-MT. CLEMENS, SATURDAY; JULY~2, 1921 igan \w r. UBAM CLOVER, the neW' annual le- f; a ', game, has been planted on .‘a thOusand l ‘ acres in Michigan this year, according to re- ports received by the state farm bureau. fie far as the farm bureau knows this state : :hasjplanted more this year than any other ‘state. Alabama, the state where Hubam .2; was. first. found, is. probably second and ' “Iowa, the homéf'oforofessor H. D. Hughes, the discoverer of; "the~ clover; is considered third. '_ we" . - - .. - y Under. favorable-1 conditions Hubam pro- .from,,390rto 500, pounds per acre.” {l‘heprice-this, year hasrbeen $5 a. pound in and someWherez from $5 'to $10 ' " "i’i‘rin, :cher— states; No. One. predict what, -‘ the price will be next when there will . be a largergquantilty of '. seed onjhand. The extent to which farmershave used I. this seed is seen in‘tlie» reports of county 9agents .to, Eben Mumerd, State Leader of 51:00unty Agents. .‘J. ’W’. Sims, ,of Hillsdale, says that there are 20 acres, of Hubam clov- er in his county. .v'l‘en farmers in Eaton : county "have planted a total of 45 acres ac- ' . cerding to R. 'E. Decker, county agent, and ~. _sma}l samples were distributed to 25 other ‘ farmers. MisSaukee county farmers ,have planted a. number of seed plots of Hubam "which promises to be very popular in that I locality. One farmer in_ Muskegon county is growing a large acreage as a commercial ~.proposition. ‘ Indications are 'that it may /f.;‘pr6ve a yaluable crop on ‘Muskegon sand ' " Arrangements were gmade' ‘ .. county; Washtenaw county is carrying on ..,several_ demonstrations. ' ' ’ W.— F~. Johnston, county agent of " Wex-l» ford, who has been instrumental in intro- queing $6,000 worth of improved Seeds this year .put on. two demonstrations of‘ Hubam season.” The seed was placed on differ- ent- soils but the results seemed to. be allow; -'-the same, Extensive testing ' of-yHubam in. Otsego' county~ . “is reported .by A. C. - Lytle. 3ij .v Six, farmers ‘in Lenawee. ‘ ~100th .are. (ac-operating? with ' .Oo'unty. AgentijaIrr- bn’_for- ‘ “of ,Hfibam.. \Mrr' gv‘says,’ z “The - common White-,biennia1,is grown quite; tensiyelyf *maintain g. ’ ‘iiity has» mammary: 4 r ' 'f~' nan "have . x 1 ads . . iby - V ,1: "County Agent Eckard of Van Buren c0un-‘ ‘ ty for a large-acreage of ' Hubam" in. .his ‘ x O '5 ll] , ' EndOrsed. by Farm Bureau “I BELIEVE this variety is one that J W willbeofgreatusetothefarmer of this and other states,” said Mr. Nicolson, manager of the state 1am" bureau seed department, to a rep- resentative of the Business Farmer, who had. asked him what ‘he thought of flu- bam '~ clover for Michigan terms. “It will not:.ltake the place of Our common clovers grown in this state but I believe it. will" have :a. place in our agricultural system. ' ~ . ' “In~ this I state it looks as though it will be - particularly valuable to sandy sections of the state that are deficient in .orghnic matter for it is a; leguminous. 'plant- and produces mere foliage in *a : summer-season any. other legume that I_ know of. It will also find a spec- . ial adaptation, I believe, "among orchard men as a‘ cover crop.” More than 700 seed tests of various kinds are being carried on by county agents over V the state, according to .Dr.—Mumford. Alger county farmers have ordered . 12,000 pounds ’of grass seed through the state farm bureau, according to C. P. Johnson. Alle- gan county, planted upward of 5,000 pounds of guaranteed northwestern grown Grimm alfalfa. .' Alfred Bentall, county agent, says he believes that farmers have taken unusual pains in liming and fertiliz- ing this year, because of the high price they have had to pay for some of the seed. Baraga county has planted 10,000 pounds of guaranteed seed. .Four large public. demonstrations and ,fifty smaller demon- strations of the best methods of growing oats,” alfalfa, clover, potatoes, and soy beans are being carried on in Barry county. More alfalfa is reported to be see®d this year in Hillsdale county than any' other 'crop. ‘ Crop work in Tuscola county .has film” that of other olo m follow- . ,m-mutumred» clown! mom‘s , w a sweat Mover,- and/harping. , was sowed than ever before. Hubam Clover Acreage Theu‘sand'Acres Planted toNew Annual Sweet Clover in This State been devoted largely to the securing of bet- ‘ ter seeds and the dissemination of pedi- greed varieties, according to Mr. MacVit- tie, who "reports that 15,000 pounds of im- ' proved grass seed was purchased by farmers. Twenty tons of clover seed of various kinds, was purchased by g the -‘ Wayne county farmers, including . 3,000 I pOunds’ of Grimm. alfalfa which. is being tried in many places where cemmon alfalfa has failed 'to grow, due to freezing. ‘0. Gregg says, that Black Barbless Barley . proved to be so well adapted to farming conditions in that county last year that 15 for 20 farmers are giving this variety a trial this year. Extension work in Washtenaw county . includes the testing of several varieties of celery this year. Several farmers of Schoolcraft, county are giving sunflowers a careful trial as ensilage. W. E. Mc- Carthy of Ogemaw, says, “It appears now as though the oat crop would narrow down I to two varieties by another year or two in- stead of the numerous ones. now grown, ’ many of which are inferior in yield and j quality. A concerted effort in Monroe , county to increase the alfalfa acreage“ resulted in ‘the‘ purchase of’ seven tons of common alfalfa and 2,500 pounds of _ Grimm.” _ ‘ The 1910 census gives Marquette county ’ 70 acres'of clover. L. R. Walker says that , through constant agitation and recommen-~ dation the «acreage has been increased many times. Many farmers have. sown who never sowed it before. More barley More acre age of sunflowers was sowed last spring‘ than ever before. Barley and sunflowers will take the place of corn as a grain and as silage in this county.” I An interesting comment in the report of ‘ R. H. Cameron of Luce county is, “Smut in oats in this county is now a curiosity, practically every farmer treats yearly.” Four car- loadsmf farm bureau seeds have gone to Kent county this year which R. G. Carr, coun— - I ty agent, believes will -bring about a. marked improvement in crops. The Kalka’ska coun- ty" agent, . E. Twlng, ' carried on an intensive cam- 'pa.ign last spring to increase the acreage of sweet clover: Hisefl’orts resulted in the. placing of. seed- through local ; lee-operative association sum..." _ ’cient (to sow 2,000acres. ‘ .1. -from. all ’ other ' countlcs‘fshow that there nevi" or was 1a greater interest in ” gth" -- 0'; Si . 3: ., l ._ ;. w‘li“ seam : Hm Am onmngeataeflfit ‘ . “fig-d. Everymjfixgpm‘iaingl flied; Au const‘ strut of m sh filihammfl-adnm r . I. . ,1 mm Am-mm-mmmm WWW '. em’ly . t a s 0 ' ‘llhe MM‘MouflegeI-mnh Wand ‘ :_ oidusnviear“ idly. . t ' dipowet. The Aermotor, ‘ designed and well W W1); madnill V by the 'Acmotor. illhlfilllllllll °“"**°' . 8av6825 M are lousy :- 300,000 anti. mere prov. -' fitoizg‘daanddimct aelli . ‘m.‘C|oseship- _ mfiailoway '00.,10136 ‘ ' flefloo. Iowa '» SAVE MONEY! BUSINESS‘ FARMER in combination with your; - By renewing the favorite daily. THE ' MICHIGAN BUSINESS sued merfldilyi newvmpons WV \Wlllflug BOil’l m SENT lFQR FluJLf YEAR :10:- tamoun't 6H“ MINES mm canoes aluxseu BATTEE.GBEEK susnunu leflli Knuemnsno rtun lflaiflflflfls Pfimiflflfififl YRBfldMII Q . ‘NOTEfmally .mpers At .the above combination rate are ma"!!! 490 R. «F. =9. .reslimnts only. filo orders can be accepted without R. F. D. num- ber. r rates on- Michigan dailies apply (or Ou the mate ‘of Michigan .onky. .Send all .‘Dc’docs to THE ‘mllifl 31mm. Mt. Clemens. 'Mlchtgan We 2mm M. M. B- IE. goo the‘iTrick . . .ssmnlv’ mac? .r . . . . . . . . . 54503 Free 99m Alouuul “Vim Bros: . . . . ... , £Herald . . .. . . 'mn; i-News . . . . . .4150, ‘ lam 4'50; WM“ . . . . asses Wlmos .. . x4.an Humid hammer” mas ‘ iDl‘OlBl‘S' tcltlzen’ Patriot . News . . . 'Enqtflseréflews Moon-Journal . 428!) .m murml Gazette ... . . . Journal “Walkman! :Ypsllantlan Pres. 830 Hflfifllfinallhfluvulutx:1aifhislnflros”iieighflmur?? HERE’S AN INTRODUCTORY iii; :Out and thanfl u ' , ‘iinV-noiniorcetmp. - ,l s. laso, 3523.09. . 435‘0 ' “mound-r ..... $6505 .. 5.50 Journall. "8:00 i _ 1 l i .xnwlen and "homes with “I!” 1‘! “II-r emu “Is 33 5% Other-simZtoZZH-P at V Dronortionanuow prices. 90, Tfiluli) inhuman .. ‘ “vim . , I mini-dink! . i. a "'th Tm Tfi%&% ' V tines to oosel‘ . £M‘,m*““f ~ EG-ssszseflfifiia ‘ 2' 3—“ - omwyfl'” :EIIJL 1_;li00 mix or .mlm Ni“: 1’ ' . D. ’8 Tile: nil tmomnltoea from or 3140 can um , a a ‘ “nan --'. x. xx— r m on, Pmid Jimmy-illan Jihwnuxtee. Bnersnmo‘r ’Dhemloil 00.. ‘Igmmtuml «amenities 7 “was third M .m m _V m .lmha‘n‘ge gets results. fismrgW-m‘ m m, N 1mm" ’ : Mam "QmhMfithnfiflWflfififlfimflfimmmflm » Mackinaw; I I 0'. 6 0.0 oJJJ o‘- o DZK nu isqaL ashe’ (1 our time on W one): big ol ' rest I he, ‘ mm m. as raw . ‘ ‘ ' *1“ ,in' color-{rm roll-and chlngln. Write ' or um- ‘ plenum) out money “Vin pncu. Bulflon Products ‘ Co. ; t v- . v ‘ . 13 ‘YDUR MM m ems Write :Dllt a zp‘lafin description *and figure 0200 for each word, ‘hiitial ‘0? ‘3 groan-11f mgures *Eo n‘firree anemones. ' ‘Theee no mo cheaper or tbetter way or selling ta )farm “in Michigan send you w deal {direct With tithe :No :- a‘genteror commissions. Elston wantf ste seen {or trade your farm, send in, your m. todw. JRon't just gtalk: whom lit.- Our Business Warmers!" ' inde the Michigan i'Busmess .Earnlet, -Adv. merit” Mt. ’Cteme‘ns. I 3 1",Ei‘...'v:I'I:!€,;:‘"v'.:'.:i ' 1",. A > u.- i.‘ t » v i: Jpooling centers declare “that #001. row" ‘.Ij 1 0m" 14500,?” 'Pms ‘Stwte Farm lBur— v eau wool .pool has "passed the 3‘ 125mm M m and who! continues to come 'in at ‘Che‘ra‘tl fl 3150,0110 pounds a week or «60.1000 mmMpfiays the farm bmau Wow .Mparttm'ent. Mom .athzan $1350;— am has been m the m0! .g’rowerr £118 (the initial mach r-ailvance on fileir mmflbaaudm M1! the. value ofsthe graded wool. on date of pooling. A block of 150,000 pounds of short staple fine wool was sold 'last week ' at 22 «cents, We 'the dorm bureau. “Five grading 'tea-ms v‘have Visited ‘ .for the first time 15 of .the 1.30 meal grading ‘wawfe‘honses “scattered over the state and some of those in the Where pant of the state have been twinned {like second mime, "Mien ,a _ roman-up grading m mike 13m iihet purpose of diosin-g'the pool as ‘far as . those warehouses were concerned? The tokeanmp tuni‘p’iis 'mepara’mm it“) "the volume sales, 0“! new wool Which tulle :fimnn thuneau aspects gin) :etart shortly after ,July 1.