun on new Proc- 1
cott Street sewer. Pore larqnetto ,
Railroad gets permit to build new
bridge over Saginaw river.

(hemmed.

valuation

tor-G assessment

$11,990,099 over lsst‘yenr. ‘
made in Apple and Potato Show
here next fall. Tn new building
to be erected on Valley on: Milling ;
Company site. New park improve-
ment program outlined by city. .

Traverse City—Betta Rack-
drive carried on has.
Lawton—437w 8109,90.

Adriane—New water power tactory'
to be erected by Ford Motor Cor'a- .
pany.

. Bay City—St. James school will
build new $50, 000 gymnasium. ‘

Big Rapids—Four ”new“ ’1
m to be built byW

pany V
Battle Creek—Work commenced '

. on new 8150 .000: Masonlc‘tem Io,
Dc‘tro i9—Port til

cl! Detroi tr

 


~ Street—in Chicago.

 

“moan F'arm nag-nine Owned and Edited. In mm’v'

_ II-d
lat-doc mandrel-m mob"
22,1917I
tar, Am I! at the
Wonder act of Karen
8rd; 1879.

 

rly Marketmg to End Peak Load Problem

:0 F Brodhrte, President of American Farm Bureau Federation, Speaking to Chamber of Commerce
of U. S. Tells Farmers’ Plan

msystem of ctr-operative

marketing will go far towards
{solving the railroad problem in
Speaking before the eleventh an-
cal: meeting of the Chamber of
Commerce of the United States in
Noi York on May 10, 0. E. Brad-
rote. President of the American Farm
Bureau Federation, declared that the
arm had found his own solution
to the peak load Question in trans-

portntion.

N ‘A‘ccording to President Bradfute
’e farmers’ new system of co-oper-

ntive marketing whereby the prod-

ucts of the farm are moved into
oints of cbnsumption in an orderly

manner Will give the railroads an

, opportunity to move the great staple

‘ farm crops gradually from the farms
to the distributiOn centers and thus
.avoid the peak loads and the attend-
«ant car shortage problem which
break the railroads’ back.
~ ,Mr. Bradfutechallenged the busi-
4n‘m men and railroad executives to
, join hands with the farmer in help-
in: him perfect a cooperative mar-
My; system providing for the star»
agoand ﬁnancing of farm products
' on the farms. About onebtwelfth of
* those farm products properly stored
'; and adequately ﬁnanced on the farms
can be moved into points of con—
m n each month.
* r. Bradiute made it plain that

ductions in railroad freight rates “as
an absolute necessity to the come-
back of agriculture and the ultimate

' _pmpority of both city and country. "

President Bradfute’ s address is as
follows:

"What do all these people do for

a living? I come out of the Grand
~ Central station or walk down LaSalle
I see the throngs

or folks racing hither and you, all

intent on something or other Per-

haps it is natural for a plain farmer
; ’ from the open country to wonder
-.i when sci down in the midst of a
. great city: ‘What do all these people

do for a living?’ I have never ceased
to marvel‘at' this. A careful analysis
of his problem leads one to observe
that all these talks in the crowded
metropolitan centers are engaged in
getting three things: food, clothing
and pleasure. In the third category,
pleasure, I classify the creature com-
~ forts of home, luxury, amusement,
etc. Now Solomon, the wisest man
of all time, abjured us, with all our
getting to get understanding, and I

’ am not so sure that the denizens of
,. the crowded. market place always

‘ follow that advice.

All Are Interested
_ f 9‘] would have this great ‘body
which springs directly from the cities
and town oi America to understand,
“however, that two of these three
driving incentives of metropolitan ct-
fort originate on the farm. Food
and clothing in the raw state rank
among the staple products of our
farms. Happily, then, we are all
city men and country men concerned
-' about the same thing basically. Your
city man is working with what the
farm man originated.

“In order to get into the channel _

of proﬁtable one it is, of course, neo-
Lescary to focus the rodncts of the

strain the metr'opo itan centers of
distribution. Out of this great fune-

unpertation now confronting us its
”biggest question mark is our
” v The farmer".

-~-'.,:.75ial; on me

\

SCAR EDWIN BRADFU’I'E, president of the American Farm
Bureau Federation, is one of America’s best-known and most
progressive farmers. He lives on the old home farm near
Xenia, Ohio, in Greene County where his grandfather was one of

thoearly settlers.

Mr. Bradfute has served his second term as vice-president of the

American Farm Bureau Federation.

He is also president of the

Ohio Farm Bureau Federation and one of the trustees of the Ohio
State University Mr. Bradfute is a stockman and farmer and has
specialized in pure bred beef cattle.

 

 

' mate consumption.

we use to carry our products from
the place, of their youth toward the
place of their use. The farmer’s in-
terest in transportation does not
stop until his products have been
landed safely at the point of alti-
Thcretoro, our
philosophy of transportation includes:
careful thinking about the cow path,
the ﬁeld road, the highway, the rail-
road, rivers, lakes, canals and the
ocean paths. The American former
has a transcending interest in the
whole transport problem.
sec if we can picture it in a few
simple but comparative ﬁgures.
The Transportation Problem
immense new volume of
wealth is created on the farms of
America every year, running into a.
gigantic business total of from 12 to
14 billions of dollars. Of our farm
products about 10 billion dollars
worth are transported of our farms
each year. This. is our direct trans—
portation problem. '

“Consider railroad transportation
alone: The gross freight bill of the
nation is around four billion dollars
per year. Of this freight bill the
farmers pay one-half directly. Add
to this the farmer’s freight bill for
horse, and wagon, and harness, high-
way costs, motor transport, carriage

by water, etc" and agriculture pays.

more than four billion dollars every
year to get the products of this basic
industry moved into centers of con-1
sumption.

“It may combo you to know that
the cost of transportation is one-
third of the farmer’s production bill.
The farmer comprises loss than forty
per cent of the population but pays

Let us .

more than ﬁfty per cent of the na-
tion’s transportation costs.

“It must not be forgotten also that
the farmer pays freight both ways.
On the things which he sells a freight
rate is deducted from the price which
it brings. On the things which he
buys a freight rate is added to the
cost f. o. b. cars. All this is part
of the farmer’s direct interest in
transportation.

London Fixes Wheat Price

“The man on land has another pri-
mary interest in the transportation
problem which is not given the atten-
tion which it deserves by our states-
men and economists. The price of
wheat in Kansas is ﬁxed by the price
of wheat in Liverpool. Under our
present marketing system .1 demand
for surplus farm products determines
the price of the whole» crop. Not only
is that Kansas wheat farmer forced
to take a world price for the small
portion of his crop which goes to
Liverpool, but that selfsame Liver-
pool price determines the returns
from his entire wheat ﬁeld, even
though the grain is all milled in
Kansas.

“The same thing is true of live-

stock. When I sell a fat Aberdeen— .

Angus bullock to be killed by the
local butcher in Xenia, Ohio, he pays
me the prices ruling at Pittsburgh,
or Buffalo, or Baltimore, or New
York City minus the freight rates
from those cities to my home town.
Why is the farmer so anxious for re-
duction in freight rates? Because
the transportation bill effects the re-
turns from his whole crop, not only
his surplus.

"I have talked to many railroad

 

 

DR. DAVID FRIDAY, VICTIM

OF UNWARRANTED

POLITICAL ATTACK, SAYS PRESENT TURMOIL
WILL CLARIFY AGRICULTURAL ATMOS-

PHERE ‘ IN

MICHIGAN

DURING the past week, Michigan Agricultural College,
through its president, David Friday, was subjected to
one of the most disgraceful and unwarranted attacks ever
staged in Michigan. During the absence of Dr. Friday on
a speaking tour of the east, statements were made to the
daily press which not only sought to discredit his ability
and loyalty, but to besmirch his character.

The attack was so underhanded and indefensible that
the Governor has taken a hand' 1n the matter and has prom-
iced to ﬁttingly punish the politicians who were guilty of
perpetrating the slander and gossiping it to the always-
ready-for-sensation daily press.

In reply to a request for a statement to his 70, 000 real
farmer friends, who read The Business Farmer, Dr. Friday

telegraphsas follows:

Because of the wise and courageous stand taken by
"Governor Groabeck, the Michigan Agricultural College
. will shortly be m a position to serve the farmers of Michi-

gan as me:- before.

present turmoil is long overdue

and will do much to clarify the agricultural atmosphere
of the atom—David Friday, President, Michigan Agricult-

musicales:-

0111‘ wt on the subject will be found“ 111 the Editor-

Iveof

this me.

 

 

experts and economists and statisb g
ticians who deal with the overwhelm- ,
ing problems of national transports-
tion. They talk always in terms of
bottle necks and peak loads. I think
it is fair to say that they really have
no solution. I think it is fair to say
that they have no formula for widen-
ing the neck of the bottle or for re-

. ducing the peak loads at harvest

time. To these vexing technical prob—
lems I believe that the American
farmer himself has found the answer.

Orderly Marketing the Answer
The answer lies in orderly marketing
of our farm products rather than in
the usual seasonal glutting of the
distribution centers. Since the farm-
er has found his voice and has
learned how to use it in a national
way our agricultural industry has
been the recipient of some very pro-
gressive and helpful legislation. We
now have on the statute books a law
permitting the farmer to unite to
market his product collectively for
the best interest f0 both producer ,
and consumer. Some twenty states
within the last two years have like—
wiSe assessed laws permitting us to
undertake a certain deﬁnite type of
cooperative merchandising which the
American farmer has worked out to
meet his own needs. In the closing
days of the last Congress organized
agriculture secured an approved
warehousing act as well as legisla-
tion providing for a new type of
credit for the farmer. When this is
ﬁnally worked out the farmer will be
able to store his crops in his own
cribs, and bins, and root cellars, and
hay mows which will be designated
as approved warehouses. It is not at
all beyond the range of possibility
that the products of the farm stored
in these approved warehouses on the
farm may become the basis of sound
commodity ﬁnancing. Surely there
is no better security for a loan than
the food of the nation. We are not
very wise if we cannot perfect a sys-
tem whereby the farmer may hold in
the storehouse of his own farm the
crops which he raises and move them
into channels of consumption in an
orderly and regular manner. Under
some such a system as this I can
vision that one—twelfth of our farm
product might move oil? the farms
into the conduits of transportation
each month rather than pouring the
whole thing onto the market within
a few days or a few weeks after har-
vest time. I would have you realize
that these great staple food roducts
are stored now in a manner accept-
able to the ﬁnancial system of the
country. The trouble is they are
stored in cities instead of on the
farms where they originated.

“Eventually the adoption of a
farmer’s cooperative marketing pro-
gram b-y America will do away with
the peak load in farm products. We
shall substitute for dumping all the
products of our ﬁelds and pastures
onto the market at one fell swoop
when we have to have the money,a
new and improved system of gradual
orderly merchandising.

“I challengeohere and now the
business men of America, and par-
ticularly the leadersin the transpor- '
tation world, to join hands with the
American farmer in helping him .
Work out his co—operative marketing
program for the good and selﬁsh
reason that this will do a great deal.
towards solving the transportation
problem.

“-‘I cannot close this discussion and
feel that I had performed my whole _ ~ .;

duty unless I state frankly to you;
that the American farmer regards on ~
early and substantial reduction 111;
railrbad freight rates as an absolute

necessity to the comeback of agri-

culture end the ultimate W
of both city and country. ,

 


A New Solution to the Producer to Consumer Problem that 15 Based on the Oldest Form of "
Commerce; the Barter and Exchange Plan Practiced 1n Bible Days ' '

ELLING directly from the pro-

, ducer to the consumer, with the

‘ elimination of all middlemen

ndzmiddlemen’s proﬁts, the McLean

wunty. producer’s market, Bloom:

gton, Illinois, recently opened, is

eadily growing in popularity and
tronage.

, .On the big days the sales aggre-
gets as high as $1,500, and rarely
drop below $1, 200. The farmer
brings in his produce and places it
in one of the 45 stalls, which rented
to him for the nominal rate of $1
per day. Many sell out in a few
heurs, but they have the use of the
stall and market building for the en—
tire day if they desire it...

Practically everything raised up-
‘on'the farm is sold. Pork in its
various forms, including pork cuts
1 and sausages; eggs, poultry, butter,
~ cottage cheese, milk, cream, all
kinds of vegetables, grain, and fruits
:11: season, together with pastry,
" bread, preserves, jellies, canned
fruit and, in fact, an endless variety
~of good things having a strong ap-
peal to the urban shopper.

,The market is opened at 9:30 a.

m. and, no trading is permitted prior

~to that time. There are usually from
100 to 200 patrons in waiting each
morning for the doors to open.

No objection to the market has
been ﬁled by the city merchants.
Eyery booth rented usually reports
receipts ranging from $15 to $100.
A large proportion of this money is
taken over to the dry goods, cloth~
ing, millinery and shoe stores and
expended for needed articles.

The business men have found that
a goodly proportion of the money
that is taken ill at the farmers’
markets soon afterwards is expend—
ed with the established ﬁrms. The
market has had the result of getting .
the country and city people better
acquainted.

Every booth renter signs an agree-
ment to be responsible for the pur—
. ity and cleanliness of the produce he
'm-arkets.

Supervised by County Agent

He must also deposit the sum of
$5 to the farm adviser. Should there
“be any complaint from a patron and
the booth renter fails to settle, the
farm adviser conducts an investiga-
tion. If the latter is satisﬁed that
the customer has a legitimate com-
p aint, he is reimbursed out of the
‘d posit fund for the sum he claims.
.1 So far there has not been a single
.03. e where such action was neces-
‘sa , a remarkable testimonial to
th harmonious trading and the
good feeling that exists between the
farmers and their customers. In
,, fact, the farm bureau seeks to instill
" nto the producer an element of
ride in the market which will have
a tendency to make it a place where
the buyers will become permanent
customers.

It has developed that many of the

 

 

LOOMINGTON, Illinois, is a city of 28,725 inhabitants. In,

Michigan there are 14 cities the size of Bloomington'. or larger. '

Every year Michigan becomes more of on industrial state,

- which means that the proportion of people who live in cities is in-

creasing while the population” on our farms ' is decreasing. The

. Business Farmer agrees with Dr. Friday, that this is nothing for

the ‘i'armers of Michigan and the nearby states to cry about. It
must mean higher prices and more proﬁt for the men who stay on
farms.

The farms adjacent to the growing cities and large towns in
Michigan must supply a larger proportion of the food which these
cities consume. The farmer within a ﬁfty mile radius of any given
market Call, with good roads and modern motor truck, deliver the
products of his farm direct to the consumer at a real proﬁt.

TOO MUCH FOOD IS BEING SHIPPED INTO MICHIGAN

which ought to be supplied from the farms of this state. Our
fal mers must awaken to the new conditions which the past decade
has brought. They are fools who raise wheat in competition with
the wheat-growers of Argentine and. the Ukraine. Less staples and
more specialties will be grown in Michigan by the business farmers.

Here then is the story of a well run farmers’ market in a city of
28, 725 population. It solves the producer to consumer problem in
the oldest and yet the most successful way yet discovered. City
people like to buy direct from the farmer. Bloomington and other
cities have proven that a lower price is less of a consideration, than
that the produce be! sold clean, fresh and attractive.

The Business Farmer stands ready to back the efforts to build a.
Farmers’ Market in any town or city in Michigan or the nearby
states, which has a population of two thousand or more. In vil-
lages of lesser size, we advise house to house selling or a Saturday
morning market in a given location direct from the wagon.

If you know of a city which should have, but does not have a
Farmer Market tell us about it and we will t1 y to secure the co-
operation of the local newspaper to encourage such a project.—
The Editor.

 

 

 

 

F

 

 

.—

 

t0",

 

Although you might not suspect it, thls is a farmers stall in the Farmers Market at Blooming-
llllnols, where the farmers from many miles around bring thelr produce and sell direct to
consumer. Thls stall rents for $1 per da y.

 

 

 

farmers who sold directly to the- city .

residents at the latters’ homes new '_
go to the market and their old pat-
rons come to them. The prices at
the market compare favorably wits
those at the established stores, but
the patrons of the farmers“ ‘know-.
that the stock is brought directly'
from the far the day that it is cf-' ,
fered for sa e and there are never
any stale articles on hand.

That the market has been a suc--
cess to the farmer aswell as the
consumer is shown in the fact that.

,_ practically every producer who rent-

ed the stall on the opening day has-
been a permanent renter.,

The farmers’ market seems to be
ﬁlling a business niche that has long
been empty and which is badly need-
ed. Every booth renter is required
to subscribe to a code of rules that
promotes neatness and cleanliness
and which are publicly posted so
that customers can persue them.
They have an excellent effect.

Here Are the Rules

“It is hard to keep hands clean,
but it will help. ,

“Also the ﬁnger nails.

‘TWash basin in the basement.

“Sweep our your booth when-
through.

“We don’t believe that you will
have time to chew or smoke.

“Don’t wear your whiskers too
long or your hat at all.

“A white apron, coat or cap makes
a wonderful improvement.

“The state pure food inspector re—
quests that you do not keep blankets
or wearing apparel in your booth.
Plenty of hooks in the basement.

“Gumme-d labels must be placed»
upon all dairy products and covered
containers.

“All eggs must be candled before
placed upon the market. Candle '
them at home. It will save time.

“A garbage can will be found up—
on the ﬂoor in which to place all
waste.”

Claimed a Model Enterprise

Since the market was started its
fame has spread and the farm advis-
er is in receipt of ”frequent requests
for information in order that ar~
rangements can be made to take
similar action. One request came
from Phoenix, Ariz., and another‘
from Fitchburg, Mass, indicating
110w much attention has been at-
tracted to it. ‘

The managers of the McLean
county market believe that they

have a model and one of the ﬁnest

of the kind in the United States. The
ground ﬂoor of the market building
is utilized for the booths, while the
upper ﬂoor contains the farm bureau
offices and an assembly room for
committee or public meetings. It
is essentially a farmers’ proposition.

(Editors Note—This article land
picture illustrating it are used
through the courtesyxof the Chicago
Daily Drovers’ Journal

Farmer and Labor Mix Like Oil and Water, Says Roger W. Babson

HE farmers are the backbone of
our prosperity. This does not
mean that the farmer makes

prosperity any more than that a
backbone makes a human being.
There must be arms and legs that
manufacture; there must be arter-
ies, and a circulatory system that
transports and distributes; and most
of all there must be a brain that di-
rects all parts of the body and causes
each to help and supplement the oth-
ers. It is the same with our nation.
Statistics clearly show that to have
a healthy country we must develOp
all sections, classes and industries

’ ether. It does not do a man any

ad to have merely a ﬁne big back—

hone if his arteries are hardening or
, his arms and legs are becoming

W alized. Anything that develops

r-t of the body at the expense

liar is detrimental rather

' ‘ One bad tooth may

health, happiness and

nd a little gallstone has

his grave.

backbone is necessary for a healthy
man and a healthy nation, and the
farmers are the backbone of Amer—
lea.
Oil and \Vater in Politics

Therefore I repeat my ﬁrst state-
ment: The farmers are the back-
bone of our prosperity. They keep
it erect. The farms are the back—
logs of our ﬁres. They keep them
from going out. The farms are the
backstops of our great national
game of business. They prevent us
from going to pieces when threaten—
ed with defeat. The safety of our

democracy is absolutely proportional
to the number of prosperous farm-
ers that we have. No man was ever
known to hang the red ﬂag of anar—
chy over his own hearthstone. His-
tory shows that the decline of na-
tions has begun when the number of

'its landowners began to decrease.

The best insurance against Bolshev-
ism is more successful farm owners
and home owners. Such owuers,
however, must be successful. It does
no good to have a man a landowner
if he is heavily mortgaged and in
constant fear of being wiped out.

 

 

OGER W. BABSON, as you know, is one of America’s greatest

economists.

His article, a part of which is reprinted here,

by special permission of the “Saturday Evening Post, ” in
which it appeared, is especially interesting to the farmers of Mich-
igan, because of the repeated attempts to mix Labor and Farmer
in a political movement. It may also conﬁrm your suspicions re-
__ garding a certain type of so-called “friends of the farmer, ” who
shout loud in political halls what they are doing for the farmer.
Mr. Babson says the farmers are just getting over another “eco-
nomic disease,” which comes regularly every thirty years and takes
about four years to run its course.

 

 

There must be contentment and a.
feeling of. security. Hence the safe-
ty of the nation is not proportional
to the number of farmers, but rather
to the number of successful farmers,
It may be as dangerous to have too
many farmers as to have too few—
if the country now has all it can
proﬁtably Wsupport

The farmer is the backbone of the

, nation because he is naturally a con-

servative. Of course he goes off at
a tangent once in thirty years. Every
new generation of farmers has to
have the economic , diseases, the
same as most children have measles,
chickenpox and mumps. The last,
generation had its dose in 1893 to
1897; the present generation is hav—
ing its now. Just about thirty years
apart, are “they not? Whether or

' not it will take this generation about

four years to get the poison out pf.
its system only the future can tell. ._,
Yet, I repeat, (1 farmer is by na-,. .
mm a conserve ye. ; He is a pro ‘ "
erty owner and‘mu ti stand! * '
protection of '

 


 

 

 

 

EDITOR HARDING MAKES UP EDITORIAL PAGE.—With a background of printers,
President Harding is shown making up the editorial page of the New York Tribune in the
composing room. Left to right: Capt. Adolphus Anderson, naval aide; Col. Clarence Sherrill,
military aide: Mrs. Harding, who is much amused at one of the cartoons; Ogden Reid; Pres.
Harding; Postmaster General New; Mrs. Ogden Reid; H. F. Dana of the editorial'staff; Chair-
man A. D. Lasker of the Shipping Board; Brig. Gen. Sawyer, the president’s physmian; George
J. Christian, private secretary to the president.

HIKING To FRISCO, PENNILESS
Williams and Bernice Kerns, both 25
of the Ohio State University, at Coium
California. The trip is the outcome of a dare that the could
travel to the Paciﬁc Coast wit ut a penny and war their
way. They had covered 120 miles when this picture was
snapped in Cincinnati.

Left to right: Esther
ears old, and students

pulpit has been
us, who are hiking to

adjusted to suit the speaker.
ing from his new pulpit.

, i.

one: Doc'rons TAKE u" 'I'E.-—'l"he .term is
liment but science has Inn ed that ﬁeld and at the veterinary hospital
nsyivanie the most .giodern. and up-to-da methods a in use for operating upon horses.
“while". vnlu Io horses Inhthe 5rd,? [havﬂobe'e'ié‘haolwni heri'a tgd “Phxio urn. “this im-

‘ 109—” W .a I oemo . o sows evet-
Wk: $019M operating. ; . P y. ‘ ,, ’

of “horse doctor” not generally, used as a
n

at the lverslty of

 

EVERY STREET CORNER A CHURCH.—The portable
invented by no one less well
Roach Stratton who plans to‘ hold open-air
of the Cavalry Baptist Church,
is built over the engine of the automobile and
Photo shows Dr. Stratton speak-

New York

LOOKS LIKE A “CIRCUS COME TO TOWN”.—-—A herd of zebras, photographed in their
native haunts, in the heart of Africa by the famous explorers, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson
whose experiences are now being shown on the screen. In the back. can be seen some speci-
mens of the gnu, an animal that looks as though it had been assembledfrom spare parts. It
took weeks of watchful waiting in carefully‘buiit blinds to get the intimate pictures of wild
animal life. While it was not their intention to kill any of the animals they were obliged
to kill several in protecting their own lives.

.é

RACING THE WAVES AT SANTA MONICA;-——Marie Pre<
vost and Phyllis Haver, two beautiful maidens from moweland.
are enjoying a motorcycle ride along the beach at Santa Mon-
ica, California. It is claimed that they are racing the waves
but what wave could be cruel enough to try, to wm from
such fair maidens? We wonder what the Wild waves me
saying.

known than r.
meetings In front
City. The pulpit
ls removed or

 

 

ON CRAZE HITS THE WORLD.——Pari's started it with the dance marathon
a few days America broke out with the dance marathon like a small bo with the
measles. It even got as far as Washington, D. C. where the above was taken. 8
bod started a piano playing endurance test. This was followed by a knitting\ more
in eargla. Now a ady in Perms Ivania claims the. marathon dish washing record of the
worldywhlle in Paris they are hol ing a drum beating contest. What next? '

MA RAT
and within

' , _ “ ,(Conymht Keystone "*Vi‘ew‘ﬂcmpegﬂ

wwwumks—

 


    

 

 
 

    

 
 

gomg—rtmaplmndollsrsandcmispropom
youwasieyouriimeatlmevenspreadingyon
Ioeeploﬁisthatahouldhebnghoyon.

The McCormick-Deming spreader paforms two
importantopetaiions. Pushitshredsdzenmnum—
teamittopiecesasitpasses throughthetwosteel
heatersandthespirslwidc-spmddevice;secend.

~.HQHICIH’IOIOIHQHI.|!?.IH.|¢I .,, H,

 
 
 

   
    
 
      
      
      
       
    

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Amongdiefeann‘esofdleMeCormicite-Dea'huspreeder
are: Anuﬁo—steerwhichpermitsthe spreader”
medinclosequarteraandwhicheliminaieeneck
adjustment for sixfeedspeeduandtheall-steelfram
withallepplisncesholtedtoitdirect.

As]: the McConm'cE-Deen‘ng Denier to
point out these features.

INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY

OF MEN“

HI.I.‘.IDvIl

‘r..n.

 

!.~Il.ill.

  

”Olilulx.luculoyu.”lanternoull1p-IIiInIAoIIAQ-u

     
  
 

II|.I'I.|II."
..__ M—
W—

   
   
 

 

 

CHICAGO. in. »

 

  
   

 

ﬁ McCorrnick-Deering
Manure Spreaders

MhTmPopdarSizes

 

DII.CII.OII.IVO.IOIIIII.IIIQII

  

 

 

 

 

 

ultln.

 

 

 

 

 

Wm. m‘ ._._-.,-__._.'—.———._-o

Oil!DIllonuOnnounonu.-u.

 

 

 

 

IIOIHONIOIHOmonion-Outlomomomontouiolnoulomomon:on

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Ofallthebrandsofcfgarsmade
« in the state of Michigan 28
years ago CHAMPIONS alone
remain. And that is because
they are always the same
always uniﬁesm in ﬂavor uni

The lucrecsiu‘ po aloe-it o!
CHAMPIONS is proof!“ “Lo

   
  
  
  
  
 
    
  
 
 
  

incisor
lama

HEMEI'ER’S

   
 
  

‘19:.--

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
  

 

 

 
  
 

 

 

- ‘ '1' a M
”I. “Wilda!!!“ must he "ammo

ENTITLED. TO mm 14on

NW
Wouldliketomwiglrenta
tarmtormoneyren'totawidow

   
    
 

whohasaliteleasecaniholdnry. mam

-—Upon» the death of the widow. the

lesseeotthets’rmwouldh’eeo-oa

tenanthysulerunceotthsreminderb

manandwouldhemtiﬂedtothree

 

have to pay the taxes on the term?
——Miss R... Delton, Michigan.

—In the presence of an agreemat
to the contrary, the purchaser of
real property pays the taxes falling
due Dec. let, it he purchases before
that date. It the purchase is made.
utter Dec.1st. the seller W5 the
taxes.. Under this rule, A would

“have to pay the term on the turn.

and B, the taxes on the store—Asst.
Legal Editor.

CAN BE EXEMPT FOR FIRST ~

FIVE YEARS

Can I be exempt tram paying lax
onwlld40acresotlanditlgoto
improve it? Is there any law about
itT—F'. 1., Hal-ion. Michigan.
—Act 208, P. A. 1913, governs the
case in point. The substance of the

‘ act is that it a man buys wild land.

forty acres or more. and lives on
same and subdues and places under
cultivation two or more acres a year.
he can be exempted from taxation
tor the ﬁrst ﬁve years on the pro-
perty. A reference to the act will
give you more details about lt.——-
Chas. J. DeLand, Secretary oi! State.

WHO OWNS TIMBER?

A and B own farm adjoining with

highway between. A claims high-
way is all on his land. B’s deed calls
for all land to center of highway.
There is timber on B’s side of road-
way. Said roadway has been used
by the public for over sixty years.
Who owns timber2—R. I... Saranac.
Michigan.
-——The owner of land adjoining the
highway owns to the center of the
highway, unless his deed and ab-
stract of title provide otherwise. Ii!
B’s deed calls for all the land to the
center of the highway, he would be
thelowner of the land and timber.
—Asst. Legal Editor.

