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Edited in Michigan

Farm Magazine Owned and
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1923

 

XI, No.

VOL

 


 

T he: EM i ‘2 l' 58 a n S ta“ 3 -

    

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

          
  

 

The 100th Hmirersar'y' E Year of the W3 Of J¢lm
,2 E How-arm’s Mung—Emmﬁmfm”
" *udson’s 42 “d” Anniversary Sale
‘~ Begms on Tuesday, September 4‘” ‘ ~
‘ hisgreatsalehas ' E . - , ’ " ~
been planned to ‘ ' 5 ~ 2 ,
, enable you to pur-
E chase everything
needed for the
home as well as
new Fall and 2E
E Winter Clothing 2 ‘
and all wearables
for Men, Women J: 2 \
E and Children. _ g: 2
Each day will be a J 2*? 2
memorable one ET" 2
for the remarkable J3 ' 2
2 2 opportunities pres _
'2 - sented. Everyitem 2; ' ,'
carefully seleCted
4"" E to measure up to 2
Hudson Quality. . _ V, _ 2 E _2
Plan now to visit " " " : Jar—5 \ 2
E the State Fair and mmwmmpwwmm 2E
-' shop at‘ Hudsons. - V E 2’
. .2 2
42 Years of Serv1ce
This salecelebrates our42years ofservioetothepeopleof Detroitandvicini -andwe 2’
have brought together under the one roof, merchandise from practically over the
E world, oﬁering economies that will malteitwell worthyourwhiletosharein thisevent. 2E
~ Visitors to the Staie Fair
will ﬁnd every convenience of this great establishment at ;E
their service—plan to meet your friends here. ‘
Those Who Will Stay at Home
may also share in the savings to be made in this 42nd 2E
'E‘ Anniversary Sale, by having the Personal Service Bureau
shop for them. Give a careful and accurate description
of the merchandise you desire and we will shop {of you.
2; The Sale Will Continue Untilsepta‘nber 22nd
[ Seventeen da 5 of remarkable oﬁerings—read the daily .,. E
E newspaper a vertisements and, take advantage of the ' E
E2 savings which this Anniversary Sale okra. E
T H E I. L. H u D s on COM P AN ' :
WOODWARD' GRATIOT’ Fm. - 513-. E ’ i" '2 ., "E ‘ WOHWCHIGAN E

 

easiundmauuuabauwwa


 

 

 
  
    

 
 
  

  
 

 

  

 

 
  
  

 

1L'Auaus‘t 22, 1917 in the
1 tot, I
- 1 Mt. Clan-us,
math" ofﬁce a u“ d March
1879. '

 

 

 

 

TATE Tax Commissioner George
Bord has just announced that
the state tax for 1923 will be

about 81, 800, 000 less than it was in
,. 1922 and the state tax rate will be

"'»'~.mand 75 cents per 8.1 000 valua- .

- tion’ lower.
There are two factors responsible
for the prospective cut in the tax
' Into. One, according to Mr. Lord, is
that state expenses have been so re-
fuuced that the total amount to be
_ a raised will probably not exceed 816, -
“000,000. The state tax last year
was $17,300,000. The" other is the
increase in the state valuation for
tax purposes, ﬁxed by the State
Board at Equalization late yester-
day.

The billion and one-half dollar in-
q crease in valuation would naturally

lower the rate, even it the amount
to be raised were the some as last
year. The decrease of 81, 300, 000
' in the amount to he raised further
cuts the rate.

The 1922 state tax rate was ap-
proximately 83. 08 per thousand. The
prospective new tax rate is about
88.32 per thousand.

‘ Record Valuation Jump

The Board of Equalization in—
creased the valuation of the state for
tax purposes 81, 540, 000 «000 over
the 1922 equalized valuation of 85, -

_ 000, 000, 000. _ The new unlined
' valiiation of 86, 540 .000, 000 is a he-
,dnction of 85,065,000 from the
State Tax Commission’s recdmmend-
ed valuation for this year.

The increase in the value of the
state’s taxable property is the larg-
est jump over decided upon by a
board of equalization for a single
year. The advance was largely
attributed to the fact that the
1923 legislature enacted laws lim-
iting the mill tax appropriations
for the University of Michigan and
the Mi 11 Agricultural College to
$3, 000, 000 and 81, 000, 000 a year,
‘ respectively. Heretotore the mill tax
appropriations have increased in pro-

‘portion to the valuation.
. The $1, 500, 000, 000 increase will
have little effect on the proportion
of the state tax to be paid by any
county. The increase is spread hor-
imntally, except in the case of 10
-northern counties. They are given

_ reductions. The sheet of the in-
crease will be to raise whatever the
amount of the state tax amounts to

_ on a larger valuation, which means

lower rates. The total amount to
be paid out by any individual or
countris not altered.

The 85,065,000 reduction from
the State TarCommimion's recom-
mhdﬁ valuation was arrived at by
cutting $50,000 from Crawford,
$109,000 from Delta, $50,000 from
Huron, 850, 000 from Iosco, 850,-
009 from Lake, 895, 000 from Luce,
€850, 006 from .Ilanistee, 8150, 000
iron: Newaygo, 50, 000 from Roscom-
men, and 894, 000 from Schooicraft.

counties, in the opinion of the
board were the hardest hit agricult-

V i use! and mining counties and were

entitled to a reduction. The re-
”“9318de of the $5, 065 .000" out will
be Spread equally over all the coun—
is; and will not affect the proper—
of the state tax to be paid.

the new edmﬂzaﬂon
"'will have a valuation oi ape
' _ .. gt: ass, 500, 000, and win
about 40 74 percent of the

 

 

Lamond Admmzsiatzve Expenses and Increased Valuation Given as Reasons for Welcome Relief
‘ ‘ —Northem Counties Given Larger Share of Melon Because of Impoverished Conditions——

Wayne County Now Pays 40% of State Tax

938, 000 and 5.04 per cent last year:
Jackson, 8131, 847, 000, and 2. 01 per
cent as compared with 8,100 645, 000
and 2.01; Saginaw, 85144, 600, 000
and 2.20 as compared with 8111,-
584, 000 and 2. 23.

Rural Districts Get Beneﬁt

The reduction in the levy on the,

rural districts and the raise to the
industrial centers is all the more
noteworthy because of the tremend-
ous euort which was made by De-
troit representatives to show that
city levies should be reduced or at
least kept down to present levels.
The decision of the board is a splen-
did tribute to the supervisors and
others who so ably represented the
rural districts.

Thirty-Six States

may be that the farmers of
Michigan were not such moss-
backed resctionaries as they

were pictured by the city papers

when they ask for a gasoline tax last
spring. The tact that a majority of
the states have now gone on record
or are collecting a gasoline tax to
maintain their good roads, means
that now Michigan will have to fol-
low the crowd, instead of being one
of the leaders.

One prominent state ofﬁcial, in an
address before a farmers picnic in
Michigan last week, went on record
as favoring a gasoline tax of 3 cents

It is well to recall that in the
hearings recently held before the
State Board of Equalization to de-
termine the State’s equalized value
and to re—apportion the tax levy
among the several counties of the
state; Michigan farmers and the
Michigan State Farm Bureau were
ably represented by Melville B. Mc-
Pherson, of Lowell, member of the
Board of Directors of the State Farm
Bureau, and an acknowledged auth-
ority On taxation matters.

Mr. McPherson presented evidence
to prove what is commonly known to
be true, namely that in Michigan to-
day rural property is valued relative-
ly higher than is city property. He
declared before the Tax Board that

Wayne county should remaln at its
recommended value for 1923 while
the rest of the state should be re-
duced an average of 10.87 per cent.

McPherson declared that farm
property is either assessed too high
or the utilities of the state'and city
property are assessed too low and he
gave ﬁgures to show that while the
tax commission had increased the
general property valuation of the
state 78 per cent since 1916, mining
properties from 1915 to 1922 were
increased only 25 per cent, and for
the same period the railroads and
other corporations paying the pri-
mary school interest fund specific
tax were increased only 19 per cent.

Mr. McPherson said real estate
and corporate property in Detroit

(Continued on Page 23)

Tax Gas to Maintain Good Roads

per gallon and a. ﬂat rate of 82 for
the automobile license fee.

The. farm bureau and other farm
organizations are keeping up the
agitation and the fact that the state
highway fund is now almost a mem-
ory, means that some method of
bringing in the necessary funds to
keep up the elaborate, but apparent—
ly necessary good-roads program,
must be adopted and at once.

The gasoline tax, claim Its spons-
ors, is the only direct method of tax-
ing the automobile and truck for
their destruction of the paved road—
ways. The light car, burning less

 

 

GASOLINE TAX YIELD BY STATES

The states which have adopted a gasoline sales tax, the esti-
mated. annual consumption, the rate imposed and the estimated

yield of the tax is as follows:

_ as compared with 82.11. ,:'
"and tops é): cent 1m - ~

 
  

Estimated Tax 3. Estimated
STATE Consumption gal. yield
Alabama .. .................................. 38,182,048 2c $ 763,641
Arizona ...................................... 16,126, 416 1c 161,264
Arkansas ............................. , ...... 35, 868, 704 2c 717,374
California. .......... ..... ... .......‘...365, 406, 168 ‘2c 7,208,123
Colorado .......... ...... .................. .. 68 ,827, 072 12c 1,376,541
Connecticut ................................ 64, 862, 248 1c 648,622
Delaware ......................... . .......... 10, 413, 440 1c 104,134
Florida ...................................... 47, 256, 080 3c 1,477,682
Georgia. ........... ...... ......... ......-... . 60, 811, 352 1c 608,113
Idaho ............ f ............................. 22, 842, 676 3c 685,280
Indiana ...................................... 199,254,136 12c 3,985,083
Kentucky .................................. 65, 304, 904 * 1c 673,049
Louisiana .................................. 43,368,416 1c 673,049
Maine ........................................ 39,236,536 1c 392,365
Maryland ................................. 70,224,576 52c 1,404,492
Massachusetts .......................... 163,337,944 12c 3,266,759
Mississippi ............................... 32,890,104 lc 328,900
Montana .................................... 26, 563, 600 2c 531,272
Nevada ...................................... 5,137,184 2c 102,744
.N. Hampshire ............................ 20,524,144 _§2c 410,483
New Mexico ............................... 10, 800, 552 ‘10 108,000
North Carolina .......................... 77, 401, 200 1c 774,000»
North Dakota .......................... .. 41,998,048 1c 420,000
Oklahoma ................................ ..105, 855, 416 ‘1c 1,058,554
Oregon ...................................... 56, 869, 000 30 1,706,000
Pennsylvania ............................ 351 ,,808 488 "1c 3,518,084
S. Carolina. ................................ 40, 694, 672 3c 1,220,840
South Dakota ....................... .. 53,102,184 2c 1,002,043
Tennessee .................................. 57,513,584 2c 1,002,043
Texas ...................................... .223,124,912 1c 2,231,240
Utah ......................................... 20,745,536 21,4c 518,638
Vermont, .................................... 18,505,544 1c 185,055 ’
Washington .............................. 89,343,584 52c 1,786,871
West Virginia, ......................... 47,811,512 1c ’ 478,115
WyOmjng. ................................. 12,990,088 lc 129,900
Total ........ 2,607,032,068 841,607,835

*After September 30,1923
1mm August 1,1923.
itAtter June 1, 1923

i

 

I ' rAiter January 1,1924. .
ISubject to referendum if 15 000 voters sign petition within

ninety days after May 24. 1923

 

VA 3. : ‘Bill W increasing tax to 2c a gallon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

gasoline, pays only its proportionate
share as against the heavy truck
that burns a gallon to the mile. The
bus lines, all using heavy motors will
also come in for their just dues.

The president of one of the larg-
est truck lines in Michigan is on rec-
ord as favoring a gasoline tax as
high as ten cents a gallon, if neces-
sary, to keep up the paved roads and
he says it will be economy for his
company. This is applicable as well
to every individual owner of auto-
mobile or truck, as a road in bad
condition can do more damage in a
dozen miles of hard— —going than the
gasoline tax would amount to in a.
year.

Forty-Ono Millions From Gas Tax

State gasoline taxes in the United
States this year are expected to
bring in $41,607, 835 additional rev—
enue, according to a compilation
made by Dow, Jones & Company.
Eighteen states imposed the tax in
1922, and thirty— —six states will be
taxing gasoline with a levy of from
1 cent to 3 cents a gallon before De—
cember 31.

The revenue raised by the gaso—
line tax in 1922 was $11, 923, 442, of
which $6,474,178 was applicable to
state road work.

Last year 12,239,144 automo-
biles were registered, giving 3. rev-
enue of $152,047, 823, of which
$117,093,116 was used for road con-
struction and repair. More than 2, -
000, 000 new cars were produced in
the ﬁrst six months this year, and
their registration and licensing will
increase highway revenue.

2,,607 000, 000 Gallons Taxed

Estimated total gasoline consump-
tion in 1922 in the states which
passed gasoline tax laws was 2 607, -
000, 000 gallons out of a total do-
mestic consumption of 5,366,000,000
gallons in that year, according to the
information. Estimated yield of
gasoline taxed in 1924, levied in
thirty-six states out of forty-eight, is
$41, 607, 890, based on 1922 regis-
tration of 12 ,,239 114 cars and
trucks and an annual consumption
for each vehicle of 424 gallons, the
average estimated by the National
Automobile Chamber of Commerce.
Estimation is 1,000 gollons for each
truck and 358 gallons for each pass-
enger car, but 10,793,930 passenger
cars greatly outnumbered trucks,
thereby lowering the combined aver—
age. Cars and trucks now in use
number about 13, 500, 000, according:-

to latest estimates. With the lic-
ense tax only, owners of cars pay no
tax for use of roads outside their
own states, but payment for such ‘
use can be collected by means of a
gasoline tax. ,

 
 

    

  


 
 
  
     

  
  

*UESDAY, July 3lst, was the big
day of the year for the Holstein
‘breeders of Jackson county. It
as the day of the second annual

   

 
 
 

reeders Association and members
re out in full force before the
ass of the day. However, the tour)
tarted‘ from the courthouse in
ﬂaskson at 8 o’lcock with only a
i ,W cars in line but before it arriv-
_ d at its ﬁrst destination the number
ad multiplied threefold. The man
ggtm head of the tour was Corey J.

encer, president of the county
ssociation. .Well known men who
accompanied it were: U. R. Harper,
,vice president of the state associa-
~ tion; James Wells, M. A. C. Dairy
Extension Department; C.

  
  
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
   
  
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
   
 
   
 
   
   
   
   
   
 
   
 
  
  
  
   

M. Long,
not the National Holstein Breeders
_ Association, and R. E. Decker,
_county agricultural agent. Herds

were inspected on eight different
farmsand a ﬁne picnic dinner was
'served at one.

The ﬁrst stop was made at Wal—
. nut Grove 'Stock Farm, owned by
'1 W W. Wyckoﬁ and located in Na-
. poleon‘ township. Here the mem-
bersinspected a ﬁne herd of 45
purebreds, perhaps unlike any oth-
er herd in Michigan; every animal
in the herd is a descendant of one
c W that is now 18 years old and

st recently gave birth to a ﬁne

calf. All cattle in the herd have
A. R. 0. records.

From the Wyckoff place, the
breeders went to the farm of M.

L. Noon & Sons, Michigan Center.
’Mr. Noon is vice-president of the

Over Seventy-F we Members of JacksonhCou » - i

r of the Jackson County Holstein _

 

.r Annual Tour and A

Report c1 Good Time

 

Arthur J. Perrine. is second from left; W. B. Harper, vice president of the State

Holstein Association, is third from left; E.

J Noon, owner of the champion cow of

Jackson county for milk and butter- fat, is ninth from left, and Corey J. Spencer,
president of Jackson County Holstein Association is tenth from left.

Michigan State Farm Bureau.
has a herd of eighteen cows which
had high, record in 'the Rives Cow
Association for the year ending
May 15, 1923. Mr. Noon has some
heifers which show promise of de-
veloping into ﬁne cattle to ﬁll the
ranks of his herd.

After viewing the herd, the
party repaired to the apple orch-

‘ard where the effects of fertilizer

upon apple trees was viewed. Mr.
Noon had put amonia phosphate

,- 1».

He-

fertilizer upon several strips of
ground in the 16-acre apple orch-
ard, and where the fertilizer had
been laid,. and where it had been
omitted, the difference was plainly
marked. While in the orchard,
Decker and Noon gave several talks
on the value of fertilizer, and Noon
stated that before long there might
be an announcement made that
would revolutionize fertilization.
“Then all college men in America
and Europe will take off their hats

 

. to 3. Jackson county man,” he "said. V, .
north of thei

The Prison farm,
city, ' was the third stop on the
route. There were thirty-ﬁve head

_of pure-bred HolStein cattle in the

prison barns, brought from Living-
ston and Shiaw‘assee ecunties last
fall. The bull, the head of the herd,
is a ﬁne 4-year- old gotten from the»

'state farm at _Ionia,,and his dams

have a record of 24 pounds of but-
erfat a week. The prison has three
airies with 150 cattle and nearly
all are Holsteins" according to Geo.
Bretherton, farm supertendent.
Dinner at Layton’s Corners
Inspection of the herds already
mentioned occupied the entire
morning and the tourists Mom to
Mr. Bretherton’s-‘place at Layton’s
Corners for a picnic dinner. After
the seventy-ﬁve people present had
satisﬁed their hunger with great
quantities of farm cooking, ‘ Mr.
Spencer introduced Mr. Decker as
toastmaster. Mr. Decker in his
opening speech made the statement
that “best satisﬁed farmers are
dairymen” and it was echoed and
expanded by every succeeding
speeker. W. R.. Harper, state vice-
president, was introduced as the
ﬁrst speaker. Mr. Harper explainv
ed that in order to make t e breed-
ers" association more (1 mocratic
the membership dues had been
changed from .a per capita tax on
females in the herd to a ‘ﬂat rate
of. two dollars a breeder. He said

’ that due to depression after the war

and lack of/a reliable help, many
(Continued on Page 19)

 

Inez I’iertertje on farm of 1V. 1V. “iyckoff at age of eighteen years and
still milking. The entire herd “of \V. “2 \Vyckoﬂ' descended from this cow.
53 are now in the barn, and he has sold 4'7 head. This is an example of
what a farmer can do if he persistently sticks.

C. M. Long of the H01-
stein association talking
it over with James Wells
and R. E. Decker.

This is by fair the best bull seen on the tour at the Michigan State
Prison farm. It “as 191-011tly purchased by \Vardeu H. H, Ilulbert
from H. “H Horton Jr. di1ector of Animal Industry, State Depart-
\ ment of Agriculture, at, Lansing, Michigan.

Why Should We Go Out of Our Country to Buy Sugar?

By C H ALLEN does not “make” sugar, it merely
washes the dirt and molasses away
from it. A sugar reﬁnery is a

 
 
 
  
      

 

HE recent sensational increase
in the price of sugar has caus-
ed a howl of indignation to go

 

 

   
 
  
 
  
  
    
  
 
  
  
  
  
   
 
   
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
  
   

up all over the country.

Accusations of proﬁteering have
been hurled right and left; the tar-
iff has been blamed; investigations
have been ordered; “Some one
should go to jail,” say some people.
. Learned (?) editorials have been
_written by writers whose only
knowledge of the subject is that sug-
ar is a white powder they put in their
coffees in the morning to SWeeten it.
, There has been such a confused
mass of stuff .put out that the major-
ity of people are mystiﬁed and wond—
er what the real facts are.

We in the United States last year
consumed 5,700,000 tons of sugar.
This is nearly a million tons more
than we had ever consumed before
in the same time.

From its large production and its
.peculiar connection with our tariff
laws, which will be explained furth—
or along in this article, Cuba con—
trols at certain times of the year the
entire supply coming into this coun—
, try.
Sugar used in the United States
was grown in the following places:
Hawaii, 520, 000 tons; Porto Rico,
50, 000 tons; United «States (cane
11d beet), 1,,310 000 tons; Philip-
ne Islands, 240, 000 tons; miscel-
eons countries, 40,000 tons;
be, 3,240, 000 tons; total, 5,700,-
1‘0 term.

This consumption includes some

    
   

     
  
  
    
  
   
  
   

 
 
  

  

 
 
  
 
  

HE writer of this article. Mr. C. 11111131., is the president of a
farmer-owned sugar company at Deﬁance, Ohio, and has spent
considerable time studying the sugar market and conditions

governing it.

This article is the result of his work.
will remember the article on the sugar market by Mr.

Most of you
Simon G.

Palmer, sugar statistician, that appeared in a recent issue of the

Business Farmer.

You will ﬁnd that both of these market experts

have arrived at the same conclusion, and that is to produce our

own sugar and not depend on Cuba.

What is your idea?

 

 

sugar, both beet and cane, grown in
1921 and carried over to 1922.

In February of this year, in ac—
cordance with its usual custom, the
Department of Commerce made an
estimate of the sugar available for
consumption in 1923. This estimate
showed a “carry over” of 477,000
tons from 1923 to 1924. As the “car-
ry over” of Cuban sugar alone from
1921 to 1922 was 1,600,000 tons
this is a decided de’crease- in the fu-
ture visible supply. Remembering
with anything but pleasure their
painful position when sugar was
scarce, buyers immediately jumped
in' and the “war was on.” Prices
soared.

The bulletin of the Department of

Commerce Was confessedly merely.

an estimate; it could not have been
anything else. It was compiled from
the best information they could get.

 

The Department of Agriculture

now comes out with another esti—
mate.
by the Secretary of Agriculture of
the Republic of Cuba. These all
give different ﬁgures. Practically
eVery sugar dealer makes his own
estimates, and it is the opinions
formed by these estimates that make
a difference in the views people hold
of what the price should be.

Geographically our sugar supply
comes from tw0 sources:

First: From the United States and
its dependencies; beets in the United
States; cane from Hawaii, Porto
Rico, Philippine Islands, and Louis-
iana and Texas in the United States.

Second: From the Republic of
Cuba; all cane. '

Most of our sugar comes from
Cuba.

All sugar made from cane must
go through a reﬁning process to
make 1 thor ugh-1y white,

     

 

‘ laundry for sugar.

Still later one is given out.

Reﬁning '

The reﬁneries that handle the
sugar extracted from cane coming
from Cuba for American consump-
tion are, for convenience and proﬁt,
built along the sea coast.

The beet sugar growu in the
United States does not go through
this reﬁning process. Each beet
sugar factory granulates land washes
its OWn sugar, making it-ready for
the table.

It is important to understand this
difference as because of it a very bit-
ter competition is maintained be-
tween the beet sugar farmer and
factories extracting the sugar from
the beets on one side, and the sugar
reﬁneries reﬁning Cuban cane sugar
on the other. The same thing is
true between the cane sugar farmers
of Louisiana and the Cuban cane
sugar farmers represented by the
reﬁning companies.

It has been acknowledged by
every one if it were not for the tar-
iff there would be no American sug-
ar industry, neither. the cane northe
beet could exist without protection
against the cheaply grown cane of
the tropics. The amount of this
tariff should be, or whether there
should be any at all, has been warm-
ly cdntested and is a continual bone
.of contension. much to the den-1.
ment of the honae are n p '"duction.

       


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OUR NEW 'PRESIDENT—Calvin Coolidge, who
took the oath as President of the United States
at the farm home of his father near Plymouth,
Vermont, where he was spending a short vacation.
President Coolidge was sworn in by his father who
is a notary public. The elder Dir. Coolidge had
the honor of being the only man ever to swear his
son in as President of the United States. President
Coolidge is expected to do big things.

   
   

FIRST STEAMER TO
GO TO FORD TURNING
BASIN—The U. S. Mer-

 

 

TW‘O SONS 0F PRESIDENT COOLIDGE—John
and Calvin Jr., the two sons of the 30th president
of the United States. One of the boys is attend-
ing the Citizens’ Training Camp while the other
with several boy friends is spending his vacation
working for a farmer ‘picking tobacco. The latter
boy, working from daylight to dusk for $3 per
day, asked his parents if he might remain as he
enjoyed the work.

chant steamer

Marine

“Oneida”

was the ﬁrst to

 
   

make the trip up the new
River Rouge development
from the Detroit, River to
the, Ford Turning Basin.
The new channel is crossed
by six modern bridges, all
being the bascule type, like
the one shown to the right.
This channel has been cre-
ated in conjunction with the
River Rouge from the Ford
liIotor' Company’s properties
through the Detroit River,
a distance of about 3%
._ miles, it is 21 feet deep
throughout, is 300 feet
wide at water level and 200
feet wide in the channel
bed. The point of greatest
interest in connection with
this new channel is that
seven or more miles of
water front have been cre-
ated and ’made available

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
   
 
  

for port development,

and

it will

quickly become the

 

 

 

 

center of extensive indus-
t r i a l enterprises. T hi s
whole project is a direct

result of Henry Ford’s de—
cision to locate one of his
large manufacturing plants
on the River Rouge. Be-
cause of the nature of the
land adjacent to the Rouge
it was feasible to dump the
material dredged into the
land Edjoining the channel
and thus ﬁll it up for bet-
ter industrial uses. The
government has paid only
$610,000 for the work done,
while Ford has paid be-
tween four and ﬁve million
dollars. (Photo loaned by
courtesy. IThe Detrolter.”)

 
 
  

THEY DONf’l‘ PAY; MUCH BENT
Italx. is this one. ‘ Here thegnatiVes
s‘pitdof theaheat ‘ot the glaring""sun.‘
stator-grant, fork. t’v'l’iigy;qo
96 how :the ,oes re made

 
    
 
  

ere we

     

 

  

  
   

 

HERE—-An everyday scene in Naples,
prefer to, do their work out-of-doors in
‘ II have a quartet of shoe manu-
their. Work this way ‘ so that thoSe who ’pass can

 

NE‘V “FIRST LADY” OF THE LAND—Bits. Cal'-

of the newly sworn president?“
President and Mrs. (,‘oolidge left the farm at. l'ly—~
mouth, Vermont, belonging to the President‘s fntlier,,
as soon as they received news of Harding’s death;
President (‘oolidge and his family have lived for
years in an apartment that rented for $30 per
month so it will be quite a change for Mrs. (‘oolidge
to take charge of the “'hite llouse.

vin Coolidge, wife

 

 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
 
 
  
 
  

 

 

 

 

    

to move to a new site.
83,000 surrounding acres

   
  

  

the world,

..7

WHOLE TOWN MOVES—The entire town

reservoir .to be constructed
with a capacity of 1,500,000 acre

 

  

 
   
   
   
  
  

of American Falls, Idaho, is
The present sitewill be inundated together With
the gigantic American Falls
which will be the’ 4th largest
-feet of water. -

by the government

  
  
  

   

 

 

 

 

 

 


Tiny side clean the full length.

from test does the.“

1mm like as“ ' information "is? ._ "
artiste a‘hush‘ 'n the line tehce.‘-g
21,11.st been ﬁghting poison-ivy...an&

ush ior‘the lastien years. I' kgep,
an
enioree them to‘elesn upthelr

do? What steps shall I take?

them to be away-\Iro’

I ’ ktenceZ—A. IL, Ann .

 

 

   
    
  
   
   
 
 
    

‘ownes to keephissldo

to the company.

rExtension

 

L ‘ “Nothinsin'thom Pf‘j;,"""’

compelling an »
the n...
fence tree from brush or shrubhery.
There is nothing in the statute
which limits the distance that bees
shallhekeptiromthelineoianad-
joining property . omen—B. H.
Par-ﬂow, State Highway Dept.

BE! 1'0 WY ATTORNEY

Will you please tell me through
your valuable paper how I may cut-
er the patent oﬁce at Washington.
D. 0., without an attorneyt—J. E”
File Lake, Mich.
—Ifyonsreseehingapatenton
some invention. it is well to employ
a regular patent attorney to make
app tionformslthoughitis
not necessary. The U. 8. Patent
Gilles, at Washington, D. 0., will
send you information on the proced-
ure in applying for a patent—Ant.
Legal Editor.

