
  
  

 

 

-' 11 Independent
- Farm Magazine Owned and
_ Edited in Machxgan

 
 

 

i In this “Poss Tax First” is Wdr

SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1925

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" THE SQUARE DANCE-‘83; 147mg Campée/l

.. -.——_______—~._.—______.

M-—— ____..A_.._

Talk about the modern dance,
Fox trot an’ the rest, ii

Did you ever have a. chance
Dancln’ when ’twas best?

Lanterns hangin‘ on a string
High above your head, ‘

Grand march was a bang-up thin
It 'twas you who led!

Violin a. screechin’ high
“Turkey in the Straw";

All the gals a-steppin’ by,
Best you ever saw!

Ol‘ man Perkins shoutin’ out
“Choose your partners now!

Allemand, an’ turn about,

» Make a little bow!"

Circle to the right! Never had to speak

Dance with all the gals you know! ’Bout the young folks dancin’ so
(Watch out for that light!) Spoony cheek to cheek!

Ladies in the center! Quick! Had no dancin’ censor gent
Shake your feet a while! Eylng‘ couples there,

Gents. go on an’ take your pick! For I guess square dancin’ ment

“All hands join an’ don’t be slow! In the days of long ago, 1
Swing 'em ’round in style!" Dancln’ on the square! '

I'

-~—.——-——. _____ ——-—; w.— ~———r._

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TERMS: TWO YEARS :31
60c PER YEAR—5 YRS. $2

 
  
    
     

Cry at Lansing—Will Michigan Growers Get Over $6 for Beans? ~,

. ..
, m ‘ ,; .~ I ~ »- V A ' s I ~’“ :

  

  

              


MAJ...

 

 

 

 

OTICE the clear view ahead, the handy controls. Make note of the
roomy platform, the wide protective fenders, the comfortable seat,

the auto’type steering, the tool box, the brakes, the removable lugs, the draw/
bar with its range of ad justment,the wide belt pulley and its sensible location.

Then there are the many McCormick’Deering features you cannot see
here—such as the crankshaft and main ball bearings guaranteed for life, the
removable cylinders, the unit main frame, the ball and roller bearings at 2.8
points, the throttle governor, the perfected lubrication, etc. Everything is
there, on top or inside. Remember this tractor reaches the farm complete

with all the features named above.

Note the little round plate in the center of the platform. That is where
the Power TakerOifattaches—the great new feature through which you can
run the mechanism of grain binders, corn pickers, etc., by power conveyed
from the tractor through a revolving shaft. One of the greatest of recent

tractor improvements.

Write us for full illustrated catalog about the McCormickaeering Tractor. Use
your tractor for winter belt work and be well acquainted with it by spring’s work.

INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY
Chicago, Ill.

of America

Bird’s-eye View of  I *
McCormickaeering g
Tractor

—Just about the View
the operator has as he
steps up on the plat-
form and takes the
seat. One day he may
be sighting along the
belt to the ,belt ma-
chine and the next
day steering across [1

his ﬁelds.

 

 

 

 

 

cm
MCCORMICK‘DEERING

new
TRACTORS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
  
 

  

   

“Jaipur.” r'i'.\'s‘¢:u
 . ,V _ . ”
CHOICE glnc,“

 
 
   
  

For Best Results Ship Direct

I —— To

GIVE

 

    


 w . . .
' s; -. Detront Beef Co., Detrort, Mich.
Dressed Calves
Dressed Hogs
Suckling Pigs
Live Poultry
Dressed Poultry

    

 

HEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE
IOII THE MICHIGAN BU8INESS FARMER

'5

III/Ill///////////////////////////////////////////////l///////////////////////////////////l/I/I/l/l/l/l/I/I/I/I/I/I/I/l/I/ '

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y .

: '7//”///////////////////////////’I/I/f/[l/l/I/Il/II/I/IKI(III/II(III![I’ll/,I/l/I/

’.7/////////////////////////[ﬁll/l/Illlllll IIll/lﬁll/l/I/l/I/Iﬂllllll/llIII/I///I/I/l/II/l///////////////////////Ill/ll

WRITE FOR FREE SHIPPERS GUIDE

 

 

 

 

      

Fug/0a like
Aime Camée/l’s

paw/m?

  

Then send for her new book

“ COMPANIONSHIP ”

which is a collection‘of her poems of home, family and farm life.

Because Mrs. Campbell’s ﬁrst published poems appeared in
The Business Farmer she will personally autograph each copy
of this ﬁrst edition.

  
   

Bound in cloth,
185 pages. $1.25 post-paid
, Order from
Rural Publishing Company, Mt. Clemens, Mich.

    
  
 

 

 

   
 
 
    
   
   
   
  
 

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BONDS

 

 

 

THE BUSINESS FARMER
“The Farm Paper of Service”
TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT IT!

. highways was

 

 

continua:  mans

E’ 0! prison labor on highway
work during 1924 was the most
marked digression from the old
order of things and the most inter-

- esting feature of‘the state’s pardon

policy for 1924. Fred E. Janette,
commissioner of pardons, says that
the system has proved even more suc-
cessful from the standpoint of both
state ﬁnancial affairs and the welfare
of the prisoner than had been antl—

' cipated.

The system of prison labor on the
instituted with the
support and advocacy of Governor
Groesbeck back in 1923. That was
the ﬁrst year when this labor was at-
tempted on the roads. During 1923
there were 660 prisoners from Jack-
son prison and the Ionia. state re-
formatory who worked on the high-
ways. During 1924 the number was
1,421. For 192; the number taken
from Jackson prison was 739, and
from Ionia 682.

The largest number of prisoners on
highway work at any one time during

1924 was approximately 800. They
were quartered in prison camps,
where every sanitary facility, from

water and drainage to barber service,
and the best of Wholesome food and
comfortable quarters were provided.
And with all this the men received a
small daily wage for their depend-
ents. When the ﬁnal balances were
struck. the state maintains that a big
sum of money on highway construc-
tion and maintenance work has been
saved for the taxpayers of Michigan.

Short Tcrmers on Roads

State prisoners who are assigned
to highway work are those of short
terms or whose terms will soon ex-
pire, that is at least the minimum
sentences. They are men whose. rec-
ords are good. They are given pa-
roles to leave the prisons, being as—
signed to highway camps and work,
under guard at those places. When
their minimum terms expire they are
taken back to the prisons where they
are formally released on their own
paroles, and sent out into society un-
der the usual system. Singularly
many 0! the men have asked to re—
main on the road jobs but for several
good reasons that could not be done
in order to maintain the morale of
the men still retained under the prise
on labor plan.

For the ﬁrst 11 months of 1924,
the total number of paroles from the
state prisons numbered 1,288; for
1923 it was 1,846. For 1923 the
total number of prisoners received
was 1,871; for the ﬁrst 11 months of
1924 it was 1,270. The increase was
due to short termers, many of whom
were liquor law violators.

In 1923 the parole violators num-
bered 209, while for 1924 the total
was only 110. This decrease in the
number of parole violators is as-
cribed to the prison labor system on
the highways established in the past
two years.

SHORT COURSE FOR U. l’.
FARMER

PER Peninsula farmers will
have the Michigan Agricultural
College brought to their door
during the last two weeks in January
when a short course in agricultural
engineering is given at Northern
State Normal School at Marquette.
Prof. H. H. Musselman, head of
the department, and George A. Get-
man, will come from East Lansing to
give the instruction. They will be
assisted by Larry F. Livingston and
George Amudsen, extension special—
ists in land clearing, who spend most
of their time in the Upper Peninsula.
The course will be divided into
four parts. The ﬁrst studies will in—
clude all phases of farm mechanics,
such as rope making, rope splicing,
knots, belt lacing, soldering, pipe cut-

.ting and ﬁtting, riveting andzpump

repairs.

The second group of studies will be
on farm equipment and will cover
farm building layouts, fencing, drains '
and drainage, equipment mainten-
ance and repair, household equip—
ment, home conveniences and cou-
crete.

The study of farm buildings, in—
cluding farm houses, barns, poultry
house, silos and small buildings, will
be undertaken in the third group,

The ﬁnal group of subjects will in—
clude the operation of gas engines
and tractors.

 

 

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- *  3 BUSINESS FARMER

 

 
 
 

 

The Only Farm Magazine Owned and Edited in Michigan

Published Bi-Weekl at
Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1925

“ Pass Gas Tax First”

S prophesied in the last issue of
THE BUSINESS FARMER, the mat-
ter of highway ﬁnance was the

chief subject of interest during the
ﬁrst few days of the ﬁfty—third ses-
sion of— the Michigan Legislature
which convened at Lansing January
7th.

Gas tax supporters rejoiced over
the outcome of the ﬁrst skirmish of
the session, which came in connec—
tion with the choice of a Speaker for
the House of Representatives. The
speakership race ﬁnally settled down
to a struggle between Representative
Fred B. Wells of Cassopolls and Rep-
resentative George 0. Watson of Ca-
pac. Both had voted for the gas tax
in 1923, but Wells was regarded as
a somewhat more outstanding cham—
pion of the farmers’ cause. Repres—
entative Watson polled the solid vote
of the Wayne County delegation and
was said to be the favorite of the
Administration. However, Repres—
entative Wells was an easy winner on
the ﬁrst ballot, the vote being 62 to
33.

The ﬁrst day of the session was '

largely given over to such formali—
ties as giving the Senators and Rep~
resentatives the constitutional oath
of oﬁice, electing ofﬁcials, and pas—
sing routine motions and resolutions.
By the second day of the session both
branches were organized and were
ready to receive the third biennial
message of the Governor. A joint
convention of the Senate and House
was held in the Representative Cham—
ber and in the presence of the assem~
bled law makers. state ofﬁcers, Jus-
tices of the Supreme Court. and as

'many legislative observers and Lan—

sing citizens as the hepacity of the
hall would permit, Governor Croes—
beck appeared and read his message.
For the first time in history the (lov-
ernor gave his message before a mi—
crophone and his speech was broad—
casted by W'KAR, the radio station at
Michigan Agricultural College.

Governor Stresses \Veig‘ht‘ ’l‘ax

As expected, the Governor placed
chief emphasis on the importance of
enacting highway ﬁnancing legisla-
tion. He advocated a weiuht tax as
the best basis. With the skill of an
experienced politician and agility
which would have done credit to a
tight-wire artist, the Governor glid-
ed over the mooted subject of a gas—
oline tax without leaving any very
deﬁnite impression as to just what he
thought regarding the many argu-
ments which are being strongly ad—
vanced in support of such a measure.
Regarding this proposition, he said:

“As you know, there has been a
general discussion as to whether a
dual system/of taxation applying to
motor vehicles should be adopted.
That is, whether in addition to a
Weight tax there should be a levy
based upon gasoline consumption.
\Vhatever your ultimate decision in
this regard may be, it necessarily fol--
lows that if a gas tax is passed no
higher rates should be imposed by
either law than the state’s needs dic—
tate, and that prope‘ adjustments as
between them should be provided to
prevent unnecessary collections.”

The lovcrnor’s message so uned to
leave the impression that a weight
tax should first be passed and then
attention might possibly be given the
matter of a gasoline tax. This is just
what the leading senators and mem-
bers of the. gas tax bloc in the house
do not intend to do. Their motto
seems to be, “Let’s get a gas tax ﬁrst
and then perhaps pass a moderate
weight tax bill to make up the bal-
ance of the required revenue.”

Gas Tax Bloc Smiles

It was with no little glee that ar-

dent gas tax enthusiasts heard the

Entered as 2nd. class matter, Aug. 22, 1917,
at Mt. Clemens, Mich.. under act Mar. 3. 187..

is War Cry At Lansing

Supporters of Bill to Tax Gasoline to Finance Highways Increasing and Favorable Vote Expected

By STANLEY M. POWELL

(Lansing Correspondent of The Business Farmer.)

Governor declare, “Experieme h :
amply demonstrated that horse—pow—
er does not, even in a remote degree,
correctly measure the use of the
road.” It was pointed out that the
same objection might be raised
against any weight tax and that the
only way to tax a car on the basis of
beneﬁts derived would be through a
gas tax.

Immediately after the Governor’s
message had been received, Senator
Howard F. Baxter of Grand Rapids
introduced both a weight tax bill and
a gas tax bill in the Senate. The
weight tax bill would take immedi—
ate effect and ﬁxes the rate at, 70c
per hundred pounds~ for passenger
cars and from 80c to $1.00 per hun-
dred pounds for commercial vehicles.
Senator Baxter’s gas bill would, if
passed as originally introduced, take
effect January 1, 1926. The two bills
are so drafted that as soon as the gas
tax measure should take effect the
weight tax rate would be reduced 20c
per hundred pounds.

The two bills introduced by Sena-
tor Baxter are regarded as having the
support of the Administration, but
they are not being favorably received
by gas tax bloc leaders in the House.

Representative Joseph \Varncr of
Ypsilanti, who fathered the vetoed
gas tax two years ago, has informed
your Lansing correspondent that he
has a very carefully prepared gas tax
bill which he will introduce, probably
January 13. Representative Warner
says he is a member of the Detroit
Automobile Club and that no one
need fear that the Detroit Auto (‘lub
will initiate a referendum if the gas
tax is enacted. He declares that, in
his judgment ninety per cent of the
members of the Detroit Automobile
Club are personally favorable to a
gas tax. It is generally acknmvlcdgcd
that support for a gasoline tax has
considerably strengthened since the
law makers assembled a Week ago
and that; it is probable thcre will be
some very interesting developments
in the near future.

Another important, issue to make
its appearance early in the session
was the much discussed subject of
legislative reapportionmcnt. 0n the
ﬁrst day of the session Senator A. lC.
Wood of Detroit introduwd a reap—
portionment measure which would in~
crease the number of \Vaynv (‘ounty
senators from live to ten and would
redistrict the remainder ot‘ the stale

Many Noted Speakers For Farmers’ Week

"[3 MANY men prominent in the
 economic life of the United

States have been secured for
l“armers’ Week at the Michigan
Agricultural (3 o l l e go, beginning
Feb. 2, to discuss problems at pres-
ent before the farmers. 11. M. (lore,
United States secretary of agricul—
ture was asked before the death of
former Secretary VVallaco, to be pres-
ent. lle has announced that he will
attend unless unusual conditions de-
mand his presence in Washington.
Dr. H. Parks Cadman, New York
city, president of the Federal Council
of Churches in America, and Dr. J.
M. Evans, Chicago, well known
health lecturer, also will be in at—
tendance.

Dr. Evans is scheduled to appear
on the ﬁrst day of the session, Feb.
2; Dr. Cadman on Wednesday, Feb.
4, and Secretary Gore, Thursday,
Feb. 5.

In addition to these three, a num—
ber of other well known men will be
heard, according to Elton Hill, chair-
man of the committee in charge of
speakers. Most of the speakers have
been secured because of their knowl-

edge of some particular phase or
farm economics. F. R. Pirtlc ol‘ the
United States doparlnn nt ot' ng‘rlcuk
ture, bureau of agricullm'al H'onotn

ics. will be present on tho s<-<-ond dmx
llis talk will be on “Selling the l’ul

llt'.” .\ similar subject will in
handled by .lohn .‘d. licllvy, Ulla‘ ot
the bust known t!(l\'ttl‘llb¥lll;_’j men in
the l'nilcd States.

l’rcsidcnl’. Kenyon !.. Itnttcrtiwld of
tho M. A. C. will spook on (mo of tilt
days. Another sprakwr \xlli be John
Kelch. a widely known eastern au
thority on farm conditions.

Professor ll. ll. llibbard ol' the
agricultural economics department
of the University of W'isconsin, will
present the, facts of farm life in VVis—
consin where conditions are very
similar to those in Michigan. llo
will appear Feb. 4, as will H. it).
Babcock of New York.

One additional speaker from out—
side tho state will be added to the.
program, while from the ranks of
the farmers of Michigan will be Fer
Arbogast of Union City, who will
speak on the subject “How to Pop
Up a “Vern—out Michigan Farm.”

 

 

\VATCH FOR “H()\\' BILL Bl't‘lilill) 'l‘lll‘l ’l‘lGl'IB"

3.70U all recall the story of Pete. Dexter, the mastor taker who wrote

of his Forty Years of Faking; last winter.

l’t‘U‘ was no angel when

it came to getting other folks money and altho he liu-d a long time

d

on his crooked work, he eventually wound up in jail.

Que day several farmers were discussing; the career of Pete with
us. A farmer thought it was a bit ovcrilrawn and that. no community
could have been afflicted with all the things l‘ctc claimed to have put

3(‘l‘058.

There was one fellow who thought dill'crcnt. Bill Edwards

was his name and to prove his point Bill said he could tell oll‘ hand a
lot of things that happened right in his neighborhood.
So we got Bill to write down his experiences of how one com-

munity combatth promoters of a questionable type.
The tiger, accordng to Bill was the beast

Tiger” is the way Bill put, it.

“Bucking tin-

that wasn’t satisﬁed unless he was eating up good money and “mu you
bucked up against this animal, Bill says you just; couldn‘t. help losing.
Bill’s yarn is a “corker” and we have called it “How Bill Buckcd

the Tiger.’ ’

The ﬁrst installment, Will appear in our January 31st

issue so be on the lookout for it—it’s even better than “Forty Years of

Faking."

 

giving the rural districts :1 corres-
pondinar decrease in representation.

Most of the other bills to be intro—
duced thus far have not been of par-
ticular intercstto the farmers. Keen
disappointment was expressed that
the Governor’s mesage did not con—
tain any reference to the problems of
the farmers or any suggestions as to
legislation relative to agriculture. It
had been predicted that highway ﬁn-
ance, conservation, and agriculture
would be the main points stressed in
his address. While nothing was said
about agriculture, considerable atten—
tion was devoted to conservation.
The Governor said:

“The subject of conservation pre—
sents many perplexing problems that
require both time and money for
their solution. The awakened inter—
est ot‘ the public in the recreational
advantage of the out—of—doors, coup—
led with the sane and judicious use
01‘ the state’s splendid resources, call
for a. prog'am ol~ conservation that
will make possiblo their enjoyment
without unwarranted restriction. To
perpetuate and incrcarw these re-
sources is no easy task. Improved
transportation facilities have opened
lllllt‘ll of our isolated country and
made it easily accessible. As a result

l'tll‘I‘sE llt't‘s, causnd by negligence,
linuw incrmwctl: lishing waters and

hurting amunlls have been used be—
_\onil thoir capacity, 2111 indicating
that our conservation department
must. it \\':> are to keep apart) of this
land :xnd wer utilization, establish

unn- l‘t‘~l‘2".“.\‘. increase tlsh hatchery
tvl'»vtlllt.‘ii'tll. maintain and equip more
slut;- part4 intend our tort-st lire 0r—
r.:i:|ix:'i1on. complon llit‘ land econo~
llllt‘ :1; at \\'.’lle*l‘ pchr surveys, and de—

‘.tvlt‘ nimh How and more funds to
’ "H naiuvul and artilicial restora—
'l‘ho ques—
'~:'csi;tzion should receive
 p. ‘ I.va geitvntion and facilities
In.» 1. mi in. 111 toast treble our plan»
ammo \',::t‘l\' in order that a conside!“
.a'» : portion ot~ state acrcagc may be
1“»...ur'tl [H its former trco fertility
during th~ next two years and an in—
creasing amount each year there-
zll'tcl‘.

“Little, headway has been or is now
being made. to stop the unnecessary
pollution of our water supply—riv—
ers, streams and lakes. Your com—
mittees having charge of this subject
should, it' possible, formulate II
scheme of procedure that will mark
the beginning of a bona tide endeav~
or to properly and saner handle the
issues involved and so centralize the
resposibility for carrying out legisla—
tivo enactments and policies that
there will be no further doubt as to
their execution.”

ll , (.1 t-l.t'l.l1'i~.t mumps,

Atmosphere Intense

The opening days 01' the present
session of the Legislature were con—
Sltlt'l'nltl) lilcc thosc ol‘ l'ormor ses-
sions wxw-pt that tho atmosphere was
a little nlm‘o inlt'llw‘. The old mem—
bers \xwrc carrcr to return and greet.
tln ir l'ormm :wrtociatov. 'l‘hcro was

 
  

tll~ tonal rumor that lobbyists were
to lw ~\.c:udod. ‘wt Iln-\' \\‘«‘t‘o present
in tat?! tort» (lll" uw'w' feature of
lilo Mission not: thw :2; ivt';li':tllt‘u of a.
lath rucm‘utj \xho l: il‘ tint woman
on 2‘ to sit :1»: a lllt‘lilvH-l' or the Michi—
gan llouso ol~ licgiisluturw. :rihw is Mrs.
(‘ora ltcynolds Anderson oz' l.’.-\nse

and rcpt" sonts the t'llllllllw:~ of Iron.
llaraga, licwccnaw, and Hntonogon.

lly the Next. issue ol‘ 'l‘nt; til smuss
l“.\lt.\llllt there will no doubt be much
of interest to t't-pol'l. tn the mean-
time, we sugugnt that your senator-
and representativos would appreciate
hearing from you as to your attitude
on the legislative matters which are
coming up for immediate considera~
tion.

  


 

HE market for choice, hand-pick-
ed Michigan beans has improved
considerably during the past

month, with the price gradually
working higher, and, with everyone
doing their share, both grower and
elevator man, it will not be long be-
fore the price reaches a level that
will compare favorably with the price
of beans in other sections. Michigan
produces the best beans grown, and
many canners will use no others, but
through unorderly marketing and
meculation the market has been
about ruined.

Realizing that the market had
reached a level that discouraged the
growing of the crop A. B. Cook. pres-
ident of the bean growers association
suggested an advertising campaign
to educate the consumer as to what
Michigan beans were. The idea was
(popular and during the latter part of
last summer representatives of the
growers and some of the elevator
men got together, worked out the
plan of securing funds that has been
discussed in our columns, and on Oc-
tober let the collecting of the money
began. It is believed that at this
writing the total amount taken in is
over $2,000. No advertising has
been done to date but the informa—
tion that Michigan is going to adver—
tise her choice beans has been broad—
cast from coast to coast and Mr.
Cook, chairman of the advertising
committee. says he has a letter he
received from a large, well-known
ﬁrm, stating that ﬁrm bought heavily
of Michigan beans, in anticipation of
the advertising. Mr. Cook is of the
opinion that there are other ﬁrms
that are buying with the thought of
this advertising in mind, which is no
doubt true.

Farmer Holds Third of Crop

Students of the market declare
that at least 50 per cent of the Michi-
gan crop of 1924 is already out of
the state, and the growers had only
about a third of the crop.

On December 30th, 1924, Chatter—
ton and Son, of Lansing, issued a
letter to brokers in which they stat—
ed:
“As a result of survey carried on
by our elevator managers located in
various sections of Michigan, and
combining this information with the

opinions of various elevators over
the State with whom we have talked
regarding the bean situation, we
have reached thee-conclusion, and we
are trying to keep our ﬁgures con-
servative, that slightly better than
50% of the Michigan 1924 crop of
white beans has moved out of "Mich-
igan. That virtually 15% of the
crop is owned and held by the three
hundred odd elevators in Michigan
who handle beans and the Michigan
bean jobbers. That not to exceed

 

 

L

' et 3 ver s

time. In other words, we have left
to market only half of the Michigan
bean crop over a period of seven and
one-half to eight and one—half
months. -

“As far as we can learn stocks out-
side of Michigan are below normal.
It accordingly appears to us as

 

 

A. “'. JEW'ETT, JR" “'OKLD’S HAY KING
Judges at tho International Hay and Grain Show at Chicago pronounced this bale
of alfalfa [my the best in the world. It was raised by A. “K Jewett, Jr., of Dilution,
awarded grand sweepstakes at the 1924 International, and sold to the Blue Valley
Creamery Institute of Chicago for demonstration purposes. Mr. Jewett is shown»
here with the bale.

Outlook for Pea Beans Bright and One Company'Predict's Price Will Reach $6 Per th. By April .

35% of our crop is left in the grow-
ers’ hands.

“This would indicate that better
than 5.0% of our beans have moved
out in three and one-half months

 

though stocks of beans left in Mich-
igan were not going to be suﬂicient
to take care of the demand until an-
other crop is harvested."

Storks Low

It is declared by Chatterton and
Son that the stocks of white beans
in California are the lowest they
have been in the history of that state
for this time of the year since that
company has been keeping record.
The market in California has been
strong .

Figures on the New York market
show that farmers of that state rais-
ed a much smaller acreage of pea
beans-in 1924 than they did the year
before, and of the crop produced this
past year it was estimated on Janu—
ary 1st that 85 per cent had passed
out of the‘farmers’ hands. Some of
the large dealers of that state esti-
mate that at least two-thirds of the
crops have moved to the consuming
centers.

Out in Colorado Pinto beans have
been selling at $6 and above and
there is only about one-third of the
crop yet unsold. Dealers state there
are fewer Pinto beans left unsold this
year than there were a year ago, and
higher prices are expected. In Idaho
farmers were forced to sell early as
they needed their money and as a
result only about 40 per cent of the
crop remains in their hands.

Sees Higher Prices

After taking into consideration the
bean situation in the various states
and the low price of Michigan beans
Chatterton and Son declare them—
selves, “ﬁrm in our belief that higher
prices will prevail on Michigan
beans.”

In a letter that appeared in our
January 3rd issue Chatterton and
Son stated that they believed that we
could promise the farmers $5.50 for
their beans if they would hold up
deliveries ’entirely for forty to sixty
days. On December 30th J. E. Ma—
loney, of Christian Breisch and Com-
pany, Lansing, wrote us that they
were able to advance their farmer’s
paying price to $5.25 on pea beans.
And he concludes his letter with “We
think the market will be $1 per cwt.
higher within the next ninety days."
That would mean over $6 per cwt.
for your beans.

American Farm Boy Visits Hairdresser in Merrie England
By FRANCIS A. FLOOD

In this article. the eighth of his series
- travels in Europe, Mr. Flood tells us
1 his troubles in ﬁnding a barber shop
h England, crossing the English channel
and arrival in Holland,

HE bulk of America’s bathing
I and barbering is done on Satur~

day night, just as salad forks
are used when company comes and
ﬁlls are paid on the ﬁrst of the
month. Some indulge these weak—
nesses on other occasions, but they
are extravagant; properly these are
the traditional times.

My friends and I had decided, sev—
eral days before, that I needed a
haircut, but it was not until my ﬁrst
Saturday in London that I decided I
wanted one. There were no striped
barber poles in sight. I walked
blocks; perhaps the big candy stick
is not used for barber shop Signs
East of the Statue of Liberty I
thought, any more than the cigar
store Indian is used nowadays.

I walked more blocks looking for
the barber shops themselves instead
of for the conventional sign. I found
lune. Could it be that in England
shaving, manicuring and similar du-
ties of the toilet are performed in
private and considered a personal
matter rather than a public exhibi—
tion? The European does not seem
tl fancy our delightful idea of mak-
ing the toilet in public as we do in
our barber shops here. I missed the
friendly, sociable exhibitions of
whole families being shaved, shorn,
manicured and massaged in public,
which brighten all our busy streets.
We do, .not have our bathtub on the
front porch, but when we Wish to

' shave weftake off our collar and sit

lathered and bibbed, in the show
window of a barber shop before the
passing multitudes. But these cheery,

home-like, and intimate scenes of
domestic and private life are
thoughtlessly barred from the gaze
of the European public. I could see
no barber shops.

I asked the infallible nicely uni—
formed and well informed, London
“Bobby”, the ﬁnest policemen in the
world, where I could ﬁnd a barber
shop. Of all the many questions I
had asked these courteous gentle-
men, this was the ﬁrst one the Lon—
don Bobby could not answer.

“A barber shop, sir?” He had the
mystiﬁed look I should probably have
received if I’d inquired for a boot—
legger’s shop. He didn’t seem to
know what I meant. And yet he was
neatly sliaVen himself. He must
know.

“Yes,” I insisted. “I want to get
my hair cut," and took off my hat to

impress him with the necessity. He
got the idea instantly.

“Oh, I say, sir. You want to ﬁnd
a hairdresser’s don’t you?” And he
began to point down the street.

A' hairdresser! I was puzzled.
Was my hair so long that he thought
I wanted it braided or marcelled or
roached? Did he think I was a pian—
ist, or a soviet statesman? It could-
n’t be that his English sense of hu—
mor had been moved to expression,
because his answer had come too
soon. I protested that I simply want—
ed my hair cut, the same as .his or
any of the men who were passing on
the street. We must have provided

one of the sights of London that
afternoon as we stood there, I with
my hat off demonstrating to an ear—
nest but puzzled policeman just how
I wanted my hair cut, and he in

 

 

Stonehence. th77 mysterious rook one of the 12th Century. in Enxland.

turn reassuring me that if I would
but follow his directions it would
come out right after all. \

“Hairdressing for Ladies and Gen— ,

tlemen” seemed to be the most com-
mon of all the many signs about the
places of business to which the cour-
teous Bobby directed me. All were
on the second or third ﬂoor, with a
dental chamber entrance that would
have frightened almost anyone away
unless he would be one whose wife
insisted that he shave at all costs.
Still skeptical, I ﬁnally poked up the
stairs to one of these modest barber
shops, and found a Sign that told me
the show was closed, as usual on Sat‘
urday afternoon.

A barber shop closed on Saturday
afternoon! It 'would be like a church
closed on Sunday, or a cafe closed on
New Year’s Eve, but inquiry dis~
closed that it was customary. Satur-
day evening is the British closed sea-
son on barbering.

I ﬁnally found a place that was
open, however, and took up the mat-
ter with the proprietor. He seated
me on an Ordinary straight chair of
the variety that graces the usual din—
ing room. He selected a towel that
had been very popular through the
week Just passed, and oozed it down
ins1de my collar. He was different
from our American barber; he did
not talk to me of his personal affairs,
nor even mine, nor batting averages
nor politics. He had no electric
clippers, no battery of huge mirrors.
no magniﬁcent showing of plumbing
——just a little, cluttered up room
with a short row of straight chairs
before a row of little vest—pocket mir-
rors. When he was through, [he dip-
ped the same sand-colored towel that

had just been around my neck into»
(Continued 5m1,31?page,,§l,y§_.jl..Q.~ j, »

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“I’M A FEARLESS CO‘VBOY.”—

   
  

ALL TUCKERED 0UT.—"‘This dog would lay by the hour rather than dis- ISN’T SHE HANDSOME, BOYS?
This “wild and wooly west" picture was turb his little master,” writes ll. Stanley Manning. of North Street, Mich. lie .—But this isn’t, a girl, it's Victor
taken near Remus, Mich.. and sent in would give his life protecting the child. A good dog can truthfully be called Haas, of Nashville, wearing girl’s
by Wm. \Vernette, R4, Remus. man’s greatest friend and defender. clothes.