SECURING PATENT

Will you please inform me where
and how to get an article which I
have invented, patented2—R. 3..
Perrington, Michigan.
—-Write to the Patent Oﬂlce.~ Wash-
ington, D. C. for “Statutes and Rules
of Practice” relating to application
for patent. These are distributed
gratuitously by the patent oﬂlce and
contain forms, etc., to be used in

making application for patent—~As-'

sistant Legal Editor.

mTATE HELD JOINTLY

It man and wife owns a turn
jointly and either of them leave can
the one leaving receive their share of
the property? What share would
the write get it she was the one to
leave? If they each inherited money
tram home and the wire received,
say 39, 000 and the husband 83, 060
can the wife get the amount she in-

herlted over-andabovehershareot,

the property it the money is tied up
ini tilts propertyT—‘l' . 3., 'W
H c

husband and wife, each is
whats ‘

,m 313”.»

—Under an estate held jointly lay .

 
   
   

  

does not amount to hut about one-
halt the amount B paid as ﬁrst pay-

ment. Farm is assessed to A but 3
has paid taxes in tum—W. V.
Climax, Hie-h. \ .
—-It A does not wish to enerelse his

right of foreclosure and to lispos-
sess B he may maintain an action at
law to recover overdue inter“. and
could levy upon B’s personal prop-

requiring conveyance by vendor he-
tore bringing such action—Asst.

Legal Editor.
maximum 00"

I am a subscriber to your paper
and have been for years. Will you
please answer this through your
columns? i bought a cow the ﬁrst
of last November at an auction sale.
costing 852.50. The man saying
she was due to freshen February
12th. 1’ dried her up a month he;
tore time to freshen. She isn’t

tresh yet and won’t be fol-some. ,

time. I understand that property
must be what it is sold for. Do you
think I have a case against this
maul—W. IL. Central Lake, Mich.
——It is dliﬁcult to tell just when a
now will become fresh. Altho the
owner should be able to determine
within a month’s time of the actual
date, yet, unless you can show the
seller deliberate misinformed you as

to the date, knowing that it would

be several months later than repre-
sented, it would be difficult to es-
tablish a cause of action against
hind—Asst. Legal Editor. .

CONSULT SUPERVISOR '
I would like to know thru the M.
B. F. if Sec. 28. Art. 8' of our con-
stitution as amended in 1916, does
not say that , the tax for highway
purposes shall not exceed $5 «per
1,000 in any one year according to
previous valuation. It so. by what
authority have they got to assess us
over $13.00 per 1,000 for this pur—
pose?-—~C. B., Allenton, Mich. '

——’l‘he statutes provide for the build-
ing of certain roads. upon the ap-
plication of persons to be beneﬁtted '
by such roads, in which case those
beneﬂtted are subject to special as-
sessment. Statutes also provide for
state and federal reward roads, and
special assessments therefor. I ad-
vise you to consult your supervisor
to ascertain to what diﬁereut pur—
poses your road taxes are applied.
——-Assistant Legal Editor. '

TEAM AND COWS EXEMPT

I own 40_ acres of land, a team 0!
horses, two cows, and have wite'and”
tamily. Now can a concern seize
and take any of those chattels or-
land or can they ’ garnishee: my
waged—A. 0.. Hellman.‘ Michigan.
---It the 40 acres at land is owned
and occupied as a household, it
wouldheexemphtotheexientot

  

 

You}:

 
  
   
   
  


 

 

.*?r';:/ «a 1. 72,1‘
,Jd m“k*\¥&»»

.THE PERFECT MOTOR_OiL

Sharp Economy

ANY farmers do not realize the tremendous waste due to wrong
lubrication. They no not charge against the motor oil such mat-
ters as scored cylinders — overheating —- too much carbon — too

'much exhaust smoke—too high consumption of gas.

Yet the right grade of Polarine —indicated in the chart frequently corrects
all these troubles. P'olarine means economy in operation, as well as added
ﬂexibility and power.

The reason why Polarine is good, begins with fundamentals. Polarine is
made from selected crudes—high in lubricating value. Polarine is manu-
factured in modern reﬁneries. It is made according to the ﬁndings of the
world’s leading petroleum chemists in cooperation with the designers of
the very tractors for which the oil is intended.

 

Tractor Chartaof
Recommendations

mamm- MotorOll mad um. Motor on

Lin 8 H.
Little Oink Alsas. H.
14-28.“...8. H.

spawns Eb u wanna m

Made

Oolarine .2.

THE PRF’ECT MOTOR on. Grades

Use

wash an as

It is tested, scientiﬁcall , in hundreds a t _ all times provided the gra d e
of tests— in all kinds engi‘nes—un- indicated m the Chart is used.

der all ﬁeld conditions Polarine is elastic. It forms a perfect

 

22222‘= ..
PM" PM“: PP” PP: PPPFF PF: F‘ P FF: Fl

 

 

 

 

Polarine is dependable at all motor
speeds—at all MmmWMum
it holds together. It maintains its body,
does not dismtegrate under pressure,
w111 correctly ,lubncate your tractor

(I nd/iaha)

cushion, an unbroken ﬁlm between the
moving metal parts. Yet it offers mini-
mum reSIstance to motion and maxi-
mum ﬂexibility. Change your motor
011 very frequently and use Polarme.

Standard Oil Cdmpany, asahmr

 


   

  

E "

_ ngme
'l'heFarmerwithagood bigiobwenls
agoodengineiustasmcbuhewuh

agoodsepantor.
.— Goodmandypowerisinstu
necemuysss equation-Aha:

of stendypowermesnspoorﬂweslu’ng,
r ' and cloning.
p”godrgltm"inventamingoutfitthat
breaks down or has to slop and wait
foot mates-I, mm lands stand idle a

yoYonwlosklluslma

vestoaop and you notwant itwasted.

Red River
Special

outﬁt with a Nichols-Shepard Steam or
Oil-Gas Tractor and

Save Your Thresh Bill

The reason is that it is correctly designed
and strongly made.

Get the right outﬁt todo your thresh-
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Write for Free arculars

Nichols & Shepard Co.

(In Continuous Business Since 1848)
Builders exdusivelyotRedRivesSpecial

 

Thresh Wind Stackess, Feeders.
Steam Oil-Gas Traction Engines
Bettie Creek, Michigan

 

 

 

ENSILAGE CUTTERSO
The Kalamazoo Ensilagc Cutter is
the product of long experience.
cill‘iiousamis of enthusiastic users ac-

un its superiorit Comparethe Kala-
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TRAINING INST- Buffalo. N.

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FORDSON TRACTOR FOR 8] LE—GOOD
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,growandhar- A

 

 

 

I have a lot I wish to seed to
alfalfa. Soil is light.
corn and cowpeas on it the last two
years. Land is in fair condition.
I think of liming this spring. plant-
ing-early to beans, then ,«work well
and seed to alfalfa after beans are
harvested, sowing a few oats for
cover. Would you advise this
course?-L. 11., Augusta, Hie

-—l am of the opinion that you will
get much better results by seeding
alfalfa this ”spring or early next

spring, using one bushel of barley

as a companion crop. There is con-
siderable risk In seeding in late
August or September after beans.
Should we have as favorable a fall
season as during the past year, you
would get a stand but should frost
come early or should the September
season prove very dry, it Is not like-
ly that alfalfa would catch well.

On land such as you describe.
lime should be used at the rate of
two tons per acre)~ of ﬁnely ground
limestone. It is important that
northern grown or Hichigan alfalfa

seed, preferably the Grimm be plant- .

ed.—-J. 3'. Cox, Professor of Farm
Crops, M. A. C.

CHANGING 111an

By JOHN T. BARTLETT

A MILK FOOD DRINK

T one time in our national exist-
ance, the village milk man
drove his cow to the centre of
the town, beneath a friendly tree,
and there served his customers, who
came to him with buckets. They
saw him milk and knew just what
they got. It was milk distribution
made as simple as the times knew
how to make it. In some foreign
countries today, goat milkmen drive

their nannies from door to door.

The milk distribution system has
been a. longtime changing—and the
end is not yet. Recently, a Denver
milk distributing organisation has
eatablished a service for customers
which should increase the consump-
tion of milk in a. strategic direction.

Of late years” the soda fountain
has consumed greatly increasing
quantities of dairy products. The
soda fountain is a habit, a passion,
or a necessity to millions. One of
the soda fountain drinks just intro-
duced in the west makes a delect-

 

able concoction in combination with ~

milk. A little of the new prepara-
tion, and quite a little milk, and the
consumer gets something pretty line.

What the enterprising milk dis-
tributors did was to make an ar-
rangement with the manufacturers
of the preparation whereby the dis—
tributor could bottle it with milk,
and sell it to customers along with
milk. The bottled product costs
only about two cents a quart more
than ordinary whole milk. The
dairy organization spent large sums
telling Denver consumers what they
could now obtain, and introducted
the new service. Great quantities of
the bottled milk drink are being
sold in this manner.

Families drink it ice cold, or
steaming hot, as they prefer._Child—
ren like it, and it has proved the
solution of the milk problem in the
case of many a child who refused
whole milk. The child likes the
rosey color of the new drink, and its
distinctive ﬂavor.

This means one more good way

for increasing milk consumption.

By the way, did you know that
milk is transported these days in
great tank auto trucks!

' A HIGHER RETAIL PRICE LEVEL

LL the elements entering into
distribution cost soared during
the World War period.

Cost of container.

Freight rates.

Wages of city workers engaged in
physical distribution.

And since all businesses make
gross proﬁt a pacentage of cost
price, all margins increased. A 50
per cent mark up on $1 is 50c—onc
$1 50 is 76c. Unit proﬁts went up.

Some of these things came down
in the m pclod, but they to:
gather only eased at a little, and the
future is likely to see them savanna).

snap to ALFALFA Asp BARLEY‘ ‘V

Have grown >

,and 1920;

lng again. Distribution costs hex. In.“ _0 ind

able. It Would ham to be consider—
able. Just freight cost, handling
costs, middlemen's , gross proﬁts

would make it a' substantial ﬁgure.
How is his going to and? From
the economic standpoint, the practi-
cal solution—with a general advance
in labor costs already under way——
seems clearly indicated. It is a
much higher level of consumer food
prices. In old price levels; titers is
not room for modern distribution
costs, and a proﬁt to the farmer.
Themmroomiftheoonsumerwill

Pay the farmer more, as it now pays

transportation companies, the mid-
dlemen, more.

A. campaign for higher retail price
levels is in order. The consumer is
reconsiled to paying a nay high level
for building materials and many
other things.
similiar high level for farm products
taking it as a matter of course. dis-
tribution costs will not obtrudc as a
crucial problem, for there will be
room for them. There is not this
room, with pro-war, or near pre-war
levels.

FARMER AND LABOR Mix LIKE
OIL AND WATER
(Continued from Page 4)

things from an employer’s point of
view. It is well enough for pink
professors to write about Farmer-
Labor parties; but it would just as
practical to expect an Oil-and—Wat-
er party. A man will love a life-
preserver when he is in distress ov-
erboard; but he quickly loses his in—
terest in the thing after he gets be“?
on dry land. He does not think
enough of it to carry it home as a
souvenir, even though it saved his
life- The farmers are glad to use
labor to help them put through some
pet scheme; but if labor thinks it
can depend upon the farmers’ vote
to help increase wages and reduce
working hours, labor will be most
terribly mistaken.

During the war I assisted Secre-

' tary of Labor Wilson in the import-

ant work of increasing predation.
With wheat pegged at $2.60 a bush-
el the farmers were, of course, tre-
mendously interested in our efforts.
The farmers then through the De-
partment of Labor was doing a. ﬁne
work and they were very sympathet-
ic with our efforts. Some even sug-
gested that We should take over the
Department of Agriculture because
labor and agriculture were working
for the same end. After ‘the 'war
was over, however, and the price of
wheat went down with a bang, they
quickly forgot the Department of
Labor. Although during the war
hardly a week went by when we
were not Visited by a complimentary
farmer delegatiOn, I doubt if one
such farmer delegation has been
near the department since the Arm-
istice was signed. They were then
no longer interested in increasing
production. Reduced wages was
what the farmers wanted in 1919
Now, of course, it Was
not the function of the Department
of Labor to work for reduced wages.

“The department was established
for improving the welfare of the
wage earners," We told the Grange
oﬁ‘icials, “hence We do not feel justi-
ﬁed in inaugurating any , campaign
to lower wages, even for farm labor.
Let wages take their natural course.
They will anyway." ,

“Very well," replied the farmers.
“We thought you were our friends,
but we see you are not... Guess we
had better stick to the Department
of Agriculture, for when we farmers
flirt with labor we are playing with
ﬁre and are likely to get out ﬁngers
burned. "

A QUEEN'S ENGLISH

Mrs. Stevens had oﬁered liberal wages and
privileges, but still the general house warh-
seemed a little undecided about coming. ‘Do you
do your own stretchin'f" she asked suddenly.

"Do we do our own what?” Mrs. m
asked, puzzled.

“Strotchin’. " repeated the woman. “Do you
put all tho food on the table and sketch for it
yOuraolf, or do I have to shuﬂls it mud 1C
you?”——8ucecssful Farming.

Roux BARREL pounce 1
"Mrs. Jones. Job: :0 with u a. ~
I” rust!”
_w. Idﬂn'thswhswutolnintown.”
"‘thtohs mean, in town! Elihu's our”: red

    

When he accepts a”

 

._‘-—-s_——-A

 

 

 

to the consuZer Would homomor-

 

rne‘s Boomers on
rams SANITATION:

No.151—f. “TIM". Describuuld

to prevent diseases enun-

mon to liveﬁook.

No. 187-— 006 COOKIEI'. Mshowtoﬂdﬂie'
dog of ﬂeas and to help m
disease.

He. m—llilggdm MET. Covers them-mum

No. H WW8. Givesoompletedi-
rections for me construction {I a

concrete hog wallow.
No.163—‘I’0IIIJIV. How to get rid of lies
dmites. also to prevent disease.

 

 

munnmigsouhorimm_
muons.

ANIMAL INDUSTRY DEPARTMENT C

Parke, Davis & Co.

 

 

DETMI‘I'. mm

 

 

I Fastest, Ceapest Way
to Clear Land

Atseontestheldmntl tow. Bacon
Heteuiesall- -stecltriple misnomery sump $1

Mupulbd at f
math umpe aster than any

foams Eaﬁy to p . an!
estates. one owes Hercules most com
Ip—to—the—mlante stump pulling outﬁt made. to
for egg-get my
er. » _

    

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     
  

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
     
      
    
   
       

 
       

 
    
   
         
 
      
      
      
      
    
      
            
       

        
   
    
   
    
  
    
   
  
   
 
  
   
 
  
   
 
 
  
  
  
   
 
  
   
    
      
 
 
   
   
   
  
  
   
  
 
  
 

     
         
  

  

 

 
    
   
       
   
 
   
    


' . tag. power.

"an,

 

said to a friends-ml monster of the

amen this power and return-

” {is daylto say, "Lord, even the
J " ” Fire subject unto us thru thy
m” But here, how changed!
«We-hear them saying, “Lord, why
What we cast it out?" Has the
“ ‘ .chan'ged? No, but the dis-

” 0‘ its ' and therefore suffered
. There the boy stands in the very
presence of the multitude challeng-
iﬁgthe reputed power of Christ thru
the disciples. There is the father,
plodding andimportuning, but his
’upectancy gives way to hopelessness
as disappointment in not seeing
" the demon cast out. The scribes
W and Pharisees standing by said, "I
5-" “told you so.” .- How like those form-
at and superﬁcial religionists today
who shriek, “Didn’t I tell you so"
" when the on-going movements of the
church apparently talk-But may I
{.parenthesize that all Godly enter-
W go forward. Growth and pro—
use: is the normof life. And I’d
rather be an enthusiast in the van
, than a sullen follower in the rear.—
But 0, how those baffled disciples,
in the midst of that on looking mul-
7 titude', longed for the Master to

' come down from the mountain! And
‘W he came , he spoke, and“ the demon
went out and the boy was cured
from that very hour. The religion

use, “Tell me iaboututhat farmer.”

"He is one of our own boys,” said
he, “and had only such schooling as
our own country, school provided.
But the other day I received a letter
from an agricultural college asking
me to secure him for their experi-
ment farm." “But why was he such
a success?” "Well, he had faith in
his job and he mixed plenty of hard
work with it,” said he. Verity, faith
chloroforms all fear in the soul,
gives it courage and daring, and fits
it for great'and loving deeds.-

So, it is not a new church, nor a
new system of government or church
policy, nor organization as helpful
as this is, but an implicit faith in a
conquering Christ and an unwearied

' conﬁdence in the power of the Gos-

pel to regenerate that guarantees
victory. And here some of us will
have to seek our prayer closets and
have it out with the devil before we
can feel this healing power.

But what will_no little faith do?

It will regenerate the churches. And
they need it. It will set the altar
ﬁres going in their sanctuaries. My
and your church owes to the com-
munity th most helpful kind of
spiritual worship. Every devot-
ional period should be warmed with
the ﬁre and radiation of Pentecostal
hearts; hearts so wrought up in
faith as to convince every saint and

‘sinner of the Bethe] nature of the

place. But many of us are spiritual

illusions. We present to others a

deceptiVe appearance. '
And why isn’t the average church

7 it , F's ﬂ! "
«(gamma «thea'postles to set the
pace for him. He is too smugly con-
tent with his own church and soci-
ety; his own gains and comforts. He
is busy satisfying the personal equa-»
tion while vast surges of lost men go
sweeping by him. We sing, “Make
me a blessing today," with not
encugh intelligent faith to know
what that means. May I suggest it
is the way of the bleeding heart, for
only so did our Lord qualify to bless
us. “When Zion travaileth she shall
bring forth}?

No, the Lord has not changed.
But many modern disciples have.
Why should we pride ourselves in a
Gospel faith when our neighbor does
not know of it? Why, he scarcely
get settled before the grocer, butch-
er, and politician found him, and
you have not found him in these
years. Everywhere on the farms and
streets, in the stores and markets,
are people famishing for-the bread
of life. Though you have but a few
loaves and ﬁshes, give and the Mast-
er will bless wonderously.

But how shall vital faith he sus-
tained? By constancy in prayer
and devotion. “This kind goeth
not out but by prayer and
fasting.” The disciples, in their
busy rounds failed to keep up the
devotional life and consequently lost
conﬁdence and power.
same spiritual paralysis come over
us? In the outwardness and activ-
ities of the Christian life, the fric—
tions and distractions of the world
are so liable to tear us loose from
the fellowship of Christ and power.
A good, grandfather Martin oft re-
tired to a secluded spot on the rear
of his little farm for trysting with

Has not the.

if one would work for him; “The sf-;
factual, fervent prayer of a rights .
eous man availeth much.” _

And fasting.‘fThe purpose of self-
denial must be strongly set in our;
lives. ,We qualify to enter the King-
dom through . cutting on hand and
foot, said Jesus. But in likeman-
ner, we qualify for service and pow-
er in the Kingdom through continu-
ed self—denial. Mark those who are
given over to self indulgence and
there follows moral weakness and
inefﬁciency. We must enter the
gymnasium of self—control and self
limitition to have our lives disciplin-
ed for strength and power.

Vital, growing faith will give us-
power. After the San Francisco
earth—quake disaster, 9. Chicago daily
came out with a cartoon on its front
page, in which lay a powerful sug-
gestion. The center of the picture
showed a devastated city ﬁlled with
grief—stricken, hungry people, shelt-
ered in tents and being fed on char-
ity. At one side, standing on an .
eminence which overlooked this
ruin, stood a man. He was dressed
in the clothes of the laborer. His
line of vision is centered in a great
cloud of smoke which overhung the
ruins. In the center of this cloud
he sees the restored San Francisco,
beautiful and prosperous. And with
the tools for the task, he descends in
faith and courage to reconstruct the
city of his vision.

If we stand with Christ on the
Transﬁguration mount, b e c o m e
steeped in that holy communion, and
get the Master’s vision of a sin-curs-
ed humanity, it is then that we catch
his spirit and descend with him in
power to bless the world through a
working, challenging faith.

 

of faith triumphed.
T Faith is the source of sin-repell-
There are those who
my we need not expect such fullness
‘ of power today. They idealize the
early church with her phenominal
growth and her apostolic teachers
who were direct acquaintances of
Christ lathe flesh. But let us see
' what we have to keep this faith

We have the same sin-cleansing
T Gospel. -Man-’s physical needs are
' ‘ supplied thru‘ the same physical
laws as then; and so his Splrlt-
uni needs. Human spirits abide
and they must be fed upon the love
of’God no matter what may be the
, superﬁcial life of man; his race, oc-
cupation, education: or position. The
atoning Gospel yet addresses itself
tothe needs of the heart and cures.
You must believe this or you are

N , but a stumbling-block in the on—go—

‘ ing of the Kingdom. ,
t We have the same spirit abiding,
wooing, and cemforting. _He came
that the greater works might be
done. The same spirit that tore
L away a Saul from the legalism of
the Pharisees and sent him out a
pulsating apostle to the gentiles, is
L the spirit of the Wesleys, the Moodys
and the Judsons. This is the same
spirit that prompts the hard-working
farmer to go about his labor in the
enthusiasm of Christian purpose.
. Perspiring and blackened by the
dirt of his shop, Elihu Burrit, the
learned blacksmith, sang away with
the music of hammer and anvil. Said
one 'to him, “Why are you so hap-
py?” “Oh, said he, “I am sending
the Gospel to the heathen.” Yes,"
the same spirit as of old. My friend,
get out from under «the “juniper
tree." There are millions living who
' have not and will not how the knee
to Baal. And you must believe it.
I We have the same Lord, yester-
day, today, and forever. We saw
him in his marvelous works; 'follow-
ed him to the tomb' and ascension;
only to go away vitalized with the
spirit of triumph in his promise to
be with us unto theend. And my
' personal faith is,» that the masses

. ‘ _~ are more sensible today of his prose

ence' and power than ever before.
' And you, too, must believe it, else
we are in for defeat.

' Even so,.to ﬁnd thesource of our

.. failure, we are thrown back upon
’ ourselves. We have lacked in a .pro—
and, spiritual devotion to Christ.

G-ve its a man of. faith and we have v
- tenacious in purpose,.-supreme

~ liver and married to the accent—

one, great dominant. _

it was in June in the
, _t

 

 

 

 

W

o

 

 

‘5 1’

 

 

 

 

addition to six cylinder

mile written guarantee; and a deﬁnite "Mileage-Basis
Plan” which proves the real quality of the Oakland Six

' Main Bearings — a

or more without attention

Valves ~. . . .

or more without need of grinding

Connecting Rods - -

or more without attention

Cylinders, Pistons .

Special performance guarantee

. 20 to 25 miles
. . 15,000 to 25,000 miles
Transmission, Axles, etc, Life of the Car

See the car—get detailed facts at your dealer’s

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Before you buy a car, consider what Oakland gives in
s—an engine with a 15,000

 

40,000 miles
15,000 miles
40,000 miles
15,000 miles

 

 

 

 


 

.3. I } ' from your own land
HE most economical cattle feed!
’ - is that raised on your farm pro-
viding you get good: yields per acre.
One ton of alfalfa or clover is worth
two tons of common hay as a milk
producer. When preparing ﬁelds for
_ grain, harrow in one to two tons per
- ' acre of SOLVAY and sow alfalfa or

clover. The feed bills you save will pay
for the SOLVAY many times over.

 

THE SOLVAY PROCESS C0.
Sales Agent, Wing & Evans, lnc.
Real Estate Exchange Building

Detroit, Mich

 
  
 
    
  

 

Write'for ‘ ‘ ﬂ . ” ~ 3 Itteﬂsaﬂ
FREE ' ' 3' ~ about
booklet. 9 , . I - ' . :3; lime.

 

  

,LIM E STONE

 

   

      
      
  
  
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
     
   
  
     
    
    
  
   
  

MR. FARMER!
Mr. Dealer. Mr. Jobber

[T THE .
Is PRICE
THE '15
BEST RIGHT

 

Are you remembering in purchasing your binder
twine that you have a factory of your own at Jackson?

It is making the best twine that can be placed
on the market and has a mixture of ﬁber this year.
Manila is added to the sisal to give extra strength.

The State Farm Bureau and other organizations
and dealers of the state are in position to handle your
twine. If they do not, write direct for prices as “we
want you to use your own twine as we make 14,000,-
000 lbs. more than Michigan can use. '

Michigan State Prison
HARRY L. HULBERT, Warden
JACKSON, MICE. '

     
    

   

 

 

 

BABY APPLE TREES Read: to Plant
' mw-:°.'°'f.ssz:esg u...

blackberry. ox. . . or n-
' fﬁiu'iil’itifii“ vlhieﬁcll‘b. 13°31 "Imus. .

. ‘ .. Paw Paw. Italians ~ g,

 
    
  

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OLA. K I ‘uthoim Bugging;

   

   

.a moment he stopped.

 

.-;.By,lams01iver; ., _ , , _, ._ .
4 America's Fennest Author'of the Great Northwest .
. «W In 1953- Oliver Our-eon '

(Continued from May 12th issue)
HEIR eyes met steadily.

“If you are, Johnny,” went on

MacDonald in a low voice, “I’d
take her with me. An’ if you ain’t, I’d
leave these mount’ins to-night an'
never look in her sweet face again as
long as I lived.” ,

“You’d take her along?" demand
ed Aldous eagerly. '

“I would. I've been thinkin' it ov-
er to-night. An’ something seemed
to tell mewe mustn’t dare leave her“
here alone. There’s just two things
to do, Johnny. You’ve got to stay
with her an’ let me go on alone or—'—
you’ve got to take her.”

Slowly Aldous shook his head. He
looked at his watch. It was a little
after ten.

“If I could make myself believe
that she w0uld not be safe here—I
would take her,” he said. “But I
can’t quite make up my mind to
that, Mac. She will be in good
hands with the Blacktons. I will
warn Paul. Joanne is determined
to go, and I know she will think it
pretty indecent to be told emphotic-
ally that she can’t go. But I’ve got
to do it. I‘can’t see——”

A break in the stillness of the
night stopped him with the sudden-
ness of a bullet in his brain. It was
a scream—a woman’s scream, and
there followed it shriek after shriek,
until the black forest trembled with
fear and agony of the cries, and John
Aldous stood as if strippe of power
to move or act. Donald MacDonald
roused him into life. With a roar
in his. beard, he sprang forth into
the darkness. And John Aldous

  

followed, a hot sweat of fear in his .

blood Where a moment before had
been only a chill of wonder and hor-
ror. For in Donald’s savage beast-
like cry‘he had caught Joanne’s
name, and an answering cry broke
from his own lips as he followed the
great gaunt form that was tearing
with the madness of a. wounded bear
ahead of him through the night.
CHAPTER XXII

OT until they had rushed up out

of the coulee and had reached

the pathlike trail did the
screaming cease. For barely an in-
stant MacDonald paused, and then
ran on with a speed that taxed Ald-
ous to keep up. When they came
to the little open amphitheatre in
the forest MacDonald haulted again.
Their hearts were thumping "like
hammers, and the old mountaineer’s
voice came huskey and choking
when he spoke.

“It wasn't far—from here!" he
panted.

Scarcely had he uttered the words
when he sped on again. Three min-
utes later they came to where the
trail crossed the edge of a small
rock—cluttered meadow, and with a
sudden spurt Aldous darted ahead of
.MacDonald into this opening, where
he saw two ﬁgures in the moonlight.
Half a dozen feet from them he stop-
ped with a cry of horror. They
were Paul and Peggy Blackton!
Peggy was disleveled and sobbing,
and frantically clutching at her hus-
band. It was Paul Blackton who
dragged the cry from his lips. The
contractor was swaying. He was
hatless; his face was covered with
blood, and his eyes were only half
open, as if he were-ﬁghting to pull
himself back to consciousness after a
terrible blow. Peggy’s hair was
down, her dress was torn at the
throat, and she was panting so that
for a moment she could not speak.

“They’ve got—l—Joanne!” she cried
then. “They went—there!”

She pointed, and Aldous ran
'where she pointed—into the timber
on the far side of the little meadow.
MacDonald caught his arm as they
ran.