RETAIN OUT OF PURCHASE
PRICE
Three years ago we bought a reg—
istered Durham bull. We had about
twenty stockholders at that time,
we elected our ofﬁcers which was put
in for a term of three years. Two

yearsagolmhiredhythehoardof

trustees to keep the bull that year.
One year ago I was rehired to keep
the hull for the year 1922, tor SIEG.
This your at the annual meeting the
company voted to soil the hull. The
board of trustees sold the bull to me
for 8.90.50. I collected some money
tor’outside cows that did not belong
This leaves me a
balance due of $25.00. To whom
will I look for my pay and how will
I go about to collect my money?
The hull is in my possession yet. Will
I have the right to sell same? Who
is held responsible for damages done
by bull at present time, as the com-
pany has not signed any papers over
to me?—J. OWL, Blanchard, Mich.
———If you have not paid for the bull.
you may retain the $25.00 out of» the
purchase price. 11!, however, they
owe you $25.00 more than the $90.50
which you owe them. then the only
recourse would be to sue the, comp—
any for the balance. You may sell
the bull it necessary to collect what
is due you, even if. the papers
haven’t been signed over to you, as
you have a. lien on it for your ser-
vices. Belongssitisinyourpos—
session and under your care, you are
liable for damages done by it.—-—
Asst. Legal Editor. ’

BORDEAUX MITRE
I would like to know about Bonk
eaux mixture, where it can be purch-
ased, if it is very eitective, etc.

- Thank yon—B. K., Remus, Mich.

——Bordea.ux mixture is a combina—
tion of copper sulphate commonly
called ”blue stone." with equal parts
of lime diluted with water. The
home made mixture is prepared by
dissolvingthecomerand lime separ-
ately diluting the solutions and pour-
ing them together in the diluted
form which makes a combination
that spread and sticks inst with what
is known as the “bordeanx ﬁlm.”
Nearly any hardware or drug store
or implement dealer handles the
spray in some term. -

The elective use of burdens: in
the protection of plants iron insect
and foliage diseases depends upon
the thoroughneu with which the
material is smiled to electively cov-
er the whole plant—J. W. Watch.

Specialist, II. A. C.‘

.erty collected and

.. gents ms: *‘ W *

- "lnfénﬂstlousm 'w ‘. "- H ‘
mun. W was emu-imam

proper amount of care, used spark

heirs, to show where the money
guest—A. G., Elie Englich. ‘

——Ittsthedutyoitheadministrator
to render to the probatecotrt an ac-
count of all money and other

dish by
Ifhedoesnotdothis,itisthe
of the probate judge to Order one
an account, upon the petition of the
heirs—Asst. Legal Editor.

SCHOOL 0mm ’NO'! m-
Pm

W3.
notonthehxmmalcgalﬂghtto
raise a school tut—1A. W., Van
Bares: County.

becomes vacant immediately and ii
the some is not ﬁlled within twenty
days the township beeni um such-
vscancy. It also requires that a
person to be qualiﬁed to held once
shall have property assessed for

school taxes and shall have, his

name on the tax roll of the town-
ship where the district is located.
The law does not provide, however.

J 11019 Rubeqs

m 'lt. ANSWER
I'VE been gettin' letters lately ask-

   

 

in' me why I didn’t do this and

that an' t’other to make things
right an' settle 3 lot of things ’at
our senators sn’ congressmen are
snppowd to settle-—'lected by the
people—-of”mebbe 'pointed by our
gov’nor to ﬁll vacancy or somethin'
—a.nywsy, they're s’posed to dothe
business for us. Jest today. I re-
ceived a letter from a very lovely
lady—I know she is jest by the way
she writes, how she is one of the
kind of women God intended all
women to be an' she asks me to try
’n. answer Mr. A. A. Lambertson.
who wrote an article in B. B. I": rec-
ently.

Dear “Sincere Subscriber” there
ain’tathinganyonecanssytoany
thing like that. The man is simply
given expre—tion to his own desores
an’ anything that you or I could say-
’ll not change him in the least.

He can he’s “been practically a
teetotsler all his life!” Dear
“Sincere Subscriber," don’t it seem
kinda suspic’ous to you "at its.our
“practically teetotalers" that’s doin'
most of the hollerin’ for 5 per cent
beer an' light wines an’ such?

An’ don’t you see its jest such
men as thst’d put all the 01’ things
hock onto us! No dear subscriber.
I wouldn’t dust to try to answer Mr.
--well, now. what’s his name—~no
mam jest puttin' up the
same argument that lots at other
beer swiIlers puts up. They want
beer with alcohol into it—wthey don't
want to git drunk, you know. An'
alcohol—only jest 5 pa cent is not
intoxicatin’. Kr. Couscus sex it
ain't an’ it must be true.“ But dear
lady. the only (inference twin 5 per
centan' Cpercentisthis—onehas
only to drink a little more of the 5
per cent an’ it takes longer an' costs
more money. >

No, I don‘t want to answer Hr;—
well now. ain't that queer 'at I can't
remember his name an' I remember
yours so well—mo matter 'hont the
“voted to make ”it dry but he made
anawinlmistahewhenhedidit.”
Dear-mum: nevermhesa
worse mistake an' that then he'll
never go tar wrong. will her;

   
   
 

 

3" ml

tam

 

_si:rongasitisinsnycity.

  

, price prohibits-4n
7 _ nobody is- oterinjit.tolemfcount;,ot
",.L.".lsl,prohihitton ' _, ~ . 1 »

  
 

--W. L. Cofey, Dept. Public
Insh'oction;
PROCEED are mum WHAT 18

company gets halter the proﬁts and
theotherhaligoestotenanm'l'here

cameupandsetﬂedwithunandwc
just came out even, I doubted his
honesty then, but could not convince
myhushand othisdishonostyasthe
crops were not as good as they
might have been, but in in: our
crops were pretty good, and we
we have made some money but
asallchochaand everythingcamoin
hisnameand hewent swaystterhe
got all the money and we lave not
seen him since. Other people have,

and he told them he did not owe us ,

anything as we did not get anything
at all this year. We haven't the

     

inach Se 3' at,

 

little but ted that little bad. An’
dear Erlen I'll say it'll be bad
:IuLongh it he glts it——any thing at

You know we had 50 or 60 years
of high license saloons reg-dated by
govr’ment control. Did it reg’late?
I ask the world if any liquor law we
ever had reg’lated the liquor busi-
ness, kept men from gettin' drunk,
beatin’ up tsm’lies, spendin’
their wages, stayin’ out all night,
makin' tools an’ beasts of them-
selves an’ commitin' murder, adultry
an’ everything else 'at could' he
thought of? After all the years of
high license the saloon was ﬁnally
outlawed jest 'csnse the gover’ment
could\not control ’em. Norrwe'vc
got prohibition an’ its in its inisncy
jest now. Give it 10 or 15 yearn—-
not askin’ for 50 or CO—éest give it
ten years an’ see what comes an'
new dear~“Sincere Subscriber" while
I was glad to get your nice letter an‘
I sure appreciate the nice things you
said, still an’ all I'm jest a poor 01'
teller 'at can only write things I see
orbelievetobetru'e. An'soI
would not dare to try to answer Kr.
“whet’s—his-name’s” letter. You
see he is very wise an’ a 01’ teller
what's passed his years of under-
standin’ don’t have no kind of a
show with such a man an' so—whilo
I’m truly sorry ’at I can’t come back
still an’ all you’ll see how it is an’
you’ll excuse me, want you dear
lady from Caro, Mich? Cordially
yours, UNCLE BUBE.

P. 8.—fl‘here is one little thing im -

Mr. Lambertson's letter ‘at I take
exception to. He sea our young
folks are bein' tempted an' are fall-
in'—-—I never called a man a liar
’ceptin’ when I thought I could
handle 'im, but—well I live in a
place where temptation is jest as
, I’ve llv-.
ed here live years—Jive known the
place for many years, I know ”at

when saloons wus runnin' there was-

streetswhereitwssn’tsatetora
docsntwomantogoatter‘p.m. I
also know the some streets today
areonrbusyhnsinegMThen

beer. [lot the

 

‘ groom "the other tenant settled
- with you in 1931. I! this settlement, , --
was madden the basis-of a port her;
ship relation between you. and..._.ii;v_..
you cultivated the farm in 1922' on ’

the same basis as the previous year.
Inn of the «opinion your partner-

couldhemmtoMﬂth yos«

«the same'is in 191]. It you are not
able to reach an mesh]; settle-
ment with your partnu, I would ad-
vise you to retains lawyer and pro-

ceed to collect what is due _you.—- p

00011) m “ W To
_ PA! em 7% .

I bouht some fans machﬁery on
oneyear'stino. ‘Igaveancte. The
face of the noteamosnted to $145
drawing 'a' per cent ingest from
maturity. When the note come due
Iconldnotpayitsohaditrmewed
tor three months, they charged mo
34 interest. Now the way I ﬁgure

Asst. Legalnditor.

 

,.

' the interest at 7 per cent it amounts

to 82.54 for three month—N. 0..
Muir, Iichigan.

—-'l‘he iota-est on $145.00 fu- three
months at 1 per cent would be $2.64
and the holder of the 'note could not
compel you to pay [more than this
amount—Asst. Legal Editor.

DID NOSE .PAY FOBLABOR
\ A works for B and .B hasn't paid
A for his labor. Can A go and work
a few days again .ior B and file a
claim on logs for the new
amount and old momma—I. G. 0.,
Kenton, Mich.
—-—Compiled Laws of 1915,
14846 provides that the statement of
a labor lien for services on logs,
timber, etc, shall be tiled within 30
days after the work is completed. I!
you have tailed to do this on tin
old account, your lien is lost. Filing
a labor claim on the new account
would not cover that old account so
as 'to create a lien on it also—Asst.
Legal Editor.

 

 

CAN WIFE SUE FOR NOTES?

Have read some interesting infor-
mation in the M. B. It, and would
like a little myself. My brother had
some money, he told me to, let it out.
I. let it out. He was sickly and he
had me make the notes payable to
himself. or myself. He married and
died about a. month after. His wits
is‘going to sue me for the notes. Can
she do it! These notes were ﬁxed

this way, as he had made his home .

with me of! and on for eight years.
—-0. Fl” Riverdale, Mich. ‘

-—If your brother authorised you to “

make the note payable to yourself in
consideration ‘for the services you
had rendered him, intending that
you should receive the money from
the holder, I am of the opinion his
wife would have no right oi action
against you to recover the amount of
the note—Asst. Leg£1.~"Editor.

 

FENCE ALONG It. R.
A railroad company last January
let job to take down thdr fence and
build a new ‘one. The man has tak-

en down the old fence. and now '

won't build the new fence. I have
been after them to build the fence
all spring. They say “yes, we will
bull " but nothing has been done
yet. The ﬁeld next to the railroad
is my pasture and I wish to turn my
cattle out and there is no fence. Is
there any way to make them build, it
for iL—P. C. 0., Arcadia, Itch.
—-Railroad companies are required
by law to maintain tencg along their
right-ot—whs. ,.
tails to comply with this“; com-
plaint may be made to the lichigsn
Railroad ‘

or con I build it and make thempay.

001nm

 

   

 

 
 

Sec. ‘

any company.

mﬁinx.’ ‘-

~ '6
we.

 

 

      
      
      
     
 
 
 
 
  
   
 
 

   

 
 
  

  
 


 

 

7/LF1AU t1 LJVLJU

Popular
Model

Send No Money

More

Pay On Arrival

 

 

 

~- . is the very pick of the choicest of Fall Don't send one cent. Just letter or postcard
Embroidered sty les——the mos ttetching garments of the season brings any of these smashed price bargans . No Sat!“
. Gabardine at a“2:13;:on huneauaufd ‘garsﬁlarichpricgsése Stigma): oIbligatloIn orh “sil'cl Moraly ngiIvIe 3:?begothamg P f
. . szes o eac ar e o 1
Order right from this page. G oi. the most fetch- y “mp 01'

 

' Two-Tone
Women - -
Shsrood heartily . - - - Combination
. ”26$“ recommends t h i s and M‘sses
. attractive frock o

good qualit cotton 1 '

“1:1. » cebardme. t is de- '
. 11" ‘ signed along slender- ‘ , 1 .
53",: 17mg lines for stout — — 11‘0")“ '
; no women. he skirt ' a9
2 3;" is ﬁnished with two satin
$61M! wide,h gooset panel: 11u1111),o1(1hee:lrnp
1 11111 1 '

if". Shtrlcbgtmni. 'l‘mhse An exceptionally One of the most novel and 0 ,1 9. button style

for Stouts

 

 
 

    
  
      

edges are bound in

ing advance styles at the lowest prices in America.

Bulgarian
Effect

Gabardine.

11" rock For

   
 

   

attractive f1 11 e

till goods arrive. then only the smashed price and
postage. If not delights with your bargain af-

ter examinatlorr and try-on, return goods and we
instantly.

cheerfuilI refund your money Don't

put it 0 Send now.

Child’s Middy

Dress Attractive

attractive children’s gar-

 

with fa ncy rosette

   
  

_ quality cotton ments ever produced and
bleak andoﬁgbgaixgl gabardine dress sure to be a his favorite on s‘irlipl I’lifljlrrila$z;gl]l§
emf on CD rai iii for women and for fall and 11inter. A with medium toe and
:10 or clan 91.011 misses. 110111111011 charming t11op1c111 11ii1ldy Close edge trim a le
ﬁe Inewff otg 111- 11111111 111 shawl dress, including snappy With11111'111111101'110019111111110111150113 A dregsy
\ :21ng g (tic, eth effect, sleeves Balkan 111i1ldy Of all "3‘1 stylish new Spring f1§hion tirit‘ 11111 be ll th
“01181-8 Ok'néac 311d belt 11111811 113111101 10111111 “1111) “it“ rage 1111111111,r the lmst‘ 11111551111 1111111-1 S a 21/6
I 53381131111?“ch means: 11‘“ Yted'f lalntim Iltiundf mil“ zliInd ciiﬁg. to 8: 11i1le 11'111ths.0rder by No.S63A2521es Sen?!
‘ 1 r1111 0 ).ouse 19 F011 . co r1r. cu s
and éabslonvbell- . enhanced with and 11111111111 Ihottom 1.1'e :ﬂalmongtate Psii’e only $1 98 and postage on ar.
3573;: Is ”alga 'e\11111<.1tcallovcr e111luroiilcre11 1n exquisite - -
trimistlisne iii: back Cilibl‘oiderod de- contrasting ('11111I'S.R0pe
and ﬁnished witli sign in Bulgar- izirdle 111th tassels at Waist. Popular
tie sash. Sizes 44 inn effect with Skirt 0f navy blue serge 1
t 54111151: measure rich harmonious in clustered plaited st Ile One—strap
Billie len ’th desired. colors. wo hangs from a. white inns in
Order "Evy by "0‘ streamers at under— waist. Furnished in One-Buckle
96E 116 brown both sides and red blouse and blue shirt
No 96 0t 761 groInIt. Wide combination onlyénIdSizesq 7 Pump, Black
0' ' 1e embroider- 0 years Bl" 0-
. 3°11 1’ 111°"... 11 1. 12981113183: Patent or
' ouse. 1zes
8:3th poIstaagIeo os'lzeulii‘iiail for “GM 34 arrival. Be sure to state Brown
Women length to 44 bust; for Size-

Manchurian
Wolf
Scarf

 
 
 

misses 32 to 38
bust. S t a t 1:
length deslred.
Colors, navy or
brown. Order

Brown No. 9Q
1502. Se nJ
no money. 6Pay
$2 .88 and post-
age on arrival
for either color.
State size.

Women’s Classy Stitchdown

 

   
  
 
 

I {F}

‘ Novelty Cross-
Strap Model in
RichBlackPat-

ent Leather.

 

Calf
Finish

     

  
   
     
           

   
  
   

  
   
   
  

  

    
     
      
        
 
 
  
    

Always
Oxfords mention
- Size
style in all when
the 1111: cities Ol'del‘mg.
9* t f1)1r failwenr.
1 .a e ( 11 1: «strap,
— SIZE? 11 n c 11111-11115
111111111 11f1‘113h .
Classy stil1hd1mn O\'« H.111: 11 11cm (11 P11111111_1Hf finished 19:1”er

         
    
     
   
  
      
  
 
   
   
   
    

ford for 1101111111 ‘\ 1111»
derfully c0111f01't1111113111111
stylish. Uppers of brown

ls 111111 111111111 111111 11111f11111tc1l :111'11011 tip and medul-
lion toi 111111111 11111111111111111 1111171111,), strap 11.1111

1111111'-t11. (11111111111x 111111111111 (XtL‘llSllHl oak sole; ‘.

     

  
 

 

0 r patent lenth 1r 1:111 . 111111111'1' 11111111111: 111ml 111111 1111111111 to lift.
Smooth leatlieIrtr i112 Everyone will admire this 2‘2”?" if t” 5b“"‘1(" wulths BUICK patent £01196- .7
IagltesI. dI (lie .11 i b l e early falllI style c1 oss strun money 'ogy" Sfigsﬁneihrd' goitagngznt 3 Id 1 no
‘ s 1 1 is 01111 0111: pu111p.1c vnmp all( quart- . ' . rriva or .;,
Look At This 319 . outsoles. Low rub- er are of selected block Dilt either leather. State sizes. .,‘~
sharood Bargain 121812 liIeelsé stgzeg e11tIIlea¥herIb11ith die}; black 0 t. 1'
n ‘ 0 . ide suere our- or e eI1- I cross _.
0 I, widt the. stru s. Medium ointedI dress toe has 11111tat1on u lng
per orated tip. amp is quarter neatly perfor— ':
nted. Straps fasten on each side w1thI buttons. Flannel '1
I IOneI piecs leattgélar 1?;1I1Ie wiStIh B21535; Lguls8 leathéir 1‘
' ice on me p e. 1zes o ; W1 e
- widths. No. 96A12. Send no money. Pay 10 Yds. for x:
. 2.98 and postage on arrival. State size. '3.

Beautiful, soft, inexpensive Manchurian Wolf
'soarf lined with Messaline silk. Length about Give
-4“4 inches. Width about 12 inches. Tail about 13 5'19

Order brown by No.
. 273 Send no
money. P a y only
$1.98 a n d postage

 

$18_9

inches, long and bushy. Order Black Scarf by on arrival. 0 r d or
lilo. 98K9000. Order Brown Scarf by No. 96K- ggﬁgtlgeathgr by 02?.
9,001. Send no money. Pay only $3.69 and $2 48 and postage on arrival - ay V Blue and pink check;

postage on arrival. Ulllk blue and gray I‘j

5111110 ; attractive plaids

' ' in navy, grey and brown. - "”1
' Men’s 31;: 1111“] 11193 pink iiptd '3
g y ; , 1119 p 211 on w 1 e
Women 8 Patent Quallty 11111111111 ten yards only. 1,,
. Be sure to state color i

Leather, Gun- Dress :1 n 11 pattern Wanted

Order by No. 96F 3842. '
Send no money. Pay
$1.89 and postage on ‘3
arrival. 1;

Men’s Work ;,

Metal or Brown
Calf Finished
OXFORDS

$12§

Shoes and
Oxfords

 

 

 

    

 

Men’s French toe dress shoes or oxfords in'Brown
calf ﬁnished leather. Have meduun toes perfor-
ated. 011k soles and rubber heels. PerforatedIon

 

   

An absolute rock-bottom IIprice on men’s Black

       
            
    

vamp and eyelet stay Sensatlonal Values. Sizes comfort and dress shoes. ave cushion soles and

Choice of 6 to 11 wide widths. Order oxford by No. 98- rubber heem. Sizes 6 to . 01-119.- soft too I
Three A658. Order shoe by No. 96A680. Send no model by No. 98A618. Order b1’uecher cut with .
Leathers money. Pay $2. 98 and postage on arrival for Tip too by No. 9811811. Send oney. F

    
    

either style. State size.

FREE

Pay $2. 98 aynd postage for either style.n state she.

 
 
 
  
  
  
  

    

 

BARGAIN CATALOG

Your order from this Ad brings you our beautifully illustrated
:fowggge ceasing of more than 4000 bargains in everything

Made with imitation shield tip and medallion per—

Bla k ork shoe 1" durable leather.
forated vamp. perforated lace stay and circular Brown 01‘ C. W 0

Solid leather inner soles. double soles.

   
   

     

 

 

' et a new Bargain Catalo weeks.
' faxing. Has medium rubber 11861 and medium This Is Sharood’sg we of k | _ Green chrome outsole. Leather heel. izes 6
'pointe‘d toe. Sizes 2% to 8. Wide widths. to- date merchandise a‘t' the $191191” pilgesaiiiplxeg: chia‘i—quiriletligd 1 Wid ed Widtahls only, a” ”931:?ng bysynod
m_ patent by No. 96A121. 0M.” gunmetal by vastly superior to the old way of sending out a. big catalog only 98‘759' Orpgr $1338 gym, 333“ e on 'amyai,
. 0. 3°. 23‘ am, brown by No. 93‘123. , - once or tw “1:001; yaaml Sharood's goods are always the newest 32d$°gg§' sizes” 1 1.6 51/2 by No. 611554. Pf!“
oner- P1111 $1.98 and Postage on — PM” Wan" ‘ ° "“8" s1. 93. 01-11111- Little Boys sizes 9 to 131/. by,
1 No.’ 96A565. Price $1 1.1a. _

 

   

Dept. MINNEAPOLIS

MENNESOTA


   

  

  
   

   

 

engine

Says R. Stanley Dutrow, Walnut
Grove Stock Farm, Chariestown, W.
Va. “That ll/zhorseFairbanks-Morse
Engine that I got of you is certainly
some horse forwork. Theonly REAL
engine I ever owne ” Says Silas A.
Smith, Oakboro, N. C. . s “The en-
gine I purchased from you in 1917
has been in continuous service ever
since andhssnotcostoneocnt for
repairs.” .
thEgg;350,0001:1;elrlﬂzzre‘:giroved ’

Engine. 0 your

requirements, there is a :3”

to exactly suit your ne s.
Over 5,000 dealers carry these en-
ginesinstockandwillsave you
money on freight.

1 H..P.“Z” Equipt) 3 54
1221:1332" W 74
3 153."? Battery 90
3 HI.‘ 2” Magneto 110
6 ILP.“Z”(Magncco 170
ﬁmhﬁctory
Addfnddttoyourm

    

FAIRBANKS, MO G: CO.

Manoloesurers a CHICAGO

imported Melotte

 

   
    
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
 
   
   
  
  
 
   
  

 

 

 

 

~are almost thrilled. Yet, young man

 

of the labor occupation on the
farm as timely and applicable to the
bean business. His Hr. Ford’s idea
to work farmers in his factories up-
on the days that they cannot work
on their farms audit is his idea to»
use farmers to build machinery that
they use on the farm during the per-
iod that they are not busy on the
farm.

In line with this the farmers can be
of great service to the bean industry
by picking their beans at hem dur-
ing the winter months, and ereby
earn wages for time that would oth-
erwise be’ unproductive and accord-v
ingly increase the income from the
farm. There are many~ other rea-'
sons in favor of this—among them
are the difficulty to get help in which
to orderly market the crop, as the
substitution of machinery. and cor-
responding reduction in the quality
has not been at‘ all conducive to-
ward increasing the consumption of
beans and improving the quality
The whole family could join in pick-
ing beans with» slight expense for
equipment. '

The difﬁcultly of drawing fair
samples from farm stocks is evident
to all so that in either event, some-
body losses. We have' known farm
tests of 10% to show only 1% actu-
al shrink in the elevators and we
have seen it the other way.

Labor becomes more and more
scarce all the time and it will soon
be impossible to get the picking
work done on a reasonable basis.
The farmer has to pay the price of
picking and handling and the shrink
so why shouldn’t he do the work.
The progressive farmers will quickly
see the advantage of doing all of the
work on the farm necessary to pre-
pare the beans for market. The
progressive dealers will also welcome
a movement of this-kind, because it
will prevent their competitors from
paying unproﬁtable prices by not
getting the full pick which always
ends in passing on to the consumer
an inferior product. Now if the
farmer wants to put out a strictly
high grade CHP article, he does not
have to depend upon the country
elevators to do it for him. He can
do it at a great deal less expense
himself than they can do it for him,
and by so doing he can improve the
efﬁciency and income of his farm.—
Benjamin Gerks.

THE FARM

GRICULTURE in this day is con-
sidered a far greater vocation!
than it was forty years ago.

Great progress is being made and
prospects are favorable for young
men who are contemplating farming
as a profession.

The nation realizes the great need
of lending a. helping hand to the
farmer and we understand better the
phrase, “for the farmer is the man
that feeds us all.”

It behooves the farmer of the
twentieth century to be enlightened
and scientiﬁc; we are living in an
age of progress and one of great
achievements. We have Agricultur-
al Colleges throughout the land, and
opportunities are open to young
men who are willing to respond and
dare to make great accomplishments.
“Experimentation" in many in-
stances has proved successful by
men who are scientiﬁc farmers, and
who have had training in some of
our Agricultural schools.

As a‘.‘ rule, farmer's sons drift into
the cities. Their main reason for
going seems to be- that the farm de-
mands too hard work. Modern im-
provements in machinery are a great
asset. Contrast, if you will. the
times of today with those of thirty or
ﬁfty years ago. What did our
fathers have to face? Low prices of
produce and inadequate machinery.
As we listen to the stories of our
parents concerning farming then, we

  

and young women on the farms to-
day are. dissatisﬁed. .The times are
as different as day and, night. Con-
sider the ’goOd "marketing of today

and, then-' ask, your am: wvhaL.
“ We: M:

ﬁnest.“ oats. can. and

unaware“: ”Bosnian.
Ford. covering the manner. . .

 

  
 
 

ever, encourage one’s' heart for a

brighter future. ‘The writer, himself

sold butter endow for sixty and
seventy cents at times, while, work-
ing the farm of-‘his father. ’ ' , _

Talk about work-L—We must work
wherever we go. The work in the

country does not get as monotonous

as the work in the city for the fact
that on the farm one is apt to under-
take four or five diifereut kinds of

work in one day whereas, in the city

he works at the same thing over and
over again. Furthermore, one is
strictly independent on the farm and
can consider himself" as his “Own
Boss.” _ .
Consider if you will! Suppose

the father of a home in the city is‘

conﬁned to his home by illness.
From whence does the resource
come? On the farm, the wife with
either the children or hired man may
manage to keep, the stone rolling.
And in case of death, where can
money be better invested than in the

farm, where those who survive have

something to fall back upon.

The United States Government is‘

very much in sympathy with the
farmers of today, for the reason that
people are leaving the farms in a
steady stream to go to the towns and
cities. A survey by the Department
of Agriculture shows that nearly
460,000 persons left farms in 1922.
The farm labor supply is only about
88 per cent of the demand. Last
year at this time the supply was 11
per cent more than the demand.
The automobile is another great
advantage to the farmer. Twenty-
ﬁve years ago, March 24, 1898, the
ﬁrst horseless carriage was sold and
was delivered one week later. Then
twenty cars were sold during the
first year, whereas, today there are’
more than ten million registered car
ovfners in the United States alone.
The bright future there is for farm—
ers to sell their produce by the use of
trucks! ‘
On April, this year, there was a
shortage of 12 per cent for employ-
ment on the farm. The movement
from the farm to the city last year is
estimated by the Department of
Agriculture to have been 2,000,000
persons. As some 880,000 persons
indulged in the "Back-to—the—Farm"
movement, .there was a net shift in
farm population of approximately
1,120,000 or 3.6 per cent in our
rural agricultural population. The
excess of births over deaths reduced
the net loss to 460,000. Several
causes have combined to bring about
this “On-to—the-city" movement. The
fear has often been expressed that
the movement away from the agri-
cultural districts offers a continuous

thread to our food supply, and so to -

ones national life.

The movement from the~ farm to
the city certainly can not go on for-
ever, although we are reminded
that the increased use of farm mach-
inery may be expected to do much
toward making up the labor short-
age.

Restricted immigration has re-
sulted in a stringency of common
labor. Building operations, high-
way constructions, railway better-
ments and extensions, and public
works demand tens of thousands of
“pick-and-shovel” men. Wages by
the hours for unskilled labor are
nearly double what they were two
years ago. Congress at present is
considering the inﬂux of unskilled
workers into the United States. “Ad-
vice is almost as dangerous as pre-
diction." but there‘are certain cau-
tions which ought to be deﬁnitely
placed before the farmer. Beyond
all question, he would be wise to
think twice before he undertakes a
program. of large production at
greatly enhanced costs. Needless to
say, this suggestion bears no rela-
tionship whatever to the advice that
some have in times past govern the
farmer to. curtail his output in the
hope that in this monitor... he'wonld'

For him “to Z declineﬂlo grow a
«'92 than been” " ’
w dbsﬁ

be able to farce prices npunduly ..