  
    
 

. « ‘ ,  ' ‘ v
V. y? x I . . . I

“STOLEN PIE".-—Tho.t is the title given this picture by Carl

 

u...

‘VINTER IN THE I’ASTURIL—

CIlRISTliAS AND EVERYONE HAPPY.-—-Frnnk M.

Van \Vagoner, of Alpena, who sent it in. “A snapshot of my This beautiful scene was a view of (Yornalr, of (flit-mining. and his grandchildren have their
boys,” he writes. It makes us think of many years ago when the pasture on the “'. H. Dorrence picture taken around the Christmas tree. Ho write-s
we lived on the farm. \Ve too enjoyed making a raid on the farm, at Scotts- Donald D. Dorr- “Those are my only grandchildren and I am proud of

cupboard, unbeknowu to mother. ancc sent us the print. them." He has 21 right to ln- proud.

 

Ir ,y _ , I:  . .. .... , ; . ,.  I , , .. __,,

 
   

     

Lg;  I',._..J  ‘ «a? ' he; 3" '

WHERE THE HUNTING IS GOOD.—Apparently the “GOOD-BYE.”—Sister is GETTING P‘DY FOR COLD DAYS.——Tliis hi't‘lll‘ was taken
rabbits were plentiful the day this picture was taken, or off for school. The picture on the farm of Frank Thuyer, Ceder 'Vullcy, last, full. Mr. and
0180 the hunters knfnv Just where to ﬁnd them. It was sent is from Mrs. E. “’alter, Mrs. Thnyei were caught while looking over their winter supply
to us by Maude Willoushby. Shepherd. Coleman. of fuel. -

 

 

 

 
 

   

TAKING TEDDY FOR A Rme—The SNOW WHITE COLL—“This is a picture of our colt, born pure white.

“IN THE CLOVER”.-—Here we
you“? 90“ 0' MP- and Mrs- Chaﬁ- L. Sco- It was quite a. .curiosity_ around here and attracted considerable attention,” have Edna. Hughes and her small
ﬁeld, of Woodland. Stems t0 be giving his writes Herbert Young, or Big Rapids. It it Mrs. Young holding the colt, sister in a patch of white blossom

teddy bear a sleigh ride. . Herbert? sweet clover. They live at Rose City.
(We pay 3,5 for each kodak picture used on our cover and givo .1 one year renewal for each picture used on this page. Pictures mwt be sharp and clear.)

L ‘3: w

 

 

 

  
  

4 _..-._.—._-m_~.._...

 

 

   
              


  

  
  
 

Listen to Dave Greb
“Three Years is Too Much”

“THE tag on the bag is all right so far as it goes, but it
sure doesn’t tell the! whole story of what’s inside.
For three years hand running, I have had poor luck with
my timothy, and I bought what appeared to be good
seed— high test purity and germination, etc. If the rest
of my crops had been poor, I might have blamed myself
(ﬁr; the :lve’ather. As it is, I know it can’t be anything but
e see .

Dave Wants to Know

Of course, Dave will try a different brand of seed next,
and he’s hoping he will be luckier. But he would feel easier
If he knew just what has been wrong in the past, so he
could be on his guard against that sort of thing in the
future, not only in buying timothy but. other ﬁeld seeds.

Believing there are a good many farmers who feel just like Dave. the.
Albert Dickinson Company has published a little book entitled
“7 Lessons in Judging Seed,” which explains the important points
to consxder in buying seeds, and contains practical information of
value to every farmer. This booklet is sent free on request: a. post—
card will bring it. Write today.

THE ALBERT DICKINSON co.

CHICAGO, ILL. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.

BUFFALO BOSTON

PITTSBURGH NEW YORK BINGHAM'I‘ON

“PI N E TREE.”

F SEEDS
7 Sold ByGo‘od .De-a IE‘MEWIY Wh'e ‘

   

      
   
 
 
 
 
   
  
   
   
  
    
   
    
   
   
    
 

 

  
   
    
   
 
    
   
  
     
     
   
  
 
   
 
    

I-IERE’S what you get when you ask your
dealer for Zinc Insulated American Fence——

2 Superior quality steel, smoother, rounder
wires drawn by the most skilled wire drawers
in the world—and more zinc on the wires
which adds many years to service. These
features mean better looking, longer lasting
fence and saving money in years of service.

i 
_ ’ Ask your dealer g  
l AMERICAN STEEL &' WIRE COMPANY
("hi. am» New York Boston Birmingham Dallas Denver

   

 

   
    
   
    
   

 

 

WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERSPLEASE MENTION
 " “ THE BUSINESS. FARMER

n'o‘

rpwww. .. ._

  

.__—v

 

__..__¢—

 

-—-.~_

 

 
 

  

ill 5.1.3:,
it“: ' I, i'

(A Greeran Department for farmers’ ever

’ Farmers _S__erviCe cure

 

dey troubles.

  

an 

tango?“

      

 

Prompt. oaretul "ottentlbn Even to

all complaints or requests for lnl'ormatlon a dressed to this department. We are here 0 serve
you. All lnqulrlea must be accompanied by full name and address. Name not used lf so requested.)

 

 

TIME TO READ \VILL

Am writing you for a little advice.
First, when is the proper time for a
will to be read? Should the heirs be
notiﬁed when the will is to” be
read? Who shall I Write to get date
set by court for creditors to present
bill'S'? If the party deceased has al~
ways paid his way and party he
stayed with accepted what. he gave
them, can they come on for his care
again? I am as ever, G. 19., North
lranch, Michigan.

EFORE a will is proved in court.
B a notice must be given to the

persons interested. The usual
method of giving notice is by public—
ation in the local paper three consec—
utive weeks.

After the will is proved a time is
set for hearing the claims, which also
requires a similar notice. Creditors
have at least four months in which to
present their claims.

Write to the judge of the Probate
Court to ’ﬁnd out when the hearing
on claims is to be held.

If the deceased has always paid his
way, the party he stayed with could
not collect for his care in the ab~
sence of an agreement. Legal Edi—
tor.

 

TO PUT IN PRESSURE “'ATER
SYSTEM
I have a deep well about thirty
feet from house and would like to
put in a pressure water system.
Would it be better to drive a new
well in the basement; run the pipe in
from the old pump; or build a sep—
arate well house?‘ Do not have elec—
tricity—N. D., Battle Creek, Mich.
E usually distinguish between a
V? shallow and a deep well by

classifying all wells as deep
on which a suction pump can be
used. According to this classifica—
tion it is necessary to place a pump
directly over the deep well. If your
present well is satisfactory, it would
probably be advisable to build a well
house over it, install the pump and
pumping unit in the house and pipe
the water under ground into the
basement. I’m assuming that the
tank for the pressure water system
is to be installed in the basement.

If a line of 4—inch tile is laid from
the well pit to the basement and the
pipe line placed in this tile, it will
not only facilitate the making of re—
pairs but will aid greatly in prevent—
ing the pipe from t”rcezing.-—~l”. lil.
Fogle, Assistant Professor, Agrian
tural Engineering Dept, M. A. (7.

CAN (77011141001‘ ASSESSMENT

My brother and l bought, a team
of horses at a neighbor's auction sale
held a year ago. We. had the. horses
jointly'insured in a lire insurance
company but since that time. I lost
my horse through sickness. \Vould
I be. compelled to pay my insurance
dues the, some as though I had not
lost my horse. by death? Subscriber,
Vassar. Mich.

THEN a person insures property.
if they desire, durng the. life. of:
the policy, to make, any changes

in their insurance it is their duly to
so inform the company-w if they have
paid in advance then the company
will rebate for the unused portion of
the money so paid. if the assess—
MUSINGS OF A
ERE I am again! W'e, are not
H mining the land just now and

it’s time for the muse. All I
.do now is chores during the day.
and the long winter evenings I spend
at the hearth pulling my eyebrow,
in shallow thought.

All this year’s crops are safely
stored and we are now planning
next year’s work.

My wife and I have spent some
time in arranging our crops and have
settled it and only await the seasonal
turn. In other words, we are ready
for the gong.

Farmers have faith. When the
ﬁelds are covered with snow and ice
they make their plans for harvest.

During the cold days when the
car starts hard I stay at home and
try to think out my problems. And
live with the stock.

 

 

/

ments are not paid in advance then
they will be charged only for the time
the property was insured. There is
no way for the insurance company to
know of any reduction or change in
ownership on property insured ex—
cepting by being advised by the in—
sured or an agent of the company.
and in our opinion the company is
clearly within their rights in asking
for assessment in full to the time
the assessment was called and policy
reduced.

NO’DE GOOD FOR SIX
‘ YEARS .

I hold a note for $30.00 on which
$6.00 has been paid. Note was given
for life insurance in February, 1923,
by a young man, now married. Note
was payable in 4 months. Can I
sue and get judgment on this note?
It I do, how long will the judgment
stand? How long a period before
the note is void by statute of limita—
tions? Thanking you for any in-
formation, I am—E. G. C.. S. Lyons,
Mich.

HE note is good for a period of 8
years. If you sue and get judg-
ment, the judgment would be

good for 6 years in this case. If the
man was under 21 years of age when
he made the note, I doubt if you
could collect the amount, if he chose
to contest it.-——Legal Editor.

\VEEVIL IN BEANS‘

For the last 20 years I have not
iced bugs or weevils in the beans.
They seem to form in the blossom.
and under the skin and are white.
Later they form wings and ﬂy. Now
what I want to know is how to ex—
terminate them? May some kind of
a solution be used on the beans when
in the blOSSOIll?——J. O. C., Jackson,
Michigan.

HE insect is undoubtedly the bean
weevil, an insect that is to be
found on the ﬂowers, to be sure,

because it feeds on the bean plants
until the beans are set. After the
pods are formed and little beans are
nicely started, the eggs are laid in-
side the pod, through a slit cut by
the mother beetle.

The larvea are inside the beans
themselves at harvest time and from
them come the, beetles which con—
tinue to work on the dry beans un-—
til they are reduced to evil smelling
powder. The. only remedy is to
fumigatc with carbon disulphide and
thus kill the. insects in the dried
beans—~11. ll. Pettit, Professor of
Entomology, M. A. C.

MUST HE PAY NOTE?

About six years ago I signed a note.
for $300 for a man and now they
want me to pay $327. I was never
notified how things were going and I
thought it was paid long ago. Please,
let me. know and oblige H. J. V..
Fife Lake, Mich.
IF you are an indorser, you would

 

be entitled to notice before. be-

coming liable, provided notice
was not waived. If you are a co-
i'naker ol' the note with the other
12111132 you Would be liable even with—
out nolice. However, if the note he-
came due, more than 6 years ago, it
Would likely now be outlawed by the.
stat die of limitations—Legal Editor.

PLAIN FARMER

Strange isn’t it, 110w one gets at—
tached to the animals around a farm
borne? Something human about
their companionship.

Our horses and dog have ﬁrst call
around here, but everything seems
to have a place in our affections.
We are getting so sentimental we.
dislike to sell a veal calf. And I
had an awful time killing a turkey
to send away to a brother Who lives
in town.

But things have been going smooth
in the stables today, and I am wrlt~
ing accordingly. Some times the
yearlings.don’t go to their places,
and a. modest cow today will place

-her foot in the pail tomorrow.

When things go wrong I make a
dairy of it, and perhaps you will
hear of it from now on.——A. P. Bal~
lard, Huron County. :

J... .

  
    
     
       
    

   
  
   
 
  
 
 
   
  
  
 
 
 
 

«- Pn—

‘—~‘_‘

     

   
    

    

   
 

 

  


r

‘—~‘_‘

   

   

‘!
I

  

p1. ‘

B

E are congratulating ourselves
vz’ on Broadscope Farm that we

secured so much wood last
winter, for this icy time would be
anything but pleasant for work in
the woods. This icy time has been
more suitable for work in the shop,

roadscope ar

 

 

so we have been making potato,

crates etc. Yesterday we recleaned
some clover seed. It is of the mam-
moth variety and contained consid-
erable sorrel seed. Dealers seem to
have their own ideas about cleaning
clover seed, and we have ours.

We have a very good recleaner
which we bought of a seed merchant
when he purchased a larger machine.
It is of ample size, and the outﬁt con-

'tains twenty—six screens and sieves,
‘ so we are able to ﬁnd a screen for
every need. Here, perhaps, is where
many make a mistake in cleaning
seeds. They expect the screens to do
too much, when really the air blast
is of as much, or even more impor—
tance. By using proper screens and
a. very heavy blast we were able to do
quite satisfactory work. The cleaner
is equipped with a pulley fer belt
power and we run it from a line

shaft.
It * it

Engine and Line Shaft

Our engine is a three horse power
portable one using kerosene for fuel.
We park it in the shop where it
drives the line shaft which crosses
the shop and extends about forty feet
outside to the pump and washing
machine.

The line shaft is made of one and
one-fourth inch gas pipe, and the
hangers in the shop are made of Sec-
ond growth white oak plank. The
shaft supports outside are made of
cedar posts three and one—half feet
long, set two feet in the ground with
a piece of two—by-four seven feet
long bolted to them, and they are
about ten feet apart. A hole the size
of the shaft was bored four inches
from the t0p end of these two-by-
fours, and the piece from the hole to
the top was sawed out and removed.
The shaft simply revolves in the slots
and after eight years of service there
iS'very little wear. These supports
are braced with half inch rods.

It has proven a very efﬁcient means
of'power transmission and enables
us to keep the engine housed. We
had some trouble at ﬁrst with the
belt from shaft to pump jack. Being
exposed to the weather caused it to
shrink with dampness and stretch
with’ use. It was always too tight or
too loose, and on rainy or windy days
we could not run the pump. This was
overcome by constructing a box-like

cover which encloses the belt and pul—
' leys, and we never think of weather
conditions any more when we want
to use the pump.

Our engine being mounted, We use
it to buzz wood and run the cement
mixer. Sometime we will have a pic-
ture for you showing a cement mixer
which we made at a cost of two dol-
lars, using the gearing etc., of an Old
Deering mower. No factory built
mixer would do better work, and it is
very nice to have a mixer of one’s
own, for unless you do, the work no
doubt would have to be done by
hand.

* it *
Planning Spring Seeding

We are planning our spring clover
seeding and it takes some thought to
know just what see‘d'to sow. We
have two ﬁelds which grew potatoes
last year, and have decided to sow
one to Grimm alfalfa, and the other
to June clover. Another ﬁeld that
produced corn- last season will be
sown to cats and seeded to sweet

clover.
II: III at

Sweet Clover

We are more and more convinced
that sweet clover will be the salva—
tion of our soils in the near future.
We grow certiﬁed opotatoes, the
greater part of which are shipped;
yet we sell many to farmers who
drive from one to twenty-ﬁve miles
for them. In talking of farm crops
with these men. our vision has been

 ,. w I,‘  t» . _ -
m  Views

Edited by L. w. Meeks, Hillsdale County

a,
n» ‘I -5
-

 

considerably broadened. 'and it is

/

 
  

 

 

       
   

    
 

  
 

 

s' r
~~‘.\  ¥

   
  
  
  

surprising how many raise sweet
clover. '

One man told of pasturing thirty
hogs on only one acre all summer,
and every week or so to turn his
cows in to help the hogs keep the
clover from getting too large. This
we believe, is the secret of pasturing
sweet clover,-—not to let it get too
large. ’

Some farmers seem to, have suc-
successful experience in getting sweet
clover to grow. It may be their soil
needs lime, the seed needs innoculat-
ing, and their seed bed should be
ﬁrmer. These are the three essen—
tials. We have tried out lime here,
but it seems to have very little effect
on sweet clover, perhaps because

there are many limestones in our
However,

soil. lime has been the

 

Standard 81:: Coach 895

Master Six Coach 

Prices! f. o. 1:. Buick Factories.- government tax to be added.

Ask about the G. M. A
Deferred Paymaats.

 

. 0. Purchase Plan. which provides for

. v; r a: '

 

o o o
Alfalfa -

The ﬁeld we shall sow to Grimm is
level, and while not low, is one of our
lowest fields. We had intended to
ﬁt this piece without plowing, and
sow about one bushel of barley and
seed the alfalfa in it,_but a visit with
a friend about three miles from here,
changed our mind. He has followed
several systems of seeding alfalfa,
using only one method each year, but
last year he tried three methods side
by side so he could test them by each
other. I only wish all our readers
could visit his alfalfa ﬁelds and see
for themselves what he has proven.
These methods will be explained in
the next issue of Broadscope News,
for .just now we 'want to call your at—
tention to Farmers’ Week at the
Michigan Agricultural College.

a]: * >k .

Farmers’ Week, Feb. 2-6
We are making plans for Farmers'
Week at the M. A. C. These mid—
winter get—together meetings are al-
ways largely attended, but when one
considers how large Michigan is, one
wonders why more farmers do not

mess: (if imaging" the alfalfa ton-
' 'nage.

Success
of the

Coach

(18

BUICK
builds it

Everyone who has seen the Coach a; Buick

 
    

 

go. It makes no. difference what.

branch of farming you are interested
in, whether it is farm crops, stock or
housework, you will get some new
ideas and inspiration. »

The writer gets only one half the‘
benefit of such meetings, for his
hearing is so defective he can not
hear the lectures, but there is enough
to see to repay him for going when-
ever possible. This year there will
be some new departments added.
The poultry department wil be larg-
er ‘and better; the potato exhibit
Will be larger than ever, as it will be
the Annual State :Show of the Mich—
1gan Potato Producers Association.
Some worth while prizes are being
given, but the honor of being a win-
ner is the best prize.

Yes, if this cold weather continues
some of us Older ones may have to
stay at home this year, but let’s send
the boy or girl anyway. There is just
as much of interest for the girl and
her mother as for the boys and their
dads
H Take a note book and pencil, and
it you don’t return home feeling you
have received full value for the time
and effort expended, Yours Truly
will miss his guess.

\

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\\\\ii\l“““""“\\\\\\l

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Limit!

u
l

\\\\\\

éuz'ldr it knows why t/zz'r Coach has received
such sweeping public approval.

The Buick Coach is a real closed can—built to
Buick’s high closed—car standards. Fisher body.
Graceful lines. Two wide doors, hinged at the
front, enable rcar~scat passengers to enter or
leave either door without disturbing people in

front seats.

There are the, reasons for the phenomenal
success of the Coach as Buick éuz‘ld: It!

BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN

Divide" of Canard! Motor: Corporation

Pioneer Builders
cf Valve-in-Head Motor Cars

Canadian Fartorizr: McLAUGHLlN-BUICK, Orhuwa. Ontario

Duco ﬁnish.
each of the two coach models.

Different colors for

The chassis! The identical chassis that has won
Buick world—recognition for dependability and
economy! Valve-in—head engine. Buick exclu—
Sivc automatic heat control for immediate
all-weather starting. All driving units Jed/ed
in iron and steel housings to keep dirt out and
lubrication in. Buick 4—wheel Brakes which
function perfectly in any weather.

And the price! Never before, a closed car of
such ﬁne quality at such low cost!

Branches in All
Principal Cities—Dealer: Everych

 

 

 

WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM

 
 

 

 

 

 

     


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y». gut—a... '

 

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 “4.x 1.“:...__:I.,‘z;..._.;_ .1 w. 45“.» .

‘ NL—LVQLS..4J-.~A;._ .. ...

, ,, , V, ,_ .;.

.~. AN gun. "swerve: \afu‘n‘

 

Now You Can Get What

       

  

You Have Wanted

Here it is—the simple tractor that weighs less, de-
livers more power and lasts longer. You have wanted
all the vital advantages you ﬁnd in the

John Deere Model D

15 H. P. on Drawbar; 27 H. P. on. Belt
The Most Tractor for Your Money

Simpler by 500 to 1,500 parts
than other tractors of the same
power.

Lighter by 500 to 2,000 pounds
or more.

And think of its power—15
H. P. on the drawbar and 27 H. P.
on the belt, conservatively rated.

Power for the most economical
and efﬁcient use of drawbar and
belt machines. Lighter weight with
more power, so that you can do
your ﬁeld work the way you want it
done without packing your soil.

Simplicity and ruggedness that
mean fewer repair bills and longer
life.

Burns kerosene with real econ-
Omy——the simple, two—cylinder,
low-speed, heavy—duty engine is
especially designed to burn low-
priced fuel.‘ Saves dollars in the
fuel and oil bill.

No oiling worries—all work-
ing parts, including engine, are
completely enclosed in oil-tight,
dust—proof case, and kept auto-
matically bathed in clean oil.

Get acquainted with all the facts that make the John Deere the tractor you

need. Ask your John Deere dealer for a, demonstration.
Address John Deere, Molina, Illinois.

all about it.
Ask for folder W «133.

free folder telli

Write us for a.

‘OHNTZZT’DEERE '

THE TRADE MARK OF QUALITY MADE FAMOUS BY GOOD lMPLEMENTS

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

Jackson,

 

 

"‘=inll_‘llillilliii
i" will  " I‘ am: i -

 

  

imlummm.

 

ii"?

Cash Income Every Month
FROM THIS CROP

No Poor Seasons
No Crop Failures
N 0 Taxes to Pay

An Income Check Every Month

PLANT YOUR SEED DOLLARS IN

Consumers Power
6.6% Preferred Shares

TAX FREE IN MICHIGAN
“Ask Our Employees"

Michigan

 
    

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION

THE BUSINESS FARMER

 

 

 

 

 

 

RADIO]: .DEPARTTMEN

1.2:: Edited by J. HERBERT FERRIS, a. a. 

 

 

Contributions Invited—Questions W V

THE BEST RADIO SET FOR YOU
IME after time the question is
asked, “What is the best kind

of a radio set to buy or build?"
That is the question I will answer
in this and succeeding articles from
time to time. It is a question that

_ cannot be answered now for a fu-

ture day as radio is changing grad-
ually and at any time we may look
for an invention that will change
our present sets Into "junk," that
day we believe is at some distant
time, not this year or next year, but
some time in the future. It; is the
present We are interested in. and
there is no need to ‘worry about
wasting money on buying a set now
and then thinking that possibly next
year it will be out of date.

Before taking up the “best set”
let me put in a few words of can-
tion that may save you trouble and
expense and help you to get out of
your radio that which you have a
right to expect.

Do not buy a set just because it
is the "cheapest."

Do not buy a set for which un-
reasonable claims are made; there
is a limit to What can be accomplish-
ed by any set. .

Buy a set made by a reliable man-
ufacturer.

Try out any set that you Wish to
buy before paying for it, or have it
demonstrated in your home before
buying it.

Do not buy a set requiring a
storage battery to operate it unless
you can get the battery charged
cheaply and conveniently, or unless
you have current in the house so
that you can do your own charging.

 

@What "the Ne' bore 89.

Do not expect the smaller and
simpler sets to operate a loud speaik-
er; it is necessary to have at least
two stages of ampliﬁcation to prop-
erly operate a loud speaker.

In buying a set at a ﬁxed price, he
sure and ask it you have to buy as
extras the bulbs, batteries, phones.
serial or loop. Many sets are priced
low just to catch the unwary buyer,
and then you ﬁnd it will cost as
much more to buy all the necessary
extras before you can enjoy your
set.

Buy a set that your whole family
can enjoy, one easy to operate and
to connect batteries to as well as
easy access to the bulbs so that re-
newals can he made by anyone.

Last but not least, do not think
that by paying a “big” price that.
you will get the best set, nor that.
the best is always the cheapest. Buy
as you would buy any good piece of
machinery; buy a guaranteed art-
icle: buy for long service and satis-
faction. And remember the longer
you have your set and use it, the
more you can get out of it.

 

CHANGING TUBES IN
A SET

F you are using a set that uses 3
I or more tubes, you may be great-
ly surprised if you will change
them around, exchanging one for
another. Be sure that you turn off
your A battery before making the
change. Some times you will find
the better detector or ampliﬁer by
doing this, and the little extra trou-

ble is well worth while.

 

Contributions Invited

DO NOT CHANGE DATE OF
TOIVNISHH’ MEETING

N regard to Mr. Whitney’s letter in
I your January 3rd issue regard-
ing changing the date of the
township meeting, I think it rwould
be better to leave it as it is. It is
true there is no sleighing or wheeling
but the people as a rule are not as
busy in April as they are in May. And
on the other hand we usually have
some road repair to do before May
and need some money raised to do
it with—P. G. C., Gladwin County.

STANDARD \VIDTH OI“ SLEIGHS
, EAR Editorz—When up at my

farm last week, my attention
was called to letters sent out by

' the Ogemaw County Road Commis-

sioner quoting a recent enactment of
the Michigan Legislature, and pre—
scribing the “standard” width of
sleighs, and offering sleigh owners
the muniﬁcent sum of $3.50 if they
would widen their sleighs. It would
cost about four times this ﬁgure be-

sides making the sleighs less service-
able. Also farmers truly say that it
would do no good so far as breaking
any track for automobiles, as their
wheels would jump this narrow track
and mix things all up.

My advice is to have all sleigh
owners stand fast and pay no atten-
tion to this unreasonable require-
ment which does not even by its
terms apply to existing sleighsand
cutters. I stand ready to defend on
the ground of unconstitutionality

any action that might be attempted

against owners of sleighs who wish
to maintain that they can not thus
be deprived of the use of their prop-
erty without due process of law.

I run an automobile as much as
almost anyone else, yet I must re-
mark that the motorists have very
little regard for the rights or well-
fare of any other class of traffic.
What do they do to make going more
tolerable for teams, light rigs, bi-
cycles or pedestrians? To ask is to
answer the question—F. W. Newton,
Saginaw County, Michigan. '

 

WHERE OUR READERS LIVE

 

 

Haven't you a picture of your home or farm buildings that. “u can print under this heading?

Show the other members of The Business Farmer's large family where you 11v . Kodak dpictllrcs
are all right If the details show up Well. gust s 800

 

Do not send us the negatives,

print.

 

 

..._... .m. ..~...- ._....-_...-

 

 

THE HOME OF ME. AND BIBS. IVILSON TURNER, AT SAHLT STE- MAle

The home is located on the 160-110“: farm of iVIr. and Mira. Wilson Turner at Sault’
It is ﬁnished in stucco with trimmings painted brown.
15 Jersey cows, some of them pure breds and the others good grades.

Ste. Marie, R2.

They keep
In the foam

ground you can see a pure Scotch collie of the undue “min.

       

 

 

use”

= 3.12%

-. 78.5215“;

 

{W'Viﬂléia‘t'i a.

saw-‘-

M‘_~

 

array-r.- : ,

 

 

 

 


 
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
    
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
    
   
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
   
  
   

 

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A em:M‘-»~» . :-

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 a,

 
   
  
  
   
  

 

 

 

THE EDDIE WESTiON

get ﬂrom happy and inexperi-

enced lovers. They are generally .

good.

There are ideas we get from those
who never tried the. beautiful experi-
ment of home life- These ideas are
generally too. lofty for ordinary mor-
tals to follow.

There are tried‘ ideas that come
from those who both have homes,
and have observed life in all its
phases. Such ideas ought to have a
hearing.

Recently, a- Chicago Jurist, Judge
Joseph Sabath, presided over his ten
thousandth divorce case in a period
of four years. The Judge has spent
thousands of hours listening to the.
weary recital of those, who either
never loved at all, or through some.
mistake or failure, has ceased Longer
to care The Judge is not proud of
the civilization that displays such a;
social condition as this reveals in
one American city. .

While the rural home has been
more secure from the separation
disease than the city home, it is well
for us all to ponder the sage and
practical advice of this Judge.

TO HUSB‘ANDS, these words are
addressed:

“Make your wife a real partner.”

“Discuss your business problems
with her.” ’

“If no children are born to you,
adopt some.”

“Supply your wife with sufﬁcient
to maintain the household.”

“Work together, play together,
grow up together, and share the
pleasures and responsibilities to-
gether.”

T0 WIVES, the Judge says as
follows:

“Do not allow yourself to be»
treated as a Weak, dependent little
thing.”

“Do not be afraid to soil your
hands.”

“Do not be afraid of the one really
big thing in your life motherhood.”

“Make your husband feel that he
is the one man in your life. Do not
ﬂirt.”

“Make your husband share in the
responsibilities of home life.”

To BOTH MAN and VVlli‘E, the
Judge gives this parting advicoz—-—-

“Avoid heated quarrels. Speak
out frankly, but do not develop argu—
moms.”

“Differences should be settled on
tho very day that they develop.”

“Sympathy, good humor, and a de~
sire for mutual understanding are
the supporting pillars of the home.”

“One of the ﬁxed rules of every
household should be:-——good humor
in parting in the morning, and a
cheerful meeting in the evening.”

So much for the ideas of the Law.
May I add this other word. We
need a new conviction of the sacred-
ness of marriage. Whether one calls
it a sacrament, or sacred, is largely
a matter of theological distinction.
but every honest man and woman
must feel the increasing peril to
American life through the lax views
popularly held on the marriage vows.

We have yet to .work out a satis-
factory solution of this mating bus—
iness. Deﬁnite rules are easy to lay
down. Laws have always been easy
to pass, but until human love can
listen to intelligence and experience
before making life’s supreme adven—
ture, we cannot expect things to

 

THERE are home ideas which we. ,

1...

..w

‘ wry u.

 

 

A New CDACH

Recognizing the demand for a truly com—
fortable and economical car of the coach
type, Dodge Brothers have provided it.

The new coach reveals a characteristic
maturity of design—~in the low—swung
lines of the body, in the arrangement of
the interior for five—passenger comfort,
and in the exceptional dimensions of the
doors and windows.