 

“You go straight in,” he com-
manded. “I'll swing—to right—
toward river ”

For two minutes after that Aldous
tore straight ahead. Then for barely.
He had not
paused to question Peggy Blackton.
His own ’fears told him who Joanna's
abductors were. They were men
working under instructions from
.Quade. And they could not be far
away, for scarcely ten minutes had
passed since the ﬁrst .scream. *Ho
listened, and held-his. breath so that

mew “

the terriﬁc beating of his heart

    

would not drown the: sound of

crackling brush. All at ones. the",

bloo’d in him was frozen by a ﬁerce, ~

yell. It was'MacDonald, a couple of
hundred yards to his right, and after

that yell came the bellowing shout '

of his name. > , ,
“Johnny! Johnny!_ Oh, Johnnyi”
He dashed ‘in MacDonald’s direc-

' .

tion, and a few moments later heard .

the crash of bodies in the under-
growth. Fifty seconds more and he
was in the arena. MacDonald was
fighting three men in a space over
which the sprucetops grew thinly.
The moon shone upon them as they
swayed in a struggling mass, and as
Aldous sprang to the combat one of
the three reeled backward and fell
as if struck by a battering-ram.

that same moment MacDonald went
down, and Aldous struck a terriﬁc
blow with the but ofhis heavy Sav-
age. He missed, and the moment-
um of his blow carried him over
MacDonald. He tripped and fell.
By the time he had regained his feet
the two men had disappeared into
the thick shadows of the forest. Ald-
ous“ whirled toward the third man,
whom he had seen fall. He, too,
had disappeared. A little lamely
old Donald brought himself to his

feet. He was smiling.
“Now, what, do ’ee think, John-
ny?”

“Where is she? Where is Joannelm
demanded Aldous.

“Twenty feet behind you, Johnny,
gagged an’ trussed up nice as .a
whistle! If they hadn’t stopped to
do that work you wouldn’t ha’ seen
her ag’in, Johnny—s’elp me, God,
you wouldn’t; They washikin’ for
the river. Once they reached the
Frazer, and a boat—"

.He broke off to lead Aldous to a ,

clump of dwarf spruce. Behind
this, white and still in the moon-
light, but with eyes wide open and
filled with horror, lay Joanne. Hands
and feet were bound, and a big hand-
kerchief was tied over her mouth.
Twenty seconds later Aldous held
her shivering and sobbing and laugh-
ing hysterically by turns in his arms,
while MacDonald’s voice brought
Paul and Peggy Blackton to them.
Blackton had recovered from the
blow that had dazed him. Over
Joanne’s head he stared at Aldous.
And MacDonald was staring at
Blackton. His eyes were burning a
little darkly.

“It’s_all come out all right,” he
said, “but it ain’t a special nice time
0’ night to be taking a’ evening walk
in this locality with a couple 0'
ladies!”

Blackton was still staring. at Ald-l

ous, with Peggy clutching his arm as
if afraid of losing him.

It was Peggy who answered Mac-
Donald.

“And it was a nice time of night
for you to send a message asking us
to bring Joanne down the trail!” she
cried, her voice trembling.

“We——” began Aldous, when he
saw a sudden warning movement on
MacDonald’s part, and stopped.
“Let us take the ladies home,” he
said.

With Joanne clinging to him, he
led the way. Behind them all Mac-
Donald growled loudly: . ‘

“There’s got t.’ be something done
with these damned beasts of burrin-
ers. It’s gettin’ so no woman ain't
safe at night!"

Twenty minutes later they reach-
ed the bungalow. Leaving Joanne
and Peggy insidernow as busily ex-
cited as two phoebe birds, and after
Joanne had insisted upon Aldous
sleeping at the Blacktons’ that night,
the two men accompanied MacDon-
ald a few steps on his way back to
camp.

As soon as they were out ‘of ear-
shot Blackton .began cursing softly
under his breath. ,

v “So you didn’t send that damned
note?” he asked. “You haven’t said
igubut I've guessed you didn’t send

“No, we didn't send a note.”

“And you‘ had a reason—you and

MacDonald—for . not wanting the '

girls to know the truth?”
I‘A ‘~ mish

   

   
 

809d; re so '

ty _
' Q8913 19 2Q

   

    

 

 

  
 
   
   
 


 
 
 
 

 
 
  
  
 

 

y‘u
* t I want your Word that you
~ repeat nothing of what I say to

“I’ve suspect-
I’ 11 give

* “Go .On, ” he said.
6d athing or two, Aldous.
you my word. Go on.’
As briefly as possible, and without
going deeply into detail, Aldous told
' of Quade and his plot to secure pos-
session of Joanne.
-. ’ “And this is his work,” he ﬁnish—
“ ed. “I’ve told you this, Paul, so
'that you won’t worry about Peggy.

7 You‘ can see from to-night’s events

that they were not after her, but
XWanted Joanne. Joanne must not
learn the truth. And your wife must
not know. I am going to settle with
'Quade. Just how and where and
when I’m going to settle with him I
don’ t care to say now. But he’ s go—
ing to answer to me. And he’s go-
ing to answer soon.’ .

Blackton whistled softly.

“A boy brought the note,” he said.

“He stood in the dark when he.
handed it to me. And I didn’t rec-
ognize any one of the three men who

, jumped out on us. I didn’t have
'vmuch chance to ﬁght, but if there’s
‘ any one on the face of the earth who
. \has got it over Peggy when it comes
to screaming, I’d'like to know her
name! Joanne didn’t have time to
make a sound. But they didn’t
touch Peggy until she began scream-
ing, and then one of the men began
choking her. They laid me out with
a club, so I was helpless. Good
God-———”

He shuddered.

“They were river men,” said Mac-
Donald. “Probably some of Tom-
man’s scow-men. They were mak-
ing for the river.”

A few minutes later, when Aldous
Was saying good-night to MacDonald,
the old hunter said again, in a
whisper:

“Now what do ’ee think, Johnny?”

“That you are right, Mac,” replied
Aldous in a low voice. “There is no
longer a. choice. Joanne must go
with us. You will come early?”

“At dawn, Johnny.”

He returned to the bungalow with
Blackton, and until midnight the
lights there burned brightly while
the two men answered a thousand
questions about the night’s advent-
ure, and Aldous told of his and
Joanne’s plans for the next day.

It was half-past twelve when he
locked the door of his room and sat
down to think.

CHAPTER XXIII
HERE was no longer doubt in
the mind of John Aldous now.
The attempt upon Joanne had
'left him but one course to pursue:
he must take her with him, in spite

[he had Seen a .few hours before. He

realized What a ﬁght this would
mean for him, and with what clever-

ness and resource he must play his

part. Joanne had not given herself
to him as she had once given herself
to Mortimer FitzHugh. In the
“coyote,” when they had faced
death, she had told him that were
there to be a to- morrow in life for
them she would have given herself
to him utterly and without reserva-
tion. And that to- morrow had
dawned. It was present. She was
his wife. And she had come to him
as she had promised. In her eyes
he‘had seen love and trust and faith
——-and a- glorious happiness. She
had made no effort to hide that hap-
piness from him. Consciousness of
it ﬁlled him with his own great hap-
piness, and yet it made him realize
even more deeply how hard his ﬁght
was to be. She was his wife. In a
hundred little ways she had shown
him that she was proud of her wife-
hood. And again he told himself
that she had come to him as she
had promised, that she had given in-
to his keeping all that she had to
:give. And yet—she ~was not his
wife !

He groaned aloud, and his ﬁngers
dug into the ﬂesh of his knees as
he thought of that. Could he keep
that terrible truth from her? If she
went with him into the North, would
she not guess? And, even though
he kept the truth from her until
Mortimer FitzHugh was dead, would
he be playing fair with her? Again
he went over all that he had gone ov-
er before. He knew that Joanne
would leave him tomorrow, and
probably forever, if he told her that
FitzHugh was alive. The law could
not help him, for only death—and
never divorce—would free her.
Within himself he decided for the
last time. He Was about to do the
one thing left for him to do. And
it was the honorable thing, for it
meant freedom for her and happi-
ness for them both. To him, Don-
ald MacDonald had become a man
who lived very close to the heart and
the right of things, and Donald had
said that he should take her. This
was the greatest proof that he was
right.

But could he keep Joanne,from
guessing? Could he keep her from
discovering the truth until it was
time for her to know the truth? In
this necessity of keeping her from
suspecting that something was
wrong he saw his greatest ﬁght.
Compared with it, the ﬁnal settle-
ment with Quade and Mortimer Fitz-
Hugh sank into a second importance.
He knew What would happen then.
But Joanne—Joanne on the trail, as
his wife .

(Continued June 9th Issue)

 

' ncle Ribec Spiggch Se __§

 

IS SUGAR SCARCE?

OLKS’ S, we’ve been told fer a
1 long time there wuz a scars’ty
of sugar, ’at the sugar crop wuz
short of what it ort to be an’ the
price has been mountin’ higher’n
higher for a long time an’ we’ve
been payin’ the higher prices
’thout Sayin’ a word, ain’t we? In
some places they’ ve only let us have
two or three pounds at a time; jest

like war times, you know.
Well today, bein’ sort 0’ out 0’
order, mentally and physically, I
- went snoopin’ ’round as I sometimes
snoop an’ I found two places, retail
groceries, an’ I wuz lookin’ into
their warehouses. Well, in one,
where there’s been a shortage of
sugar for some time, sacks of sugar
.piled twelve high in tiers ten wide
an’ extendin’ back in a room I’d say,
wuz 30 or 40 feet long met my gaze.
In another, just a little farther down
the street, I saw sugar piled eight
high an’ seven wide an’ I couldn’t
see how far back it wuz. You know-
they don' t ’low visitors in their back

I rooms an’ only fer my snoopin’ hab-

its I wouldn’ t have known anything
’bout this. But folks, what I did
see is enough to convince me, if it
don’t you, that we are bein’ held up
by somebody. I’ m not sayin’ who——
1119be I think I know-‘—I do know
this, the sugar I saw wasn’t put in
there yesterday nor the day before
told ’em to buy an”
are payin for
rim:

 

  

  

everything. Apples that the farm-
ers wuz glad to get ﬁfty cents fer
last fall have sold fer ten cents per
pound all winter. Potatoes that had
no market on the farm, sold fer
ﬁfty cents a peck. Even cabbages
that were so plentiful an’ the farm—
ers had to almost give ’em away sold
fer three an’ ﬁve cents a pound.
Dear farmer friends, can’t you
see there’s got to be a different way
of sellin’ your stuff? It’s not a fair
deal to you fer the middleman to get

‘ sixty-ﬁve cents out of every dollar’s

worth of stuff you sell. An’ yet
that’s jest what they’re doin’———milk,
eggs, butter—everything you sell.
Figure what you get an’ then ask
any consumer in the city what he
pays.

There is no sugar shortage. If
there wuz no merchant could pile up
ﬁfty or a hundred toils of it. There
is no shortage of anything jest now
except farm help-there is a short-
age of that ’cause the city offers
better wages ’an the farmer can pay.
But wait a little while, jest stay
where you are. Soon the tide will

change, somebody’ll want something

to eat an’ it wont be before him.
Farm prices must go higher or some-
body must go hungry. Jest stick
to her boys fer a! little while——some-
body will be sick or whistle—just to
kee his spirits up. Say, join some
goo farm organization like the
Farm Bureau or somethin’ an’ sell

your stuff in a business way. I guess

cordi-

  

’s jest ’bout all I can say.

BEE

   
   
   
  

 
 
 

 

    
   

 

 
   
    
     
   

 

   
    

 
 

 
   
 

  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
   
  
 
   
  
     
   
  
  
 
   
  
   
   
  
  
   
    
 
  
  
  
   
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
    
   
  
   
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
  
 

 

 

Accidents Like the
Above May Happen

With the large number of heavy trucks and auto-
mobile busses running on the highways your car may be
run into and shoved off the highway into the ditch, mak-
ing a complete wreck. The driver of the other car may
be worthless and you will need automobile insurance to
take care of your loss. On the other hand, in case of a
collision in which the automobile is damaged and people
injured, there is the usual argument as to who is at fault.

Mr. FARMER, if you have invested from $500 to
$3,000 in an automobile, can you afford to take the risk
with the increasing danger upon all highways and city
streets of the state? Why not insure in the pioneer mut-
ual that is now starting its ninth season of success and
therefore is organized to give you service and to protect
your rights? Every regular policy carries liability to
$5,000 and ﬁre and theft not exceeding $1,000. Collis-
imt and additional ﬁre and theft can be had at reasonable
ra es.

On May 1st the total cash assets of the company '
were $225,412.20 which, with office building and other
assets amounting to $49,690.49, makes total assets of -
$275,102.69.

Remember, on a Dodge car the cost is only $10.50
for ﬁre and theft to the value of the car and $5,000 lia-

 

 

bility. Insure today; tomorrow may be too late.
’ At Close of Business, April 30th, 1923. -
ASSETS '
Cash in Banks and in Ofﬁce, ............ $ 75,261.30
Cash in Banks, Savings Acct., ........ 143,000.00
Cash in’Hands of Agents, ................ 7,150.90
Total Cash Assets, ............................... ' ......... $225,412.20
Accrued Interest, Cert. of Deposit, ........................ 4,463.05
Ofﬁce Site and Building, .......................................... 27,727.44
Furniture and Equipment, ........................... 1. ......... 12,000.00
Salvage Department, .................................................. 5,500.00

Total Assets, ..................... ; ............................ $275,102.69

L I A B I L I T I E S
Claims in Process of Adjustment, estimated, ________ $ 30,000.00

 

 

 

 
  

 

 
 

Accrued Salaries and Fees, ...................................... 4,170.50
Current (Bills, ............................................................ 0.00
Total Current Liabilities, ............................ $ 34,170.50
Surplus, ........................................................ $240, 932. 19
Total Liabilities, ............................................ $275,102.69

  
  

 

 

 

 
 

See the local agent or write to the

  

     
 

 
  
 

 

 

 

 

   


‘ at the core of their Agricultural College.

 

summer, in! 2c. 1093

 

Edited and Published by
THE RURAL PUBLISHING OOIPAIY. Inc.
GEORGE M'. SLooIIM. Preeldent
Mt. Clemens. Michigan

Represented in N York Chicaz St. Louis end Minneapolis
the Wm mains“ rs, humanized by

Member of Audenltursl Publishers Aeeouhtien .
Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation:

Milan Grinnell ’ m

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“73me Barn-n .... ...... Mﬁreuuru-

Henry D. Wiﬂnldm iWant Superintendent

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hay “Ga ar a your edge
ulna Rates:

Advert! use telin urine-teen lumn
inch“. 71: line- to the WWW °‘ °°

dluotlen Bale Advertising. We oﬂer low
ble breeders of live etcckand and!» ultry; us.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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“The Farm Paper of Service”

DIRT! POLITICS

T is to be hoped that few farmers were actually
gullible enough to wallow in the slime of
dirty gossip which was given to the city news-

papers last week from Lansing, regarding the
honor and character of David Friday, president
of the Michigan Agricultural College.

As Governor Groesbeck said,«"No more direct
stab—in-the-back was ever aimed at' a Michigan
institution" and the pity is that it was made
serious only by the amount of space, always will-
ingly devoted to any scandal, no matter how
frail its foundation, by the daily newspapers.

We believe in a free and untrammeled press.
but we believe ﬁrst in the foundation of all Amer-
_ciau law and order, which is, that a man is inno-
cent, until he has been proven guilty.

By “aver” and “it is alleged” and “we under-
stand", the daily press can print any amount of
gossip or propaganda, attacking the honor and
character of any citizen, no matter what his posi-
tion or his past reputation, and be “within the
law.”

At the time the ﬁrst reports from Lansing were
strung across the head lines of the newspapers,
Dr. Friday, was in Connecticut addressing large
meetings in the indirect, if not the direct interests
of Michigan agriculture.

From the point of any one familiar with the
present and past history of the Michigan Agri—
cultural College it is the most natural thing in
the world that this present eruption should have
happened; the regret is that it could not have
been a clean, above-board, open ﬁght. That was
‘ hardly to be expected, however, with Dr. Friday,
aligned against a peanut-brained group of gar-
den—variety politicians.

Something Wrong at East Lansing

The farmers of Michigan have known for a
good many years that there was something rotten
They
were paciﬁed only, when the announcement was
made that a man of Dr. Fridays reputation was
to be put at the head and given full authority
to bring thecollege back to a standing, second
to none, which it once boasted.

We have been no less aware of the fact that
,. all was not right at East Lansing, even since Dr.
.Friday took over the reins and we began to see
Q, his fundamental policies of business farming per-
colating into the working of the various divisions
of the college activities.

As recently as February of this year we asked
Dr. Friday, privately and from this very page to
use The Business Farmer as his spokesman to
the real farmers of Michigan. We promised him
a willing audience And a most interested one in
anything he might have to say._ We felt perhaps
he had a load on his mind which he ought-to
divulge to the men and women of the farms in
Michigan. to whom he was, when all is said and
done. alone‘responsib‘le. It is therefore to be re-
gretted. at this time. that he did not accept this
invitation and lay down before the farmers of
Michigan the difﬁculties under which he was
laboring to improve their own institution of

learning
‘ , 1“ “Blinds 08—1». Friday!"
.If the.~ More of Michigan will think for a
they will Quickly discern that Dr. Fri-

,tililitions. .

‘ basis.

Dr. Friday should have _
tomtionthepricepeidformllkin.»
. up i

. 38 .
these “mass" as wh , " , ,
they the disgruntled bolsheviks, who do .with

, the pupils, suggesting that it wohid he.

the wave of prosperity turning towa‘rdz the term
er, as Dr. Friday predicted, that their job of
“organizing" and “howling” is over? Or are
they the impractical theorists who have tried to
make us believe that the union laborer of the

‘ city who owns nothing, except his right to strike,
is entitled to the friendship and support of the'

farmer, who has an average investment of thou-
sands ot dollars and yet who has not been able
to afford the luxuries which the dollar-an-hour
city laborer has boasted these past several years.

Let's get these so-called “state-agricultural-
leaders” out from under cover. ' _

Let’s find out who these men are who speak
authoratively for the actual working farmers of
the state of Michigan.

Let them show us their record. not of words,’

but of deeds!

If there is in Michigan a man who has ac-
complished more for the farmers business in our
state. who has pointed out a saner course, of
helped to stabilize farm and crop prices or helped
show the boys and girls on our farms a future
on the farms, or who has more diligently sought
to disclose, to tired and tear-dimmed eyes of men
and women after devoting the best years of

their lives to farming. a silver-lining to the dark .

clouds that seemed almost to engulf them. than
Dr. Friday, we want someone to point him out
to us.

High Time for Action!

We believe the farmers of Michigan will agree
that The Business Farmer has as much right to
express their sentiments as any other source.
We have a record for being absolutely indepen-
dent and we shall continue to be, but we say.
here and now, that the farmers of our home
state are tired and nauseated with the cheap
politician. the man who is striving to get political
position by capitalizing their friendship. We
have tolerated several in Michigan that ought
to have been exposed years ago. but when these
same individuals launch an attack on a man who
has the confidence, gained by actual accomplish-
ment against great odds. such as Dr. David Fri-
day enjoys with the farmers of Michigan, they
can get ready for our “big bertha", because it
is aimed their way.

We believe that Dr. Friday will stand by the
ﬁght. now that the gauntlet has been thrown
down by his opposition. Wis do not size him up
as a “quitter”. The fact that he hurried hack
to Lansing when the news of the attack reached
him would indicate that he does not fear a ﬁght
in the open. as those who attacked him from
ambush did. We know he will stick if he feels
that he has the conﬁdence and the support of
the real farmers of Michigan behind him and we
want him to know that he has.

MEMORIAL DAY

ORTY states in the Union now celebrate May -

thirtieth as‘a legal holiday. It is a day set

aside primarily for remembering those who
have given the greatest gift within their power for
the honor and defence of'their ﬂag and their
country. It is no less a day set aside to the
memory of all .whom we loved, but who have
preceded us in the “great adventure."

On this day as an emblem of our love and devo-
tion we place ﬂowers on the graves of those who
have departed as an expression of their memory
which we cherish, yet Decoration Day was only
an idea in the head of a young newspaperman
ﬁfty-eight years ago.

The origin of Memorial Day is an interesting

one although known to few. The man to whom'

the idea came was John Redpath. a young news-
paper reporter who had been assigned to accom-
pany General Sherman on his march to the sea.
John Redpath wrote the first news of the fall of
Charleston, South Carolina, and. when the troops
entered that city, Colonel Woodford, who was
the millitary head of the city, invited Mr. Red-
path, in addition to his newspaper duties, to be-
come the temporary Superintendent of Schools.
This work was not difﬁcult, for the people of the
city were anxious to resume their lives on a peace
What John Redpath had to do, however,
was to work on the first public schools opened in
Charleston for negro children. _"One_ of these

schools was just outside the town. and the road
that led there passed. what had once been, the

race-track of the city, but which had been used
after the ﬁghting around Charleston as a gen-
eral burying-ground for the men of both the
Union and Confederate tosses who had fallen in
battle. To make this imam spot more sad.
the graves were 5m: sedated.

Oueday.itwasduriugl.prii.whichisiste

in the 89gb“ " liél. If 'Bgdpath

every scholar would pick a bunch of.
Whenever they could, putting the ﬂgm
grave". ' . ’
As one little negro girl said, W, we
jest git armfuls of posies and smother til ‘
graves from sight!”

As he went about his work in the days that
lowed, John Redpath spoke of the idea of deco
ing the graves to a great many people- . rs .
one with whom he talked the plan proved pop
ar. A committee was arranged and it was
ly decided that May first would be a 8M
for the decoration celebration. So that May
eighteen sixty-ﬁve, over ten thousand men. wom- ‘
on and children met at a central spot, all carry-.3
ing ﬂowers, and after singing hymns marched .to- -'
the race track cemetery, where the ugly mounds

of sacred earth were literly covered with blos- .' ‘

some.
cherished of American institutions.
A FARMERS MARKET PLACE

WHAT Bloomingtou, Illinois, has done In.
creating a market place for the farmers oi!
the adjacent country is a lesson to be taken “
to heart by every town and city of considerable” ;
population in the state of Michigan.
been any number of plans “suggested for the
shortening of the gap between the producer and .,
the consumer, and yet none has the practical ele- ,.
ment which makes for success as does the open
market provided in cities where farmers from a

_ distance can come and dispose of their products.

The market place at Bloomington is'an example.
and The Business Farmer is presenting this story
to our readers with the idea of encouraging the
establishment of more markets in the cities of
this state.

True it is that many of the large 'cities have”-
called markets, but most of those who sell on
these markets are buyers who go. through the
country and buy from the farmer. The markets
which already exist in Michigan do not reth ’
ten percent of the number which should be oper-
ated and operated to the proﬁt not only of the sur-
rounding country but to the municipalities which '
would provide such an establishment. .

We are informed that the sale of bonds 'to pro-
vide for a suitable market place by any town or
city in the state of Michigan is permissible and-
The Business Farmer would like to do all in its

. power to encourage during the present year as

rapidly as possible the building of farmers’ mar-l:-
ets in every town and city in our state.

PAYING UP
MAN connected with’several farmere’ banks
in the central portion of Michigan tells us
that farmers are rapidly paying up the obii~
gations they contracted during the past few years.

It seems a little odd perhaps that debts should
actually be paid up during times of depression.
while debts are contracted during times of easy
money, and yet it is a human trait. We are all'
optimists. If things are good today we believe
they are going to [be good tomorrow, and so we
borrow for our needs today in the expectancy of
tomorrow.

We have all been pressed hard during the past
two years of agricultural depression, so we have
adjusted our lives to using less money, we have
worked harder to make more money, and with

our surplus, we have been paying up the obliga- ‘ '

tions which we contracted during much better
days.

Nothing better could be said of the farmer than
that as a class he is moat anxious and will sacriw ,
lice most to rid himself of the burden of debt.

THE MAY SNOW

WHEN we awoke the other morning and found
t he thermometer outside registering
twenty—two degrees above zero our hearts
sank within us, but a statement from the Crop,
Survey Department. says that little damage was
done in Michigan and for this fact we have to
thank the heavy snowfall, which ‘protected the
buds and dropped several million tons of "poor
man’ s fertiliser” over the state- . ' .
One scientist has pointed out that because of _
sun spots this will be a cold summer. and so far '
at least we can take him seriously. ‘
Another argues that the sun is sloﬂy cooling
oil and that the world may expect lower mean

average temperezure as them

 

Thus came Memorial Day, one of the most L

Theré has ‘ "


Slocum—3i mail in
it“! ‘ multiply so rapidly that they soon

.. mu; lots at things at beneﬁt
tall, also that an. E. W. B. want-
ad to know ’about selling rabbits,

eta, back to companies in New York .

”and Kansas City
' We bought two pairs at rabbits of
a" Food and Fur~Associatian in New

'"Iark, a tow years ago and they were .

1'31 a piece. They promised to buy
It“): all we raised so we raised
‘ some, and after a while they bought

, > one pair, 3? per pair they were to

.pay as contract, and said they
, would buy the rest, it I let them
' knew how many I had. So I did,

but they weren't ready and I wrote f

different times, and only received
36 tor the pair sent them, and they
were better stock than we received
but they claimed they were under-
weight and i had a time getting this
money tor them.

They are just trends in our opin- ‘

io'n. ’i‘hey ﬁgure on selling stock to
- you for a big price and get out at
buying, and I have been going to ad-

-. vol-tine them. Anyone that buys

tromthemwillgetto’olod."

letter gets Irst place at the

head at the Publisher’s Desk

this week because i hope it will
help to answer one or two inquiries
that are bound to come to me every
week from well meaning readers
who have not noted in this column
my comments on the growing at rab-
bits, guinea pigs, white mice, and
covies for the so—called Food and
For Associations who sell the origin-
al breeding pair at a high price with

the understanding that they will buy ~

the chewing ' at correspondingly
high prices trom the grower.

Ellis Parker Butler once wrote a
book called “Pigs is Pigs. ” It you
have not read it. go to yo nearest
library and borrow it it you want an

. evenings good enjoyment and many
a hearty laugh. You can read it in
an hour or two.

The foundation of the story is the
rapid breeding propensities of a pair
if guinea pigs, which were shipped to

" a small express oﬂlce presided over
by an Irish express clerk. As the

www.0tploked up bythe
rightful owner the pigs started to

crowded the expressnan 'out of his
ofﬁce and threatened to engulf the
town. »

I am wondering what would hap-
pen it the same thing should happen
to a shipment sent out by the Fur
Association. In that case, accord-
ing to the alluring circulars, the. ex-
pressman would ﬁnd himself poss-
esded or a growing tel-tune which

‘ would soon rival that at Mr. Ford.

A GOLD BRICK

N eastern‘iarm paper with a na-

tional circulation, which is old

enough to know better, is send-

ing crews into Michigan and nearby

states; the men in which are armed

with a lead pipe in the shape of a
petition.

Some of these agents travel in
overalls, sometimes with a retired
farmer, or someone known in the
community, who lends a degree of
respectability to the proposal. The
unsuspecting farmer is asked to sign

. a petition to ."lower taxes, prevent

labor strikes, lessen commission,
men, and reduce freight rates."
Naturally every farmer who sees this
wants these four things to happen
and is willing to sign anything that
may aid in bringing them about.

The hitch comes when the agent '

asks for two dollars to pay for a ten
years subscription to this paper so
that the tanner may keep posted on
Just what this paper is doing in
Washington to bring about the ideal
conditions their petition seeks.

The scheme sounds so simple, that
yon'may consider our warning read-
ers of The Business Farmer, as
questioning their intelligence. The
scheme is, however, being presented
in so many dinerent terms and so
often with the apparent good faith
of a neighbor accompanying

1

l

 

the ‘

agent that we cannot help but use ‘

this space in the Publisher’s Desk.

with the hope that some reader with i

a little red in his hair will kick the
agent and his friend who presents
such a “gold-brick" clear out into

' the dust of the state highway.

Coupled with yOur own
belief in the superiority
of Federal first mortgage
bOuds is the comforting
assurance that thousands
upon thousands of other
investors hold steadfastly
conviction.

to the same

 

Write for Booklet AG845

Tax Free in Michigan

Free from Federal Incorne Tax of 4%

6%%

FEDERAL BONDS

Are Better Bonds

FEDERAL BOND a: MORTGAGE COMPANY
FEDERAL BOND & MORTGAGE BUILDING, DETROIT

 

 

4 TIM E8 Around lhe timid will: ENE OILINI
100,000 Miles Without Stoppmg for 011'
.. An inventor who could develop an automobile, a railroad car or any
. ,’ other conveyance on wheels which would perform such a feat would
_ be considered a wonder. But such is the record of regular
accomplishment by the Auto—oiled Aermotor during the past
"_. eight years in pumping water.

Did you ever stop to think how many revolutions the wheel

“- of a windmill makes? If the wheel of an Aermotor slmuld roll along the sulfa:

4' of the atthcsame speed that it makes when pumping water it wen i
encirc e the world 111 90 days, or would go four times around 1n a year. It wouldl
travel on an average 275 miles parsley or about 30 miles per hourth hourscaoh
day. An automoblle which keeps up that pace day after day needs a thorough

oiling at least once a week. 1511’ t it marvelous, then, that a windmill has boa -
made which W1 11 go 50 times as long as the best automobile with one oiling?