 

     
 

  
 

most homes on the term, are given .

' something to do is“ soon as’theyjar
able, which tends to keep them. 0

 
  
 
   

  
 
  
   

Of mischief.' Contrast the young '7 '

  

 
 
 

boys and girls in the city who drift-a

remand the city streets, with those
in the, country—“An idle brain "is
the Devil’s workshop.” ‘. _
.Let us ask the question .and be
frank with ourselves, from what,
place do the most of our great men

‘eone! Consider our presidents,

, preachers.

I contend that we haves right to
say that farm life has a tandem-grin~
elevate one more forthe better than
has citylus. statistics show mt
young‘men from thefarm are better
ﬁtted for strenuous work. Young
men hen the” country, however,
seem to have more appreciation of
life in nature and are more preserv-
ing. —-John F. Link. Bay County.

 

BEAljl CROP WILL BE'LESS
THAN EXPECTED
TAKE notice there is a great
howl going up about the over-
supply of wheat. Snow, the
greatest by far crop statistican ‘on'
earth, says it is no such thing. The
carry-over is but very little larger
if any, than usual, no more than
enough to be safe. Wait until the
speculators and elevator ‘men get
a hold of the heft of the crop, then
see the price of wheat and ﬂour
jump. I take notice the middle
men get more hoggish from year to
year. In a few more years they
will expect the farmers to smile
and kindly thank them for taking
the goods off of their hands with-
out any remuneration whatever. .
See where the price of beans has
gone to, all owing to printers’ ink,
too much publicity. Every man,
woman, and child in our state
knows or thinks we are going to
have a bumper crop of beans. The
real facts are, if the whole state is '
like western Michigan we are not
going to have more than one-third
the crop we thought we were going
to have a month ago. On account of
hot, dry weather, the blossoms are
bloated and fall oﬂ.’ making no pods
and even lots of the small pods fall ‘
off and what pods there are left on
the vine are short and will_ contain *
but few beans. _
We will have to have rain pretty .
soon if we get a third of a crop. All
the good rain will do now is to fill
out what pods there are left. It ~‘
can’t restore pods , and blossoms
which have fallen off. If we don't
get rain pretty soon, all there will ‘
be in the line of spuds is just the
vines.-——A. A. Lambertson, Kent
County. - .

PAliIPHLET‘ GIVES 11st FOR
CONQUEST OF T. B.

HE general essentials of modern 3
tuberculosis treatment are sum-
marized. for the guidance of

consumptives and their families in .
“Getting The- Best Of' T. 3.," a
pamphlet just issued by the Michl- 1
gan Tuberculosis Association. For
the individual advice essential to
each case, the booklet refers the
patient to his physician.

Rest and more rest is the secret
of recovery from tuberculosis, the
reader is assured. As ﬁrst aids to"
rest come plenty of fresh air and
enough nourishing food. ‘ ‘

9 problem of living comfortably
out of doors in cold weather is giv-
en considerable attention, and the4
illustrations show a home made

sleeping porch, a cure chair, and . __
other devices which insure the pa-
tient’s comfort. A brief discussion, I

:‘fi the consumptive’s diet is inclini-

“in. pubescent-in be M
is mnsmmmegr " ‘

  

    

   
      
   
     
  

 
 

 
 
    
    


 

 

  
  
  
  
 
  

 
  
 

But this is to
The two days'concur.

-~ dent .s Christianity.

How

to. conquer And this .is

moay or history.

But persecution is not the only,

nor the large, present tense of this
text. It is but an accompaniment
« of, blessedness. And blessedness is
a consequence of an inward charac-

teristic of loyalty to the Heavenly'
“churchianr

government. Much of
ityf'wplaces‘ its emphasis upon ont-
~ward characteristics. But Christ

' emphasizes the inward.

ti Jesus spoke for the disciples then ‘
living. He gave them fair warning ‘

»of.~_what they misht expect from the
world. . The disciple's life then Was
spent “in Journeyings, in labor, and

» in distresses." He always was front-
ing danger like some doomed crim-
inal. Paul relates, "We are tools
for Christ’s sake.” We are “as men
doomed to death.” Like their Mas-
ter, they had no dwelling place or
localities. The Galilean had no place
to lay his head. “There is but one
price for human freedom—blood."
True. But the blood spilled in a
moral resistance to a worldly antag—
onism. .Here is where Love meets
persecution and suffering and sacri-
fines her life to atone for hatred.
Don’t you believe it? Hear that
burning word on the Cross, “Father,
forgive them, for they know not
what they do.”

But Jesus proclaims an all-time
principle. History has proved it
and the future will evidence it
wherever sin abounds. “I stood in
their dark dungeons with their rusty
implements of torture devised by
man for the punishement of man, and
in the damp cellars where their vic-
tims who were found with Bibles,
were chained naked to be eaten by
armies of hungry rats.” so writes
Sherwood Eddy from Central
Europe. But, says he, "The spirit
- .of John Hues triumphs." Even so,

"He that endureth to the end shall
be saved." This too, is the last
message of the apostle John in the
"The Revelation," where we have a
pictorial description of conﬂict and
persecution. thruont the Christian
age; but all of which is to result in
arebirth at. the nations and the “es-
tablishment of e New Jerusalem."
So, roll on, 0 w eels of Time!

. To sketch the beattitudes is to
see Christian idealism as always an-
tagonistic to worldly standards.
They are foreign to the habits and
notions of sinful man. When you

r are a friend to Grace, you are a

foreigner to the world. And a for-
eigner is watched, restricted, and
‘otten severely persecuted. Said
thesoldier on" guard in the recent
,, war, “Who are you?" “What is your
nationality?” way all this? Be-
cause a German citizen living 1 the
United States then, was, theore ical-
l‘y,’ an enemy. Politically, he was

- held to be a standing rebuke to

...¢‘

American principles. And a true
Christian, a citizen of the Kingdom

.ot Heaven, must be a standing, re-

pute to the world. His conscience

* ,y‘will register things worldly as evil:
. and this provokes antagonism.

1A8 yet, the practice '01 righteous-

ness makes us unpopular. We may

' 0' hold religious opinions or make a
protession and suitor little.
' - practice the idealism of Christ 1810

But to

Take your re-

spite persecutiem
Christian friend,

on . seriously,

”as solute. Society and test here

’ ntionalities, or into Industry
”. hex-practices, and at once.

"int

* VS~ _
too; that now is the day of

tion and suiering are inci-
, ' , "They that
would live Godly in Christ Jesus
~ must enter \“persecution.”
long? As long as there are enemies
the testis

M. A. C. from the University or
.- .MWPPL
gM

   
 

«“Whyﬁfsaid the minister,
,_ should advocate, seriously,
your program ‘ irom' my pulpit, I
would losemyjo .” , And instances
mkht be multiplied. But listen!
The indolence, self-righteousness,
and inactive “conservatism. of the
church, is part or the relentless
force . borne down upon those who
Would be Gospel enthusiasts. But
in this day when the destinies of
nations are being decided in human

blood, is your lite-blood, your per--

sonal or church interest, too great a
price to ask to set up the Society of
the Golden Rule.

When religion walks around with
concealed Weapons, little conﬂict
need be expected. It Christians are
not suffering as they ought to, is it
because of the leaven oi churchli-
ness in the world or the leaven of
worldliness in the church? Maybe
both. But certainly the churches
cannot aﬂord to haul down the
Christian" ﬂag when the devil ﬁres
across the Gospel boat. All honor
to the boat‘ that - beached herself
rather than surrender to the enemy.
All glory to the Christian men—and
women who would keep their ban-
ners ﬂoating and sent their craft up-
on the rocks of persecution rather
than surrender to' the powers of
evil.

Persecutionhnot for your own

faults or temperament; not for
harsh judgement or intolerance of
others; but for “righteousness’

sake” makes the Kingdom assured
to you. Immediately, you recognize
your calling is not of this world. It
brightens your hope and, increases
your vision. Paul and Silas had
their backs lashed to blood, but
made the prison resound with their
praises. Hear the Armenians’ sick-
ening moan! “The blood of the
martyrs is the seed of the church.”

But there is a future Kingdom for
all those who receive the Kingdom
ideals here. The Kingdom spirit
here is the germ pledge of that
more perfect reign to come. Poly-
carp‘ said to his persecutors,
“Eighty-six years have I served him
and he has done me nothing but
good. How then can I revile him,
my Savior and King?” He joyfully
went to the stake for “righteous—
ness’ sake." But burning at the
stake or having our names recorded
on history's pages, in itself, does
not count. There is a large com-
pany of just plain folks who have
become immortalized on the books
of Heaven, but whose names, and
.mention of Whose deeds, have not
occured on human pages. They are
men and women, who by toil, sacri-
ﬁce, and kindness, have helped to
build the community of Christian
good-will.

“They have no place in storied page,
Nor rest in marble shrine;
They are past and gone with a.
perished age;
They died and made no sign.
“They healed sick hearts

their own were broken,
And dried sad eyes till their’s lost
ht-

while

We shall know at last by
token
How they fought and fell in the
light."

To be sung about in this way for
“righteousness’ sake,” is more bless-
ed than to have silver and gold, and
vast possessions. Even yet “The
way of the world is to praise dead
saints and persecute living ones.”

a certain

PROF. HARRISON HUNT CHOSE
M. A. C. ZOOLOGY HEAD
ROF. HARRISON R. HUNT has
been named head of the depart-
ment of zoology and geology at
M. A. C., succeeding Prof. Walter
B. Barrows, who died in February,
1923, according to the announce-
ment of Robert S. Shaw, acting
head of the college. Prof. A. C.
Conger, who has served as acting
head 01' the department since the
death of Professor Barrows, resign-v
ed some time ago to accept a simil-
ar position at Ohio Wesleyan uni-
versity. Professor Hunt comes to

who're, he has been

a law—onion " menses" 7'" i 9

  
       
 
 

'TheOIdestMailordeersé f -
'is‘l'odaytheMosthgressive ‘ ~

    
 
 
   

 
 

    
 
   

 
 

 
   
  

  

 
    
        
    
 
     
     
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
   
     
  
  
   
    
  
   
    
 
    
   
      
   
   
   
  
  
  
    
    
 
   
   
  
   
  
   
  
    
    
  
   
   
    
  
   
  
 

 

You may as well Proﬁt by the Saving
this Book offers You

This Catalogue is free to you. You need merely ﬁll in the coupon below. You, too;
may Just as well proﬁt by the saving this book offers.

Over Fifty Years’ experience in buying and manufacturing has gone into this book
—to secure for you and your family the lowest prices and the biggest savings.

Over Forty Million Dollars’ worth of merchandise has been bought when prices were
lowest, and manufactured especially for this Catalogue.

' Our World-wide Search for Bargains
Actually, our buyers have searched every important market of the world to secure
for you those bargains. Nothing has been left undone to secure the lowest prices. And
in all this work we have never lost sight of quality.
To offer only the kind of goods that is best for you to buy, that will give the longest
SCI'VICC, that is our policy. We never sacriﬁce quality to make a seemingly low price.

“Ward Quality” Means Reliable Goods
. When you buy from Montgomery Ward 85 Co., you get only goods that will stand
inspection and use.

That has hem our principle for over Fifty Years. To sell only Dependable, Scrvicc~
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Everything for the Home, the Farm and the Family

- FOR WOMEN: Our own Fashion Experts, living in New York, have selected for
you the best New York Styles, only the best. And we offer these for every member of
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FOR. THE HOME: Experts in 0m- new
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everything needed for the home
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FOR. THE FARM: For over
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and are continuing to help by oﬁ‘er-
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FOR THE MEN: Everything
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And so we say to you—don’t you,
at least, miss the advantage this .
book offers you. You and your
family may just as well proﬁt by
Its saving.

. The coupon below brings you this
big, complete Fall 8: Winter Cata-
logue free.

Montgomery Ward & Co.
Chicago' - KasaCity St. Pull
Portland, Ore. Fort Worth

     
  

To
MONTGOBIERY
WARD 8; CO.
Dept. ll-H
Chicago, Kansas City,
St. Paul, Portland, Ore.,
Fort Worth. (Mail this cou-
pon to the house nearest you.)
Please 0 oil me my free copy of
Montgomery Ward’s complete
Fall and Winter Catalogue.

   
  
 
  
  
  
 

   
    
       
       
    
    
   
  
 
 
  

  

   
       
    
 
 

Name.............nu.....uuu

  
  

Addie-3........-...._¢.u'......u...ou

     
  

\.

  
    

 

 

 

the department of biology
38* canyons. - , _

   

 

  
 


 

 

  
 
 
 
  
  

  
 
  
    

 

A m
PULVER'ZED ‘ ,
LIMESTONE ‘

Don't let another seeding go by before
you ,put in SOLVAY. You make
more money using SOLVAY because
a it gives you bigger crops, better crops
and that means more money. l

 
    
  

   
  

it's so easy to handle SOLVAY—
shipped in 100 lb. bags or in bulk.
‘ may be spread by hand or lime sower.
Safe, will not burn, and is so finely
ground it bringszresults the ﬁrst year.

\

Sweeten your soil and you “sweeten”
your bank roll too. There's years of
proﬁt in using SOLVAY. Find out
all about it —Write for the valuable
SOLVAY lime book ———freel

THE SOLVAY PROCESS CO.‘

Sales Agent, Wing & Evens, Inc.
Real Estate Exchange Building Detroit, Mich.

 

 

 

 

     
 
  
   
  

Before it is too late ﬁnd out if you
‘ (have sour soil. We show you how.
We send all necessary materials. Same
test used byvsoil experts. EE—No
obligation. rite today for catalog—price.

EN

iime and phosphate distributor

   
    

curesb sour sorl atslowdscpst. hln- SCOllt I
cures um I crepe. tea ime. p osJ , .

phetee. untrue... 1656 n. wide—twiee nght welght—
1width of others. Cuts work roomy, comfort-
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'eate wager» andle mate“ swamps riced. Can
lonce, Freight car to field. '6'4‘“. ewom under

Write for latest price. arctic.

THE HOLDEN CO. In
PEORIA,Dept. 232 ILL

   

    

Ask for No. 804
(black) or No.8“
(brown)

30 Years ofHonest Shoe Values

Dependable H—B Dress and Service
shoes for men and b0 are made of

, ALL LEATHER, an all good lea-
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longwea ' ' tothclaststit
they satisfyyourfeetand pocketbook.
Your store sells them, or will get
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Send for handsome booklet REE.

HEROLD -BERTSCH’ SHOE C0.
l (in-1M Mich.

 

II your on horse enlists"
Use 2 large cans. Cost $2.8.-

HEAVEs

\ Mm boat 6! not satisfactory .
, OH! on at “.25 sites eullelont. In under tom.
1. Man: [or out

N E WTO N's
t v I compound for
Bursa. Cattle and Hogs.
Heaven. Coughs. Distemper.
[n stion. Wonn expeller.
Conditioner. At deelers‘ c
y parcel post.

I'I‘IE NEWTON BEIEDY 00.. TONI. 0M.

 

 

 

RATES T0 CLEVELAND .
C. Waterway. Refreshing. All can-

 

 

LOW
by the D. 3;
72381118121088.

 

 

MICHIGAN BUSINESS
FARMER
“The Farm Paper

   

  
 
  
   
  
 
 
  
  
  
 

of Service”
TELL YOUR FRIENDS

 

ABOUT IT

 

 

 

 

 
  

 

 

ETU’RN‘ING from a hunting trip, I
waited at the little town of Los
Pinos, in New Mexico, for the south-

bound train, which was One hour late. I
sat on the porch of the Summit House
and discussed the functions of life with
Telemachus Hicks, the hotel proprietor.

Perceiving that personalities Were not
out of order, I asked him what species
of beast had long ago twisted and muti-
lated his left ear. Being a hunter I was
concerned in the evils that may befall
one in the persuit of game.

“That ear," said Hicks,
of true friendship."

"An accident?" I persisted.

"No friendship is an accident,"
Telemachus; and I was silent.

“The only true case of true friendship
I ever knew,” went on my host, “was s.
cordial intent between a. Connecticut man
and a monkey. The monkey climbed
palms in Barranquila and threw down
cocoanuts to the man. The man sawed
them in two and made clippers, which
he sold for two reales each and bought
rum. The monkey drank the milk of
the nuts. Through each being satisﬁed
with his own share 'of the graft, they
lived like brothers.

“But in the case of human beings,
friendship is a transitory art, subject to
discontinuance without further notice.

“I had a friend once, of the entitlement
of Paisley Fish, that I imagined was
sealed to me for an endless space of
time. Side 'by side for seven~ years we
had mined, ranched, sold patent churns,
herded sheep, took photographs and other
things, built wire fences, and pidked
prunes. Thinks I, neither homicide nor
ﬂattery nor riches nor sophistry nor
drink can make trouble between me and
Paisley Fish. We was friends in busi-
ness, and we let our amicable qualities
lap over and season our hours of recrea-
tion and folly. We certainly had days
of Damon and nights of Pythias.

“One summer me and Paisley gallops
down into these San Andres mountains
for the purpose of a month’s surcease
and Ievity, dressed in the natural store
habiliments of man. We hit this town
of Los Pinos, which certainly was a roof-
garden spot of the world, and ﬂowing
with condensed milk and honey. It had
a street or two, and air, and hens, and
a eating-house; and that was enough
for us.

"We strikes the town after supper-
time, and we concludes to sample what-
ever efﬁcacy there is in this eating-house
down by the railroad tracks. By the
time we had set down and pried up our
plates with a. knife from the red oil—
cloth, along intrudes Widow Jessup with
the hot biscuit and fried liver.

“Now, there was a woman that would
have tempted an anchovy to forget his
vows. She was notso small as she was
large: and a. kind of welcome air seemed
to mitigate her vicinity. The pink of her
face was in hoc signo of a culinary tem-
per and warm disposition and her smile
would have brought out the dogwood
blossoms in December. _

“Widow Jessup talks to us a lot of
garrulousiness about the climate and
history and Tennyson and prunes and
the scarcity of mutton, and ﬁnally wants
to know where we came from.

" ‘Spring Valley,’ says I.

" 'Big Spring Valley,’ chips in Paisley,
out of a lot of potatoes and knuckle-
bone of ham in his mouth.

"That was the ﬁrst sign I noticed that
the old ﬁdus Diogenes business between
me and Paisley Fish was ended forever.
He knew how I hated a talkative person,
and yet he stampedes into the conversa-
tion with his amendments of syntax. On
the map it was Big Spring Valley; but
I had heard Paisley himself call it Spring
Valley a thousand times.

“Without saying any more, we went
out after supper and set on the railroad
track. We had been pardners too long
not to know what was going on in each
other’s mind.

“ ‘I reckon you understand,’ says Pais-
lﬁY. 'that I've‘ made up my mind to ac-
crue that widow woman as part and par—
cel in and to my hereditaments forever,
both domestic, sociab' is, legal, and other-
wise, until death us do part.’

“ 'W'hY. Veal says I, ‘I read it between
the lines, though you only spoke one.
And I suppose you are aware,‘ says 1—,
‘that I have a movement on foot that
leads up to the widow’s changing her
name to Hicks. and leaves you writing
to the society column to inquire as to
whether the‘best man .wears a japonica
or seamless socks at the wedding.

“ ‘There'll be some hiatuses in your
program; says Paisley, chewing up a
piece of a railroad tie, ‘I’d give in to you,’
says he, ‘in 'mosiL any respect if it was
secular affairs. 'but this “is not so. The
smiles of waman.’ goes ‘on Paisley. ‘is
the whirlpool of Spuills and Chalybeates,
into which vortex the ,good ship Friend-
ship is often drawn and dismembered.
I'd assault a. beer

“is the relic

said

or . rub

   

  

J'bott“ ifférOJ'lE'  

lmJnDodbdcuPonQCuWhMleﬂhﬁe-MSMMe

- . _, , . ,.'...that was annoying.
-‘you,' says Paisley. ‘or I'd ,indorse your
the /Dl,a-96 between 79“?» p

    

  
 
  

shoulder-blades With opodeldoc the sarm
as ever; but 'there my .sense of etipuetto
ceases. In this fracas ,with Mrs. Jessup
we, play it alone. I’ve notiﬁed you fair.’

"And then I collaborates with myself,
and offers the following resolutions and
by-laws:

“ ‘Friendship between man and man.’
says I, 'is an ancient historical virtue
enacted in the days when men had to
protect each other against lizards with
eighty-foot tails and ﬂying turtles. And
they’ve kept up the habit to this day,
and stand by each other till the bell-boy
comes up and tells them the animals are
not really there. I’ve often heard,’ I says,
‘bout ladies stepping in and breaking up
a friendship between men. Why would
that be? I'll tell you Paisley, the ﬁrst
sight and hot biscuit of Mrs. Jessup ap-
pears to have inserted a oscillation into
each of our bosoms. Let the best man
of us have her. I‘ll play you a square
game, and won’t do any under-handed
work. I’ll do all of my courting of her
in your presence, so you will have an
equal opportunity. With that arrange-
ment I don't ’see why our steamboat of
friendship should fall overboard in the
medicinal Whirlpools you speak of, which-
ever of us wins out.”

" ‘Good old hoss!’ says Paisley, shak-
ing my hand. ‘And I’ll do the same,’
says he. ‘We'll court the lady synon-
ymously, and without any of the prudery
and bloodshed usual to such occasions.
And we’ll be friends still, win or lose.‘

- “At one side of Mrs. Jessup’s eating-
house was a bench under some trees
where she used to sit in the breeze
after the south-bound hed been fed and
gone. And there me and Paisley used
to congregate after supper and make
partial payments on our yespectsto the
lady of our choice. And we was so hon-
orable and circuitous in our calls that if
one of us got there ﬁrst we waited/for
the other before beginning any gallivant-
ery. .

“The ﬁrst evening that Mrs. Jessup
knew about our arrangement I got to
the bench before Paisley did. Supper
was just over, and Mrs. Jessup was out
there with a. fresh pink dress on, and
almost cool enough to handle.

“I sat down by her and made a few
speciﬁcations about the moral surface of
nature as set forth by the landscape and
the contiguous perspective. That evening

 

twitch-'5 ,9 '33

“We strikes the town after supper-u
time.” A ’

was surely a case in point, The moon
was attending to business in the section '
of sky where it belonged, and the trees
was making shadows on the ground ac-
cording to science and nature, and there
was a. kind of conspicuous huilabaloo
going on in the bushes between the bull-
bats and the orioles and the jack—rabbits
and other feathered insects of the forest.
And the wind out of the mountains was
singing like a‘jew’s-harp in the pile of
old‘ tomato—cans by the railroad track.

I felt a. kind of sensation in my left
side-«something like dough rising in a
crock by the ﬁre. Mrs. J essup had moved
up closer.

“ ‘Oh, Mr. Hickis,’ says she, ‘when one
is alone in the world. don't they feel it
more aggravated on a. beautiful night like
this?"

“I rose up off the bench at once. 1 '
" “ 'Ezcuse' me. ma’am,’ says 1. ‘butII' .1 ~
have to wait till Paisley comes hello
can give. a audible ham 5'. to. i.’

   

 
  

 

 

  
   
 
 
 
     
   


   

   
 
  
   

 

 

i
w

teapot-the other. in , y . __
, ore mushy‘walks of life, such as might
”beifomented by sentiment: and proximity.
.Mrs. » Jessup appears 'to' think serious

about the matter for a. minute, and-then

she“ breaks into a species \of laughter
that makes the wildwood resound.

“In a few minutes Paisley drops
around, with'oil of bergamot on his hair,
and sits on the other side of Mrs. Jessup.
and inaugurates a sad tale of adventure
in ,which him and Pieface Lumley has a.
skinning-match of dead cohvs in ’95 for
a silver-mounted saddle in the Santa Rita
valley during the nine months’ drought.

“Now,_from the start of that courtship
I had Paisley Fish hobbled and tied to
a. post. Each one of us had a different
system for reaching out fer "the easy
places ina the female; hea'rt.’ Paisley's
scheme Was to'petrify ‘em with wonder—
ful relations of events that he had either
come across personally or in large print.
I think he must have got his idea of sub-
jugation from one of Shakespeare’s shows
I see once called ‘Othello.’ There is a

colored man in it who acquires a duke’s/

daughter by disbursing to her a mixture
of the talk turned out by Rider Haggard,
Lew Dockstader, and Dr. Parkhurst. But
that style of courting don’t work well off
the stage.

- “Now, I give you my own recipe for
inVeigling a woman‘ into that state of
affairs when she can be referred to as
‘nee Jones.’ Learn how to pick up her
hand and hold it, and she’s yours. It
ain’t so easy. Some men grab at it
‘so much like they were going to set
a dislocation of the shoulder that you can
smell‘the arnica. andrhear ’eni tearing
oﬁ bandages. Some take it up like a hot,
horseshoe, and hold it off at arm’s length
like a druggist pouring tincture of asa-
d’oetida in a bottle. And most of ’em
catch hold of it and drag it right out
before the lady’s eyes like a boy ﬁnding
a baseball in the grass, without giving
her a chance to forget that the hand is
growing on the end of her arm. Them
ways are all wrong.

“I’ll tell you the right way. Did you
ever see a man sneaw out in the back
yard and pick up a rock and throw at
a tomcat that was sitting on a fence
looking at him? He pretends he hasn't
got a thing in his hand, and that the
cat don't see him, and that he don’t see
the cat. That’s the idea. Never drag
her hand out where she’ll have to take
notice of it. Don’t let her know that you
think she knows you have the least idea
she is aware you are holding her hand.
That was my rule of tactics; and as far
as Paisley’s serenade about hostilities
and misadventure went, he might as well
have been reading to her a time-table of
the Sunday trains that‘x stop at Ocean
Grove, New Jersey.

“One night when I beat Paisley to the
’bench by one pipeful, my friendship gets
subsized for a minute, and I asks Mrs.
Jessup if she didn’t think a ‘H’ was
easier to write than a ‘J.’ In a second
her head was mashing the Oleander ﬂower
in my button-hole, and I leaned over and
—but I didn’t.

“ ‘If you don’t mind,’ says I, standing
'up. ‘we’ll wait for Paisley to come be-
fore ﬁnishing this. I’ve never done any-
thing dishonorable yet to our friendship,
and this won’t be quite fair.’ '

“ ‘Mr. Hicks,’ says Mrs. Jessup, look-
ing at me peculiar in the dark, ‘if it
wasn’t for but one thing, I’d ask you to
hike yourself down thevgulch and never
disresume your visits to my house.’

“ ‘And what is that, ma’am?” I asks.

“ ‘You are too good a friend not to
make a good husband,’ says she.

“In ﬁve minutes Paisley was on his
Side of Mrs. Jessup.

“ ‘In Silver City, in the summer of ’98,’
he begins, ‘I see Jim Bartholomew chew
off a Chinaman’s ear in the Blue Light
Saloon on account of a cross-barred mus-
lin shirt that—what was that noise?”

“I had resumed matters again with
Mrs. Jessup right where we had left off.

“ ‘Mrs. Jessup,’ says I, ‘has promised
to make it Hicks. And this is another
of the same sort.’

' “Paisley winds his feet around a leg
of the bench and kind of groans.

“ ‘Lem,’ say-s he, ‘we been friends for
seven years. Would you mind not kissing
Mrs. Jessup quite so loud? I’d do the
same for you.’

“ ‘All right,’ says I.
.will do as Well.’

“ ‘This Chinaman,’

‘The other kind

goes on Paisley,

‘was the one that shot a man named
Mullins in the spring of ’97, and that
was———-'

“Paisley

interrupted himself again.

  

3W WEI-hid agreed? to ,tekellie iii".
01: the» ‘

 

 
          

a?! “Lem," salve he._‘i£‘you was a_;true
friend ’yyou wouldn’t hug Mrs. Jessup
quite so hard. I felt. the bench shake
all over just then. Yen know you told
me you would give me an even chance
as long as there was any.’ . .
' “’ ‘Mr. Man,’ says Mrs. Jessup, turning
around to Paisley, ‘of you was to drop in
to the celebration of mine and Mr. Hick’s
silver wedding, twenty-ﬁve years from
now, do you think you could get it into
that Hubbard squash you call your head
that you are nix cum rous in the busi-
ness? I’ve put up with you a long time
because you was Mr. Hicks’s friend;
but it seems to me that its time for you
'tonwear the willow and trot off down the
hi .’