The car is lacquer ﬁnished in Dodge
Brothers blue with a body stripe of car—
touche yellow. Fittings and ﬁxtures are
ﬁrst quality throughout, and balloon tires
are standard equipment.

So far as riding comfort and dependability
are concerned, it is only necessary to add
that the Coach is built on Dodge Brothers
sturdy chassis and cushioned by Dodge
Brothers undcrslung springs.

  

The price is $1095 1’. o. b. Detroit

DODGE BROTHERS DETROIT

DC‘DEE BQDTHEJQS (CANADA) Lil’v‘lITED
VJALKE—F2\JVLLE

(J "YTAf-d I I)

 

 

 

 

 

_ l
._ :

 

change for the better.

BIBLE THorGH'rs

IF THINE ENEMY be hungry, giVe.
him bread to eat; and if he be
thirsty, give him water to drink.—
Proverbs 25:21.

BRETHREN, if a. man be overtaken
in a fault, ye which are spiritual, re-
store such a one in the spirit of
meekncss; considering thyself, lest
25min also be tempted.-—-Galatians

LET THLS MIND BE IN YOU, which
was also in Christ Jesus. Let nothing
be done through strife or vainglory;
but in lowliness of mind let each es—
teem other better than themselves.
*Philippians 2:5, 3.

 

—.._—__————

BRGWKs

Prices

   

Gel‘l’his Barge

In mynew Bargain Fence Book you’ll
ﬁnd prices‘cut to the bone—prices you have

been waiting for a go
as usual, Jun

Now Is The Time

Send for t;.is Bargain Fence

money-savingr prices on 150 different st '19 f
famous double galvanized fence, also Byteesl go:th
gates, barb Wire, rooﬁng and paint. —-Jim Brown:

THE BROWN FENCE & WIRE 00.”)
Dept. 3907 Cleveland, Ohio

BARGAIN
erncs
*BOGK”

   

Brown's prices are way be.-
low all otberfence prices. Quality highest.

  
 

PUT THIS NEW
MILL ON YOUR.-

   
 
 
  
  
 
       
      
      
   
   
       
        
    

. 7 "" Wheels

It is Your Guarantee of Quality
Our Catalog . illustrated in colors describes
. FARM WAGONS .
- 9 With high or low
wheels, either
steel or wood, .
wide or narrow
tires. ‘ '
' - Also Steel Wheels
to ﬁt any running gear. Make your
old wagon good as new, also easy to
loadW-save repair bills.

Be sure and write for catalog today.

Electric Wheel 60., ’2 E'm 5*-

Qulncy. III.

I. k ‘ - 1 0::
«ﬁgs érlrcrmcr’ steer

   
 

 

 
 
   
    

, Albion ‘lrcl .1er w“! "wlL

u'r- mud

" and gwxsrrltl ONO-fluid [hr (no! 1:»
mg parrsr 0/ anv lit/Hr :ml'l.
Univ mmn Homo llPJIlILJ

Wm! l

  
    

:. All I)

  

  

n :
mm \V lg. le rlv~:’ u
now mlh .l gum] -
This is your chancc -F U. I}.

A Hiion. lircrl u ward}. Ari .‘UUX

drum, or \vnlc ulna lo

Union Steel Products Co. Ltd.

   
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 

 

in oak Fee

 

 

 

Dept. 3i
Albion. Mich... U. 8.5

ON’T WEAR
A TRUSS

BE COMFORTABLE» -

Wear the Brooks Appliance, tliv
modern scientiﬁc, invcution which
gives rupture sufferers llllllletl‘llttv
relief. It has no obnoxmus
springs or pads. Automatic Air
Cushions bind and draw together
the broken parts. No Halves or .
plasters, Durable. Cheap. Sent on “- Iv
trial to prove its worth. Be- In... L. Ina-48. '
ware of imitations. Look for trade-mark will:

portrait and algnature of . E. Brooks which to-

od long time—and,

to Buy Fence
BOnk today. See the big

 
      
  

   
 
     
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
   
 

 

Duty Free
wgindow 'MPORTED HARP 3892:“: 
For 22 years Euro e’a standard separabor.70,000 :
old yang/The c (was: skimming, easiest turn- 
no gate at to clean and longed: lasting sep- s
"shanghai; ' ' am...
0 EV — no -— no ob! -
son to . "or go on: NI oun m‘s‘n'i.

In . w
THE HARP sgganﬁtt'ia coy.“ Boat. 19

      
 
  
 
   
   
     
 

 

 

“THEN WRITING TO ADVER-

1‘ ISERS MENTION

 
 
  

       
       

  
 

115 s. boarborn Stunt. Chicago. Ill.‘
‘ leurs on every Appliance. None other genuine.

‘ull infornmtion and booklet free in plain smiled
envelope. .
IMIKS APPLIANCE 60.. 29" Sun 81. Mklﬂlﬂl. “ll. ‘ «

 
 
  

 

THE M. B. F.

 

    


  
  

WIRE FENCES

BEFORE you buy fence be sure to get full information
about our improved Super-Zinced Fences. They are
armored against rust by the heaviest coating of zinc that
can be successfully applied to wire. We use a special formula
of steel, and by our improved process the zinc is so closely
bonded to the wire that it will not crack or peel.

Columbia Fences

are made in a wide range of styles and weights for farm,
poultry and garden. Their sturdy hinge-joint construction
and superior rust protection establish a new standard of
fence service and durability.

Our complete line includes also stiff-stay fences in farm and poultry
styles, and our superb Ornamental Lawn Fences. All Of our fences
are Super-Zinced , are guaranteed unexcelled in quality and durability,
yet cost no more than others of ordinary galvanizing quality.

Send today for Super-Zinced Fence catalogue and for your copy of
the Farmers’ Handy Manual, a useful vest pocket book containing
farm account pages and helpful farm information. Both mailed free.
Send the coupon or a postal card.

Pittsburgh Steel Co.

709 Union Trust Building
Pittsburgh, Pa.

    
     
     
    
     
   
   
   
   
   
   
     
    

   

      

 

  

Get Acquainted Offer

 

about 100 seeds, all for .............................. ..

Guaranteed to please you.
MARSHALL'S VINEYARD
Paw Paw, Michigan.

     

 

l ,peach tree, 1 apple tree, 25 Dewberry plants.
2 grape v1nes. 1 package smgle Hollyhocks, $245

6 Concord grape vines for $1.00. post paid.

 

'0 Myks'l’hom From Your Season's catch at Low Prlce
We Will tan your pelts pad manufacture them into an;
ingot coat, robe, neck piece, cape, cap, mittens at lowest
prices. Finest workmsnshrp, best linin s and findin s,
lean-ate measurements, guaranteed ﬁ)! old reliaiile
house, with an experience of 43 years back of every

:rder executed for you.
our ﬁnest trophies are ssh» srded when so . . -
 Send us I trisfgrder. Writs (orilmsgsteﬁeffr‘bro

7 mm ROBE 8: TANNING 00.. ll El“ 81.. Reading. Mich. v

STRAWBERRY PLANTS

Per 1000. and up. Our strong, h lth ,
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overbearing Strawberry MASTODgN. *ggfa‘ggdwheg‘ergou “Se O’dmm’ “‘3
Full line of Raspberries, Blackberries. i’aaeaggmm—ﬁferaougia 322.352.32.13 ii" m";
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Induced at $18.00perthousand Grape Plants  Years 0'
Better Seeds

Mess Beautiful new color catalog free. Write Today.

IIDGMAN NURSERY CO. 3 Box 26 Bridgman. Mich.
For nearly a half century,
Isbell's have been develop-

ing yield. vitality and hardi-
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. imenting. careful select on.
better Wing. sorting and cleaningmethods
have one this. 200,000 customers have
rowed this proﬁt-building quality—they plant
shell's seeds year after year and net bumper crops.
We grow our own seed—you buy direct from us,
savingr money and eliminating all risk of substitution.

This Valuable Book——
The 1925 Isbell's Seed
Annual tells how to /
select seeds how to we
pare sorl. gives cul-
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i,_,i,_.-L_J.-. ,. quotes direct-from-

' ,i “I l grower prices. The con-

. pon brings it Frog. , _‘ ._ .
VIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll. II .-

s. M. ISBELI. & COMPANY
336 Mechanic St. lsokson. Mich.

Send your 1925Soed Annual
from-grower prices on Qualit‘iuggg 

     

   

  

      
  
 

    
  

  
    

 

You ea do it wit seeds at have

mination and adapted to the soil. The

 

 

    

  
  
    

  

‘1'? .1 '-
"' over. vsrie es,
. The beat trees l

9' '0!!! I) la
v hammered s
% DBHEAEu Milli?“
I: m'

in
prices

  

 have ever produced.

    

fruits 'shru‘nyo . i'i'ueodu.
win
230 . s:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
  
  

   

 

    

 

 

 

e Peerl ' n B '
, gar-ii) Wire, Steel ﬁesta, Gates, '  Name
, . lttgirdnts 1' Just out. Send for n; a? .
s V my. ,
mm was s. ism maximums. cum-m. om Adda” ----------- -: ------ --< --------- --.-:--:.- ----- 

 

vitality and life—that are of high ger-

work of preparing the land and planting is
or

 

~_

 

 

 

 

(Continued from Jan. 3rd issue.)
CHAPTER VI
Constance Sherrlll
N the morning a. great change had come

over the lake. The wind still blew

freshly, but no longer ﬁercely, from the
west; and now, from before the beach
beyond the drive, and from the piers and
breakwaters at the harbor mouth, and
from all the western shore, the ice had
departed. Far out, a nearly indiscernible
white line marked the ice-ﬂoe where it
was traveling eastward before the wind;
nearer, and with only a gleaming crystal
fringe of frozen snow clinging to the
shore edge, the water sparkled, blue and
dimpling. under the morning sun; multi-
tudes of gulls, hungry after the storm,
called to one another and circled over
the breakwaters, the piers, and out over
the water as far as the eye could see;
and a half mile off shore, a little work
boat——a shallop twenty feet long—was
put-put—ing on some errand along a path
where twelve hours before no horsepower
creatable by man could have driven the
hugest steamer.

Constance Sherrill, awakened by the
sunlight reﬂected from the water upon
her ceiling, found nothing odd or startling
in this change; it roused her but did not
surprise her. Except for the shortiper—
iods of her visits away from Chicago,
she lived all her life on the shore of the
lake; the water—wonderful, ever altering

 

 312m:

'- By William Mscl-iarg and Edwin helmet

  

Ownisht by Edwin lensr

and mates and wheehnen and learned all
the pilot signals and the way the dif-
ferent lighthouses winked.

Mr. Spearman, who recently had become
a partner of her father’s, ,was also on
the boat upon that trip. He had no par—
ticular duty; he was just “an owner"
like her father; but Constance observed
that, while the captain and the mates
and the engineers were always polite and
respectful to her father, they asked Mr.
Spearman’s opinion about things in a very
different way and paid real attention—-
not merely polite attention—when he
talked. He was a. most desirable sort of
acquisition; for he was a. friend who
could come to the house at any time,
and yet he, himself, had done all sorts
of exciting things. He had not just gone
to Harvard and then become an owner,
as Constance’s father had; at ﬁfteen, he
had run away from his father’s farm back
from the east shore of little Traverse
Bay near the northern end of Lake Mich-
igan. At eighteen, after all sorts of ad-
ventures, he had become mate of a lum-
ber schooner; he had “taken to steam"
shortly after that and had been an oﬁlcer
upon many kinds of ships. Then Uncle
Benny had taken him into partnership.
Constance had a most exciting example
of what he could do when the ship ran
into a. big storm on Lake Superior.

Coming into Whiteﬁsh Bay, a barge
had blundered against the vessel; a seam
started, and water came in so fast that

 

 

 

SU‘NIDIARY OF OUR STORY TO DATE

and from this copse there comes at time of

EAR the northern end of Lake Michigan there is a copso of pine and hem-
lock back from the beach

storm 9: sound like the beating of an Indian drum. This drum heat, so
tradition says, whenever the lake took a life. During December, 1895, Mikawa,
a new steel freighter, sank with 25 people on board but the drum beat only 24.
and the one remaining person was not accounted for. Benjamin Corvet sailed
the lakes for years and then retired to direct the-ﬂeet of ships he had purchased,
and at the time the story opens he has two partners, Sherrill and young Spear-
man. Sherrill has a daughter, Constance who is to marry Spearman but Corvet,
who is called Uncle Benny by the girl, does not want her to marry him but will
not give her a reason asking her to wait until she sees him again. Then Corvet
disappears. A young man, known as Alan Conrad, appears at the Sherrill home
asking for Benjamin Corvct. Alan, since a. small child, has lived with a family
in Blue Rapids, Kansas, and neither he or the family know who his father or
mother is. He was left with this family by a man who told the people they
would receive pay for taking care “of the boy. They received money through

the mails but never knew who sent it.

Then Alan receives a letter from Ben

Corvet to come to Chicago and Alan rushes there thinking that Corvet could
tell him something about his parents, but arrives after Corvet disappeared. He
goes to the Sheri-ill home and talks with Constance and Mr. Sherrill. He de—
cides Corvet is his father and upon being given a key goes to Corvet’s house.
Alan discovers a man ransacking the house and grapples with him but he

escapes.

 

 

—was the ﬁrst sight each morning. As
it made wilder and more grim the desol-
ation of a stormy day, so it made brighter
and more smiling splendor of the sunshine
and, by that much more, inﬂuenced one’s
feelings.

Constance held by preference to the
seagoing traditions of her family. Since
she was a. child, the lake and the life of
the ships had delighted and fascinated
her; very early she had discovered that.
upon the lake, she was permitted privi-
leges sternly denied upon land—an ar~
bitrary distinction which led her to desig-
nate water, when she was a little girl, as
her family’s “respectable element.” For
while her father’s investments were, in
part, on the water, her mother’s property
all was on the land. Her mother, who
was a Seaton, owned property somewhere
in the city, in common with Constance’s
uncles; this property consisted, as Con-
stance succeeded in ascertaining about the
time she was nine, of large, wholesale
grocery buildings. They and the “brand”
had been in the possession of the Seaton
family for many years; both Constance’s
uncles worked in the big buildings where
the canning was done; and, when Con-
stance was taken to visit them, she found
the place most interesting—the berries
and fruit coming up in great steaming
cauldrons; the machines pushing the cans
under the enormous faucets where the
preserves run out and then sealing the
cans and pasting the bright Seaton
“brand” about them. The people there
were interesting—the girls with ﬂying
ﬁngers sorting fruit, and the men pound—
ing the big boxes together; and the great
shaggy-hoofed horses which pulled the
huge, groaning wagons were most fasci-
nating. .She wanted to ride on one of
the wagons; but her request was promptly
and completely squashed.

It was not “done”; nor was anything
about the groceries and the canning to
be mentioned before visitors; Constance
brought up the subject once and found
out. It was different about her father's
ships. She could talk about them when
she wanted to; and her father often
spoke of them; and any one“who came
to the house could speak about them.
Ships, apparently, Were respectable.

When she went down to the docks with
her father, she could climb all over them,
if she was only careful of her clothes;
she could spend a. day watching one of
her father’s Iboats discharging grain' or

lanother unloading ore; and, when she

was twelve, for a. great treat, her father
took her on one of the freighters to
Duluth; andrfor one delightful, wonder-‘
ful week she chummed with the captain

it gained on the pumps. Instantly, Mr.
Spearman, not the captain, was in com-
mand and, from the way he steered the
ship to protect the seam and from the
scheme he devised to stay the Enrush of
water, the pumps began to gain at once,
and the ship went into Duluth safe and
dry. Constance liked that in a. man of
the sort whom people knew. For, as the
most active partner—though not the chief
stockholder—of Corvet, Sherrill and
Spear-man, almost everyone in the city
knew him. He had his bachelor “rooms”
in one of the newest and most fashion-
able of the apartment buildings facing
the Jake just north of the downtown city;
he had become a member of the best
city and country clubs; and he was wel-
comed quickly along the Drive, where the
Sherrill’s mansion was coming to he a.
characteristic “old” Chicago home.

But little over forty, and appearing
even younger, Spearman was distinctly
of the new generation; and Constance
Sherrill was only one of many of the
younger girls who found in Henry Spear-
man refreshing relief from the youths
who were the sons of men but who could
never become men themselves. They were
nice, earnest boys with all sorts of serious
Marxian ideas of establishing social jus-
tice in the plants which their fathers had
built; and carrying the highest motives
into the city or national politics. But
the industrial reformers, Constance was
quite, certain, never could have built up
the industries with which they now, so
superiorly, were ﬁnding fault; the political
puriﬁers either failed of election or, if
elected, seemed to leave politics pretty
much as they had been before. The pic-
ture of Spearman. instantly appealed to
and instantly in charge in the emergency,
remained and became more vivid within
Constance, because she never saw him
except when he dominated.

And a. decade most amazingly had
bridged the anyss which had separated
twelve years and thirty-two. At twenty-
two, Constance Sherrill was ﬁnding Henry
Spearman—age forty—two—the most vital—
izing and interesting of the men who
moved, socially, about the restricted ellipse
which curved down the lake short south
of the park and up Astor Street. He had,
very early, recognized that he possessed
the vibor and courage to carry him far,
and he had disciplined himself until the

coarseness and roughness, which had

sometimes offended the little girl of ten
years before, had almost vanished. What
crudities still came out, romantically re<
minded of his hard. early life on the

lakes. Had there been anything 1121' that
life of-his of-‘Whlch he had not-.told 

\,

 

.o .;:_.:, ._,‘—‘____.“”_._“ ._r .

 

 

 

an...” Mme,” ..

. Pusan—me,

 


   
 
      

 

. M“: 1&.mmmmu<wmmmw r.

 

mews: th
magnetron “could strike-a; ~ I, ,v '
Bonny’s last," drainatic appeal ,to "her had
suggested that I but even at the :moment
when he was talking to her, ,fright for
Uncle Benny—not dread that there had
been anything wrong in Henry’s life—-
had most moved her. Uncle Benny very
evidently was not himself. As long as
Constance could remember, he had quar-
reled violently with Henry; his antagon-
ism to Henry had become almost an ob-
session; and Constance had her father’s
word for it that, a greater part of the
time, Uncle Benny had no just ground
for his quarrel with Henry. A most vio-
lent quarrel had occurred upon that last
day, and undoubtedly its fury had carried
Uncle Benny to the length of going to
Constance as he did.

Constance had come to this conclusion
during the last gloomy and stormy 'days;
this morning, gazing out upon the shining
lake, clear blue under the wintry sun,
she was more satisﬁed than before. Sum-
moning her maid, she inquired ﬁrst
whether anything had been heard since
last night of Mr. Corvet.
sure, if her father had had word, he
would have awakened her; and there was
no news. But Uncle Benny’s son, she
remembered, was coming to breakfast.

Uncle Benny’s son! That suggested to
Constance's mother only something un-
pleasant, something to be avoided and
considered as little as possible. But
Alan—Uncle Benny’s son—awas not un-
pleasant at all; he was, in fact, quite the
reverse. Constance had liked him from
the moment that, confused a little by
Benjamin Corvet’s absence and Simons’s
manner in greeting him, he had turned
to her for explanation; she had liked the
way he had openly studied her and ap-
proved her, as she was approving him;
she had liked the way he told her of him-
self, and the fact that he knew nothing
of the man who proved to be his father;
she had liked very much the complete
absence of impulse to force or to pretend
feeling when she had brought him the
picture of his father—when he, amazed
at himself for not feeling, had looked at
her; and she had liked most of all his
refusal, for‘himself and for his father,
to accept positive stigma until it. should
be proved.

(Continued

PETER PLOW SAYS

THE CHILD LABOR
g COMMANDMENT

EAR Editorz—A short spell back
D one of the neighboars says to me

what do you think of this here
child labor Commandment. Well I
told him I never ﬁgured it was any
of my business to criticize Holy Writ
and I supposed “honor thy father
and thy mother that thy days be
long in the land which the Lord thy
God giveth thee” included such labor
as they set for me or any other child
to do.

No he says that ain’t it, don’t you
know that congress has proposed a
20th commandment to the constu-
tion of the U. S. and is asking all of
the State leglesslatures to say ok to
it and if 5% of them do, it will be
into the constution along With the
stuff Thos. Jefferson put in. Well
what of it I says, what does it mean
anyhow.

It means he says that congress is
wanting a license to say “Until thou
art 18 years old thou shalt do no
manner of work, thou nor thy sisters
nor thy brethern nor the orphan
that is within thy gates, neither in
the ﬁeld nor the factory nor the barn
nor the kitchen.” Now I says you are
using sack religious language to poke
fun at something that ain’t so, for
even politicians ain’t such fools as
to want to keep kids from doing
chores and helping round on eater—
days and vacation.

You wouldn’t think so, he answers
back, but three times they tried to
change it to leave out work on the
farms and in the homes of the par—
ents and every time the change was
voted dowu, so it looks as if they
don’t want no youngsters of 15 or
17 to throw corn to the shotes.

I’ve noticed this, I told him, that
politicians don’t bother to ask for

in Jan. 30th issue.)

 

" power that they don’t ﬁgure on using

to the limit and then some. And if
it comes to that we’ll need a revised
version which says “Honor the old
maids which the burrocrats have ap-
pointed that thy days may be long in
the penny tenturies for which thy
siothful habits in thy youth hath pre-
pared thee.” .

And I bet you Mr. Editor that if
this commandment comes to pass and
children are perhibited by law from
learning to have regular work and
look after it responsible like until
after they are 18 yrs. old we will
have so many Leopard-Loch cases
that the papers won’t bother to print

them; reign; "118!ij PETER PLow.

1: her? ‘ﬁnclei

She was quite ‘

 

 
   
    

 
 
  

 
 
 
 
 


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Here is another big achievement of the New Idea organization—s new

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.. _ hi m __ sees [h 8‘ every I C] New Idea Spreader
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T wenl'q Alive-
of Highest Quolilq

OR a quarter of a century the New Idea Spreader has done a steady job of proﬁt-
F Its day in and day out service, year after year,
won for the New idea unquestioned leadership—and made it known in every
farm community as the world’s best Spreader!

making on thousands of farms.

 

The New Idea Model 8 Is the
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Never before has greater value been built into a farm im-‘
Never before has a farm dollar bought greater
The new Model 8 New Idea gives you a
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and details of construction have been improved and reﬁn-
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Insist on Getting the Original and Genuine NEW IDEA SPREADER

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Complete literature on the New Idea Spreader or New Idea Transplanter will be sent you upon request.
The coupon will bring you the facts—or ask your dealer to show you these two fine farm implements.

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Please send full information of the

      
 

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Every single, desirable feature for efﬁcient spreading is
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“Spreader Specialists
for Twenty.five Years

:0

 
  
  
 

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and a far greater yield.
Handles any transplant-

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' iii . .

‘39,  ""—~ . _
Downafter30Days’ ,
Trial; Balance Easy
MonthlyPayments ~33»;

To prove my claim thntWesr-More is the
strongest harness made, le me send you
any style you select for 3 days’ lreo
serviceon your ownteam . Test itin evary
way. I take {our word for it if not then
convinced. S ley returnitatmyexpenso.
Write todl for big, free book with new
reduced gr cos. See how I've one away
with rub 5; between
leather and metal. Doubled wear right

or Learn how short-snubbmg of
leather under buckle edge or around nar-
row metal units costs on moneyln break-
downs and repairs. so how I overcome

no“ secret lrom a pail audio.
lleve you owe itto our pocketbook to In-
vestigatemtonc , is mnrvelousadvnnco
in harness-ma inc and harness v-luo.

JOHN C. NICHOLS, Pres
ms 'Srle Avo., Shoboygan.Wls. w (a
John c. Nichols (:0. Also ()rluln- acke and um

shore Illd Makers of ﬁlth" Collars ll handy to
we. Like can-yin pail
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reek In

   

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STRAWBERRY PLANTS
Banpb B berry. G . to. .
Roses. 3’ lldiml. Seedl. ‘ ravagrareltoed. 9153:35nizlv32

ate 5 rec .
.41. “satay; can. no. Bridgman. Mich.

body should [plant this spring.

 

38 Years of Reliabili

Alfalfa, “The'Farmer’s Best Bet or
1925." High-testing certiﬁed seed,Grimm
and Common. Dakota, Montana and idaho
grown. Also Sweet Clover, Red and Alsike,
Timothy. Samples free.
Fire Dried seed Corn. large stock,
Wisconsm grown. Golden Glow,
Murdock, Silver King.
Pedigreed Oats. barley,
wheat, soy beans.

38th Annual Catalog

Now ready. Lists reliable Field
Garden and Flower Seeds of all
kinds. B_est varieties. Also tools
and supplies.Write for copy today.

. L. Olds Seed Comlwny
[8.

Drawer 35 Madison.
CONDON’S GIANT

EVERBEARING 

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- \‘t/ s» Northern Grown Live Seeds and Plants. we
' ' mn'l you 125 seeds of Condon's Giant

EverbearinxTomato and

 B’ 1925 Garden and - l I

  

 

    
 

 

 

Tell Us the Kind of
‘ Hides or Fur
You Have

for

and Malia-up
“79 will gladly send
you price, a t y 1e 3 .
_ s _ samples of lining, $13.
We make ﬁne robes. coats or mittens out of beef
or horse hides.
From your ﬁner furs we will make Chokers, throws,

rugs, etc.
We also mount deer heads. Feel free to write us.
W. W. WEAVER, Custom Tanner

Reading. Michigan.

 

You've heardyom
neighborprnisethlr
wonderful weekly
magazine that 3
million 900
read. Unbiased i—
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world aﬂairaChock
G“ g a full of the kind of
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struction for alL ‘ Send 15c (coin or stamps) today tor (bio I
paper on trial 13 weeks. or $1 for l year (52 issues). ANN”: '
PATHFINDER. 741 Lsngdon Station. Washington. D. c.

      

 

Prices ldwer the
CONDE'N 37%;”? 2:
magma, val 'udﬁrfnk’ WHEN wnrrme T0 ADVERTISERS PLEASE
soxzas Roc rono.n.uuon MENTION THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER

 

 

Trees From Kalamazoo

 

Direct to You at Reduced Prices

Also shrubs, berries and roses. Beau-
tiful 1925 catalog sent free upon re-
quest. Full of big bargains and tells
about stock to be given away. Every-
It is

a patriotic as-well as a proﬁtable
duty. Therefore you cannot afford'to
be without this catalog. It willcut‘
your tree bill in two. Ask 
day—NOW—right away. " _

CELERY CITY NURSERIES  

Growers of Good Trees for Many Years.

Box 210, Kalamazoo, 

 
 
 
 
 

  
   
  
 
     
   
  
 
  

  
      
  
     
   
  
 
 
  
   

 
 
  

   
        
  
    
  
  
   
   
  
  
   
   
  
 
   
  
  
   
   
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
   
 
    
   
  
   
  
  
   
 
  
   
   
 
  
  
  
   
    
 
    

.m»".‘- w

"i’i x15“ ./ r

         
      


I A ‘T/we/“sz'cﬂiz’z‘ﬂgan .
BUSINESS FARMER

SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1925

Edited rind Published by
THE RURAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. Inc.
GEORGE M. SLOCUM. President
Mt. Clemens. Michigan
Detroit (mice—818 Washington Boulevard Bldg" Cadillac 9440
Represented in New York, Chicago. St Louis and Minneapolis by
the Associated Farm Papers, Incorporated
Member of Agricultural Publishers Association
Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation:

 

 

 

   
   
 
 
  
  
 
  
   
   
 

 

Milon Grinnell ____________________________________________________ ..Ma Edit-or
Mrs. Annie Taylor Farm om. Editor
Frank D. Wells ...._...Frnit Editor
J. Herbert Ferris. «.mdio Edit”
Gharles A. Svn‘ngle Leia] Edlt‘”
W, w, cote ___________________ __ Market PM)?”
Rev. John w, Ilollandnnm ________ ..Rcligious Editor
Carl H. Kncpfu_,______.__._,”“ ...... _. ,.._Spccisl (‘Orreslmmlfnt
Robert J, Mpcoigan . _ _ _ _ , _ , , _ . , o . _ ,  ...... "Circulation Manager
R. E. on‘mrh.  .................... ..,..Amht0r
Henry F, Ihpkins ____________ __ _-_ ______________ ._Plant Superintendent
Publ'shed Bi-chkly

ONE YEAR 80c. TWO YEARS $1. FIVE YEARS $2.

The date following your name on the address liliiei shows when
you: subscription cxpircs. In renewing kindly send this label to
avoid mistakes. Remit by check, draft, money-order or registered
lctter; stumps and currency are at your risk. \Ve acknowledge
by ﬁrst-class mail every dollar received.

14 lines to the column

 

. Advertlsln‘g Rates: 45c per agate line.
inch. 772 lincs to the page. Flat rates. ,

lee Stock and Auction Sale Advertlslng: We offer special low
rates to reputable brceders of live stock and poultry; write us.
RELIABLE ADVERTISERS

We will not knowingly accept the advertising of any person or
firm who we do not believe to be thoroughly honest 31nd reliable.
Should any reader have any cause for complaint against any ed-
vertiscr in these columns, the publisher would appreciate an im-

 

mediate letter bringing all facts to light. In every case when
writing my: "I saw your advertisement in The Michigan Bulmeﬂ
Farmerl" It will guarantee honest dealing.

 

“The Farm Paper 0/ Service"

 

SIX DOLLAR BEA NS

NCE upon a time, if our memory serves us
0 correctly, Tm: BuerEss FARMER was accused

of predicting higher prices on beans and then,
just to prove how human and not infallible even
we are, bean prices went lower!

Some thoughtless ones accused us because they
did not make the (expected proﬁt. We pointed
out to them that, in our articles we reiterated
time Without number that our statements were
based only on the facts as we saw them. That
we were risking only a guess. That we were
speculating on an assumption that might as
easily be in error as their own. Still so'mc said
we “had advised them to hold their beans!“

Now, on page four of this issue we are again
giving some facts which seem to point to higher
prices for beans, even a $6 price by April. XVe
believe it is the plain duty of a farm paper which
attempts to be of actual service to its readers
to collect and present such facts as determine
the market. Our market pages have been built
on this basis and to try to estimate the hundreds
of thousands of extra dollars we have put in the
pockets of farmers in Michigan who have followed
it, would produce some rather staggering ﬁgures.