' The Auto-oiled Aermotor after 8 full years of service in every
part of the world has proven its ability to run and give the most reliable service
with one oiling a year. The double gears, and all moving parts, are entirdyli

cacloeednnd ﬂooded with oil all the time. It gives more service with less attention than
everlasting wind-mill satisfaction buy the

BELIEVE HIGHWAY FUNDS ABE
, WASTED

READ your statement regarding
the veto of the gasoline bill by
the Governor. Was surprised at

- your approval at it. It seems to me
while it would be a little unjust to
the stationary engine owners of
which I have. two, yet it wand be do-
ing more justly than it is at present.
Regarding the misuse of state high-
way money it seems to me from
what little I have seen it is about as
tree as radio, just get your station
(and there are lots of them) and

spectlng the gravel my men are put-
ting on the road." So here are a
few incidents as to some or the ways
the money is being spent for noth—
ing—Louis Finch, Clare County.

——Editor’s Note: We did not ap-
prove ot the governors veto of the
gasoline tax, ,as our reader suggests.
The Business Farmer believes in
presenting both sides of a serious
question and letting its readers do
their thinking for themselves. We
printed page after page of material
from the advocates and opponents
of the gasoline tax. Our columns

take in all the time. p
in Farwell there was a little job of
about 1 mile, yet there were two

young men, 1 should think about 20;

_or 21 years old, who carried a sur-
veyor’s equipment with them in a
‘Ford car who surveyedmnd resur-
veyed, I don't know how many
times. They had the contractor
take dirt out of out of one place,
move‘it to anotherthen put it back
several times. or course the con-
tractor did not care, it was excess
work, he got paid for moving it. And
those two surveyors were here at
least 2 or 3 times a week during the
time that job was being done. One
day I was in town last fall on my
way to the board of supervisors
meeting.
that day on that little job atvFar-
well. Anoter job just east of Far-
well where they were putting in a
bridge, there was another young man
about 22 who was supposed to be in-
specter. He boarded in Farwell at
least one month hetero they even

Last summer

There were 8 state men

. more immigration.

. l.
, attics-o back and call
that theyiwoald be- willing to bring

were open to all and we urged our
readers to express themselves to
their legislators. They evidently
did, for the house passed it by a. rec—
ord vote and the rural vote of the
senate was unamlnously for it.
Events have now proven, in our
opinion that the Governor should
NOT have vetoed the gasoline‘tax.

TOO MANY FARMERS FOLLOW-
ING RADICAL LEADERS

HE great question of unemploy—

ment and poverty seems at the

present time to .be solved.

There is work at good wages for

every man and woman and when
everybody can get Work there is
practically no poverty.

Now there is a clamor arising for
more immigration. I was surprised
to see a communication in the Busi-
ness. 1' by a self-styled farmer
for immigration as a panacea for the
ills of the former. Now, a nursery-
man my be a farmer but he is in a
dltoren‘t class from the great major-
ity at banners, and I think the over-
age tamer will hesitate a long
wbile berm-e he Supports a policy of
01! cOurse there

may“ M'Mpovertytoat-

 

 

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Auto-oiled Aermotor, the most efﬁcient windmill t

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mm; will not ban. Three dead air spaces make pafect insulation.
Tile is made from selected scanty ﬁre clay in our own plant

ducﬁen,

paint

has ever been made.

Kahlua».
located in the center of the but ﬁrechy districts.
Lei eu- Boiling Plan Departmental. you. Write for dancin-
tlveliterature. Free cstimatuon receipt of you: whole-s.
Kalamazoo Silos
—chob:c of Wood Stove or Gland Tile. Product of thirty
years’ silo bulldlngcxperl once. Give you grater production.
are proﬁt at lc- cost. Yldd a handsome dividend on the
act-taut ym" nits yen-r. Write for Free Silo Book
Silo C04 ”Opt. 4“ Kalli-nae. Mich.

 

 

111. mu!» SATISFAGTIOI run
no common ruuossﬁt

It's

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


  
 

  
  
     

  

. your comrades, sleeping, lay.
.Qld soldiers. dressed in blue—
Gray and stooped and limping, too;
» Slow and slower, day by day,

Old age draws your strength away.

       
    

”Member, long ago,

When you went with eyes aglow—

Br’ave young men—brave, soldier
. men—-

-‘ And you knew Abe Lincoln then.

 
 

  

      
      
        

 
 

        
       
      
     
   

‘G‘r'and Army of the Republic—how
‘ remain

  

.‘Of your loyal, noble train! .. .
, Who kept our states in golden band,
And gave to us our happy land.

LEPHIA BRYANT LARSON,
' Aberdeen, Wash, April 6, 1922..

 

SMART BRIDAL ACCESSORIES

HERE no longer seems to be any
T question of the propriety of ad-
, . ding a touch of color to the con—
ventional veiled bridal gown. The

« predominating tone of course is
white but dressmakers in this coun-
"try are copying some of the French
dressmakers and putting a little bit
of soft green or even the palest
shade of pink under the bridal dress.

The head—dress that has a diadem
is the smartest of all for this spring
and can be made at home very easi-.
1y. Sometimes they are fashipned
of artiﬁcial orange blossoms, in fact
any dainty white ﬂower would be ap-
propriate.

If it is possible to have a home
wedding, have one by all means. I
do not know of any sweeter mem-
ories than an old—fashioned home
wedding. Rich or poor can afford
this and with the abundance of
spring ﬂowers that can be had in our
0Wn woods, our homes can be made
a bower.

The white prayer—book is taking
the place of the bridal boquet in a
great many weddings and it makes
a lovely keepsake.

 

 
   
   
 
 
  
 
   
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
 
 
   
  
 
  
    
 
   
  
    
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
   
  
   

 

LINEN SHOWER FOR THE JUNE
" BRIDE
F a girl has a few friends in her
I neighborhood, it is a lovely
thing for one of her most inti-
mate friends to give a linen or even
miscellaneous shower. These show-
er affairs are very inexpensive for
the giver and brings so much joy
and real good to the future bride.
All our girls love to make pretty
things and a towel With a few
stitches of embroidery makes a very
acceptable gift. Each girl making
”some little hand worked article—-
face cloths with a little crocheting
around the edge, two or three kitch-
en towels With neat hhnd hemming.-
‘The handkerchief carried by the
bride on her wedding day is a lovely
gift.
A simple luncheon can be served
so that a great deal of work does not
make our hostess tired. Why not
have our girls arrive around two
o’clock and either sew or play cards
or just chat for an hour or two and
then serve a simple tea menu. The
following is very good and not a.
great deal of labor:
Tea Menu for a June Shower
Egg Sandwitches;
Cheese Straws;
Hot Gingerbread with whipped

      
     
       
      
      
            
   
     
    
    
      
  

Tea;
Raisin Opera Caramels.

Egg Sundwlches—Chop finely the whites of
"hard—boiled" eggs; force the yolks through s
strainer or potato ricer. Mix yolks and whites,
season with salt and pepper, and moisten with

. mayonnaise or cream salad dressing. Spread mix-
ture between thin slices of buttered bread. Cut
crust off both sides and cut in two diagonally.
Cheese Straws—Roll, puﬂ or plain paste one-
fourth inch thick. sprinkle one-half with grated
cheese to which has been added few grains of
salt and cayenne. Fold, press edges firmly to-
gether, fold snin. pat, and roll out one—fourth
“ inch thick.- Sprinkle with cheese and proceed
’ as before; repeat twice- Cut in strips ﬁve inches
. long and one-fourth inch wide. Bake eight min-
utes in hot oven. Cheese straws ‘sre piled log
~ fashion and served.
' " gust Blncsrbmd—Two eggs, one cup sugar,
one‘snd one-third cups flour, three teaspoon bak-
ing powder, half teaspoon salt. one and one-half
Mon ginger and two-thirds cup thin cream.
Best wants light. and add sugar gradually.
1 lipift, , ingredients, and: add alternately
to ‘ ainkture.» Turn into buttered
pan. sud bake thirty minutes in s moderate
(W ,«e in squares on pie sire plates and
‘ ' cream on top after it has been
,,Mrtot_astssndsdroportwo

obstacle—Ewe cups light brown
hts cup thin cream. one—half cup
sugar sum: in saucepan. bring

t9

     
     
       
  
    
   
 
   
     
    
      
   
  
 
   
   
     
    
     
     
  
  
  
   
 
    
 
 
 
 
  

  

    

  

 
 
  

  

 
   
  

     

   
  

.5

 

of your own work.

in the last few months.
highly article in my home.

what I want.
dress at top of each sheet.

struggle is hard.
and I hope we will all
stop' and pause on May
30th and give a prayer
even a silent one for
those who are with us no
more. ~

 

 

boil until a soft

, ' commit for, the w.
4.- Edited byline. sum trams

m MAKING OF our? COOK Boon

THIS cook-book made up of our own recipes will have a place in
every'reader’s home, and] want you all to feel the book is a part
We will make it attractive enough so that .
every‘lfarm woman reader will'feel she cannot run her house without
one. I want your favorite cooking, canning, and household recipes,
I will treasure every one of thegn, including the recipes ,
To me, a good practical cook-book is the most

membering a recipe when all yriou have to do is just open to the page.
Remember, simple, every day, as well as fancy cooking, recipes are

Kindly write on one side of paper, placing your full name and ad-
, Ipilautouse the name and county of each
sender with their recipe, unless you ask me not to.

 

EMORIAL Day is here and lest we forget, this reminder is just to

h refresh our memories folr thoée who fought and died that we
might enjoy the blessings of this beautiful country. We all
must admit it is a wonderful nation altho there are times when the
We in this land do not know what hardships are

. f: ',
mamas

Address letters: Mrs. Annle Taylor” care The Buslness Farmer, Mt. Clemens, Mlchlgsn.

  
 
 
    
   
     
 

 

Ihave received
Why burden our minds with re-

 

 

 

 

Add raisins. seeded and cut in pieces and spread
evenly in s buttered pan, using hands, having
mixture threefourths inch in depth. Cool and
cut in cubes. These may be passed the early part
of the afternoon.

Tea should be served with sugar and cream

or a dish of cloves and those who care for it
this way use two or three cloves in cups and it
gives a peculiar but delightful taste. Slices of
lemon are also served for the tea.
, The table can be made so attract-
ive with a large fancy doily that
does not quite cover the whole table
or with small doilies. At a tea the
custom is to either seat your guests
around the room andserve them or
else stand. There are so many
beautiful wild ﬂowers now that one
need not be without a. pretty center
piece. .

The shower gifts can be a Sur—
prise and just before serving a box
covered with colored crepe paper
can be used to hold the gifts and
give them to the bride-to—be and she
should open each package so that all
might share in the happiness.

EMBROIDERY RINGS MADE OF
METAL

OR .the women who are handy
with their needle the new em-
broidery rings made of metal

are splendid for working on heavy
material, like bed spreads. , They
can‘ be adjusted to the thinner ma.-

.=_____=_.AIDS TO GOOD DRESSING

3993. A Jaunty Cape—«This is a splendid
.model to go With s one-piece dress, or With a
separate blouse and skirt. It ma be made of
broad cloth, jersey. tweed. or tafie
shown. tweed was used.
scarf_ of brushed wool

material.

The Pattern
Medium use
Figured percale and

Gingham, hneu lawn
ﬁve for this style.
This

a
40 42. 44 and 46
The width

3 .
the right st 1e or a
comfortable ' es and

form an sttracti

inch size requires 9‘
The width at the foot

 

model.
40, 42. and 44
Without the skirt 4

on the sins

 

is en in
38-40, and Large, 42—44 inches bust measure
for Ladies, and. 14 and 16 ears for Misses.
will require 25K

4258. A Pretty House or Porch Frock—-
pique are here combined.

P ttern is cut 'in 7 Sizes: 34. 36, 88
inches A as

5
ootis
d

inch size requires yards
at the f
illustrated reqmres 1 yer

841 A Po ulsr 8km ModsF—Here is just
utihty ' ha

very practical pockets. It
is good for serge ‘or twill. and also for velveteen
corduroy, and ea or es. * '

vs
The Pattern is cut‘ in
34, 88 and 88 inches wais

4218. A Splendid “Work" Costume in Romper
Style WIth or WIthout Slum—This design ﬁlls a
long felt want—combining utility, nsatness snd
comfore. with good style lines. The mper"
may be worn without the skirt. which can be
readily fastened if duh-ed. ergo, linen,

hi, and crepe are

The Pattern is cut in 6 Sizes: ' 34. so as
inches bust measure. A 33$
inch size requires 6% yards of 36 inch material.

~ f nati n‘ looms ahead. on e de shine
I Warts. trimmed with valgnciennes lacs

. This is truly s summer
ribbons and laces. Sine
ller chﬂdrsns

terials as well and are much strong-
er. I just purchased one for my
Mother and she is delighted with it.
They cost twenty—ﬁve cents in our
stores and would be pleased to send
you one upon receiving this amount.

A DAISY AND BUTTERCUP.
WEDDING

AISES or elderberry blossoms

make as pretty decorations for

a June wedding as do roses.
Laurel also makes a charming orna-
mentation and keeps fresh, which is
a decided advantage. In all decorat-
ing, avoid mixing ﬂowers. Make it
a rose wedding, a. laurel wedding, a
dogwood or a daisy wedding, but do
not mix these all up in one. You
could make your dining room one
kind and another room different. An
exception to this, however, is in the
mixing of ﬂowers which nature her-
self has a fancy for combinning,
such as the early wild .ﬂowers or
buttercups and daisies. These are
beautiful in combination, giving the
effect of. cheer and sunshine.

Make garlands for the bride’s and
groom’s chairs. If you have a spec-
ial for the young folks make a cent-
er-piece for the table sticking the
ﬂowers in a bed of moss. From this

 

 

ta. As here
One could have the
or other contrasting

4 Sizes: Medium.

crops are also attrac-

 

bust measure.
of 32 inch material.
2% Aards. To trim as
88 ches wide.

Braid wo
'sim: 26, 28, so
t measure. A 86
of 38 inch material.
2 yards. .

materials for this

will be required.

e make a dress 1:

of
' g is used a great deal
clothes.

 

2—7

ALL PATTERNS 12c sacs—3,1701: 30c POST-PAID

Order from the above or former lswesof The Ballasts Farmer. slvlng number and slgn you»

name and address plslnly.

ADD I00 FOR OPBIHO AID IUﬂﬂER FASHION BOOK

‘ . 7 MM all-oil's m mum to ,»
Pattern Department, THE nusmms EARLIER -

 

 

 
  

, mound of ﬂowers in the

,w

 

, . ml?
pr at small tallies.- have 7
bullet with vines or feathery f 11m

leading from it. On either sleepless ,
candles if possible ‘ with, shades to

match the color scheme. .- , ,
These can be found in a ten-cent

store and are very, attractive. ' 0n I
each - end have plates piled with

napkins. between. Have two or

three varieties of sandwitches with

plates of each kind on either end of‘
long table, and plenty more to serve.

The bride’s cake should be white
and a dark brown cake with white
frosting for the groom. These
should be on large table with gar-
lands of ﬂowers around them and.
cut by the bride. and groom so all
might have a piece. ' , ‘

 

THE TWELVE GREATEST
WOMEN
MRS. Maud Wood Park, president
of the National League of
Women Voters in the U. 8.,

formed ‘a committee to decide upon,

the twelve greatest women and after

pouring over thousands of" letters ,

decided the following were the
greatest living. I am givlng them
to you and any one of these women’s
lives would be worth reading.

Jane Adams—philanthropy.

Cecelia Beau—painting.

Annie Jump Cannon—astronomy.

Carrie Chapman Catt—politics.

Anna Botsford Comstock—natur—
a1 history.

Minnie Maddern Fiske—stage.’

Louise Homer—~music. -

Julia Lathrop—child welfare.

Florence Rena Sabin—anatomy.

M. Carrie Thomas—education.

Martha Van Reusseleau—homc
economics.

Edith Wharton—literature.

 

HANDY RAINY DAY DEVICES
OME handy things to have about
for rainy days are: a clothesline
‘ that stretches across the porch
With clothes—pins handy; a wire cir-
clesuch as some salt barrels have
about them suspended above the
stove with spring pins kept, on it to
dry mittens, socks and other small
articles; a few screweyes in the ceil-
ing above the stove on which 'to

hang a coat hanger and dry wet
coats.

 

 

Mothers Problems

 

THE AFTERNOON NAP

HERE is no set limit to 'the age
at which a child shall cease
taking his afternoon nap. The

time varies with different children.
Sometimes a child with an excep-
tionally strong nervous system, can
well dispense with the afternoon nap
by the time he is in his third year;
again, a nervous, high—strung type
of child must rest and sleep a bit
during the day if possible, until ﬁve
years old or more. It is for every
mother to decide when her child is
too old for the nap.

Most mothers stop the daily nap too
soon. As the child gets into his sec-
ond year and play becomes an .all-
important consideration more and

more ﬁrmness and persistence are.

necessary to get him to “go off” each
day at the regular time. . If Mother
is busy, and the child shows no signs
of being sleepy, the temptation be-
comes too great to let the nap go

just for to-day." Perhaps later on
the child will fall asleep on the

couch or on the ﬂoor, and will be.

put to bed to complete his rest; but
the habit of being put to bed at the
regular time each day will have been
weakened. It will grow easier» and
easier for the child to remain awake
past nap-time, until soon he is going
all day long without a break in his
day of play. ~

If the child goes to bed very early, .

no ill effects may follow, but likely
as not, bed-time will not be placed
an hour ahead of its former time.
and the child will merely be cheated
out of an hour’s needed rest. .

The nervous child can never grow

too old for, a daily'nap, or at. least a ‘ ,
Even after school—age f

has been reached, it may be.gneces- ‘
sary to insist upon a ,t’ew moments" . .

daily rest.

‘ .650

   

 


   

 
 
    
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
    
  
 
 
 
 
     
  
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 

 

.. . , H...
.»y< ..

    
  
 
 
    
 
    

31011-

es as I am. It some of you
omen have a man that likes to play

ficards as well as mine does, God pity
Mine could play night and \

day,‘ all the time. There he is in his
glory. His home and family doesn’t
worry him any, even it we are all
sick. He can go away and stay all
night and come home at 6: 30 in the
morning.

It is all the same to him. Many a
time I have gotten supper ready and
he has not come home until eight
and ten o '.clock What do you think
my feelings are? I have put up
with this for many winters. It seems

self I can’t stand it much longer.
Some one write me the remedy for I
have- tried everything I could think
oi. If their is any of you women
that has a ~man that stays at home
nights as a companion, appreciate
him.—A Subscriber.
——-We can feel very sorry for this
reader and she has our most sincere
sympathy. The only remedy that I
can see is to play your part and play
it well. Maybe he will relent and
see the wrong he-is doing.

ll

 

The Runner’s Bible

 

 

 

 

 

Personal Column

 

1' course no little modern bride is super
sldtious. Certamly not. But all the same
brides of today like to know the supersti-
tions that long have applied to brides.

There are certain omens that they feel better if
they know about, for some are good and some are
bad. and all are quaint. Here are some rhymes
you may cut out and paste under the cover of
your hope chest, just to laugh about, or to show
to some of your bride friends who may be a bit
superstitious.

Marry when the year is new——

Always loving, kind and true.

When February birds do mate

You may wed. nor dread your fate.

If you wed when March winds blow

Joy and sorrow both you ’ll know.

Marry in April when you can——

Joy for maiden and for man.

Marry in the month of May,

You will surely me the day. '

Marry when June roses glow,

Over land and sea youll go.

They who in July do wed.

Must labor always for their bread.

Whoever wed in August he

Many a change are sure to see.

Marry in September’s shrine,

Your livingvnll be rich and line.

If in October you will marry.

Love will come. but riches tarry.

If you wed in bleak November.

Only joy will come, remember.

Another interpretation is.
Marry in January's hear and rhyme,
Widowed you’ll be before your prime.
Married in February's sleety weather
Life you'll tread in tune together.
Marry when March winds shreik and roar,
Your home will lie on a foreign shore.
Married 'neath April’s changeful skies,
A checkered path before you lies.
Married when bees o'er May blossoms ﬂit;
Strangers around your board will sit.
Married in month of roses—June;
Life will be one long honeymoon.
Married in July with ﬂowers ablaze.
Bitterest memories in after days.
Married in August's heat and drowse,
Lover and friend in your chosen spouse.
Married in golden September's glow,
Smooth and serene your life will go.
Married when leaves in October thin.
Toil iand hardships for you begin.
-Mamed in veils of November mist.
Fortune you. wedding ring has kissed.
Married in days of Decembev cheer,
Love’s star shines brighter from year to year.

C I . '

brown. you will live out of town:
Married pink. your spirits will sink.

'Andto guidsyoutothorightdayefthewesk:
Monday for health.
Tuesday for wealth.
Wednesday the best day of alL
Thursday for losses.
Friday for crosses,
Saturday no luck at all. ‘
Or this:
Wed on Monday, always poor.
Wed on Tuesday. wed once more.
Wed on Wednesday. happy match.
Wed on Thursday. splendid catch.
Wed on Friday. poorly mated. .
Wed on Saturday. better waited.
Wed in the morning. quick undoing.
_——s—‘--—--—-—

I would be pleasedto hear from some of the

Married in- white. you have chosen all right;
Married in gray, you will go far away;
Married in black. you will wish yourself back;
Married in red, you will wish yourself dead:
Married in green. ashamed to be seen;

Married in blue. he will always be true;
Married in pearl. you will live in a whirl:
Married in yellow. ashamed of your fellow;
Married l:

\‘ readers on opinions of “bobbed hair" for women.

--A reader of the M. B
Textile Leather Work—One of your readers has
asked if the company selling textile leather work

to be done at home was a reliable iii-111.1 am
lpoklng this hwy}; wondering if any

' squares.

    

hot maple syrup.

Maple sauce for Ice Cream—For plain ice
cream u1.s " sﬁuoe served hot. One tablespoon
lions mixed with one-eighth teaspoon salt. one

milk. Make same as custard. adding one

our
tablespoon m. and enehalf cup maple syrup.

 

 

PEANUT COOKIES
Siftoneeupofsugarnvetimestoonesnd
one-half cups of cake flour arid add two level
teaspoons of baking powder. sift ﬁve times. Beat
theyolksofsixeggswfthspinchofsalttos
cream, add the sugar gradually beating continually,
then add a teaspoon of vanilla, one- ha-lf cup of
hot water. and the ﬂour gradually, beat for ﬁfteen
minuta, pour into a greased and ﬂoured drip-
ping pan and bake in a very slow oven. When
cool cut in squared; frost all sides and roll in
ground peanuts being careful not to crush the
These keep nicely in 11. closed container

and are delicious picnic lunches

FROSTING
Mix two tablespoons of melted butter. four
tablespoons milk. one teaspoon vanilla and enough
powdered sugar to thicken, then a tablespoon of
marshmallow cream. The latter may be omitted.
but I do it to all feelings as it keeps them
creamy and from becoming dry or hard

PEANUT BUTTER COOKIES

Cream two level tablespoons of butter then add
one-half cup of peanut butter and mix the two
thoroughly. Gradually add one cup of sugar and
one egg lightly then one-half cup of milk. Take
one cup of sifted ﬂour and sift again with four
teaspoons of baking powder and a pinch of salt.
Add the cookie mixture and when well mixed stir
in ﬂour to roll probably three and one-half cups
in all. Roll out out and bake in a hot oven.
Sprinkle with sugar before baking if liked.

PEANUT COOKIES
'I‘wo- tablespoon shortening, one-fourth cup of
sugar, one egg. one-half cup ﬂour, one—half tea-
spoon salt, two and one-half tablespoon milk.
three—fourths cup chopped nuts, one tablespoon
baking powdered and one-half teaspoon lemon
juice. Mix as butter cakes. Drop from spoon
on an unbuttered baking sheet two inches apart.
Bake twelve or ﬁfteen minutes in moderate oven.

Makes about two dozen cookies.

CASTOR OIL COOKIES
Wish we'd known about them years ago.
One cup each of sugar molasses and milk, one-
half cup of castor oil. one-half teaspoon salt.
one teaspoon soda. two teaspoons ginger and
enough sifted ﬂour to make a dough that can
be rolled. Roll out and shape, bake in quick
oven. Two of these coohes are equal to one
dose of castor oil. Children are fond of them.
-—Mlm Alma Becker. Augusta, Michigan. B. 1.

PANCAKES
One quart of sour milk. a pinch of salt. one
ass. one teaspoon soda and ﬂour to make of
right thickness. I use this same recipe for the
Buckwheat cakes. I don't put in the egg and I

use only one tablespoon of ﬂour (wheat) and‘
uckwheat—

puttherestinofB

GINGER DROP CAKES
One cup molasses, one-hall cup melted butter,
ens-half cup warm water. three cups ﬂour, one
teaspoon soda. two teaspoons ginger. Stir all
well together, line a dripping pan with buttered
paper, drop in small spoonfulls and bake in a
quick oven—Mrs. Lesley L. Amos. Saranac. Mich.

RHUBARB PIE

Wash rhubarb and cut in pieces to make three
cups. Scald and drain. Mix one cup of sugar,
one-half cup of ﬁne stale bread crumbs or four
tablespoons of ﬂour and a few grains of salt.
Add .the rhubarb; ,tnix thoroughly. Line a pie
plate with pastry. ll with the prepared rhubarb
and cover top with strips of pastry. Bake in a
hot oven—400 degrees——for half hour.

C

THE CROUCH
There was a man, at least he claimed that name.
,But he growled and groaned all the same.
When the weather was warm and started the
sweat
He’d hump up his back and say he was ”hot".
But when the wintry winds blew cold and it
snowed
He’d look from the window and say "Worst
weather ever known’
And thus he complained from morning 'till night
And Eh?“ darkness alone could shut his mouth
2
He became such a nuisance to all of his friends
That. of plans to cure him there were no ends.
His tangily {and his neighbors of patience were
ere I;

And wished earnestly that his neigh‘borhood n. ‘

had left.
But no such good fortune was theirs to enjoy
For this "excuse for a man"
old boy"
ﬁnally their patience being entirely or
hausted,
Onto the waiting junk heap this grouch thq
tasted.

And his place on Earth being thereby vacated
Andtheharmhehaddonobeingjustlyrated.
It was found on inspection that nothing of worth
Had resulted from this being having come from
to this earth
And now that this lesson to all is apparent
That to some mortals a sour disposition is h-
herent,
Int us all have charity that thinketh no 111
And have patience to let the grouch his sons
sardentlll.
—Written by a— subscriber.

 

‘ ﬁ

—-if you are well bred!

 

 

At a Petty—Do not talkgossip. Listen in-
terestinglytowhatisbeingsaid. Donotuse
slang. Refer to brothers and sister-shy first name,
during conversation. Refer to your escort as your
friend. not your "gentleman friend”. On leaving
thank the hosts: for the pleasant parts.

     
    
 
 
  
 
 
    
 
 
   

gasoline.

,At general stores
and Hardware_

. dealers. pieces.

always cool.

The Royal is now saving time, temper
and steps for over 1,000,000 women.

SELF HEATING IRON COMPANY

Box 4oz

 

ll llv I .11-111111111;1'1111111'1111111-111111|III||lIllllllllllll

Cool (bmfort

No ﬁres, no electric cord; no gas tube
here when you iron. Use just a little

Instantly ready for large ironings or small .
Heat easily regulated. Handle '

  
 
 
    
   
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
   
  
  

ll

Attractively’ nickel plated.

Big Prairie, Ohio

 

30 years of Honest Shoe Values
Behind this Footwear.

Scout

Light-weight

cool and
roomy for
summer
wear

$3t0$3.50

at your shoe store

Lots of service for little money in
this sturdy shoe. Made of all lea-
ther. Good grade of upper stock
and quality sole. Michiganfarmers
have beenwearing itior years. Try
it on and see how cool and com-
fortable it feels. Boys’ sizes also.

Herold-Bertsch Shoe Co.
Grand Rapids
Burl for ‘Booilef

 

   
 

 

still raised the

GUARANTEED 8 MONTHS

AT “AU PRICE

 

 

The-ears Goodrich. Goodyear .F'irestone Fish and
other best known standard make tires. All slightly
used. but readil give our customers thousands of
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LOWEST TIRE PRICES IN AMERICA

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t. ONLYg‘ﬂl-I gaff“: tire elitism Bel:nee 0.0.D
t mos Ano&er tire Damn.“ at half price“ for-n any net

M ma ER" CID Mm

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M E" 138. C. 'lmll AVIL. CIIICAIO. [LI—

 

 

WHEN WRITING ADVERTISERS
MENTION M B- F.