‘ as Win, Allegan county, ’ “last week graders took care m %;m0 fpcnm'ds M “the wool gnooled .there in one .A sextond trip will he .nec- essary. .Next day at Caledonia, )Kvem 'cennty, 183.000 pounds revere pooled and aft ‘Crnswem, $311311“: county, thinned 2t?) deeds and wool awaiting ‘t‘lrem earl-y tin; the morning. 1A Sixth grading ‘ieam .is to ‘be added ‘to $0116 fierce "Within the next week; will/make; the com- ?iiined “Wily capacity '.oi.' the items 90,000 pounds. “Graders will wish the {upper peninsula where growers F are sure {that they will pool 1%;00’0 ~pmm‘lls 16f Imam. Emma} support given the vmom :paM*mt :to the ‘file barometer Wh‘ic‘h ; findicatbes ’iiha’t optiniism mm the “hu- drum to! the Pfarr ~mbureau‘iie automger than ever with the ifarmers 10! the state. Men Who “have been at moo] the morale of “the wool growers "and .when ineliei.‘ fin titre :8ch «if their cogperabixe mnfientfiking 33 What:— able. Other states are matching with "interest tithe progness of ’the Midliigan pool and the American Emmi iBm'eau iEednmtion ‘h’as *ta'ken :the Michigan ,pool as an xmamfile nor its national publicity on ale ypmil- Eiug. ’ Wool madng dates for the week of July ,5 th are: Tuesday, 'Evant, ~“Nit. ‘Pieasant, i*Pontlam‘fl, Climax; 'Wed- manflagz, mean 56m, Mt. Element, JR»- ; ammo, Egohoohmsafit; {Thursday} 40mm- 5 an, alarm, ‘Manshall; Friday,£adiIMQ,‘ Clare, Albion; Saturday, Manton, J .Mesick, ‘IBeaventonflSt. Louis, “Bit-06k- ‘ p(nudge. ' ‘ WAR W mamas WWI! .~ , OILSNNDS "(if aflollans will he saved «to western and northwest- ern ‘Midhigan ‘futit growers "this i 1 -. , t. ‘ ~ . , . . . ‘ . . wear throng‘h a «sweeping weduciimn do a ,fiInen'flmrmeighborwwho as mot aasuhscrrber. It as wonth Just; .25lcrto thecause'me twillsend "The “Business “F-arm’er on"tri2i‘l toa any mew name Eur «six months, nor Msmwmflmmim) , _, V 4' din mism- straight wastes an mutt. 'n'e- unentlyy {part iinto mfient he like Good- rich and Michigan Transit Company mvmifltmffifia [nihilism m Mic W, mmmnm.m«mm 0,0"...lfil 'MiSsinn. Oimeng. PMRGML 113061 My sthe wool growers tot the state ‘ ~ ifs he'll! ‘by wire from ibureau wool 11e- ‘tlim‘ss, 2mm W‘ , made was: ammonium ftfile m 3118-. _ _ it .- i ‘ LEANEFS-H‘G N “— Ignace, ave, ass Jam. town‘s la? City W ‘Wilawed hear been reduced as follows; Barrels I, mm. m the m; W m. =35!) .wmmmmmufn m manna, mater W1 we, m mWon; mix-isms. mm, has M, Bit-to £50.; hum as so am; . 97?}, ball bushel baskets, as fto em: one-third and Quarter bushel MGR? ages. 20 to 15¢, fifth bushel. pack- ’9», “ sages will? the mac. _. Reduction on carlots and less than carlots of apples, berries, “ourrants, grapes, nheiwies and also «Hilary ,f'r’om , Emmi! Maren. Whamn. Montague, ‘ . ' and WM lilo Mileage am the Goodrich :Iine range from 15 to- 25 per «cent and better according tothe tariff ,maently adopted. , , The carlot rate from Grand Haven 1 do «Chicago congapnles has been on—H *- tdanad lam as so she, themes ans : currants 80 1—2 to ’63 1—;2c‘; grapes? 7 and «themes «0‘8 0-? ‘to iii-c, and col— ‘ery‘m “040 1&0. 518mm damn ibuxh " «eau, redoing What mmtmte tad; nustments inane 316811 invade 31mm , 'Mus’kegon, montaguenand “Whitehall I ' “to 'Cificago. » iskeamhoat men seem that the ; :relinnisinn *in I!” z; 'i . mm to are» ,1 in mm: W and t8 mus] I V . a manual m m manned“: :5“ sum name: untanfi; a Without .a ibig volume ml? business. 7 ‘ says Frank E. Coombs, F‘anm :Bus-f eau Traffic Commissioner. ‘ mxm van ‘ [assailant I "‘ t v HE Mean-m1 meetmgrnf the "in," ‘ American Mm :Buneml Roder- ‘fiation ~will .he timid at Atlanta; ; .I _> I Georgia, November 22-25, the LMiom- ‘ -’igan ‘Statte Bureau “has advised thy (the national gmganiza- ition. flihis ewes decider eat lithe tweet— .ing at time Executive Committee ‘ in Chicago, on June :21. Which textmrfled tinv‘irtartiorrs were St. teams, toh‘inag'o, unaware, ret. moms, New You‘k; Burnett) and Minneapolis. The .Midhigaon State Faun :Bnream '- with a .membensifiprnr 91,1000 is en:- titled '.to dive delegates, one for eafll" ‘EONOO member-3., Michigan will have «one «if one )largest xfieiagations mt tlseihig'nnsnting. ‘Iowanmhioh has «the .langest .fanm thian membership ‘ Other tcitiw‘ _ ' .1n tthe .Amexzican .Facm 'meeau :Fedg ,' eration Win‘have six delegates. 0th- ~er states "with an approafima‘te vmem- ibersh‘ip «of ammo, (entitled fro ‘fim ‘ reelegases am illlilflifi,‘-thn, . menses _ r and Indiana. FARM Nome L“ VERY contention of tithe 'Farm‘ ‘Bureau “regarding momentum elmtose and like :gna‘im ,trends in MM nu) by nits Federal Ek‘. antfh‘e fronts ,of ‘Ennminal and :Counr- ‘ “try Til-aim Movatorsi", 'tiust 1issued in Whitman. mire mantisth that menth integrators 61v , ifmient titan iihdapenflent auxin .,1ine semesters-gas judged by the monk .4" Trade V ‘ Snmmissionls "9 .neliminary .Repom: _ me ijdint "Congreserona' ‘1 Vminn tho inmtigate miculhmal alumna mill iQWiZB «‘an xhqgin “ i Annuities meat week. ‘;coznmib~1, , than ‘will "discus 3 131% 70913 Mm, 111!- ;‘ *tesests, who must”: podium- fiflll; 3th 1:” um um. which whim filling all! main. um WSW emotive ,ih‘lll .‘ ‘ 5 ~ 4' “ l x V . iii. amusement” at! thment' . in. i _. R, ER vawmmammmmfififiw am this for ensmmw W ., :mndmmmwane .emeone. . . J‘l—J-I—l-< A. Hsu.m in gym .4. u y- a fie. uni-sale a Knee «Miscondfitfon musthechazmged.. The-maniwhoi swam mm an comers“ 9f..- tfiv - Wovmembersofl' the. WW1}; . asthma Tour Association met on the. cam}: of the Michigan Agricultural College on. ‘ one 22 and: 23 tor a big, summer camp and r-round-upz' Several, special‘ conferences were a? we am m days, fihe awe”..@wx 'lk'\l Wail]; ,I v ' , ‘ g-‘5'*-'1,‘he seventh ConfineMe. oi Rurai ‘— at“ IVE. A. was faasessibn .diuring the as Were conferences on Agricultural : Sellout Eonsol'i‘dation', aH-d‘ ‘ I ' midi Gfilfi” Clint? The Thur Asso- ciation Belicia spmiinl‘ of its ‘ ' that Wes hear the: the: ’ condemns“. tho: Mahala! as (he: immuva magma; at; Push. , . at enema whitening-5'; i; Hen... Lea Driven” Magale at Rural; Education, were; headl-~ v on; various: DW' In: of the loading authorities. on: » ‘wereflmmd. Meagan} r. 111.. at the: State: l- " 71: ring, the scores of Tour“ Assmiati’on péolfle Wen” holding. men from the. range organizations; oil the? Agniouiitlmd Collegg, and: sounded" out what- proved to he one.~ 01%. the: begt programs 'ever’given before a group of . Michigan rural workers. ‘ Arriving at the: W mn- into camp immediately’and: prepared: tor the : varied activities lined up by the program com- '~i under the: ofif Em R. j member of State, ofi Age 4.4 _.e Grange Every— » fixt‘hmghfinom; seems at” mes, fins. the and, em in: eofl‘egie. pool thirties: W pm.— the: eatery at. their My camp ends}! . H Professor; Women. N ’ithiom primes- hm— fin} for W More, mono. bemoan pm oar was mull: by imxnlédinssing one of the joint v f L , fl , . "'W5Wral economics. . Cfii all, commodities 'are now rated at period wish of. ,_; "_ f". ole rise-ti about 175 - r =' mafia’mmtumasmeerg ; amenities K {Abe ' ‘ng. emails ‘ " ‘~ < W n... F” am ofi" jam wgwm' in end“ “at a“ ' ' . roads pm to ’, ‘j you tamer ~the‘Great Lakes-St. Eamnc » Iv 1'2 330 smoother waterway development actually does the work and accomplishes the: real results must come into his own.” That the movement oi“ man power firm the. famns. to the. city is» quite. natural. and. is to be expected; was the. opinion expressedi by Carver- It is. in that canes fior the Simpluo of people on the farms. The danger how~ ever, in. a, possible of- the best talent from the farms; -This must he prevented" by \ ' on Six- teen National. Questions.- FARMERS" everywhere are agreed that. they want positive action on 16‘ questiOns of national importance, recently submitted" to‘ them in; the form of a referendum by the" ’ American Farm 'Bure‘au Federation". In the first county. returns. from farm bureaus. are practibally unanimmxs. For posi- tive action. amt-he. financial”; tax tatibn problems put up to; than By the national farm. Bureau organisation. V Barry county, Michigam farm bureau members. voted. for positive action on all.” Berrien county” the questions—153902 to 0. .fimst Michigan body at farm: bureau members. to: replay” made an answer scarcely loss. em“?- phatic. The farm bureau questionnaire. is in: the. hands; of 1,,4’13 aounty fiarm bureaus in 47 states and will represent the verdict of‘ 1,052,000 tarm bureau members of the- armory. 'Ehe results» all” the qmstiomsaire will the A'm‘oriean- Fin-Hr Elmeam Fed'— enation. to tell Congress next winter just what the farmers” attitude is on 36 questions of national importance; , ' QUES’EIOM AND won; ' Imam Ha; you aim: wmmnfltu’ financing based; on Receipts? Yes 613247; Do you: 3mm Jim stuck; financing. based. am adequate pledge oi" anfinals and Shed? You «92953;: M 2.3631. V Di» 1mm Sam the, deml‘bnmont. of a. narsonal mad credits system Ba’sed’ om proper sate— mardsfl’ Em mm .Nh‘a 1,5058. Dw- m-rmt that- mmmrdty be. winders!“ Reserve Board! tar 50 ~ ' redfimmmt was on panama!) in loans: an! atmsro‘diun’.i‘orr or an kinda?“ You $4633“; ’. 1A . Em £0115 (amen, mums, the limit-.- 011; Eedser- ~ El." mi Bank mortgage TM' $110,000. in $225M? You war; in 8.12521. ' YAHTIQ'M ' Do you Mon m ‘ Congress. to: submit to the steam a stoma; mam-fitment pm» hunting». the issuance of all. tax—£1294 escort.~ “2‘,Yos 32,825; No 4.5963 ‘ Are;- ou: 1w- !l’avor of continuing. the. Emma» Pro ‘ts‘ from?” You» 3.7.2.80; No 2,875. , Are you opposcd‘ Go» the enactment. of 3 Gen- ‘ etal Sales Tax? Yes I‘WM’Z’; m 22,393. TRANSPORTATION “ film? may be able to.move a materid-lyj larg- c'r‘ Wt o£ agricultural products 1! the- Federa-nion se- Americaa: Farm; Bureau height cures Mate reduction in- ma You am; No- -'1-.3<3£. Db m flavor the» minding. orb. mus-market « .Wucfl’on of trans- Yflf 382379; NO 10 . oontinenfithlw {.424. a..,. In ans-.975; No 3.323. ' {of Worn}! ‘mclamation an’c‘fl pm maelNo 6.597.. , Ioi’rrt at a agaricudhumah liafie: more." attractive. and worth: while: “Them: are two: kinds of. rural 19mm,” said; Gamer. “Orr. the one hand is; the. all—to.