That we are always “bulls” on the market for
Michigan farm products goes without saying.
We want bean prices to go to $6 or more if they
will. Not that we own a single bushel of beans,
nor have we over yet speculated in the markets,
but every dollar more we can get for the fzirmcrs
who read this magazine is an indirect proﬁt to us.

We are on your side of the fence. The Ill‘c—
dictions we collect on the future of any market
are passed on only for your information and what
you decide to do about holdingr or selling is
clearly your own business.

Here’s hoping anyway!

A

\VilA’i‘ ’I‘HIJ JCUUNUMIH'I‘S TELL US

WEEK or so ago thc so—cullcd “farm—ccono—

mists” inct in (‘hicugo and hold 21 guh—fcst
which unswci‘cd all of thc pi'olilcnis which
have been ll]l]W‘l‘—llll)fil in our minds for the past

several yczirs, \Vill‘iilPl‘ or not me i'i-u-ognlzwd flicni
:is economics

Seycrzil things said
whether or iioi you :icccpt tliwisi at full
for instant-c, ill‘. l4). (i. NOill‘Ff‘, pi'csidcnt of
:issociation said; “’l‘i'nio \\'21f~', and that not so long

lili'l‘l' :ii‘c iiitciwwt inc.
Wilma

ilic

‘ago, whcn conditions of thc industrial \i’()l'i{"l‘
were as bad as any the l'ai‘incr has sufl‘ci'cd, if
not worsc, and similar complaints wci‘c licard

from shop and factory workers. Today the situ—
ation has been csscntially altcred through build—
ing up a class-consmous group, dctcrmiucd to rc—
fuse conditions of employment which fell below
a progressively rising level, not to say worshiped,
as‘the American trade union standard of living.
The general public did not raisc the, laborer's
standard for him. Only because he was willing
to save and ﬁght and pay dues and stick by his
union are labor conditions as good as they are
today.”

It is not; always easy to pay the assessments
for the grange, farm bureau or local cooperative,
but as Dr. Nourse says, it is the only way out for
the farmers of America, just as it was the only

way out for the skilled laborer.

la}.- :“ ‘

 

Dr. David Friday, ex-president of the M. A. C.
struck another chord in the farm economics sym-
phony when he stated that “in the last 25 years

K 

  

creased output 40 per cent. This process will
continue for the future. We need not get unduly
excited about the number of people engaged in
agriculture.

“Business prosperity and depression have prac-

tically no effect on farm activity or output. Cli—
mate means more than the business cycle. In

this respect farming is very different from other
businesses. The farmer has a larger proportion
of ﬁxed capital than any other business man.
The other chief capital factor is land. And, un«

* fortunately, “the farmer usually buys land at the

wrong time. He can’t diversify his holdings, as
can the owner of securities. And he can’t put
in stop—loss orders. Some way of minimizing this
risk should be. found." ,

Dr. Friday stated that “increased taxes are sure
to cause trouble for the next decade. For a long
time taxes on farmswere light compared to those
on city property. But the desire for better roads
and schools has changed all this”.

Thus having settled most of the problems that
have been giving you and me come concern, the
meeting was adjourned until next year when, we
predict, the identical same problems will be cussed
and discussed and the same conclusions arrived
at. In the meantime we are reminded of the
negro who meets a “brudder” on the street who
asks him “why all the smiles?" “Cuse ah got a
white man workin' fo’ me!” “You got a white
man workin’ fo' yo’, what doin’?” “Just doin’
all mah worryin’!” “Doin’ yo’ worryin’, why
nigger where yo’ gwain’ get money to pay him
wid?” “I dunno, ’ats do fust job 0’ worryin’
I gib him!”

So it appears the American farmer has some—
body worryin’ for him and as long as the econ-
omists know where their daily sustenance is com—
ing from, we should worry!

HANDS OFF!

HE signs of an encroachment by the depart—
ment of Commerce on the department of
Agriculture have been manifest from the be—

ginning of the Harding administration. Herbert
Hoover may have simply gravitated naturally to
wanting a hand in the agricultural pic, but his
suggestions have been anything but well received
by the men in the latter department.

The department of Agriculture belongs to that
group of American citizens who farm the fertile
acres of this country. It has a clean-cut job for
itself, so important and far-reaching that there
is not, in our opinion, any necessity of its over—
laping into other departments and by the same
token it needs none of their meddling.

All of which naturally leads us into the sub—
jcct of who is to be the next Secretary of Agri-
culture? Frankly we do not know! We havo
had a suspicion or two but that is as far as it
has ever gottenhonce or twice we profess to even
having held our breath, but perhaps that was
cnti‘rely unnecessary because things will go along
mostly the same lines irrespective of who accepts
the portfolio. And there are several who would
“accept” it, We understand.

“’0 hope the next Secretary of Agriculture will
be at man who has made what he has from furm~
ing or live—stock raising. Wc hope he has no
proscnt interests in the packing business, the
fertilizer business, thc railways or even the farm
paper publishing business! W'hat a genuine and
unique thing President Coolidge could do by ap-
pointing a former as Secretary of Agriculture.

AWAKIGNIGI)!
\XTE zippi'cciuto the support giycn by more than

onc furin paper to tho campaign we have
liccn waging since lust summer for bottcr
pi'olcction at. railway crossings to tho \chiclc

oi'ix'cr.

it is obvious that something must he done and
ihut lwcziusc in (l largc incusui‘o it is thc dwcllcrs
on farms and in rural communitics who are in
thc groutcr pci'contugc of cows the victims.

Crossings in inctropolitan citios in Ariici'iczi zii‘c
universally pi'otcctcd, cithcr by gi‘mlwscpai'ulions
or gates, but in England and on tho contiiicnt.
it. is quite as unheard of to hch on unprotectml
crossing in the country :is in the city. This is
as it should be.

There are a. hunder crossings in Michigan of
railway tracks and main traveled statc trunk~
lines, where the only possible warning to an ap—
proaching driver who in strange to the road, is
a small sign, which he may or may-not see. All
too often. our first. warning of an approaching
crossing in the rumble of our wheels as we cross
over it.

'I'hoso’ who say, "lot the motorist take care of
himself”, are not aware apparently that the gov—
r-rnmcnt requires that the public shall be pro-
tcctcd against itself. We require that every mov-
ing belt in a factory shall be protected by a cover—
ing. That every stairway shall have a railing.
That every elevator shall have double gates.

10 per cent mono   farming'thave 111-.

 
    

museum we
guarded? -. _

We do not claim that the railway should be
required to protect its crissings without any state
or government aid. The cost would undoubtedly
be staggering. But we do claim that state high-
way and railway executives must give this sub-
ject the consideration it deserves. The auto-
mobile brought with it a problem which must
be met and now is the time to meet it.

allow railway»  to r go uh- I

THE “'IMMIN HAVE A W’INNIN‘!

Y the narrow margin of one vote, Mrs. Myra
Wood Cheney was elected as president of
the Ingham County Farmers’ Club and in—

cidently established the record of being the ﬁrst

' woman president of that organization in 53 years.

We seem to feel some unnecessary apprehension
in the air around Mason and perhaps even, in
some localities where the news is ﬁrst learned
from its reading here. Shades of Lydia Pank—
hurst that we have come to this!

For our part we cannot look at the elevation
of a capable woman to the highest ofﬁce in a
farmers’ organization as anything but an omen
of better living conditions on the farms. That is
one of the penalties or privileges, as you choose
to make it of farm life, that the man and woman
are in fact, partners in not only the home' life,
but the business activities of the farm.

Not a few of the most notable farming suc-
cesses in Michigan are directly attributed to the
head-work of an ambitious Wife, and that man
faces his daily problems only half armed who has
not taken into his conﬁdence and counseled with
the one who, of all is most interested in his suc:
cess; his Wife.

So the selection of Mrs. Cheney is in reality
an acknowledgment, in one of the best farming
counties in Michigan of the part the women play
in the farming business in this state and we are
proud of every man and woman too, who voted
her this signal honor. ‘

Michigan will never fall backward as an agri-
cultural state so long as good wives and mothers
hold an interest in her future!

TAX EQUALITY FOR 'ALL BONDS

OGER W. BABSON, international statistican.
B says: “Unless the state, county, city and

towu tax—exempt bond issue is curtailed.
taxes necessary to pay interest and retire them
will bankrupt the farmers of this country. The
present increase in taxes which results from the
demand for these nontaxable bonds is raising
havoc with land values, the cost of farm pro-
ducts and rural conditions in general."

Every dollar added to annual farm taxes re-
duces the farm values more than $30 an acre;.
for the average net income on farm lands for 50
years is only about three per cent, and a dollar
is three per cent on a $30 investment. Just now,
farm produce prices are higher, owing to the set-
tlement of German reparations, and the opening
of a better foreign market. Farmers are paying
off bills, repairing farms, and some laying up a.
small surplus. Jut more tax—free state and
municipal bonds were issued during the first six
months of 1924 than ever before during a like
period. The tax—free bond issue is catching up
with the farm prosperity. When it does, good
prices will not help the farmer or any other in—
dustrial investor; he merely pays more' taxes to
pay interest on more tax—free bonds, and they
will run for 20 to 30 years!

The Dickinson bill is before congress again
this winter, with a graduated tax on non—taxable
securities, to cquulize their values and burdens
with other property and individual investments
that, have hocn paying all the tax. The Farm
Mortgage llziiikci's’ Association of America re—
ccntly dcclurod for a constitutional amendment
rcvoking thc cxcmption privileges of tax—free se—
ciii‘ilics. ’l‘hc amendment had almost enouzrh
votes to pass it last spring; and some of its
ciicniics fullcd in the primaries, so it may have
it good majority this winter.

’l‘ux equality is the one sure road to business
(lcvclopiiiont on :i sound basis.

 

I N i I] V I1)llAi i l NDIF'FERENCE

N Europe it is not uncommon to find buildings
1 several hundreds of years old, that have nev—
er seen a ﬁre other than in a ﬁreplace; there
are whole villages that have not seen a runaway
ﬁre in centuries. The more extensive use of
brick and stone, as compared with the almost
universal use of wood for American homes, re-
duces the ﬁre hazard somewhat. But the great
difference is in the care taken to prevent ﬁre.
America has ten times as much ﬁre loss as the
most incendiary part of Europe.

To eliminate that nine-to-one' diﬂerental in
America, would not invalidate the principle or
change the practice of ﬁre insurance; it Would
only make ﬁre insurance more universal, at far
lower cost. '

THE CA US E

 

 


 

 

 

   

BMCK’S REAL ESTATE AGENCY

“The writer has just been reading
with considerable interest the Janu-
ary 3rd issue of THE Busmr‘ss FARM-
»: and have noted your comment, on
page 13, regarding the Warren Mc—
Rae Farm Agency of Logansport, In—
diana.

“We recently obtained the circular,
pm. of Black’s Real Estate Agency,
Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, and as
the methods of the tw0 concerns ap—
pear to be somewhat similar, we are
wondering if you have had any ex—
perience with, or occasion to inves—
tigate the last mentioned concern."

3-7ES, we investigated, or rather We
tried to investigate, Black’s ln—
ternational Selling Service, of
Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, but we
could not conclude our inVestigation
because they would not reply to any
of our letters. Ah we ask for in our
letters to them was the names and
addresses of people who had bought
or sold farm property through them,
and surely an honest company would
be pleased to give any information
desired. ~

There are some ﬁrms in business
who send out very attractive folders
and booklets and their letters con—
tain wonderful promises but when a
“victim” begins to get inquisitive
and insist that they reply to all the
questions asked they soon lose in—
terest in him.

We have no faith in any scheme
where one advances money to some—
one in another state, a stranger, with
the understanding that he is to sell
his property for him. Nor will we
ever have, until one of these con—
cerns proves to our satisfaction that
they did make one satisfactory sale,
supplying us with the names and ad—
dresses of the people involved. If
they want to make the sale they
should be glad to handle it on a com—
mission basis and receive their com-
mission when the sale is completed.

NAILS CLOSED TO VENDORS OF
TUBERCULOSIS NOSTRUM
N the issuance of two fraud orders
1 against substantially the same
personnel, advertising an alleged
treament for tuberculosis under the
name of the General Remedies Com-
pany and an alleged “gland” treat—
ment and an obscene device under
the name of the Vital—O Gland Com—
pany, the Post Office Department has
rendered signal service to thousands
of invalids by protecting their health
and savings, and also to every adver—
tiser who desires to have public con—
fidence in advertising increased rath—
cr than diminished. .
For some time a group composed
of J. A. Gurley, H. N. (lurley. E. l’.
Gurley and It. T. Nash have operated
the Vital—O Gland Company, whose
advertising has not only played upon
the current “gland treatment” super-
stition. but has offered. a device the
mere description ol’ which is too ob—
scene for further rcpililion. Not con—
tent with exploiting tho uncduczttod
and possibly porvcrting thousands of
credulous persons, this same group
began, curly in 1924, to exploit those
:iﬁ‘lictod Willi tuberculosis.
“llAltlliAN” was tho name first
selected for tho preparation ol’l'crcd
to sufl'crcrs from rcspirntory discus-pg
through ncwspzlpcr ndwrlising and
follow—up litornturc. ’l‘hc lcttorhead
of the company also cxploizcd “lth—
’I‘Elttll<ll\i" for stomach. bowcl, kid—
ney and liver disordcrs, and “AAllu‘X”
for rheumatism and all (lisoascs of
the blood. lloth the newspaper ad~

" The @ollection 130%

cc
.

        

y

 

The purpose of this department'ls to P”-
tocr. our subsorlbers {rom fraudulent dealing!
or unfair treatment by persons or concerns at
a distance.

In every case we will do our best to make
I satisfactory settlement or force action. for
which no charge for our services wlll ever in
made, providing:

1.—The claim ls made by a paid-up sub<
mlber to The Business Farmer.

.—The claim is not more than 6 mos. old.
3.——-Tho claim is not local or between poo—
ple within easy distance of one another.
These should he settled at ﬁrst hand and not

attempted by mail.
Address all letters, glvlng full particulars.
amounts, dates, etc., enclosing also your ad.

dress label from the from. cover of any Issue
to prove that you are a paid-up subscriber.
THE BUSINESS FARMER. Collectlon Box
In. Clemens. Mich. I
Report Ending January 8. 1925
Total number claims ﬁled
l—munt lnvolv d
Total number
Amount Scour

$26,238.49
.._........ 0
....$24,015.73

 

 

  

e .............. __
claims settled
ed .............. ..

 

 

 

é‘PUBLISLHERis DESK

 

vertising and the literature conveyed
the inference that at last a speciﬁc
had been discovered for tuberculosis.
The endorsement (if a Dr. E. M. Da—
vis, described in the newspaper copy
as_“a prominent -l)enver physician”
was featured for the purpose of per—
suading readers that the advertiser
offered a product of real therapeutic
value. Investigation by the National
Vigilance Committee disclosed that
Dr. Davis is a graduate
College of Osteopathy. Dr. Davis is
not connected with any hospital, san—
itarium or clinic. There is little
doubt; that. Dr. Davis prolited by per—
mitting the use of his name.

The follow—up literature contained
quantities of testimonials, some of
which were signed with the names of
patients at the Craig Colony near
Denver. Inquiry made by the Colo—
rado Tuberculosis Association, in co-
operation with the National Vigilance
Committee, disclosed that “Haelan”
was donated to some of the patients
by some man connected with the con—
cern manufacturing the product.
These patients Were given a free
sample, and in order to receive the
second bottle, had to sign a testi-
monial. One individual who signed
a testimonial in September, 1923,
was in December of the same year a
bed patient in the Colony.

Plausibility was further added to
the Haelan advertising by the state—
ment that the advertiser’s guarantee
was “backed by a one thousand d01—
lar deposit in the American Bank and
Trust Company, Denver, which is for
the sole purpose of paying any just
claims for refunds.” Inquiry of the
bank disclosed that it had no con-
trol of this account. Nevertheless.
the bank issued a letter to this de—
positor, which was reproduced in fac—
simile by the advertiser as evidence
of its alleged integrity and responsi—
bility.

Persons who will mislead people
in the matter of their health are no
better than murderers in our opinion
because they raise false hopes in
the brasts of many sufferers who do
not discover that the medicine is of
no value until it is too late. If you
are ill go to a good physician, take no
chances.

FORD MOTOR. OF CANADA
IF you are the owner of a Ford car
I it is more than likely that you
have received a nicely engrossed
“special subscription privilege” to
buy fifty “bankers shares” of stock
in the Ford Motor Company of Cana—
da, Limited, at $6.50 per share.

The ’irculars enclosed with the
certificate point out, naturally
cnough. that had you bought with

Henry Ford even a few hundred dol~
lars worth of stock in his original
company you would now be dwelling
in marble halls, with private yachts
and other plnythings ot’ the idle rich,
while you yearly earnings, had you
hold this stock "would be in seven fig-
urts!

’l‘ho circulars ore signed by the
Empire. Stale (‘onipunv of New York,
who wo assume are nrcparcd and do
furnish lcgitinlzito slinrcs of stock in
the Ford Motor Company of Canada.

Our im'csiigution Iliscloscs how—
cvcr that tho so~cnllcd “bankers
:‘l1:1rcs”~~~What on alluring unmet-~-

rcprcsnnt in rculity ,iust l/ltltlth of
a share of capital stock in that coni~
puny. Now on January third, the
price of Ford Motor Company of (lillh
uda on the curb market was $505 per
share, so in ot‘t'criug it to you at, 55650
the Empire State Company are not
exactly giving you a “special privi—

loge”, are they?
Mel-{Ali} lltl’l‘S ANOTHER
“’l‘lGN-SPO’l‘”
“I listed my farm with Warren

McRac, Logansport, 'lnd. I sent him
$10 for listing fee the 11th day of
October, 1924. I never heard from
him.”

 

THANKS! «
an old man and have read and
for many farm papers but
never for a business farm paper like
yours. I wish I could have had it 40
years ago—A, Claggett, Macomb County,
Michigan. '

I am
subscribed

 

Have paid scarce attention to your
paper until the last few issues and am
beginning to realize it is the real thing.
Send it on for two years—Austin Mason.
Lenawpc County, Michigan.

 

Of the Still-

 

 

 

FARMERS

First Mortgage Real Estate

 

 

(229)

Gold Bonds

For New Year investment
or re-investment We are
offering several excep-
tionally attractive issues
of selected first mortgage
bonds. Write us for our

list.

Write for Eooklet AG1373

Tax Free in Michigan
Normal Income Tax Up to 4% Paid by Borrower

61/2%

Federal Bond 89’
Mortgage Company

FEDERAL BOND & MORTGAGE

BUILDING,

(1373)

DETROIT

 

 

If the ordinary fcnce will last 10

years, thcn"Galvanncalcd"Square
D *al should last 30 years. By a
newly patcntcd process we weld 2
t03timcsmorezincintothew/112w—
bearing steel fence \virc. Therefore,

Gaﬁhhﬁﬁé’aled
Square Deal Fence

(No Extra Price)
far outlasts any other farm fence.
Get this extra long wear at no extra
price. Ifthc fence you buy ismarked
with a Red Strand you are sure to
get long years of extra service.

Get these Three FREE

Write today for copies of official tests that
prove our claims. Also get our catalog
which tells all about: the stiff, picket-like
stay wires that require fewer posts and
stop sagging; the Square Deal Knot that
cannot slip; ﬁrm tension, etc; including
Ropp’sCalculator, handiest reference book
around the farm. All 3 free toland owners.

KEYSTONE STEEL & WIRE C0.
4848 Industrial St., Peoria, Ill.

 

WHEN \VRITING TO
ADVERTISERS PLEASE NIENTION
‘THE BUSINESS FARDIER

 

 

 Til-IE 905mm

MQCCAS IN. ‘

5"FARM: 

an. ‘t-v'* " i

1 lutcly thetoughcst, longest wearing ant

2mth comfortable 1" I
Iomlc. l‘osilin'ciy \\':lit‘l’lrl'titlf
' 'l‘ltl“..\’l‘l‘7l’ ’l‘tl \‘fl'l'llﬂ'l‘AN
.‘H'lll. ﬁlm-curlu \nlog.
' lwt‘l.
illstllw. lil'al
to “car liltv iron. (
. you'll Ill-\cr in: h.l:i\iil'ti
..vvt~. Yo‘l :‘1llll1'i i\1i\ tin
ulmrc ' has tlmt $1.1m.
51ml lrl'lt't’ minus it'll |l|.i
Men’s sizes: 8 to 11.
\N‘de w . ".‘I. ." ttt‘,
Boy’s bthl~I 3. Tan
Wide widths. Price,
Not t‘. (i. ll. suiltitwt lo
Huch Pitch ll. llttl Hili>iltWi
think thou are Hm ‘
;.ou hm:- otc: .wcn.
t‘\]lt’ll,\'t‘.

ht'll-i iilt

ljﬁkltit‘ solc.
Hob» il~.lillt‘l" c
o'iuhll'

lust .‘iltll'n‘ {or the

'incr‘s \Vork Shoe cver

. Sl’l'll‘lAllllY
l) BARNYARU H
\\'l1oit§'_
«mm
rctnn llmul‘
lncc .\m1 try ;
will no) ollic
'st‘. sun's cist-
Ullr tare-4‘.

$3.89
only..  ';.

‘lulll' approval. ’;.
. ll‘ _\|l'i ' '

ountcr,

lel'tl.
Tan only.

mom-3

‘lll back at our 

(irdcr a pull“ today.

~" E. A. ROBERTS SHOE
., 325 No. Franklin St.,

SAGINAW,

 

COMPANY
MICH.

 

   
  

Got
Save
to

h
on

home

  

Send tor IRE! BOOK

“A Kolamom

1"_J»“_,,J,,Dil.cct to You»

. (. dim-.4

 

Cash or

back guaran
manta.
. 630,000 custom

    

  

manufacturer’s prices.
[-4 to 1-2 on stoves.
ICC

if“ 5%" 11.21:“ “i”;
o 00 8 ur 3 e8 cs
‘ lefn our ' ea a'flstory.

7

e. pnyments—terma
si'l’ _

too. 24-. our-chip
Sodoya' trial in you;
er: en-
lamnzoo quality.
m

  
  

 

 
 
   

Kalamazoo.” ' ,

  
   

, .
Lin: *
, .

 

 

 

 


 

   

'WE oan'r SPELL ANY MORE
. ' By Anne Cam'pb’ell
He’s growing'older every way,
The baby we adore!
We noticed it the other day.
We can’t spell any more!

I said at dinner, “Well, I guess
We’ll see a s li—o"

Before I’d ﬁnished, he cried. “Yes
That’s where I want to go!"

It used to be if we should talk
0f c—a-n—d-y,

He'd just as likely take a walk,
But now he stays near by.

And if we say, “To b-e-d
Somebody must run."

He sighs and cuddles close to me!
No secrets from our son!

He’s growing up! He goes to school,
The baby we adore!

He‘s just a bit too old to fool.
We can’t spell any more!

A BUDGET FOR. TIME
'1‘ ANY liOiiScwives have found it
 economicle Io budgct/not only

their household expenses. lllll
also their time (if course it is im-
possible to determine beforehand
just how many minutes must be
spent on this or that task, but after
some experience it can be estimated
with a fair degree of accuracy. Lay—
ing out the morning or afternoon, or
both, .with a certain schedule of
things to do has helped more than
one housewife to accomplish her
round of duties with a minimum of
lost effort and worry about What
ought to “come next”. On the other
hand, no one should become a slave
to a system just becausc there is a
system. The system should be made
to serve its creator, and not vice
versa, as is sometimes the case.

BAKED l’OTA 'I‘OES

00D specialists agree that the po—
F tato baked with its skin on is
much more valuable than the
pared and boiled potato. Since this
plentiful home grown vegetable has
a valuable amount of the minerals
most important to the body——iron,
lime, phosphorous, as well as of the
third vitamin. why pour these desir—
able materials (lOVVIl the kitchen sink
when they may be saved by baking?
At the college of agriculture in
New York State the foods instructors
wash and scrub the potatoes thor-
oughly and bake them forty-ﬁve min—
utes to an hour in a hot oven (400°
to 450° F.) Be sure to have the
oven hot before the potatoes are
put in. To test the potatoes do not
pierce them with a fork, but squeese
them with the hand wrapped in a
towel. When soft, break the skin to
keep them from being soggy and
serve. If desired, a bit of butter and
a dash of paprika may be placed in
the opening made in the potato.

 

FUMIGATING WITH SULPHUR
O rid a house of bed bugs and
other insects proceed as follows:

First open up all clothes
drawers and hiding places. Then
close up all the rooms, plugging

with cloth all cracks about the win—
dows and doors so the fumes of burn—
ing sulphur cannot. escape. The
amount of sulphur required depends
on the Size of the room. Find the
number of cubic feet in the room by
multiplying the length by the width
by the height. For each one thou-
sand cubic feet use three pounds of
sulphur.

Sulphur may be safely burned in
this manner; place the sulphur in an
old iron kettle or any metal kettle
that will not be required again, since
the sulphur will spoil the kettle for
use as a. cooking utensil. The kettle
must not leak. Set the kettle on
bricks in a tub in the bottom of
which is two inches or so of water.
Make a hole or crater in the top of
the sulphur in the kettle. Pour into
the crater about half a cupful of
wood alcohol (methylated spirits);
touch a match to the alcohol and
leave the room. Keep the room
tightly closed up for three or four
hours. The bugs will be finished
within that time also any eggs.

It is advisable to do the whole
house at once, since this is the only
way one can be sure of getting rid
of all of the bugs. It is advisable,
tOo, before fumigating with sulphur
to remove from the house all articles
of silver or other metal liable to be
tarnished by the sulphur. The action
of. the sulphur fumes is strengthened
if‘rthe house is moderately warm, at
least not cold, when fumigated. Bed

,

  
  
 
 
  
  

 

pattern.

with one.
this for these readers.

and look nice, I think.

over was before and I need
your help, so let us work
together —- we will help
each other.

Address letters: Mrs.

 

 

(i I n w; '-

Tbe Fr He

LAD‘eDéuztment for the “’an

Edited by MRS. ANNIE TAYLOR

on home-made slippers and included a small illustration of the
Several have written me that they were afraid they
could not cut a satisfactory pattern and asked if I would furnish them
I have a pattern, about a size 5, and will cut duplicates of
If there are any others who would like to make
a pair of these slippers but are unable to cut a satisfactory pattern I
will be. pleased to serve them. The slippers are rally wiry easy to make

DEAR FOLKS: In our December 6th issue I published an article

1 have resolved to make our page better during 1925 than it

W  ,

Annle Taylor. care The Buslness Farmer, Mt. Clemens. Mlchlaan.

  

  
 

'\

 

 

 

/.

 

 

bugs are dormant in cold weather
and harder to kill in that state than
when active, as they are when the
temperature is reasonably high, say
from 70 to 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
Simpler remedies against bed bugs
may be tried if the method described
cannot be used. A feather dipped in
coal oil and drawn through cracks in
the bedstead or wall will kill every
bug it touches and eggs as well. Or
the following mixture may be applied
in the same way: Corrosive sublim-

ate, one ounce; alcohol, one pint;
spirits of turpentine, one quarter of
a pint. . Coal oil and the mixture des-
cribed will kill every bug they come
in contact with, but the bugs cannot
be completely eradicated by these
means since it is impossible to reach
all hiding places, and a few bugs left,
will in a short time produce an infes-
tation as serious as before the treat-
ment was applied. The only effective
way to rid a house of bed bugs is to
fumigate it thoroughly.

The Baby’s Health Food

OME people still disapprove of the
amount of attention that we lav—
ish these days on babies. “In

the good old days,” they lament,
“children grew into healthy men and
women and lived to a good old age,
without regulated sleep and prescrib-
ed feeding.” What they forget is,
that a few generations ago only the
hardy baby survived at all. Babies
that could not be nursed by their
mothers had a small chance to live,
because medical science knew little
or nothing about satisfactory sub-
stitutes for breast feeding except the
use of cow’s milk.

The most important thing to a
baby is his food. True enough, its
proper preparation requires time and
inﬁnite care, but the mother’s re-
ward is more than enough to pay for
the time spent.

One of the ﬁrst things to learn
about a baby’s stomach is that it can-
not digest foods suitable for adults
any more than his muscles are able
to lift a chair. Only suitable food can
build up the necessary strength and
resistance he will need in later life
to meet physical and mental strains.
First in the diet comes milk, moth-
er’s milk preferably. If the mother
cannot nurse her baby, then his food
should be prepared and adjusted un—
der the careful supervision of a phy-
sician. But even quite young babies
can have more than milk for their
meals. Not many years ago, the
mother who fed a child under six
months anything else was popularly
supposed to be jeopardizing his life.
Nowadays medical authorities agree
that children grow faster and are
stronger if orange or tomato juice
is given them by the second month,
and carefully strained vegetable juice
by the ﬁfth or sixth month. Even
egg—yolk may be beneficial at that
age, but it should only be fed under
deﬁnite directions from the doctor.

Thoroughly cooked cereals, in
small quantities, may be added to
the diet of the healthy baby by the
seventh or eighth month, and the
amount of fruit—juice and vegetable
juice may then be increased. During
the ﬁrst part of the second year,
mashed vegetables, a. small amount
at a time, may also be included.

Lucy H. Gillett in her recent book,
“Food for Health’s Sake”, gives her
readers an average menu for the tod-
dler, that is, the baby between two
and three years old, which we give
below:

Breakfast—4:30 to 7:30 A. M.

Cereal—2 to 4 tablespoonfuls of any well-
cooked cereal.

Milk—«l cu .

{read—1 sice (day old).

Butter on bread after 14th month.

‘ Luncheon—10 to 11 A
' .Fruit juice—~l to
pnce, prune pulp, apple sauce,
or pear.

tablespoon'fuls' of orange
very ripe peach

Dlnneo—‘lz M. to 1 P. M.

Cereal, or potato soup, $5 cup, or broth with
cereal cooked to it.

Egg—3 or 4 times a week after 14th month.

Milk—1 cup (me be given in the coup).