 

 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
 
  
  
    
   
  
   
    
   
  
   
 
   
 
  
 
  
 
    
 
  
  
   
  
  
   
    
    
   
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
   
       
     
  
   
  
 
  
 
   

CONCORD l-YI-lllll. Heavilymoml

GRAPE VINES 01111

Sclcmcd maul s17c vmes from 1h: M 1ch1gan Grape .

licll uhcrc 1hc ﬁnes1 Concorde 1n 1h: world are
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Thlcc vines plamcd in your g1rden will '\ V
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They will grow and fruit 1n very cold 10-
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I'__o__ur Mon__t__hs t_a H___e_lp l_’__ou Start RIGHT!
l1‘1lled'—_— w11h ill11strs1cd.ln1t1esiing pracncal stones 0! suc 1K
cess with oney Crops. " T 0 encourage a more general
plaming oI Grapes we make Ihis libcnl offer and a silver
Quarter takes it all. Send name and address today 1o
THE FRUIT BEL .
15 Market St. .. Grand Raplds, Mzch.

   
 
 
  
    
   
       
  
  
     
   
   
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

$44Lig 1: running. easy cl caning
close skimming sdurrbt'g.
Slaps a route
NEW BUTTERFLY guaranteed a
lifetime against defects 1!) material and we
.Msde also inS four larger sizes up to

30 DAYS’ FSREEn TRIAL
and on a plan w hereby they earn theiro wnooet
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Catalog Folder Buy from the mono fee
Ind save money

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,,. ’ You have never before been able 4
"W to buy the iamousl’ eeIIess Fence at such low
prices - our new plan of selling direct from factory means

40 Per Cent LOWER PRICES d
CATALOG—send fnrit to ny
FREE £13: :ggrrl’uzﬁ: suvin g on Fencing—Steel Posts
-Barb Wire—Paint and Rooﬁng. Satisfaction gusranteed.
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h—M’KKY LA N WEISS:—

321 days of sunshine every year.

185 growmg days—45 Inches of rainfall.
Maryland Is a land of Good Farms—Good
Roads- Good Schools- Good Homes- Good People.-
IVllgryland Is one of the garden spots of the
or .
Fa rmln 11g pays In Maryland and good farm
land Is stIll available at reasonable prices.
Our catalog of farms and country estates Islll

Interest you. Sent free. Address Dept.
CHAS. H. STEFFEV,
336 N. Charles street Baltimore. Md.

What Would YOU Like to Study?

We Teach You and lee You A YEAR TO PAY
Expert Instructors, Lowest Tuition Rates. New
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Advertising. Journalism. Photographic Journalism.

 

 

Federal Tax Accounting. Salesmanship.10mcs »
Management, Business Administration. Po will .
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and postage. returnable if not satisﬁed.

WALHAMORE INSTITUTE

Dept E. Lafayette Building. Phlladelphla. Ps.’
STRAWBERRY PLANTS $2M Pest -
150 Dunlap, 150 Warfi

3O HAMPTON l1 SON, R. H.I.IANG10II,MI‘l .

FRE -—-To Introduce our Pedlgreed Everhesrlg
Strawberrles we will send 25 plant“
free. MASON NURSE ERY 00.. Piedmont

 

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Use a Good Agent
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: I ”)m .
MORGAN

MONEY TO LOAN

On the 33-Year Government Amortization Plan to desirable borrowers who own
good, well-managed farms in icbigan and Ohio, and} wish to borrow not over 50%
of the value of their land plus 20% of the apprised vnlue of the buildings.

No ' ' —l.ow 'ntaseat rates. No stock breakout. Unusually prompt and
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FIRST JOINT STOCK LAND BANK OF CLEVELAND
Guardian Building, Cleveland, Ohio

V If Ruptured .
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Apply it to Any Rupture, Old or
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B—K in waterliillsthe gm in Convinced Thousands

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cemic t 'izeror years. - ., _
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Just put it on the rupture and
the muscles b to tighten; they begin
to bind tags or so that the opening
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with. Don't neglect to send for this free
trial. Even if your rupture doesn’t
bother you what is the use of wearing
supports all .your life? Why suﬂfer
this nuisance? Why run the risk of

“Helps for Milking Machine
Users.” Includes care of milker
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Gives results of years of experi-
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conditions right in the barns.
At progressive dealers. None

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O
Rheumatism
A Remarkable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It

“Ii“ moms 1893 I was attacked by Mus-
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408B Main St, Adams, N. Y.
You may send are entirely free
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‘11- um aﬂicted know for over
m flﬁn' “1 ﬁe: med}, m Name ..........................
"a rule! as m was "‘1’ MW"! ddre ........................
M I. found a, treatment that cured me A :8
“giddy and such a pitiful condition has State ..........................
sores returned. share given it to; number who
was build: cted. even bedridden, some of
Iran seventy to dainty yous and the
”mthmmeummxowncaso. _ e
I want every sirli'arsr from any torn: of mus- g ‘ ‘ g
. “I “t8 “W “ '5' m"). sBllSIIESS FARMERS EXGEIAIGE E
anam.totrytbegmtvalueofmim = g
_ “Home Treatment" for its mm at 1116 E as. um" um "08,“ 10° por Word. pq- Isms
' D“ ”we" mun-Sim '1“ mi :3" 1t lace Euummmmmnmwmmwmmmml
, 1 , ' FARM AND 1.4an
2000 GETS 80. MONICA FAIR; 80
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furniture. modern implements, tools, seed, an en-

lay. Write today. gins etc.; splendid advantages for thllingml

  
  
  
   
   

  

 

 

income from start; on mum
MARK E- J‘CKSON 0getroit: nar village; 70 acres rich loamy till-
26” billion Elk" Esracdse. 11. 1'. age for what, oats, potato etc: stream—watered
Mr. whouisrespousible. Above statement true. 11'6- Vﬂnety trui i exce ““5 74‘0““
cuss. water, 46-. basement barn pani-
housa. o settle ails. . new all $8006. only
000 Details this ad 5 acres seen

8
.m Malice“. 96111 .bar. .
gobs less than m1: cash» page 2
mar—murmur (30

 

 

   
  
  
  
 
 
    

  
   
 

 

 

   
  
 

free.
now woum . meant iﬁlﬂﬁiﬁh em...
YOU LIKE TO ac-r M m =
as THE susmrss m Wm»

 

saunas AGENT m
- YOUR coumr .

Rm 3 mote ICED mm FOIL
II onhrm.twoiasianlﬁy. Was-a

 

    
 
      
    
     
     

  

 

 

 

    

'1 pi me the chickenshe

m

brother- or sister!
write. I an 5 feet Ll
weigh 115 pounds, have
hair and gray eyes.

My dad takes the 11.3: F. a
all like it real well, as there
many interesting articles. in it. My
dad owns a grocery and dry goods
store.evensohe tobeafam
er. Must make room orsome of the

g.
3? iii

write whenever they-want to. The
more otten you write the better we
get acquainted, and you stand the
same chance of having your letter in
print, whether you have written
once or one hundred times. By all
means come again, Isabel].

Dear Uncle Ned—I love every-
thing on the farm. We will not dis-
turbe a bird nest of any kind as we
love all birds. We have little wren
housesupoaapostlnlroatotour
house. The birds built a nest in our
mail box last summer and we took
them out and put. them up in a box
and they stayed there all summer.
We hope to see them again this sum-
mer. We like your paper.——Hattie
Ruslng, R. 6, Allegan, Mich.

—-—One should always be a. triend to
the birds. Many of them appear to
do considerable damage but in most
cases the good they do outweighs by
a large margin the damage. Poo~
pie who like animals and are kind to
them always have. plenty of friends.

 

Dear Uncle Ned—It has been such
a long time since I have written to
the M. B. F., I suppose you have tor-
gotten me. I have been so busy
since I started to high school in Mt.
Clemens that I could not write. The
school work has been much easier
for me this semester. I’m now 16
years old and in the A 9th grade.
Will the. girls and boys please write
to me? These otmy age or older.
My sister, Eunice, said she would
like to join the M. B. F. but is too
old. She is 18 years old and would
like to have the girls and boys oi
her age and older write to her. I
think there isn’t anything nicer than
to receive a letter from someone. Its
also a great pastime to write letters.
About two weeks ago my sisters and
I went to the woods to get ﬂowers.
The mayilowers were the only ones
out, now the bleeding hearts, adders
tongues and violets are out. I just
love to go to the woods don’t you?
My sister, Rose, has eighteen corres-
pondents and I don’t really see how
she can keep track at all at them. I
have only one. Will close with lots
of loVe to Uncle Ned—Iris Arnold,
Box 474, R4, Mt. Clemens, Mich.
-—-I should say I have not forgotten
you although it has been a long time
since you wrote to me. Don't wait
so long between letters, Iris. And
tel-l your sister, Eunice, that she can
write it she wishes. Some of tho
mémbers of our merry circle are two
or three years older than she is. Yes,
it is great fun to gather ﬂowers in
the woods. '

'Dear Uncle Ned—This is \the sec-
ond time I have written but I did
not see my, ﬁrst letter in print. I
think it went in the waste paper
basket. The weather is nice new
but the water has been high and all
the ditches were full and overﬂowing
but it went down Monday, April 16.
We did not have any school for one
week for the water went over the
roads 'and‘ the children could not
come to school. ,I am 13 years old
and in the seventh grade at school.
My teacher’s name is J. J. Donnelly.
I wish you could see the water now
and come and take a boat ride like
some people are taking, for beside

. our house is a big ditch about twelve

feet deep. We have 5 rabbits but
only one is quite tame. Every time
flue ﬁght

yard sack. Up and down,

down, never touching sky or ground.
Answer: A pump handle. I think!
that is enough for this time. The
one that guesses my middle name I
will write. a letter to. Good-bye
from Either EL. The-t, Turner, Mich-
igan, m. -, .

——-“II at ﬁrst you don’t succeed try,
t1“! again" must'be your motto. It
is a good one. The waste paper
basket is taking a vacation.

   
 

Dear Uncle Ned—l would like to.
jot: your merry circle. I like to
read the Children’s Hour. When I
was reading it last week I saw a girl
with same name as mine. I was go-
ing to write‘ to her but can not ﬁnd
her address justrnow. I am 16 years
old, and in the 9th grade. We live
on a farm of 240 acres. We have
fifteen cows to milk and I have to
help. Our farm is three miles from
town but my two sisters and I live in
townsoastobemrsehool. my

one sister teaches the grammar
room. I have another sister mar—
ried. I only live about eighteen

miles from Lake Huron. I have my
hair bobbed, had it out about three
weeks ago. Lille it much better.
We don't live far from the dam that
gives the power for lights in the
city. The towers run by our place.
I have been all through the power
house. We go up there ﬁshing reel
often in the spring—Bernice Graves,
R2, Hale, Michigan. ' ‘
——All right, you are now a member
of the Children’s Hour and in order
to continue to be one you must read
the department and write a letter to
me once in awhile.

 

Dear Uncle 'Ned—We all enjoy
reading the M. B. F., but I believe I
enjoy it more than the rest and look
for it more eagerly because of “The
Children’s Hour.” I like to read
of what the other boys and girls are
doing. We are having very stormy
weather here. I live 7 miles from
the “$00” and have about a mile to
walk to school. I will be twelve
years old on the 19th of March. I
have one sister and. three brothers.-
we are all going to school. Your
gees, Mina. Miller, Sault Ste. Marie,

c .

 

Dear Uncle New-How are you
this ﬁne spring weather? I am just
ﬁne. Well, I guess I will describe
myself: I am four feet ten, so I am
just two inches or having ﬁve feet
I weigh seventy-ﬁve pounds, have
light hair, dark complexion and
dark brown eyes. I am in the sixth
grade at school. I o to the Wer— ,
muth school and lie my teacher
very much. My favorite studies are
language and arithmetic. May I
join your circle please? We all like
the M. B. F. Write to Irene 'Terpen-
ing, R1, Ithaca, Mich.

—I am just ﬁne, thank you; or as
the fellow said, “If I felt any better
I would have to call a doctor." I
suppose your school will soon bo’
out. Will you be glad or sorry?

Dear Uncle Ned—I have been a
silent reader of the M. B. F., for
some time and am very much inter-

‘ested \in the Children’s - Hour. I

thought I’d write for the ﬁrst time.
I am a girl of 13 years of age, and
a blon'd. I am in the eighth grade,
and I like to go to school. There
are 19 children going to our school.
I have one brother and one, sister
older than I. I wish some of the
readers would write to. mes—Alberta \

swarms, 31* mm ' n.

r-Al-vars j room 191' . one. (new; so:

write rotten.

1,.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


  

 
 

  

  

  

  
 

‘y’ lion in about turning.
re Muss a «cheap man is
therefore use or the moat imporiant
actors in the business. and the stock
met who when to be successful
must learn how to reduce his teed

, /’m “ 0‘}! I ‘
" 3931121 issued a bulletin on the cost

‘0! “drop prod-noun. showing the cost
a W to be $8.33 ’99? ton.

. elm

They did not say whom this key
ywas "put in stack or mow, but the

'iignres indicate m modern labor-

iﬁirﬂs‘kgaoonmne assault installs

 
 
 

  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
   
 
 
   

 

 

 

 

      
     
     
   

 

7' _ ties.

"abomwanuonmmuumk

«trailed. It costs 1519031852” $1.25
thmeonklhlb; thus
weﬂthatsﬂagembsputup at

dram one-third to one-sauna the

‘otihe hay depends upon the

. Over a half million silos are new
”aluminum hymn-stock

Surely there

meat, and we shonld give it serious
thought at this time when economy
is so important.~

Many farmers have put of! the
building of a. silo on account or: the
work or ﬁlling. The writer believes
that this hard task is mostly im-
agitation, Ear no stock food can be
harvestedand put up more cheaply
our rapidly than corn silage. For ex-
ample: alfalfa must be cut from
three .to but times a year and is
a more laborious and expensive piece
of work than the harvesting of sil-
age. It the weather is nniaymble
the cost of pulling up hay often ex-
(needstheastotmmngmsilnge
ion! or ﬁve tins. From this com-
parison I do not wish it understood

Athait‘imoo'mmndcomsﬂagein

place of Ms. mils should be
fed with corn slugs whenever it is
possible. I wish simply to compare
the mates! harvesting the two crops.

We ll: is (113911th to gel: labor
and exchange work it is advisable
to use a small ﬁlling outﬁt and ﬁll
the“. gradually with help iound
onxthe farm- Instead of taking one
MyW-ihmorihmrorevena
week. Therashlnginoisilageat
the expense of many teams and men
multiplies the cost and labor, and
where break-downs occur the ex-
pense and annoyance are not soon
forgotten. “In communities Where
silos are numerous the ﬁlling is not
dreaded lmt counted a farm task as
haying or harvesting.

It is dililcult tor a stock— keeper
not havingasilotecmpstewxithone
who is using silage. The stock and
stock products is maternally lessened
by silage, and since this is true the
oils is not only an economic institu-
tion but a necessity for success.

- 00m silage is a cheap succulent

station; the crops for ﬁlling -8hould
be, grown close to the silo. and sil-
age .can The stored in liberal .qnanti-
There is little danger of get-
-i.ng too much on hand, lot it will
'lneep til-or several years. It can he
used as a forage bank and drawn
upon/at any time When needed. The
cost of producing silage is so'low

‘mddtisanohageadtoedthatit

should dorm the balk at the ration;
and 11! any dead must he purchased
it should be concentrates such as

_, mine and mill beds—A. L. Esecksr.

mama. and 73854 in the new
senior um year old champion
Ayrshire of Michigan. This
good Ayrshire heifer completed B
Advanced Registry recmd with 10, -
361 pounds of milk, 399 .45 pdunds
oi butter-fat. She is owned by “-
tleworth .Bros. Ypsilanti, Mich.

TWO NEW m CHM.
IONS IN JUNIOR CLASS

 

‘m, andwolnd themhevery'
«Me or the Union.
must be a season pier this silo move— ..

W m such as mentioned, can-

bellman-did class Silver “Helmet
Clare, owned by W. C. Cornwell 0.12
18 takes ﬁrst place with a
production of 19328.6 pounds of
milk and £27.90 pounds of fat or
784.87 pounds of butter.

NOT ENOUGH BOUGHAGE IN
FEED

Will you please tell me what to do
for .my sows. Theyeat bones, stones.
old shoes or almost anything. They
will get it in their mouth and stand
andlmssronltior anhonr atatlme.

They did this a year ago and are
new starting again.

The past winter I have led corn
silage night and morning, sweet
clover hay once and shredded corn
stalks once through the day. The
shredded stalks were some moldy.
me ensllage and sweet clover were
nice. For grain I have ted ground
oats, corn meal, wheat bran and oil
meal, mixed as tollows: 100 '.lbs
cats '50 1mm meal, 50 '.ibs bran.
'59 lbs. oat meal. They have had
Salt befnre them all the time I have
fed liberal with the roughage but
not with the grain—shout 1f1b. to 5
0! milk.

Three cows are fresh, two will be

soon. They all are in fair ﬂesh, and
feel good.‘ There is no clover in
the pasture and a year ago I had
none tor them through the winter. I
will appreciate it very much it you
can give me a remedy.—R. D., Pe-
toskey, Mich.
—You do not state just what you
are leading these cows at the present
time. You only stated what you
had led them during the past winter.
I talus itv'tlmt you are a little short
as roughage and if this is the .case
your cows may lack roughage. I
am inclined to think this is what
they lack more than anything else
although some sometimes lack min—
eral matter when they are fed .a suf-
1ﬁcant quantity of roughage even.
and they will behave in the reams
manner as your cows are doing at
the present time. A: a remedy tor
this I would newest that you add
some mineral matter to the ration.
—0. E. Reed, Professor of. Dairy
Husbandry. M. A. .G.

FEEDING POTATOES mo MILCH
COWS .

Will you answer in regards to po-
tatoes to milch cows? A neighbor
says they are harmful and reduce
the amount of milk, also hurt test
of. creams—L. 0., Sand Lake, Mich.

-——Pota2toes make a good feed for

 

.milch owe it they are not fed too

many at a time. They are just about
as valuable as corn silage. Twenty
pounds per day make a good feed
for the. average cow and I would not
advise giving more than that
amount. If a cow is fed all the po-
tatoes (she “wants, she will naturally
eat less of other foods and her ration
then will consist of more water than
nsual and she will naturally not get
as much dry matter in her food and
the milk now may shrink same. But
when fed in the same way as silage
along with other roughage and grain
you will not (notice any reduction in
the amount of milk. Often times
the milk and butter will show the ef-
.-fect oil overfeeding on potatoes. The
batter is otten salvy. .As far .as the
test of the .cream is concerned, they
will not affect the test of cream.—
0. E. Reed. Professor 0:: Dairy Hus-
bandry, M. A. C.

COTTON SEED MEAL ALONE
WILL NOT EFFECT COW

I mforstand by some that i! you
feed a cow cotton seed meal that she
will not come in heat. .Is this true?
Intondlng-lessthasapmttea
meal twicea day. —L. .D... Pentwater,
Michigan.

———Cottsn seed meal at itself will not
muse cows to come .‘la heat, @but it
is a well known fact that cows that
one do! as good ration. and such
ration may contain cotton seed meal.
silicone m beam-e regularly and
will be in better condition than cows
that are not fed cotton seed meal.
Coos-lees! moulds agesd'laeditor
dam battle and is parﬂsn‘larly valu-
dbls homes 1!! it high m con-

, ”tent and is arm nail Ismpply

M in balancing up a ration,
to ‘the use at mt-
p—Q n

    
 
   
   
 
 
 
   
   
 
  

 

of Use

The most remarkable evidence, giving additional proof
of the exceptional quality and durability of De Laval Cream
Separators, was disclosed by the “Oldest Users Contest”
which dosed on April 7th. Thousands of old De Laval
Separators from all parts of the North American continent
were entered. ”We wish to thank all who participated 1n this
contest for their splendid co-operation 1n securing the data,
which gives an accurate idea of just how long a De Laval
will last when properly cared for.

The average lite of the “Oldest De Lavals,” all of which
are stlll being used, was a little over 24 years. The oldest
De loyal entered is 32 years old and is owned by Joseph
Larocque of Lancaster, Ont, Canada.

In view of the fact that the average life of cream sepa-
rators other than De Lavals is about ﬁve years, it can
readily be seen from such unquestionable proof that the
De Laval 15 not only the best but four to ﬁve times cheaper
than other cream separators—and, remember, the 1923

7. De Laval is better than ever, has over four times the caper;

i-ty of these old machines, is greatly improved, costs less,
and will last even longer.

(7/56 994% (WWW

States are ﬁrst listed in alphabeticald order. followed by the name of the winner.
‘chdmumsﬁwednhepmed 325, thatdaﬂrmanthouepfﬂn
De Laval which men ﬁrst place in that state:

Ala. R.M .Davis, Talladega. 24 yrs. ,Ariz. L. L. Prouty, Casa Grande, 19 yrs. ,
Ark. Medlock Dairy Farm, Arkadelphia. 29 yrs. . Cal. B. M. Martin, Newark.
1811!: :01110- M. Miller, Weak-Jilin 24 m; Conn. “Mrs. E. Lana, Bockvills. 81 yrs. .
Del., 0. D. Lamborn, Newark, 28 yrs.;P Fla. Mrs. S. R. Pyles,

Ocala, 12 yrs. ;
Ga. C. L. Foster. Dalton. 28 yrs.: Ida. .G. Fairman. Jerome, 20 yrs.; I11.,F , G,
Palmer, an'kvﬂls. 23 yrs. : Ind. 1".Mo‘1ter. Lawrencéburg. 28 yrs.: 1a.. M Weill-ob,

D. Wﬁ Morrow, Blue Rapids, 30 yrs.; Ky., H. M. O'Nan.
. Sitger. New Orleans, 12 yrs. Mo., R. C. Briggs.
Frsedom, 24 yrs. , Md. Mrs. E. HHolbrook, Owings Mills. 24 yrs. Mass. ., W. D. Smith,
Bushland. 27 573.; Mich. ‘1“. Downs. Nashville. 24 yrs. ; Minn. C. H. Bragging
.11. Boas, Sessums, 18 yrs.: Mo., L. M. Lotta. Cari
.; Nah. I. C. Nichols.
. E. L. Jewett. Sullivan.
M., C. W. Jackard, Hayden.
A. B. McAulay, Hunk/ravine.

Kalona. Blyrs. Kane.
Springﬁeld, 27 yrs.: La... P

. Astls, Vinelanﬂ, 30 yrs.; N.
Y. Mrs. J. P. Morris. Olean.30yrs., N. C.,
24 yrs. N. D., Fred Jonson, Norma, 25 yrs. Ohio, Lee Nash, Xenia, 29 yrs. :
Okla... Lee Armstrong, Sailing, 20 yrs. :Drs. Clinkinheard Bros- Marshﬁeld, 28 yrst
Pa. M. Lazar, Sharpsville. 29 yrs. ; R. I., A. F. Clark. Westerly, 28 yrs. : S. 0.,
Mrs. J. E. McIvsr, Darlington, 18 yrs.° , S. D., H. Moseman. White Lake, 27 m;
Tenn. D. B. Hancock, FE' Chattanooga, 24 yrs. ; Tex. Mrs. F. P. McClure. San
Antonio, 22 yrs.. NUM’F .W. Cowley, Venice, 21 yrs. ; Vt., Ashton Souls. St. Albans.

31 yrs. :Va.. Hylton, Floyd. 22 yrs. Wash. M. Kintschi, Edwall, 23 m:
W. Va.. W. MWalkGer. Wellsburg, 27 yrs.; Wis... H. Petersen. Oconomowoc. 30 yrs. :
Wye. RJCatlin, Wheatland. 20 m; Hawaii. H. Iten, Mt. View. 12 yrs.

Tlie 1923 DeLava.
a: WWW.

As good as theseald De Laval Son-stars are, the 1923 De Laval is still
better. Naturally much has been in the design and manufacture of cream
separators during the past 40 years. and purchasers of praent-day machines reap
the beneﬁt of such experience.

TwanwaﬂveyeauagoansLavﬂ Smraiornf 2501bncapaci arbour
cost $125—today one of the largest sized De Lavals with 1000 lbs. oyftfur times
the capacity per hour. can be bought for approximately the same amount a!
money, and one of about the same capacity can 'be bought for approximately half.
In addition it has many improvements in design and construction, is made of
better mama. does dietmr work. is under to handle sud can. for, and will last
even longer. This applies fbe all sizes .1 present-day De Innis.

you are using an n erior or worn-out separator, you may be wasting 9110 h
huﬂnn—fattopuMnnewDoLaval and notgst it. Eonmbuyanslnuv‘al
on such em terms it will pay for itself.
write an abut getting a {new one.

The De Laval Separator Company
165 Broadway 29 'EMadisonSt. 61 ﬁeale Street
How York Clio-go Surat-launches;

Sooner or later you will use a

Laval ' 5‘

See your De Lam] Agent now .

1.. /‘..

24 Years 1

 

 

 

 

 
   
    
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
  
 
 

  
 

New».

   
    
   
   
   
   
   
   


‘ “14,114,“,‘m, 1-...

“vertical-name inserted under this detained-.1» repute»: nmam or Liv. “can " m we
rate: to enoo are Inc of nthe far arm: or our readers. Our adv i on

Fla ‘1' mo Cents (0800') “perw a “Er Ine’ Foourteen aoetle dnennuo? monumn 43th
' n rtlon. WILL PUT IT IN TYPE
g“ month follewlng “datehgfwlm it will fill. Ad dm all "glam:

III
E‘EDERSW DIRECTORY, .MIOHIGAN- BUSINESS F RMERV ”Mir. CLEMENS; MIOH.

 

lTSAMERE---CEDAR BEND’
DISPERSAL SALE OF

AEBHEﬂliEﬂ HﬂlSiEIN- HIESIANS

,At Cedar Bend Farm, on M-16, 10 mi. East of Lansing—Okemos, Mich.

MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1923'

All consignments, except those from fully accredited herds are sold
subject to 60-90 day retest.

The accredited herd of E. P. Kinney consists of 23 head and is head-
ed by a son of Carnation King Sylvia, whose dam has 24 lbs. and:
carries about 90% of the same blood of the world’s milk producer’
Segis Pictertje Prospect. This bull togather with sons and daughters
of his will be sold.

Itsamere herd fully accredited consists of 21 head including a, 19 lb.
Jr. 2-yr. -old, daughter of a 30 lb. cow, and most of the herd are sired
by 30 lb. bulls. '

Supplementing this sale are consignments from the following herds:
H. D. Box & Sons, who enter 11 head including 24 lb. daughter of a
33 lb. cow with 772 lbs. milk, she having 3 records averaging over 39
lbs. in 7 days.

A. R. Black & Sons, of Lansing, sell a 26 lb. cow and two sons of
their Grand Champion Show Bull of the Michigan State Fair 1922, and
one is by a 8-yr.-old that led her class in the 305 day division last year
in Michigan. .

F. E. Fogld, of Okemos, will sell a well bred 3-yr.-old heifer.

H. E. Rising, of Woodland, a son of a 29 1b. cow, she a daughter of
a 32 1b. cow.

Harry Schultz, of Lansing, sell a proven son of Dutchland Creanelle
Korndyke Lad.

Sale will start promptly at 10 o’clock, central standard time.

Col. s. '1‘. WOOD, Liverpool, N. Y.

E. MACK, Ft. Atkinson, Wis.
In the Box

Auctioneer

SEND FOR CATALOGUE TO 0. A. DANIELS, OKENIOS, MICE.

Col. J.

, present colds.

 

 

 

MIBHIEAN HEHEEUHD AllllilliNS

68 Cows and Heifell-s; 80 calves go free with their dams.

10 Lots. 14 Bulls. No better blood.

10° Head. Fall-faxes. Disturbers, Woodiords. Anxlet es.

Moneymaker-s.

RAMSEY’S SALE, JUNE 7th

tatlon Pere Marquette Ry. Naif-w between Harbor Beach and Port Hope
enAIE'IuEIEEEl’fstggre8 Rood.’ 6 Balls. 28 Cows and Mel ers: 1B calves.

BAKER’S SALE, JUNE 8th

Hereford Farm. 8 Blocks from Station of Port Huron A Detroit
IAecErIE‘Ry‘EU'C' simi‘ﬁom local stop. 1 Bulls. 28 Cows and heifers; 14 calm

LE k t practically to pay practical people proﬁts under present ressing
{Erantocll'I-ilge‘ng. “LIE-m 'Mlzgigan's unique Hereford system It pays . rd readers
will ultimately Jelnl t. It you get as good individuals elsewhere you will pay more for them.
Enjoy a Ilehloan Trip. Motor to these sales. For CATALOGS giving "mgr... and
”WWW—“m” T. F. B. SOTHAM & SONS
(Sales Managers. Hereford: Since 1839.)
St Clair, Michigan. Phone 250.