~ frequent. leader who confines, himself to 3.0.011!" sidEnaztdow oil the. griemom. the: rights, and the wrongs. oh the tamer, and am the. other. hand the. leader who. points out the real op- amd. obligations, from a construc- tive. point of View.” ' Round Table} Discussion Interesting, round. table. discussions were. held. at. one; of the meetings with Hale Ten— naint, Marketing Specialist at EL. A. 0., pre- siding, A. Bk. Cooks, Master of. the State. Gnange;., Ahmed Allen, President of. the State Assoeiation: ofi Farmers’ Clubs. and. Chief of tho.- Galeanors; George B.-. HOr-ton, of Fl‘ui‘t’ Ridge;- and. N. P. Emil” President. of. the Mich igan Milk. Producers’ Association, were among; the. prominent farmers of the state, who took“ part. in. the. diaeussien at this. meeting. Meet The More: than. 2519 veterinarians of. the state Weer in; conference at the College. during the. week, preparing. for government examinations» to qualify as Tubereuhm Testers. These exam- inations were given at variious points in the state on saturday, June 25', and’ the veterin- arians: were» reviewing the work of the tests under the leadership 01” government inspection». men. and. members. of“ the M“. A. C: veterinary ma. 7 ' -'e: veterinary conference brought the» hat of groups gathered“ East Lansing from- June 22-24 up to six, one of the, largest bodies even brought. together. to discuss agricultural prohlems fir Michigam—Ji. K H. Pepper Growers Benefit by . Standardization ,GT EVERYBODY raises peppers, of '- " course, but everybody who. sells producer can take a le$on from Florida- pepper growl- ers who tried a. new stunt in marketing: this last Winter; The way the county agent of3 Lee county, Florida, puts it is:- ‘”“The truckers have been good’ prices for peppers: this: season.” ‘ To. get at the reason for the good? prices, is necessmy to know how' the peppers were put: up for market. And? reveals the fact that: the good‘ prices m~ a result of the. park of the peppers. Fourteen, ear-sot peppers! ship dim fie fimt’ weeks“ after , Christmas; ram, Brought prices ranging from. $6. a for choice to' $8 a: crate. for extra fianoy: A year ago? was solid peppers under" the and the.» pack was may of the highest. quality. The did _ kindly to: ""W"’ mm, Theres- ifere; metabolism WiMfl’ new Brand; “Sewer: Stain,“ adopted, cm- mag! & extra. honey, amdi ehm'ma W pars; Asa Matt at elbser grand. more eareful packing, a better product been. a . tahlished, and _people m buying it, at. better 5. . This only emphasnzes the firmed m that must come before: mummy” indeed it m be called a spank}! M fi‘fllfiélf poorly gradmd and poorly w produetnfwflf not sell on than: inauket'1 _ , ", pmd-nt, ., - " I d v ' M \. - n .. . V -‘ l‘ S EEPQRTS or hog cholera outbreaks ~ are ‘ again being featured in the news, col- umns of our daily papers; every year 'ithous-_ ‘ ands ofhogs are taken by this dread disease when," if proper precautions were resorted to this persistent infection Could be completely eradicated from the state within a five-year period. The time has come, in ‘the‘ history "of this country, when live ’stock breeders can no longer afford to temporize with the menace of contagious disease. Cholera in hogs, tu- berculosis in cattle and scabbies in sheep can be absolutely controlled and the “American farmer will find it greatly to his interest to co-operate with state and national authorities in the effort to stamp out these diseases. , Conceding the necessity of stamping out the infection of hog cholera in Michigan at the earliestpossible date, it is a self-evident- fact that for the next five years at least, every herd in the state should be immunized by the double treatment of every hog. in it with serum and virus. The cholera infection has become so widely distributed, as a result of the numerous outbreaks which have occurred in every county in the state that the menace to porcine health assumes more importance than ever before. That hog breeders fail to realize the impending danger is evidenced by the fact that scarcely ten per cent of the hogs in the state are immunized. The question of the hour, in the minds of the state authorities whose duty it is to safeguard animal health is, how can the Michigan hog breeder be made to see the need of general immunization. An Inexpensive Operation Many breeders do not vaccinate because of what they have been told concerning the heavy expense of the operation. Others have heard and have given credence to some of the gossip going the rounds to the effect that-vac- cination is not always effectual in preventing an outbreak of cholera. Others have heard ~ M,,,pg,;..a... m a raise a. Dd By B. H." MACK \ _.__—q R. MACK SAYS manybreeders do not My vaccinate because they have been aftold that the operation » costs. are v h. . Others have heard that vaccination , is not always effectual in [inventing chol-’ era. The writer of this article, has had several years experience in this linefand he ‘ states the cost- should not be over 60 cents a pig- and he is satisfied that vaccination not only protects from cholera but many other diseases as wells—Managing Editor. that, occasionally, small tumors appear in the feet or on the legs 0f the treated hogs, being a... or crates directly traceable to the use of the virus in _the vaccination treatment. First, let us consider the- expense of the vaccination. The breeder who desires to make a clean job will follow the strictly up-to- date practice of vaccinating ‘ his weanling pigs. In the first -placeit is' important for‘ the breeder to‘ know that only licensed veter- inarians are permitted to vaccinate hogs. The best course for the breeder to take is to get in touch with his local veterinary surgeon and - agree with him upon a future date for the op- eration’; this method of procedure will make it possible for the veterinarian; to secure a stock of “fresh serum and virus“ and to arrange matters so that the date of the operation will not clash with his other business. A breeder who has 50 pigs, five weeks old, that he wishes, to have the double treatment, can get the job done for less than 60 cents apiece: \Vhere can the breeder be found that can afford to take the chance of a cholera outbreak when he can get his hogs immunized for 60 cents The chiefargument in support of ’ apiece? vaccination for small pigs is the small cost of the treatment. ’ ’ But how about the efiectiveness of the vac; ntgg'ious Disease 7 cination treatment? The “gifting hogs for several year-g ,pmaeh " ‘ only proved to "his oWn satisfaction‘ that ii cholera can be prevented by Ivaccinati . he is. convinced that the vaccination ‘ofismafi pigs not only them from fiche but also protects them from. many other -. eases that the hog "is. heir, to. Occasionall vaccinated hog will show up" with a ,smali 'tumor,‘ often the result of :careless operating methdis but if the attendant *will' Watch the, animal, until the swelling begins, to ysoften,~b then. lance—it, the wound will: immediater “heal. . The time has come when the breeder, 5 pure-bred hogs, cattle and sheep must be 7ablem', to give a certificate of health , with every mal he offers for sale. During; the fall of ’ the writer. attended several auctiOn sales i 9f ,, pure-bred hogs; the hogs in some of the Offer; 1;. Pure-breds Must Be Immunized ~ l’: ,ings had been immunized and in others the animals were not immune. With scarcely a single exception, the hogs thathad been im.-.1 munized brought 20 per cent more ' than ethé‘f“ hogs'that' had not been treated. The strictly-V, up-tO-date breeder will have blank certificates of health in which the date of treatmentandv manner of treatment can be specified. '- One of} these certificates can be made out for each hog and the veterinarian 'who "does the inr should be asked to sign each one of these ce — .. ‘tificates- before he collects his fee for doing . the work. When the hog is offered for sale the breeder can satisfy 'his prospective- cus- tomer. that the animal is completely safe guarded from hog cholera. The Michigan; Business Farmer desires that the time may?" come, right speedily, when: every domestic'afi- imal in Michigan will 'be given agelean bill of health by complete immunization from Eco ta:gious diseases. ' ' ' ' 7 \ . Control Measures to Employ in Fighting GrasS-hoppers Most Practical Methods ‘ofDestroying Hoppers 'a're‘Hopperdozer and Poison Bait HERE are three principal methods of I control which have been found to be of greater or less practical value in combating grasshoppers in this country: First, the de- struction of the eggs; second, catching the in- sects in the field by means of traps; and, third, the use of the poisoned baits. Destroying the Eggs of GrasshOppers It is seldom practicable to destroy the eggs because of the many different hiding places chosen by the grasshoppers in laying them and the impossibility. of reaching the same with cultivating implements. However, where they are accessible the ground containing them should be thoroughly plowed, or disked, and harrowed in the fall, as these operations pre- vent the eggs from hatching, successfully the following spring. Attempts to reach the eggs by handwork, such as digging up thesoil, is practicable only in gardens; truck farms, and places where intensive cultivation is practiced. ~ Mechanical Means of Destroying Hoppers The most common method of destroying grasshoppers meChanically is by’the use of a . implement or trap simple horse-propelled TheSe im- commonly called a hopperdozer. . plements are constructed along similar- lines,, but are of many slightly {different patterns. ,A‘s originally built the ‘ ' hopperdozer , consisted ‘ of a galvanized shect- ,' iron pan or‘ trough hav- . meta. townships at right angles togthegpan. .- , It -~was about 516 feet in _ ' , léngthand‘mounted‘mn’v ~ ~ . . minnérs made-of Wood x . ‘¢ .1 I . r.’ . k. 2.-, a n , . . 1 . - . "taif?§_'. If '\.~, . By W. R. WAIII‘ON Bureau of Entomology, U. 8. Dept. of Agriculture have a pan made of galvanized sheet-iron, but the back and side wings are usually built with a WOOden frame covered with stout mus- lin, screen or light cotton duck, thus securing lightness and elasticity or structure. The pan of the hopperdozer is kept partially filled with water, upon which a film of low-grade kerosene, or coal oil, is maintained. When the , implement has a cloth back and wings, these are kept moistened with kerosene oil. As the hopperdozer is, drawn oVer the ‘ grotmd the grasshoppers g'ump or fly against its back and most of them are precipitated into the oil- covered water in the pan. A slight touch of oil is fatal to the insects Thus, those that merely touch the oil-soaked back of the hopperdozer are'usuallyt (killed, although they may not die immediate: -. 