“ ‘Mrs. Jessup,’ says I, without losing

 

' :my grasp on the situation as ﬁance, ‘Mr.

Paisley is my friend, and I offered him
a-square deal and a equal opportunity
as long as there was a chance.’

“ ‘A chance!’ says she. ‘ Well, hemiay
think he has a chance; but I hope he
won’t think he’s got a cinch, after what
he’s been next to all the evening.’

“Well a month afterwards me and Mrs.
Jessup was married in the Los Pinos
Methodist Church; and the whole town
closed up to see the performance.

“When we lined up in front, and the
preacher was beginning to sing out his
rituals and Observances, I looks around
and misses Paisley. I calls time on the
preacher. Paisley ain’t here,’ says I.
We‘ve got to wait for Paisley. A friend
once, a. friend always—that’s Telemachus
Hicks,’ says I. Mrs. Jessup’s eyes snap—
ped some; but the preacher holds up the
incantations accOrding to instructions.

“In a few minutes Paisley gallops up
the aisle, putting on a cuff as he comes.
He explains that the only dry-goods store
in town was closed for the wedding, and
he couldn’t get the kind of a boiled shirt
that his taste called for until he had
broke open the back window of the store
and helped himself. Then he ranges up
on the other side of the bride, and the
wedding goes on. I always imagined that
Paisley calculated as a last chance that
the preacher might marry him to the
widow by mistake.

“After the proceeding was over we had
tea and jerked antelope and canned ap—
ricots, and then the populace hiked itself
away. Last of all Paisley shook me by
the hand and told me I’d actedsquare and
on the level with him and he was proud
to call me a friend.

“The preacher had a small house on
the side of the street that he’d ﬁxed up
to rent; and he allowed me and Mrs.
Hicks to occupy it until the 'ten—forty
train the next morning, when we was
going on a bridal tour to El Paso. His
wife had decorated it all up with holly-
hoeks and poison ivy, and it looked real
festal and bowery.

“About ten o’clock that night I sets
down in the front door and pulls off my
boots a while in the cool breeze, while
Mrs. Hicks was ﬁxing around in the room.
Right soon the light went out inside; and
I sat there a while reverberating over
old times and scenes. And then I heard
Mrs. Hicks call out, ‘Ain’t you coming in
soon, Lem?’

“Well, well,” says I, kind of rousing
up. “Durn me if I wasn’t waiting for
old Paisley to ”

“But when I got that far,” concluded
Telemachus Hicks, “I thought somebody
had shot this left ear of mine off with
a forty-ﬁve. But it turned out to be
only a lick from a broomhandle in the
hands of Mrs. Hicks.”

OUR- BOOK REVIEW

(Books reviewed under this heading may
be secured through The Michigan Business
Farmer, and W111 be promptly shipped by
parcel post on receipt of publisher‘s price
stated.)

 

 

‘-

“Trodden Gold” by Howard Vincent
O’Brien. The book is a splendid study
in contrasts as it unfolds the lives of the
two sisters, the spiritual and ﬁnancial
progress of their husbands, the ultimate
l'ewards of their efforts and the resulting
effect on the whole Ball family. It ques-
tions the philosophy of a life that makes
the accumulation of riches for their own
sake its one aim and reveals the quite
tangible advantages in depth and richness
of character and ﬁneness of spirit that
accrue to him who devotes himself to the
betterment of mankind, to bringing new
knowledge to the world's science, and
to a life of service to his fellow men. ($2.)
Little, Brown and Company.

 

 

 

    

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If thereisn’t a copy of this great “Thrift Book
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lun---------h-------------I--

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
Chicago—Philadelphia—Dallas—Seattle.

Send me Latest General Catalog No. 073153.

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o o oloooloooloo-Oooo ------- o .......

 

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It is easy to clean milkers and
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BENERAI. lABOIlA‘leES
420 Dickinson St.
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SATURDAY, WEB 1,182!

Edited and Published by
THE RURAL PHILISIIIIIG COMIY, Int.
GEORGE I. SLOGUI. President

Inclement.”
Look and Mouth by
WWW
Member of Agricultural Panthers Milan -»
Member of Audit Bureau of W

Milan Grinch “magnum: wg~

 

 

 

 

 

 

mo'wm
J. Wm m
min E. Brown Editor

 

 

Wink-i W. ﬁlm-mu ..._............
Hairy r. Iﬂnkins 5hr: Sunni-indent

OI! YEAR 60¢. TWO YEARS 61. FiVIkmu :18 82-h
The date f the adress on w on
showing your “1.de on s
no” mistakes. Remit by check. graft, men
letter; W uld are your
by ﬁrst-ch- mil 19% received.
1m... m: use to lin 14 lines to the column
teeth": 'l‘i'uu to the w 131?”.&

m and Auction Sale Alva-tiring: We odor low
ntotormbbbreedmof livestockand poultry;wn us.

RELIABLE ADVERTISERS

We will not knowingl accept the advertising of say or
ﬁmwhowedomilbelimbbsmhlyhmestaMbh
Should reader ‘tusinstsny

 

We o:ckno'wledu

 

 

“The Farm Paper 0! Sonics"

. THE FAIR * ‘
brought the best and sleekest of their flocks

The milldest cow. the squared-shouldered ox;
The hull. with mimic thunder in his cry. ’

~ And lightning in each eager. wiaed eye;

The sheep that had the heaviest garments worn.

Thecockthatcrowed thelondestinthemorn;

The mule, unconscious hypocrite and knave.

The horse, proud high—born Asiatic slave;

The playful calf, with eyes precocious-bright.

The hog—grim quadrupedal appetite ;

1110, Indian corn—ears. prodigal of yield.

The“ golden pumpkin. nugget of the ﬁeld;

The merriest-eyed potatoes, nursed in gloom.

Just real-reeled from their cradle-tomb;

Rich apples. mellow-checked. sumcient all

To 've tempted Eve to fall—to make them fall:

The grapes, whose picking served strong vines to prune.

The peach—rich alto of the orchand's tune;

Theverybestthefarmers’landhadm

They brought to this menagerie of their own.
—-W‘ill Carleton.

THE 1923 STATE FAIR

HE Michigan State Fair at Detroit opened its
gates yesterday and they will not closeuntil
the evening of September 9th, so that every

citizen of this great state will have an opportun-
ity in viewing its every department in detail.
There are two ways of coming to the State
Fair at Detroit and the value of either is measur-
ed exactly by the desire which prompts the indi-
vidual in his decision to come.
The ﬁrst way is to make a hurried one~day visit

‘to the Fair and try to crowd into it as much

amusement as is possible with only a ﬂeeting
glance here and there at the exhibits of an educa—
tional nature which have taken months to pre-
pare. Then to make a canvass of the midway,
renew acquaintances with the ancient freaks and
hurry to the grandstand for the afternoon and
evening performances, followed by the grand dis-
play of ﬁreworks.

The other individual and his family come to
the Fair and prepare to stay at least one night,
which gives them two full days into which they
pack a carefully and well planned examination of

the various exhibits, particularly those in which.

they are specializing in their own daily work.

There is not a single department of the fair
from better babies to the display of Michigan
wild life which is not worth a careful and thor—
ough examination. There is something for every
man, woman and child who comes to the Michi-
gan State Fair. It is today, more than an ordin-
ary fair and must not be compared even with its
own exhibitions of ﬁve years ago. You, who
have visited the fair at Detroit during the past
two or three years, will readily grant that this
fair has now become a real exposition and that it
actually ranks among the three greatest fairs held
on the American continent will be no surprise to
you.

Provisions have been made for automobile
tourists who bring their own camping outﬁts, and
there are accomodations on the grounds for not
less than a thousand cars, and running water and
toilet facilities have been provided within the
grove which will make this an attractive place to
stop for one or more nights.

No other fair enjoys the favorable ‘ location
which this fair does. in its proximity to America’s
fourth city. The Michigan State Fair enjoyed
the largest attendance of any fairvon the Ameri-
can continent in the year 1922, and there is every
indication that the year 1923 will far surpass in
attendance any previous year. , .

  

It is to be remembered that the State M II-

now entirely owned by the state of ,
that all proﬁts from it, together wine.

.tration would be the lowering of taxes.

  

that of previousyears. om would not 3130 1331.13. ‘ I '

our full recommendation if we were not sin-
cerely enthusiastic over the’ present educational

.and recreational value of the Michigan State-

Fair at Detroit.

STATE TAX LOWERED
HERE is cheering news coming from Lansing

to confirm thebeiief which we expressed on

this page earlier in the season that the state
tax rate would be cut this year.

The 1922 state tax rate was approximately
$3. 08 per thousand. The prospective new rate
will be, it is hoped, $2. 32 per thousand, a cut
of '15 cents per thousand.

Two factors it is claimed are responsible for
the lowering of the state tax. First. that the
operating expenses of the state have been cut
from $17,300,000 to $16,000,000; second, because
the increase in state valuation for tax purposes

as ﬁxed by the state board of equalization, has '

increased the valuation of the state over one
billion and a half dollars.

There is. cheering news to the ten northern
counties in the fact that they are getting a larger
slice of the melon, but there is a reduction
throughout the state of approximately ten per-
cent.

We have contended right along that time alone
could efface the post-war conditions and that
gradually but surely conditions would readjust
themselves and the farmer would ﬁnd himself
on a ﬁrmer business foundation than he has
been at any time in the history of this country.

One of the things that we knew must happen
was that state and national taxes would have
to be lowered. At the last election both parties
promised that the greatest single purpose they
would attempt to attain during their adminis-

appear from the information which has just
come from Lansing that the present administra-
tion at least had made a sincere attempt to live
up to their pre~election promise.

'rnn snon'r swarm) BEAN Joanna

E have it on good authority that there are
W one or two prominent bean jobbers in

Michigan who do not like our statement
that we intend to inform the farmers of Michi-
gan as to who are contributing and who are not
contributing to the campaign for advertising navy
beans to the c0nsumer.’

We did not make this statement in the nature
of a threat. We made it because we believe the
farmers of Michigan are entitled to know who
their friends are and we are anxious to ﬁnd out
the names of the reactionary gentlemen Who do
not see things through modern eyeglasses.

There should be no' factions in the bean in-
dustry in Michigan. There was a time when the
bean jobbers association as a whole were looked
upon by the bean growers of Michigan as directly
opposed to their interests. '

Thanks to the farsightedneas of some big men
on both sides of this controversey, these days
have passed, and all realize now that the Michi—
gan navy bean will ﬁnd its rightful place in the
market and that all interests concerned "in its
welfare will beneﬁt most by carefully planned
and coordinated cooperative work.

We are intensely interested in this plan to ad-
vertise beans to the American consumer the same
as California associations are advertising prunes,
citrus fruit, raisins and other staples with such
great success

We are endeavoring to prove our sincerity by
using ample space in THE BUSINESS FARMER
to tell the bean growers of Michigan about these,
plans and thus to encourage the farmer himself
to cooperate with the buyer of his beans.

We intend to leave no stone unturned by which
it is possible for us to extend any help to this
cause which may be within our power.

AMERICA’S SWEET 100'!!!

N another page in this issue _Mr. C. H. Allen,
who is president of the farmer-owned sugar
company at Deﬁance, Ohio, asks why \it is

necessary for the United States to go beyond our
own border lines to buy sugar. and the reading
of this article is well worth the time of every
farmer who grows now or may in the future,
grow sugar beets. '
- As is well known the consumption of sugar
per capits in the United States is practically

income that of any other country in the world.~

to be unsuitable. . v , ,
To supplyrvlthis went: 9 A
gamma. * ’

 

' It would '

detriment of both producer and ,’
United States. not this is a no: see
proven by the present price of sugar wh
.going lower, it seeing in preparation for the

contract is determined.

 

run WHEAT rams Asp FAB-M PBOBPM
HILE half the people have'be'o'n searint the .
other half about wheat prices and the aw- - '

tui outlook for the future prosperity.nanr

of us have overlooked the fact that the price of,

corn has gradually advanced until on‘July 31m.
it reached a ﬁgure which, with the exception of
the three years 1917-1919, is the highest on
record, at least since 1868.

We have long been accustomed to thinking of
one dollar as the standard price of wheat and
ﬁfty cents for corn.
fallen a few cents below its standard, corn is
worth within a few cents of twice its standard.
value. Is the present price of wheat, then. the
catastrophe we have been told it is, particularly
when we remember that for every bushel of

wheat raised in this country, we produce over’ I

three bushels of corn? In other words for
every bushel of wheat which is o! a few cents
in value, there are three bushels of cormhn each
of which farmers will collect nearly twice the
standard value.

Then, too, we ﬁnd that oats and barley are
worth, rather'more today than they were a year
ago. Two years ago cotton brought only eight
cents a pound, and corn but 18 cents a bushel
in Nebraska and lows. Now cotton is worth,
25 cents a pound and corn 90 cents a bushel.
Tobacco has advanced from ﬁve to 36 cents a
pound. ~—«

According to former Secretary of Agriculture.
E. T. Meredith, the value of corn, wheat, em
and barley crops on the'farms was approﬂmatoiy
$500, 000, 000 more July 1 of this year than on
the same date a year ago. K

Apparently, the current price of wheat is not
the most important, nor indeed, the only aspect
of interest in the present farm situation. Its
importance, however, has been exaggerated until
it doubtless, overshadows every other factor in
the minds of most people. It would seem that
those who have been most energetic in the pro-
paganda of discouragement have been those who
hope, ardently, to retain their political seats, by
the now worn- -out method of howling calamity
to the farmer. .

 

FROM FARM T0 CITY

0 less an authority than Dr. R. M. Olin,
health commissioner of the state of Mich-
igan, in a full page article in one of the Do-

\troit dailies points out that the present migra-
tion of farmers to the city must result in a car-
tailment of food products which will force prices
up and make farming again the most remuner-
ative and pleasant of man’ s occupations. _

We have been pointing out right along that
this condition was bound to exist sooner or later
and that the boy or girliwho hastened to the city

and abandoned the farm of their parents was not ‘

necessarily going to make the greatest proﬁt over
a ten year period. .
Recently a survey was made in Ohio which

proved that the actual living expense of a family ’

was some $1,200 per year greater in the city than.
in the country. That is, that the farmer would
have to earn $1,200 more per year in the city
simply to make up for the food and living ac-
commodations which he ﬁnds on his farm. That
is something to think about before you move!

Dr. Olin points out in another part of his art-
icle that strange as it may seem, "the city is rapid-
ly outdistanclng the country as a healthy place
in which to live, and that this is largely responsr

ible because of two important factors,—-ﬁrst be- ,

cause of the large number .of ﬁles which come
from livestock kept too close to the home, caus-
ing dysentery and other kindred diseases, and

second, because it is hard for the famer to“
learn that when the winter season comes wiﬁ ,
its slack period of manual labor, he mm m

down his food requirements.
Because the farmer is accustomed to

large quantities of food during the busy day. of:

when the ten price of beets, under the W

 

To-day, while wheat has I,

     

    

 


  

    
  

 

  
  
  
 

 

 

 
 
  

 

made, Michigan, . I? am“ ‘ able to

tell ,youvbf elbow "Two-dollars:
, ln4advance. for “employment" scheme
. whiehMis'bein'g worked by the Inter-

national Exchange corporation, 8941

. comma Avenue, Chicago. I have

their circular matter before me. ,_
“This“ company, in a letter signed

: byﬂl. W. Brandweln, president, agrees

to send our reader for the, $2 she is

‘ *a'sk'ed to send them "simply as an

evidence of good faith and to protect
us from curiosity seekers," "Polish,
German, Austrian and Russian
\inoney, the pro-war value of an
equivalent amount of which was
$506,350.00.” .' , , .

This is by far the biggest odor we
have ever been able «to announce
from this page and it is quite pos-
sible that this amount of foreign
paper money would be worth more
than 82 if sold for waste paper and
certainly much more if used to pap-
er your house. ,-

But this is not all that Mr. Brand-
wein promises our reader, because
therealpointisthatlfshewﬂlcopy
letters for him and send themto her
friends, ‘supposedly suggesting to
them that investment in foreign
currency and bonds may prove a
proﬁtable speculative investment, she
will be paid not less than $10 per
hundred for copying the letters and
itiaalsopossibletoearaaahighas
$1“ per hundredletters.

The letter contains a guarantee
that if our reader cannot earn from
$25 to 875 per week, she may re-
turn all the material they- have sent
her and receive her 32 back, so if
it were possible to collect allof the
Russian rubles. German marks, and

' oeived, providing baby had not torn

up someof it, friends taken it for
souvenirs, or father used it for shav-
ing paper, there would be a fair
chance of getting her $2 back.

The Publisher is curious enough
to want, to see one of the letters
which Mr. Brandwein is asking to
have copied, so if any of our read-
ers happen to be a “local correspon-
dent" for the International Mange

' Corporation and have~ a copy of this
letter, we would appreciate their .

sending it and we promise not to use
their name or initials in any com-

_ ments we make on it in the future.

OUR FRIEND McRAE ,,
ARREN *McRAE of Logansport,
Indiana,‘ says we have done

him a great injustice in stating

that he did not have an ofﬁce and
that he was rooming in a morning
house. That statement came to us
in a letter from a reader who stated
thpt the Chief of Police of Logan-
port had so reported to her, but

' whether it is true or not has little

bearing on the facts in the case.
The facts are that Warren McRae
advertised in Michigan newspapers
for farms for sale, stating that " he
.had buyers ready and waiting. When
the owner of a farm wrote'him he
sent a printed circular letter stating
that to list the farm with his agency
would require a down payment of
$10 and in this letter and various

< follow—up letters which we have on

ﬁle in thm oﬁce, Mr. McRae stated

. he was sending buyers-to Michigan
‘ and gave their names.

'Mr. McRae has now published a
booklet which apparently contains
the listing of several hundred farm-
ers who have paid him a ten dollar
fee and he states that he has pubr

ﬁshed one thousand copies of this

 

 

 

taut "ﬂ. '1 ﬁnd-mm ups-
0' .1317.- u'aaﬁnuu bfrom fraudulent dangle:
‘1'!an Jamel-cones?
ammugm“mmh l.
. Motions.“
en's-sic.

 

 

 

' design with the diﬂerent colors by

- quickly and we want to be of service

pald—in—advance subscriber, we must

mpald in advance, but if it reads
* (A0823) or any date before that,
. and Billy Coats for one year or a

 

book. . tMr. McRae states that The

, Businessfli‘armer has done him an

”' injustice; so We here state that» if
Mr. McRae con prove to us that
he has'sold a single farm to any
.prospective buyer whom he listed
speciﬁcally in one of his circular let-
ters to one of our readers or any
other farm owner in Michigan we
will so state the facts and thus give
him a free advertisement in these
columns.

Mr. McRae,_,says we uphold the
scheme Worked by Mr. Jones, of 01-
ney, Illinois.
we suggest Mr. McRae reread our
comment on the Jones scheme pub—
lished in the issue of July 21st. we

‘have never knowingly accepted the
advertising of anyone who publishes
blind ads‘askihg for farms for sale
and then sends out a. scheme where
advance payments are required, and
we will continue to warn our road-
ers to be on the lookout for any ad«
vertisement headed “Wanted, Farms”
and under no circumstances to make
any down payments whatsoever for
the sale of a farm until the deal is
,consumated.

SOLD FOUR IN TWO MONTHS
reading the " last Business
. Farmer I noticed your inquiry
about the American Music Pub-
lishing 00., 1658 Broadway, N. Y.
Will say that I answered their ad—
vertisement and it reads that they
will pay 10c for every circular
mailed out. Their equipment con-
sists of 20 copies of music, lots of
circulars, envelopes included, and
you are _to mail these circulars to
your "music loving friends and pay
the postage on them yourself and if
your friend buys this music from
you, you are to charge 25c a copy
for it. And in this way you get
your 82.00 back you sent them, but
if you can not sell the music you
have it on your hands, and money
out is the way I look at it. It in
about 2 months now and I have
sold 4.coples and I expect to lose
the other dollar.—~P. C. M., Holton.
Mich.

 

ON THE NILE AGAIN
EAR Mr. Slocumze-I saw in-
quiries in your paper about
Nile Art 00., Ft. Wayne, Indi—
ana, and as I have had some exper-
ience with them I thought I would
write. I sent them'$5.50 for their
outﬁt—it consisted of some small'
bottles of color like ink, some little
pine sticks, a wad of absorbent
cotton, four thumb tacks and four
designs stamped on unbleached
muslin. The idea was to ﬁll in the

smearing it on with absorbant cot-
ton wrapped around sticks. I did
this very carefully and sent them to
the company. They wrote back
that I was doing very nicely for a
beginner but that I would have to
have perseverance as “Rome wasn’t
built in a day." In the meantime
they would be only too glad to
furnish me the unbleached muslin
squares at 50¢ per and the little
bottles of coloring at 250 per
bottle. I didn’t send for any more,
needless to say. Th could put‘
one off indeﬁnitely by saying their
work was unsatisfactory and still
be making big money by selling

This is news to us and ‘

 

their worthless material.—-Mrs. S.

PLEASE SEND LABEL

F our readers would attach the
I address label from a recent copy
of The Business Farmer when
writing for service from any depart—
ment of this paper it would save
time and expense all around. We
like to accomodate our friends

to all, but inasmuch as we make no
charge for any service rendered by a

know" you are one.

The date on your address label on
the front tells the story. If it reads
(M23) or any date thereafter you .

you are in arrears and you must

  
 

Oil? ' ' .ﬁllhacdption: rate is low

 
  

 

 

has: 'MOrtP'age \Real Estd'te Gold 30.715.

The tremendous num-
ber of Federal first mort- ,
gage bond buyers in-
dicates the high regard
in Which they are held
by the American public.

Write for Booklet A6917

Tax Free in Michigan
Free from Federal Income Tax of 4%

 

61/2%

FEDERAL BONDS

Are Better Bonds

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

(917)

 

 

 

     
 

”my“ -» “N W“ 3
.z * ' ('5‘; {14‘ b 1‘" ‘— {L F I A“ .-
ﬂ. M." '. J! \I; K"I '7 n“ ‘ s.- ‘ l 1‘4ch \
‘ my“, ', f, M. ’,‘ ‘."‘ ‘ ' " , ‘n
“Emerge? ‘ gulch ’3 , “""rfixil‘lgL—MW "m" .. “.3
(mg ,.."l’, “"u “’7, 1““ \ , e- x... :7’2':
- . _ ,1 .vI/Wl l \i . ‘ ’"f’! ’ - 2
11 ‘ $ {2. i‘r.!v'/,:l It": ‘i \ 2 (-1313. [1 . \\. . . -
/ cm 15” I? H". W 'l 'l \l \ it‘ll/Ml ‘1 l ‘\ $2563.53"; ‘ A

 

x—_

2* ’ "W -
Fertilize your winter wheat with Roystcr's Fertilizer
and harvest your crop ahead of the destructive rust and
the deadly drought. Royster’s Fertilizer will also give
the wheat an early and ‘sturdy start; will increase the
yield and the quality, and leave more straw. Royster's
motto is "How good?” not "How cheap?"
bank on its quality.

You can

At the Ohio Experiment Station, wheat on unfertilized
land gave a yield of 10.7 bushels per acre while on land
treated with complete fertilizer the yield was 24 bushels
per acre. Unfortilized. about 49 per cent. of kernels
were shrunken, while the fertilized wheat had only 16
per cent. shrunken. F or information, write F. S. Royster
Guano Company, Toledo, Ohio.
AGENTS WANTED IN OPEN TERRITORY

, ROYST ER

 

 

est early and escape rust,

 

 

   
 

  

 

   
   

  
  
          
  
        

   
     
 
  
 
 
 

  


   

concon .fsmrrts- mm " “

    

3ii‘ed again! ~

‘ > =- weeks I've counted the sultry
We — - ‘
£1931

  
  

ca ,on's over and school be-
‘o-day. '

't scholars cannot learn,
.. the days of summer—the days
.that fairly burn; _

' n'der if they ever ask how mothers
1: along ,
th'romping boys who ﬁnd their joys

in doing something wrong.

     
 
    
 
  
  

Jill?!“ John, Joe and Jimmy—their
clothes were nearly new .

; " they come home from school that
7 day,;and said the term was-through;
Now ‘John, and Joe, and Jimmy, with
«_ sun-:brown hands and'feet,

Come in at night about plight of beggars
on the street.

    
 
      
 
  
 

,There is no order in the house; I cannot
_ find a thing;

='-1,‘he drawers were tumbled up side down
' with six hands hunting string:

  
   
  
  
 
 
   
  
   
    
     
   
    
   
   
  
   
  
   
  
  
  
    
   
     
  
 
 
 
 
   
  
    
    
    
   
 
  
  
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
   
 
 
 
  
   
  
  

.1 ~ whole house fairly jars ’
iWith Jimmy jumping off and on, to run
histrain of cars.

5My bran-new carving knife, I found out
in the grass. here Joe

3Had used it making arrows for Jimmy's

little bow:

gAnd John came home from ﬁshing—came

- whistling through the gate—

With father's best tobacco box ﬁlled up
with worms for bait.

The hens have had a frightful time the
whole vacation through;

II'hey could not hide a nest away, the best
that they could do:

'I heard the rooster crow this mom; to
me it seemed to say '

I’m glad vamtion’s over and school be-
gins today i”

“All wor ” they say, “without some play,
makes Jack a stupid boy."

Well, that’s agood old adage, and gives
the urchin joy;

; But if the man who wrote it lived now

and owned a son,

He'd sit up late and scratch his pate,

. to write a diiferent one.

There, there, I‘m not complaining! Tho’

1 weary of the noise,

I love as only mothers can, my rattling,
romping boys;

And I shall watch for four o'clock

. through every coming day,

'WhenIcanseemydarlingsoutinthe

yard at play.

I've one dear boy now sleeping beneath
' the summer sod;
He took a long vacation when he went

home to God.

When life's rough school is over, I’ll meet
him, by and by,

Where graves ne’er hide our treasures-
where dear ones never die.

—John H. Yates.

AWAY TO SCHOOL
Life on the farm is one struggle
after another; this same rule ap-

. only solution to this is the trying to
better our lives; but how? The
following editorial was written in
i one of the Chicago dailies and I am
,2 :giving it to you:

9 GOOD many boys and girls,
‘ along with their parents, are

struggling with the problem of
whether they are to go away to
3 school this fall. We think there is
only one solution. That is to go,
unless the ﬁnancial burden, in addi-
’ tion to that already existing, is too
.great to bear. Attention is fre-
wquently called to the fact that the
boys who go away to school these
” days seldom if ever come back to
'the farm. In spite of that it is
Vb‘est for them to go. ‘There has
been lots of foolishness projected
Labout keeping the boys 0 the farm.
They should never be t there
unless they prefer farm life 0 any-
thing else. And if they are going
to the city to live by all means give
t-them a training that will help them
'to be successful. City life is hard
enough at best. It is drudgery for
the mail not able to do better than
the average, with mighty little ac-
cumulated after long years of hard
Ork. Some farm folks are not

      
 
  
   
   
   
   
   
     
  
   
  
   
   
 
 
   
  
  
     
  
  
    
  

ve not. seen the seamy side of city

life

 
 
 
 
  
   

     
     

I ut there really is a more im-
hrtant consideration than that of
liars and the scale of living. If
lege ‘education pays, it pays best
,e outlook on life it gives. Life

 
  
  
 
 
  
 
    

,t of it, and for what we can
huts to. the
~ . College training broadens
“you" oak. Education is merely

 
  
  

wee we the experience .91 '
lia- “ 2 = m

dvacation's over, and‘ school is 1

say that teachers cannot teach, '

The chairs are always in a row; the

plies to the city and town folks and ‘

inclined to believe this, but they"

Worth living only for what we ~
happiness of '

  

    
  

 

1' .

woman readers of this page.

ere. Our cook-book is slow-
ly being constructed and al-
though it takes time for
all good things I hope to
have a thorough book when
completed.