 

 

 

 

DISPERSION SALE OF

45 HEM] HEEISTEHEI] HﬂlSTEIN- EHIESIAH BATTLE

owned by WILLIAI F. SHENAN. Howell, Mich.
With a draft of 20 head from other good herds at Sales Pavilion, Fair Grounds. Howell, Ilob.

+I‘IURSDAY. JUNE 14, 1923. AT 12:00 O'OLOOK, NOON
8bn11s.2from811b, damsthatareﬂttoheedhishch-berds.

umber be fresh. Fine individuals, heavy producers. .m to
Effoﬂ‘li'am Anumbg‘hav'emreeords. oneu blah as 28 lbs:
A M opportunity to secure good foundation stock.
(Badlands: summonses-31W) Ii‘ceateiusireadan-e 15:.)
00l— J. I. MACK, Auctioneer. Address. F. J. FISHIECK, Hogan, .1013.

 

 

 

11111) roman ounmrms

 

-—A few choice bulk
and heifers for sale.

“and.” w a N. Lamina. sues” In :2.

~ ., N '
IIBOAUKEE en‘szulsﬁavgmamfsw .3201»
.‘E-E'lﬂsémrrn,uu OM. Em... '

 

ER —REGI ENE. CUE—TIC Y HEIF-
eigsttﬂigmb org-res elso oholeeb bnlfcel use!

 

 

TROUBLE MAY BE DUE TO TWO
CAUSES--

I wish to know What is the matter
with my hogs. They are not feeling
right. I have twenty-six hogs shut
up in my hog house and they are
getting poor instead. of fat. I have
them divided in two bunches. The
hogs weigh 165 pounds apiece.
They have been shut up for four
weeks on corn "and alfalfa and a.
warm_ drink twice a day, half milk
and water mixed. In my hog house
I have cement feeding ﬂoors and

sleeping pen separate from feeding T’
.. room and plank ﬂoor.

They don‘t
have any appetite, they don’t seem
to be sick or dumpish, they seem to
breath like a heaving horse, their
sides seem to thump in and out
much harder than common. They,
seem to have a slight cough, but

don’t seem to strangle or choke.‘

The twenty-six hogs now are eating
seven bushels of corn and a small
feed ofvaifalfa and drink 25 gallons
of milk and water daily, but fail to
fatten—R. F. D., Leslie, Mich.

l—It is rather difﬁcult to tell just

what ails your pigs. Your trouble
is“ due to either one of two causes.
Either these hogs are severely infect-
ed with intestinal parasites, or your
quarters have not been properly
ventilated, causing them to steam
during the night and they have

» caught cold.

If the latter cause was the trouble,
it would be best to open the quarters
and give them air enough so that
they will remain dry when piled up
in the nest, and give them a. laxative
ration for a. few days in order to
assist them in getting over their
This could be done
by giving some bran in the milk
and water which you are feeding,
and adding to it one teaspoonful of
epsom salts per hog.

If worms are the cause of your
trouble, it would be best to buy
some capsules or tablets for the pur-
pose of eliminating the worms.
These can be obtained from any re-
liable drug house, or perhaps thru
your local drug houses. It would
be best to purchase a capsule or
tablet upon either santonin or oil of
Vchenopodium.—Geo. A. Brown, Prof.
of Animal Husbandry, M. A. C.

HAVE VETERINARIAN EXAMINE
SOW

I have a fat sow that has been
paralyzed for three months in" hind
parts. Does not stand on hind legs
at all. One veterinary took her
temperature and said it was normal
and said it would be all right to
butcher her. Would you please let
me know whether this would be all
right to market? Hog eats well
and seems all right otherwise—D.
J. T., Moline, Michigan.

——-It would very likely be very difﬁ-
cult to get any hog buyer to buy your
sow in a. parlyzed condition. Her
carcass may perhaps be all right for
humane consumption after she has
been killed and dressed. I would
prefer however to have the carcass
inspected by a competent veterinar—

after she has been killed ‘and
dressed to make sure that it is all
right. It may. be perfectly all right
but it will depend somewhat upon
what the cause of the paralysis is.
——John P. Hutton, Professor of Surg-
ery and Medicine, M. A.

[T BELONGED TO KITTY
“0h. mother!" cried youthful 'Mildred. "I
found a little flee. en kitty and I caught it!"
“Whatdidyoudewith it.I"asked1notber
','Why Iputitbackonkitbuain, ofeonne.
It was her flea."

 

‘ 58 Herefords 880 lbs.

 

E“ . If? «seldf‘dcs as:
' n... so. .2... 35""

vise us at once amine ‘
for ou. Address, Live ems r.rditol‘.
F.. t. Clemens

May 31—Shorth'orn‘s sd 'Ber kshirHimon'
G. Maicllle, Mi leville, Mic
June 4—Holsteins, C. A. Daniels, kelnoe.

lchica
June 7Et§1§refor€dahaner Ramsey. AWL
011, 1c 1 an
June silil‘erefn ords, obi. Baker. St. Clair.
1c 1
June 12—Agerdeen Angus. Aberdeen Angus
Association, East Lens
June 1mm. Wm. r. ”shell-In.

Michigan.
June 22F5horthoyms 0.11.3. Prewott I: Sons,
Oct. 18—Holsteins Howell Sales Company of
vinfston County. Wm Griffin. Sec’y.
- FLilnwe l, Mich.

 

 

 

‘

HOLSTEINS
WILL a; noun or

 

“YOU THEM”

Wonderful chance to t register e
DR. CHIVERS, Jackson, Michigan.

FASCINATION FARM vassan. MICHIGA
Holsteins, registered fully accredited .3
sire. Write your want. 1

r mnnroans

HEREFORDSﬂd

Young Cows with calves b
consistins of blood from mer-
ica’s foremost herds at

that enable them under

 

 

. udmx prpl:
winners at the is or showsa
practical prices. erds headed;

by Straight Edge 169786, one of two sons oi
Perfection Fairfax out of a daughter of the
famous Disturber.

T. F. B. SOTHAM a SONS
(Herefords since 1839) Saint Clair, Mich.

Steers For Sale

90 Herefords 800113
44 Hereford: 36:01“. lbs.

 

 

6-1 Herefords 720 lbs.
48 Herefords 500 lbs. 44 Herefords
Know of other bunches. If in the market for real
quality dehomed, deep reds, good stacker order
choice one load or more from any bunch.
0l'ite stating number and weight preferred.

VAN BALDWIN, Eldon, Wepeilo Co.. Iowa.

AN GUS

IIirE HAVE SOME FINE YOUNG ANGUS BULL.
from International Grand Champion Stock
R& 00., Addllon.

 

 

 

reasonable prices. E. H. KERR
Mich.

 

 

SHORTHORNS

mR—iEhland Shorthorns

SPECIAL OFFER: Two choicsly bred cows
One roan——One white—~0ne with bull calf at foot
by son of I.MP Rodne. This show stock of real
caliber and great fcun stion material. A bargain
at the price.

C. H. Prescott & Sons.

Off! Herd at
Tawas City, Mich. Tawas City, Mich.

SHORTHORNS

Home of Me Commander, NJunior Cham-
on at the recent ternational. Now h the time
buy. We have severpguﬁounz cows and heifers,
bredto this wonderful for sale. Also, sev-
eral bulls and heifers of breeding are. from our
other noted sire, Perfection Heir 8111. Visit or
write us at one
8. H. PANGBORN and SONS, lad Axe, Mich.

Write Central Michigan Shorthorn
Breeders Ass’n, Greenville, chiun for list of
Milking Shortborns, all ages, priced to sell.

 

 

 

 

RAISE SHORTHORNB
Like Kelle U. 8. Ac credited
28 945. rdescriptio on and pric write,

L.C. KELLYG ASON, Plymouth. Michigan.

JERSEYS

REG. JERSEYS, POOGIS 99th OF H. F. AND
Majesty breeding. unz stock for sale. Herd
fwullyt accredii’ﬁcl bfy Bfgtr; ee.'rld!¥:itlde1'a.l Government.
1- or WWW
r”buoy c. WILBUR, BELDING, Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

BROWN SWISS

FOR SALE—VEL VIERDEs BROWN SWISS
Cattle, registered. 13111 and calves rite
ED. RISWOLD, R. 1. wBeiialre, Michigan.

 

 

 

O. I. O.

o I 0’s MARCH FARROWED COW AND
I I Boar Pigs. sired by Michigan“. Giant
with lenty range“ and good books,

$20.1!de czar-m
paid. Maple Valley stock Farm, North Adams lab.

I. C.'8. 1 GILT 18 MONTHS HOLD, WEIGHT
380. due June 3rd. 10 last lldlts due A
and Sept. 1 last fall boar s not
Record free. BCits.c hone. mile wut of depot.

O'I'I'O B. ULZE, Nashville, Mich.

 

 

 

 

(Other Livestock Ads on Page 28)‘

 

 

ﬂaws" 'uoxenl'g'b" “ entra’ierw mm
l’oﬁna. la Inc

a. o. recalls. Auctioneer

 

PUBLIC AUEBTiON, Ma»; 1.1.1.923

Shorthorn Cattle and Berkshire SOws

Nine cows one with calf at side. Five heifersand ,
.11 ethbredbylen uhehAOenaRound Greys,
old. White Goods by Fair Acre

six miles straish t edstfof

nine bulls sired b Sliver Imam
I. Cow, are hand

 

 

WITHOUT HORN. ’ "
Herd Ne.


‘ , healthier than ever before.

The. following letter will no doubt

of utmost interest to poultry rais-.

;_ g 3 who have had serious losses from
to Diarrhea. We will let Mrs.
Bradshaw tell of her experience in
r own words:
. v- ‘Gen'tiemen: I see reports of so
.many‘ losing their little chicks with
White Di arrhea, so thought I would
tell my experience. I used to lose a
great many from rthis cause, tried
many remedies and was about dis-
savaged. Asala‘stresortlsent to
the Walker Remedy 00., Dept. 680,
. Waterloo, Iowa, for their Walko
V‘White Diarrhea Remedy. I used two
50c packages, raised 300 White
"Wyandottes and never lost one or
had one sick after giving the medi-
cine and my chickens are larger and
I have
found this company thoroughly re-
liable and always get the remedy by
return maii.--—Mrs. C. M. Bradshaw,
Beaconsiield, Iowa.”

Cause of White Diarrhea
_Wh.ite Diarrhea is caused by the
Bacillus Bacterium Pullorum: This
germ is transmitted to the baby chick
through the yolk of the newly hatch-
“ed egg. Readers are warned to be-
" ware of White Diarrhea. Don't wait
until it kills half your chicks. Take
’ the “stitch in time that saves nine."
Remember, there is scarcely a hatch
without some infected chicks. Don’t
let these few infect your entire ﬂock.
Prevent'it. Give Walko i n all drink-
ing water for the ﬁrst two weeks and
you won't lose one chick where you
lost hundreds before. These letters
prove it:

Never Lost a Single Chick
Mrs. L. L. Tam, Burnetts Creek.
Inch, writes: “I have. lost my share of
chicks from White Diarrhea. Finally
_I sent for two packages of Waiko. I
raised over 600 chicks and I never

arduoumkwfn'i’goahm btit wth:
0 pro 11' u

chicks strength and. visor; m3? doveiop'i'e'cm
and feather earlier."

' , Never Lost One After First Dose

Mrs. Ether Rhoades, Shennandoah,
Iowa, writes: “My ﬁrst incubator
chicks, when l a few days old, be-
gan to die by the doz~ us with White

Diarrhea. I tried different remedies

and was about discouraged with the chicken busi-
Finally, Icon tto the Walk Raw.
Waterloo. Iowa. for a box of their Wslko its
iarrhea Kennedy. It) the on? thin: for
this terrible raised 00
hchiealthy chicks and no var lot a single

You Run No Risk

'We will send Walko White Diar-
rhea. Remedy entirely at our risk——
postage pmpaid——so you can see for
yourself what a wonder-working
remedy it is for White Diarrhea in
baby chicks. So you can prove—as
thousands have proven———that it will
stop your losses and double, treble,

even quadruple your profits. Send
30c for a box of Walks or $1. 00‘“ for extra
large box—v—five it in all ldrinking f

ﬁrst two In and watch mutant“ You'l‘lr 11th

too. If you don't
greatest little chick aver
ed. your money willbe beinstantly rdun’ged. ﬂ.

we... Rudy c... Dept. can, mm”, 1m

BRAND NEW

 

 

 

I NOT ENOUGH OUTDOOR
EXERCISE .

On March 15th, I had 200 baby
chicks shipped from Grand Rapids,
and they arrived here in a blizzard
and of course they were badly
chilled, and died by tens until all
were gone except forty. They did
very well until about three weeks
old. They were in a small com-
partment in large broader house run
by hard coal heaters. This compart-
ment had a board ﬂoor but I had
put sand and ﬁne gravel on the ﬂoor

- but their legs and feet got all crip-

pled up, and when they got about it
was by ﬂying and ﬂuttering of wings.
Leading out of these compartments
are large runways with cement ﬂoor.
Itook sand and covered the cement
ﬂoor about an inch and a half and
dampened it, and shut chicks out
there in day time, and nearly all got
well and over, the lameness and
started growing again. And new
again I have four or live that can
hardly get around they are so badly
crippled. They do not have acess to
outside ground as the snow has been.
deep until the last two days. They
are fed with the following: Commer-
cial chick feed, cracked corn and
some wheat. have bran, ground green
alfalfa, charcoal and shell, butter-
milk or thick sour milk and water
in front of them at all times. Can
you tell me what is wrong? Some
tell me the damp sand will cause
rheumatism. but I read an article a
few weeks ago similar to this and
the woman said she saved a flock by
putting them out to paddle in the
mud.—-W. A. R., Petoskey, Mich.
——Your experience is typical of many
others who hatched chicks early this
season. Unfortunately, the spring
has been cold and damp with the re-
sult that many chicks did not get
sufﬁcient outdoor exercise early in
life, and leg weakness in nearly
every case occurred.

Chicks cannot be conﬁned longer

,,than two or three weeks without de—

veloping signs of leg weakness. It
is a good practice to encourage the
chicks to take out door exercise
when they are from ten days to two
weeks of age; however, we have
been able to reduce and practically
eliminate this trouble by careful
feeding.

Green food in some form or an—
other such as sprouted oats, chopped
cabbage, etc., furnishes dietary es-
sentials in preventing leg weakness
due to faulty nutrition. Ordinarily
it is a good practice to feed green
food after the fourth day and if out"
door exercise is furnished in addi-
tion to a diet containing leaf greens
very seldom any trouble from leg
weakness will develop.

We have had exceptionally satis-
factory results in feeding lime water
to correct excessive acidity, and sup-
plying a mash containing equal parts
by weight of bran and rolled oats
moistened with tomato juice plus
about one per cent cod liver oil.
Chicks will usually yield to this
treatment showing a marked im-
provement within twenty—four hours.
——E. C. Forman, Associate Professor
of Poultry Husbandry, M. A. C.

A NEW CORN CHAMPION
CCORDING to the Agricultural
Extension Department of the
Ohio State University, a farmer
of Licking County, Ohio, William H.
Gilmore, raised more corn last year,
on ten acres of land than has ever
been raised before.» The record is
ofﬁcial, having been made in connec-
tion with the annual 10-acre corn
contest conducted by the university.
Mr. Gilmore produced 1,343.1 bush-
els of air-dried shelled corn on his

10 acres, an average of 134.3 bush- .

els per acre, 93.3 bushels greater
than Ohio’s average yield.

“Mr. Gilmore," said one of the un—
iversity oﬂlcials, “has averaged over
100 bushels per acre for three years,
but this year made very special ef-
forts to break all existing records.
He plowed down a clover sod, half

. of which had been manured, and ap-

plied 18 per cent acid phosphate at
the rate of 500 pounds per acre. The
ﬁve agrgsoowithm manure had an
extra po s 0 an 0-10-10
tortillas!

. Thesesdwassownthreo,

”Walthiudto

 

Nearly everyone else owns a car! Why not
you? It is not a question of money. Your spare
time for a few weeks, mixed with preseverance and
“gumption,” is all that 18 necessary to win this latest
model Chevrolet Touring Car.

Or, if you already own a car, get a radio set,
baby chicks, pure-bred fowls, poultry books, etc.

It is the official organ of the Michigan State
Poultry Association that makes this offer and our
reliability is unquestioned. Someone is bound to
File the car—~why not you. Send post card for

e 13.

$10. 00 PER DAY‘CASH

If you prefer cash, drop us a post card at once,
and we will send you details of our new method that
enables any honest energetic person to make $10 per
day, or more.

This is our own method, which we have tested
for the past 6 months, and we know it gives an agent
50 to 500% better chance to earn real money, than
any other ever tried.

Free Pamphlet

“ VITAMINES gAND CHICKS "
y

Prof. H. C. Foreman, Head of the Poultry Dept. at
a Michigan Agricultural College.

The big feature of our May number is Prof.
Foreman’s “Vitamine” article, which announces the
wonderful effect of Vitamine foods on Baby Chicks.
He gives actual, facts and illustrations of results al-
most miraculous when Vitamines» were supplied.
Luckily, these Vitamins foods are common to every
household, and Prof. Foreman explains which ones
to use.

. Already the demand for this article has almost
exhausted our May edition, so we reprinted it in
pamphlet form which we will give free to readers of
the “Business Farmer” who subscribe direct from
this ad., at our special trial price of 50c per year.
ORDER TODAY, before the pamphlets are exhaust-

ed.
MODERN POULTRY BREEDER
Battle Creek, Mich.

 

High Pro duciné laszsesabycmck

gap-say WMWM

Fully guaranteed, direct from Trspnested. Pedigreed Tom Barron and Holly-1

'23... weed Imported White Leghorn; World' a champion layers. Not ind a to"

300+“ birds, but a high ﬂock average egg production—thst' s where you

make your Hatched in the largest and ﬁnest Hatchery in Michigan. by
those who know how. Bargain prices If you order now. We can also saw. y.
m on Brown Logborns. Anconas Barred Rocks, Rhode Island Beds and“!-
Wyn-idols“. Wu guaranteed or your money back. '

We, couplets catalog free for the asking. Write for It teddy.

surnames mum_rARM5._—P—°Ml‘-zeelantm.m

 

Dan! uﬂicKHROM SELku‘T ED FLOCKO
Six leading? varieties. Populard prices and guaranteed

delivery. rite for EcatsE and price l'mt. 0 can use a
James. lie

few earn-
est me n
and women put

 

 

TOBACCO

 

”A000. cums I
1.15. W00 20
m 5 pounds man-2 $10 but“
«fft‘s‘tonmaéb’gnowm
roesooo.

snide-“mm, ,

 

LII“!
_, i351“:

 

 


 

.111.

 

R
OR
aflONAls

  

 

‘ and“

 

 

 

 

 

and RE
WYOANDO‘I'TES I‘WI'IITE asomgs'h RUFF ROﬂ'“

 

 

10.00

 

 
 
 

7 g: MINORCAS. do" oA

. . rme TII
‘ .EXTIIA enscrao noon ’

Hots of 500

 

OP mm “$0000“-

 

  

Poslpsid full live delive guaranteedﬁs
visor-nus. pure-bred variell'yies carefully selected
all and save a and ppoin tment. crease

and month of
ANCONAS,

For May 28
LEGHORNS.

Caref packed and s hipped

 

Reference.

PARKS

Send for our free catalog an

Len-gem I’I'Ic:d List for return ma a.II

mg.“ the most modern method of Incubation from good
pakc ed. No catalogue. Order ht from thil
Chesanlng Bank or any business on esaning.

June.

Addﬁu BABION'S FRUIT AND POULTRY FARM, Guy L. Bablon. Prop" Chesanlng, MIOI'I.

REDUCED PRICES

Barron ty'pe WHITEd LEGHORNS).
BARRED OCKS and RE D.S

Full live count guaranteed.
e

TIMMER’S HATCHERY, R. 3 A, Holland, Mich.

 

 

From seleaged. heavy

$6.75; 10 5031"? 8.2
Extra Select,
hatched modern machines.

28 per 100 higher. Mixed Chicks, 50,

full live arrival guaranteed. Bank reference an
safe in ordering direct from this ad NOW
have our careful personal attention. WE WANT YOUR.

WINSTROM FARM & HATOHERIES, Box H 5. Iceland,

 

BABY CHICKS $10 per 1001a11d UP

n’gomus hens. White and Brown Le horns 6A_n00616s, 50g

50. Barred Rocks, 50,

(5.5 0:10'0, s1°;d 500:3

$08. 50;

refuily and correcty packed 11nd shi p.ped Pos

O'W7edll
noﬁ u want them.
USINESS. Catalog Free.

Michigan

 

 

  
    
 

June Delivery,

' 001.660. 1 00 0/0

10c Each.

from

delivery guaranteed. Order now,
ROYAL HATCHERY a FARMS. R. 2. Iceland. Mich. 8. P. Wlersma. Prov.

Extra selected, 1 1 IA c.

ENGLISH WHITE LEGHORNS, BROWN LEGHORNS.11 years of breeding
for egg production. Highest quahty chicks

tested layers. Satisfaction guar-
15.11111 1'c1e1ence Catalog free.

 

 

Reduced Prices
BABY CHICKS

I o s t Paying, Heavy
Layinsgtr, aliusrebred

Tom Barron English
C. . L

 

100, $10; 0500, $45;

1000
Park's 0Str aln Barred Rock 5: C.
50, 38:8100,

Rhode Island Reds-25. $3:
$12; 500. $55; 1000, $110.
Good strong broiler chicks, $8 per 100.
Place your order at once; avoid dis-
appointment. Get your chicks when you
want them. 100% live delivery guaran-
teed postpaid.1nstructive catalog free.
Prices on mature stock. 8- 12 weeks old
pallets on request.

Brummer-Frederickson Poultry Farm,
Box 26, Holland, Mlc .

 

 

N-

"I have used y
Remedy with fine
Monte, Methodist

 

llﬂWNS’ BHIBKS

Extra Selected, English White Leghorns
from my very best breeding pens, 011 and
r June 15th at $100 per hundred.
011 orders now. Write for my 16 page
White Leghorn Catalogue.

\V . A . D O W N S
Washington, Mich.

 

hio. ”Mentioned
a few weeks ago.

  
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

CHICKS 10c

The kind that are husky and grow fast
lor June delivery. Leghorns 10c, An-
sense 11c, Barred Rocks 12c. Special

on eggs for tching. We prepay
fore ourﬁa ycatalogue

BYRON CENTER POULTRY yFARM,
Byron Center, Mich.

losses now.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TDeKoster’s Hatchery

Strong. vigorous Chicks fro
lected heav la aying ENG GLISH

STRAIN W ITE LEGHORNS and
BROMIN E

L GHOR 100,
s12.so- 500 $30. THO 01hr sons:
HOL TERMAN STRA AIN BAsRRED
R00 8 and ANCONAS,100.
$18; 500. $87. 50. Postpaid, full
Ijve delivery guaran Catalog
free. Bank Reference.

.E- KOSTER’S HATGHERY. Box X, Iceland, Mich

E—ABY CHIC‘KS

EGHORNS, 50.

 

 

In strains 8. W.
ghslgksh.o;1oo, $12.00. 500, $15,060.500
Barred Rocks . 77.50 514. 00 $65. 00

   

7.50 14.00
...... 8.50 16.00 75.00

t b ll of Ma and June '1 rices. Or-
}???th 33m sad. First ational Ban , reference.

_BLISSFIELD HATOHERY, Illssﬂeld. Mich.

Cured Her

Rheumatism

mln “PI-2:“ terrible exude-Inc: the Isuﬂa‘
0 let Street 0-489.

kfl VI
11 ItddosII'snI:

E's“ slmnls m

S. O. R. I. Reds
R. C. W. Wyandotte

 

 

      
  

   
 

.0..Mun

 

No muss.

ing water.
cal to use.
alwaﬁsD be

Be pr
on 11a

as City 0. .. for
bottle of Imperial
his strength). and

angular
Remedy. ay post
postage on arrival.

and Mite Remedy,
laying—ell for $1.

 

to be dro ped occasionally
form Rage every chick

n.d
NO MONEY.
dress to Imperial Laboratories,

be sent this regular $4 .00 value
Readers risk no money. as Impe
are fully responsible and will refund the cost on
request any time within 30

‘New Way to Rid
Poultry of Lice
Rev. G. R. Mente Tells of Amazing Dis-

c‘overv Which Keeps Hens and Chicks

Free From Vermin

 

 

Few Drops of Liquid in Drinking Water
Does it—No More Dusting,
Spraying or Greasing

our remarkable Lice and Mite
results, " writes Rev. G. R.
Parsonage, New Washington,
this at a Farmer’s Institute
Consequently, farmers by the

dozen have been after me every since to ﬁnd out

where and how they could get it. It has put a

- stop to the poultry losses in this community. You
are a great benefactor to poultry raisers.’

Lice and Mites Go Like Magic

This remarkable new dis-

covery which Rev. G. It.

Mente, used is Imperial Lice

and Mite Remedy. Just a few

drops occasionally in the fowls
drinking water makes Lice,
Mites, Ticks and all vermin go
like magic. No
disagreeable and miss ni-
t a r y dusting. spray] ng,
greasing or digging.
Equally good for ck-
e11s, Turkeys, Ducks.
G e e s e. and Pigeons
Fine for baby chicks and
makes them healthier.
sturdier and grow faster.

poultry raisers
know ,that sickly. lice-in-
fecmd hens cannot lay or

 

have 005 hatches. Vermin sap the very life
and sti‘ength of hens and baby chicks. Stop
Guaran
ﬂesh of dfoglls din 11% e:vay A
to an 00 p11
mgriigy- back guarantee of satisfaction. -

White Diarrhea Remedy Free
(Regular $1. 00 Size Package)

At last a Wefuss treatment for this dread disease.
No

if t these
t a so e Ks or
“ct 1.20 a spleid‘id egg

Costs but a triﬂe. on

Comes in condensed tablet
in chicks' drink-
hhatc h.ed Econom-
epared. These remedies should
Just your name and ad-

Det 6399, Kan—
one regula r, Full size $1. 00
Lice and Mite Remedy (dou-
they will include free of cost,

1.00 box of Imperial White Diarrhea

man on $1. 00 and few cents
0r. slylarge size Trial Pack-

f either one of these remedies for 50c.
“alloyou have a large ﬂock, this Special Intro-
ductory Oder also applies on a double ttquantize!
both remedies—two regular 1.00111:

bot tie?) of
and two regular $1.

ages of White Diarrhea Remedy at an deitional

75. eciiy that on
or only' $1W5 5.

l Laboratories

Simply

days.

 

HIGHEST

a.
1| :2“...

your door.
and
satisfaction

I“;

 

 

  
  

Books
Wml' tested Hounized

range stock that make wonderful
513313311: by 1Insured Parcel Post Prepaid

mtogal
. Got lgwest price on best quality

QUALITY CHlCKS
Michigan’ 5 Old
Reliable Hatchery
(The most mo and l

a how

best‘equippedH

in the stats )

PURE BBEB E551; ’
and American S. O.

W. Leghorns: S. O. .
Ancon nas Barr ed

Lﬁeds. Stu-one

ah1001;», live deliivery 1;;-

es exp. -

oh cks has you ad-.

to thousands. rite for
and D

 

32.00 por 1.0.1.1... i

IREaWdN '
HealtléylyChicks from selected heavy laying ﬂocks mated with strong vigorous males.

gostpaid to your door.
reduced prices before placing your or

1110110 '

iii ‘
“'00 f.

‘ diﬁerent color to those hatched by

'weakness, however, may be due to

 

'heni.
land Red hatched three goelinge and
one chick. A week later a White
Rock hen hatched three gosling s and
two chicks and she would not have
these queer looking baby gosllngs

and packed them until I took them ‘

to the Rhode Island Red, and she

took them without a murmur, but-
,when I gave her the extra chicks‘

she wouldn’t have them. Then the
little Bantam came off with baby
chicks a week later, and I gave her
the two chicks and she took them.
.She went on the nest for a week to
start with, never laid on egg and
then went to setting and hatched out
baby chicks. This morning I had
two goslings hatch and gave them
to the Rhode Island Red. I guess
she would take all the go: slings one
would give her. But it still being
too cold to keep the three little ones
out of doors I brought them in and
gave them to the Bantam, and she
squawked about such looking babies
and when I put them under her and
told her she had to keep them. I
guess she understood for she made
no more fuss and they eat and sleep
all together now and all are happy.
——Mrs. T. R., Allegan, Michigan.