7' 1y. The cheapest. procurable grade of kero-.. , sene 011 1s perfectly satisfactory for usejin'Va' hopperdozer. An implement of this kind, has I been constructed recently ' with a back curry? ing slightly forward.’ The back- and sides. of this implement are covered with tin, nailed? furring strips carried by the uprights "of’th frame. It has been used successfullypin we ern states, and it is claimed that the: slag , curve of the back and" the slippery surface s . the tin aid in precipitating the grasshoppers 1 into the pan" AS many as 309 ‘ bushels 5761 grasshoppers have been. collected by the use of hopperdozers on 100 acres of alfalfa. . even where these, impl“ ' .ments may be used-sue: cessf'ully‘, a great maan grasshoppers escape}. ‘ 65 mg killed by "them; the fact that hoppefd ers can not ,bei-us/ed (uneven, stony, For. ire centlyscleared, is I'd ground,“ herein: ours or fields" of ‘if . .». I, ‘ ,Where the, reached a" consider makes 'it’limperative} 3 , . .y; , ‘ effective; method “0f: Coo V. “ .g-ist the; tulpllcatitm was ape. 1 proved. 't ~ “ to’ th 1) utdjm;~ _ ‘ _ V 1 [homes which is at eet'ana an elevation «use .wateryin -a hr m ‘- purposes. 1) the hill- "ifsup'ply or water :Dfi, Reed :City, Michigan. 3 ‘e'~ iron possible for 'youflto *fiaterto the second house into satire-tank and it isrxnot neces: . chairs a ‘return pipe. A. wind: to operate a 'p'r‘eSsure] tank. suc- ‘uy shouldjbe, a r backageared 6 pump on the pipeqlinegleading e, pressure tank. The~exhaust the relief valve may befemptied '-..the "stock'tanlr- - Ar , ‘by—pass Wd‘also be made. past. the relief ‘__e‘ or some other arrangement ‘0! is so that n will be possible .to _ . it.me to thepresent house or. hard itht‘out. going 2 through--_ the relief valve: _I.’h:ave assumed that the w 'dmiil will 'be hand Controlled. It possible to. equip..pnin'p. with a ‘ aulic cylinder which Will an- ically throw the, windmill in.‘ in out of. gear asthe pressure 'nlrfibecomes low or high. The dc Walling Company, "Kenda- Indian-a; ,F. E. Meyers & Bro., j. ;' Ohio: and Humphreys Mtg. M__nsileld, Ohio, can furnish you cfi'lars regarding the. hydraulic j‘yl‘inde'r and, no doubt, [the local «dealer. will.- be familiar with pa of pump.—-'-F. E. Fogle, Assist- ymt [Prefessor '- Farm Mechanics, ML " omsnvo- OLD Roan is-‘a, road across the corner of." - He» and I got ,a‘petition to lay out. th cadron the section line and discon- ;%arz‘old road; :-’I‘-his the township. d.. id and put some work on the readout“, it is; not. passable yet. ‘1 a. right to close the old road?— _N., _Mesick, Michigan. \ ) ‘ ur statement is so very brief heanswer can not be anything but general Way, Your letterdoes . as whether you instituted two caddings, one to establish anew ghvyay and another to discontinue ' old. ,The c.0urts have held that could} not combine both pro- edings in one but each proceeding “be upon, its .own merits. It ‘ id thegener’al rule that you " 1, ve orright to close the old- , the p ’ bile“ authorities au- 4_ . you." - ‘ t ’theyInegIect‘ to {We thefiproper steps” that the law, ‘ ‘n T’ require them to do you might ' xthe'aid of the court by man- damn lea—Legal Editor. . ‘ TERESBiNG MACHINE .IN- ,. .. : SURANCE. ‘ 'printv names of companies that I machines—K. and ,y " reshin ittemore, Mich. ins" Co... renewing companies write in- finite on threshing machines: . u; ty;.In,suranCe 00., of Con- Waiter .Wi-lliams, man- - we ern department, Rockford, ‘7 v _r‘Am”ericanj Eagle, 'western i“ rtment, 207 West Jackson Blvd” cage, V 111.; Aetn‘a Insurance, ‘06., Vern: depa-rtmen-t',, Insurance 111:- e~= Bl’dg., Chicago, 5111. -;, Nation; in Fire Insurance '00., Pitts: . Vilnsurance “Company. - of crica, _-Western ' depart. 9~~ est Jackson ' Blvd, ‘Chiy , I undies-estate “ Department ~01; L ’ULFHCQMPANri m‘b‘ information, regarding _ as ' o' thercnentraigand 9. Olson, ich ” in‘vestpr's~ , as relief »_ valve. shOuld‘: be, next , this 7 ' . “We havefjhadfi nocomplaints con- cerning this-company and. it- seems to" be any f‘managed. Howeverathis commisgiomdm not recommend the purchase? ot‘any security and its "ap- .proval. should not be construed by an 'endorsement or value—Michigan Securities /Com- 1. mission: ' ' -; DOWN LINE FENCE A man, buys 40 acres and it. is fenced 'all around, line fence and road fence. "New has he any rights by law to talge down any, art of the line fence. This fence was uilt several years before he bought the 40 and he claims theright to . take down half ’or the._ line and then force the other man to replace it. The wire was also outside of his line posts. If he takes 'down the, line fence who has to replace_it?——J. J. W., Levering, .. Michigan. .. “(The one ,who' put up the fence has the right to remove the half that isnot on the. par’tg'of the line he is ‘ obliged to maintain. .Or, under the statute he may have its value ascer- tained and compel the adjoining owner to pay its value or have it assessed against his land. If he re- mdves‘ the fence he'can compel the adjoining owner to' build 7, his share ii'he improves the land—Legal Ed- itor. ‘ > . SCHOOL BOARD *‘oo'ns. AGAINST ‘ , vomEns Can the school board change. the school. rules? The people voted for 8 months school and the school board and school oflicers changed it to onlv 6 months of school. .Can that be done? Why change and rob the children? They want to save on‘2 months school money.———R. 8., Grand Haven, sMichigan.‘ , v» I am='of the’opinion‘ that the school ‘board is bound ’to provide a school for the full time voted by the dis- trict at the annual meeting and that such_ duty may be enforced by man- damus.—‘-’Leg'al. Editor. ORGANIZE TOWNSHIP Will you please tell me how we will go about it to organize our township? At the present time we are three town— ships in one and. we Wish to separate.—_— J. A., moorestqwn, Michigan. Act 312 of the Public Acts of 1917 provides for the organization of townships. by the Board of Super- visors. You would want~ to follow all the details required by that law. .——Leg.al Editor. 'SIGNS on OIL .. you kindly inform me through the cold ns of (your valuable p’aper what some of the in loations are when oil is present in land. and oblige?——A. B., Sid- ney. Michigan. I . v ' The indications of oil varies ac- cording to the geological conditions obtaining in didere’nt fields, In many places seepages of oil and gas as very significant'but in Michigan the seepages are most numerous where geological condi- tions are most unfavorable, that is, the seepages occur along’the line of the outcrops of oil and gas forma- tions. resent merely belts directly under- lain by oil bearing formations but under conditions unfavorable for ac- cumulations. ’ Seepages, are veryabundant in a belt extending alongt'he southeast .. won-l portion of Michigan and across the‘ northern: part "of the southern pen- : insular—N Many wells have been drill- 2378.11. on the basis of these signs but no noteworthy “amounts of oil or gas hays been: Mec6vered. :In short, 3931333982111 littlest) ‘ 0 st hon nun..." .......... .,....- .D _ .......................u. ’ Manson... "0‘ Miluof Railway (l9l6) mm... mm -«7}/l‘l ,, BELL SYSTEM regions, owned “a giflhted u ............ n... W (XX) , M of 600 - of Empl 000 Stockholders 000 UNITE]; sures 107,1 “cum-no :71 $2. 2570. l. I9] .000. k u. noun-u , rme Mmgfltuumuacuou I l.033,000,0m I" u “ow-om ~ Uniting .;a ‘Nation Within reach of the-call of your telephone are more other telephones than may be found in all the other countries‘of the world. This is made possible by the Bell-System of telephone. communication. The central administration of the‘Bcll System'by the American Telephone and. Telegraph Company—- Provides for invention and scientific‘ research. Provides for the economic manufacture of equip. ment. Provides for the standardization of methods. ‘ Plans for future extensions. Insures financial stability. It is the complete cooperation between the central administration and the many operating companies that produces nation-wide telephone service. to the lowest rates. It would be impossible for unrelated organizations provide the best service to the greatest number at Only the united effort which insures continuous development of telephone communicao tion can carry through that controlling purpose of the Bell System. “BELL ’SYSTEM " AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY .AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES One Policy, Ono System, Universal Service, and all directed toward Such seepages therefore rep-' Michigan appear tofhave I niflcance,’ as . indicators, . ' , E-rcommercial- ‘quan- *: ‘ i, on Business Farmer, ‘Mt. lQie‘mens, ‘Mich. This” with YOUR own name . . . . . This is a genuine Keen-Kutter pocket-knife made by one of the largest and most reputable houses in America and absolutely guaran- teed to give long and satisfactory‘use. transparent handle under which will appear in large type as shown, YOUR FULL NAME AND ADDRESS, for identification. _. ' Ypu Cannot buy this knife in any local store because it must be made up especially for you. Its real value you can easily see. Genuine KEEN-KUTTER FREEl, It has two keen blades and a or. t'. .5? an m .5, w , This dandy knife is given FREE for a club of only Three ( 3) yearly subscriptions to Tho‘Michigan. Business Farmer at One Dollar each. of which at least two must be NEW sub- lcribers, the third can be your own or someone else’s renewal. Just ask two of your neighbors if you. can send ‘ loriptlon. Tell them. if you want tottbatqou will collect_ their dollar later. names and 83.1.1111 out the order below and the knife wfll come forward .prepaid at once. ' x This is :one .othhe most popular premiums wehave ever ofl’ered, why not make the very little eflort garjfirs'nnnclosed flnd $3"! 2‘ ' * HOW to get it FREE! year’s sub- us the in their names for a Send required to get- your knife. Any member__ of ‘a subscriber’s family can accept as V _ I I I} insubscriptio‘ns for'which'you are?“ wta'bsomtely FREE “he. # fun—Knitter “Jadk"Knife ‘wnhnis‘ ” ‘Sandaddressonwitflr54: w .. ‘g ' ‘ v " d7‘fn‘istakes,‘ print out-your name and. address.) _.‘. . ., ,3, > _ . I r .5.— .' ’ ; ,’_: ’ Grace Nellis Jenm ..... "H. H. Mick ‘, your subscription expires. . IVOId mistakes. Mt. alone-s. m , . ,- r nepmnted in New York. chicane. at: In the Alsociated M Ms. W . .n............ . . . . ...._---.-_.--- .Mt .7......‘....>......... .M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ’. .Manazins Editor “u..- . . . . . .Farm Home‘Em . . .... . .. . .Marlret an! Livestock Efltor . . . . . . . . . . . . ....‘...l..l._.... “tor . . ..; . .Mg. .Vem Editor ONE '5“ (52 Issues) «81.; m 7. (104 ml) $1.50 THREE 3’8. use Issues) 52.- 5": ram (2’80 films!) ’8 The date following your name on ,the address label shows when In renewing kindly send this label to Remit by check. draft. money—order or reinstated 19”“; Stamps and cummw are at gun: risk. We acknowledge by first-class mail ewery am: received. I , Advertising his: Forty-mu aunt sien- agate he. 11: fine: to the column mail, 772 lines to the page. Fla’t rates. — lee Stock and Auctlon Sale Advertlslngz’We offer special low rates to reputable breeders of live stock and poultry: mm 31$ RELIAhLE novsmnds We “1 not W he album .1 my person or firm who in do not believed” be Milan Grinnell handily ‘houet and nibble. M an! leader have any wise for complaint and an: advertiser in m columns. the mesa M an immediate letter bringing all facts. to light. In every case when writing my: “11 saw your advertiseme i The Michigan 3mm Merl" like m filth!- ‘Itul‘lm ‘ Entered as mound-:5 utter. as am. on. :m as}; New York Fighting ‘Laikes‘to Gcean Highway ASED ON as selfish a motive as ever par- petrated the representatives of a single state against the best interests of the Whole United States is the opposition which the lakes to ocean ship route is receiving in Wash- ‘ ington- The‘ New York congressmen are lining up every conceivable this inev- itable nafioml improment, but shm’ of ‘ their verbiage they all reduae to the wholly selfish desire to protect the tonnage which now passes entirely through America’s bottle neck, New York harbor. The great demand for a more economical method of transporting the gigantic wheat crop of the northwest and the products of all states west of the Atlantic seaboard, to the ‘ markets of the world wtirfly overlooked by these provincial legislators. Never, to our knowledge, have our own representatives at Wfiington been ed'to fight nor Miehigan’s against those of the United States at large and'we hOpe they never will be! It is inconceivable in these days when "following aselfiefli W,‘ in which thousands of our boys laid down their all for a wholly inkel, men in our own 333d should foster a. policy so utterly, ’ devoid of the spirit of democracy, which :we ' have held up as a beacon-hm to the of the world. No state in the United Stats hm to even challenge the "bail: of all the states! We hope- there is a any to teach dur- ing this vastly important legislative fight a' single state imam. . ' The Farm Bureau and the County Agate ~ ‘N mansrmnmo has been came into between the Farm Bureau FedEration and the States Relation Service of the Bop-amt of Agriculture whidl it awr- ried out means the end of a flange county agent ’s usefulness. The things which ‘ a county agent may NOT do are'given below: I M‘mm‘_;.‘.-4‘ , “The county agents witlnM 1h taming people in a broad way with reference to - a: production. ’ marketing and - oomation of {arm all omen: m,- ‘ mauve organizations. but will not themselv- es organize Mm mama's « sinifilr'mau- . nations, conduct membership campaign, a .Hidit receive Anne. M arm bureaufunds, edit and manage the - rm Wampum, namesake iness, of the term bureau, W com-y mama! Militias or take wtzn Martins are 'm ' as, Twenties: agents." 3 g. ' ' 2 sum manna; ova pastime. "re . ito : - It win-‘b‘e ammo mu , fine Wnation and may it as it is to suspend an apple“ in mid-air" when .gravitly bids it fall. The county agent who is hmestly interested in bettering canditwn of. culture will, despite all. - p ' women, find himself many time! Mg the things, Elijah he is forbidden to do. ' '4. '1 As long as the government pays any part of e of the county agent there will be 1 complaint from file taxpayer ,wlnose business 7 is by the: county agent’s and rightly, too. ‘ The Farm Bureaus are be- coming numerically and financially usth enough to pay all the ekpense' of production and marketing should at once relieve federal government and the state of all expense and power in con- nection with the county agent. Many annuity farm bureaus have already managers and commercial managers; When all farm humans follow suit there will come an end to weaver-lapping of jurisdiction and the eternal whine from the middlemen that the “county agent is ruining their-busian D URING THE past week there has been held in Detroit, 3. meantime which would wring a heart-throb from the most cold- blooded wea- profiteer and we assume that most of them kept at a safe distance that their emo- tions might not thus be perturbed. I I it was the national convention of flee Dis- able American 'Veterans of the World War. 'We shall not seek to paint inane any of the sad antennas which were thus brought to American font-lib city. Suffice is to say, that only then who could move about among their fellewmen were present and that flaere are . and thousands of these members of this who are crippled or edmgured in mach ways that they could not attend. r The mmtion Was opened by Amrmmhn, the blind chaplain from Cincin- nati, who but his sight in acflm to save a comrade. Despite his handicap, The Disabled War Veteran . Aaronsohn is continuing his amnion in mol- ogy alt the_»Harrew Union College. We draw the attmtionof readers to significant convention became the avowed pur- pose: of this organization were thus exp-named by one of their leaders: . ‘1‘Thez'e are times motives we-wis‘h to ac— complish. ‘We want to expedite legislation new in (SW m the relief oaths 111‘s- abied soldier“, to eliminate the present ml taxpe mmmhammmmm upon the veteran the We! be M cea- -cu;py in society when the government muses its relief.‘ . “We seek to elimlmte any “bog-M at- -We' on the\ part no! the dignified m: mum!” is thrust upon his own resources. “When It. federal hoard its trail. Mg me want the veteran to ere-min! and Mendent.” There might be a question mixed by some as be extra payment for the men who saved in the great war under the wars and stripes, and- whore‘lmedtotheirhemesin goodheelth manninjmeihuttherecancertainlybe no shadow (of doubt in the mind of any as I in m we owe to time who were disabled. .‘Theydonotask charity. The-37m 'ne vestige of the old-time pension grab. "ma men gambled their all and lost in a game we ' all are equally responsible for starting. ' No man or woman will begrwhe the cm and W which one man new“ at the We of m gwernmem, no matter what the Emails aplacewhereweme no li- cense to think "a dollars cunts“! Luke'wa am Name m' activities, : once has not "to ‘our‘ knowledge been '- .‘the open sea thanthe eXpanse of Lake“ gan'which from his down, in in our an M, in ms:- .0 w. a _‘ the to name of?“ a, I which it has been Prmidmt Harm’s; ' PM); .we have known at Mr. ' _ f work for a good many years. He is aboYeVaE a .successiful mm executive and that is; we gather fronting daily' M the. t (neededin'axe shipping {or bar merchant ' m . . . W ‘ \ MM)? envious eym which turned to rapid of Gennany’s sea during the past decade, When'a‘ll of Ammea‘l prodnots were can-ted to ports flagabut the dim and Wipes. Japan needy dominates time Pacific and genetically every other important," has @5335 11m the routes of trawl I ‘. =f ~‘ The Unit-ed Wes board is than. >< e A PM also by higher, a mm mm: labor costs She demands that a reasonable number of able-bodied seamen be carfied'yfte protect the lives and property during ‘g . 3 emergency; Our. fuel costs are as high and a ; L ’ 1 in m cases‘laigher than foreign flag P3)“ . Wiétth, if the United States is to have as Eben can advance a single good flw‘uld not one, than it » keen-est business brains of America to me it w a basis which will come 'anyWhere new: Iadaeqnatemerdaentmarinaandnomeaité, ,_ reason why w i i; . 4 \ v lbmakig_ even and in Albert 19. Lasker, we ; believe, the right manflaas been found fm' a , mighty hard and ammo—1t Gasoline Under Twenty Cents p {'g; - E HAVE not the figures available ‘31. 7 - of the 1 Wonefflw United States farms-of thiseomtqghntwe would the watemenft that no {single ' ’ _.one1tentlo£ usedlvyonriamm So the this of a _ ,l .139 B—lflh cum: on and - in kerosene, myth 1W . "by the Standard 033 in means somefimg." Now, we '_‘ fie famerthadin Wat? this several would): ago, represents a cut of nearly aim the end of 1920 and we can hedemflylthankful flmsedaysformnmfifilm ~ The move which “like :pmducers of ,ewylineinmxieamnakentfiism "tins game name will compare that " x l.- is to out their prim down to a basis willjustnetfienmwfleym the rest of flaisyaar, just has happened to Those who do {mg a. feel as £661): of the amt [.7 buying market, a very few ‘i ing in 1913. These not ' 'j. A writer on the stat! of a western mm ’ wrote an article an whim an that paper recently, Elie began his with a ~quotation m ‘mfiefls poem, g.- my ~ \ , . after reading meantime, that spent a day on the end of a pitch fork.“ nothing wary mystical 3330351; ze'ttim. a 'fW' in your back or mafing'iiblisters on 1 ‘ERHAPS "I’resiehnt SW25 mwdmvm. _ R W and: ' ‘ wilifbe‘ were Was pummel: , When- we speak of Michigan. we mean: all ofMichi‘m " columns. " em ’0‘ m ' rum. “ .V‘Mihern . . . Macs—m ‘ at the me: m to. be included lower robes. I innit; roan tom as though ' to he Mud he", tau; - . H. 'lfoder, woolen!!! *1‘ \_- . - , ya. do not recall any article in of thin weekly in whieh’ls m hated that. we draw any line m upper and 1mm.