Bread—1 sice ( ay old).

Butter on bread after 14th month.

Vegetable strained or_ chopped ﬂno——1 to 8
tenspoonfuls .(niay be given in the soup or as
a separate dlSh)-—Splnilch, Lettuce, Green Peas,
(jarrots, Young Beets.‘ Potatoes, String-beans.
(.elery, Peas, Young Onions. -

Dessert—mustard, Junket,

pudding.
Luncheon—8:30 P. M.
Bread—1 slice.

Milk—1 cup.
Supper—5 to 8 P. M.
germl—2 tablespoonfuln.

iilk—l cup.
2 mltablespoonfule may be given

cornstarch or rice

Fruit—«l to
after the 18th mon

Bad habits of eating can often be
avoided by not allowing the baby
even to taste the food that his elders
eat. If the highly seasoned dishes
appeal to his palate he will cry for
more. Then, if the indulgent moth—
er yields to his demand, she lays the
foundation for future digestive trou-
bles and other illnesses.

“It is so hard to teach my children
to like the foods that are good for
them,” we often hear mothers com-
plain. This is a sad truth which has
taxed the patience and good judg-
ment of thousands of mothers. There
is only one method that will simplify
this problem, and that is, not to al-
low the baby to have his own way in
this matter from the very start. Do
not permit him to develop a ﬁnicky
appetite if you would have him heal-
thy and sweet—tempered.

Healthful eating habits begun in
childhood are one of the greatest
preventives of tuberculosis. Malnu-
trition, one of the causes of this dis-
ease, often results from a pampered
appetite. For this reason the Na-
tional Tuberculosis Association and
its afﬁliated organizations spend
large sumes of money every year to
help teach the American public how
to eat healthfully.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
  
  
  

‘ﬁ,

  

L ! I
can lay some claim to recogni-
tion as a health food as well as

the much heralded orange. Apple en-
thusiasts among the home economics
teachers at the state college of agri-
culture of New ‘York recently made
this claim for the apple, as it co
tains all three vitamins in sma.
amounts. Though oranges have I
much larger amount of vitamins
and C, it is probable that New York
state people eat three times as ma
apples as oranges. If this happe
the scales balance and one gets t
same amount of the vitamins. Appla}
have one important advantage ova
oranges. They contain more irdl
and this important mineral is mu,
needed in the diet for making 1'
blood corpuscles and keeping that.
in good working condition. Wh “
there is more food value in fre ,'
than in cooked apples, newly cooked
apple sauce is good, although vita-
min C disappears in cooking. Enough
good fruit value is left, however, so
that food experts say, “the more ap-
ple sauce the better."

 

 

Personal Column

 

 

Home-Made Tam.——Isn’t the tam shown
here cute? Would you like to make one
for yourself or daughter, or both? I have
a model of this tam, about large enough
to fit a medium-sized doll, but correct in

 plant. ml;
1 p ,_ l

\

  

     
  
  

\

     

 

 

every way, and I will gladly loan it to
any reader who would like to see how
it is made and cut a pattern. You coul‘i‘
cut the pattern according to the size
wanted. The tam was sent to me by
Mrs. Morgan of Vicksburg.

 

 

—if you are well bred!

 

 

 

I

Quasi-lntroduction.——A quasi—introduc-
tion is a polite evasion for a real intro-
duction, made in order not to present to
each other persons accidentally brought
together, when it is not certain that one
or both would care to become acquainted.
When talking with an upholsterer, for in-
stance, and a friend enters the room, ack-
wardness may be avoided by informally
including her in the conversation without
actually introducing her: Mr. Bro.
thinks the couch should be covered wi.h
a puce brocade.” This permits the friend
to give an opinion without meeting Mr.
Brown. Or, a hostess talking to one guest
may turn to a second and say: "Mrs.
Coutant, Mrs. Gray just mentioned meet-

. 1 " con-hid fashioned'apple are. "

ing General Gaillard when she was inf

Paris. You know him too, don’t you?“
This indirect quasi-introduction leaves it.
open to either lady to discontinue ac—
quaintanceship after conversation. In a
quasi—introduction, when a man has been
presented to a woman, the woman nods.
ﬁrst in taking leave. To offer her hand
is as much as to say she is willing to
accept a more formal presentation.

 

 

5'

 

The Runner’s Bible

(Copyright by Houghto—r-i‘Miﬂiin Co.)

 

 

And in whatsoevrr house ye enter, ﬁrst
gay, Peace be to this house. Luke 10:5.

Let this benediction be in your heart
whenever you come into the presence of
another, it will help greatly to bring
and you into empathetic accord (P l.
2:2.) Shun every one while you “feel
irritable." Not only that, but the moment
you feel irritability coming upon you go
into seciet chamber of your being and

be perfectly quiet (Mark 4:39) until the I

assurance takes possession of you that in
heaven where you truly abide, everything
moves in perfect harmony. Divine Truth
.will banish the lulu-nth of material hot.
The man who allows himself to be chronic—
oly irritable is never a Christian; he in
the maternal of murderers, killﬁi _.
victims through the multiplicity 0,,

,,,.
.rV



 

  
 

 

 

E
z
i
a
i
i
l
l
l

 
 
 
 
    
   


  

 

 

 

  

 

 

 
 

Cream. of Cheese'SouCp1 i
Cele ves

W ‘Oodﬁsh Balls
Baked Potatoes

Baked Macaroni and Peas
Spinach Salad

Cheese Salad Fig Pudding
Coffee ‘

*Oodﬂsh Bella—2 cupfuls mashed pota-
toes. 11/3 cupfuls shredded codﬁsh, 1 egg,
1 tablespoonful fat, melted, 1,1; teaspoon-
ful pepper. Put codﬂsh in wire strainer,
let cold water run through and squeeze
dry. Mix the hot, unseasoned potatoes
with codﬂsh. To this add the melted fat,
beaten egg and pepper. Beat well. Shape
in balls and fry in deep fat until a golden
brown color.

 

 

RECIPES

 

 

Ooﬂee Bread.——% cupful milk, 1/; cup—
ful melted fat, 17$ cake compressed yeast,
1 teaspoonful salt, 2 eggs, 1 cupful sugar,
1 teaspoonful lemon extract, 1/, cup-ful
chopped English walnut meats, ﬂour.
Heat milk slightly, then add ﬂour to
make batter and yeast dissolved in little
lukewarm water. Allow to rise until light.
the. add fat, eggs well beaten, sugar,
lemon, salt, and enough flour to make
stir dough. Knead ten minutes and let
rise until light. Place in greased pan
and let rise again. Spread with melted
fat and sprinkle with sugar, cinnamon
and nuts. Bake in hot even an hour.
Suicient for one large loaf.

 

lot-fold Purses—1A? cup barley, pearl
1 quart water, 3 pints white stock, 1%
cupful cream, 1 yolk of egg, 2 tablespoon-
fuls fat, 4 tablespoonfuls cooked carrot
balls, 4 tablespoonfuls cooked peas, salt,
pepper, and paprika to taste, diced toast
or tried bread. Put barley into sauce—
pan of cold water, bring to boil, let boil

AIDS TO Goon DRESSING

BE SURE AND SEND IN YOUR SIZE
4088. A Pretty Afternoon Frock—Metal brocade and satin are here combined.

alsobe
veto

To make 'as illustrated. in the large View for a
and 8% yards of plain material 36 inches wide.
is required.

1955. A Simple Morning Frock for Stout or
underarm darts.

chain? The Pattern is cut in 8 Sizes: 34
A 3 me

is 1% yard.

“/
A Smart Blouse Dress for Youthful Fianna—Jersey or ﬂannel could be used for this model.
The Pattern .is cut in 4 Sizes: 14, 18, 18 and 20
inch material. If bodice is made of lining it will

4904.
It is also good for wool crepe, kssha or satin.
yarn. A 16 gear sine requires 4%» yards of 36
require % yar . .

£964.- A Stylish Frock for the Woman of Matur
model will at once appeal to the woman of generous

silh. for charmeen, broadcloth or velvet.
48 and 50 inches bust measure. .
at the foot is 2%. ards, with laits extended.
material 95 yard W1 be l‘eqllil‘ﬁ.

4986. A Stylish Model'ﬁor the Growing Glrl.——Here we have a fashion’s latest expression. the
mic Blousc, developed for the school girl in

most popular lines.
bod;Y portions which
mo e1

  
  

v" i

'6‘ .

tern is cut in 4 Sizes:

    

as

       
 
       
 
  
 

. VOW?!
25:23».

- 4'1.

     
     
      

v.“ ‘

the front.
trimming.
and 6 years.

i
I

 id

3

p'ide will be required.

an
yv

   

5

  

\. ‘ ’

4 Sizes: 2, 3, 4 and 6

would be attractive

(mired.

 

    

attractive in crepe or crepe _de chine combined with figured silk or embroidery. It may be de-
ped in simpler style as shown in the small views; without the tunic.
ﬁber 3 38, 40, and 42 inches bust measure.
38 inch size will require 3%. yards of ﬁgured material,
If made with long sleeves % yard more material

_ . , . Slender. Figures.—-This becoming model is fitted by
This style is plain but attractive, and is convenient and comfortable with its front

. . 3 . . 4 . . .
h 3158 Will require 3% yards of \Qﬁ‘ inch material. The width of the dress at lower edge

o~ Figure—The slenderizing lines of this attractive

. The Pattern is out in 8 Sizes: 36 . . , .
38 inch also requires 4% yards of 40 inch material. The width
If the collar is made as illustrated 0f contrasting

The skirt is joined to long

.iiiay be of lining. This ,
will be good in velveteen and homespun

combined, using the velveteen for the Blouse; or,

one could use homespun or wool repp. The Pat-

To make as illustrated for a 12
require 3%, yards _of 40
yard of lining 40 inches wide for the iinderbody,
and V4. yard of contrasting material for trimming.

4949. A Jaunty Coat Style for a Small Girl. U
—Chiﬂ.’on broadcloth, Velour, or velvet Would be J
pleasing for this model.
very comfortable. Tiny
Braid or fur would be attractive for “
The Pattern is cut in 4 S‘ ,
. . _If made of one material 2 yards
40 inches Wide Wlll be requ1red for a 4 year size.
If collar and cuffs and a facmg at lower edge of . "'
cost are of contrasting material % yard 54 inches
' . I To trim with bands of
ur 3% inches Wide Will require 2% yards.

4947. I A Practical Popular Suit for the Small
Boys—This style expresses comfort and case. It
is an ideal play or school suit for a little boy.
‘elveteenh serge, Jersey cloth or flannel may be
used for its development.

I ears. A 4 ear size re—
quires 2% yards of 27 inch inateriaLy

) 9967. ‘A Pretty Frock for Mother's Girl.—
Irinted veile, or crepe, crepe de chine or pongee

for this design.
may be finished short as in the small view or with
the long and coxiiiortable bishop portions. The
Pattern is out in 4.Sizes: 4, 6. 8 and 10 years.
A _6 year 5116 requires 2 yards of 32 inch ma«
terial if made With long sleeve portions.
the long sleeves 1% yard
band cuffs of contrasting material 96 yard is re-

ALL PATTERNS 12c EACH...
3 FOR 30c POSTPAID

Order from this or former issues of The Busineu
Farmer. giving number and slap your
name and address plainly.

App 100 FOR FALL AND WINTER
1924-1925 FASHION BOOK

Address all orders for patterns to
Pattern Department

THE BUSINESS FARMER
Mt. Clemens, Mich.

 

 

- l

dive minutes, then drain oi! water;~ this“ ,

removes the slightly bitter“ taste. Now
put barley into saucepan with fat and
water, let' these boil gently until barley
is tender, drain and rub through sieve.
Add stock to this puree and let simmer
ten minutes. Beat yolk of egg with cream
and when soup has cooled slightly, strain
them in. Stir soup over fire a few min-
utes to reheat; but be careful that it
does not boil, or it will curdle. Season
carefully, add carrot balls and peas, which
should ﬁrst be heated in a little stock or
water. Serve with dice of toast or fried
bread. If you do not possess a round
vegetable cutter, cut the carrot intosmall
dice. This is a particularly nourishing
soup. If you prefer a slightly cheaper
variety, use milk instead of cream, and if
you have no white stock the milk and
water in equal proportions instead, and
cook a carrot, turnip and onion in milk
and water for twenty or thirty minutes.

HOMIESPUN YARN

Chocolate Cookies.——6 teaspoons crisco
or lard, 1 cup sugar, lyé teaspoon baking
powder, 1,4 cup cocoa, 1 egg, 4-6 teaspoons
water 2 cups ﬂour. Mix as cake making
a batter stiff enough to be pushed from
spoon. Use 1 heaping teaspoonful for
each cookie. Drop about two inches apart.
Bake in a moderate oven, 12 to 18 min-
utes.

 

Home made sweets are sure to be
wholesome. Many may be made of fruit.
t 1 II

A cream of onion and potato soup
makes a mighty satisfying supper dish
for these cold days. It’s ﬁlling and nour-
ishing, too.

It t I!

Aunt Ada’s Axioms: Like the pies and
cakes that mother used to make, there
are no bedtirne stories in these days of
radio like the ones that mother used to
tell.

* it III

Boston brown bread sandwiches are
good for the school lunch box. They go
very well with the hot dish which your
school should be serving at noon.

This model would

The Pattern is cut in 5
The width of the dress at the foot is 1% yard.

46 and 48 inches bust measure.

hnes. This model is excellent for the new figured
40, 42 44 48

I

10. 12 and 14 years. #955. ' ‘

_ year Size, will
inch material With as

 

 

 

 

 

The raglan sleeves are '
inserted pockets ﬁnish

 

 

izes: 1,

 

 

 

The Pattern is cut in

The sleeves

. _ Without
Will be required. For

    

   
   
 
 
    
     
   

cum

1m: WORLD'S GREATEST

BAH 1N6 POWDER
SALES 21/ TIMES moss or ANY omen BRAND

has produced PURE
FOODS - BETTER
BAKINGS—for over '
one-third of a
Stopped m a day
Hill‘s steps a cold in 24 hours, and Grippc
in 3 days. Your druggist guarantees it.

century.

It combines in the utmost way all the
essentials in dealing with a cold—coldrchecks,
laxatives and tonics.

Millions now employ it. In 25 years no
way has been found to improve it.

Don't take chances, don't delay. Insist on
getting the best cold treatment men have yet
developed. And start now. Every hour
gained saves much danger and discomfort.

All druggists  Price 30c

CASCARA silillNlNil
GctRedBox MW“ with portrait

NEW LOW
p ICES!

Gee manufacturer’s riced.
(338 Save 1-4 to 1-2 on uptovu.
ranges. furnaces and house-

bi ood d l ' z...
 sglo mint 3; :gaﬁgmgory.
Inn- C.

  
   
   
 
 
  
 
 

 
   

Don’t
try to save
money by buying a
baking powder that costs a
few cents less than Calumet
—that’s the worst kind of
false economy—you’ll throw
out more in spoiled bakings
than you save on the price
of the powder. iAnd that
isn’t all—thinkof .
the time you lose
—the failures-
the disappoint-
ments.

The unfail-

ing strength of
Calumet guar-

antees perfect
results, so join

   
  

   
 

   
  
 

EVERY IN-
GREDIENT
USED OFFL
CIALLY AP-

   
  
   
  

   
  
   
    

    
  
  
   

  

 

 

Rubbed on, Vicks
Has a double effect

HERE is the last word in treating
cold troubles—rub Vicks well in
over throat and chest. Get into bed
and leave the coverings loose about
the neck. All night long you breathe
in the healing vapors of camphor,
menthol, eucalyptus, turpentine, etc.
The application also acts like a heat-
ing linimentlor plaster—almost sure
to loosen the cold before morning.
Vicks is just as good, too, for inﬂam—
mations, such as cuts, burns, bruises,
sores, stings and skin itchings.

Write to Vick Chemical 00., Box 272
Greensboro, N. C., for a test sample.

.ICKS

VAPoRue

OVER I7 MILLION JARS Use-o YEARLY

 

  
  
  

 

 

 
  
  

“LAMAZOO
IT IS TR U E! otiiﬁé’iie'liﬁ‘; 
Children in their teens need “meltegugl

‘7 Send lol' rm noon

:4 Kalamdm

2:325:52: Direct to You“

an abundance of nourisho
merit not only for growth -
but for strength.

Scott’s Emulsion

should be given regularly to
children or adults who are
thin, malnourished or frail.
Scott’s builds them up.

Scott & Bowne, Bloomﬁeld, N. I. 24-37
Million Strawberry Plants

82.95 per 1000. Raspberries. Grapes, Bulbs.

  

  
   
   

 
 

 

 

 

 

Brings you an size New Butterﬂ Cream
Separator direyct from factory achino
earn: it.

pay. We quote Lowest Prices and pay-
ments as low as

No intdre xtraa. Eve machine guar-
anteeda lifetimeeminst do acts in material

own cost and more before you @ L
ONLY faﬁso PER MONTH ‘
3 ~ 0
and workmanship

£0. Qazs' FREE Trial 33333;}? n

200,0 0 in use. Easiest to clean and turn.

 

 

Flower Seeds. Chicks. Illustrated catalog free.
Meyers Plant Nursery, Box 51, Merrill, Mich.

 

dimes-£36“ 5%" "4"" “i”
so Irma-n Blvd. _  III.

  

V GFVVM >. ,
BAKINIG'Eowg R
\ *0 onto-rap W /

PROVED BY the millions who . E
U. S. FOOD refuse. to accept . N _
AUTHORI- ﬂnV‘hmg but “‘3 ' .ﬂ  ,
TIES. 1 best  test "HzISéKENguiau/D‘“
eavene . 

  
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
   
     
         
  
 
  

  
 
 
 
 
   
 
    
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
 
   
  
 
 
   
     
    
  
        
  
       
   
    
  
    
   
     
     
 
  
 
 
    

 

   
   
  

     

  


 
   
   
    
 
 
 
 
    
 
    
    

acre.

is a difference.”

ash.

information.

 Uncle Sam
' Says About

 ertiliger’
 ‘ Quality

"The difference between a good brand of
fertilizer and a poor one lies hot so much
in the difference that may exist in the total
amount of plant food contained in it as in
the quality of the materials of which it is
made." [ U. S. Dept. of Agriculture]

After all you buy better fertil-
izer to grow better crops. :

This difference in quality is known to thousands of far—
mers who demand fertilizer rich in available phospho— - ‘
ric acid, graduated nitrogen and soluble organic pot- i
They will use nothing but goods made by the l
l
l

‘AN

The “Fertilizer Leaders of America” know their goods
make more bushels of grain or more tons of hay per
They make more potatoes, truck crops or celery. ,
In other words, they make more money for you. '3

The “Fertilizer Leaders of America” have spent 40
years studying fertilizer and what to put into it, and
they know what Uncle Sam means when he says “there

“Fertilizer Leaders of America” for they have tried
these fertilizers and found them good.

Get their fertilizer from your dealer, or write direct for l

 

 

‘~-‘\

 

 
  

—-l_ NCORPORATED ; ‘

Federal Chemical Co, Inc.

LOUISVILLE KX NASHVILLE TE/V/V, COLUMBUS O.

uluuulul

   

ﬂurucwl
FERTILIZERCO. V '

'QRANCH _

     

   

 

 

   
 
     
 
 
 
   

Easy-Ply:
Plan. Full year to pay.
3 0 n A? 8 T R I A I.

Try any American Separator,
inyour own way, a 1‘ our risk. If it |
is not the closest: skimmer, easiest
to turn and clean, and best Separ-
ator for the [east money, return
at our expense and every cent
received promptly refunded.

Write now for Inc catalog
Low prices andLiberal Easy-pay-plan

e ship from stock nearest you

AMERICAN SEPARATOR C0.
Box 26 D Balubrldze. N. Y.

minim mun "7 ‘4 I ‘5:
for selling: 30 pkgs. (‘hcwiuu
Gum at in- a pkg. Ritlc first-class.

When sold return £1.50 and \H‘ stud lltlt‘.
Bluine Mfg. Co., 966 Mill St., Concord Jct., Mass.

 

u

          
 

 

(Eured His Rupture

was badly ruptuer while lifting a,
trunk Sl‘Yl'l‘lll ytai's ago. Doctors said
my only hope of cure was an opvration.

'l‘russcs (lid me no good. Finally 1 got
hold of something that quickly and coni-
plc’tcly cured me. Years haw: passul and
the rupture has never returned, although
I am doing hard work as a carpenter.
There'was no operation, no lost time, no
trouble. I have nothing to sell, but will
give full information about how you may
ﬁnd a complete cure without operation,
if you write to me, Euzenc M. Pullen,
Carpenter, 44L Marcellus Avenue, Monas-
quan, N. Better cut out this notice
and show it to any others who are rup~
tured—you may save a life or at least
sto the misery of rupture and the Worry
and) danger of an operation.~(.mlv.)

 

 

I
Quality in exam WEEKS f
To Earn Real Marley indict? 

' Auto ﬁTractor Business

Come to any of my Great Shops.

There's one near your home. I will

train you to accomplish what these
i men have: George Smith is making
l $800 a month with his garage. D. M. .
' Collins is making $300 a month as
garage manager. Albert Boyer is only
19 years old, but he owns his own
garage. You can do the same.

' «I bet calls every day from
Big Jabs Open Garages, Buttery Stations.

etc. for McSweeny Trained men. Big firms need
trained men and they know where to get them.

. Idon't care if you
No Experience Needed 9,9160, (,0, I...

make you I hit [any Auto Expert in 8 weeks.

GET THE FACTS TODAY
My Big Illustrated Book tells how
.‘ others are succeeding. It tells many
'- things you ought to know about autos

and tractors. Write now, before you
turn this page. Address shop nearest you.

: ulomotive 8: Electricnl
 z MCSWCCDY Training 
  DEPY 529 ops I‘
Cincinnati,0. Chiclonll. Cleveland,0.
9lh& Walnut 5173. Lallin I815 E. 24th

COAL

Ohio, W—Va. and Ky. Shaker Screened Lump 0141):)
in carloud lots~ at attractiw prices. Best (111111 Vt
guaranteed. Farmer Agents Wanted. Buy dtec
from the mines and save money.

Turn. nun'r A. anus ﬂolrnra. Ohio.

 

 

 

SHALL WE HAVE A MOTTO,
COLORS AND A PIN?

EAR boys and girls: In an in-

teresting letter appearing else—

where on this page Muriel Frey,
of Caledonia, makes a suggestion
that appeals to me. She writes:

“Say, Uncle Ned, Why can’t the
children in the Children’s Hour or—
ganize and have a motto, colors and
pin and then when you write in for a
contest if you do fairly good but
don’t Win a prize, then you could get
a pin? I think that would be bushels
of fun, don’t you? Can We do that?
We could decide on the motto, club
name, colors and design of our pins
by putting it to a vote by letters.
I’m just proud of our page in the M.
B. F. and want it to be the best
ever.”

What do all of you think of the
idea? I think it is fine and we will
have a motto, colors and pin—IF
YOU WANT IT. And the only way I
can be sure that you want our
club, the Children’s Hour, to have
these is for you to write me, write
me a letter telling me that you would
like to have our club have a. motto,
colors and a pin. If you want these,
and tell me you do, then I will have
a contest, offering prizes for the best
motto, choice of colors, etc., but this
will come after I hear from you.

Send your letter in any time be—
tween now and Saturday, January
31st,, so it will arrive at my ofﬁce not;
later than Monday, February 2nd,
but the sooner the better so that it
everything is all right we can start
the contest in the near future and
get our plans under way. Remem-
ber, it is up to you, so write soon if
you are intercsted.-——UNCLE NED.

 

()UR BOYS AND GIRLS

llcar [’ntalc Nod :»~.-\r<- tho column gains
opt-n to a «~ity nliss‘? I am sixtt-on years
old, 5 foot 7 ll'lt‘lli‘S tall and of light (‘(llll-
ploxion. My l‘lllllt‘l‘ just. startwl to tuko
tho M. R. I“. in September so i don‘t feel

exactly “acquaintle I enjoy rvadiuu‘
tho letters from the country boys and
girls you nun-ll. I think llHZl'l Harlow
is sixtlwu years old. I ('J'l' just llll'llll'l‘

her in a molly gingham apron with a sun»

bonnet on lulr arm. among: llli‘ twwuly
(lit'l'vi‘vut llinds ot llo‘wwi's. shw lwlllg: tho
“llowlr ol~ youth". l‘lwtiy llll‘llll't‘ don't

you think? l Sll]lll():<n you all road l'ul-ll-

,\'t»(l's plop to \\'l‘l[1‘ to :\llll‘l‘1 Sillitll. tllé‘
boy with tho lll'tlkt‘ll l4~:', loll l woudl-r how
many Ill't‘ going to rll-nt :.i"l4lll iillll try
to (‘lli'l'l‘ Allu‘t't‘.’ l’id l lllftl' :1 :Jhoul'.’
“All (it 118:" l :llll Mun l (lid. l tlllllh
Allu l‘l lbl (-iglltm-tl .\l: l': liltl. rl‘llid l5
whnl I told llllll ill lo). l~itar to him. 1.
would just lo\-- to lw in Ho :w-outi'y.
l'll lu'l tlu- turf»: and yiilri :llw l:;:\.iui.:'
\\'olulurrl‘ul thin»: roasting and slullln;:'.
\\':tll l uuwss l “will li'l\'l' to t-lor-w or l'ut‘lw
.\'wd will not lol llll' I’llllll‘ .‘lL'Uill.*'~l“l':lllt'i}:
lial'wiu, llL’l .\i<'.\.‘lllill‘l'll!;l \‘x', llvtroil,
Michigan. .

lloar l'nttlo Nt‘tlIVAA'llt‘l'l“ is anollnr our
who wants to join your merry circle. I

am a, country girl, am 1:: yours old and
in the eighth grade at school. I go to
a consolidated school which is two miles
from my home. Last summer. the day
before vacation started we had a largo
picnic, which all tho children attended.
in the morning “'1‘ made at lunch and
startt-(l for the lake. I going in a bus
with lllt‘ rt-st, ot' the: ('llillll‘vn and my par—
ents coming in tho (-ar. ’l‘hv bus took us
to school where all the children were.
waiting. After \W' \\'t~l‘t‘ all ready We
startvd out. 'Whvn um not there we found
that tin-re was a large crowd thcrl: a1—
rvady. The watt-r was smooth and the
day was warm and clear. We played all

Tl

(I‘l il'i‘ﬂUNiNG

 
    
 

sorts of games and when noon came they
built bonﬁres and made coffee. In the
afternoon some of the children went back
to their play, while others went boating
When the boats came back they all Went.
to the beach and there they served lemon.—
ade and ice cream. We stayed till ﬁve.
o’clock and were growing: tired so we
decided to return home. We were all
happy but tired with our days outing
I think I will close as it is growing late
Hoping to hear from some of the boys
and girls of the circle. Yours sincerely.
“Margaret Lucille Hardy, Cooks, Mich.

lwar {Tm-lt- Neda—Well Uncle, you.
must think I am a Very quiet member but
my school work has been rather hard
and so hayc to catch up, you know. How
are you and all the “Kids” getting along?
I hayo been so busy I have not had time
to own read their letters. I surely enjoy
wading the nice letters and wish some
would correspond with me- If any boy
or girl would write a. letter to me guest»
ing my ago, I will send them a present.
My age is lwtwwn l2 and 15. Now I’ll
write a big “fat” letter to the one who
does not guess my age but will write just.
the same. \Voll I must close and get.
busy as I have some extra studios. So-
long. From a busy irimnbcr.-——Miss Mary
Young, {3. Scotts, Michigan.

My Doar llnclc Nedz—I couldn’t let
my (‘hristmas vacation pass without
thanking you for the lovely prize that
you Sl‘lli, ulo for my letter in the Decem-

ln-r 30th issue. It certainly comes in
handy at school and I was proud be—
t-auso I won. Another reason that I was

:zlad that my letter was printed was be—
t‘illth‘ when daddic road it he jumped
right, in tho "("hcyis" and went to Grand
llapids and bought me a 4' C. Flexible
Myer sled. My! it certainly is a dandy
sled and [’11 how» the speed rocord when
school starts and We go down to “Yo-
Scmitc Valley” to slide.

Say, Uncle Nod, why can‘t the children
in the Children's Hour organize and have
.‘1. motto, colors and pin and then when
you writo in for a contest, if you do
fairly good but don't. win a prize, then
you could got a pin? I think that would
be busln-ls of fun. don't you? (Tan we
do that? “'0 could docith on tho motto
r'lub namw, colors and design of our pins
by putting it to a \‘oto by lt-ttm‘s. I’m
just. proud of our page in tln- M. B. 1‘.
and want it to ho tho best cvor.

J wrulw to Alle Smith as you re—
iluosll-d. I thought your svntimt-nt i‘vlrard-

lug “l’ollyauua” was vory (-lcyvr. I read
"Pollyanna" about tlii‘t-o yours ago and
thou m). t'hulu and l organind a “Glad
(‘lub” :zrlll \\t' do many kind dc-wds. [all
still pi'm-‘idwllt.

\\islltu:;’ you a happy and lll‘oslwr‘llus
Now liar, I. out, your lining lllt'tft}.-"“
l\|urivl l“l'<*_\', ('ulmlonia, Michigan.

,

lllu‘.‘ l'ut-ll- .\'wl:~ I will toll about out
tom- :olo our—halt yl-ars on a homestead
lu \\'_~.<oulu:1‘. It was so dit't'wi'l-nt from
\Xllil'n- no did liw- that wo vuloyl-d it, so
paw-h. 'l’lll- tll'Ht yvzli‘ wo moywl llli‘l't‘, in
llu .zliog' and on tho fourth of July
cowboys hurl a round—up nvar a lake. 2.
llltli' way from our house. ’l‘horu were
::_IIH-l vows and valves, several cowboy}:
and about, 20 saddle ponies. That day
they brandth all tho valvosi. \Vo thought,
that was quite. a sight. We use to so.
tho rant-lions hauling wool to town and

they would (lrlyc from four to ten horses
on two wagons of wool and there would
be from 4 to 5 of tin-so, freighters in a.
bunch. They all carried water-bags and
would stop at, our place and ﬁll them.
There were lots of coyotes there. Also
have Sl't'll droves of 30 to 40 antelopes.‘
We have gone to our hay stacks at night;
and SOL'H as high as three dozen jack
rabbits run from it at one time. There
was also lots of sage hens tln-rc which
are yt-ry much like prairie chicken. They
taste like sage as that is what they live
on. I will close hoping this letter Will
lntorvst some one who has DOVE? lltftin 
mo, \Vtgst.—Roy May, lockl‘ord, Nit-111g”.
lilllllv 4.