——It is a common practice for poul-
trymen to incubate eggs artiﬁcially
and then induce a foster mother to
raise the chicks. It is probably a.
more common practice to set the in-
cubator and the hens at the same
time and when the entire hatch is
completed to transfer the chicks
from the machines to the hens. In
making this transfer, one should be
very careful not to add chicks of

the hen, because she will immediate-
ly detect that they do not belong 10
her own brood and is very liable to
peck and abuse the chicks to such
an extent that high mortality re-
sults altho you do not mention the
color or the breed of the chicks pro—
duced.

I would surmise the reason why
these hens did not adopt the chicks
more gracefully was due to the vari-
ety of color. It is not a good prac—
tice to rear goslings and chicks to—
gether as their habits are so entire-
ly different. Little difﬁculty is ex-
perienced in giving each hen chicks
of the same color and if different
breeds are being raised together,
each hen should be given a few eggs
from the different breeds so that
she will have a variety of colors
among the chicks she 'hatches.——E.
C. Foreman, Associate Professor of
Poultry Husbandry, M. A; C.

 

COMBINATION OF DISEASES

We are troubled with a disease
among our hens. First it causes
their heads to swell around the eyes,
then they become lame, they get very
thin and die. Could you please tell
us what this disease is called and
also What to do for it?——Mrs. J. S.,
Brown City, Michigan.

—From the symptoms described, the
trouble could be diagnosed as a com-
bination of either Chicken Pox or
Roup, and Tuberculosis or some
nutritional disturbance.

Ordinarily in the case of Roup a
discharge is usually apparent in the
nostrils and a swelling in front of
the eye altho the entire eye may be- '
come affected in severe cases. In
the case of Chicken Pox, brownish
or blackish scabs appear on the comb
and wattles and in real severe cases
cankerous growths develop in the
throat and mouth causing a high
mortality due to diﬂicult breathing.
In the case of nutritional disturb-
ances a puﬂiness usually occurs
around the eye without an accumul-
ation of puss: The birds in such
cases generally possess good appe-
tites but are usually weak and low
in fertility. -

Lameness is SOmetimes one of the
external symptoms of Tuberculosis,
especially when it occurs in the left
leg and is accompanied by an emaci-
ated condition. Some forms of leg

Rheumatism caused by faulty hous-
ing conditions. It may also be due
at, “spring complaint" or, “Layers’
cramps" both of which have their
origin in faulty nutrition—E. C.
Foreman,

   

' e ' ' ' " tam
Easter Sunday the Rhode 13-.

1
....... 12150 #1141

MORENOI HAIEFOQHIRY.M1 '

WII.. Br., Buff Leghorn 1011; Br.
Wh. Rook. Reds. Wh. Wm. B. 0m,

12s:
Assrt. 9c: Assrt. large breeds,10c. Catalog

POULTRY BREEDER’S
-—DIRECTOR

Advertisements Inserted under '
this heading at 300 per agate line,
. per issue. Commercial Baby Chick
advertisements 450 per agate lino.
IVrite out what you have to other
and send It in. We will put- it in
type. send proof and quote rates by
return mail. Address The Michigan
Business Farmer. Advertising De-
partment. Mt. Clemens, Michigan. ‘

 

 

1

 

 

 

 

 

QUALITY Chick Price} «:2...

Rock 1103‘ .-

tree.
MISSOURI POULTRY FARMS, Columhls. Mo. 1

 

 

S. C. White Leghorns and S. C. and R. 0. Black
Minorcas. Must make room before cold weatl or.
About ready to lay.

LAPHAM FARMS, Pinckney, Mlch.

JOHN’S BIG BEAUTIFUL BARRED ROCKS
are hen hatched, good layers, quick growers, light
and' dark matings, 30- -eggs $3.50. 50- $5.00 nost-
age paid circulars. John Northon, Clare. Mich.

 

 

 

HATCHIN G EGGS

HATCHING EGGS

S. 0. White Leghorns. Tom Barron Strain. 250
egg utility line. November to April, average 65
er cent. Pure white plumage.
ealthy, vigorous stock. Eggs
$4. 00 per 37.0 per 100.
ited supply.‘5 oOr er forom this ad
MAPLEWOOD POULTRY FARMS
C. W. Bovee, Prop. North Star, Michigan.

3””: BOOK EGG av 10 1.13. MALES

and let Cincinnati.
0., winners Hogan tested hens, heavy layers.
J. C. CLIPP l:

S,ONS Box M, Saltillo, Ind.
THUBUUGHBBED B U F F ROCK E G G S
from Blue Ribbon Win-
ners, $1.50£er 15 $9.00 per 100.
BALDWIN non/LIN; R. 4, Lainosburo. Mloh-
White and Barred Rock Eggs for Hatching. Pur

Prize winning, utility strains, selected pens, $1. 3
per setting, ﬂock $1. 00 a setting, delivered P. P.

 

 

 

 

 

special on quantity. Dawson's Farm, R. No. 4.
Muskegon, Michigan.
BARRED ROCK HATCHING EGGS. NORMAN

Heavy Laying St ram
M.Rs JESSIE B. DEAN. R. 1, Mason, Mich.

BARRED ROCK MATCHING EGGS. PARKS
200- -egg strain. $2 per 15; $5 per 50; $10
per 100 by" prepaid parcel pos ost

R. KBR R. 1, East Lansing. Michigan.

 

 

FOR SALE—BARRED ROCK HATCHING EGGS
from good winter layers $1.25 per 15 or $2.00

per 30 pos spat
Mrs. Frankp aMdilliliin. Mich.

PU RE BRED BUFFr ORPINGTON EGGS AT
$2-] 5: $5. 50 5‘l.1'aeﬂi
MSR . ANNA LA NO E, Fostorie, Michigan.

THOMPSON STRAIN BARRED ROCK EGGS

by 9 lb. males, bred to lay. Dag-k matings $1. 75

per 15, $3.00 er 30 prepa ai.d

MRS FRED LOMP, St. Charles, Michigan.
HATCH-

ROSE COMB RHODE ISLAND tREIDS.

ing eggs $1. 25 per setting. Post

Mrs. Albert Harwood. R. 4. Charlevolx, Mich.
FOR MATCHING—UTILITY STOCK.
Grand White Wyandottes—-—M.

R. 1, Roscommon.

 

 

 

 

EGGS

A.
Champions. Good, square deal. Reasonable prices. »
Send for price list.’
C. W. HEI MBACI-l, R. 5, Big Rapids, Michigan.

EGGS FOR HATOHING--PURE BRED WHITE

 

ngrdoattgs), 15 eggs $1.25; 30 eggs 0212.0 0139.511?
e s or more
3 gg Other f. o. b Alle gan.

Sin e settin s prepa1d..
H.311. Hortolii, Citz. Phone 294B, Allegan, Mich.

WHITE WYANDUTTES MARTIN s‘rnlm,

Eggs for hatching
WAYNE CHIPMAN. R. 2, Washington, Mich.

SILVER LACED AND WHITE WYANDOT‘I'ES
Four llarge, beautiful roosters. Eggs $1. 50 per 15.
W. BROWNING, Portland, Michigan.

BOURBON BED TUBKEYS. E53151?"

THOS G. CALLAGHAN, Fenton. Michigans

MAMMOTH PEKIN DUCK EGGS FOR SETTING
2 00 or two settingse $3.00. Also Wild Mallard
uck eggs same Very choicest stock All

orders prepaid. Cedarc eBend Farm. Okemos. Mich.

 

 

 

 

 

LEGHORNS

LEGHORNS

. ff Le horn Hoens Pullets and Cockerels.
Flencs slid] pulletis $2.5 0each: cockerels $3. 00

 

 

b Show birds a matter of clorrespond-

grit-11.0 eCICIPHAM FARMS. Plnckney. Mich.
PULLETS BARRON ENGLISH WHITE
Leghorns. eight weeks to matur-

Breed ding flocks repeatedly
Extra large and vigorous.
big looped combs. "Lay-

hilt” in every way A180

d nbryeeding cockerela
t n more or me

SEﬁmMOWSEa WHITE LEGHORNb achARM.
Belding, Michigan.

ity—May to October.
culled by experts.
Wedge shaped bodies,

 

 

v

ANOTHER PROOF THAT IT
PAYS TO ADVERTISE
THROUGH THE BUSI-

NESS FARMER

 

Rave had splendid results
" ' Mrs. La";

 

 

 

. Asséciate Professor of = 'i‘
"_ Poultry Hus n A '

PULLETS. IIEIIS IIIIII cocxsnns'

»

 

 
 
   
           
        
       
     
   
      
        

  
   
   
      
        
     
   
   
    
   
    
   
         
        
     
      
       
   
    
    
   
   
   
    
    
   
  
  
    
    
  
   
  
  
     
   
     
   
   
        
    
    
    
  
     
    
  
   
    
     
    
     
   
   
   
   
 

7

 

 
  
     
      

    

    
     
      
   
 
 
   
 
    
   
   
  
  

 
 
 
 

   


 

 

 

  

  
 
  

  
   

   
  
   
  
   
   
   
  

I

’ Depen

‘ Famous Egg BasEet Strain. _

  
   
  

large lopped combs.

   

horns, famous all over
their large size and great laying

    
 

made in baby chicks.

  
 

 

 

CHICKS

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

Anconas.
PURCHASE THIS YEAR'S“ cnor

layers. headed

OF CHICKS -i'rom tested
288 Pedlureed

b 'large vigorous 280 to
see.

~cUSTOMER8 REPORT BIO PROFITS
with these wonderful layers. Write today

for our large Iilustrated‘catalogue. It
tells all about them, it's free.

WYNGARDEN HATCHERI
Box B, Zeeland, Mich.

 

 

400,000 Chicks]

Big, strong chicks
frOm well-bred and
well - kept, , heavy
laying hens.

Buff

    

.3 R
8.50; $12

100, - 60 .
ocks. White Wyandottes, bu Orplngtons,
' ' 5 63.

. . 100. $13 liver
andottes, 50, 1.00; 100 $14: 500,
0. Postpaid. live arrival guaranteed.
ank Reference. Order direct from this
ad. Free Circular. ,

MODERN HATOHERV
Mt. Blanchard,

Box F. Ohio

.

 

 

 

 

    
    

BABY
CHICKS

Vl orous, Heavy
roe Inc Stock

Star Hatchery

From Select
Laying

Prices Reduced '

Hatched by modern methods

in best machines under our

.. _ personal supervision. Careful]

— ‘ packed saga sent osﬁpafid an

1'0 (7,, live deﬁvery xuaran .. an e erence.

1109; take no chances in ordering STAR BABY

CHICKS. Place I?“ order now and set them
when you want t em

sun HATOHERY, Box x. Holland, Michigan

Hardy Northern Bred Chicks

Reduced Prices for June Deliver .
S. O. W. LEGHORNS 1 o
1.000. Parks
00KB 130
, Parcel
1d. 10 '7' live delivery
guaran eed. Quality is assured as
we are owners and breeders of one
of the leading pens at the -
. gun Egg Laying Con est. 8_ to 10
weeks 0 d 8. C. W. horn pullefs
11, $90.00 per 100.
POULTRY FARM. Holland. Mich.

AND UP

 

$1.00 ea
. PINE, V,AV

    

Q. DEVRIES Grandvlevv Poultry Farm,

vi

 

mulch
n'. Miohloosn

Our Business Egg-Bred Leghorns
Produce Our

dable Quality Chicks!

The Famous Egg Basket Strain

Single Comb White Leghorns
Muted to Hollywood

250 to 300 Egg Pedigrees! Sires

Proﬁts in Large White Eggs and
Plenty of Them When Prices Are High. That’s
what you Want, and that what you get in the

Our parent stock is selected with the great-
est of care by experts as to their laying ability
and health. They are of large size, long, deep,
wedge-shaped bodies, with keen, alert eyes, and

These wonderful Pedigree-Sued Matm ,
combined with our ﬁfteen years of skill 11]
breeding produce our Egg- Baeket Strain Leg-

t 0 United States for
uality of
large white eggs. They are proven w nter lay-
ers and consistent winners for our customers
at leading shows and Egg-Laying Contests.
They should be the best investment you ever

 

To

Hatched under my personal supervision from personally inspected ﬂocks of heavy-

layms.
White,
erred

B
White
White

 
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
  
   
   
        
      
  

  

  
  
   
   
    

Order DlroctFromThlsAd
For. Immediate Delivery

Prices, for May and June
delivery, on our Hollywood
Pedigree-sired extra select
Grade A chicks: $12.00 per
100; $55.00 er 500' $100.00
per 1,000; rade 0 chicks:

11.00 per‘ 100; $50.00 per

00; $90.00 per 1,000; post-
paid. 100% live delivery guaranteed.
Hatches every'l‘uesday. Order now!
10% deposit books your order and
assures future delivery just when you
want them. Can also ship 0.0. D.

FREE Our large illustrated

  
  
    
  
        
     
    
       
    
    
 
 
 

circular describes
our wonderful Leghorns and
our large breeding institution,
sent free.

Box L , Zeeland, Mlch.

safe arrival guaran

l’.

 

  

  

CHICKS THAT MAKE PROFIT

heavy—laying qwl‘ities dand well cared

WHITE, UFF LE
POSE and S. 0. EDS ANCONAS
Mixed, all varieties for
live count guaranteed.

0,000 JUNE

pure-bred few 3.
Varieties

Brown and Buﬁ‘ Leghorns ...........................

Rocks, Reds,

and Buff Rocks,

and Buff Orpin
Mixed

White Wyandottes,
tons, Silver Wyandottes
hicks for ‘

' Get your order

POSTI’AID and full live delivery guaranteed.
from this advertisement with full remlttance.

From

Wonderful layers—

Our' rads A chicks are from these selected
egg ams, descendants from_Penua. Poultry Harm's egg laymg contest winners. notably Lady Victory,
304 eggs and Keystone Maid, 306 eggs. Prices: 25, $3.50; 60, $6.50; 100, $12; 00, $57.50;

1,000.
ad

faction.

You can do so with absolute safety,

H. B. TIPPIN Box, E, Findlay, Ohio....

Egg Bred White Leghorn Chicks

our famous

3 110.00. Full count

Reference. Zeeland State Bank.

Rosewood Farm
~Healthy, Hardy Chicks

Well-hatched.
and ship ed. lag-
in WH TE LEGHORNS 5 .
f: 10 1 .'

1.000

as
506,

R00 . 5 . . . 00.
$16.50: 500, $80. Poe aid,
guaranteed. Our chicks Wll
satisfaction and you wi

We
Chicks

have be

carefully packed.
Select, heavy

3.

1 o.

to, $1.50- 100 14;

$01.50. Select elm so
0 850' 1

 

,full live delivery
render you the best of
_ OME BACK TO US.
(1 long experience in producing ‘good

and our ﬂocks are second to none. Circular.

free. ROSEWOOD FARM. R 12 A. Holland, Mlch‘.

 

GREEN LAWN GHIX

White

per . 100.

or Anconas $14

gar 100.

isconnt on 500 0
less

each
d .

sent with order.
GREEN LAW

11cm; high grade chix that please.
of shipgi
ing an
June. July 10 per ch11 .
state Lust when you Wish chlx
to can

sent insured parcel post
prepaid. Barred Rex,
110x R. 1. Beds, and Black Minorcas, 516
Brown Leghorns, English White Leghorn
per 100. Heavy Broilers $14
Odds and Ends $13.00 per 100. 5
r 1 000 lots. All varieties 1 0
than 100 lots. Our 13th year ro-
. . . ‘ Our meghod
n3 positively prevents chllhng an crowd-
0‘7 hve delivery May,
less. Order from this ad an
sent. A. saving
Deduct 5% if full cash is
Reference: Fenton State Bank.
N POULTRY FARM, Fenton, Mich.
Gus Hecht, Proprietor.

we guarante 10

customers.

 

 

 

  

'We mute
0,00 live chick! gamma. Posts 0 PAID.

’sisv ,0HIOK§

Hatched from strong
v ourous .fl ks of ENGLISH
H ITE N

. mucous a
men tee-p OOUO'I'ION.

100 per cent
rices reasonable. Instructive

 

 

10
x rices free to est. UALI Y~ HA‘I’OH-
ERY, Bea oftheelsnod. Mlc .

s .

$10 PER 100 AND UP. From vigorous, ore-bred flocks on free range,

GHORNS. ;

5.190. WHITE and BARRED ROCKS, WHITE WYANDOTTES,
R , 50, $8; 100, $ ,

hrollers, $10 per 100 straight. lostpaid

You can order now

want them. Bank reference. Free catalog.

BLUFFTON HATCHERY. Box L, Bluffton, OhIo

Prices on 1 00 00
.................... $1 0.00 $47.50
...... 1 2.00 51.50

3.0 62.50
14.00 61.50

 

Bronlers, $9.00 per 100 straight.

Bank Reference.
.Member I. B. O. A.

wintcrlaying English White Leghorns.
the result of many years of breeding for increased production of large, white eggs.
females mated with pedigreed sires bred from 200

and'live arrival guaranteed by prepaid parcel post.
as you are fully protected by our guarantee of perfect satis-
Catalog free.

PATER’S POULTRY FARM, R. 4, Hudsonville, Mich.

 

 

" . autism, sis-100
' Anconas, 314-100

a. chaos, ROOKS and mnoncns,
teed. Wi

 

 

Strong and Healthy.
WHITE LEGHORNS and
BARRED ROCKS.
ﬂocks are kept on free range, prope

E J
HOBNS and ANCONAS at GREATLY reduced prices. ' ‘
ANTEED, POSTPAID. Strong chicks from Vigorous, Heavy Laying ﬂocks. Catalog FREL.

KNOLL’S HATCHERY, R. 12,

CHICKS $8.50 PER 100 AND UP

WH Varieties NS Prices on Ego $190500 $4550550

ITE. BROWN and BUFF LEGHOR ................................ . . .

BARRED R s. s. 0 RED ANCONAS, MINORGAS. 1.00 12.00 51.5:

WHITE ROCKS le E wvmino'rves ...................... . ......... .00 13.00 62.5.

BROILERs, MIXED cmcxs .................................................... 5.00 9.00 42.50
a FF MINOROAS, 25. $5.50: 50. s10; 10

Hatched in best modern incubators from
on free range. Carefully selected and pac c
with full remittance. Save time. No catalog.
You take no charif'r;E Instructions for

 
   
  

10.00 100.
ll ship any gumbo: of 25 or more, specie.

COLONIAL! POULTRY FARMS. Box B, Iceland, Michigan.

PHILLVIEW HATCHE RY ‘

GUARANTEED TO ARRIVE

h' k 1' selected hes laying. Hogan tested ﬂocksENGLISI
C m ” eligwu d We m1 A coon
Ptidto our ooran
08 pa yri fed and cared for insuring the vigor necessary
in the Chicks to live and MAKE A P
I‘ULLVIEW HATOHERY, Route 12 E, Holland, Michigan.

RgDS and ROCKS, mated with M.

00d, vigorous,
d to go safely.
Reference;
raising late Chicks With each ord
EAGLE NEST HATOHERY, Box K,

     

mean or — ' .
' * COMPETITORS ,
IN QUALITY,‘ ; '
2.00 per 100 higher. 100% .
prices on 500 and over. _

Extra selected

LEGHORNS. Heavy Laying EXTR
live delivery guaranteed.

OFI'I'. Give us a trial and you vnll come and--

A. C.
TYPE B. LEW-v

HEAVY
live arrival GUAR»

100%

and
H01 land, 'Michigan

Postpaid to your ooor and
full live count gu rantced

0, $20.
pure-lire heavy-laying flocks
Order right from this ad
Citizens Savings Bank.

 

(‘1'.
Upper Sandusky, Ohio

CHICKS WITH PEP, $11 per 100 and up

 

Postpaid full live deliveryoguaranteed. BUFF ORPING-r

~ Selected Hogan Tested Flocks.

. . wvnnoorrzs 50, 9.25. , 1a: BARRED and wu.
0331865 ws'f'aii'dd s."'c. EDS, MINORCAS, 0, $8.25; 1 0. $18. ANOONAS and
HEAVV'BROILERS. 50, $1.25; 100 $14. WH., an. and BUFF LEGHORNS, so 51‘
.100 $13. MIXED ALL VARIETIES, $11 per 100 straight. On 500, 501,. on; 1.00
100}, off. Free (iamlog. Member I. B C. A.

‘HOLGATE HATCHERY, Box B, Holgate, Ohio.

 

 

 

——REMARKABLE FOR SIZE

BABY GHIcK and strength. Reasonable
prices. Leghorns, Anconas, Rocks. .Reds, Wynn-
dottes, Orpingtons. Minorcas, Spanish, Brahmas.

TYRONE POULTRY FARM, Fenton, Mich.

selected for
prices considering exceptional quahty.
600 $62.50; 1,000,
BUFF carnivorous,
$72.50: 1,000, $140.
to your door and full
this ad and get them when you

for. .ow
50, $7

direct from

 

CHICKS

in quickly right
Free Catalog.

 

Large, vigorous birds of ﬁne utility type.
to 303

Order direct from

SHTENAW

HATGHEBY. “"5 “"358-

Hatches Mondays
and Tuesdays. Barred Rocks, Reds,
W. Wyandottes,

$13.00 per 100.
White Rocks, $15.00. Bull Orp-
lngtons, $17.00. 3. e.

W. Leg-
horns, $11.00. 500 or more, 10
less per chick.

WA

  

Add 50c for half
and quarter‘ hundreds.

Postpaid, full live delivery guaranteed. Our ﬂocks
are carefully selected and bred for high egg pro-
duction. Order from this ad. Reference, Farmers
and Mechamcs Bank. \

WASHTENAW HATCHERY. Ann Arbor.‘ Mlch.

Old Chicks

From Select, Hogan Tested.
Flocks on Free Range. Well<
fed and hand ed to insure
strong, oghicka

 

 

Day

 
   

RE 5 .
8.50; 100,$16; 560,,515.
right and shipped
live dehvery guar-
Order direct

      

right. reggae. 100%
anteed. ank Reference.
from this ad.'Circular free.

BORST I ROEK. Box ~P. Zeeland, Mloh.
Buy '51:

Pure Bred Chicks n... Home

Broiler Ohlx .............. 90 White Wysndottes,

. or B. L horns 110 But! Or ingtons 15¢
Bd. Rox or eds....1So Light Bra mas ....... 100
White Box ............ 14'10 .Shepherd Anconas 12¢

Black M norcas ........ 140

Add 350 if less than~ 100 lots wanted. Circular.
LAWRENCE POULTRY

 

 

 

 

 

FARM
Dept. 8 Good Refermco R. '1, Grand Rapids. Mich.

 

   

CHICKSM

Improved S: 0. English type White and
Brown Leghorns, $10.00 per 100; $50.00
per 500. Extra selected $12.00 per 100:
$57.50 per 500. From all good profit-
able layers, and our selected are from our
very best layers.
This is our 12th year breeding, hatch-
ing and shipping chicks, and we are oﬂer—
ing you chicks from the best layers at a
very reasonable price.
We pay the postage up to your door
and guarantee you 100% safe arrivaL
Order direct from this ad to save time,
for it pays to be a little ahead of time.
or write for our free 32 page catalogue.
Wolverine Hatchery, Zeeland, Mich.

 

 

 

 

  

From select vigorous, heavy

laying breeding is t o (- k . White,

' ’ J‘ Brown Leghorus, Anconus, Bar-
red Rocks. Our price is lﬂVrcnts and up.
Guarantee 100% live delivery by pre
paid post. Get your order in now-—
will ship when you want. Customers re-
ort “Big Proﬁts” with these wonderful
ayers. Write today for Illustrated Cata-
log, It‘s free. Reference: State Com-

mercial Savings Bank. Member M. B. C. A.
Queen Hatchery 8: Poultry Farm,
Zceland. Michigan

BABY CHICKS

You can new order Chicks in 11 breeds of the
Pure Breed I’ract1cal l’oultry that 18 making egg

 

 

alatrrtednnoiks records on our customer’s own
le 00 s farms. If you want stock that
532?]ﬁjg-tgsds will make. real money, send for
orplngtons our descrlptlon and price list.
Leghorns.__ All stock guaranteed 100% post
Wh.,Br., Buff paid. We want you to try our
Anconas stock this year. It is the best
Minorcas practical-stock you can buy.

STATE FARM ASSOCIATION
202 Chase Block Kalamazoo, Michigan.

 

CHICK Barron Strain Selected
White Leghorns. Produced
under my personal care. Strong, viz-

orous chicks carefully packed to go
live deliver!

 

safely. Postpaid, full
guaranteed. 50 chicks, $6.50: 100.
$12.50;500, $60. (let your order in

egg-1y, Elgln Hatchery, Box 317A, Zeeland,Mlch.

Hatching Eggs & Baby Chicks

Tompkins strain. For April and May chicks.
per hundred. $18.00. Eggs per hundred. $8.00.
Quality breeder of Rhode Island Reds. both combo.
WM. H. FROHM, New Baltimore. R. 1. Mich.

BABY CHICKS

Prices on our very best A~1 English White Ler
horn and Ancona Chicks reduced to $11.50 as
100; $55.00 _per 500; $105.00 per 1.0 0.
Get our descriptive catalog or order from ad.
Model Poultry Farm a. Hatchery, Zeeland, Mich.

wmmxnrs a. l. Bans—”slim

and Egg; Strain. Bred from winter lay .
hicks and eggs. Wnte for freemfagj
o

 

 

Farm, Box 4. Lawrence.

 

cﬂlcxs—WE HAVE SHIPPED THOUSAND.
. each season since 1904. Differs
breeds, free booklet with guarantee and delive
price. Freeport Hatchery. ex 10. Fresnel-t. M

   

  
  
 
   
     
   

    
 
 
  

  

 
   

   
  
    
 

 

—eluel.a co a sure '
GHIGKS only Strainers-.1 chmrtﬁquf
min; stock. .1. w. wees an. a -

 

OHIOKS—ENOLISH s. o. w. I."
“0183’ 1980 1'." "ii n‘w“ "”5 "it
1' . 70 O
3331. nanny warmth vﬁi‘f

      
  
    
     
   
   

    
    


 

  

 
 

g A Word to Our Readers
RMERS and stockmen who read
. ' The Business Farmer are cor-
, dially invited to write whenev-
or they desire any information about
the markets, or when they have in-
.formation to offer regarding farm

matters in their neighborhood. Pro-n

'dictions as to the future are obvious-
ly more or less uncertain, but advice
is always cheerfully given when re-
quested. In a general way, it may
be said that until farm workers be-
come plentier and their wages are
considerably reduced it seems to be
advisable for farmers to avoid
branching out too much, and fewer
acres well cultivated and diversiﬁed
taming should bring in larger prof-
its than the old methods of a large
acreage devoted to grains. Many
farmers are endeavoring to grow
as much food for their families as
they can, instead of spending com-
paratively large amounts of money.
Every farm should have an orchard
of fruit trees, as Well as grape vines,
berry bushes and vegetable garden,
besides plenty of hens, some cows,
hogs and sheep. Fortunately, many
of our Michigan farmers are already
pursuing this course, with the best
of results. In parts of the country
where the land is level numerous
farmers who were unable to hire
helpers have been buying tractors.
The former ambition of owning
large tracts of farm lands has large-
ly died down, and theinilated war
time prices are no longer paid, ex—
cept in rare instances. Many farm-
ers are wondering how the move-
ment started by the federal govern-
ment recently to prevent wild specu-
lation in grain on the produce ex-
changes of the United States is going
to effect the market. Statements of
purchases and sales of grain futures
since May 1 are called for.
Rallies in Grain Prices

, Wheat prices for several weeks
followed a downward course, and
corn and oats sold lower, but they
declined less than wheat, while the
fall in prices for oats was still less.
Part of the fall in wheat was
brought about at the beginning of
May by extensive sales of speculat-
ors, who were taking their proﬁts.
Since then some good advances have
taken place, with active speculative
and export buying, and smaller ad-
vances in corn and oats. Crop re-
ports are potential in» making prices,
and this is especially true of wheat.
Much importance is attached to the
fairly large exports of ﬂour and
wheat from the United States and
Canada, and a few days ago a sale
of a cargo of new crop hard wheat,
the ﬁrst such sale of the season, was
made at the Atlantic seaboard for
shipment to Germany. All along
Germany has been a large buyer of
rye in this country, yet our rye
stocks in sight are reported, as ag-
gregating 17,370,000 bushels, com-
paring with only 6,208,000 bushels a
year ago. Of late our exports of
corn and oats have been much less
than a year ago, but visible supplies
of both grains are much smaller
than at that time. Corn planting
is late because of the cold, wet
spring, and much uncertainty is felt
regarding the next crop. Wheat
continues to sell at much below
prices paid one and two years ago;
but corn is still selling much higher
than last year, and oats prices are
greatly lower. The sentiment in the
wheat market is that prices in the
coming crop year will be higher, but
this is looking considerably ahead.
'The trouble with corn is that it is
selling out of line with hogs at the
. present time, and many farmers talk
' of reducing their spring breeding.
.- Recent sales were made on the
~. Chicago Board of Trade of May
wheat. at $1.18,, comparing with $1.-
409. year ago, May corn at 81%.
cents, comparingrwith 61 cents last
ear; Marinate at, 43 cents, compar-
"~ " licents last year; and

' cents, comparing

”ago. ,

‘ polo]: of Best

, , .3 19°03‘16““ there "has ,

Foors’sunsm' E111.“

  

 

Wheat _markot cosy. Other grains quiet. Beans M other

recent advances. . Old pout-sedan. Butter and eggs are in de-
mand and ﬁrm. Poultry" in fair supply and demand good.
Med calves wanted. Hogs steady. (Weenies. .