- mmlm- d.’ our _ ndwalmthd Ma'upin the hem "(10min . age well as‘tfie folks nl’ong the; Ohio border lines and; hope in _-e you all just as veil moth them I _ Unlike most farm papers we .m our we: only ourth state. .. ‘ Mus m mum. out. to But Mr mention peninsula... which makes me , at cm is of- to- the W for mom or rejection: . If ratified, the char-cu n W to the Regis- hture for or Mention- In 1911,. Lou-Angela comfy adopt- ed a. m monies only three ad- ministrative officers were elec- ova—mm, district attorney and; assessor. , .' ' . in Alameda- county in which there a local of sentiment bo— twm the mail and urban popula- tion as to consolidation or annexa- tion, a system of federation was de- vised whereby a. county board, as a separate and distinct body, was abolished and was ire-composed of mayors, and in the case of the larg- er cities, one! designated mem- bers Of the city councils, and of rep- resentatives from town's. ' San Bernardino county in Cali- fornia, as well as Denver, Colorado, in; all of dorm .59. constants- With mm ‘ deferred charges to operation usual- 17 consist ofpeapsid rent, .prepeiid‘ p1:on stocks that will beuoedupinmmhtwhieh- min. stock. or. on hand and have an asset value. Frazer tells you that this anoint: to over 14‘ per cent—oer when; you buy $1,009 worth of stock 3149 0: your money goes down the rat. hole: for women’s com-missions But will Mr. Frazer step to the front of the platform and deny that they spent. twenty per cent. for such commissions? ' Will he step up and tell us where the 13th Engineering Company’s refining plants are in operation and if they are so superior to all» others why the Standard Oil or the Royal Dutch hove not telegraphed in to get the exclusive use of their pigg- cess? And will: be step up and deny that the Beetaph nEgineering Company , it who a ill soil 1“ ,V Mar, so well a hay. crop. grain. feed. “All: not surprised: g , j your Michigan farmers can scoop flowing. crops. “5.5..-. . Lube-(1.14.4‘e You have t‘ watches, to sow with your grain, a with the grain for straw, fibres]: with -' the mm for market, crop or feed. yet enough vetch: seed shatters while being, cut: to» rescue! your land. and pro-w under for green manure, ready for a crop 011.com, potatoes or sugar beets. ' With cheap manure like that. and . .your red. clover for hay and manure and no expense for sowing, harvesti- ing or hauling, no wonder your Lad is kept up in first class condition. I .= 7 wish I knew how to get some of that vetch seed, I would try it a whirl ‘- out here on this, the once "Great. t . American Desert...” where we get on?! fertilizer by the slow process hauling manure on a. wagon. . Wouldn’t it. be. great to mix some» veimh seed with the small grain and sow all together at once, a who]: field at a time, instead of the slow at . 1 l1 ..2 \" Mal“ s4 -6..‘..-L -. to Lu-.. “-5 1 company will got five per cent of the sales made, which is paid to them before the stockholder gets, any money for his. process of hummus; out. and scatter- f ing' by hand, maybe enough manure ' to cover 5 or 10 acres a‘ year? ; I don’t believe that one—half 01.3 Us, retaliate is: “me fine anemia budgeted V's-fl emerald dotted state-of W M.WG may, ,, “t'h runway. mm not only A-\._.| .u--~-._u. Let—‘4. has adopted forms of government which, give more local minnow to these counties. .\ . In Kayla-d, the constitutional ‘- We “in. o. ‘ I ‘J at Mm but in the whale » States. M wu. slid. nonunion-Ty but no mere motor or depress- uun is more apparent than the present " . curse of high railway rates. They ought to be lowered at any cost and lot the high-salaried "executives" who so clev- erly defeated; the mom ‘0! govern- W WM' 28th issue regarding the resign- . film. of Frank S. Kedxi‘e. ‘ I am you came out regarding it. The people should know how slow the 'md has been in removing. an in- . competent head of the institution $3,351. What the result of retraining him its been. ~- 1 meaning the text of his res- " fixation and I would be glad to see ' on edikorial from. your you upon the - . naked eluuso.‘ To much such a ‘ f .__T:}.vmesf, C'Tfowever, I desire, it lit -'»_reg-nesc , .. slime. 21$) 5% the judgment oi and orth- membors oi" the board, to remain: 7f I. -* the harness if. the college in some t; f under. the where I can be of best sor- ‘ V circumstances, » oceans most. peculiar and the grant- . of it by the board very danger- .mr—Geo. A. Waterman, M. A. 0:. fill, Wuhtmaw County. ‘ ’— Me's Wren changing pretty that over W ““s ‘” Gkoesho‘ NH. to} em MOMS-3 to W the no ‘ Pm- m Fir-day is; ham m ex- pretty ax-Premdenat stays in i. can; hardly 3th position in the: college or nod, be up 'to the incoming president.—— or M. S ' ‘ ..\ been handed your let-tor in you inquire the names of White in other states that have .liuceessfully tried out' the Commis- sion: plan of - county government. Asyyou are prdbably aware, prac— all counties have a more sim- plified government ,than. that found in thetwootstesatMiohim and g V be- , dale. a commission of three ' or five—which group takes the place of of Supervisors and Board ‘ of‘Auditors. In addition, there are the usual. elective officers found in .-mehigan. ‘ This type of government belcslled the commission and while it may-have some ad- _ . muss. tongs. ballot and isopen ,.... "a. . . _ ' mm. gummy. in 13-11, isomer “8 we”. in 11mm 1 which - ~P’°' ' .m'fl» 'Norno rem: editorial In' May- , ment control during war times, use the , b. k mire mm . c I ' > ' ‘ new to play her first‘ for company. Presidenr Keith holding the job and his own feelings pretty ,well in check.‘ ‘We- are Aging 1; will an tum out for the best and: or com REFORM, a]? r'mlgsyimnia. The, usual practice :;.'..fi.ufor, the. legislative and principal fi- vgudministrative duties to' ‘ ‘Eowever, states are beginning to"- ‘ t ' passes-Yo- otellawins - ' V3108.le or their financial fimage’? WOT. .thO‘tme we have, gun: "_h“nflM‘ ll’r . 7 — uWen, 2-! . be to amendment. was: adopied allowing a certain measure of county autonomy but as yet, no Maryland county has adopted a; aorta, alike _the Balt- imore home rule charter provides for a .epartial consolidation of city and county offices—Lent D, Upson, Director and Sec’y, Detroit Bureau of Government»! Research, Inc. Home is a little mra information on the proposed country "reform". It is the purpose of the Ensures: Fan-near to find out! all; is can about. commission gromm- mt for counties We the people oi any why in this state will be asked. to vote for a change in their farm of gove- emment. 'If commission government is a good thing we want n it is no bet- ter than wa have: now we can’t. want it. and that‘s all there. is to iL—Editon. TEXAS on. PRODUCTS AGAIN AM GLAD that the Texas Oil Products, through Mr. Frazier had use of your columns to ans- wer m'e—lmt as he I am: mali- cious, I wish to say that. in. June, 1920, Shackleton and Graham of Grand Rapids, fiscal agents said that the roadway (€06 barrel capacity) would be in operation and! paying dividends. A stockholder, in 192]: dissatisfied; with their failure to puitup: and operate a GM‘Mn-el re- finery, asked for a Minn-d; of. his money, and as a subscriber of M. B. 1‘. asked about this concern I under- took to tell a little about them. For I believe that. the farmers at Mich- igan can better afford to buy soil fertility, sheep running wafer-- in. kitchen and burns: and sheds for im- plements rather than salesmen. and promoters. I know that a. number have. grown tired of waiting and. have disposed of their stock—and others may have help stock bought twice or five. times—es we know some men get drunk chance. they have. ' The admission of Franz, however that deferred charges to operation, state- ment oi! Dec. 1929,. pm assets EVERY . is open to Question, m while-- men Mr. Moor says that I am ignor- ant and deceitful but I did not say that commissions for stock sales were: assets» nor did I have a chance, to assert that I am a. lawyer and ae- countant as well as a publicist and writer with 'a valuable reputation ‘ But the Oil Products C'om- . pony did not seem fit to return their dissatisfied customers money, and that is. a. part. of successful business nowadays. . He also tells us that fire mere skimming plants down there will be out of the game a. few years from now when their 6,000- pl'anf is boom- ing, but how does he know that the field will not be dry and they have to build expensive pipe lines, or haul in crude oil by freight. I: am sorry, if in the course of human events, a prying into the af- fairs of this company should have brought out unpleasant facts, but they made them ,not nae—Ezra R. S. Averill, Kent County. Perhaps more of om- readers are in- terested in the Texas Oil Products Corn- pany than we think. there: are. I! so. we would be glad to publish a continued debate in these columns. comma we give the company a chance. rm- re- buttal in not more words than- Mr: Av» evil} has used above and let our read. ers get further information from other sources—G. M. 8. ‘ FOSTER’S WEATHER PRE- WNS FINE. . 4 CLOSED find one dollar to pay back mhscriptionth’at I am in arrears for. Will send one dol- lar some time in near future for the next year’s subscription as I like the paper very much. Mr- W. T. Fost- er’s predictions: of the weather gives a. fellow a. chance to plan his work ahead to the best advantage. Many thanks for sending the paper to me as. you have. Many other publishers would have shopped, the paper as soon as the‘year had: expired. I will try and not have, it run so long the next time. Thanks for past favors and winthank you for future ones. Singing run 7 deep falsetbo. . ,Oh, day-u res: upd- giadness. That milk) man cm early since he sports a new trucks; And he in.- Jorms me without even a. blush. that milk has dropped "~me cents per with. ' l - — Misc??? «rangers .13 s 1211-: .- , , _. im going .w: hove .a’i V ope-r 4”“ 1‘ all!!!” ' ‘A’G‘uess in, o of." V / ‘ name to Musings of a Plain/Farmer \ ——D.v0. Bayes, Omega County. one face of diminishing prices. It‘s too 1mm - This hoe is certainly getting heavy. But I must. keep it going or the weeds will take charge of our farm. 47»! Here'comes the baby with a pool of cool water. She has accumu- lated quite a coat oi tan these warm~ days; She cheats in a. lisp which. is very- soothing. to my ear. A visit with a child Brings. comfort to the field. . ..:‘We- on mains; m our three -* We. Perhaps We will be paid mind! when we start; down the grade. -. , 5 Have you, noticed it’s usually the. WM ‘ , , . .yaur‘rjast homo—Arthur P; Ballard. ‘.’xeucn"’fls . gritty mm ~ ‘ A. ‘ ; mower . thug smooths you»: pillow in ‘ .per. your farmers appreciate what. a salt . 3 map they have/in fertilizing their ’1' land and. keeping up their soil fem- '. mitt—A. A. Weston, Juesburg, Cal- ’; male. Right you are, brother! I Littlede the fam, who has spent 2.11 his lid. II ? ' Michigan realize. what a. grand old stain, we have._ But once he leaves this stat. to farm in another and then return later, he cannot sing his praises 0!. Michigan loud itor. “TIMES AIN’T CHANGED MUCH AFTER ALL” ' OME WISE city fol-ks, “talk about. “pro-wan- prices” as if the H. G. "4 of L. was then unknown. The} following was clipped flrom “Fired at Random" several years before. the war when Roy K. Moultou was_ “Column: Condoctor” for the Grand Rapids Press—Stacy Brown, Innis. 