 

 

’ The 1 Fa ’ _ ,
. ' lepnxtzuent for. thew It.
Edited by MRS. ANNIE tramps

, WOMEN'S EXCHANGE .

EAR FOLKS—During the last six ‘months since I have had this
department, I have received letters asking for help and suggestiOn

to aid the women on the farm to-either make money or how she might
obtain the things most desired. In taking this matter up with Mr.
Slocum, we have schemed out a plan to be used only for and by the
The new department will be under the
heading of “Women’s Exchange.” I want you to read it thru and know
that I want our page to be for each and every one of my women read-

@M

Address letters: Mrs. Annie Taylor. care The Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens, Alleluia“.

  

 

 

O

 

 

 

 

from contact. with others. The
best that college training gives is
the ability to enjoy life, and to add
to the joy othersqﬁnd in life. And
here is where parents come in. The
boy or the girl they send to college
will never cease to bless them. This
is the rule. There are exceptions to
it, and so there will be as long as
ingratitude is a trait of some hu-
man beings. But by and large there
is nothing parents can do for their
children that will mean more in
later years than providing the op-
portunity to go away to school.

College life is expensive now, 9.1-.

together too expensive. A lot of
unnecessary frills add to the ex-
pense, and not a few of them could
be eliminated. The selection of the
school is important. It should be
a school that provides a high stand-
ard of training, and real democracy
in student life, where a youngster
is accepted for what he is rather
than for what he wears,or has to
spend.

Sending boys and girls away to
school is no small problem, but
there is really little chance for a
mistake if. they are made up of the
right kind of timber-

MAKING MONEY AT HOME

If one is near a town of any size
ﬂowers are good money makers. I
personally know a girl living out-
side Detroit and she raises all kinds
of cut ﬂowers and makes beautiful
bouquets and sells them in the city.
She has built up a good trade, keep-
ing some of the Detroit oﬂices sup-
plied with fresh bouquets three
times a week. This idea might be of
help to some of our readers living
near the larger towns.

The following letter came to me
and it has a good suggestion for
making this extra money in a very
pleasant way.

ERY sorry indeed that I cannot

help the many farmers’ wives

by telling them of something
'deﬁnate they can do to make money.
I know many of them are needin
help in that direction. -

If the average woman had been
taught to love and know the grow-
ing things they could do so much
to help themselves when misfor-
tunes befall them. Some day we are
going to have an eduCational sys-
tem that will ﬁt every boy and girl
when they enter manhood or wo-
manhood for the life that will bring
health, happiness and efﬁciency and
because our present one does not
do that we see human wrecks and
unhappy lives all around us.

I have an acre and a half of
peonies that help ﬁnancially very
much. So many things one could
do if one only knew how.

So many of our home bureau
members are asking the same thing
for the farm home in the last few
years have felt keenly the low
prices of all farm products.

Hoping better times are coming
for all farmers, their wives and
daughters, I am Nora Burt Dunlap,
Roray Home, Savoy, Illinois.

 

 

Mothers Problems

 

 

THERE’S ALWAYS A REASON ’
ENRY ALBERT was naughty.
Yes, there .was not denying. it.
He .was 'as naughty as shuttle

boy could" bat: ~ e cried one: the
. le,~ll31mn~1-,L~'h ’ l '- '

   
  

  

   
 

  

 

he threw all his toys on the ﬂoor and
then lay down and kicked and be]-
lowed. His mother was exasperat-
ed. “Henry Albert,” she said, jerk-
ing him none too gently from the
ﬂoor, “I wish to goodness I knew
what ailed you! Every single day
at this time in the afternoon you
have one of these cranky spells!”
There was something ailed Henry
Albert. Do you know what it was?
The child needed a nap. He was
only two years old, but he had given
up naps some time ago—and h,‘e
still needed a nap after dinner, even
though he did rebell at taking one.
Every afternoon he was tired, and
that made him irritable. After he
had lain on the ﬂoor and kicked and
howled and whined for an hour,
more or less, he began to wake up.
and the last of the afternoon he
would be a very different boy.
Many time it is lack of sumcient
.sleep that will cause a child to have
periodic naughty spells. Again it is
an upset stomach—too much cake
and candy and too little milk and
vegetables. Proper feeding, with
perhaps a good dose of physio, will
overcome such spells of naughtiness.
Too much excitement is another
cause of naughtiness in little child—
ren. Being out late nights? taking
long auto rides, going to exciting
moving pictures, will tire even an

adult after a while; is it unreason-

able to expect that they will overtire
a child? '

A certain amount of naughtiness
crops out in any child, but when a
naughty dispositionseems to be com—
ing to the fore, look for the cause of
it. You will be pretty sure to ﬁnd
that the child needs a nap or a dose
of physio, followed by a proper diet,
or a period of rest and quiet. There
is always some reason for such
naughty spells. Ferret them out—
and see your child’s happy nature
return!

TEE CHILDREN’S PETS

NEIGHBOR had given seven

year old Elizabeth 9. rabbit. It

was just a plain, ordinary rab-
bit, but it was the ﬁrst pet of her
very own that Elizabeth had ever
had. She loved her Bunny!

But Elizabeth’s father thought
pets foolish things to have around,
eating up good food and bringing in
no return—in cash, at least. Once
the rabbit dug out of his pen and nib-
bled various vegetables in the gard-
en. rElizabeth's father scolded her
and told her she wouldn’t have that
rabbit if it did any more damage.
or course, it did get out again, one
day when Elizabeth was in school.
When she came home for dinner,
there was—rabbit—pie! Her father

~ had killed her Bunny!

Now there aren’t many parents so
heartless as to do a thing like that—
though Ithave met some who would!
e—but there are many who fail to
censider a child’s rights when ani-
mals or birds that have been given to
them are concerned.

Boy’s Club's have done a great
deal to show fathers chat when a

boy has been given a calf or a young

pig to raise, and he has raised it to
salable age the returns from it be-
long to the boy. "But no club yet
has shown a father that he has no

right to kill a boy’s dog without the-

boy’s sanction. , _

, A-«I-f for some reason a child’s pet
' ' ' ' 5th. cheater

 
     

  
  

  
 
 
 
  

- enough of- he.

cries of such can 'child. _
the'bitterest memories men have had ' -11

“appear like one.

. those whomt «icebetwork in ex

. pleadings» "M
is .. , . .

   

 
   

am e

Some .of

have been of tho,“day “they killed
my dog.” ..
Better topersuade a child to sell‘.

' or giveaway a pet he can no longer ,

keep'than till his heart with sorrow
and bitterness over the killing of it.
After all the pet is the child’s own
property; what right have you to say

what shall be done with it?

 

 

Personal Column

 

 

One Who Believes in Being Kind.—-Am
sending in my views on bobbed hair as
requested. , First. I will say I am :1 WO-
man who has lived nearly sixty years
and looking back over that time I can
remember several we'men who have worn
their hair cut short. and all have been
noble women, and have done their life's
work as well and better than many who
have kept their hair long. It seems to -
me that it. makes no diaerence in our '
character, whether we wear our hair long
,or short, but it would certainly give us
more time for our other work and be
much easier to keep clean and I for one
wish all women would adopt the style
of short hair. What do you say, sisters?
Who will be the ﬁrst among us older
ones? Not so long ago I heard a man
and woman talking about bobbed haired
girls and they were very loud in their 3
denunciation of girls who wore their hair
that way. Well, I looked at the woman's '
head and it looked unclean and was un- '
becomingly combed, and the man’s hair
was sadly in need of a comb and cut.
and I thought if they would go home and ‘-
clean up their own heads they would not
have so much time to criticise young {
girls, so let us older ones he very sure l
that our own heads look all right and
don't judge the young folks by the way
they cut or comb their hair. You know
we are being judged the same as we
judge others and none of us would like
to be judged immoral because we did not
wear our hair just as someone thought
we should. So let us encourage and help
our young folks instead of criticising them
unkindly. Remember a good name is
better than riches and we have to give
others a good name if we ourselves wish
one. From one who lows and believes
in the virtue of our young people—L K.

 

There are Always Two Sides to a
Question.——Is it wrong to have bobbed
hair? I will tell you what I think. First,

.What are they doing it for; cleanliness.

No, it is for another purpose. Show of
course. Oh, how rude for a woman or
young lady to cut her hair. We were
taught it was a shame for a woman to
have short hair. Now they are not only
trying to take the place "of men, but to I
I do not admire the
bobbed hair or the half dresses.

If the only excuse I could give "for

.bobbed hair would be for little girls

where there is large families or in sick-
ness. But not any for sleeveless dresses.
I would like to hear what some good
living mothers honestly believe. I am
trying to bring my family up right.- I ‘
am the mother of seven girls and I like
all the good advice “I can get. We like
thesM. B. F. ‘

 

/

From One Who is Willing to Change.—
I am sending in a few words concerning ‘
bobbed hair. I think it is a wise idea,
not only for girls *in- their teens but for
women also, for comfort and time sav-
ing. How much more comfortable it
would be for all. We all know that
things have changed since mother was
a girl: some of those old folks think
girls and women of today should dress
as they did years ago, but we all know
things are bound to change and will. It
isn’t necessary to have puffs made of your
hair which was cut off for dress wear,
as it is just ﬁne with just the ends
curled a little. You can' purchase bobbed
hair curlers with little expense which
answers very nicely, why wear puffs and
combs and make it more uncomfortable
than before your hair was cut. If you
have your hair cut for comfort, why not
have it that way. It looks ﬁne when
you get used to [it and we all soon will.
So let us hope we will have'comfort. I
hope I did not write too much. We sure
enjoy the M. B. F.—-A Constant Reader.

 

A Mother's Grateful Thanks.—-We wish
to thank the M. B. F. readers for the
generous response to our call for pieces
and work. Also the M. B. F. and Mrs.
Taylor for getting our wishes before so
many people. I have written most of
you personally but in case I have missed \
anyone please believe it an oversight.
Will say to those who sent bedding to
be made up will get their work just as
soon as g rush is over, and

change
for modems daughter-«has‘afﬁcsinred. use
is Working on ordersendxliaa'i , 1 " '

    
 
 

   
 
 

us oom- .

   
   

 
  

  

           

. , , . ’88 . . ..,!n2;"
this werld without inﬂicting mom.

 
 
 

 

 

 

 

. \‘M‘wﬂ‘f' / ‘V5
A ‘
.

 

 

 

 

 

   
   
  


 
        
   
 

   

 

‘s’
w

 
   
  
 
   
   

l'ro

)

W ,_ e steward

. .01:on msin- methoss instructing them

that oppose ‘_themselveoi ' 1,1 . noradrenture
gaoomey glve'th‘em repel; once unto the

.“lt’nowledg'e of the truthﬁé-i .'Tim.2:24-25.

' Never be drawn, =i1ito r'an ‘ argument.
YOur. work will not'always be with the
well-bred (who do not argue). The world
deals summaoily with the sins of impol-
iteness,’but you must take another/Course.
Nothing but evil ever comes of controver-
sey, 'tor. the spirit back oil it is never
mimble.’ and‘truth gains access only thru
humility. ‘

 

 

RECIPES

 

 

Marble Oake.--Three eggs. one cup sugar,
one tablespoon butter. one teaspoon of
vanilla. three—fourths cup milk, two and
one-half cups ﬂour and two teaspoons
baking powder. Cream butter and sugar,
add beaten eggs, then vanilla and milk,
and ﬂour with baking powder. Take
half of this and mix with one-half cup
molasses, one-halt teaspoon cloves, one-
halt teaspoon cinnamon. For dark part
put a spoonful of dark then light ’mix-
ture in pan. ' -

Apple Sauce Cake.—0ne and one-half
cups apple sauce, one cup sugar, one—halt
teaspoon cloves, one-half teaspoon nut-
meg. one-half teaspoon salt, one-half cup
Citron, one-half cup dates, one and one-
half cup nuts. Cut up last three items
and mix with ﬂour. Three cups ﬂour
and two teaspoons soda. "

Summer Cake.—Cream one fourth cup
of butter gradually cream in one.halt
cup or sugar and then add one well beaten
egg. measure one and one-half cup of
sifted ﬂour and sii't again with two and
one-half teaspoons of baking powder.'
Add this alternately with one-half cup
of milk to the butter mixture. Beat hard.
Bake in layers in a moderate oven.

Frosting.-—Beat the whites of two eggs
and sweeten and beat in mashed berries.
Spread between layer and top.

Molasses Cooldesu—One cup sugar, one
cup lard, one cup molasses, two eggs,
one teaspoon ginger, two teaspoons baking
soda dissolved in seven teaspoons hot
water, add ﬂours You can make the
cookies with or without eggs—Alma
Becker. .

 

Chunk Plokles.—-Soa.k seven pounds of
cucumbers, cut in chunks one inch length,
in strong brine for three'days, then soak
in clear .waters» three days. drain well
then take ‘wwk vinegar enough to cover
and add piece of alum size of hickory
nut. Cook slowly. but not boil, in vinegar
for two hours. To seven pounds of en-
cumbers use three pounds of brown sugar.
three pints vinegar, one ounce of whole
spice; one- ounce of cassia buds. one
ounce of celery seed, heat and pour over
pickles. boiling» hot. Let them stand for
seven days and on the seventh day boil
the syrup quite thick and pour over.
then can and seal.

 

Spiced Currants—7 pounds our-rants;
ﬁve pounds brown sugar; three table-

, spoons cinnamon ; t h r e e tablespoons

of cloves and onepint of vinegar.
Pick over currents, wash, drain and re-
move stems, put in a preserving kettle,
add sugar. vinegar and spices tied in a
piece of muslin. Heat to boiling point
and cook slowly one and one-half hours.
Store in stone jar in a cool place. Spiced
currants areL a delicious accompaniment
to cold mes.

MY FAVORITE RECIPES

 

 

 

 

Unripe Cucumber Pickles (Gherkins)-——
Wipe tour quarts small unripe cucumbers.
Put in a. stone jar and add one cup of
salt dissolved in two quarts of boiling
water and let stand three days. Drain

up

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

' ﬂ * b tt : baki
Lily White has been iniproved. It is now milled by an
absolutely new process. ‘It revolutionizes the making of
ﬂow. It means better baking. This we guarantee. It means
whiter bread, better leoking, better ﬂavored bread. It means

your bread will stay moist—fresher longer. It means it will
, bake easier and have better texture—ﬁrm and even.

"Lily White

“The Flour the Best Cooks Use”

always has been a superior ﬂour. For years we have guaran-
teed it to be the best ﬂour you could buy. It was only natural
that when an improved system for making ﬂour was evolved

Lily White should be improved.

By this new method the eﬂiciency of the protein content of the
ﬂour is increased 30%. This means free action of the yeast on 100%
of the ﬂour instead of only 70% in making delicious breads.

Result of 25 years ’ effort

For a quarter of a century this process has been developing. Now
it is perfected. All we ask is that you try the new Lily White.

Your Grocer Has It

VALLEY CITY MILLING COMPANY
Miller: for Sixty Years
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

cuomnbers from brine, bring brine to the ‘

. boiling point. pour over cucumbers, and

again let- stand for three days; repeat.
Drain, wipe mmmbers, and pour over
one gallon boiling water in which one
tablespoonaium has been dissolved. Let

=standsixhourathendraintromalum

S

v

water. Cook cucumbers ten minutes. a.
few at a time, in one-fourth the following
mixtrre. heated to the boiling point and
boil ten minutes: One gallon vinegar.

‘ two sticks cinnamon, tour red peppers.

l

two tablespoons auspice berries and two
tablespoons cloves. Strain the remaining

. liquor over pickles which have been put

I

i

i

l
‘ 3

into a stone inn—Annie‘ Taylor.

Bed and Green Pepper Bombs-Twelve
onions. twalve green peppers. (sweet),
twelve red peppers. (sweet), one teas‘poon
mustard seed. three cups granulated
sugar and two pints or vinegar. Chop~
onions and peppers and let stand in boil-
ing water for ﬂfteen‘minutes. Drain and
add other ingredients then boil ﬁfteen
minutes.“ Can. -

,xlndian Relish—Six large cucumbers.
one? quart of onions. six green tomatoes,
two large cauliﬂower, tour green pepp

Cut ﬁne. Cover with hot brine andlet
stand over night. Drain and add one-
balt gallon of vinegar. 8 cups “brown
sugar, one-halt cup white mustard seed.
{Hake a paste of one-hlzlt cuptigxﬁ one.

‘ ‘ magma, . ..a rge one- Q tea- ,
a. We powder. Peur in Very .

';boil.:— or- tené‘rninute’safAnnie

 

 

  

‘s-

 

   

 

 

—-if you are well bred!

 

 

Good Manners in Play.——If you are in—
vited to play a game, do not give as your
reason that you don't play it. It is al-
ways courteous to give a reason for de-
clination. It is a. sure way of being a
part of the fun your hostess has provided
for you by attempting to play, unless it
is injurious to your health or one you do
not approve of. In case it is the latter
do not voice yourself but gracefully de-
cline and give some slight excuse.

 

 

WOMEN’S EXCHANGE

you have somethlnu to exchange. we I!"
'Erlnt It FREE under this headln providing:
Irate—It appeals to women and s a bonln

h In . Second—It will

Iortedlnteoer unehsvoroom.
—IR& ANNIE TAYLOR. Editor.

 

 

' ALL PATTERNS 12c EACH.

3 FOR 800 POST-PAID

ADD TIN GENTS FOR FALL AND WINTER
. FASHION BOOK .

THE BUSINESS FARMEB

PM pom-int. m. olomm. um. .

 

 

 

 

mu. pt 2 . inch material.

The simple dresses are always the better taste
for our school girl and you Will ﬁnd a couple of
good numbers to choose from. Brown. W1 be
the prevailing color this fall. Mrs. Coolidge, the
ﬁrst lady of our land, wears brown_a {zest deal
and this Will have a bi inﬂuence in lping to
make this our main fa coloring. If brown is
unbecoming there are lovely shades of dark green
and greys. n

4413.. A Smart Frock for the Growlng Girl—
Plald gingham and one are here combined.
This style ls attractive in ratine. pongee, taffeta
or Jersey cloth. Mustard color retina with facings
0 white or “green would be nice. The Pattern is
cut in 3 Sizes: 12 14 and 16 years. A 14
Pb? sixniLri-e .es addmmlor 536 mg: material.

co .acmgsan eocon stmgma-
terial 93, yard is requireﬁlrd

4411. A Simple Popular Model—This is a
good style for gingham. printed voile, and other
cotton goods now in vogue. The sleeve ma be
. ed in wrist or elbow length.

is cutin 4_ Sizesz.6, 8, 10 and 12 years. A
10 year size re 3 yards of 27 inch
ma rial. For co r and culls of contrasting
material 54. yard is required.

4476. A Jaunty Cape for a l‘l..lttl_e Mlss"——
Practical and all together comfortable II this de-
sign. 0 front: are double hr and rolled
to form muLthat meet a broad collar in notches.

Pattern fgood for any of the cloakin now
_ vogue. also or fur. velvet and other tab-
10 «irhi'zhmm ‘1%; in 5 ire 'oquir' 6'25?

on years. year s r es
yards of 40 inch me. I.

4481. A Smart Blouse Sult for the Small
, on. _ . pongee and chombre as well

so serge. chenot and twill may be us for this
Pattern is cut in 4 Sixesy’ 3, 4.

5 and 6 ears. your size requires _3%

 

 

 

u
r

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 
  

 
 
 


  
  

  

... ‘ . . tunings
/; , * kt NTRAL‘

\LINLS/
Fair rates
and good service

This country has enjoyed railroad transporta- ” \.
tion on practically a cheaper basis than any
other civilized country.—-Report of the Con-
gressional Joint Commission on Agriculture.

  
  
 
  
  
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
    
  
   
  
   
   
   
   
   
  
   
   
  
   
   
  
    
  
  
  
  
    
     
  
    
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 

 
 
 
  

Shippers of farm products _on the New York Central Lines
know from experience that the quality of railroad service is
of greater importance than the price.

Inadequate, ineﬁcient freight service is dear at any price.
Rates that leave no margin of earnings on railroad invest-
ment dry up the sources of new capital, withoutwhich tin
carriers cannot provide the new equipment and facilities their
shippers must have.

This necessary margin of receipts above expenditures, so
vital to the life of the railroads, IS a small fraction of rail-
roadratea. In E22 therailroadseamedthelargeetnetin—
come in ﬁve years, a return of 4.14% on their property
investment. But a reduction of 16% in the rates charged
in 1922 would have taken all this net.

The Congressional Joint Commission of Agricultural Inquiry
estimated that the average proportion of freight rates to the
value of goods married was 6%. If this were reduced to 5%,
a reduction so small that the consuming public would detect
no difference in living costs, most of our railroads would starve.
Living rates for the railroads—insuring healthy growth of
railroad facilities—are vital to agricultural prosperity.

"Maw YORK CENTRAL LINES

bOSTON sm-mcmm CENTRALUBIG FOIIR~PITTSBUBGH swam
‘ AND THE NEW YORK CENTRAL AND SUBSIDIARY LINES

General Offices—466 Lexington Ave., New,York

 

 

 

 

1

NEW SUBSCRIPTION RATES

, . ‘ mamas/again" ,-
BUSINESS FARMER

IL To JANUARY, 1924, . . . . 25c
l
f

 

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

VERY subscriber at‘the above rates is entitled to ALL.

the Departments of Service which have made TheBusi-
ness Farmer famous, so long as the term of subscription
laStsYou know The Business Farmer is the most practical
and fearless because it is the only independent farm paper
lvpublished in Michigan.

_ —.___.___._—.—————_—_—_—___
—__._. -—

The Michigan Business Farmer,
Mt. Clemens, Mich.

I enclose $.. .......... for a years subscription,
this entitles me to eyery department of Business F armer
Service, without further cost for the full period of my sub-

seription.’-t _
Mu..."noun..-.”3.”nu-nu.-......"no-oucuuo'uouou"a...u. RFD No-........

 

0. STATE..............-......

Ila-cal.” “Imuesmdtheauruslabelfmmthh-
mum-volumistakesm D ‘ ‘

 
  
 
  

 

 

O MANY have requested that we

have decided to start one with
this issue. I am oﬁgring thine pen-
cil boxes for the three besLdraflngs.
Each pencil bot contains four pencils
and a, penholder, things you, will

need when school starts, which in

most cases will be next week. Now

I will tell you about what to draw '

so pay close attention and be sure
that you understand before you make
your drawing.

September is the month of fairs in
Michigan, both county and state, and
nearly everyone 01 you will spend at
least one day at some fair during
this month so I have decided that
our pictures will be of something
that you saw at the fair. If VOILBee
two friends meet at the fair draw a
picture of how they looked to you
and send that, or if there were cer-
tain exhibits, such as a prize cow or
horse, appealed to you, draw a pic-
ture of that; maybe you went to a.
show and there was a fat boy that
you would like to send a picture of,
or you could draw 'a picture of the
horseshoe pitchers in action at your
fair. It matters not what you show
in your picture it it is something that
was at the fair.

There are a few rules that you
should remember and they are:
Each drawing must be in black and
white (no water colors); if you have
black ink trace the pencil lines in

-your drawings but if you haven’t

make your drawing with a pencil
only; drawings should be on a
smooth. white sheet of paper, no
lines or marks outside of those that
are a. part of the drawing; make
drawings not more than ﬁve inches
deep or wide; put name and address
on the back of the drawings.

The contest will close Saturday,-

September 29th, and 'all drawings
received after 1:00 p. m. of that day
will not be entered in the contest so
be sure to send yours in to arrive
before that time. If you have at-
tended a fair already this year you
can send in your drawing tomorrow
and it ‘will receive as careful con-
sideration as it would if you wait
until the last day. Do not delay
but forward your drawing as soon
as it is done.

I hope every one of you may be
able to go one day to some fair but
in case you are not you may draw a

picture of what you saw at last year’s ’

fair, so you can try for the prizes.
If you care to you may submit sev-
eral drawings and I will choose the
best one to use in competition with
others. Now do not forget the rules
and do your best. The drawings by
the winners will appear on our page
so if you would like to see your
drawings printed you must work
hard as there are many, many boys
and girls who are going to try to win.
—-UNCLE NED.

Hello —Uncle Ned: -——I thought I would
drop in for a nice triendly chat this even-
ing. The birdies are chirping so sweetly.
One bird has built its nest in a Lilac
bush. There are three blue 08:! in it.
I love the birds, don't you Uncle Ned?
lelldoacribemyselfsoyouwﬂl know
whatIlooklike. Iamttuclomehea
tall and weigh 83% pounds. I have dark
brown bobbed hair, blue eyes, and some
naughty treaties my nose. My
agelabetween 12am! 16. name who
guesses it will receive a nice long letter
from me. My birthday is May 8rd. and
IamintheSthgx-ade. Ifyonhaves.
drawing contest as Myrtle Taylor sug-
gested I will send in a piotnre. Well
good-bye. Your niece—Luella Marie Nel-
son. P. S.—I enjoyed an] visit very
much and may I come again me time?
——Drop around again some evening for
another visit. but next time be sure to
give your complete address.

 

Dear Uncle Nod:——-Having seen in the
paper where you asked me to tell you
about my trip tram New York to Michi-
gan, I’thous‘ht I would write again. I
am sure there is nothing to tell about
my trip only that I enjoyed it very much.
although I was. tired when I got here.
Wehadbdtv‘eryfewchangestomako
andanhourwasthelongestwchadto
wait, which was in Buffalo. We intended
to spendapartotourthnoatNIsux-a
Falls, but We could not make connections
so that we could arrive in Flint during
the day, so We couldn’t go to the Falls
yet. We me xthr’ouﬁh Genus- v
we saw some of the masonry The
answer to— the riddle whiohI in

430 is

hold a. drawing contest that I

and am 5 feet 4%

garb alter one cents). I think the ana-

'wm‘to the riddles which Eva Rana:
put: in the paper are. A next!)

on a. horse with a kettle turned hm}
side in) on his head. And the ascend
" to the riddle which Gladys Carlson out, ,_

in the paper is a pig. Well I think I,

isabeerbottle

had better close for this time, your niece,
-—Mlss Fairy Dunkle, R. 2, Durban. Mich.

 

Dear Uncle Nah—As I have never.

written to you before I made up my mind
thathouldwritotorthenrnthnaud
soeltmletterwillbeorintod. lama
farmers daughter too. I have media
brown hair, blue eyes. fair comm

hdaestaihwetghnt
pounds. Gum—I’llletyouguessmyage.
Donullketomllkoows? Idon'tsup—

poseyoudo. Iwouldrathormilkeower

thanwaahdlshenbutlhavetomah
dishes. Wellveontbeminroadmu.
and there is lots of travel. Is the
weather warm enough for you Uncle
Ned? MyIpretty nearlyroastitisno

wnrmhere. Mymotherandlhavebeen.

picking hudﬂeﬂrﬁes and red raspberries.
Do you like them? I do. but I don't
like to eat the raspberries for tea: at
eating some 'worms. .1 s

W they
,wouldnhelp to ﬁll up, but I don’t care

anything about them. Were you ever up
to Kalkaska? If you haven’t been, you
have missed a lot, because it is an awful
big town, Ha! Ha! Well I guess I will
clone and give the rest sonic room.
Would like to have some or the boy!
and girls write to me. ‘Good bye. from
your niece—41133 Mary Drake, Star
Route, Kalkaska, Michigan.

Dear Uncle Ned:—-I am going ~to write
toyouaalseesomanyot moccasin
arewriting. IseethatEvelyaBoper
has promised a card or letter to the one

her right age. I think that\

whom
Evelyn will be 13 her next birthday.

Miller has Written me some real
nice letters during the past year. I m
atamergirl. 17yearsold. lamb
feet 3 menu tall, weigh 130 pounds. I
have medium brown hair. (Oh yes I had
it bobbed on the 23rd of July). My eyes
are blue and I have a light complexion.
My birthday is on the 23rd of Decmnber.
Have I a twin? I have not attended
school for two years, but I would be a
junior in high school if I could go. I
live near Oak Grove, or north of Howell.
I am working in Howell 4% days a
week, but I am home the rest of the
time. My letter is getting so long that
it won't miss the waste paper basket
if I don’t close. I hope that some of the
cousins will write as I will be glad to
hear from them I am reading The
Hunted Woman, and like it Very much.
—-Idah Knapp. R. 2. Oak Grove, Mich.