 

(Note: The above summarized
”in. to arm—Editor.) .

Muhammad _
tummmmupthoont-mumuu 'mmggnngImuw-m

WWW,“

 

 

been a marked increase in the con-

sumption of beef in this country,

and this has made a better outlet for
beef steers, cows and heifers; so that
it was possible to sell much increas-
ed supplies of cattle in the Chicago
market at ﬁnm, and even higher
prices, subject to temporary reac-
tions at times. Recent sales of
steers have been largely at $8.50 to
$10.25, with more sales at $10 to
$10.40 than at any previous time
since January. The best class of
steers brought $9.50 to $10.50, the
best yearlings selling at $9.25 to
$10.25, while common light weight
steers brought $7.15 to 7.75. Butch-
ering cows and heifers sold at $4.50
to $9.50, bulls at $4.50 to$8 and
calves at $5 to $11.50. Only a mod-
erate business was transacted in
stockers and feeders, but prices were
higher because of a very limited
supply, sales being made at $6 to
$8.75. Quality was demanded, and
good lots sold at $7.75 .to $8.50
mainly. A year ago common to
prime steers sold at $7 to $9.25.
Prospects for the iuture look prom-
ising.

Hogs Marketed Rapidly

There is a large demand in the
Chicago market for hogs on local
and shipping account, and despite
continued heavy receipts, the de-
cline in prices has beenrchecked, late
sales being as high as a week earli-
er, buyers paying $6.25 to $7.85,
mainly $7.30 to $7.80. Prime light
hogs topped the market, selling 15
cents above the best heavy butchers.
A year ago hogs sold at $9.50 to $11,
supplies at that time far exceeding
those at this time.
the Chicago market are mostly good,
and their average weight is 243
pounds. Combined receipts in sev-
en western markets for the year to
late ”date amount to 12,463,000 hogs,
comparing with 8,953,000 a year
ago, 9,608,000 two years ago and
10,354,000 three years ago. Furth—
er declines in prices are expected.
Advices from the country show
plenty of hogs left‘and anxiety on
the part of many stockmen to get
their holdings shipped to market.
The domestic consumption of lard,
fresh and cured hog meats continues
extremely large, and exports oi pro-
visions loom up big, especially of
lard, these far exceeding those of a
year ago. Still, the cold storage
stocks of provisions in this country
are growing rapidly, and are far
greater than a year ago.

Active Demand for Horses
Not enough of the higher grade
horses are coming on the Chicago
market to meet the present increas-
ing demand, and suitable. drafters
and chunks are .bringing $175 to
$225, with occasional sales at $250
to $275, and once in a while a sale
around $300. The heavier the
better the buyer is suited, the de-
mand being for horses weighing
from 1400 to 2,000 pounds. Infer-
ior horses are poor sellers around
$25 to $50. In the east many big
trucks are being 'replaced . with
horses, and recent sales have been
made of matched teams at $400 to
$500. A large part of the horses
offered sell singly for $100 to $150.
To a very large extent farmers have
ceased to raise even for their own
use.
Great Boom in Lambs
Insigniﬁcant Chicago receipts of
, spring lambs, clipped lambs and Col-
orado wool lambs have brought.
about sensational advances in prices
for everything that is fat, the offer-
ings falling greatly below the de-
mand. The spring is late. and;

there is ,a great can between as»: .
an serum. in micro: 1c over};

close pot the seasonﬁfo: .marketing
dolor-ado lambs ' and the" delayed

Hogs reaching ‘

 

. wreckage, " '1,

marketing of southern spring lambs.
Farmers who are in the sheep indus-
try these times are extremely fortun-
ate. Recent receipts were much
the smaller of the year, and prime
Colorado wooled lambs advanced to
$17, while the best clipped lambs
brought $15.60, and California
spring lambs went to $17.50.

 

WHEAT

Trading was lifeless last week in
wheat and any attempt by bulls to
cause the market to-become active
and prices advance was met with a
ﬂood of wheat that left dealers with

, more grain than they knew what to
do with. However, the market de-
clined only slightly as crop news
was of a bullish nature. The re—
ports from the majority of the wint-
er wheat producing states were that
the yield per acre will be under that
of last year by quite a bit, because
of poor stealing and thin ﬁelds and
these’reports were on the increase
as the week drew toa close. But in
spite of these reports the market did
not strengthen as the bulls expected,
giving the impression that the back-
ward condition of winter wheat had
been discounted. Dealers believe
the short promise will attract the at-
tention of the investor who will buy
and hold, compared with the present
purchaser who buys and then sells
as soon as he sees an opportunity to
make a small proﬁt. The price of
wheat is low, compared with other
products, and must go up or other
commodities decline. During last
week the Detroit market advanced
3c and declined 1c leaving it 2c
higher than on the close of the pre-
vious week. .
\ Prices

Detroit ——Cash No. 2 red, $1.34
No. 2 white, $1.34;
$1.34.

Chicago—No. 2 mixed, $1.22.

Prices one year ago——Detroit, No.
2 red, $1.37; No. 2 white, $1.35;
No. 2 mixed, $1.35.

No. 2 mixed,

 

CORN

The corn market traveled much
the same route as wheat during the

. past couple of weeks. Sales of corn

to arrive showed some increase but
domestic demand was slow and ex-
port trading .quiet. Receipts were
small. Corn planting is well under
way, and while the soil in some sec-
tions is too wet to work, in general
the ground is in good condition and
planting is going along rapidly. The
Detroit market shows a gain of 1c
over a week ago.

. Prices
Detront—Cash No. 2 yellow, 876;
No. 3, 860; No. 4, 84c.
Chicago—No. 2 yellow, 85c; No.
8 yellow, 84c.
Prices one year ago—Detroit, No.
8 yellow, 6535c.

 

OATS ,

The oat market showed a loss for
the week. This was due to local
and commission house selling, bas-
ed on the easiness in other grains.
Oats ﬁnished last week 1c lower
compared to the week before, thus
being the only grain showing no ad-

vance.
. Prices
Detroit—Cash No. 2 white, 50c;

No. 3, 4855c; No. 4, 47¢.
Chicago—Cash No. 2 white. 46c;

‘ N0. ".3" 446. l ‘

Prices one year a

zwhite. 45c. ‘ ,

   

go—Detroit; No.

_ ‘ mm. , . -
Tno‘sDetroit' market for rye shows

The demand {is his

' country loadings.

  

 

_ Detroit—{lash Nth/2, 81¢. '
' Prices enemy " *
CashNo. ashes. ., . . +5

 

 

and prices made advances. At
troit the W Shin
during - the past g .7
market is in a fairly strong positiiih
at the present. time'and prices 3.

expected to gohigher in thev‘near
future. However, there will umi
doubtedly be slight declines in’ their
meantime. Dealers all declarettli‘e'”;
can see no reason-why price- shou‘l
not go still higher-as the demand; iii“.
good. One of the main troubleswitli
the market tor.Michigan beins‘i'is’r, ‘1
that the price ﬂuctuates within such. 4

a wide range. If a dealer or whole-3',“ '

 

  

  
 

 

sale grocer goes out to buy a carloa’d ‘ ‘ '

on an advancing market the price
will be boosted every few minutes
by some rabid speculator, and for
that reason much buying is done on‘
the “hand to mouth” basis. If the
national advertising campaign now
under consideration is put on it will ‘
tend to stabilize prices so that the.
wholesale grocer can buy. a carload
of beans without fear of a sudden,
change in price that will mean a
great loss to him. The Michigan
been is rapidly approaching the
place where good demand is cons-‘ ‘-
tant, or as near as possible, becom-» ‘
ing the favorite of the cannot!
throughout the countryand several
large dealers report many of their
customers buy strictly C. H. P. Mich-
igan beans only. Indications are
that a large acreage will be planted
this year. ‘
Detroit—C. H. P. $7.25 per cwt.
ghicago—C. H. P. $7.25 per cwt.
rices one year a o—Detro .
H. P. $8.50 per cwt. 8 it" 04

POTATOES

If the old potato market is going
much lower it has shown no indica- '
tion during 'the past week or so.
The bottom may have been reached
as the shipments of old stock are
practically at a standstill. Few p0:-
tatoes are left at Northern Michigan
points and there is no indication
that the market will soften much
until the end. ‘

- . Prices

Detroit ——— Michigan, $1.33@150
per cwt.

Chicago—Wisconsin and Round
whites, $1 @1.15 per cwt.

Prices one year ago—Detroit—

lﬂchigan, $1.92 per cwt.

 

HAY

A ﬁrm tone has prevailed in the
market during the last couple of
weeks, owing to light receipts. While
shipments received on the markets
at some points are larger than they
were a week ago in general they are
not sufﬁcient to take care of the dc;-
mand. Spring work is holding up

Det an N Prices

ro —— o. 1- timothy, $17.50
18; standard, $16.50@17; lighat
mixed, $16.50@17; No. 2 timothy.-
$15.50@16.50; No. I clover mixed,
$14@15: No. 1 clover, $13@14.

Chicago—-No. 1 timothy, $22@23:
light mixed, $19@21; No. 2 din--
othy, $18021; No. 1 clover, $150
16; No. 2 clover, $13‘@’14.

New York—~No. 1 timothy, $25@
26; No. 2 timothy, $22 @25; No: 1
clogg- mixed, $25. ‘

ces one year Detro
Standard timothy, $21@22; Iiglltt,
mixed, $‘21@22; No. 2 timothy,
$20.@21; No. 1 clover, $16'@17.

WOOL PRICES MAINTAIN

‘ STEADY‘ LEVEL

Activity in -‘wool marketing in
some sections of the range states.
and very little movement in other ~
sections during its .past..weok’iiSéree-r '
portodyto theitlnite ﬁts} ‘ ' ' it,»
ment otVAgriciﬂtd lie

380—-

 

      
  

  
      
 
  
   
  
 

  
  
 
 
 
  

  
 
   
 
   
 
 

    
 
  
    
  
  
 
  
 
   
  
 
  
 
  
 

 

auood andnnulj On‘

 

 

   
 
   
 
 

 

 

 


  

  

   
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

   
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
   
 
 
 

    
 
   
  
   
   
    
   
   
   
 
   
   
   
 
 
 

  
  

‘nd very moderate. Lin-
the“ heavy, odor-lugs good, de-

t. Cottonseedm ealeesier,
:lslr. demand light. Season
ts bran and middlings of-

it

  

presentrequirements. Quoted
$26. middling $28:
bliss $30: Elanaap‘olis 1;

 

 
 
   
   
 
 
 
 
   
    

 

Week of In, 27
The ﬁrst half of the week of May

orally warm in Michigan.
About the middle part of the

l ’ week. however, skies will cloud over

and general showers with some
scattered rains and thunder storms
are to be expected in various coun-
ties of this state. These conditions

with high winds will continue over‘
' Thursday but during this day tem-‘

peratures will fall lower.
There are indications that the sky

3 Ann clear of: about Thursday but

about Friday will again become

, overcast. threatening and precipitat-

lug general showers during last two

About Wednesday or Thursday he-

‘ kiss a period of general showers,

Nets dall and decline

5'7 27th is expected to be lair and gen- -

 

 

 

Better Returns
7 from your
Produce---

d u c o more proﬁtably

Farm Bureau Produce Exchange.

Jinn, farmers and shippers are

not receiving the best market

es. Increase your returns
through the service of the

Farm Bureau “Mitten” Outlet

non nss'r assume ship
through your local (lo-operat-
ive Association. Your co-op.

manageriskeptﬂmi-oughlym.

formed by as on WEE-Rand

HO’Wtomakeshipmeain.

——SHIP NOW
ALL KINDS OF POULTRY
Especially Broiler. Hem
and Ducks

W made-«mum
\ M sum

Other Products Handled
and Marketed

l
IOU can market your pro-
l

 

 

  
 
  
  

   
  

unanimous-um

.. I”

  

 
  
   

high We»,
mat-stared

 

n .* I I l‘nt "1 .
- recently stated in these columns the

three weeks centering on the sum-
mer solstice would be warm, we wish
to emphasise that the tow days
either side of June 23rd will be quiet
cool for the season" and tender
growth should be protected accord-
This does not contradict our

on the average for the three weeks.
To the century this should serve
as a warning, as a cool spell during

W

As this is a nice coo morning and
this snow storm has g t as best on
the bean proposition, we would like
to know whether the weather man
could help us out on what we could
plant to avoid the cold weather and
escape the hot, dry weather at blos—
soming time. The blight or hot,
dry weather stopped us raising
beans four or ﬁve years ago. Any
intormation Would be thankful to
get. There are about three inches
of snow on the level this morning
and still snowing—A. J. Rumbaugh,
Van Bure County, Mich.

—We 100 for a change in temper-
ature conditions beginning about the
second or third week in June. For
the balance of that month and run-
ning into July we look for warmer
weather than usual for this time of

year. ,

'l‘h’e rainfall will be heavier than
usual or, at least, plenty of it, ac-
cording to our ﬁgures. For this
reason your bean crop should be
planted on well drained land and we
believe your step will get a fair
start.

Late plantings will probably be
best this year as we ﬁgure the aver—
age temperature during blossoming
time (latter part of July) will be
normal to below. Therefore, blos-
soms will set and rapidly develop
into healthy bean pods.

Temperatures during the week

‘ from June 20 to 27 will average cool

and while are do not believe it will
develop into frost in your section,
we advise that you keep close watch

_of your thermometer, the sky and .

the wind.

TOO MANY FARMERS FOLLOW-s
ING RADICAL LEADERS
(Continued from Page 13)

of labor is only temporary and to

bring in foreign labor would not

only hasten unemployment but ac-
centuate the condition when it does
come.

We are too familiar with the evils
of emigration to reverse our present
policy of restriction. We already
have an immense population in this
country, a large part of it congested
in cities ranking among the largest
in the world- Our population is in-
creasing at a rapid rate and we
know too wellihe conditions of the
«people in over-populated countries
like India, China and Japan.

Times are very trying for the
farmer but we must remember we
are paying for the costliest war in
history and it’s not going to be easy.
The just complaint of the farmer is
that he is hearing much more than
his share .of the burden.

Labor unions by their powerful
organisations have been able to pre-
vent readjustment or any consider-
able reduction in wages. A large
proportion of the farmers have back-
ed up the unions in their attitude to
their own direct detriment.

The farmers have always been
noted at the great conservative class
-—'-too many of them new are follow-
ing radical leaders that will get
them nowhere hut lead them into
further diﬂculties. The farmers to
a large extent are bancoed by their
own self-styled leaders. I would ask
the am tamer what beneﬁt he
has maimed tron all the legislation

n. great problems that confront
and excessively

  

articles. unequal att-
as“: Wants. and exorbit-
have mm very lit-
attendants—K. 8. Wood,

high cost of. ,

 

’F'I‘II SALE

 

   

lawmwmamrmemmm

 
 

“In 1921, l thrashed 7.000 bushels without a bit of belt trouble.
In 1922, I turned out 9,000 bushels with the same satisfaction
“Monica. MybeltisaGoodymrKlingu'teBelt.”

—ALBsa'r CASLEY, Cheney, Kansas.

 

NO engine resetting when you use a Goodyear
Klingtite Belt, because Goodyear Klingtite Belts
do not shrink. No jumping the pulleys, because
Goodyear Klingtite Belts hold with a slipless grip. No
overheating, because Goodyear Klingtite Belts run
loosely. No messing with dressing; no breaking in.

Goodyear Klingtite Belts are made in endless type

for heavy duty and in cut lengths for lighter drives.
'I’Iueyaresold byGoodyear Mechanical Goods Service

VALVE 5

Station Dealers and by many hardware dealers

PACKING

   

BELTS

EEE§%§E§E EEEEg

 

 

I—sumnuu “HES—W

12,000 Mile

7500 Mile

Oversize Cord Heavy N-Skid
30x3“

$9.95

30x3 %

$6.95

 

New husky overstud heavy skid built
lorreslwesrsszood‘asthsbut. By
direct we cut out man, proﬁts.
See 0 following low prices.
Hear; McLean:
_ N-Sh. Oversize Harv,
Sue Fabnc Cord
80x8 ....8 8.45 $1.85
30x3 .._ 8.96 8 9.88 1.40
82x3 3.... 9.45 14.85 1.50
31x4. ._ 10.85 15.95 1.80
32x4 ..._ 11.85 18.05 1.90
88x4 __ 12 95 11.95 2.00
8414 .— 1845 18.96 2.10
sinus in [topaz-lion. We carry
ol_odd sizes in stock. our law
pics but. Ship 0.0.1”). on IWNval.
Bend no Menu.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MINNEAPOLIS. MINN.
HAMPSIHBES
HAIPSHIIIIB. A FEW IRED OILTs LEFT
Placeyeurordernowier our rpisnts

hails. Pairs at !
lemnll.&dshm.n.4.ﬂleh.
DUROOB
HILL

PEACH IIILLW FIRMS; m"

013151130“. ”plums-agwom
."Jn as r e"031013" snuur 0N {mg-
man was]? a LA

I
of .lddhbn.

weanling;

“piss. either

 

egg;

III 0’1 ’RIIL DUIOO
seven1 months
M112. 1501.1
D I “110””

PIGS

 

 

 

BARON MI 3- OOLLKA.
We... 532mm... on...

 

 

  
 

m Will"

““54““.

   
     
   
 
 
 

50 33%:35
= Free Tnal

l He’lgoium EDelotts

No Money Down! fir?)
Catalog tells all-writs. - _

cautionlu lo t “:8 211011
shows that vibration of the

Catalog FREE

Write for new Melotte cat-

 

ltn in ' mess
"sternum 'mreu he"): loudest

m about enema-(1:?
our 15-year guarantee

I- y stronger than mi?-

m tee. 'rhm mm

cunt-an
Howmucumdom

Iheﬂslette Seawater. H. B.Bobson.U 3%
2.43 W. 10th 8mm 33.”

 

 

 

 

an arms sum as
m users—sac.

  
     

 

 

 
   
  
 


[Low EST : PRCE s? 11

    

     
    
    

$193

V ery attractive.
dainty voile dress,
with organdy trim-
min 9 . Beautiful
ﬁgured voile with
new 8 i d e panels.
Youthful organdy
collars and cuffs.
Also pretty vestee
insert of organdy
and neat organdy
sash. This model
has all the lines
of fashions selling
at much more than
Sharood‘s sale
price. Misses sizes
14 to 20 years, 31!
to 38 bust. Women’s
sizes 34 to 46 bust.
Be sure to state size
wanted. Choice of
colors. No. 98E-
e112, Navy: ' 96E-
9718. Copenhagen;
99E6114. R o s e;
96E071B, Laven-

der. 80nd no men-
ey. Pay 91. 98 and
postage on arrival.

 
   
   
    
  
    
   
  

  
  
 

  

Women’s
“Stylish
Stout”
Voile Dress

$29.1

A very beautiful
tunic model in
- “stout” v oi 1e
dress of graceful
slenderizing lines
for stout Women.
Made of good
quality polka dot
voile with tunic
over-skirt, attrac— _
tiv ely trimmed
with pretty or-
, gaudy collar and
_, cuﬁs. You will
pay much m o r c
for a dress of
equal value else-
where. Better get
your order in ear-
ly. Sizes 89 to
5 3 Bust. State
Ii 2 e w e nt e d .
Choice of colors.
N o. 99:98".
Black: No. 96E-
8812. Navy; No.

99E9813, Brown.
Send no money.
Pay only $2.98
and postage on
arrival.

  

    
    
  
   

39%"

     

    

""%:.11"43 to Nlcntion Ali Sizes. Colors: ch: .nmi

Pretty Voile

5'87de No Money Wm— Pay 071

WWW——

 

Positively Lowest Prices in Amer-
ica—bar none. Sharood guaran-
tees this. You take absolutely no
chance in ordering from this adver-
tisement becauSe everything is
shipped at our own. risk. Let us
prove how we save money for
thousands of Sharood customers.
Juslt select anything from the bug
list of super-bargains shown below.
Order it on approval and when the
goods arrive compare With any
similar article shown elsewhere. If
not convinced that our prices are
positively ' unequaled—quality for
quality—just return the goods and
you will not lose a cent.

   
   
     
  
  
  
  
  
 

 

DON’T ”send one cent. Just letter
or postcard brings any of these
smashed price bargains. Absolute-
ly no obligation and not the slight-
est risk to you. Merely give name
and number of each article you
want. Also state size and Write
your name and address plainly to
avoid delay. Pay nothing till goods
arrive—then only the amazing bar-
gain price and postage. Then ex.-
amine your selection—try it on—
show it to your family and friends.
Then if you are not delighted with

your bargain your money will
be cheerfully refunded. Order
NOW. §

 

 

     
   
   

Women’s Stitchdown Oxfords
Black Patent or Brown$ Calf Finish

$19__8U

Classy stitchdownP 0x-
for for women. \Von-
derfully comfortable and
stylish. Uppers of dark
brown or patent leather.
Smooth leather insoles.
‘lexible stitched- down
oak outsoles. Low rubs~
her heels. Sizes 2% ms
- ide widths. Order
grown bgen No.d 98A—
no
mohey. Payd onl
3. $1. 98 and posing:
, on arrival.

   
    
 

  
 
   
 
    
  
  

   
  
  
     
      
 
     

 
 
  

  
  
  

Mention
Size and
Color
Wanted

Give

by 0.
Price $2 .48 and post-
age on arrival.

Women’s Dressy Pump
'- I! I "' ' ~=i ‘7

Brown Calf
or Patent
Leather

This smart l11))umpin sizes

2% to black patent
leather or brown calf ﬁnish
~—-a stunning one- strap model '
with ornament on strap. imi-
tation shield tip and medal-
lion eﬂectively perlorated.

3 medium rubber heel.
Order paoient leather by No;

96A72. Order brovim by No.
99A18. Send no money.
Pay I91. 98 nand postage on
arrival

 

Two Percale
Aprons, Light
and Dark

Patterns

Set of Two
Only
Sensational Sale!

sold at this matchless price.

not delay ordering. Send quick while stock last
No money now. Pay onl

price and postage 011 arrive.
No. 96011040—330113

0111‘

     
 
   

Auto owners—your opportunity to buy a fabric tire
GUA X‘RAN'IEED FOR 60 00 MI LES for only $4.98.
Positively the Biggest; Bargain in America But only
' 50, 0 to be Better

smashed bargain

Non-skid or rib tread" “945988

 

Women’s Patent
Leather,’ Gun-
Metal or Brown
Calf Finished
OXFORDS

351%

of Three
Leathers
Made with
im l to t 1 o n
shield t i p
and medal-
lion perfor-
ated vamp
perfora t e d
laceltey and
circular {ox-

 
 
 
 
   
  

rubher heel

    

and medi-

um pointed Money

toe. Sizes

2% o . .

Wide widths. order patent by No. 991194. Or-
gun 981169. Order Brown

metal by No.
by" No. 6 . Send no money.

Pa 1. 98
postage on arrival. y S and

Men’ 3, Boys’ and Little Boys’
Scout Shoes =

Fine scout shoe of soft .
pliable brown leather.
Absolutely guaranteed
barnyard proof; reliable
sturdy solos; low broad
leather heels; leather
in s ole s ; reinforced
leather back stay.

guaranteed t 0 stand
iairdestI wear. Wid

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
    
 
 

Order Men's sizes 6 to 12 by No. 9811138. Send
money $1.98 and postage on urlval.

nog‘" little boys' sizes, 9 to 13%. by

565. Price $1. 59. Order big boys' sizes 1 to 5

by No. 9811564. Price $1.19. Pay bargain price

and postage on arrival.

 
     
     
 

 
   
   
     
   
   
   
 
 

3.

   
    
  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

but not over-
size. Ordor by No. 990-
11090.

30X3 l '2 only”.

includes one ap-
ron of da rk
blue p ercale

1th white dot
—the otherW 1in light ﬂoral
pattern. Both are made
111 11 becoming style with

Send no oney. Pay
$7.98 and postage on

GUARANTEED lfgﬂEﬁ TUBES
v

Sharood offers you“.y ext re

  

31351127

: : ililt. l); i"

. - 11—30x9'/ ‘Non- skid tread only ......... 98
Dont fall to No. -skl¢i tread, only ' 9.89
order this splen— No. Id tread, only ....... .
did combination No. Id "9am only
”m" Charming No'. Id tread, only .....

F3333 (pittgi'ii No. tread. only ....................

at “0 m0” s 000 Mile Guaranteed Sha-

than you have rciod’s Standard Cords for

p a ild f 0 r a Standard Fords and all cars _ using 5 98
sing e garment ‘ 0x334 tire sizes. Built like _ '
elsewhere. Set cord the regular Cords I

Pay
on arrival.

e rubbser' inner tubes

 

    
     
     
     
   
 

   
 

        
    
     
 

 
 

braid bound see. large b s avin . thee l t- -A
pockets and wide owing Howa maiiy anal-llweuy send?“ Pay :nIyoingi-giilln p-rlcecimd pose:
iiimsh; gag—snug, M-w' m °" ”glider“ sensuoso rue: emcee
1'98 6 size. 9994024—92141
o. 99E9011. Send no money. Pa onl 99940 0—- ...... 9 99 904022 32x3 ...... 5-3
908 Mo on arrival for set of 2 aiming. 9904021—3823551 ...... 1.19 l 9994029:81x4* ...... 8,13% 9833233F3i§4 z:

 

SHARQ

 

      
  
  

   
  
       
      
     
     
     
   
     
   
  
   
     
  
  
         
   
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
   
  
   

     
  
 
  
    
     
   
 
  

will be all the rage among the best dressed women.

   
    
  
  

  
   

Sizes 2% to Wide width 0 d

sense. Send no 5 r or b ‘ I.

postage on arrival.m° Slim 52:. only $1 93" and ‘
Women’s
Soft Kid
Slipper

$149

    
      

Mention 91;. ' '

 

       

Beautiful soft kid
model with two

     

leather sli
buttons.

per.
edium

Cushion soles. Black or brown kid. Sizes 2*
wide width 3 _
by 890.9 o'Azzo‘ "c" b’ No 98A228. arena

   

Stylish str
round to?

 
   
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
   
       
         
 

. Send no moinoy.

and posiaage on arrival. State si.ze P”

\l

81.49

  

Men’ 3 Dress Shoes

 

Give Size.
Men’ is French- toe dress shoes or oxfords in mahog-

any Brown calf-ﬁnished leather. Have medium
toes perforated, oak soles and rubber heels. Per-
foreted on 0vamp and eyelet stay. Sensatioal valuing
Sizes wide wi.dths Order Oxfords .
No. 96A6058. Order Shoe b No. 9611660.

no money. Pay 2.98 an postage on arrival
for either style. tate_size.

GUARANTEED

- For Six Months’ Wear

U. S. Army
Work Shoe
for Men
Boys

 
    
    
    
    
        

      
      
    
   
 
 

  
       
 
    
 
   
  
 
  
  
  
 
 

      

MONO]

     
  
  

    
   
   

Men! Don’t loses momentt in orderi
deriul brown work shoe. "ft“. 10.3":

rproof as can be me deI—go a:
through and thmush With 3:); in Ellé‘lglnvﬁ ,
gesrsdI suaranteed tow weer six men

full. the", doubl ‘-
nailed for greater at: until. . “rim '0‘." new .‘
or counter, rivet eted o”tow“ prevent mngigAr's t0.
0.i

Pay ".9. ”Mb ylouﬂlu "‘0

      
 
    
  

    
  
  

      

12, wid de widths. Conan.

money. antral I.

    
 
  
   
 
 

  
  
 
 
 
 
 

Be 1' Guaranteed She u—Six men ' (u.
Twyo green chrome leather solessfthzzme a:
see 1

Wait oints as shoe above.
ido dths aprugl

.9 d
is, also "5mm“

  
  
   

    