5 County, Mich. Some time ago we. published a. hit d I verse glorifying the life of the farmer . and telling of its advantages. Among * the multitudi'nous comments which 11st ‘ . arrived by mail is one from Lake Odes- sa. written. by a. party who doesn’t Lilia ' us. He signs: it “Grinnand Barrett," Ell reply is as. follows: “Dear Sir: Mr. Moult‘on, you’re wal- "Conf‘ound it, 1'0ng in bliss; Nothin’ to do but 1031 around and tear off stuff like this. ' ‘ ‘High cost of livinv‘? Thunder-l. If. pitiful. that plaint. _ You’re paid enough to cover it. b’gush . the tanner ain’t. ' ‘Tarm life. suits you exactly? Iyin' like a. Turk. What would you do, you bluffer'. if you ‘ really had to work's You‘re ’ No chance to give the world a. coat of . thick vermillion paint? You’ve got the time to do it, but, b'gosh the farmer ain’t. “1’11 stay at home forever, because I'm money '. And maybe get the mortgage paid the day before 1' die. Things a‘m’t just as they should h. There's some cause for complaint. You’re paid darned well for all you do. B’gosh, the farmer ain’t. “Sometimes you print a. jokelet. Someu times that ain’t the case, ‘ But every time you cover up a. column of good space, Your warmed up gags would perforate the patience of a saint. You‘ve got the nerve ,to- write 'em. but. b’gosh. the farmer ain’t!" Well, times, ain’t changed much utter 1.11 Since Mou'I‘ton wrote his column. * The city fol-ks still blat and hawk In even- easing volume. Yes, 1' would be a- furmer gay And roll in health and honey And frolic. in. the new-mown hay And gather in the money. For what's the fun of town life Where the cost of living’s high When one can lend the farm life And bid his troubles "good—bye." Yes, I w uld be a. farmer 'gay .. And ne or my duties Shirk 11.1 was sure 01‘ my weekly pay And didn’t have to work—Editor. ' Your paper is sin-e a mud term pg- ]: new read term papers for Kl. years. and I think yours is the, mat right down to business paper I ham nut in tint Inns; Hoping you» enough—Managing Eds ’} , fwhole‘cdu t . 9.11? 0: r van n . fallen .or on, your lawn?- _. p It may not be possible to have one of cement on a pedestal—splendid because inconvenient for Miss Puss rebut one can be made quite easily at no expense. I had a galvanized .irOn garbage container, with a hol- low bottom. The top having rusted' away it was no longer useful for its original purpose so I turned it up- side down in my garden just behind the primroses. It' stands about twelve inches above the ground and the bottom, «now the top, is filled- with fresh water every day standing to a depth of three inches. The birds are certainly enjoying it and so are we. Just yesterday Ithere was a big scrap on between two sparrows umpired, or as a. little girl said, “vamp-ired" by a robin, who in a loud and angry voice gave his decision. The bath has attracted ‘not only robins and sparrows but brown thrush, wild canaries, cat- 'birds. wrens and orioles. We made way with our eat so that no murder would be committed in our garden. - If anyone wants to know how to be rid of a cat in a genteel'and pain- less manner just ask me, Two of my neighbors failed and had a big bet that I would. Their unwelcOme felines were on their back steps next morning and in revenge have given them concerts every moonlight night since but mine rests peacefully-un- der the clover and the birds in grat- itude give us wonderful concerts every morning and all day. BETTER TIMES COMING HAVE wondered lately why there ' have not been. more letters in our ‘ department and I‘ believe it is because we have all been so busy taking care of our chickens and garden that we haven’t been able to find the time. But let’s ‘give our men-folks bread andI milk for sup- per some night and take the time to write a nice breezy letter as our ed- itor has asked us to do. I live in the southern part of the Thumb, where money is so scarce that every bill is stretched- until it scarcely resembles U. S. currency and our clothes are so patched that the manufacturers would never rec- ognize them; but we still sing or whistle while we gather our 20—cent eggs and milk big pails of dollar per hundred milk from our two hundred and fifty dollar cows. When we can’t sell our produce “we eat what we can, and what we can’t we can." And the downfall of the price of milk, eggs, etc., can’t keep us from enjoying to the fullest extent the flash of blue across the garden as Mr. and Mrs: Bluebird, who have apartments in our corner post. go out looking for food for the child- ren; the lark's 5 a. m. song: the .w’ren's chatter; the bob-o-link's ex- quisite music as he gracefully bal- hnces himself on.a timothy head in the meadow; and the brilliant color of the oriole who has a nest in one of our maples and is constanigy flashing back and forth from near- by trees with food for the nine ones, '0' we saw with Browning: “The year’s at the spring And day's at the morn; Morning’s at seven; The hillside’s dew-pearled; , The lark’s on the wing: ' ‘The snail’s on the thorn: - God’s in His Heaven— 2 - Ali’s right with the world." Seriously. I believe we farmers I ‘Lihave seen our hardest time and if: to "our ;grit. a few we 'can hold on I we shall be able to a -1 inonths longer, inarke't our produce for somewhere “hear the product-ion cost.——-M‘i's."li‘. ll. B.’,«Tuscola County. ' ‘ _____,..._.__——-——-—- 11 i "believe that timesnre slowly I m 2" all we need to do is just I " vi and 3?“??Ioixdgonchasn't it Emerson who ' said that “It does not .make so much difference. ~where ,we‘ stand 41s _ in which r treet' ion'we are. Eon ,. ‘ .ldiefiegwe.arggstarted-in that right direc- "b’r" and"Lth3it means .. and one who can appreciate oetry arid-vine beauties of, our big! macro mar fry" -~ That {span/exquisite bit of Browning. ’33 8‘ bird-bah in 'better to allow your names and g." And I' do .be- . a to 3b 7' h'ter da 3 for the farm- . “a "g bettir times for the ,"heiu you; Really Iéwulll this pago‘ooc am"! coon iafln'wukly' from so “the jimlo deponmen we can make. this if you in Detroit. Mr. slooum in as or wherein, can have our own Iowoot way. i. you .oro doing.. . . Eamon: v, _ my dell! friends: ,Pieooo do' not think ‘61 mo ' ' more . mi than”. whether you ore-sixteen. or sixty: wt write mo once in o while on any subject that'u‘botbei‘in r ' u ’or m l . W‘ 'i .l ‘ ‘ :Iso new to mif loco your confidence. and you-Jim a j” ‘ a“ M min“, I _ you will only help me; thew-oi: nothing you can ask me that I will not be alto d a boot. whether it be looking up a recipe, getting you thoubooi advice on «any subloct or chopping for ‘ ‘ odious coil urn. that the Business Farmer chouid’beylikod .‘ as woii, by the women as it “I: by the monPf'oiko 3:3 ho has told ‘mo that here in one ’cornor one Dian!!an or thinking wOUHflhd/me in some reel on have round extra hi or some hints you have found time-savers. I want, on, 'so' m m y 0. Mrs. Grace Neill: Jennoy, The Business Farmer. ML-Oiomona, Mich. in»; at Moom,.--o lohggway tuned. bu \ ;‘ 5y do than dim. tho but department in this oII-ood -'no..ldea;-wnot..a'hm¥: ‘ . . "in return. I ‘ ' II o to. the ‘vi to me some nice chatty letter: on what, ‘ uch. to know you all better!— \ The Bird With a Broken Wing ‘ \ WALKED In the woodland “meadow. Where sweet the: thrunhes sing. And found on a bed' of mosm A bird with a broken wing. . I healed It: wing. and each morning It song its old sweet strain. But the bird with the broken pinion Never soared on high again. I found a young life broken By sin’: seductive art. ‘And touched with c Christ-like pity ‘ ltook him to my heart: He lived with n nobior pumm' CORRESPONDENT-“S COLUMN W0 L IES. readers of our De- partmen have written me asking for orders for crocheted work. I will gladly give their names and ad- dreSSes to anyone writing me. ~ I U 0 It seems to me that it would be much ad— dresses, to be given here in this column. You would hear direct instead of thru me and much time would be saved to you. but _that is for you to decide: I t 0 We have plenty of recipes for cream pzuffs and lemon pie but none for orwegian cakes. having it would send it in. ’ t O A very good ,way to keep cheese is to put it; in a glass jar fastening an oiled or waxed paper over the top with a. Eubber This will do in some ouses. u n mine the onl sure w keep it is to hide it. y ay to I t t t Mrs. C._T. D.-—:-Will you kindly s'end us the rccrpe for raisin puffs? We have not ,had a recipe for them, = the - I am sure anyone.- And struggled not In vain. But the life that sin had stricken Never soared as high again. But the bird with a broken pinion Kept another ,from the snare. And the life that sin had stricken Raised another from despair; Each loss has its own compensation. There’s healing for each pain. ‘But ‘tho bird with the broken pinion Never scored on high again. ’ ——Heaekiah Butteer Mrs, L. Lee-The dong wick oil-stove is best as the short wick burner is ‘ very slow. The New Perfection and the Quick'Meal are two very reliable makes. o o 0 Mrs. K.,C.-——4I will inquire about the enameled ware trays and let you know next Week about them. I left out the cream puff recipe as we have so many now; , * ' 5 THIS WEEK’S POEM HAT DO you think of the truth of this week's poem? I am in ‘much doubt, myself., You re- member ‘that “There is mere rejoic- ing in Heaven over the return of one sinner than over a whole congregaé tion of the righteous." ' _Real strength comes through trial and often failure 'rather- than exemption from either. “To him who overcometh, God giveth a, crowd. Come, 'let me know what you think. ‘ ' * marinas-pa , spoonfuls of v' Over the gie : of sugar, add 1-2 ’ mun: G' to lomon. addipulpr . _ . ., the._, . tins" with pastry, '. 1 ’1~2 dozen. _ r~ knife or shears. Fill with whipped_cre'am . , ple‘plate an _, wil . V 1 and brown; the or Mrs. M. j .. ' ' ‘ '_ ~ ‘ Lemon Bios 1' = Beat 4 easy: yolks..onlx..;mtlr ' V offwatgr' tbls " cornstarch .1; into this. the “ Juicegofr .0- . .‘ stir Well-"‘“hin , *baike . 