 

 

MADE EASY

 

C711er 7 ea

 

 

 

Cup
Yams info a Chinam at:

    

 

 

 

 

'7'- col“) 5mm

 

 

 

-‘qu

 

 

 

 

 

"#FF$Wﬁ—wwunwmwn~nsummrmh

 


 

 

 

, “Imam r4 day,» .1...

 

 
 

cwR czar-No.76 _ '

 

x, . .
w n ...‘ . .5;—

 

 

 

23 Li

 

 

 

5 '61 ‘e

 

 

 

 

 

9 "l0

 

 

ll lZ

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Zl

 

 

23

 

2H 25—

 

 

 

 

2'1

26

29 3O

28

 

 

 

5! 32.

 

 

 

3"} 35'

 

38 39 H0 "ii

 

33

 

 

 

 

37
‘H

36

 

H2. H3

 

 

 

 

 

LIB ‘49

 

 

5"! .55

 

 

 

 

 

a clue to other words crossing them,

both.

ACROSS
1—A cabbage with open curled leaves
4—A beast of burden
6—A red vegetable
9—Every shcool has one
1—A growth on one’s head
a—A garden green used. for salad:

or vertically or

 

 

S—A preﬁx meaning ‘to
1—More fleshy
8—-—Senior

9—-cerry

1———-Monkey

2—Small rug

3—lelt
vS—A kind of snowshoe

6—Appropriate

l1—Before

S—Fluid used in writing

I1-——To extend or lengthen

lz—An Indian tent

.3—A girl's name

4——Abb. for name of a New England State
1—Abb. for Civil Engineer

lF—Upon

~9—A vegetable which forms heads

u4—A ronoun-mascullne
5—“? do of an apple

6—— oh

l8—Loud sound from a trumpet
i1—What the voter in the kettle does
-i5—A farm animal

E»O——What formers pull out of the garden

 

 

(Books reviewed under this heading may
be secured through The Miclngundlusmese
Farmer, and will be promptly shipped .by
parce‘lpost on receipt of publishers one»
sizitvl . )

Crop Production and Soil Management.
—By Joseph F. Cox, B. S. A., Professor of
Farm Crops, Michigan Agricultural Col—
lege, and head of Farm Crops Suction,
Michigan Experiment Station. This book.
prepared by one of “Michigan‘s Own", is
the second volume in the VVili-y Farm
series. It contains 32 chapters and the
appendix, and takes up: major operations
of prolitaiblc crop production; choosing
crops adapted to prevailing conditions;
growing high—yielding varieties; Selecting
and testing aged; plowing and preparing
the spil; rotation of crops; maintaining
fertility of soil; planting"; controlling
weeds; controlling crop posts; harvcsting
and threshing small grains; harvesting,
storing and marketing hay; makim: en—
silagc. The ﬁrst thirteen chapters are..-
known as part one and thi- chapters in
the second part take up the growing 0f
the different crops, as follows: Corn.

 

A NS‘VER T0 CROSS-WORD
PUZZLE NO. 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OXEN STY MULE
ZAIDS ERE ASIA
RiG STATE EER
.75 EH O AD 5
iA T SD
A88 0 HOG i
iS HORSE EST.
CHIEF TEETH
‘CE 'STEEP ,ED
ON ERE MA 0
P SNARE L. G
DART S MESS
COLT EN GOA

 

 

 

 

 

 

5O

SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS—WORD PUZZLES

Start out by ﬁlling in the words of which you feel reasonably sure.
. ' and they in turn to still others. A
in each whlte space. words starting at the numbered squares and running either horizontally

1
1

16—A I

18—-A vegetable green

20—Entrance through a fence
dad to

24.—

atl—Before

zap—Female deer

2(i—Relating to aircraft

27—Abb. for liquid unit of measure
28—Note of the scale

BO—Part of the lee

BIS—Fruit of the oak
B6—Underneath

to—Part of the verb ‘to be'

I1—Exlsts
42—Near or by
Ila—Idle chatter

1
i
l

H6 H7

 

 

5i 5?. 55

 

 

56

 

 

 

 

 

-_.- a. . _4._ ._.-_..

These will give you
hitter belongs

DOWN
1—A sheepfold
2——-Abb. for pound
B—Elongated ﬁsh (pl)

4———Low female voice
6—Ciose
6—11 to

z—Famous aviators
4—-—-A vegetable roat
urge vegetable used for pies

 

u h
s—Bei’ore Christ
.a—Behoid
iO—Accompllsh
iz—Left end \

 

Ira—Abb. for the name of a* Western state
The answer to this puzzle “ill appear in the next issue. %

Also, we will hav another puzzle.

 

 

 

/
wheat, oats, rye, barl y, buckwheat, ﬂax,
sorghums, potato, sug r beets, cabbage,
ﬁeld beans, soybeans, clover, alfalfa
sweet clover, grasses for h; and pasture:
emergency and special pur so hay and
forage crops; and chapter 32 takes up
“Conducting school and community crop
exhibits and judging contests.” Knowing
l’rof. Cox as you all do it is quite un—
lll't‘QSS‘fll‘y for us to go into detail about
i‘élt'll chapter, liccuuso you are all aware
that when he starts anything he ﬁnishes
1t~cach chapter is quite complete, The
book is a proﬁtable investment for any
farmer and should have a ‘place in every
form library. It contains 516 pages,
51,.1x8 in., is printed on high grade paper
in large type and well illustrated, bound
handsomely in cloth, and sells for $2.75.
The publishers are John Wiley & Son,
Inc. The Book Revicw will be pleased
to mail a. copy, post paid, to any address
upon receipt of the price.

  
 

 

Thanks for all the good things in your
paper. Very sincerely—L. A. Williams,
Montmorency County, Michigan.

 

 

Please send THE BUISNESS FARMER for
two years. Enclosed ﬁnd one dollar. We
like your paper very much.———Mary A.
Phelps, Oakland County, Michigan.

 

That story in the paper I read a good
many years ago but it is good and will
be just as interesting as before. I have
taken THE BUSINESS FARMER a good
many years and would hate to miss a.
copy. If we had more of such papers it
would be better for the farmer.———E. L. N.,
Boync City, Michigan.

 

GET FREE ACCOUNT BOOK

Before putting up any fence investigate
the "Super-Zinced” fences put out by the
Pittsburg Steel Company, 709 Union Trust
B1dg., Pittsburg, Pa., whose advertisement
appears in this issue. To anyone inter-
ested in fence they will send a copy of
their catalog and also a. copy of the 72-
page Fennel-3’ Handy Manuel and Ac-
count Book. both free. Mention Tani
Burmese Future when writing them.
please—(Adm)

 

’,/
I/A,’

  

  

way. If
eyes on, send it back at my expense.

 

 
 
 
 
          
   
 

Fancy Lino
Spreaders

Order your har-
ness early and
be ready for the
rush of spring
Work. Break-
downs with old
harness mean
costly delays.
I am oﬁcring a
pair of hand-
so m c F a n c y
3 3 . 0 0 Li ne
Spreaders Free
as a s p c c ia l
“ award for early
‘ orders.

 
     
 
      
       
   
 
    
     
       
   
       
   
   
   

  

    
 
 
 
 
 

17-25

 

after  Days Free lia
SEND NO MONEY. Before you uy har- ,
ness, let me send you a set of Walsh No-Bucklc Harness on
30 days' Free Trial, to show you why this harness is three times
stronger Without buckles, better looking and handier in every
not convmccd that it is the best harness you ever laid
The Walsh is a proven
success on thousands of farms for over nine years.

Three Times Stronger Than Buckle Harness

Buckles weaken and rear straps. Walsh lyﬁ-inch breeching strap,
tested in a steel testing machine, holds over 1100 lbs.
strap With buckle breaks at the buckle at about 360 lbs. pull. Ordi-
nary harncss has68 buckles.Welsh
Harness has no buckles. Easy to
see why Walsh is three times stronger
than ordinary harness. Packer's Nor-
them Steer Hide Loathcr‘best that
can be tanned. All Walsh leather
given the most rigid inspection test
known in the harness industry—my
free book tells all about it.

COSTS LESS—LASTS LONGER

The Walsh Harness costs less because i t saves many a dollar in
repairs. No patching, no mending, because no rings to wear straps
in two, no buckles to weaken and tear straps. Greatest advance in
harness making. Easily adjustable to ﬁt any horse. Write today.

$5.00 After 30 Days’ FREE TRIAL
Balance easy payments, or cash after trial ifyou wish,
otherwise return it to me at my expense. Write today for free book,
prices, easy payments and thirty days' trial after, and arrange
to get a. set of the Fancy Spreaders without cost.

AMES M. WALSH, Pro-ideal,

NESS CO., 421 Keefe Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.

Send No Money-Mail COupoh

 J
' WALSH HAR

 

a}

’ No4 Buékle Harness

NO BUCKLES TO TEAR

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

be same
Thousands Praise
Welsh Harness
“The Welsh isstrongestmeateet,
most Convenient harness I ever
put on a team." Geo. Heath.
Penn Yan, N. Y.
Mr. C. C. Anderson, Aitken,
Mini , who bo u g h t his ﬁrst
Walsh 5 year! ago and bought
three n e w s c t 5 since for his
other teams eaye:——"Walsh has
buckle harness beat a mile."

 

James M. Welsh, Pres., WALSH HARM C0.

42! Keefe Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.

Send me, free of charge. Walsh Harness Book.
free trial offer. liberal terms on Welsh Harness.
Fancy Spreaders to be given for early orders.

 

 

Ihe‘ibuﬁe‘ﬁ‘at'you leave in the skim-
milk wont buy the baby any shoes

The loss of only 25 cents’ worth of
butter-fat a day costs you $91.25 a
year—enough to keep the whole family
well shod, and then some. Thousands of
farmers have stopped the waste of much
more butter-fat than that by replacing
their cream-wasting separators with new,
clean-skimming Dc Levels.

Trade

Allowance

S e c y o u 1' D (3
Laval Agent or
write us about trad~
ing in your old sep-
arator (any age _or
make) as partial
payment on a new
Improved Dc Laval.

 

see and Try
an Improved

  

Never in the history of centrifugal
cream separators has there been a.
machine to equal the new D‘e Laval—for
clean skimming, easy turnin or duru-
bility. It has the wonderfu new sclf‘
centering bowl which runs smoother and
easier, and eliminates vibration. It Will
give you more and a richer cream than
you have ever gotten before.

New De Levels sold on easy
terms ranging from
$6.60 to $14.30 Down

the bounce in 15 easy
monthly payments

 
     
       
  
 
 
 
  
  

 


 

4 ‘7‘"‘jmyn-“I‘J w,, '

Did you ever think how little added milk
it would take to actually double your net

milk proﬁt?

Competent authorities agree that on the
average, only 10% added yield would double

the net return from dairying.

See what a chance you have, then, to
realize real proﬁts by giving more thought
to safe ways of increasing the milk ﬂow.

Make Cows Thrive on Winter Feeds

The Kow -Kare way is safe, reliable and sure.
Row-Kare is not a stock food. It is a medicine-
tonic that invigorates the milk-making organs. It
enables the cow to assimilate the rough, dry winter
feeds with the same ease and milk-making effect as
these same organs, unassisted can handle green

pasturage in summer.

Kow -Kare is scientiﬁcally designed to act di-
rectly on the digestive and genital organs.
only stimulates, but builds natural, permanent vigor
into the organs that control the milk yield. A table-
spoonful twice a day, one week out of each month is
the usual feeding of Kow -Kare. Once tried, you are
sure to become a regular user of this great invigorator.

,Feed dealers, general stores and druggists
sell Kovaare — in $1.25 and 65c sizes.
Order direct if your dealer is not supplied.

DAIRY ASSOCIATION co.,.1nc.

Makers of Bag Balm, Gorge: Remedy, Horse Comfort

LYNDON V ILLE, VT.

Double your Milk Profitv
bybuildz’ng 7fcalt/z andear

 

Banish Cow Diseases
Barrenness, Abortion. Re—
tained After-birth, Scouts,
Garget. Milk Fever, Lost
Appetite. etc., all result
from an impoverished
condition of the digestive
and genital organs. in the
successful treatment of
these diseases Kow-Kere
has a quarter-century rec-
0rd of success.

Write today for our free
book, "The Home Cow
Doctor." Thousands of
dairymen would not be
without it.

c1
Penny _/
a Day
VJ]

Per Cow/

It not

 

 

 

 

 

  
  

' ARE

 

advice FREE. Write tonight.
eriary“Co.

  
 
 

   

Losing Their Calves

You Can Stop Them Yourself
AT SMALL COST

Ask for FREE copy of “The Cattle
Specialist," our cattle paper.
 ' ' ' questions asked during the past thirty years
about abortion in cows. Also let us tell you how to get the “Practical
Home Veterinarian”. a Live Stock Doctor Book, Without cost. Veterinary
A postal will do.

In

- _ - v _. ,‘.-  ,_ ,...
g—.- gr- .: -,__ — -~-P—‘.-r=\-r=-

ﬂair—“3w”!

YOUR cows

 
 

  
    
 
    

  
 
   
   

Answers all

 
  

   
 

c., 152 Grand Ave., Waukesha, Wis.

 

 

 

Advertisements inserted under this heading for reputam; breeders of Live Stocx at special um

rates to encourage the growing of pure-?

‘reds on the farms of our readers. Our advertising rate

Fourteen agate lines to the column Inch

I Thirt Cents (300 or agate line per insertion.
s y ) p ith order or paid on or before the 10th

or $4.20 per Inch, less 217 for cash if
of menth following date of Insertion. SE D

FREE. no you can see how many lines it will ﬁll.

sent W

D AND WE WILL PUT IT IN TYPE
Address all letters,

BREEDERS DIRECTORY, MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMER, MT. CLEMENS, MIGH.

 

GUERNSEYS
MAY #4 GUERNSEYS — ROSE

STATE AND FEDERAL ACCREDITED

Bull calves out of Dams up to 877 pounds fat.
Bired by Bulls whose Dams have up to

nude fut. The homes of bulls; Shuttlewwk May

038 Sequel, Jumbo of lirnirbiink unilrliolbecks
Golden Knight of Nordluml. From Dams pro-
ducim: li)ll.lS fat, 772 fat and 610 fat.

50 L B RROWS or G ORGE J. HICKS,

. U
Saginaw. W. 5.. Michigan.

H E RE F0 RDS

HEREFORD suns

. d 880 lbs. 68 Wt. around 750 lbs.

» 9(2)   640 lbs. 88 Wt. around 550 lbs.

4 Angus 500 lbs. 56 Wt. around 475 lbs.

Dee reds, dehorned, good stocker order. Real

ﬁnality hei'efords are usually market to. ion! when

nished. Also heifers same quality. “’1 sell your
choice from any bunch. v

VAN BALDWIN, Eldon, Wapello 00., Iowa.

 

JERSEYS
DEG. JERSEYS, POGIS 99th OF H. F. AND
Majesty breeding. Young stm-k fur galp' Herd
fully accrediimi by State and lﬂ-rlerni Government.

for prices ami desoription.
WILBUR. BELDING. Mich.

SHORTHORNS

——6 ROAN YEARLING SHORT-
horn bulls. good ones at $75-

(‘omo and see them.
PETERS & SON. Elsie, Michigan,

AYRSHIRES
FOR SALE—REGIIsTERED AYRSHIRE BULLS,

ﬁt for service. Tested. From heavy pro—
ducing dams.

“rite or Visit
GUY c.

 

FOB SAL
$100 each.
H. B.

 

 

Findlay Bros... Vassar, Michigan.

 
 

 

HAMPSHIREhSPRING BOAR8 FOR SALE.

 

~ g: HAVE BRED HEREFDRDS QINOEJSBO
' herd bulls are International Prize Winners.
Stock of all ages for sale at Farmers prices. Write

' h i ma on.
‘ u. {or  orrds that tten gills

of
"if. on re radii. Owen: ’hmi. Rigid-nan.

 

 

Place your order for Gil bied to order. 11th
year. John W. Snyder, St. Johns, Mich” R4.
0. I. C.

 

o.t I. £3. HST Bng Pltasi Elfﬂgrd 3‘53,
n I n ’0 0 8 Oc recof , e
3110 s. eo'i‘w‘ﬁr alone. Neehviile. Mich.

 

 

(We invite you to contribute youriexpeﬂenoe  V  I ‘

stock to this department. Queétibns cheerfully answered.)

WINTER CARE OF FLOCK
VERY IMPORTANT

GREAT deal of the success with

lambs in the spring depends on

the feed and care given the ewes
during the winter, is the observation
of Turner. Wright, extension live—
stock specialist at South Dakota
State College.

“If ewes are to develop good lambs
they must have good feed and plenty
of exercise,” he says. “This does
not mean that they should be fat.
The aim should be' to keep them in
good thrifty condition. prlenty of
roughage is available the ewes, as a.
rule will not need grain until about
six weeks before lambing. Alfalfa
hay is one of the best feeds for breed-
ing ewes. The clover hays are also
good and should be used when alfalfa
is not available or they can be mixed
with the alfalfa to very good ad-
vantage. The run of a stalk ﬁeld in
the fall and early winter and_the
use of corn stover or sorghum and
similar fodders will help to lower
the cost of the winter keep, but as
these feeds supply only a small
amount of growth materials, the
ewes should not be forced to sub-
sist on them alone as weak lambs
will likely be the result. Used in
connection with alfalfa or one of the
clover hays, however, they make a
very good winter ration.

“Watch the ﬂock closely”, he
warns, “and if any of the ewes begin
to get thin in ﬂesh, start feeding
those ewes a small amount of grain
each day. All the ewes in the ﬂock
ought to be put on light grain feed
about six weeks before lambing.
about a half pound a day of a mix-
ture of about two—thirds oats and one-
third corn or barley for each ewe is
very good for the grain ration. If
one is fortunate enough to have a
good wheat or rye pasture available,
the ewes should have access to it at
all times when weather conditions
will permit. No other winter feed
gives quite such good results.

“A supply of. good water at all
times is an important consideration.
If the water can be heated in very
cold weather just enough to remove
the chill, it will be better for the
ewes.”

“Many sheepmen make the mis-
take of housing their ﬂock too closely
in tight barns during the winter. A
good, dry place is all that is needed”,
W'I'ight declares. It is very import-
ant to keep sheep from getting wet
in the winter. A mature sheep does
not need much protection from the
cold as its ﬂeece will keep it warm
enough. If this shed, or the yard
surrounding it, opens into a large
pasture, the run on the pasture every
day will add to the health and thrift
of the ﬂock.

TREATING MILK FEVER
LLK fever occurs usually short—
ly after calving. High-produc-
ing cows, especially those in
good ﬂesh, are most frequently af—

fected. The symptoms are an un—
easiness and restlessness, which
may develop into excitement. The
cow may move wildly about; her
limbs become weak, resulting in a
staggering gait. She soon falls

down with her head turned toward
the ﬂank, and becomes unconscious.

The method of treatment is very
simple, and if employed in time is
usually successful. Air is pumped
through the milk ducts of the teats
until the udder is distended. A tape
is then tied about the teat to pre-
vent the escape of air. A single in-
ﬂation is often sufﬁcient, but if the
air escapes before the animal recov-
ers, the udder should be reinﬁated.
Recovery usually takes place with—-
in a few hours after the treatment
is applied.

Inﬂation can best be accomplish-
ed by using a milk—fever outﬁt,
which can be purchased from any
dealer in veterinary supplies. It
consists of a metal milk tube, which
is connected to an air pump by
means of rubber tubing. Between
the air pump and the milk tube is a.
chamber containing absorbent cot-
ton for ﬁltering the air before- it
enters the udder. Before using the
apparatus, the milk tube and rub-’
ber tube should be disinfected by

being boiled or by being dipped into
a strong solhtion of carbolic acid or
coal-tar disinfectant, and the udder
washed with soap and water. ,A
towel may be "laid below the udder
to aid in preventing infection dur—
ing the process of inﬂation.

As a precaution against occurenee
of the disease, part of the milk may

i be allowed to remain in the udder

during the ﬁrst two or three- days
after freshening. The cow may be
milked as often as usual, but only
enough of the milk should be re-
moved to prevent congestion.

RATION FOR DAIRY ODWS

How should I feed milch cows?
I have alfalfa hay. corn shocks or
fodder, beans, potatoes, ruta-bagas
and corn on ear. Will that make a
good ration or do I have to buy Some
extra? Please state how much to
feed of each kind.—A. F., Scottville
Michigan. '

I WOULD suggest the following
rations for your dairy cows.
First, feed 1 pound alfalfa bay

to about 100 pounds of live weight
for his cows and what corn stover
they will clean up, and up to 40
pounds of ruta-bagas daily or up to
4Q pounds of ruta-bagas and potatoes
mixed. The roots and potatoes
should be cut, either with a. knife or
a, root cutter to prevent the cows
from choking on them. Then I
would suggest as a grain ration to
be fed at the rate of one pound of
grain for each three to four hundred
pounds of milk produced daily by
the cow, depending upon the test of
the cow. '
40 lbs. corn and cob meal, 20 lbs.
ground oats, 20 lbs. beans ground,
15 lbs. linseed oil meal, or 40 lbs.
ground corn, 20 lbs. ground cull
beans, 40 lbs. ground oats, 15 lbs.
Rnseedtoilp meal.——J. E. Burnett,
ssoma e rofessor of -
bandry, M. A. C. Dairy Hus

VETERI NA RY
DEPARTMENT 

TR-EA'I‘IN G W'ARTS

W’e have a yearling bull that is
getting covered with warts. Will
you please tell us what to do?——-G.
K., Holland, Mich.

N all probability the best treat-
ment for warts where they are
not too numerous is to cut them

off after disinfecting the skin sur-
face. If the wart is quite large, the
hemorrage can be controlled with a
cautery. Where the entire surface
of the skin becomes covered with
warts, the treatment is very unsatis-
factory, and cutting the motif is out
of the question. The daily applica-
tion of sweet oil has proved success-
ful in some cases—John P. Hutton.
Assoc. Prof. of Surgery and Medi-
cine, M. A. C

 

 

 

 

A dairy barn doesn’t need to be costly
to be clean.
* an a
The great secret of success in life is
for a man to be ready when his oppor-

tunity comes.———Disraeli. ,
NEW LAMP BURNS
94% AIR

Beats Electric or Gas

A new oil lamp that gives an
amazingly brilliant, soft, white
light, even better than gas or elec-
tricity, has been tested by the U. 8.
Government and 35 leading uni-
versities and found to be superior to
10 ordinary oil lamps. It burns
without odor, smoke or noise—no
pumping up, is simple, clean. safe.
Burns 94% air and 6% common
kerosene (coal oil).

The inventor, A. R. Johnson, 609
W. Lake St., Chicago, Illl, is offer-
ing to send a lamp on 10 day’s
FREE trial, or even to give one
FREE to the ﬁrst user in each loc-
ality who will help him introduce it.
Write him to-day for full particu-
lars. Also ask him to explain how
you can get the agency, and without.
experience or’ money make 3850 C.

.3500 per  i . .

r 5:?“ ‘ n;-

~zﬁ.‘.‘iWJi-f>x1.,u..n Ml, , , ’

; «am-awn

  

 
 

 

.-... . .ﬁwq-...w...,...w

 


  

«re-mu»-- v

w-.~».Mm.r»4 M1,. _, , ’

 

. 4.». -va-ma-z“-A

. -m. ~..<a—~

 

“feds two calves.

 

for six weeks ! 

 

This is the cost of a 100 pound bag.

Compare this cost with feeding
cow’s milk for the same period——
ﬁgure what you save with No—Milk
Calf Food. Produces ﬁne, healthy
calves without using any whole
milk. Begin using when calves are
three days old, and simply mix it
with water. It is not a calf meal
——Has been used successfully since
1885.

At your dealer's today you can get
No—Milk Calf Food. Try one bag.
You’ll be surprised with it. Look
for the Red and Green bags. Put
up in 25 1b.. 50 lb. and 100 lb. bags.
Call on your dealer today and got
a bag! '

» National Food‘ Co.

Fond du Lac, Wisconsin

 

 

 

BSORBINE

will reduce inflamed, swollen
Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft
: Bunches; Heals Boils, Poll
Evil. Quittor, Fistula and
infected sores quickly
as it is a positive antiseptic
and germicide. Pleasant to
use; does not blister or remove
the halt. and you can work the ham
52.50 per bottle. delivered.

v Book 7 R free.
ABSORBINE. JR..the antiseptic linlment for mankind.
reduce: Painful. Swollen Veins. ch9. Strains. Bruins:
stops pain anr’ inﬂammation. Price 81.25 per bottle at
dealer. or delivered. Will tell you more if you write.
Libra! Trial Bottle for 10¢ in stamps.

W. F. YOUNG. Inc.. 369 Lyman St.,Sprlngﬁeld, Mass.

BUYYOUR
Cream

Separator

Now—Save Money

Make money and save money by havinga high gual’ity,
efﬁcient cream separator like the Empire-Baltic. l‘he
best investment you can [igssililgy make. Order now—-
at our direct-to-you BED OC FACTOLY PRICES.

Emillic

       
  

 

 

  
  
   
   
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
    

is the famous

.  Cream Se 3-
‘his   r?ltoer“l}th
. “’ ‘ e i ion

400 lb. SIZO Denim Bowl '
 —tl'l8 ONLY

real self-balanc-
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at a price that wil' put
' thousands of these won-
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-' the hands of farmers and
dairymen everywhere.

All Shipments

PREPAID

Quick delivery every-
where nnd no extra
charges of any kind.
You pay for the
- m separator only.
‘ Each separator
. complete with tools, oil,

   

 brushes, etc.
LGGGJHDO ~_
in ‘ . 233 Days”
Use ‘ Trial

Money returned if not satisﬁed after 80 do 5’ trial,
Satisfaction guaranteed. YOU TAKE N Rle.

Price List Elli???

 

 

N0. Capacity Price lstl’jly’i Monthly-l’iiyinﬂtL

M.O. lﬁOlbs. $25.00 $5.00 35.00!” 4 Months
No.2 3501bs. 370% 1% oo $5.0M.» 7 Months
No.4 4001bs. $55.00 335760" moororio Months
Write for prlcou on lnrgerulnon up to 1850 lbs. cspnclty. Also

[at our low prices on Electric or Powar Driven Separators—
Wrnpb at our expense.

FREE Service and Paris

forone year. Get catalog. 6% discount for cash—or
86.00 down and balance monthly. Write today—or
meeoupon.

EMPIRE CREAM SEPARATOR
SALES 60., Inc.
bent. 25 Louisville. Ky.
SEND POSTAL 0R COUPON!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IHPIRE can" SEPARATOR SALES CO" Inc.,
.._, 2:5 Loullvlllo. Kentucky

Please send me _

CHECK D New Empire-Baltic Catalog

WHICH D mpire-Baltie No............... I enclose $5.

 

inn--
-1 ‘z.
,,"""'

3. IV. D. Not-4...; ..........................euu.-.-...-......-.

 

‘A.

"AMERICAN FARM-BOY VISITS
HAIRDR‘ESSER ‘

(Continued from Page 4)

a community bowl .of powder and
mopped my face with it as one would
shine a shoe. Then with the other
end of the ﬁshy-feeling towel he
wiped the clippings, powder and dust
off my clothes and the job was done.
He charged me Sixpence, which is
about eleven cents—but I would ra-
ther sit in a comfortable chair and be
wrapped‘up in a clean white apro,
even if it would cost me twelve cents.

But we had other worlds than Eng-
land yet to conquer and two weeks of
our short summer abroad were al-
ready gone. We had the former
kaiser’s ambition to be in Paris be—
fore September, but it seemed Eng‘
land was causing a delay of our iii—
vasion of France quite as effectively
as she (lid that of the Germans in
1914.

Merrie England was too interest—
ing to leave—too good to be through
with it so soon. All four of my
grandparents had been “born in the
British Isles, three of them right, in
England and the fourth—or ﬁrst as
he would insist on being called—in
Erin's island just west. I had been
brought up on the glories and great-
ness of England, and here they were
spread out before me. Why go to
some other country and leave all this
unseen. '-

It was with genuine regret then.
that we turned our oyster—colored jit—
ney toward London. We would sell
the faithful old Grey Goose that had
carried us over most of the southern
shires of England, and then we would
take passage across the channel to
Holland, the. land of tulips, wooden
shoes, and windmills.

All of rural England had been a
continuous panorama of artistic love-
liness, and the last two days from
Leicester, where we visited the Royal
Livestock show, were as attractive
as any.

We arrived in London on the
Fourth of July, 148 years after the
Declaration of Independence had ex-
plained that it had become necessary
to dissolve the political bands which
united us with this same mother
country. All of my ancestors were
good British subjects in 1776 and no
doubt would have disowncd any re—
renegade rebel offspring of theirs
who might in future years come over
as‘u “damnyank” to visit.

On this particular Fourth of July,
English peddlei‘s were selling, at ex—
travagant prices, little United Suites
ﬂags for American tourists to wear
in their button-holes. It was luxu—
tion, but with u very noticeable rop—
i'esontntion of Americans. Two years
before, in Edmonton, Alberta, I had
had to shop nronnd town for u Ion}.r
time before I would ﬁnd a United
States flag for tho bowspi'it of the
car. They seemed to know more
about our Glorious Fourth in Eng-
land than in Canada.