 

Dear Uncle Nedz—I bet you hays been
wondering where that “Katy-did" wéht
to. Well here I am again. I like my
scissors ﬁne and sure do use them a

>great deal. Now maybe you and my

cousins wonder what I look like so I will
describe myself. I have dark brown hair.

browneyes.and1a.m4teet,2lnchestan..

I weigh 102 pounds. and was 17 years
old last January, so you see I am rather
small for my age. I wonder if I have a
“Q.“- It I have _I surely wish they

.would write to _.me Lawrence Chapman,

of Alma, Michlgnn, I wonder if he has
atwin. Hhewasaboutéxdaysyounger
he probably would have one, Ha! Ha! I
think the answer ”to the one riddle that
EnnaWhltoaskediaamad. Iathat
right. Elm? I don't know the other
IalsothlnkthatDorothyPoetmainla
years of ago. Well now Undo Nod. I
am very interested in ﬂat drawing oon~
tostyouapeakot, asllovotodrnw. I
thinkaetterstopaslttagettlnglato
andtimefongoodzirlstobolnbed.
Good bye Uncle—Katie M Prowant,
Durand. Michigan.

NEW LAMP BURNS
94% AIR

\

Beats Electric or Gas

 

A nepv oil lamp that gives an amazingly
brilliant, soft, white light, even better
than gas or electricity, has been tested
by the U. S. Government and 36 leading
universities and found to be superim to
10 ordinary oil lamps. It burns without

    
     
 

 
    
 
   
      
   
    
   
    
     
    
 

 
 
        
      
     

 
   
 
    
    
    


   
  
 

   
 
 

_ rang from her lips.

..

, and
,mumnsmmm

. a knife.

(continued from August 18th)

1'? was no those: knife-work now.
A

5 ﬁre avalanche of brute strength

.' AndheknewthatQuade

areneoningthmg. Hehad
tom Hemhlindwlththe
Mounts. hawthouht
tinder-the
weight of the club in hishuge hands.
Aldon waited. He heard Joanne-’3 ter-
riﬁedsereamwhen endow-almost
mmmmmmetsep—
mtedtlun.‘ Thodllb'lldmnndlng
whenheﬂunghimsetffbrwud.
fortboother’sfeot Theolubcreﬂled

that moment Aldous was at his throat.

He would have sold the hem of his
life for the skinning-knife. But he had
but it in gripping Quads. And now he
ohokod——witli every ounce of strength in
him he choked at the thick neck of his
enemy. Quade'e hands reached for his
own throat. They found it. And both
choked, lying there gasping and covered
with blood, while Joanne struggled vainly
to free herself, and scream after scream
And John Aldous
knew that at last the end had come.
For there was no longer strength in his
arms, and there was something that was
like a, strange cramp in his ﬁngers, while
the clutch at his own throat was turning

' the world black. His grip relaxed. His

hands fell limp. The last that he realized
was that Quads was over him, and that
he must be dying.

Then it was, as he lay within a ﬁnal
second or two of death, no longer con—
scious of physical attack or of Joanne‘s
terrible cries, that a strange unforseen
thing occurred. Beyond the tepee a man
had risen from the earth. Me staggered
toward them, and it was from Marie ﬂat
the, wildest cry tame now. For the man
was Joe- DcBar!- In- his hand he held
Swaying and stumbling became
to the ﬁghters—from behind,
not see him, and over Quade's huge back

he poised himself. The knife rose: for
, a fraction of a second it trembled in mid-

nir. Then it descended. and eight inches
of steel went to the heart of Quade.’

And as DeBar turned and Staggered
toward Joanne and Marie, John Aldous
was sinking deeper and deeper into a
black and abysmal night.

CHAPTER m

In that chaotic night in which he was
drifting, light as a feather on the wind,

* John Aldous experienced neither pain nor

very. much of .the sense ’of life. And yet,
without seeing or feeling, he seemed to
be living. All was dead in him but that
last consciousness, which is almost the
spirit; he might have been dreaming,
and minutes, hours, or even years might
have passed in that dream. For a long
time he seemed to be sinking through
the blackness; and the something top-
ped him. without jar r shock, and he
was rising. He could hear nothing.

-There was a. wast silence about him, a

silence as deep and as unbroken as the
abysmal pit which he seemed to be
softly ﬂoating.

After a time Aldous felt himself sway—
ing and rocking. as though tossed gently
on the billows of a. sea. This was the
ﬁrst thought that took shape in his strug-
gling brain—he was at sea; he was on a
ship in the heart of a black night, and
he was alone. He tried to call out, but
his tongue seemed gone. It seemed a
very long time before day broke, and
then it was a strange day. Little needles
of light prickled his eyes; silver strings
shot like ﬂashes of weblike lightning
through the darkness, and after that he
saw for an instant a. Strange glare. It
was gone in one big, powderlike ﬂash,
and he was in night again. These days
and nights seemed to follow one sonther
swiftly now, and the nights grew less
dark, and the days brighter. He was
conscious of sounds and buﬂetings, and
it was very hot.

Outofthisheattherecgmeacool,
soft bros-e that was continually caress-
”Mahmudeyeaendhead It
was likothe much of a spirit hand. It
becamemoreandmorerealtohhn. It
car-cued him into a dark and comfortable

, oblivionasdll brlshter day roused him.
‘-Hlsbrainsseemed

clear. He opened his
eyes. A white cloud was hovering over

‘ij‘thm: it fell softly; it was cool and
“gentle. Thenit rose again audit was
._nutacloud.butahandl WWYOG

patriotism-slacking intonpur
e-onen. We. prayerful eyes. and
semen ”snug. and o m

6 board move-

: Forums! Author of die Gust Norm

 

.end just

lips. But Joanne heard; and he heard
her calling to him: he felt her hands ,
she was impioring him to open his eyes.
tospoaktoher. Itseemedmanymingtes
before he mild do this. but at last he
succeeded. Andthis time his vision was
not so blurred. He could see plainly.
Joanne was there. hovering over him.
beyond her was 7 the great,
bearded face of Donald MacDonald. And
then. before words had formed on his
lips. he did a wonderful thing. He
smiled.

“0 my God. I thank Theo!" he heard
Joanne cry out. and then she was on
her knees, and her face was against his.

sobbing.

‘sndshewas

He knew that it was MacDonald who
drew her away.

The great head bent over'him.

"Take thin will'oe. Johnny boy?“

Aldous stared.

"Mac. you're alive.” he breathed.

“Alive as ever was, Johnny. Take

Ho swallowed. And then Joanne hov-

  
  

  

He recognized it. It
was ﬂan-Donald's old home. When Jo-

wide bunk built against the wall. Sun- '

light was ﬁltering through a white cur-

tain at the window, and in the open door

he saw the anxious face of Marie.

He tried to lift himself, and was
amazed to ﬁnd that-he could not. Very
gently Joanne urged him back on his
pillow. Her face was a glory of life and
of Joy. He obeyed her as he would have
oboyedthehandottheladonna. She
aw all his questioning.

"You must be quiet, John,” she said.
and never had he heard in her voice the
wetness of love that was in it now.
“We will tell you everything—4301mm and
I. But you must be quiet. You were
terribly beaten among the rocks. We
broughtyouhereatnoomendthosun
is m until now you have not
opened your eyes. Everything is well.

“Joanne, my darling, you
now—why I wentedto com
the North?"

Her lips pressed warm and suit against

feel her arms trembling, and her breath
coming quickly. Gently she drew away
from him. “I am going to make you
some broth.” she said then.

He watched her as she went out of
the cabin, one white hand lifted to her
throat.

Old Donald MacDonald seated himself
on the edge of the bunk. He looked down
at Aldous. chuckling in his beard; and
Aldous. with his bruised and swollen
face and half—open eyes. grinned like a
happy ﬁend.

”It was a wunerful, wunerful ﬁght.
Johnny !" said old Dcmald.

“Itwae.Mac. Andy-oucnmehﬁna
on the home stretch !"

“What d'ye mean—«homo
queried Donald leaning over.

"You saved me from Quade."

Donald fairly groaned.

“I didn't, Johnny—J didn‘t! Dem
killed 'lm. It was all over when I cane.
On’y—Johnny—I had a most cur‘ous
word with Culver Ram afore he d‘ledl'Q

(Continued September 16th.)

strata; ?‘

 

Quade did .

assimbntmho.“

 

 

1923 SEPTEMBER!

 

 

 

sun MON run was

     

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

'x'ﬁ

ill I

 

 

 

 

WED

1925

5’“. VEMBER 1923

 

 

 

   
   

 

 

 

Clear More Land This Fall -
Large Proﬁts Next Year

YOU are‘after bigger crops and bigger proﬁts
next year, there is no more valuable work you can
do following harvest than to clear more of your

stump land.

The easiest, quickest and most economical way is
with Dumorite, the new du Pont explosive.
9 Dumorite has approximately the same strength as
40% dynamite, stick for stick, yet leaves no larger
hole in the ground than a 20%——and you get

% more sticks for your dollar.

It won’t freeze.

Get it from your local dealer.
Write for free 110-page Farmers’ Handbook of

Explosives.

planting.

It gives full information on the use
of explosives for land-clearing, ditching and tree-

E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS & CO., Inc.

,, McCormick Bldg”

Chicago, Ill.

Hartley Bldg”
Duluth. an.‘

”she whispered. and he could

ﬁnch-V“ as». - 5. ..—....—......4L‘. 1.. _. , , -.

  
   
      
  
 
 

   
  
    
       
 
      
          
      
 
 

 
 

         
         
   
  
    
        
    
   
  
    
  
 
   
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
  
  
 
   
  
    
   
  
  
   
   
  

   
 
 

 
 
   
 
    
  

  
 
 
 
  
    
   
   
 

. 4m....v,....:. "4.3.:

    

   
 

 
   
   


  
    

to encourage the growing of

 
 
  
 
 

6.20 or Inch less 2 for
".-l:anth lopllowlng dots of "linemen.
REE. so you can see how many lines lt will nu.
B‘REE‘DERS DIRECTORY, MICHIGAN BUSI

  

 

o‘

  

 

" iE'I'o avoid conflicting dates we will wnnout
. on» list the date of any live stock solo In
' I! you are cons'lllllerllr:I ma ‘aaolodgl;
V us at once an wow c

.10“ on. Address. Live stock Editor. M. B.
t. Clemons

  

 
 

 
 

‘ l—H retards. Thumb Hereford Cattle
‘ A“ 3 Breeding Ass’n. Bad Axe Fair. '1‘. F. B.
Sotham & Sons, Sales Mgrs.
—H late' . B. S. Gier. lensing. E. J.
Sept. 21Fishbgck.“81ales Manager. Howell, Mich.
Sept. 27—Hoistein, Grand River Stock Farm,
Eaton Rapids. Mich. C r
1 —H lste'ns Howell Sales cmpany 0
Out. 8Livinogstoi1 County. Wm. Griﬂ‘in, Sec’y.‘
Howell, Mich.

:G. P. PHILLIPS‘

THE GOLDEN RULE AUCTIONEER
Bellovue Michigan
P ’ eed Sa es a Specialty.
Write. wire or call for terms and dates.

 

 

 

 

HOESTEIN S

FASOINATION. FARM VASSAR, MICHIGAN.
Hoistsins, registered fully accredited 32% lb
Write your want.

 

 

sire.

3 Fine Holstein Bulls

read for light service in October from hes.
milking Dams and sired by omeo King Pontig
Sega Korndyke. . a price is very reasonable.
otter dnve over and see them.
SCHAFFER BROS" R. 4, Oxford. Mich.

FOR SALE—MY ENTIRE HERD

REG. HOLSTEINS. 30 Head. T. B. Tested

17 milch cows. 18 heifers, A. R. 0. stock or will
exchange for grades.
H. A. SMITH. Wixom. Michigan.

 

 

BEREFOBDS

Are You Considering

What to Feed This

Fall- That Will Prove
Proﬁtable

Before purchasin feeders in-

vestigate the So In Eariiripe
HEREFORD Beef Plan. A

 

 

oven, proﬁtable system of
of production of cat bane—v.
lit to the producer. Realise the utm tram your

feeding operations. Write for information. HERE
‘ FOBDS, Year , _ Two-yoar-olds, Y

‘ ._ all registered and T. .13.. tated lit
finches] 11098 for producing Esrhripe BEBE~
~ 0RD .Ba y Reeves. Terms granted upon proper

credentials.

T. F. B. SOTHAM & SONS
(Hereford: since 1839) Saint Clair. Mich.

F on S A I. E REGISTERED HEREFORD
KARL BUESOHEN. Eli’s, $246732:

iii

 

 

.3 W." 3:-

n‘ice Repeater 'ers one year old for
500.00. _ ' nice usty

. BRO .
8t.

' . «a Go. West Kalamazoo, Mich.

We Have Bred Hereford; Since 1860

.m. ”WWW?” epicure .22?
; MCEFABE an Omsk. llcglmnan.

,GUERNSEYB

foe BALE: BULL OALF aonu m .iFéif.
ave-y ‘11 Dan is dam of Bel]; Minus. 0
guilty Linn. th cowgirl!) h(ilsassz‘D. 1D. and l"Stem
O
», as (Jim. 0 name
lBead‘lng in G. G. Price for quick sale 8 50.00.
‘ W Ind

lake City, Michigan.

FOR 8ALE——REGI$TERED GUERNSEY HEM-'-
“mummchnlcebnllulvesof

 

 

 

 

EA.

ﬂ. III. III Lamina, Mlch.. Box 62.
' . FOR SALE: REGISTERED GUERNSEY
all: for gang nah. Ma Me BULL

: 0E1. Elohim

 

SHORTHORN S

i suomonns rum-Hour uonus
smegma a 1 I ”I N“
01‘ In 09
KELLY a son. piylzxroumlrﬁlomm.

FOR SALE: SEVERAL REGISTERED
erthorn e.
g:ﬂ’Eﬂ A GOODALE. East Tues. liohim «-

 

 

 

 

' me e ma neaoln' for museum breeders of le0 atom: a: c'
laments mu uno :- t l ore-crgd? orllﬂthe farms of current! 11‘. Our advo lsino
' a ne. per use on.
My Cents (800’ nor n ‘9 cash If sent with order or will
END IN YOUR AD AND E

  
  

’Q: HEEP

  

sols! tvdA .
Fourteen costs I nos to the column inc,
0' or ore ho

ILL PU IT N TYPE
Address all letters

NESS "amen, MT. CLEMENS, mo".
JERSEYS

  

 

Brennan, Fitzgerald &
Sinks Jersey Farm

United States Government
Attested Herd

F armington, Mich.

offers for Sale or Lease the following Bulls and
Bull Calves:

FRANK TANNE'R RALEIGH. 2 yrs. 4 months.
1st. Prize, Junior Calf, 1921; let. Prize. Junior
Year-hug 1 22 :_ Reserve Jr. Chain ion. 1922,
Mich. late Fair. Dam: Ida Banish Ksrnak.
Record, milk 6,784.2; fat 883.89, as 3 year old.

ACTRESS GAMBOGE 1 year. 5 months. let.
ane. Senior Calf. Michi an State Fair, 1922.
DamrPstchwork. Miss. ecord. milk 7883 lbs;
[at 407.48 lbs. - "

MAYS FAIRY RALEIGH, 1 car, 3 mOnths.
Dam; Mays Fairy Elf. Record. 43 lbs. of fat.

BULL OALF 8 months. Dam: Milliea Karnak.

cord. milk, 6.156 lbs; fst 393.36.

BULL OALF, 8 months. Dam: Raleighs Calico
Primrose. Member of Show herd. Record, Class
A. A., milk, 7786 le.; fat 342.75 lbs.

ACTRESS RALEIGH our prize winning herd-
sire, is Sire of all Bulls.

All records made on twice 9. day milking.

All Bulls and Caiva will be shown at Michigan
State Fair. 1923. -

C. NIELSEN, Mgr.

REG. JERSEYS. POGIS 99th OF H. F. AND
Majesty breeding. Young stock for sale. Herd
fully accredited by Stats and Federal Government.
Write or v1s1t for prices and description.
GUY c. WILBUR. BELDING. Mich.

 

 

 

ANGUS
v”: HAVE some FINE vouno ANGUS BULLS

 

 

 

from International Grand Champion St‘ock at

reasonable prices. E. H. KERR a. 00.. ddison.

Mich. ‘
AYRSHIRES

 

FOR SALE—REGISTERED AYRSHIRE
bulls and bull calves. heifers and heifer calves
Also some choice cows.

FINDLAY BROS.. R 5. Manor. Mich.

as? SWINE ‘ f
. o. I. C.
O. 1. CS

8 last fall gilts to .fnrrow in Aug. and Sept. 60
spring pigs, not skin, recorded free. Good stock.
OTTO B. SOHULZE. Nashville, Michigan.

FOR SALE—EXTRA FINE BIG TYPE 0. LG.

pigs at farmers prices. Both sex.
E. E. SALISBURY, Msndon, Michigan.

HADIPSHIRES ‘

 

 

 

 

 

HAMPSHIRES: A FEW BRED (3an LEFT.
isce. your order now_for our Boar pig at 1

gain. Pan-s not alnn. 0th year.
JOHN w SNYDER. St. Johns. R. 4. Mich.

DUROCB

 

 

 

[Muse—Jerseys and

Hill Crest F a333, Pégmgﬂ, Maggi;

35 '82?“ m r is'i'd‘iirii‘ “has... Co. 4 ml"
tr 3011 o l ( on. rs
5 “3 uzwron a. BLANK.

 

PEACH HILL FARM ‘35:; “it“; "till“;

sex. Priced ve reasonable. Write us.
lNWO D BROS- Romeo. Mich.

 

BIG TYPE DUROCS, SPRING PIGS. BOARB
and Bred Bows. rite us your wan
SGHAFFER BROS" R. 4. Oxford. Michigan.

 

 

Fon S‘LE 400 BREEDING EWEB.
A. F. LONGPRE. gal-ran. niobium.

 

DOGS
For Sale-- Fox, Coon & Rabbit Hound

JOHN ATOHIOON. "mm mom, R. 8.

coon xunx, mun. r
Fliil SALE wow’ia mmmw‘ﬁ’é
I. L. DENTON. Rodney. Illinois.

 

 

 

HAVE YOU LIVE STOCK

 

 

DISPERSI

-- Head Registered
B. S. GIER, - -

FRIDAY. SEPT. 21. 1923, at

  

0V

    
  
  

in '~ Cows

    
  

., 'V

13. own. oddrou re.

The Entire Herd of

or all Breeds, and
in the United States in 1923.
mummies several 'Winn , leading ,
with records of “7-26-2448 lbs. two 20‘ lb. 2-yr.-o
\ > a . ‘.
Don nun To Come.

ON S A L E
Holstein Cattle ——
Lansing, Mich.

2 o’clock. P. M. (teatime)

by'a son of
CowénMay Walker
can Honors over
3 other y bulls from
are a

 

I" 1 mil West of 01 Limits on St. Joseph Street.
At the am e ty n)

' (Herd under State and Federal Sage
ung b includm the Herd Sire who is a how Bull.
1&0]: g at the. Show

n

‘ rounds at molasses; 83.4 pounds _
9..' n' I

 

 

U. s. "BEEF: i-"S‘L'UrrLY “ooNsUilmn

AT {HOME ' A,
ROWTH oi population. in the
United‘ States to a point at
which the domestic market has
become large enough. to absorb the
Country’s normal beef production is
the .chief reason why American beef
is no longer an important source of

supply for Great Britain, says Chas.‘

J.‘ Brand, marketing specialist for
the Department of Agriculture, who
recently studied the meat trade sit-
uation in Europe. Another factor
working against an increase in our
beef exports, he declares, is the low-
er cost of beef production in coun-
tries like Argentina which are still
in the pioneer stage. ‘

Mr. Brand points out that from
1891 to 1921 the human population
of the United States increased from
62,948,000 to 107,833,000, while
the number of cattle in the country
increased only from 51,363,572, to
66,652,559. It is thus obvious that
the growth in population has absorb-
ed the lncreased beef production
and the same is true of mutton. Our
increased production and exports of
beef during the war proved, accord—
ing to Mr. Brand, that given the
stimulous of. a proﬁtable market the
American livestock grower can and
will quickly expand his beef output,
but many factors are at present di-
minishing his incentive to do 80.

Among these factors the most im-

portant, in Mr. Brand’s opinion, is
the relatively high cost of beef pro-
duction in the United States compar-
ed with its cost in countries now in
the pioneer stage. This fact, he
says, has convinced the meat; trade
of Great Britain that the future will
see greater and greater productioﬁ
in Argentina, until the supply from
that country overshadows that from
any other source. Next in import-
anca as sources of additional sup-
plies are Austrailia and New Zea-
land. .
At the present time the United
States is almost exactly self-sufﬁci-
ent in the matter of its beef supply.
As the country becomes more indus-
trial, home consumption Will be in-
creased. Whetherin that case the
livestock grower will have any
strong motive to engage in competi-
tion for the export trade Will be de-
termined, says Mr. Brand, by many
factors, among which he cites the
possibility of more efﬁcient beef pro-
duction methods coming into use,
the younger age at which beef cattle
are now slaughtered, and the rela-
tion of the dairy industry to cattle
raising generally.

As an exporter of pork and pork
products, the United States is likely
to retain its pre-eminence for many
years, Mr. Brand says. He believes,
however, that with the rehabilitation

of agriculture in Europe, our exports '

of these commodities, which have
been very large in the last few years,
will be adjusted to past-war condi-
tions. Average shipments of Amer-
ican pork and pork products to the
United Kingdom trom 1910 to 1914
were about 450,000,000 pounds. In
1919 the total was 1,369,000,000
pounds, while in the fiscal year end-
ing June 30, 1922, the shipments
were 676,000,000 pounds. Some
modiﬁcations of these' ﬁgures are to
be looked for, Mr. Brand says, but
energetic trade development work
will greatly minimize reduction.

MICHIGAN'S HIGH COW IN
TESTING WORK

R. E. M. STEWART, Inkster,
Michigan, had the high cow in
both milk and butterfat pro-
duction in Michigan Cow Testing
Association work. This cow, Detroit
Pontiac Pietertje No. 391047, made
20,548 pounds of milk and 663.4
pounds of fat for the cow testing

 

association year in Wayne County.

C. T. A., according to Mr. J. H. Math-
lesen, cow tester. Mr. Mathiesen
mentions that this cow was milked
four times daily‘for ﬁve months of
her lactation period and three times
daily for ﬁve months. She was dry
tor two months. .

Detroit Pontiac Pietertjo consumed
durin her year’s record 12,336
poun s of silage, 714 pounds of beet
pulp, 3,704 pounds of aliens. 310

   
 

 
  

    
  
 

 

    

. _. .9! ,
any?! lﬁ‘wgndaot $1113: 4

 
 

 

.DOu'nds of commercial teed.

, The total cost of 'f'ee‘d‘ was $211,421; ’-

and the, total value of product was
$403.26, leaving a return above the
”feed cost of $191.83. \ '

In addition to having the high,

cow in both milk and butterfat pro-
duction, Mr. Stewart also has the
high herd average completed on 'fbur
purebred Holstein cows. "This aver-
age is 17,449 pounds of milk and
561.17 pounds of fat. ~

The second highest herd average

rwent to Mr. H. W. Atwater of the

West .Allegan C. T. A. Mr. Atwater,
with four purebred JerSeys, averaged
10.066 pounds of milk and 531
pounds of butterfat. Mr. Atwater
has, for a number of years, been
very carefully breeding up a. small
but high-class herd of Jerseys. The
results that he has obtained, indicate
the success of geod feeding and
breeding in’ obtaining a high-class
dairy herd. ' /

Other herds that follow an.

summaries for a year’s C. T. A. work
are Mr. C. S. Stuart of the South
VanBuren Cow Testing Association
with ﬁve purebred Holsteins averagv
ing 12,633 pounds of milk and 464.7
pounds of fat. Mr. Sam Park of the
Lapeer C. T. A., with ten grade
Guernseys and Jerseys, averaged 82-
81 pounds of milk and 462.9 pounds
of fat. Mr. A. 0. Rock of the same
association, with ten purebred Hol-
steins, averaging 12,311 pounds of
milk and 441.7 pounds of fatz—Ar-C.
Baltzler, Extension Spec. in Dairying.
Michigan Agricultural College.

 

NO ENTRIES TO DAIRY EXPOS-
ITION AFTER SEPT. 15
NTRIES in the cattle classes at
the National Dairy Exposition
close on Saturday, September
15th. Exhibitors who are planning
to show at the, Exposition must
have their entries in the mail not
later than that date. All entries
are checked up by the various
breed associations and are then
cataloged before the opening of the
Exposition on October 5th. This
makes it imperative that entries be
mailed by the closing date.

Exhibitors whohave not received
the prize list and entry form can
secure them by addressing the Na-
tional Dairy Association at Syra-
cuse.

A total of $30,700 is offered in
prizes for cattle at the Exposition.
The Show Association offers $5,990
on .Holsteins and the Holstein-
Friesian Association of America of-
fers $2,750 in special prizes. In
the Ayrshire, Brown Swiss, Jersey
and Guernsey classiﬁcations; the
Show Association offers $5,240 for
each breed.

Prizes in all grade cow, classiﬁ-
cations have been increased to a.
total of $850“ for each breed.

Entries in the special classes for

calf club calves also close on Sept-,

ember 15th. The Association of-
fers $1,100 in prizes and theHol-
stein-Friesian Association and the
American Jersey Cattle Club have
each offered $500 in specials for

calf club éxhibits or their respect-'

ive breeds.

___' VETERINARY
DEPARTMENT—l

 

 

 

SHOULD CALL VETERINARIAN

I have ten cows and I bred four of
them to ’a neighbors bull and they
seemed to catch all right but all the
way from 60 days to four months
they come in heat again. I got me
a registered bull and bred the same
cows over three of them caught and
all due next December and have bred
the rest of my herd and cannot seem
to get them with calf.
in heat every 21 days and others go
from 42 to 48 days. Our local vet-
erinary says my bull is not any good.
I think he is as three 0 my cows are
with call: from him and the metal
bought him from has 18 cows all
with calf from him—F. B. men. Lo-
peer, Mich. ‘ ’
—-We can hardly do more than gods
:1: the, “$211?” ,_ " _'

0 case - ,ut .makingapsr'sonal‘
examination of.the.herd.;_ .1 " '
lit-1W- °.tr9ull, 1!.

 
   

or is no

124 pounds tor'cottou-gseed. snd862

Some come '.

erﬂity inlanyuspeci-i 'V:

    
 

   
  
  
  
 
   
      
     
   
   
     
      
  
      
         
 
 
  
  
  
     
  
    
  
    
  
     
  
      
  
  
   
   
     
  
    
  
   
  
   
  
     
    
        
   
   
      
   
   
   
    
    
   
     
  
  
 
   
     
  
 
   
 
 

 

< ’—

      
      
         
          
    
   
        
   

 


   

   

 

   
 
   
  
    
 

   
 

‘ tbs
' Pilot. of Animal Path, M. A. 0.

 

. other.

, 12442, Diseases, Ailments,

 
 

factory way at determining and cor-
mating the cause of sterility is to

have a. veterinarian who is familiar '

With; the diseases of the reproductive

‘ organs. to make an examination of

herd—~37. T Hellman, Asso.

 

HAVE 00W POI

Please do tell me what to use for-
my cows as- they seem to have a dis—
.easain their teats. They turn black»
and foster up at the opening and are
very sore. "One had it at ﬁrst but
now others seem to be coming down.
with it. I have one; cow that has
wart: so bad that I can hardly milk
has“ I have been usingcasztsroil
about two weeks but it does not seem
to take)“ of ..—-V 0., Burt Mich.
—These cows in all probability are
altering from cow pox. The dis-
ass: is transmissible from the bands
of the mime!- from one cow to the
It is a disease that generally
yields quite readily to treatment. I
would suggest that you wash 0! the
elected! pert of the udder and teats

’ with a. one-half of one per cent lysol

solution. dry thoroughly, and then
m zinc oxide ointment night and

«morning to the elected parts—John

1*. Button, Assoc. Prot. of Med. and
Surf... M. A: o.