“'0. herded our Nomi-colored jit—
ney, the old Grey Goose back through
the streets of London to the some
(lonlvl‘ from whom we had purchased
it; (no \V'l_‘l‘l{H before, nnd :il‘tei' con—
siilei'nblo haggling we sold it, at a
loss 01’ $18 each. .lilyoi‘y member of
the jolly ('i‘ow agreed that it Will; the
best: $18 [but any of us 11nd spent
(llll‘illﬁ‘ the (*lllll‘él summer, not oyvn
(«reprint-1' lho money we paid for tho
bolllwl water We had to buy in
li‘rzinvo inwlond ol' llll‘ll' inm'iinblo

l‘lnglzind or continonlnl l‘lurop-‘x again
I Will certainly drive my own cur, for
it .15 the most. satisfactory us Well as

necessary to cross the English chun—
nel or the straits of Dover or the
North (Sea. to get to the continent,
and, after crossing any one of them,
one readily understands why it is
that England remained unconquered
for so long. My theory is that the
would—be invaders became so sick in
crossing the channel that they were
not able to ﬁght. It took the hardy,
strong-stomached Vikings ﬁnally to
turn the trick, those intrepid sailors
from the Northland.

Airplane travel is a popular meth-
od of getting about Europe. There
are regular lines of travel deﬁnitely
established between all of the prin—
ciple cities in Europe, and the fare
is just about the same as ﬁrst class
on the railroads. But our informa-

‘ _tion was that the novice can get sick
just as easily and thoroughly in an

 

 

 

(Continued on Page 20)

l

l
l

wines and liquors. if l (‘\’\‘I‘ go to‘

 

the cheapest method of travel
abroad. 7
And now to get to Holland! It is i

 

 

 

Ashland, Ohio.
Gentlemen :

Montgomery County.

did not eat well.

 

The baby beef feeder
got his watch '

Letter from Ohio’s Boy Champion
Baby Beef Feeder for 1924

DR. HESS & CLARK, Inc.

In the fall of 1922 I decided to enter the boys’
and girls’ Baby Beef Club.

These beeves were put out by the Montgomery
County Fair board, among boys and girls of

These beeves were fed by boys and girls and
exhibited at Montgomery County Fair.
with defeat, as I obtained ninth prize.

Last fall I decided to raise another one.
November 17th I received my Aberdeen Angus
beef to be raised for the Fair of 1924.

The ﬁrst month he gained only ﬁve pounds and
At the beginning of second
month I began to feed Dr. Hess Stock Tonic, along
with his daily rations.
month he gained sixty-ﬁve pounds.

As I saw it was a great help in making him
gain more, I continued feeding the Stock Tonic.

On 181; of September I exhibited my Baby Beef
at Montgomery County Fair.
the thirty—one beeves were judged—I obtained
ﬁrst prize in county and ﬁrst in State of Ohio.

It made a gain of 525 lbs. in 290 days.

The prizes I received were trip to Columbus,
trip to Chicago and gold watch, given by Ameri—
can Angus Association.

I feel as though. it was through the feeding of
your Stock Tonic that I obtained ﬁrst prize. I
wanted you to know this, as my experience may
be of great beneﬁt to other stock raisers.

Yours very truly,
LORNE B. GILBERT,

Germantown, Ohio, R. F. D. No. 1‘.

At the end of second

Dec. 9, 1924.

I met

So on

 

On September 2nd

 

 

 

 

Finished in Black Only
Mode in 10 Styles

     

 

ﬂown

s Puts this Glde- Tan
Metal- tea-Meta!
Harness cm Your Horses

We trust you wherever you live: .Only $7.50
down. Pay the rest monihly. Write for free
harness book. Learn all about this improved metal-
to-metul linrnvss construction Metal wherever
there is wear or strain. No old—fashioned buckles.

e
mi?"

First Olde—Tan leather produced 70 years ago. Now
known throughout America for its pronounced
superiority. OlllQ‘Tﬂll harness is made by a tanner-
mannfacturer who follows every step from the
raw—hide to the completed harness.

Ask for free

Write for Free Boo hm... boo...

Learn all about our $7.50 down and easy payment
offer and the Olde—Tan metslvto-metal harness.

BABSON BROS., Dept.32-8|
19th Street and Marshall Blvd.. Chicago. Ill.

Distributors M Melotto Cream Separators and
Edison Phonoxraphs.

 
     

 

      

    

Here’s the Book that will
help Cure him—it’s FREE
' HE first move thousands of horse owners
make: when a norse goes lame is to turn

to SiiVC—rl‘lle>i’lllr3tt l'mo _ l'l its 96 pa es
they ﬁnd the exact condition described, w at

to do and how to do it .Dozl t miss getting a
copyv' it costs you nothing.

SAVE-Thes-HQRSE

Known for 3! years as the one reliable. rem—
ecly for $PAVIN, Ringbone (except low)
Tlioropinanti—Shoulder,Knee,Ankle.l‘lool
or Tendon disease. Sold with our signed
MONEV-BACK Guarantee. Over 405,000
satisfied users l;now Save-The-Horse not only
cures butkecpstiie horse working while being
treated. ' rite today for sample ofCuarantee
veterinary advice you can depend upon ancl
your copy of the Book—all absolutely FREE.
TROY CHEMICAL COMPANY
339 State Street Binghamton, N.Y.
At Drumzists and Dealers with

 

 

 

Signed Guarantee or sent prepaid

 

 

 

 

 

 

, White Leghorns
' Exclusively

Pure 'l‘nncred Cockerels
from 2.012!) egg diinis
head our high grade Royal
lrceders. This means
high ﬂock average and
poultry proﬁts. 75% of
the chicks we sell go to
old customers. 1 0 a
live arrival and good con-
dition guaranteed. All
orders have my personal attention.

Write for catalog.

8. P. WIERSMA, Zeeland, Mich., R. R. 2.

ICELAND, MICH-

 

 

S. O. BUFF LEOHORN CHICKS FROM CARE-
fuﬂy culled shock on free range.
J. W. WEBSTER. Bath. Mlchlnm.

‘chigan-Grown

 

 

  

u]
%

Stew

N

     
     

 

Order early. Protect yourself
against extremeseed shortage I.
domestic and foreign. Beware
of imggrted clovetgseed not
adapt to your 801]. and Cli—
mnte. Use only lsbell's Bell Brand Clover -red or
allike—all Michigan-grown, pure. true constrain.
herd: and bla-yleldlng—rrord Tainan" got :8 yin-I.
0 an a see a o a ow

  qunlit’y canton request with
labell's 1925 Seed Annual. Bic savin a on sterling
quality direct-from-grower needs. $1411 today.

8. M. [SHELL ‘ COMPANY
335 Mechanic St. (74) make.

   

 

 

  

    
  

    
  
  
  
  
     
   
    
    
   
   
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
   
  
   
       
       
  
   
   
    
  
   
     
    
  
  
   
    
    
   
     
    
   
  
    
 
   
 
  
  
  
  
   
   
    
   
   
    
       
       
           
         


. on“: has)“ ,

.- mxr... ~.

'. 3...».731'13:

 

BONDS THAT BUILD UP

THE FARMING BUSINESS

  
 

Land Banks.

Better terms and

put their farms on a paying basis.

VER 300,000 farmers have borrowed money on ﬁrst
mortgages through the twelve co—operative Federal
lower interest rates
enable them to steadily reduce their indebtedness—

Money for these Loans is secured through the issue of Federal
Land Bank Bonds. In this way, the savings of thousands of in-
vestors, large and small, are gathered into the Banks to be dis—
tributed to those farmers who can use them proﬁtably.

There is no safer investment than these Bonds. The Federal
Land Banks operate under strict Government supervision and are
managed by men long trained in banking methods and well ace
quainted with farm conditions. Every Bond is guaranteed jointly
by all the twelve Federal Land Banks with combined capital and

reserve exceeding $50,000,000.

Federal Land Bank Bonds are tax—free, inheritance taxes only
excepted. And interest received from them is free from all in—

come taxes.

Money invested in Federal Land Bank Bonds earns a good rate
of interest, unfailingly paid twice yearly. Price and current rate

will be gladly quoted on request.

In case of need, Federal Land Bank Bonds can be turned into
cash on short notice. Or, they can be used as security for a loan

at your local bank.
A Federal Land Bank Bond may be purchased

for as little as

$40 or $100. Other denominations are: $500, $1,000, $5,000 and
$10,000. Your choice of coupon or registered form. Delivered
by registered mail; all correspondence conﬁdential. Look for the
words “The Federal Land Bank” appearing at the top of every

Federal Land Bank Bond.

The Federal Land Banks are located at

St. Louis, Mo. Louisville, Ky.
Berkeley, Cal. St. Paul, Minn.
Omaha, Nebr. Baltimore, Md.

Springﬁeld, Mass.
New Orleans, La.
Wichita, Kansas

Columbia, S. C.
Houston, Texas

Spokane, Wash.

Write for Federal Farm Loan Board Circular No. 16 descriptive of these Bonds,
addressing nearest Federal Land Bank or the Fiscal Agent.

Fiscal Agent

FEDERAL LAND BANKS
Washington, D. C.

  
   
 

federal landllsnli

Bond)

gyardenﬂrai

What Others

April averaged 23% eggs per

Do A. I“. DALE,

"Last year I got my chicks early.
to lay Ill August, 4 months,

They started
I-i days old. In
hen."

l’ort Iluron, Mich.

-2 Males rom

High ﬂock average Is the rule with Wyngarden
  YouVCan Do stock. Pedigree: Hens, 260 89. 1

298-304 dams.

ﬁr Brown Leghorns
Anconas

19  Barred Rocks

ZEELAND, Ml

 

Write for catalog.

n arden
HgTCfngRY & FARMS

CH., BOX B

 

 

 

88 Varieties of Fine pure-bred chickens, ducks, ,
geese, turkeys, fowls. eggs, baby chicks. Large
illustrated catalog Sc. A. A. Zlemer, Austin, Minn. 
Intelegiom
CHICKS
0
Hollywood
euma 18m Mated

260-290

A Remarkable Home Treatment Egg 5min

Given by One Who Had It

 

Hatched on a real poultry
farm of 70 acres.
Our slogan is quality.
Our watclrword, economy.
Our ambition, service.
Our policy, a fair deal.
Our endowment, experience.
Brown Leghorns, Ancomie,
Barred R o c k 5. Catalog
Free.
Rural Poultry Farm
Box 660 Iceland, Mich.

 

In the year 1803 I was attacked by,Mus-
ciilar and Sub—Acute Rheumatism. I suffered as
only those who are thus aillictcd know for over
three years. I tried remedy after remedy, but
such relief as I obtaincd was only tcinpnrary.
Finally. I found a treatment that cured me
completely and such it pitiful condition has
iever returned. I have given it ton number who
were terribly afﬂicted, cvcii bedridden. some of
them seventy to eighty years old, and the
results were Hm same as in my own case.

I want every sufferer from any form of 'mus-
cular and sub-acute (swelling at the minus)
rheumatism to try the great value of my ini-
{iroved “Home Treatment" for its remarkable
i

CHICKS

Black Minorcas, Anconi
chhorns.

Member Michigan

FOR 1925

Again we are ready to book orders for. Ilahy Chicks:
Barred and White Roi-ks, Reds, White and Silver
Laced Wyiindottes, White and Buff Orpingtons,

15, White, Brown and Buﬂ’

Send for Poultry Circular with price list.
100 per cent delivery.
STATE FARMS ASSOCIATION,
Kalamazoo, Michigan. ,
Active Member International Bab Chick Association.

State arm Bureau.

 

ealing power. Don‘t send a cent; sim ly mail
your name and address. and. I Wlll sen it free
to try. After you have used it. and it‘has prov-
en itself to be that long—looked for means of

may send the price of it, One Dollar, but un-
derstand I do not want your money. unless you
are perfectly satisﬁed to send it. Isn t that fair?
Why suffer any longer when relief is thus of-
fered you free. Don't delay. Write today.

Catalog free.
from first hatches.

HIGHEST QUALITY CHICKS

getting rid of such forms of rheumatism. you From culled and tested ﬂocks.

1 0 varieties.

For large proﬁts on broilers order
$4.00 off on advance orders.

LAWRENCE HATCHERV. Grand Rapids, Mich.

 

MARK H. JACKSON

265K Durston Bldg.. . Syracuse, N.» Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above statement true.

.FREE 2.2. ill

 

 

 

 

Bookman Hatchery. 20

varieties.

icks with advanced orders.
(I up. 20 purebred tested
r

r so. -
Lvon. Grand Ionian. man.

 

(Continued from Page 19)
airplane crossing the choppy channel
as on a boat. We had our tickets
routed on the low plane that all“our
ancestors have followed and left the
air alone. ,,

Next to getting shaved, buying
hailroad tickets is the next most dif-
ﬁcult task connected with foreign tra—
vel. We overcame that to a certain
extent by having a representative
from the American consulate buy our
tickets clear through Holland, a. cor—
ner of Germany, and into Copen-
hagen, Denmark. We made one ser-
ious mistake in neglecting to specify
second class. 'I appeared at the con-
sulate for my ticket and was handed
a multicolored booklet of perforated
Sheets of foreign language, each one
entitling me to a passage on atrain
or a boat in somebody’s country, and
the complete volume cost me about
$45.00. I could read only the ﬁrst
few pages of it myself, for except the
English part the ticket was written
in Dutch, German and Danish. Be-
fore I,ﬁnally surrendered the back
cover page I had traveled on innum-
erable trains in four different coun-
tries, besides four ships on various
bodies of water.

Our route from Folkestone, Eng-
land, to Flushing, Holland, lay across
the north end of the English Channel
and a corner of the North Sea. Fore-
most among the many things that I
am not is a sailor; I am not a sailor
in spite of my service in the navy
during the war. I had found out
long before that wearing the uniform
of a gob does not make one safe from
the terrors of mal-de-mer.

We were on a Dutch ship and here
We experienced our ﬁrst sensation of
being really in a foreign speaking
territory. Most of the ofﬁcers with
whom we had to deal in connection
with our tickets, baggage, passports,
checks, dinner, and the innumerable
details which one can think of to
bother about could speak English,
and quite well too, but all the signs
Dutch, principally “Verboten”, and
all of the bits of conversation that

 

‘ . Sensation. .

_ 'n'd ‘fforeign'it'ong’ue.  a 

peered; and we were cut in the'lmidst

of the infamous English Channel on, r

the edge of the North‘Sea, ina pee—
wee ship that was only a canoe com-
pared to the Leviathan on which we
crossed the Atlantic two weeks be-
fore. 'Be1gium appeared before us
and the scene of the famous naval
battle in the recent war which re—
sulted in the bottling up of the Ger—
man navy lay before us. It was like
sitting in a movie and seeing areal
of foreign scenes playing on the sil-
ver screen. The silent beauty of the

picturesque foreign shores, a. snateh'

of conversation now and then which
served as a title,for the picture which
lay before us, the imagination of it
all—it made a delightful day.

One of the proudest moments of
my life registered when I stepped of
the boat in Flushing, or Vlissing as
it is called in Holland, and realized
that I had crossed “the English Chan-
nel, and had even sailed on the North
'Sea; and had not once felt the slight-
est touch of sea sickness! I took all
the credit to myself in spite of the
fact that everyone was remarking
that we had had a. remarkably
smooth trip.

So this was Holland! Some women
and children in quaint native cos-
tumes were loitering about the pier,
a temptation to ask them if they ob~
jected to being photographed. As a.
matter fo fact, they were quite as
much of an oddity to the Hollanders
themselves as they were to us, for
they had dressed as they did for the
sole purpose of allowing themselves
to be photographed for a small fee.
The knowledge of this fact saved
many rolls of ﬁlm for the members
of our party.

The pictures that I did take of the
Hollanders were taken in real action:
their curious children with their
wooden shoes, their innumerable dog
drawn vehicles and their countless
windmills.

Our journey through Holland will
be described in a later issue. '

M. A. C. Poultry Judges Take First at Chicago

By C. G. CARD
Coach of the Michigan Team

HE Poultry Judging Team from
M. A. C. carried off ﬁrst honors
at the mid—west Poultry Show,

held December 9th—14th, at the Col-
iseum, Chicago, in competition with
teams from nine mid-west states. The
Team, composed of Clyde Norton of
East Lansing, Frank Williamson,
Pontiac, Ralph Meek of Montrose,
and Richard Weine of Alpena, as al—
ternate, was coached by C. G. Card,
Assistant Professor of Poultry Hus-
bandry, and Acting Head of the De—
partment.

Team standings were as follows,
with a. possible 4,000 points. Mich—
igan Ag. College, 3,336.7; Ames,
Iowa, 3,276.7; Purdue, 3,260; Illi-
nois, 3,205; Missouri, 3,199; Okla—
homa, 3,040; Kansas, 3,022.5; Ne-
braska, 2,887; Ohio, 2,871.

The contest consisted of three
parts: production and exhibition
classes for judging, and a written ex-
amination of 25 questions. The Pro—
Island Red, White Leghorn, White
Wyandotte, White Rock, and Barred
Rock hens, with trap nest records.
These birds were furnished by sev-
eral of the colleges. In this part of
the contest, with a 1,500 point score
possible, M. A. C. placed ﬁrst with a

score of 1,410; Purdue second,
1,320; Missouri third, 1,290; Illinois
fourth, 1,230; Iowa ﬁfth, 1,230.

The exhibition class was made up
of Rhode Island Red cockerels, R. 1.
Red pullets, White Wyandotte pul—
lets, Barred Rock pullets, and White
Leghorn cock birds. These birds
Were picked from the ShOW room
and represented in every case, very
warm competition, as was indicated
by score. A 1,500 score was possible,
and Ames, Iowa placed ﬁrst with
1,060, M. A. C. second with 1,045,
Oklahoma third, with 1,030, and Illi-
nois fourth, with 1,020.

In the examination, ﬁrst place was
won by the Ames team, with a 986
score out of a possible 1,000. High
honors in this section of the contest
went to Rosenbaum of the Purdue
Team, who wrote a perfect paper.

Individual honors went to J. D.
Springer of Ames, Iowa, who made
1,146 points out of a possible 1,333,;
second place to L. Stark of Missouri,
with 1,145; third to Frank William—
son of Michigan, with 1,125.

In production judging, ﬁrst place
went to Clyde Norton of Michigan,
with a 485 score out of a possible

'500; second place to Ralph Meek of

 

 

 

Lott to right: 31 hard Weine, Ralph ~lpfcgekr Frank W

The M. A. 0. Judging team that represented Michigan a tire malwmroaiigy‘g‘m.

In Chicago, Dec. 9th-l4tli.

son,_01qdo Norton. In

nan-z
,-~ rt. ' '1

 

7 01:1}. Card.“ coach:  r   
 ' , i '7: 4 r’ ' 'x'riy: :"

s ',.

The chalk cliffs otguiigiandikiiéap;

 

 

         

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

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gas».
T‘ 5: 3.7‘ ,M
-‘ 'W/ﬂ/l .../’4' 1
a A» 
Lusty, Fast-Growing

Money Makers
Superior baby chicks are bred-to-
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"from world champion layers such
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This pedigree-blood in Superior
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returns and hands0me proﬁts.

Hatched in state inspected hatch-
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Michigan —- with a capacity of
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solutely guaranteed. Money back if
not satisﬁed; Book your order now
and receive liberal discount. Write for
free catalog and price list today.
SUPERIOR POULTRY FARMS

Box 201 Zeeland. Mich.

Write Toda

 

 

 

WHITE LEGHORNS
BROWN LEGHORNS
BARRED ROCKS
(Aristocrat Strain)

We ‘put quality ahead of quan—
tity in our hatchery—utility

ahead of show. Our ﬂocks are

of the best utility strains. Lay—
ing average is high in all.
White Leghorns are Barron

English strain, large, deep-bod-
ied, egg type birds. Barred
Rocks are Aristocrat strain, the
best of the breed. Stock raised
on free range, under best con-
ditions and care, is very thrif—
ty. Great Northern chicks there—
fore are strong and healthy
and come to 'quick maturity.

Our cats“, will tell you all about it.
rite {or your copy.

Great Northern Hatchery
Zeeland. Mich. Box 57

 

 

 

 

 

 
  
   
     
    
     
         
   
   
   
    
   

 
 

Save the Price
of Your Incubator

‘ Record hatches the country over, prove that
the extra chicks hatched and saved With a 103-
Degree Incubator pay for the incubator in a.
short time.

‘ IDs-DEGREE INCUBATOR
Two wonderful Improvements—the Patented Two-Circuit
Hot Water Healing System and Tillin Chimney, keep
temperature at 103 day an night. No both-
or from sudden temperature changes outside.

Free Trial for One Hatch
Compare it with others.
A money -

ntee. Write 

orbeautlfuilree '

  

 
 

 

140 Egg Incubator and breeder - $17.75*
180 Egg Incubator Alono' - - . 15.75
180 Egg Incubator and Broader -
250 Egg Incubator Alone - - - 22.75
250 Egg Incubator and Broodor - 31.00
340 Egg Incubator Alone - - - 30.75
Made of California Redwood. Order direct from this ad.
sodsws trial—money back if. not pleased. If not ready
(border now, don't buy until you get our 1925 catalog
on shows larger sires up to 1000 eggs. (3)
SOOISII “MIT” 00. 0091.134 Mill. "8- }

 

 

s . . 14o - r'cc
1. INCUBATOR cAPAcm .

ﬁle‘s all tﬁltooturee't‘hatlinsure brushes-—
.ou e’w a‘cope an compeon re ’
  “ .t’coii’uol criminal: automatic tr 6 _
" ‘ ‘ “ " thermpmete. ' ‘ ’ .
can’t break i

   

   
 

A”...

 

ran

"nod «its like
_ in mining.

 

, Judging. I
’ ‘ placed ﬁrst with a score of 390.

4 'mana‘gement of any case.

     

ithi 4‘19. ‘ In'éxiiibiuos
D. Springer of Ames

   

113
J L

The Michigan Team received the
largecup donated by the mid-west
Poultry and Egg Shippers, for best
all around team. This is not a per-
manent cup, but must be won by
some college three times before be—
coming its property. This cup was
won in 1920 by Missouri, 1921, Okla-
homa; 1922, Iowa; 1923, Missouri,
and 1924, Michigan Agricultural Col-
lege. ’

Michigan also won the large cup
for best all around production judg~
ing. In addition, each Michigan man
won two medals as a reward for in-
dividual standings.

All who took part in the contest,
feel that many thanks are due Mr.
Chas. G. Pape, President, and Mr.
Theo Hewes, Secretary, and Treas—
urer of the Coliseum show, for their
splendid cooperation, as they made
the contestants feel at all times that
they were immensely interested.

"GETTING READY FOR THE
HATCHIN G SEASON

T is not too early to begin to think
I of the coming hatching season

and with this in mind we must
pay particular attention to the ﬂock
in connection with the birds that are
to be used for breeders during the
latewinter and spring. Those who
have been practicing systematic cull-
ing during the past summer and fall
should by this time be pretty Well
acquainted with the birds that can
be best adapted to this purpose.
Where hens are to be used for breed-
ing it is very desirable to separate
them from the pullet laying ﬂock
and handle them a little differently.
as to feed, particularly where an at—
tempt is being made to stimulate and
force egg production. It is 3. dan-
gerous thing from the hatching egg
standpoint to crowd egg production
too strongly, as there is danger of
sacriﬁcing fertility and hatchability.

High fertility and hatchability are
essential factors in getting replace—
ment stock for next season’s ﬂocks
and, if in addition we have any mar—
ket for hatching eggs, success is
largely dependent on selling eggs
that will hatch and carry the largest
amount of virility that can be crowd-
ed into the shell. Eggs that will
hatch and chicks that are disease
free and will grow strong and rapid—
ly are the main thing and we can not
afford to overlook any details in the
way of selection now that will make
our next spring easier.

Strong, active birds, of the proper
type, good producers and late moult-
ers, are the kind to look for. Vigor
and strength is indicated by a broad
head and chest, prominent bright
eyes, short and curved beak and
bright comb, these will be the most
active birds in the ﬂock. The good
layers will show a soft, moist vent,
soft, pliable skin, thin, ﬂexible lay
bones separated at least three ﬁngers
and.with four ﬁngers between lay
bones and keel. If pullets are to be
used at all only those that are well
matured and that have been laying
heavily during the winter should be
used.

On those farms where colony or
brooder houses are available they can
be used very advantageously for
breeding pens. One male should be
used for from ten to thirty females,
depending on the breed used, the
lighter breeds requiring less males
than the Asiatics. Better fertility
will be obtained by using two males
with a small ﬂock and using them
on alternate days. Where possible
only males from known high pro-
ducers should be used, but where
actual record males can not be ob-
tained, choose one from a good pro-
ducing ﬂock that shows lots of snap-
piness and vitality. Well matured
cockerels are preferable to use with
hens.

Breeding stock should have free
range, which is another reason they
should be separated from the birds
that are kept conﬁned and being
pushed for egg production—Wall-
ace’s Farmer. ‘ v

FREE BOOK ABOUT CAN OER

The Indianapolis Cancer Hospital,
Indianapolis, Indiana, has published

: a booklet, which gives interesting
facts about the cause of Cancer, also

tells what to do for pain, bleeding,
odor, etc. A valuable guide in the
Write for

 

 

V lt‘todsy, mentioning this paper.(Adv.

o

    

  

 

 

  
 
   
  
     
   
    
   
   
  

    
 
     

 

 

 I eiler quzpment
\\

 
 
  
  

\

  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
        
   
   
     
   
     
     
    
      
   
   
     
   
     
     
      
    
   
       
     
      
      
     
     
       
     
     
     
     
     
     
   
    

You can dig and slave and work
all you want to but—Do you
know how to cut the corners on
expense?

 

 

How are you going to make
money at farming if you pay too
much for your tools?

 

 

 

 

The wise farmer knows where
to buy his supplies at money
saving prices. -

He buys from the Factory and
keeps the proﬁts at home—right
in his own pocket.

You farmers need this book. It
shows you how to save money
on all your agricultural imple—
ments, cream separators, harness,
hardware, paints, rooﬁng, etc.,
in fact, it’s the wide awake
farmer’s guide to lower prices
on everything he needs.

Get your copy today. Don’t
delay. This book of 92 pages is
helping hundreds of thousands
of American farmers enjoy the
fruits of their labors.

How about you? It is for YOU
to say if you want to save money. ‘

i

    

- Sears. Roebuck and Co:

Chicago Philadelphia

 

Mall Coupon Today to Chicago or Phuadelphla, the Store
Neuron You.

Please send me a copy of your catalog, “Sears Farm Dollar Saver," con-

 

 

. .
.... __”___W—___—

9 taining 92 pages of farm equipment and supplies sold at factory prices.
0
N 97M59 I
NV 4 Name.... ......c............-u....................-........... '
0Q I Postoﬂice.....-......................._...................-....-...............

@ I Rural Route. .    .... ... ... ... ...  ... ... .. ..  Box No. ... .. .. ...  -

! State . . . . . . . . . .. ... ... .. ... ..   ... .. .. .. .. ... ... ...   .-.  ... ... ...   . . ‘

I St t d N

' rec an o . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  .... ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . V .... g

L .

 

 

Fifteenth Year of Breeding to Lay

“’hito Leghorns Exclusively.
Foundation Stock is

TANCRED’S BEST
Backed by ﬁve generations of 300-egg hens

THREE GREAT MATINGS

l—Best 'l‘ancrcd males, (ancestry 270-310) to
extra selected “'olverine hens.

Z—Tancred males (175 in 343-0zg ancestry) to
extra selected “'olverine hens. ‘

3—W'olverine stock, same quality but not trap-

nested.
GUABANTY—IOOWO live delivery, plus 100%?
good condition.

  
  
   
 
 
  
 
  
  
 

 

\Volverine stock is all of the some type and of
sure productiveness. You take no chances

Catalog Free
Wolverine Hatchery, Zeeland, Mich.

 

Box 98

 

 

   
 
     

First Quality Baby Chicks

From Winter Laying stock produced by Michigan’s old reliable hatrher '
. y, pioneer breed-
:‘1: am: hgtcgers ogeratlng the best equipped and most modern hatchery in the state.
re )re om arron and American \Vhite Leghorns, Anmmis. Barred Roclnl
a? k . . Reds. Strong, well hatched chicks from tested Ilogunized free range
see .that nmke wonderful wmter layers. Chicks sent by Insured Parcel Post.
pgepuid to your door. 100 per centdive delivery guaranteed. Seventeen years
(tihoﬁzpleégencgvllae Igggdligll‘lgblandu Siltlluileilig fchickenlgiving dubsoiute satisfaction to
I . ' . e 1 us m - " ' . "
prices on best quahty chicks before placingtgbui'uordgr.nn 1mm hat (Jet lowest

HOLLAND HATGHERY & POULTRY FARM, R7, Holland, Michigan.

   
    
   

 

 

WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION
- THE "BUSINESS FARMER ‘


 

Wheat Prices Continue to Climb Skyward

Heavy Receipts of Live Stock Weakens Market
By W. W. FOOTE. Market Editor.

ARMERS as a rule are using their
F spare money for improving their
farms instead of buying addi—
tional acres, as they have acquired
the habit of depending on their own
labor, as farm hands ask higher
wages than they feel they can afford
to pay. One such farmer remarked
the other day that he had tried this
plan for quite a number of years, and
the scheme worked out all right. The
great improvements in farm machin—
ery have materially helped to lower
the cost of production by decreasmg
the work, and manure piles judici—
ously used have greatly helped to
make each acre produce more than
formerly. Many Michigan farmers
are more or less identiﬁed with the
sheep industry, and the highly for-
tunate owners of fair sized ﬂocks of
ewes are making tine. profits. the
returns being much larger than for
either cattle or hogs. Only a short
time ago prime fat handy-weight
lambs were bringing $19.25 per 100
pounds in the Chicago market, an ex—
ceptional price, it, is true, but .the
top now is still extremely high.
Wool is once more a. big item in the
profits derived from sheep, and it is
good demand at high prices. The
hog industry is carried on too exten—
sively to work out as well as sheep,
and the government statistics relat—
ing to the numbers bred are very apt
to be inconﬂict with the numbers
marketed, resulting in many slumps
in market, values. At the same time
present market values for swine are
far above those paid at correspond—
lll'; dates in the last four years. and
there seems to be no exccssiyc pro—
(lttction of lard or meats. (‘attlcmcn
are preparing plenty of stock for tho
markct. and a beef famine looks a
lone way off. The Worst feat tire of
the cattle feeding industry is the ex—
cessiyc marketing of ordinary short—
t'cd cattle.- to avoid feeding high~
priced corn. Long t't-cdiug has ceased
to be generally profitable. however,
the popular taste haying turned to
light cuts of bet-1‘. and tat ycwrliuus
are returning much the best profits.
lA‘inc profits are paying whcat farm—
crs well, the large crop being in good
demand, but in many parts of the
corn belt states there is a scarcity of
corn. with a large percentage of
damaged grain.
I“(‘(l(‘l'zll Farm Loans

It is announced by the Federal
Farm Loan Board that an offering of
$30,000,000 in farm loan bonds has
been made. the smallest issue made
by the twelve land banks in five
years, and because of this, in the
opinion of officials, reflecting the gen—
erally improved condition of the
great agricultural industries. These
bonds are dated January 1, and will
bear interest at the rate of 41/2 per
cent. They will mature in thirty
years, but are callable in 1935.

High Prices for \that

Customary reactions in prices for
wheat, are to be expected, but there
is no apparent probability of values
going permanently to a lower level,
as the shortage of wheat and rye in
European countries points to a con—
tinued good export movement of both
grains from the United States. It is
certainly highly fortunate for the
farmers who are in the habit of
l‘ftiSlD-E-ﬂ' wheat. that the large outlet is
afforded at. this time, and in its late
full report, of wheat. investigations,
the deparmcnt of agriculture says
wheat prices are not too high and
have merely been maintaining a par—
ity with all commodity prices and
the index number of wheat prices is
still far below that of wages. The
department says exports from July
to January were 170,000,000 bushels
against 81,000,000 bushels last year.
This suggests larger exports than
have been reported heretofore.

An improved milling demand for
wheat in nearly all centers is creat—
ing a better feeling, and there is a
disposition to buy on all breaks. Ac—
cording to reliable reports, thefarm
reserves of wheat in this country on

thc ﬁrst of January were only 17 per
cent as compared with 24 per cent
in a normal year Total wheat
stocks in all positions in the United
States are estimated at 397,000,000
bushels comparing with 420,000,000
bushels a year ago. Corn reserves in
all positions are estimated at 1,396,-
000.000 bushels, comparing with
1,820,000,000 bushels a year ago.
Corn reserves are. estimated at 55
per cent, against a normal of 60 per
cent, while oats on farms are estim-
ated at 46 per cent, or 2 per cent
less than normal. There has been
active marketing of the several
grains, and the visible supplies are
much larger than a year ago. Recent
sales for May delivery were made on
the Chicago Board of Trade of wheat
at $1.79. comparing with $1.09 a
year ago: corn at $1.55, comparing
with 4 cents last year; oats at 63
cents, comparing with 46 cents last
year; and rye at $1.56, comparing
with 75 cents a year ago.
The “'heat Advance

Complaints against high prices of
wheat are not justiﬁed, the depart-
ment of agriculture declares in a
statement. The grower has received
benefit from high prices and the con—
sumer is not being unduly injured, it
is declared.

ln explaining why prices in the
United States are above the world
level the department states that in
this country alone of all the produc—
ing and consuming countries was
there a, good crop. while shortages
have prevailed generally in the rest
of the world.

“The grain futures administration
of this dcpartmcnt, has competent in—
Vcstigators daily on the floors of the
important grain exchanges," says the
statcmcnt. “No information gives
ground for alarm that the essential
bread grain of the United States is
being made the subject of vicious
and harmful speculation.”

Increase in “'orld's l“l:lXS(‘(‘(l (‘rop

The Department of Agriculture
says the world‘s crop of tlaxsecd for
1924 is now being estimated at 1:12:
870.000 bushels. which is an increase
of about, 7 per cent, over the 15524
production. A 70 per cent, increase
in the United States crop is the prin—
cipal factor in the increased produc-
tion of llaxseed. The latest oilicial
estimate places the, 1021 ﬂaxseed
crop of the United States at approxi—

mately 30,122,000 bushels as com~
pared with 17,060.000 bushels last
year. This increase more than off—
sets increase in Argentine and India.
Doings in (‘at‘tlc

Enormous numbers of cattle have
been marketed in Chicago recently.
but the proportion of choice fat
bceves was smaller than usual. and
these suffered a much smaller de-
cline in prices than the many ordin—
ary to medium grades which made
up most. of the offerings. The bulk
of the beef steers sold at $8.25 to
$10.60 with sales down to $6.50 to
$7.50 for the commoner steers of
light weight. and no good steers going
lower than $9. The better class of
heavy steers found buyers at $10.75
to $11.85, and the best yearlings sold
for $11.50 to $13.50, with little
thin steers fetching $4 to $6.40.
Butcher stock had a good outlet at
$3.25 to $10.25 for cows and heifers.
while canner and cutter cows went
at $2.25 to $3.25, bulls at $3.25 to
$6 and calves $6 to $12. Stockers
and feeders had a better demand at
an average advance of " about 25
cents. with sales at $4 to $7 and a
few prime feeders at $7.10 to $7.75.
Cattle were marketed more freely
than a year ago, but prices are higher
than then, at which time beef steers
were selling at $6.75 to $12.

Gluttcd Hog Market

Instead of the long waited for
diminished receipts of hogs, supplies
offered on the Chicago market have
been showing heavy gains in num-
bers, and it was impossible to avert
declines in prices, although the big
demand for choice hogs to ship to
eastern packing points helped to
check the downward movement. At
times there were good rallies in
prices for the better class of the
heavier hogs, and on the whole the
market was in better shape than
might have been expected with such
generous offerings. As a rule, de—
clines were much the greatest in the
pigs and underweight hogs, which
were. much too numerous. There, is
a wide spread in prices, with prime
heavy butcher hogs selling highest
and about 80 cents above the best
light bacon hogs. Recent, (fhicago
receipts averaged 220 pounds being
five pounds less than a year ago,
when hogs were selling at $6.20 to
$7.25. Late sales were made. of
hogs at $9.85 to $10.85, with light
weights in shipping demand at ad—
vanced values.

High Prices for Lambs

Recent Chicago receipts of lambs
were unusually small in numbers,
and big advances took place in prices,
the best handy Weights selling up

 

THE BUSINESS FARMER’S MARKET SUMMARY

and Comparison with Markets ’l‘wo W'eeks ago and One Year ago

 

 

 

 

 

Detroit. Chicago Detroit Detroit
Jan. 13 Jan.  ' Dec. 30 1 yr. ago

\VHEAT—

No. 2 Red $1.98 $1,93@1,94 $1.88 $1.13

No. 2 \Vhite L99 1.89 1.14 ’

No. 2 Mixed 1,98 1.93 @ 1.94 1 .88 1 .13
(TORN—

NO. 3 Yellow 1 .29 1.20 ((13 1 .23 l .30 .83

No. 4 Yellow 1.24 1.25 .79
"J"l‘h"‘l’.

No. 2 wum- .63 .ool/é @131 Ji-t 

Au. 3 “'ltito .62 .58 Q2) .59 .titi .50
ltYlu—

(‘ush No. 2 1.5! 151(0132 1.51 .7311;
RNA NS—

(l. H. l’. CW1. 5.90@(i.0.') 5.91} 5.50Q35'00 ,1_7()
l’O’tWTOlGS—

l’cr (‘\\t. LOOQDIDG .76 .93 l.83@2.00
HA 1 --— __

No. 1 Tim. 18.50@19 22@24 1 7,50 @ 18 23.09;? 24

No.2'l‘im. 1(i.50@17 18@2l 156016 

No.1(‘ioycr ts@to 17@20 .15@m giggly:

Light Mixed 17.506.) 18 zoom: 1(5.50@ 17 at Q0 Au

 

 

 

 

 

 

'l‘ucstlay. January l:;.~r\\'hcat prices udVith't'. (Joni,
Pcans higher. Potatoes decline. Cattle ens."-

oats and rye unchanged.
l-log's wanted.

 

w Detroit. (‘hlcngo and Bul‘aio Tucsduy Livr ﬁlm-k Markets Next Page.

to $18.75 per 100 pounds, while
feeder lambs sold at $16 to $17.
yearlings at $13 to $16.50; ewes at
$4.50 to $10.50; wethers at $9 to
$12.25 and bucks at $3.50 to $7.
\Vorld Sheep Production

According to the Department of
Agriculture, an analysis of the pro—
duction of sheep in various countries
indicates that the trend over a long
period of years is downward in most
countries. In all countries the num—
ber varies from year to year and
ﬂuctuates with changes in prices and
other conditions that, effect the in-
dustry generally. The total sheep
population of the United States,
Australia, New Zealand, and the
United Kingdom in 1904 was 142,-
922,000 head. In 1914 it was 176,-
342,000 head, and in 1924 it. stood
at 157,355,000 head.

Large accumulations of wool, with
consequent decline in prices shortly
after the war, caused many countries
to reduce their ﬂocks, particularly in
Australia, and Argentina. As the
war accumulations of wool were ab~
sorbed by the trade, prices gradually
rose, until to—day they are at records
heights.

A noted British authority on wool
estimates that the world consumption
of wool during 1924 would amount
to approximately 2,840,000,000 lbs
The world supply for 1924, accord
ing to estimates made by the United
States Department of Commerce and
the National Association of Wool
Manufacturers, amounted to only 2,—
660,000,000 pounds. The principal
producing countries, therefore, are
now concentrating on increased pro-
duction.

 

WHEAT
Steadily pounding the market the
bears caused it to weaken some and
prices declined during the past two
weeks but the general conditions
would not permit this for long and
the bulls soon had things their own
way again, with prices/working to-
ward the $2 mark. Millers have been
taking wheat in good large quantities
following the market when new price
levels were, made. Other demand re-
mains good. There is some bearish
news afloat but not enough to seri—
ously effect the price trend. Right
now it looks as though wheat will
reach  before another issue goes
to press.
CORN
Corn followed the trend of wheat
during the fortnight ending Satur—
day, January 10. and prices are
higher at all points. Toward the
close of last week reports came out
of the west that the price was too
high for feeders to pay, and reports
from Canada were of the same
nature. Trading has been slow.
OATS
Prices in the oat market at Detroit
show a decline compared with two

weeks ago. At present there seems
to be more sellers than buyers and
the market is easy. ,

RYE

A fair demand exists for rye and.

the price is working upward. This
grain is being used in place of wheat
to a certain extent in some of the
European countries and the prices
are expected to travel in the same
direction.
BEANS

Michigan bean growers will be in—
terested in an article on page four
of this issue. In this article, we have
presented the facts as thcy appcar at.
this time and you can draw your
own conclusions. Since we wrote
this article we. have received a letter
from one firm and they declare they
expect. to see the, price go above, $6
pcr cut, and may not stop until it
reaches $8. That seems too good to
be true. doesn’t it?

POTATOES

The taXes must be paid and the
potato market must suffer because, it
seems that everyone is selling their
surplus and the market is ﬂooded.
Consumers are not buying so the
market is weak but prices are higher
than they were two weeks ago. In-

9

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Week of 'Janunry 18

IRS-T hall 01‘ this week will show

a general rise in temperature

but with a l'eVPl‘sH action during
last half. The moderation during
early part of week will In: quite de~
cided but not necessarily high for the
season.‘

Beginning about Monday or Tues—
day and running over the. middle
part of the week there will he a rain
or snow period followed by a couple
days of fair weather. There will be
a renewal of stormiuess about Friday
but the week will end with the sky
clearing upand temperatures falling
considerably.

Week of January 25

Following the severe cold period of
the beginning of this week it is not
expected that temperatures will again
go as low during this winter.

A rapid moderation of temperature
about middle of week may cause
thawing conditions, fog and more
snow ﬂurries or probable local show-
ers. Following Friday of this week
there will be a more deﬁnite turn
towards clearing weather and colder
temperatures.

First Half of Year \Vet

We expect the spring season to be
late as a. result of the unusual
amount of wetness which will hinder
both plowing and planting. Stormi-
ness will be more pronounced, how-
ever, during April, May and June.

Sugar Beet Outlook Poor

For the year 1925 we cannot, see
such rosy prospects in Michigan “ »r
the sugar beet farmer. The e- !y
planted crop may show good progress
and high hopes during the summer
months but the failuseason will not
be favorable to most of the acreage
because we expect the sugar content
to he of a low average.

Poor Conditions for Eclipse

For the beneﬁt of those who may
want to see the total eclipse of the
sun January 24th at sunrise, we may
state that the weather conditions at
that time are not the best in any
year and we do not think this year
will be any diiferent. A storm cen-
ter will be passing over the Great
Lakes region at the time and as a
result there will be more than the
average amount of cloudiness at the
time. .

In Michigan the sun will be cov-
ered the most a couple minutes past
eight in the morning but will only
appear totally eclipsed in the more
northern counties of the lower penin-
sulu. There will not be an eclipse in
the United States favorable for obser-
vation until 1345.

We’ve hMade
Lukeview Chicks
Equal to Any

Foundation 3 t o c k
with highest known
egg records, plus
careful breeding have
done it. Our White
Leghorns came direct
from Tapered—pedi-
greed. Our Barred Rocks direct from
Parks. Rhode Island Reds from pioneers
with this breed.

You’ll be surprised at the reasonable
prices for such high grade stock.

Write for our catalog and price list.

Lakeview Poultry Farm

R. R. X. Box 3.

CHIX OF QUALITY

llntclicd In Wishbone Incubators. I

  
  

  

f’ lantrez.‘ Strain —,
' WHITE LEGHORNS '.
~ PM} SHRED ROCKS ‘-'
Single Comb 5 Rose Comb
R1100: ISLAND REDS

  
 

  
 
  
 

  

Iu-Imon tau-x

a"; . .... m.

  

 

Holland. Michigan.

 

‘ $13 per 100
S. C. W. Leghoms {some per 500
I $120 per 1000

 

Barred Rocks ...... .. 1 $18 D" 100
I 575 per 500
~ Dc. KOSTER’S HA'I‘CHERY,
Iceland. Blic||.. Box 300.

Baby Chicks

Are you going lip put BIAFONIII CTIICKS under

yrmr broodch this liaison. or "Just’chicks". In.

vestigate IACOMB quality. Michigan hatched,

from guaranteed pure stock. Send for catalog.

Early order discount. 100% live delivery.

MACOMB POULTRY FARM a. HATGHERV.
Box 113, Halfway, Michigan.

 

 

\

WHEN WRITING ADVERTISERS
MENTION THE MIDNIGAN BUSINESS FARMER

 

 

days yet. or uni'illho over—supply

is clrared away. After that we hope

higher prices- will prevail, but we can-

not predict the trend of the market.
u'om.

Prices are ﬁrm a! l’losIon although
the market is quiet and demand
light. Dealers predict higher rows
within a few weeks and growers are
rnfhor optimistic.

HAY

llr‘wcipts were somewhat heavier
last week. The demand is good for
the best grades of timothy Willi only
a moderate demand for the lower
sorts. Alfalfa is ﬁrm, with receipts
light and demand good for the dairy
sorts.

 

TH E LIVESTOCK MARKETS

lilG'l‘HOI'l‘, January 13.——Receipts of
cattle Monday were about the same as at
the market's opening last week, but the
trade was slower and on everything but
canuers, cutters and bulls was fully 25
cents lower. The latter held steady and
were in fairly active demand. Milkers
and springers that were good were more
active but few sound in every way here.
Good to choice light yearlings, $9.50@
10; best heavy steers, $7.50@8.50; best
handyweight butcher steers, $7@7.75;
miked steers and heifers, $5.25@6.50;
handy light butchers, $4.25@5.75; light
butchers, $3.75@4.25; best cows, $4.50@
5.50; butcher cows, $3.50@<.25; cutters,
$,3@3.50; canners, $2.25Q1‘2.75; choice
light bulls, $«i.25@6; bologna bulls, heavy,
$5035.75; stock bulls, $3.25@4.50; feeders,
4.75@6; stockers, $4.25@5.75: mllkers
and springers, $45@70.

The veal calf trade was more active, and
50 cents higher than at the close last
week, selling as follows: Best grades,
$146014.50; fair to good, $12@l3.50;
culls and common, $7@9.50; heavy, $4@
6.50.

Sheep—Receipts of lambs were more
liberal but the quality was considered only
fair and the market lowsr. Slicep were
about 25 cents lower. Prices, Best lambs,
$17.50@17.75; fair lambs, $14@17; light
to common lambs, $8.75@13.50; buck
lambs, $7.75@16; fair to good slim-p, $8
«471); culls and common, $2.50Qp4.

Hogs—Hogs were 40 cents higher on
mixed, 35 cents on good yorkers, steady
to 25 cents higher on light yorkers and
steady to 25 cents on roughs than at the
close last week. Closing prices: Mixed
hogs, $10.75; good yorkers, $10.50; light
:orkres, $8.75@9; roughs, $9.25; Stag-s,
6.

CHICAGO—C a. t t l e——Recoipts, 32,000,
beef steers and yearlings, mostly medium
to good kind, 25 to 40c lower; most all
weights showing little change: large pro-
portion of run still in first hands at late
hour: four loads choice to prime steers
averaging around 1,300 pounds, $11.75;
few loads 1,300 to 1,540—pound steers.
810.50@ll; best yearlings, $10.50; bulk
ted offerings, 87.75@10; she stock steady
to weak; spots lower; bulk butcher cows,
$3.86@6; heifers mostly $5@7; canners
and cutters, $2.50@3.15; bulls, 10 to 15c
lower; few bolognas selling above $4.50;
calves closing fully steady; packers pay-
ing $10@11 for desirable vealers; stockers
and feeders 15 to 250 lower; largely $5@
6.50.

Ilogs~—Receipts, 70,000; closing with big
packers still out of market mostly 15 to
250 higher; big interests bidding steady;
top, $11.05; desirablc 240 to BOO-pound
butchers, mostly $10.75@.ll; 160 to 230-
pound kind, $10@10.75; 140 to ISO-pound
average. mostly $9@10; bulk pigs, $7@
8.25; niosl packing sows, $10.20@10.45;
estimated holdover, 11,000.

Slu-cp~~—Receipts, 25,000; slow; fat
lambs uneven, steady to 25c lower; maxi—
mum dcclirre of lower grades bulk. $17.50
((148.25; top, $18.50; olippcd lambs, $15;
fat sheep steady to 25c higher; bulk,
$0.50@10.25; top, $10.40 for choice I40—
Dound weights; feeding lambs, 15 to 25c
higher; bulk, $16.50@l7; top. $17.25.

EAST BUFFALO—Cattlc—-—Receipts, 80
cars; market steady; shipping steers. dry—
[etL $1061)10.50;. good choicc shipping
Stvcrﬁ. $9®9 50; heavy, fut. medium
quality. 57.50608; light native yenrlings.

fancy quality, $11.5(Wu12; mcdium to
good. $l0frl1‘10.50; best bulcliers’ steers.

§7ﬁl)3;; best fat heifers, $7((Il7.50; state
llcifcrs. $5016; light Michigan butchering
heifers $6.500l’6.752 bcsf fut cows, $5ﬁ.
5.50: medium butchering cows, $4604.50;

cutters, 52.500113; reactor cows, $18561)
2253; lwsl {at bulls, Midi/0.50; light fat

bulls. $550016; heavy bologna bulls, $4.50
405: common biIlls, $3.50@4; Stock heif-
nrs. $250611"! ; fceders. good, $550666;
stock stccrs, $150605 ; milkers and spring—
ers. good, $75/dl100; milkers and spring—
ers, common and medium, $356345.

Hogs—«Receipts, I 00 cars ; market
strong: heavy. $11.15@11.25; a few extra,
$11.50; mixed and yorkers, 5103756911;
lights, $9@9.50; pigs, $7@8.

Sheep and Lambs—Receipts, 50 cars;
market lower: top lambs, $18; yearlings,
$14@15.50 ; wethers, $11@11.50 ;, eWes, 310
@1050. Calves—Receipts, 1,500; top, $15.

 

i think Tan Busnmss Fauna is a very
good paper and am always glad to re-
commend it.—~—H. Began-om, Kent County,-
Michigan.

 g‘haﬂirfu's‘ are that the antenna.  
Will hr‘ downward at least for a few

 

 

 

 

 

 » . Your
,MULE-HIDE

'NOf A KICK “
m4 HILL/Old FEET
ROOFING
—AID—‘

SHINGLES

  

      

  

    
 

0

dealer will tell you that
the product is honest
quality clear through.
THE LEI-ION COMPANY

MANUFACTURERS
44th to 45th St. on Oakley Ave.
CHICAGO, ILL.

     

  

I a
'-

  

  

MULE‘HIDE

      
   
     

 
   
     

 

 

 

 

 

 

g

 

No advertisement less than tcn words.

discounts.

B ism ss FARMERS’ EXCHANGE

A DEPARTDIENT OF CLASSIFm ADMTISING
RATE PER \VOBD—One Issue 8c, Two Ime- 15c. Four Issues 25c.

. of ii res, initial or abbreviation count as one word.
glglﬁpln advglrlce from all advertisers in this departznent, no exceptions and no

Forms dose Monday noon proceeding date of issue.
Address: MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMEB, Mt. Clemens, Michigan.

 

 

 

 

 

FARM LANDS

' DETROIT REAL ESTATE—_—
IxII-Fég: slag: you how to make money in Detroit
real estate if you have a few hundrqu tonngcs
My proposition will bear the closest investigation.
N0 trick. just a straight business‘ DIODOSIAIOIL
Lake Shore Drive Realty 00., 1444 (.urland ve.,

 

 

 

 

Detrmt. —~_ —_‘
FEMALE HELP \VANTED
WANTED—GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSI—

' crmancnt position, good home. d
“Mk. lard,in of 2, no children. 5 miles 5:)-

 

 

l<‘l.\E PURE-BRED GIANT BRONZE TURKEYS

from excellent stock for sale. Priced right for
qulle‘Mm .. Write for particulars. Mrs. Robert
lumenrt. Horris'ville. Mich.

REGISTERED BOURBON RED T U R K E Y S .
Lowe rigorous, Axtell Strain, one and two year
Mary Beacon. Marlette, Michigan.

GIANT BRONZE TURKEY'S. GOLD BANK

strain. Chmce .beavy birds. large bone, well
marked. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mrs. Perry
Stebhius, Sunrise, Mich.

wrurn HOLLAND runners. moon NICE
birds (pure—bred. Toms $12.50 and $15.00;
Hens £1.00 and $12.00 Odell; 'l‘rio $30.00

 

 

 

 

 

wages. . , , 't . - -

,1 m_ns, on car hue. Rqﬁrﬁnms- W“ 9 Order direct from this ad. Purchase price he-
lnw/IEEL (‘Aliniee Taylor, care .of Michigan “1159111838 turned 11' act‘satisﬂed Alden \Vliitcomb, By—
l‘nrmcr, Mt. (Tlemcns, Michigan. ron Center, Michigan.

FOR SALFP—THOROITGHBRED TOULOUSE
SEED geese and gander $4.00 each. Mammoth Bronze
‘ Turkeys'twp years old. I). L. McAvoy, Lainu-
BEST FOR MICHIGAN. ROBUST BEANS, burg, Michigan, R4.

Wlilverlnc Oats. Address A. B. Cook, ()wosso.

Michignu.

‘ 'E SEED CORN-—1090 lill. loo—DAY
(“I‘dilxgrovctl Yellow Dent: 000 bu. 'Luncustcr
t‘nuutv Sure Crop: 300 bu. Early White tap,
nearlynll 1023 Crop, (111)11in L'el‘llllllittlon. “rite
for price. sample and circular. Order early ,to
sure moncy. Shull Farm, Box .50, Tuliytonu,

tucks (‘o., I’ll.
-‘ ‘AIJ‘PWBI'RIIAXK lll‘liLESS OATS 190R
“Kiwis hv grower. Full particulars and sample
free. Address II. M. \Vcldcr. l“i‘llll\'lllt‘_

 

 

 

 

LIVE STOCK
F SALE: ()Nl‘l DEC-K CHOICE “ELAINE
[(l-lfves. vcnrlings and ions, Dorest brcd. ‘ Two
decks Dclninc cwcs, twos to ‘full mouths, Shrop.
bred, begin lumbing May first. l‘runk Dodge,
Peoria, Ohio.

 

 

POU LT RY

 

.‘ALE 10 WHITE ENGLISH LEGIIORN
Focgckserels. llave a cdigrcc 4 AAAA, bred for
eggs. $3.00 each. a. W. McEmbcr, I’entwatcr,

Michigan, R1.

D'S “'ONDER ANCONAS. S. '0. (‘00K—
wgﬁk $3.50 and $5.00. _liest laying strain.
H. Cecil Smith, R2. Rapid City, Michigan.

BARBED ROCKS—BIG HUSKY COCKERELS,
standard color. bred from great layers. Write
to—dny. W. C. Con‘man, Benton Harbor, Mich, R3,

WHITE WYANDOTTES-—_BOOKI_NG ADVANCE
egg orders from 8 (1118113 matings and utility

 

 

 

flock Sitock all sold. F) Berlin. Allen. Mich,

   

 

 

F O R S A L l‘l—TIIOROUGHBREI) ’I‘OULOUSE
gecse grinders. Baldwin & Nowliu, B4, Laina<
burg, Michigan. ;

 

 

TOBACQO

 

IIOMESI'UN TOBACCO: CHEWING FIVE

pounds, $1.50: ten. $2.50. smoking the pound;
$1.25; tcn $2.00; pipe free, pay when received,
tobacco guaranteed. 'I‘olmcco Growers Exchange
l’nducah, Kentucky.

 

'l‘olLU‘l‘lL—r 'l‘llllEE YEAR OLD LEAF. 8 LBS.
r ('hl'VJlllg $2.00; 8 smoking $2.20; 8 second
Sinnkllll: $1.40. l‘uy for tobacco and postage

when rim-cited. ()‘(l llomcspun (‘11.. Ilnu‘esville, Ky.

 

HOMIGSI'I'N ’l‘OBAl‘(‘O~~-C H E WIN G FIVE

pounds $1.50 teu $23.50. Smoking ﬁve pounds
1.113. trn_ $13.00. l'ipe free. l’u when re«
ccivcd. Satisfaction gi'inrzlntcvd. l‘nited Tobacco
Growers. I’aducah. K5.

9':

 

ﬂ

MISCELLAN EO US

 

(,‘ASII PAID FOR FALSE TEETII. PLATINUM

old magneto points. discarded Jewelr and ol
gold. Mail to, Iloke Smeltmg .5; RA ring 00..
Otsego, Michigan.

22 GRAPEVINES, $1_ I’OS’I‘PAID. BED,
\Vhitc, Blue. One week. (loblcs, Mich., Nurseries.

 

 

OLD MONEY WANTED——“'ILL PAY FIFTY

dollan for nickle of 1913 With Liberty head
(no Buffalo). We pay cash premiums for “I
rare coins. Send 4c. for large Coin Circular.
May mean much proﬁt to you. Numismatic Bank.
Dept. 613. Fort Worth. Texas.

 

3‘
’x‘.
i
l:

 


w,» _ W.-W*mm,Km—u mama-w“...— ._.._......_—.v..___—. n.—

\“b [g

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\

 

 

 

   

ND not one will be out of balance in another 30
years. That’s because the very design and con-
struction of the Melotte Bowl makes it impossible
for it to get out of balance. At a conservative estimate,
out-of-balance bowls are costing the American farmer,
in wasted cream, millions of dollars a year —- probably
double the cost of all the thousands of Melotte Separators
in use in America.

Imported Belgium

Melotte ”  
/

 
   
    
   

 

 
   
 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 
 

This patent Melotte Bowl hangs from one‘ frictionless
ball bearing and spins like a top. It is self-balancing.
It skims as perfectly after 30 years use as when new.
Positively cannot ever get out of balance~—cannot vibrate
and thus cause cross currents which waste cream by re-
mixing with milk. Send coupon below today. Get the
Free Book that tells about this great Melotte.

    
   
   
 

 

 
 

. Model No. 11
. Capacity 500
litres ( l l 35
. lbs.) of milk
_ ‘ per hour.
— ‘

m1“
» Months

We will send an imported Belgium Melotte Cream Sepa-
rator direct to your farm and you don’t pay us a cent for
4 months. We make this offer because we know there is
no other separator in the world equal to the Melotte and

 
 
 
 

         
     
   
   

    

    

Model No. 7
Capacity 325
l i t r e s ( 7 4 0
lbs.) of milk
per hour.

           

     
   

Pine Tree Milker

AT LAST! Here is a milker with seven
years’ successful record back of it. A milker

    

    

 

 

 

that is 25s supreme among milkers as the we want to prove it to you. You may have a 30-day free

22163032332123? 62:33:23 £03313 - trial. At the end of that time you can make up your mind whether

T . Send today for our special Pine Tree you want to keep the separator or send it back at our expense. Use

1 Adoptedgh'w Small-he'd 05¢"- , it just as if it were your own machine. Put it to every possible
 . test. Compare it with any or all others. The. Melotte 18 easy to
 J - keep clean and sanitary because it has only one-halftne tinware of other
7 WwwmulummImmummnmmmmmm w u   A Separators. Turns SO easily that bowl spins 25 minutes after you stop

cranking unless brake is applied. N 0 other separatorhas or needs brake.

0 Mail coupon for catalog giving full descrip. 
 ! tion of this wonderful cream separator. Don’t ,
buy any separator until you have found out ,
all you can about the Melotte and details of our 15-year guarantee!
000': wait—be sure to mail coupon TODAY!

Melotte 3:931:33“? Team:
2843 West 19 treat, eat. 2-?cglucago.

The Melotte Separator, H. B. BABSON, U. s. Mgr.
2443 West 19th Street. ‘ Dept. 92-81 Chicago, Ill.
2445 Prince Street. Berkeley, Calif.

Without cost to me or obligation in an way. please send me the Mejia}:

cata which tells the full story of wonderful separator and
mm. its inventor and your offer ofubon‘t pay for 4 Months."

E‘V’“ . x;

W?”  saw

I’
.

 

Poet Oﬁice ........................ .. ._

Coon ____ ‘ Slab ____________ __
t name and m plainly)

if!” my com doyon aw

 

   

 

 

 