HEATING CATS FOR 1103‘

I am seeking information in re- .

was to my cats. They are covered
with small white lice with dark
hands. In there a. way to destroy
them and. not harm the cats? I have
tried insect poWder but did not get
rennin—Era. E. IL, Davison, Mich.

~43“: being very ,susceptable to the
tonic adios out my disinfectant,
makes it Maul: to treat them tor
ha and. silver skin diseases. I
would suggest that you try the appli-
cationotsulphur ointment to theat-
foctod posts of the cats body. It it
be nm to cover the entire sur-
face at the body, apply the. ointment
to about Ole-third of the body the
ﬁrst day. on the third day another
third, and so on until the surface is
completely covered. —John P. Hut-
ton, Assoc. Prof. 0: Mod. and Surg.,
I. A. C.

HIGH RECORD MADE BY MIGH-
IGAN JERSEY

MOST creditable record has

just bear completed by Sen-

sational Iris 392.391, owned. by
Chas. Kraut, Bart, Michigan. This
mmtmat5m.2mos.ot
ago. and in one year produced 12,-
scs lbs of milk and 714 lbs. at. but—
teriat. Her average test being
5.58. pa cent». Iris was sired by
Noble Sensatiﬁnaal Lad 1.18536,
A100 Sikor- Medal bull; and was
out o! ~Hatie Lavinia 2511084.

BULLETIN TELLS OF MANY
SWINE DISEASES

IITHE diseases End ailments which
[ are important factors in reduc—
ing the proﬁts of hog raisers,
particularly the old enemy, hog
cholera, are described and prescrib-
ed‘ for in a new Farmers’ Bulletin,
and Ab-r
norms} Conditions of Swine, pre-
pared by T. P. White of the United

States Department of. Agriculture.
Although the ravages oi hog
cholera have been reduced to 60
percent below the worst years, lack
at attention to herds and failure to
apply all the precautions available
leave it still the greatest menace to
the industry. Much of’tho bulletin
mdevutodtothindlseaseandto a
number or diseases which in the

diagnose
These other diseases We anth.
tax. o Hgamoentcrlﬂs necro-
pharhy. pneumonia, poi-

 

lliht' who plague. (hemorrhagic,

  

). momma . turd

 
 
  
  

shipment.

Agriculture, Washington, D. 0., , as

long so the sapphires“.

JACKSON COUNTY HOIBTEIN ‘
' sameness HAVE BIG. DAY

€Continued iron: Page 4.)

breeders were closing out their
herds but he advised all those pres-

ent to stick. Mr. Harper made twa”

signiﬁcant statements ' in closing;
one, that on. his farm the only pay-
ing things were" cows, hens, and
sheep, and the other that old men
were largely running the farms
with few young men taking up ag-
riculture. Both these conditions
seemed to him to be 1minous for
the tuture- James Wells was next
introduced and he described the it-
inerary of the group of aﬂicials

present on. the Jacksr 1 county tour. -

W. B. Bursa, Secretary or the Jack-
son County Fair Association, was
introduced and invited the breeders
to begin preparing their exhibits
for the coming fair.

National Ofﬁcial a Speaker

The last speaker was 0'. M. Long
of Chicago, manager of ﬁeld work
for the National Holstein Associa-
tionpwho jolted the party at Ley-
tm's Corners. Mr. Long has Just
returned from a six weeks’ trip
through the West, and said that
dairy farming is rapidly becoming
very popular in that section. He
spoke of the great opportunity for
Michigan Holstein breeders in the
West as the dairymen there must
have eastern cattle to start their
herds. According to this maker,
Wisconsin breeders have advertised
extensively in such states as Idaho
and Utah, but Michigan has failed
in this line in the past. As means
for procuring publicity, Mr. Long.
re'tommendod a dairy train to tour
the western ﬁeld, the sending of alt
Holstein news to the Associated
Press, the use of pictures of the.
true-type Holstein bull and cow, in
advertising matter. He particular»
1y stressed the importance of the
fair exhibit.

Immediately following the pro-
gram, the Bretherton herd was in—-
enacted. There are thirty—ﬁve head
in this herd, half of which are
pure-bred. The next point on the
tour was the farm of E. R. Perrine
in Rives township. A pure—bred
bull, one and one-half years old,
attracted special attention. Nine
men of the Rives Holstein Associa-
tion bought this bull at Howell and
gave Rives the honor of having the
ﬁrst association bull in the county.
There are ﬁfteen pure— —hred females
in the Perrine herd giving an aver-
age of 385 pounds of butterﬁat tor
a. lactation period. As a recogni—
tion oi the work of the Rives As-
sociation in promoting Holstein
raising, a committee consisting of
E. R. Perrlne, W. S. Wood, and Ben
Smith was appointed to begin im—
mediate selection of a: Holstein ex-
hibit for the Jackson county fair.
These men are all in the Rives As-
societies.

The party next stopped at the
Darling and- Behm farm in Tomp—
kins township, where. there are
twenty — eight pure-bred Holsteins.
Here, W. S. Wood was elected an
honorary member of the County
Holstein AssOciation, although main—
ly a shorthorn breeder. Mr. Wood is
a fair director and has been very

prominent among Jackson county’

breeders.

0n the way back to Jackson, the
farm of Ben Smith, in Rives Town-
ship was visited. Mr. Smith has six
pure-bred Holsteins, ﬁve "of whom
are descended from the same burl.
His herd averaged 10,247 pounds
or. milk and 341.6 pounds of but—
ter-lat for the last lactation period
(about a year) and his cows have

‘ surely prOVed that a small herd

with high quality is just as proﬁt-

able as a large herd of medium or,

grade rating.

The last stop was made at the .

Darlings farm in Blackmsn town-

ship, owned by Judge Harry B.
‘ ‘Houdrnan and John W’. Boardmsn.
’7’th milk m- the llichigan (Mattel

was cm is mtedtron the

T Mumobnnmmbe had
by sclerosis: the ”ﬁtment of

 

 

PA

 
   
 
   
  

     
 
    
    
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 

 

Free from worms—

Fit for thrift.
Feed

It contains Tombs—That
healthy appetite—keeps

the poisonous waste material.

sure of heavy
Tonic is fed.

thrift. '

He has a package to suit.
25-lb. Pail, $2.25

Keep them healthy—
Their bowels active-—

DB. HESS STGGK 'l'GﬂlG

Conditimeh-Worm Expeller

'17. a 1102 a
his ﬂeets”: good.
mem—‘Io drive at the worms.
Laxatives—To regulate the bowels.

Diuretics—To help the kidneys throw OK

No clogging of the system under the pres-
fhodhg, where Dr. Bess Stock

Little chance for disease—every reason for
Tell your dealer how many hogs you have.

GUARANTEED.

lOO-lb.
Except in the for West, South and Canada.
I Honest goods—honest price—why pay more?

DR. HESS & CLARK, Ashland, Ohio

Drum, $8.09

 

    
 
 

Dr. HESS D11) and Dlsmfectam
Kills Hog Lice 3

  
     
 

 

  
    
 

   

, WEST
MICHIGAN

FAIERR

IEPTEMB

17-21

      

 

‘3 One Enéine Does Every Fa

Write now for facts about this mmder engine. Same engine gives
1% to 6 H P. Gasoline or kerosene. portable. light and free from vi- -
bration. No cranking. Pumps, sews. grinds and does all chores
Plenty of power for every purpose. Easy to operate
Low Factory Price—Special Oiier

l Tremendous value Write at once for catalog

: special offer on this amazing engine. M .
Edwards Motor Co. 234 Mill: 51.3mm”, o. ;’ ' ,

(“EDWARDS l
FAR?!

     
   

 

Send akoetch or model today ibr erammznon and report.
blank on Win: Mose your 111-
vention oand "Er: Wm: hook, “Her: 10 toObtain a Patent,”
sent free. mess ascaurcd. Hi hest references;
Wm: rout. O’BﬁIEN.Rq1:uru
Pmtlmyrr, meouFEgn Bldg), Washington. D.

Tenants: FARMERS EXGEIAIG E:

5M "‘1- M load ﬁle In we. par Issue
unmmmmnmnmumnmmmmmmulmnmmmmlummumuuua

HAWK [abet—Ill. '0. F
We of no he. isms. ﬂoods.“

 

   
 
 

   
 

TENTS

$1000. 00 PER MONTH To ll. MADE BY
Dairymsn
acre ranch and place on some 00
cow a.
lion. Party must have and
mu “militant to WM. Ti.

head of 111'

 

 

GENERAL
our 114 GRAIN—$12.50 suvs GUARAI-

 

C tees” 10 006 bu Wheat. No further risk. Move-
manta 5c opp take $500; 840.0.
Part1 ticulxn market ire ee. IN*WEST

GUIDE. 929 Dwight Bldzu Kansas Cit t,y M0938

 

 

HELP \VAN'I‘ED

 

route on mean muss. won-u
W its been wort lismil-y is new
1mm “Detroit Troika“ 11331.13 D. WA
tﬁeﬂ Mutton, Miéhinn. ‘
. wnurso: m us so 11

um farmw ark. mm mo. maxim

 

 

 

 

  
  
   

    

   
 
           
 
        
     
       
   
     
 
      
       
       
     
     
     
     
     
           
   
 
      
     
       
         
     
   
      
 
        

bigd enough to lease or buy my 720 ‘

QAPLE, Chum Mich. j

  


 
  

  

These groups of stockholders illustrate the rapid growth in ownership of the Bell System.

A Community of Owners Nation-wide

“Who owns the company?" "What is behind it?”
. ‘ These questions are asked in appraising the soundness of a
business and in determining its aims.

The. American Telephone and Telegraph Company is
owned by more than 270,000 people living in every state
in the Union. Could the stockholders of the Bizll System
be gathered to one place, they would equal the population
of a city about the size of Providence or Denver.

They constitute a representative cross-section of American
citizenship. Among them, of course, are bankers andmen
of large affairs; for the idea of ownership in the Bell
System appeals to sound business judgment and a trained
sense of values.

In this community of owners are the average man and
woman, the storekeeper, the clerk, the salesman, the pro-
fessional man, the farmer and the housewife—users of the
telephone who with their savings have purchased a share
in its ownership. The average individual holding is but
twenty-six shares.

No institution is more popularly owned than the Bell
System, none has its shares distributed more widely. In
the truest sense it is owned by those it serves.

“BELL SYSTEM“

AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES

 

, toward Better Service .

One Policy, One System, Universal Service, and all directed 1

 

Carefully consider the following facts: admin ”331, of
The Auto-oiled Aennotor is the Genuine Zoe}; M

; Self-oiling Windmill, with every moving part -
fully and constantly oiled , , s... __
The Auto-oiled Aermotor has behind it8 years ‘f 5—5 3
of wonderful success. It 15 not an experiment .3" 1,;sz
The double gears run in oil' in a tightly enclosed
gear case. They are always ﬂooded with oil and are protected
from dust and sleet. Oil an Aermotor once a year and it is
always oiled. It never makes a squeak.

You do not have to try an experiment to get a windmill which _
will run a year with one oiling. The Auto-oiled Aerrnotor 1s a tried

and perfected machine. Our large factory and our superior equipment enable us
to produce economically and accurately. Every purchaser of an Aermotor gets the
beneﬁt from guantity production. The Auto-oiled Aermotor 13 so thoroughly oiled
that it runs in the lightest breeze. It gives more service for the money invested

than any other piece of machinery on the farm. The Aer-motor 13 made by a responsible comm,
which has been specializing 1n steel windmills for more than 30 years. ,

5223:1252; AERMOTOR co. mama... hats...” ”mum
Yearling Hem:

, Enngllth and American White

POULTRY BREEDER S W... m
M. D. \MYNGAIIDEN,B Iceland,“ Raine “4. Mich.
DIRECT 0RY—- *
I.

Advertisements inserted under greatestm color and egg stiain. Cockerel price “just
”(hit heading at 30c per agate line, Radian? er’s red clgerger eimprove your dock with
per Issue. Commercial Baby Chick kL K
advertisements 460 per- agnte line. INTER A E8 FARM' 3"" 4' Lawrence, Mloh.
Write out what you have to otter
Ind lend it in. We will put it in
,t‘ype, send proof and quote rates by
return mail. Address The Michigan

Business Farmer, Advertising De-
partment, Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

   
 
 
 
 
  

   
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
   
   
  
 

 

 

RHODE ISLAND REDS
wm-rTAKI-ms n. REDS. moment's

 

 

 

BUFF ROCKS

Buff Rock Cocks, Hens, Okl's and P I
rich buﬂ low combs, rich vellow shun 'ul :diiiern big,
National winners aiid "Hoe n" tested laye

J. 0. OLIPP Q SONS. gxn M. 8altillo. Ind.

BABY CHICKS

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

  

PULLETS. HEIS AND GOGKEBELS

8.0.WhiteLeshornseuds. 0.11ndR. C. Black

 

  

m Must make room before cold weather. ; , kins Strain $15. 00 per hundred.
,About ready to lay. hatciiﬁ t 22nd. Quality breeder of Rhode
13MB PI I111 . "I h.
W"‘" F ’ “° °’ ° wand H. FROHM. n. 1. New Baltimore, Mloh.

  

 

 

   
   
   

 

   

HIGHEST (M H
Poultry all ads PRIOE
mu deal ulwamI

PAID F I! LIVE

«P’isuf‘m

Went. a“ com

IEGHORNS

¥ ,LEGHORNS

.h‘taai.“ cooker'eli Giuliani

   
  
   

 

utter. , A .

 

GOSLINGS NEED. GOOD PASTUBE

I would like to know. if you can
tell me what ailed my goslings last
spring. They grew and seemed to

‘be all right until they were about

ten days old when they began to
stand humped up and their wings
drooped. Inside of a day or day
and a half they died. Their appe-
tite was'good until‘about 24 hours
before they died. I fed them grass,
bread and milk, boiled eggs and oat-
meal and gave them fresh water to
drink. I gave castor oil to some of
them but it did not save them and
greased them for lice but it did no
good either. I fed them a small
amount of feed four times a day.
By the time they were two weeks old
they were all dead. Last year I
lost the last eighteen that I hatched
out. This year I lost three out of
seven—Mrs. A. W., St. Louis, Mich.
—From the symptoms given, I am
of the opinion that the goslings were
denied the range conditions neces-
sary for growth and development.
The intimation that grass was sup-
plied in the ration leads me to con—
clude that the goslings were conﬁned
in bare runs or that little pasture
was available. Poultrymen ordin-
arily consider that the rearing of
geese or ducks is quite a simple
practice because they are less sus-
ceptable to dietary disturbances, dis-
eases, and internal parasites, as com-
pared with chicks.

The essential requirements for
rearing gosllngs are, plenty of shade
and good pasture. The feeding
method may consist of a moistened
mash containing rolled oats, corn
meal, bran, mlddlings, and moisten-
ed with either skim milk or water.
This should be fed about three times
daily until the goslings are nearly
feathered; After they are feather-
ed whole or cracked grain can be
given. A soft feed should form the
basis of the ration during the grow-
ing period.

I can understand how gosllngs
would show a. lack of ambition and
stunted growth it conﬁned in bare
runs and yards. Under such condi-
tions it would be almost impossible
to induce a normal growth and und-
er such conditions a. rather high
mortality is almost certain to pre-
vai1.—-—E. C. Foreman, Asso. Prof. of
Poultry Husbandry, M. A. C.

DUCKS SUFFERING FROM SUN-
STROKE

I wish you could tell me what is
the trouble with my young ducks.
They will draw their head around
under them and fall over backwards
and .their heads will turn clear
around and they can not stand up.
When they ﬁrst are taken they will
turn their heads up sideways. They
get worse all the time. I keep
plenty of clean water for them to
drink. I also have a place for them
to bathe. I feed them corn meal
ground feed and bran and poultry
teed. They will eat when I turn

their heads right side up and hold it.

for them. But they can not do it
themselves—B. P., Fenwick, Mich.

~The symptoms which you have
described as ettecting your ducklings
are characteristic of the symptoms
induced by sun stroke. Thousands
of ducks are lost each year due to
sunstroke and these losses seem to
occur very suddenly.

As far as possible, the duck range
should be located in a well shaded
pasture and the drinking water
should be given in utensils of suf-
ﬁcient depth to permit the duck to
entirely submerge the head. This is
their only method of keeping the
eyes and nostrils clean, which of
course is necessary in the mainten-
ance of health.

The young ducklings should be
fed wet mashes only until they are
almost completely feathered after
which they can be given a small

, quantity of cracked corn and wheat.

The dry mash should consist of 40
per cent corn meal, 20 per cent oat
meal, 15 per cent wheat middlings,
bran. an?! 10 per cent

. He must send to town.
know how to deaciihe that _ ,
. ‘ ‘ h ‘ ,

  

at all times, on the, range. .‘ ,We'
would not anticipate any serious-
mortality from this system of feed-1‘

ing and management. -—-E. C. Fore-
man,
bandry, M. A. C.

HANGING TIMEQ
\ By JOHN T. BARTLETT g

THE Dl‘EIRE FOR SOCIAL
APPROVAL

HE instigatlng, psychological ex-
planation of that great town
game you’ve perhaps heard of~——
"Keeping up with the Joneses”-—-ls
what the psychologists have termed,
“The desire for social approval.”
Human beings instinctively want to
have the apprbval and goodwill of
the people around them. The in-
stinct of Self-preservation is probably
at the root of the desire.

In the caveman days, if the rest of
the tribe didn’t like. a special indi-
vidual, they severally took a stone
hatchet to_ him. ,

It is human, accordingly, and it
one time in racial history it was ex-
ceedingly wise, to want to have the
favorable opinion of one’s fellows.
In standard of living, dress, man-
ners, autOmobiles, and thousands of
things, modern people, in their buy-
ing and conduct, are actuated to an
extent by an instinctive desire to win
social approval.

Right at present—the current
trend only goes back a very few
years—something big is happening
to the desire for social approval in
the farming country. This fact always
has been true—the closer together
you get people, the stronger motivat-
ing force becomes the social approv-
al desire. In cities, it often moves
{pédple to redlculous lengths. Go in-
to mountain country, many miles
from the railroad, and, considering
the people, you might feel that a
more powerful social approval resire
would be a. good thing. There are

 

many things, usually, that“ the lone ,

prospector could gain from stimulat-
ing contact with the world.

On the farm, desire for social ap-
proval never has been a. force which
drove families to undue lengths for
the sake of “appearances ” That
has been one aspect of the great
thing we call farm independence. I
notice this nowadays markedly. Not
in an’ undue manner, farm folks are
getting to have greater interest in
appearances than they used to have.

The causes, I believe, are partly
eco omlc and partly psychological.
Th automobile is bringing com-
munities into closer contact than
they used to be, for one thing; the
social approval desire tends to be
stimulated somewhat. Then we
have the second Condition—greater
farm buying power. Farmers can
indulge desires in many directions
closed to them a few decades ago.

WE STOPPED “HERDING SHEEP”
HE pleasant man by the side of
the road—I had asked direc-

tions to Wildcat Creek—had‘

told me the way three times, through
two cross roads and three turns. I
looked unconvinced ' still—from past
sad experience with a. memory none
too good for many corners and turns.

“0, Shucks,” said the stranger
ﬁnally, “I’ve been herding sheep.
Get down with me!"

I got down with him” while in the
dirt of the road he sketched a quick
road map. "You do this—and this

—and this—and this—" he said. In-

stantly I knew the way.

_A lot of us, ,I believe, waste much
time in giving verbal directions,
when a diagram in dirt or on paper
would convey our ideafar better and
for quicker.

One of my good friends, Johnny
Peebles, of Mule Valley Farm, goes
far with the idea. Something goes

wrong with the car, or the reap'er,~ '

or something else about the 1119.0:
He does?

 

Professor of Poultry Hus-

   
   
         
      
 
       
    
     
     
        
       
    
      
     
      
     
      
    
   
    
    
  
  
  
    
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
    
 
 
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
    
     
  
   
  
 

WWW

 

 

     
     
           
     
      
    
          

       

1-1-14- ‘Amm mun»

   
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

9-1-51:- admin

 

 

 

HHUSBGH en

 

.‘3‘ Q

09“:

 
  
        
    
   
     


  

  

   
   

 

 

 
   

/
WM. _ .._.___.__.1_._

 

, b ‘, passed September 22,
.2, is 32. 20 a hundred pounds
against all raw sugar except that
;coming from Cuba, which is allowed
a. reduction of 20 per cent; making
the tariff $1. 76 per hundred pounds.

The Fordney-McCumber Bill only

increased the tariff sixteen cents a

. ' hundred .pounds. f

The little 20 per cent reduction
effectually prevents any foreign sug-
ar outside of that coming from Cuba
being sold in this country. It is a
.protective tariff for Ouba.

These are the facts we all should

. know before we can judge of what

caused the increase in sugar prices
in February of this year.

Let us return now to the condi-
tions governing production of sug-
ar in this country during last year.

At the beginning of 1922 the
Fordney-McCumber tariff bill was
before the United States Senate, the

3 price of sugar was down to less than

ﬁve cents per pound. The price the
beet sugar factories could pay the
farmers for their beets grown in
1922 depended upon sugar prices.

‘If the price of sugar remained low.

the farmer’s returns would be great-
ly affected by the tariff.

1' Because of the low price‘ and the
uncertainty of what the new tariff
would offer the beet sugar factories
delayed just as long as they could
offering a contract to the farmer.

Contract Price Too Low

When this contract did not come
out it offered a guarantee of $5.00 a
ton for beets grown during 1922.
This was not enough to meet the
competition of other crops for pos-
session of the land consequently a
very small crop of beet sugar was
grown during 1922. For like reas-
ons and because of his inability to
obtain money to ﬁnance his plant-
ings duevto’ low price of sugar, the
sugar grower of Louisiana also had
a small crop.

In the fall and winter of 1922— 23
the American grown sugar was
quickly sold and eaten; it was prac-
rticallly all gone by the middle of
February\or 'the ﬁrst of March.

All the sugar we now get, until
sugar grown on American farms dur-
ing the summer of 1923 comes on
the market in October of this yea1,
will be from Cuba.

It is signiﬁcant that prices ad-
vanced rapidly after the beet sugar
was gone on the ﬁrst excuse that
could be offered, which happened to
be the report issued by the Depart-
ment of Commerce. American farm-
ers and American sugar companies
did not proﬁt by the high price now
prevailing.

They have always contended their
industry, although at the present
time only producing 20 to 25 per
per cent of our needs, kept the price
down while they had sugar to sell.

Those who gain from these high
prices are those who have the suge
ar on hand.
refining companies come in.

The sugar that has produced for-
tunesqfor its owners is all in Cuba.
Fifty-three per cent of the total out-
put of sugar grown in Cuba in 1921
was extracted by mills owned by
Americans.

Of these eighty—ﬁve factories,
forty-nine producing 2,331,000 tons
were owned outright or by interlock-
ing oiﬁcers or directors of the sugar
reﬁning companies of the Atlantic
seaboard. .

The other thirty-ﬁve factories in-
dependently owned only produced
786,000 tons.

There are nine reﬁning companies
on the Atlantic seaboard handling
almost exclusively Cuban sugar; six
of these reﬁning cempanies own
these forty-nine sugar companies op-
erating in Cuba.

Because all sugar destined for

‘ American consumption must come
,through there Atlantic
they have a tremendous control over

reﬁneries
all the sugar coming into this coun—

ft is easy to see who gained by this

.jjsu‘dden increase in the price of sug-.
. ,ar

Through the publicity organiza-
these reﬁners maintain, they
itemrpted to charge the tariff
cause of this increase.
‘1" McCumber
ber 2,1922.

' l was only sixteen cents a

 

  

- ”hundred pounds.

 

To maintain that an increase oc-

, curring ﬁve months after of nearly

$3. 00 a hundred pounds was caused

by" this slight increase in the tariff is

certainly the heighth of absurdity.

Any child would know 'better, yet
this was swallowed whole by some
who wish us to believe that they
wrote intelligent (1’) editorials on
the subject.

All the interviews and arguments
placed before the American people
having as a basis the elimination or

reduction of the tariff means a pro— .

posal for the destruction of 1,300,
000 tons of American grown sugar.
'How this would reduce the price of
sugar is beyond the comprehension
of ordinary sensible people. This
might be replaced by the cheaper
grown sugar from Cuba, but this

'does not mean any cheaper sugar

to the American consumer as our
experience at the present time and
during 1920, when all the sugar we
are going to get is in their hands,
has so clearly demonstrated.

We would by this method place
ourselves regarding our supply of

, sugar in the same position we are in

regarding rubber.

Because we suddenly ﬁnd that
England owus all the rubber planta-
tions and can charge us what she

" as; he Fordney-Mc~”

.

I . " “Ii ' g V “
cles calling upon rich men If

stOne and Ford to help us out, and :7
frantic efforts are being made to ﬁnd

some place under American territory
where rubber trees cantbe grown so

we can be free from this intolerable .

position of being dependent upon an-
other country and having to pay
what she dictates. The American
people are not ready to place them-
selves in this position regarding
their sugar bill.

Why should we go out of our
country to buy one ounce of sugar?
The American farmer can grow

every particle we need and we would .

rather trust the beet farmer of the
North, and the' cane grower of Louis-
iana and the thirty-four independ—
ent beet sugar factories who are not
aﬁiliated with or controlled by any
trust or reﬁnery for our sugar at
reasonable prices than we would the
present foreign control who are mak—
ing fortunes off of us at the present
time.

'WARN S AGAINST GALVANIZED
IRON UTENSILS
0 not allow food or drink to
stand for even a short time in
a galvanized iron vessel and
do not use such utensil in making
preserves or jellies or as a contain-
er for cider or other fruit juices, is
a warning issued by officials of the
Bureau of Chemistry, United States
Department of Agriculture. Some

’

,ot the zinc with which _

vat the Guam Naval

give the food an unpleasant mate
but is very apt to cause sudden and.
intense illness.

1' A recent instance of poisoning
apparently resulted from the pres-N

Twelve men
Station each
drank a bottle of root beer and im—
mediately began vomiting. Chem-
ical examination of the contents 'of
three bottles transmitted to the
Bureau of Chemistry for analysis
disclosed the presence of substan-
tial quantities of a salt of zinc in
each bottle. It is the opinion of
the ofﬁcials that even one-half the
contents of one of the bottles
would have caused vomiting. The
sale of bottles from this shipment
has, of course, been stopped and an
investigation started to deﬁnitely
locate the source of the contamina—
tion with zinc.

Experiments carried on by Fed~
eral chemists with quantities of
lemonade, orangeade, mllk, car-
bonated water, Washington City
tap water and distilled water held
over night in galvanized iron buck—
ets proved that zinc contamination
occured in each case. The ofﬁcials,
therefore, warn against the use or:
such utensils as containers for food
or drink.

ence’of zinc in food.

Hank Pohns says: “A lot of
folks get inter trouble, jest tryin’
to avoid it!" .

 

Right here is where the _

Tariff l

 

 

 

HIS splendid herd of pure-bred Holsteins bee

longs to J. B. Strange of Grand Ledge, one

of the many up—to—date Michigan dairymen who

are feeding Milkmaker the year ’round. He says:
“I have used a wide variety of dairy feeds in my

time.

accident.

best.
themselves.

 

MICHIGAN 5

  

I got started on Milkmaker more or less by
I heard about Milk-
maker and got some.
were on test and I wanted the
The results speak for
On this feed one of
my cows produced 5,554 lbs. of
milk in two months and over
93 lbs. of butterfat in 30 days.

“When my cows are in the
barn I feed Milkmaker straight;
when on grass,
maker and half corn and oats.
Milkmaker is very palatable.”

Michigan Milkmaker is a 24% protein, public formula
dairy feed made by Michigan State Farm Bureau. It
is Michigan’s best dairy ration. The ten milk making

TA //

Lansing, .

 
  

 

My cows feed prices.

half Milk-

is short.

prices.

These Cows Produce
More Milk with Milkmaker

 

ingredients are listed on the bag, pound for pound. You .
know exactly what you are buying.

How to Feed Milkmaker Next Winter
At Summer Prices

You can contract your winter feed requirements of
Milkmaker through the Farm Bureau, for equal monthly
shipments from September through March at summer
The price is guaranteed.

The Farm Bureau buys Milkmaker
huge volume at summer low prices, mixes them at one
of the largest and best equipped mills in the country
and delivers Milkmaker to you every month. I
as it is delivered. This plan enables you to buy your
winter feed at the lowest prices; it insures fresh feed.

See your local co— operative association for your Milk-
maker requirements.
to co- operate with your neighbors in buying carlots of
Milkmaker for car—door delivery.
on Milkmaker. The time
Later Milk—
maker must be bought
at prevailing market
Order now.

ingredients in

You pay

If you have no co— 0p. ., ask us how

Write for our booklet

 
   

   
  

  
     
    
   
      
      
    
      
         
          
       
         
          
       
    
     
     
         

 

        
        
       
        
       
     
       
       
         
         
       
        
      
      
      
     
         
          
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
  
  
   
 
 
   
 
    
   
      
    
    
  
   
    
   
   

 

      
       
    
 
  
 
   

  

  


   
  

MARKET '1.st
By W. w. Foo’rm

_ ACTIGAIJJY all businesses at

America are on an active money
, making basis at present and a
m of prosperity is apparent
Were. Agriculture, the biggest
and tundamenmi industry of the
MM, has been reported to be
" Ming at all times and the tamer
This been hoodwinked into the idea
that he was down and out. It is
,V true that he is not getting—a just

proportion of what he produces but
he is far from being broke. Most
from products are at a proﬁtable
level at present and further improve-
ment is undoubtedly going to develop
’ in urgioultural markets before the
’ you is ended.
It gloomy stories about the down
farmer are true, how is it
then that he is able to keep on pro-
ducing year after year on a losing
market? Them are apparently thou-
sands of prosperous farmers through-
out the corn belt and other agricul-
tural states of the union who are
totally oblivion-s of the fact that they
have failed in business. It is true
that certain agricultural commodities
have recently lost money and special-
ization has been a risky practice.
But diversiﬁed farming has generally
yielded good proﬁts to the farmer.
Increased business in the mail or-
der houses and larger output of auto-
mobiles and tractors, a large per-
centage of which business represents
the buying power of the American
; farmer; savings bank deposits, which
Show a tremendous increase; im-
provements in schools, roads and
rural communities in general all go
to ﬂow that fundamentally the busi-
ness of the American farmer is on
a healthy basis and there is little
‘ four oi? the purchasing power of the
agricultural community in general
being seriously impaired.

The great majority of our people
are employed and are making good
money. However, there is a general
tendency to use a streak of economy
in buying, this being the result of
the lessons learned during the boom
in 1920. Most businesses are carried
on with a bit of cautiousncss which
only goes to put the country on a
sounder footing. According to re-
ports from the Department of Labor

  
  
 
 
 
 

  
  

today is $27.22 or 121 percent above
wages before the war and only $2.72
lless than wages during the peak in
1929.
At the‘poak of 1920 our dollar
. was worth but 40.5 cents but today
it has the buying power of more than
ﬁfty per cent in excess over the 1920
dollar and at the same time wages
are practically as high as they ever
~ were. Commodity prices are gen-
erally below what they were three
years ago and indications point to-
ward fm'thor reduction allthe time.
A settlement in European affairs
would certainly be a good tonic to
all industries in America and outlet
for the surplus manufactured goods
and raw materials would be wider.
‘Conditions abroad are very serious
at present, Germany being in com-
plete economic disruption and both
England and France tooling the de-
pres-sin: keenly.
The Wheat Oudook
The wheat outlook has been of 3.
~ disturbing nature to the wheat tarm-
~ {or of the country during the last few
”Wrecks Prices sank to the lowest
levels since before the war.
decline was the result of an exag-
-,-gerated estimate of the 1923 crop.
"Later investigations however, made
"he exaggeration obvious in the fact
recent ﬁgures show that the whole
of North America has approximately
9,000,000 bushels less wheat than
in 1922. This report auwell as fear'
pt early frosts in north west Canada
has boosted wheat prices materially
' 11108 the low spot a few weeks ago

   

om north west this week
5111 places where wheat is so far
do! that it is out of danger.
{not that trust occurred, how-
,;mahﬁlinhoﬁecton the mar-

  

 
  

 

reoentiy, the average weekly wage '

WWW-mm”
go tor alumna down to use was

MARKVET SUMMARY

wheatacuve. Dornwdumstoudy. Byoandbeansﬂm"
Butter and eggs/adenoid. 'Pototouscame. Wham

supply anon. Good demand (or poultry.

ulvesﬂrm. Mention-ad.

Munket tor tossed
Hogs and sheep higher.

 

idiom The above turmoil-Ind Mom 11' mm IVER no Hence It ’
Wm“ um Inﬁmn no

“neuritis VIVID-R
411w.)

me

its
buttidaJno—t- V hour i

a

 

localities beyond the danger line
would be touched. The market an.
doubtedly will show further strength
although sharp upturns are not ex-
pected. The winter wheat crop is

practically all harvested and prices-

are above the $1.00 mark with Chi-
cago September wheat at $102113
and No. 1 Hard up to $10815. Much
is talked about creating a wider for-
eign outlet for the cereal. Exports
in 1922 were four timesas large as
they were prior to the war and while
foreign credit and money is not able
to take as much as they need this
year, exports are not expected to fall
off materially.

The infamous cotton pest of the
south, namely bool-wevll, has cut
deep into this year’ 8 production. The
bool—vevil costs cotton planters of
Dixie from halts. million’to a billion
dollars annually. Dry weather in
Texas also has decreased the yield,
However, these anthrax-ﬁle inla—
ences in the cotton industry have
created a better market for the pro-
duct and prices are generally on a
money making level. There has
been a strong undertone tn the corn
markettoragoodmnnymonmm
recently sensational advances have
carried prices to new high lem at
Chicago since 1.920. Contact grades
of corn have reached 991: at least
with No. 2 yellow making, 92': this
week. Outside points also report
higher markets on com. Oats are
in a strong position and most gains
are in fairlyheadthy shape.

Hogs and Cattle at New High Level

Reﬂecting general industrial im.
provement, consumptive demand for
meats has been broad during the
past week or two and prices for live
stock have been on the upgrade for
several weeks. Hogs and cattle are

. at new high levels for the year to

date and predictions are general that
they have "farther to go before the
year-ls peak will have been reached.
While hogs have been losing money
for the farmer during past months,
they are making a little now and
cattle have been proﬁtable to feeders
throughout the year. At present

from $3.00 to $6.00 margins over'

initial costs are general for feeders
to realize when they see their steers
going to the scales. Countrymen
are clamoring for thin lambs to go
on the pastures this fall and at pres-
out are paying more for lambs of
feeding ﬂesh and killers are willing
to pay for fat lambs. A buoyant
undertone prevails generally in the
live stock trade.

On August 6th, the $12.00 steer
made his appearance at Chicago and
this week they sold at $13.00 show-
ing a. fell $1.00 gain in less than
three weeks. Top cattle one within
.501: of the pwical limit last Octo-
ber and at pment are selling $2.00
above tops 3. year ago. Only a few
ﬁnished heavy steers are eligible to
these high ﬁgures they show what
killers are willing to pay for strictly
choice cattle. There is a general
report of scarcity of ﬁnished beeves
through-out the corn belt and the
premium they command over short-
iied cattle will undoubtedly stim-
ulate feeders to ripen their stock
more thoroughly before marketing
them. Predictions of traders at the
Chicago Yards are that $14.00 steers
will be here before many more weeks
and some are even willing to risk
money on $15.00 "cattle before the
year is over. The largest percentage
of cattle coming consist of young
stock of medium good grades. Only

choice and prime steers are setting .

above the $12.00 mark at ”on:

with a spread or $3. 25 to $12.59*

representing the great bulk atm-

 

those on the western order under
$6..00 Demand for feeding cattle

1 has been In evidence, but at Chicago.

the quality is not good enough to
meet neuuiromeuts and business has
been handicapped However, as soon

as the run of western range rattle —

starts coming in large numbers,
there will be more olerln'gs and the
trade is expected to improve ma-
terially. Most business done lately
ranged from $5.00 to $7.25 with a
few loads or well-bred, meaty steers,

suitable for a short turn on can at.

$8.00 and above.
Butcher Stock Market Strong

Butcher stock and bulls met
stronger markets during the past
week and gains of 26c were general.
Most cows and heifers cleared from
$4. 35 to $6. 85 although some prime
kosher cows were eligible to $9. 00
and above and thirdly My hoof
holders at $10.99 to $10.60. One
mm of may yearling homes
sold at $11.”. Bologna bolls sold
largely at $4.59 to $4.75 with the
best am up to $5.00. Veal
calves danced $1.00 during the lust
slxdanandclosedtiiowoo‘konn
$12.00 to $13.09 balls with choice
handymaight ire-lea at $13.25 and
above. Cows or cannot and corner
grade toad ready outlet at $3.75
to $3.25.

Advances in hog values lifted
choice 190 lb. butchers to $9.30 late
in the week at (micago and to $10.-
50 at Buffalo. Some traders expect
$10. 00 hogs before many weeks at
Chicago. A year ago top hogs were
selling at $9. 70. The average price
of hogs during the week ended Aug—
ust 25, was $8.10 the highest since
last April. ‘- The market has gained
$1.45 since the low time six weeks
ago. A range of from $6 00 to
$9. 30 represented hogs late this
week, common heavy packing sows
bringing ‘ the former ﬁgure with
choice lights the latter. Stronger
markets on hogs and grain have
been factors in advancing the lard
market and recently August lard
was quoted at $11.10.

Feeder buyers took lambs away

ytrom the killers this week paying /

from 15c to 25c more for lambs suit-
able to takeout to the pastures and
teed loin. Extreme top during the
period was $14.15 against a top of
$14.09 to killers. Countrymen cer-
tainly have faith in the future lamb
market and predictions for the fall
market are, ﬂavor-able, generally.
Most lambs went for slaughter at
$13.25 to $13.85 this week while a.
spread of $13.59 to $14.09 repre-
sented the {coder business. Sheep
were not numerous and sold gener-
ally from $6 to $7 all week; Wool
markets have been undergoing a
Seasonal mid-summer am but
expectation for‘the full market re-
ﬂect, optomisio. Hide and leather
markets have been dull recently ’but
are considerabh better than they
were last spring. .

. WHEAT
After a period of weakness :and
inactivity the wheat market opened
last week with a study tone pre-
vailing and higher prices-seemed to
be but a short distance aWay.
proved true and tram a slowgstart
the upward trend to prices increased
in speed daily. Into but week
there was considerable news in the
market of a bullish nature. There
was a large reduction in the esti-
mate of the Canadian crap as well as
in that of Km. Front in Canada
gave traders a scale and reports
showed that hogs in Kansas were be-
log ted 1’11th of corn. All
“km a mom of our '30

..-uuuwooarwam

‘ growl-x belie: that

This .

     

as much good wheat

0.011113?le the people met to“ in '
- much or the 81‘s. ain now ma ~
b .

\market in- below
trade. Good m

the

to Canada as well as United

Wheat is not moving t'reolyin
state. union in mamas ouuou 111v.

beenobligodmyooumdothm'

mgotaoughgratntokoepruui

steady. Foreign markets are boon-

ing a little more active, and door in.

American market as prices have

been too high but meant padvanoes in,
Liverpool brings prices nesting to a.

working basis.
Prim

Detroit—Cash No 1 rod, $1.96
No. 2 $1.05; No. 3, $1.08; No. 2
white, $1. 06; No. 2 mixed, $1.05.

Chicago—43.311 No. 3 red. $1. 04%
@106 No. 3, $1. 02@1. 05.

Prices one year a go—W,
Cash No 2 red, $1. 08; No. 2 white
and No. 2 mixed. $1.07.

CORN

Corn has moved in sympathy with
wheat and prices. are higher. The
Detroit market closed last Saturday
1%c higher than the week previous
and the tone was study. Domestic
trade was good and country odor-
ings to arrive continued llght.

Prices
Detroit—Cash No. 2 yellow, 95c;
No. 3, 94c.
Chicago—th No. 2 yellow, 83%
@90%c; No. 3, 901:.
Prices one year ago—Detroit,
Cash No. 2 yellow, 79c; No. ,3, 69c.

OATS
Oats followed the trend of other
grains but with reluctance. Country
offerings were mederate. A bit of
bullish news in the 'markct is the
forecast of probable min over the
.. belt which would interfere with
threshing operations not yet com-
pleted as well as delay the move-
ment to market. Cash oats were in
good demand at .3 steady price.
Prices

 

Detroit—ﬁsh No. ‘2 white, Ase:
No. 3, 41c; No. 4, 390.

Chicago——Oaah No.21whiue, 409
_;411;§c No. 3,38i@41

Prices one your out,
Cash No. 2 white, 35c; No. 3, 344:;
No. 4, 3113.

BY!
Rye has been onloylng a good tee
mand the past ten days and «prices

hays advanced some. The Detroit
market is 81,6c higher.
Prison
Deﬁcit—(inst No. 8, 151:.

Chicago—Cash No.1 2, 69071013.

BEANS
The bears were-not so active in
the Detroit bean martial: the in“ two
weeks and as a result prions admo-
ed. Week before last Mm tot-
aled 30 cents and last week the gain
amounted to 10 centaxmaldng the
price 49 cents above that quoted in
our last issue. The supply is said
to be moderate and dealers report
an increase In the buying.
Pm

Detroit—10.5. P., $5. 40 per 13%,

Chicago—C. H. P., $5. 40 per out. I

 

Prices one year ago—Detroit.
C. H. R, 6.50 per cwt. .
POTA'I‘OIE

“The potato market in general
seems to be stronger and milk

prices are noted at several points.—. _
The supply a scarce and market .
ﬁrmintouo. ,-‘ .., , ,

 

Prices

     
  
  
 

temporal“;
bescanoe, andthisissudtouﬂy-
m.

  
       
      
       
   
   
       
   
     
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
   
    
  
   
    
   
   
  
  
    
  
  
    
   
   
   
    
   
  
   
  
   
   
   
   
   
  
  
    
    
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
   
   
 
   
   
  
   
   
   
    
 
    
  
     
  
   
  
 
 
   
  
    
    
  
    
    
     
  
    
    
   
   
    
      
        
     
 

  
  

 

  
    
  
    
    

 

 
   
 

 

 


 

 

   

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 

 
 
 

- expected.

“‘gr‘ainisveu‘
yinthisl’all. :hhpodebapem

   
 

poorer eats

- dbsence of betier ms and a .

 

good clearence issrepu'rted 1n most

markets. Mom of all m,
’ commands same-n

 

eye: quoted
values. This strong condition will
probably“ hold into , when
a larger W of hey can be
' Prices
Detrolho. 1 timothy. 319.509

20: standard. 318. Blﬂﬂ: light n!!-
“1.831850?!” No. 1 timothy, 31?

ago—No. 31 Q
No. 2 timothy. slicl'l; light
timothy & clover mixed, sues-z:
No. irclover. 3,2262“ No. 2. 818

o 19. .
CROP REPORTS

outlaw are we,
not a much gull:

 

 

of August 31 and 22, and it is reported
that freezing occurred on lower grounds.
Threshing is progressing rapidly. Very
little grain remains in the ﬁelds and the
farmers are shocking or hauling their
oats into ‘the barn. Cats are a very poor
crop, the yield being between ‘26 and 30
bushels per acre." Beans were damaged
by drouth and a short crop is pected.
St. Clair H- 8., Agrimltural Dela.
PRESQUI ISLE—Farmers are very

'near through harvesting. grain very pan.

not even half crop. Potatoes looked fat
soJar but too dry to make any headway.
Corn is at a standstill. New Clover that
was seeded in spring is dried up nothing
to be seen of it. Pastures poor. Every-
body around here is so (liegusted feel like
quitting. —rred Wyetske

OGEMAW—On 215: had good rain.

, Harvesting he and threshing going on.

 
   
 

Corn nearly ., in wt. All crops has been
good except Ms but rains will help
them now—«h Anderson.
BRANCH—Jinn was little ram lately.
very hard m h wheat. Com well

 

 

 

 

WeekotSeptemberz

URING the early part of this

week in Michigan the weather

will be generally fair and sun—
shiny ' with , clear, starlight nights.
About Tuesday
storm conditions will start the
temperatures upward. By the mid-
dle part oi the week residents of
this state may expect the usual late
summer type of weather; that is.
light showers and probably thunder
and lightening.

These omens will last but a
couple of Illa. About hwy
the temperature will begin a rapid
decent and continue on a downward
trend to the end 01 the week at
which thus quite unseasonably cool
weather will settle into niost parts
of the state. A

Light to heavy frosts may be ex—
pected in numerous counties
throughout the northern part of the
state near the close of this week.

Week of September 9

High winds and locally heavy
rains’ will open up this week tollow-
ed about Monday with an appreci-
able drop in temperature. This
condition will not last long, how-
ever, and each day will see it a
little warmer the day beiore.

For the balance or the week we

   

' stars-l s
M “in Weather has

\

a change in the

nose Farmer Readers-11

J, time. 7 This b its method or Quick-t

remark-Hy ow prices. Man or“
. W in

   

‘ mid
ﬁsh the poet "ecek but no “as has
beenﬁnelwﬁeets yet. more a. very
large acreage of beans planted this year
but the average yield will not be very
high—Chime B'dtwansbecl.

mnm—Wumr dry, no plowing
for when: done. Harvest about done ex-
ceptmneoctaoutyet. Yields of grain
fair, quality good, if weather is right

gavernew life to con and pontoon
Threshing is nearly all ﬁnished. tamer:

seemtovhewellsatlsﬂedwﬁhﬁrkﬂ'

Inst not“ the priced—D. I. Ionic

 

POTATO “GRANGE AM OK
OPERATE“ . aims to
substitute the orderly do: of
farm products for the W1

practice of dumping these m g

on the m rhet shortly after the her-
vest or selling them without know—
ledge oi market conditions, grades
desired and other matters, Walton
Peteet told 300 delegates of 130
Potato Marketing Ass’ns.. gathered
at the ﬁfth annual meeting of the
Michigan Potato Growers Exchange,
held at Cadillac August 15.

The Exchange reported surplus of
$50 000 and votedto
to $100, 000 duringm the next few
years by deducting a small share
tom the patronage dividends it pays
to its members. '

Wane adopted petitioned the
M in adopt U. S. standard grades
iro- lutatoes and, to furnish shippers
with tailing point inspection so that
‘potatlm are properly graded and
certiﬁd at the shipping point instead
of depending upon inspection at the
point at delivery.

Wong For Gas Tax

A gasome tax was endorsed for
road ﬁnancing purposes. the state
administrative board was censured
for apparently seeking to usurp the
functions of the State Board of Ag-
riculture in the ministration of the
Michigan Agricultural College. The
Board of Agriculture was commend-
ed for the way it has discharged its
duties to Michigan farmers. nail-3
roads were called upon to com

' with the law and furnish “Sealant 1

cars for coop movement and meet
evident needs as determined by the
oi the seasons past.
W Henry Curtis of Cadil-
lac, was unanimously elected direct-
or to succeed himself. J. T. Bussey

. oi Provement, succeeds A. B. Large .

as director and Herbert F. Baker of
Vadock, was defeated by J. D. Rob-
inson .ot Levering.

MICHIGAN TAX RATE FOR 1928
TO BE OUT 75 CENTS

(Continued from Page 3)

showed an assessed value of about
61 per cent at its actual value, while
rural property showed-85 per cent of
that value. Later in reply to'Mr.
Nagel of Detroit, he cited a number
of tracts of farm land in Kent coun-

ty showing by their sale prices they 1
were either purchased recently or 01- 1
feted for sale at less than the as- i

seesed valuation. Nagel claimed
that only in Detroit could property
be bought at less than its assessed
valuation. /

. GET YOUR COAL FREE
Special offer to Michigan Busi-
large.
successful, 18 year old coal com-
pany. The Peoples Coal 00.,
W. 35th at. Dept. K. Chicago. Ill..‘
direct from mine to user,
h m this unusual opportun-
1!! it one all! user in every neigh-
borhood who has a few hours spare

tge bﬁnest grade.
,7 ee— using coal,
“1 sold dinette user.

   
  
 

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his community
cool he... Write this

  
 

 

 

increase that 1

 

 

1120,

 

i» m tofeapiain 1

 

  
   

 

: Easier than choosing Sides—

to choose the best
111 school shoe values

SCHOOL shoes used to be a pmblem for
mother. Not any more. She has learned to
get the utmost in value by demanding E-j’s.

Endicott-Johnson, the World’s Largest Tan-
ners and Shoemakers, have specialized on
children’ 3 shoes. In producing them every
bit of their skill and knowledge in tanning,
shoemaking and reducing manufacturing
cod: has been employed. Every means that
will keep down prices to you without sacri-
ﬁling quality has been used. And the result
“shoes your boy can wear and wear; prices
that mean a big saving on family shoe bills.

Séool days are here again. Its shigh time
to think about shoes. Be sure to see the
new E—Js for boys and girls.

Popular Priced—Dealers Evan‘s-e

ENDICOTT-JDHNSDN Sum-:51

%
Q?

The man whom
no worries and
knows matters at

everythin to
make them
and centemdm

 

 

 

 
   
 
 
   
  

 
    
    
    
      
   
   
   
   
 

 
 
  

 

 

“Better Shoes for Less Money”
WWO"? Detroit Beef Company
offers its services to the Partners of
Michigan as a high class, reliable

commission house for the sale of
Dressed Calves and live poultry.
Write us for infounation how to dress
$250,000

“0! “nub and ship calves to market. _
capital and surplus. 34 years in bus-
meﬁc‘ suggestions lness in the same place and same

for the prevention of dis-
eases com to livestock and poultry
and deeuibe in detail the many uses of

management.

Address
DETROIT BEEF cc, one», we...

KresoDip No.1 mes -

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
     
   
 

( STANDARDIIED)

Parasiticide and Disinfectant
For all livestockand Poultry

  

“a...“ dependable, dui~
ne Direct

I 7w fibula-Mes

lie Bk Saving.

mm

N MB’ lﬂlﬂl Ill-Ill m Mllgﬂfﬂls.

K— “War. Etc will);

"in” u.cco.

1‘33; YK'L'ho magm'l'

T0 LATE 1‘0 CLASSIFY

 

 

FREE BOOKLETS ON
FARM SANITATION:
No. 151—511“ 311111111011. Describes and

lehow to vent diseases
men to “ream eon»

No.157-mm'l. Tellshowtoridthe
dog a: does aid to up prevent §:3§sg§§a&u "" "' l“"“°i"‘ax?§?ri'c§'

eding cattle.
No. 1m loom. Common-amen

 

 

oassrt‘" RA Winn... aid. as. Mich.
saliva wm‘rse FOB Liz—s P n I u e ‘
0:"

 

 

 

 

 

  
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  

 

 

oasis—m Wmﬁ Giveeoom «:39; m,“ museum... ”ﬁlthm °“ W
mm W.Howwéeruowm
macaw“ THE MICHIGAN
, _ w :3 BUSINESS FARMER

 

Ilene ‘ '
mkggggbﬂm “ft- “The Farm Paper of

 

 
   

‘ men. W m or Service”
Park.) DCV18 & Co. Tell Your Friends

  

- Aboutﬁlt _ ,.

  
 

 

 

 

 

 

   
   
  
 
  
  
   
  
   
   
  

  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
  


  

  

. .

As an extra epeciel offer to those
7-P'ece set wifo harm their order for the hand-
some 110-Piece Good Luck Dinner Set which we are offering below
_ on such an amazing, slashed price offer, we shall include, absolutely
free, this entire 7-piece set of GENUINE CUT GLASS: Pitcher of 2qt.capac-
ity and 6 tumblers of 9 oz. capacity. Each piece is pure, sparkingly clear,
thin and dainty; hand cut decorations consisting of large ﬂoral design with
appropriate foliage. A useful set for water, lemonade or other home bever-
age; a handsome display among your other glassware. Given FREE on this
offer. But remember, this offer is entirely special. Our prices are ﬁgured at
rock-bottom. A limited number'of these Genuine Cut Glass Sets given free

just to get new customers. Get yours while this offer lasts. Read our offer
below now—and act. today. '

    

  
 
    
 
   
   
 
    
 

 

 
 
  
 

  

 

   

.,,
u’llm”

:mr.

........

Good Look” ' nner Set 410 Pieces

0
Gold Decorated Colonial Design _ . _
Madam, here’s a dinner set worthy to grace the table of the most reﬁned homes-on a.SImply amazmg smashed price-easy ayment offer.
Yes, only $1.00 brings this 110-piece set to your home on trial. Now don’t Judge these dishesb that amazmglngw price. ’hey have that
beautiful everlasting snow-white glaze that you see only in the highest grade chinaware; and t at beautiful new Good Luck pattern With
a design composed of the well known emblems which, since olden times, many have believed bring good .fortune to all who ssess them:
and that rich, artistic Colonial design with the gold decorated edges and many-Sided . shape which is everywnere e chOice of
people with taste. This is your opportunity to get, on a bargain offer, a dish set that Will give you wonderful everyday serVice and that
you will be proud of. Special Now -— FREE — 7-Piece Set of Genuine Cut Glass with hand cut decorations. ifyou send at once.

Down 30 Day; Trial ; — $1.70 a Month!

 
   
   

  
 
 
  
  
     
  
   
 

 

     
   

Complete
The cou on with onl 1.00 brin s the 110 iece Set of “Good paying only $2.70ainonth until you havepaid—what do you think? ,
seﬂice 10!: Luck" dighes to youryhgme on 30g days trial.pUse them, examine —-only_ $29.90 for a 110-piece set of dishes of such superb quality! ‘

r 12 Peonle' them, compare our price with equal value anywhere else. _After You risk not a cent on this trial offer. What family isn t Willing to
i; “Enhancmeenﬂeu or: lacuna 30 days, decide: If you don’t agree that these. are Simply lay aSide a few cents a day for something that is neededun the

i3 si'é'ii'ifa'é‘ﬁi’zmnf‘iﬁ’ in, 1%?33‘ﬁbutm beautiful dishes and amazing quality at the price send them home? We trust honest people anywhere in the U. S. No discount

i333. ..' 5i 4 “a 1 ‘ Ell-mi‘léﬂn. back and we’ll refund your $1.00 cheerful} plus any transporta- for cash; nothing extra for credit; no C. O. D. V . »

{30.u§:5“3f§§.33,s‘1-4gh 1“”; 113122 in: tion charges you paid. But if you decx e to keep them, start _ _ . . .

I onl 0 en vegetable dish. 1 covered vegetable * ' ' 2 -. m

   

9 1-2 dice dllh (2 pieces) . '

r ' ‘ traits?“ “*1"- l"::: tat“... —
. 1 auger bowl and cover 1 owl. 1pm: .
l . (29 noel) 1 cream teller
, . I butter dish. “ache. Inlckle W ha; e only. a limited

V , . . V e v

I. I, h
agree223..§.w..agt.si§p.sggms§; Free Bargain Catalog 33mg... 0; a??? ‘2. . w
s oependiin . singing roin e no ' ' S at am 0 e "‘
- l Shows thousands of bargains in 1, , .

:10 'Eobﬂthc'wgt'hsi all ﬁgﬁh‘iﬁgﬁuﬂ; home furnishings :_fnrn‘i‘ture. jewelﬁ'y, 3:119:83? i156 glen}; lastir'n 19f $313131 E21135:

0 er WI IVQII O 030 . gem “a: are, 0' . .,
“ﬁn-z c°'°“"‘ “um ""h g“ d”°"“d.;dﬁ§' nompts'FEEéfé'es. lilili'e‘slie‘hﬁr‘hlumigmn six months, don’t lit the OWN" P0”

       
         
     
 

end Elli aided shone; one piece e .

nun choc . ware. arch and lawn furniture etc. new. Remember the 'l- iece set 0 Gen
Wéﬂéaﬁom Ti-il‘tﬁiﬁ? In “Big; 3‘39 All sols on ens terms. Catalog sent nine Cut Glass FREE. if you hurry, your
dgfgdm 5”“ ‘3 °' '3'" ‘7" “9 '“°" free, with orwi out order. See coupon. order. Send the coupon now,

   

. th 0 her! will loot u life:

‘V . e touched out 133i». ' ‘ _ ' ' p _
as..."'l.am’”::s:.:i.tnsise Straus & Schram, ~33? Chicago. Ill. :

        

  
 

 

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