15 with the custard and use wléites of sweet milk, 1 for~meringuwpdra B. M}. . , v ’ ‘Cream Pu'fls ' - u Put one cup of hotwater and 172 cup}( of butter in a basin» and , place on. the. stove to boil. While boiling stir in - cup ofr‘sift d“ flour mixing until. smooth: then set as do to cool. , ' en cool put 8 eggs not beaten. Stinuntil thoroughly mixed.» Drop by spoonfuls in .a. button ’ tin and bake in a quick cyan for «2 minutes; the b king has much to do with the success of he cream puffs. This, rec ipe makes 2 dozen puffs. Can be filled” with anythin >you like best—hire. H. L." , Paw Paw, M chigan. . Cream runs ' 1 One cup~ boiling water p cup of butt’er: 1 cup of flour.- _ the boiling water and butter. let boil minutes, 1. Add 3- unbeaten eggs. beat Well, bake 1-2~hour. slowly at first. Bake on buttered tins ‘until: 9."- golden brown. They 'will fall if not. well baked; If a piece of the dough, about the size; Lt: a. walnut is dropped this recipe will ma Hog M Split one side with.._a sharp". cream or lemon filling and nicely frozen ice cream is good if served at. once.——- Mrs, F, M... Stanton. Mich. . ' r *' mwrmmNrrs ' I WOULD like to thank L. s.. Pierson? Mich... 'for the fried cake recipe, was just -w-hat 1 ‘had- been Want ‘ and makes the most delicious cakestw am sure there are lots of treasured rec- ipes in every home of the M. B. F. read-f ers and if we'cou'ld have one recipe from each home we could soon fill a'good, _ sized book. Here are afew pie hints: A quarter. teaspoon‘of baking powder added tot-he.» pie crust for one pic makes it tender and, flakY. ‘ ' " When baking pies. bake two or more“. extra crusts. Then when you wish a'. " fresh pie fill a. crust with lemon, cream v or chocolate .filling. , The crusts will keep fresh for a number ot'days if kept coo . v “ .- '» Cream filling I make as follows: F‘ ' ‘one pie. put 2 1—2 cups,of milk fever th ers of our department. could comply with my request. respect. My brother, was only one thing better a farmer has to be. to any nation. 1y that he has. put at . {the difiicult problems a which we Wamen ~ical party, With ' est :a'fiiliatidn. ‘ Just some specialgchurch, ’ A Personal Letter to'the Readers of this Page from Theodore Roosevelt’s Sister EDITOR'S NOTEz—It is my great leasure this the following letter, written by Mrs. CoBrine t . Mrs. Robinson is the sister of Col. Theodore. Roose- vel . one of our great Armor-icons, joldler, asked Mrs. Robinson to write a personal letter lgan. and as_ she is a very busy women, very mterestlnz Public speaker. I feel very much-pleased that she felt she She Is a charming, very gracious and very well Lnformed on national aflairs, urally expect the sister of Col. Roosevelt to be. TO THE WIVES OF THE FARMERS OF MICHIGAN :—+ My. dear Fellow Citizens :—-‘I have had the great pleasure, in my native state of New "York, of coming closely in contact ,in my country home on the Mohawk Hills in 'Herkimer County, with the wives of the farmers in that. vicinity, and I can say with absolute truth that there is no class of women for whom I have a greater Theodore Roosevelt, used to say that there than a good man, and that was a good woman,—and especially the kind of good woman that the wife of Somuch- of What is extremely hard falls up- on the shoulders of a farmer’s wife. , types of citizen, the future of our country depends more upon the man and woman of the farmland than on any other class. are really the backboneof our country. At this moment, there is much to discourage, all .peOple all over the world, insofar as the longed-for Peace has not yet brought prosperity” and restfulness I feel, however, that in this country, during the ‘ last” few months, we have made real progress. - n ' I belieVe that our President, Mr. Harding, our nation truly in his heart. ‘I . gstep‘s that he’ has takem—it wou that’is‘undertaken by any administration,—but I feel most strong- ‘ the heads of puritarimls departments, able, intelligent and patriotic men who are doing their best to work out _ with which they are faced. can help best/is to ourselves with the polit- , the principles of which we feel we have the close : as we work better ‘for real religion so do we work better for our country, inside 'some. special party- Every citizen, all women now hear the” ' responsibility of that great name, ' interest i-in 'publicmaiters ' 'do not agree with him in all the Id, be difficult to agree with all your mesa, week to have printed Roosevelt Robinson, to read-‘ patriot and former president. I to the farm women of Mich- a writer on public affairs and a and delightful . lady, on We woufld nat- Of all our many and varied They ’ has the good of The way . in 1- .. .2 heaping tablespoons of flour, . ‘; Tessa should feel it their; duty by; ° to be merevthan _a’ . , ; --. fire tofboil. While this is heatgng 1stir or. " ’ cornstarch): and 1 cup of ,sugar‘ together Wet- witlr enough water or milk. to ma}: a paste, add 1 beaten egg and I ,_ te, spoon of“ flavoring or else the" grated. rind .of 1:2 lemon or 1-3 orange. When‘ the milk boils. stir this _mixt.IIre into it t. and let cook until thick. stirring reun- stantly. -Pour into a crust and let coo}. Chocolate filling is made the same w‘ except that 2 heaping tablespoons Oreo-,1 003. are addedj dry to the sugar ' and"- flour and no flavoring is used. be white of the egg is used for meringue for the top. t _ > . _ When making chocolate pie, double thb recipe, fill one crust and pour the rest . into oatmeal dishes and let cool. . Serve ed with milk or cream this makes a, deaf“ licious pudding. ’ So much for pies. . ~ If you wish to drain your dishes _ stead of wiping themeand have neither sink no: drainer. you‘can make a dry; er from an old milk pan 2 by punching holes in the bottom and nailing three. ' four ’spools on the under side. Set this in a. larger pan.~ Your glasse. ' ‘ ' vex-ware will ,not drain very well so it in best to wash them first and w M ‘ then the‘last of the dishes "can be pla' in the drainer and good ‘ ’ ed over “them. If yo large it is easier to ’sta per dishes and Wash them r, ‘ breakfast dishes in. the morning, if you. have a drainer. , f - -, ‘ ‘ Now I would like to ask our editor 1: - please send me one of those bulletins» on the-Community Egg Circle. if they-re, not gone/{and then I will close this letter hoping to seevmore letters in t “a” future issues of JM. B. F.—-—Mrs. F M. ,_ Tuscola’. County soon CREAM PATNES nacho"- week's'gt, B. F. for a recipefor creamer“ 8n thought I would send one in. Bare, used it for years and it is a. good‘ Am also ending a few :.other':¢-'r _, which I ‘use often and. hope-others. ' EEING a request in last , try them. ~ Would also like .to enamel ware tables for children’s , chairs can be purchase.‘ ,,Would . , get one '11:: possible(. as I ~‘ccpnside other kind": very unsanitary, and ‘ to" any ' information, you then; . ~ ‘1 s sour 'Qredm Patties ; " {Soup Sugar.‘,1-2-"cufi , up with-sweet ,mn - salt. ’1 t. s..r‘nutme¢ ~ » ‘gbt'fo'ider I saw boys whehaditheir." all. direct ’1 :1.‘landi'1diiévifcalf/lg we hm .quit. I a. few , lit- _ y ‘ I omentihero‘ is. a tie“ "‘b‘iddies" and some’ big chickens. Th‘ey'f‘faré fighting, firecrakgk; .: We also havo some turkeys too. ' “I "I when 8. small], {ii/inell' "will send her-a big long letter .... ’ Kb?“ “first began to shoot '7 . . « .I H 1"receivea in less than :2 weeks. ._ . v wanted to“ hold. thorn ;~';f';’:L.Xoi_1r,,new niece. Gladys G. Miner--11 4. 'Vhan ran :1 had; seen. larger tangents. Mien. , , Here > viipysrdo7f.biitéény;niothertold me how; « _ W *manyrch‘iidr' ’n‘had‘ had- their link“; v ' ‘ ' s ‘ V > . . . 2 ,;. 1'- Uncle Ned—I am a 'irl eleven f3.” *bIOIn-OflEBO "‘1 never dld “1- When", , yeare‘: cld. ‘ My'birthda'y was8 the °tenth At March. Our school let out the, 27th '. - w - ' r r _ a. ‘v‘:_.'o;E-May.'and I will be in the seventh [fin-gem“ or hands blown 0“ m that " grade next year. I think it is very nice :wayiandivl was glad I. had Dfivldl‘at‘; of thexM. B. F. to set a page aside for tention to what my mother had‘Saidp fillies girlish andtlbogfsyfldogl’t {gulf I {Wig -- ~. .coew asor. opng ear ro t: It always Days beat to do 'our the members of the Children’s Hour.— mothers and fathers tell us because Nina Stuever, Capac, Mich. ‘ they are older and knOW the be“ Peter and Paul read in a paper that thing or'way to do.—+-UNC_LE NED. t _.——u for selling twenty-four pictures they would receive a moving picture ma» chine. They told tireir mother about it and. she said “You will have to ask your papa about that." When they asked their papa about it he said "No, my sons. am afraid not." They. burst out crying and said, “I don't see why not," "Well, I’ll tell you, people wouldn‘t buy from you unless they were a. member of the family, and I would not let you ask 25c for an ugly picture that is not worth one cent," said their papa. “Well let me have a. paper route," said Peter. “No, you would have to’ get_up too early in the morning,” said his father, “but if you haven’t been late for breakfast once during the week I will give you twenty-five cents." “Well I'll try but I think .it is a pretty poor way to earn*money.” said Peter. , OUR BOYS‘AND GIRLS , ' . Dear UncleNed: I ‘al'li a girl‘ thirteen . years of age and in the. seventh grade. Our school, was out May sixth and the last day of school we had a picnic. We . had sandwiches, cake._pie, cookies, lem- ’ ~ ,onade, dry beef, saia‘d,»pickles, and beans and we played» mes. In the af- ternoon there was a all game .in Vol- riey and all us schOOI children'went , to it. I I.have three hens and twelve little chickens. My'mother has two himdrrv1 ~ little chicks. I have one sister. She is fifteen years old and in the tenth grade at‘ -001. -. We have twa little kittens. 1' have a- calf., It's .name is Blossom. Our roses are out-and I think they are very pretty. I live on‘a farm of eighty acres. have brown hair and blue eyes and I am four feet and eleven inches tall. I. wish some of the girls would write to me..-—Ma.rgaret Peterson, R 1, Biteley. Mich. . Dear Uncle Nedz—Having never writ- ten to you before I thought I would try my luck and see if my letter would be in print. We moved about a month ago - and having read your letter about writ~ ing stories instead of the same thing I thought I would tell you about our mov- ing. After We were all packed we took _ our Ford and hauled great big loads of‘ the small goods in it. After making several trips we hired a truck to take the furniture. It was only six and one- ‘half miles. When we went back after ‘our cat he couldnt-be found .so had to let him ire—Miriam Simpson, Boyne City, Michigan. "v Dear Uncle Ned—May II have room tor this letter? I hope it is not too long to be printed anyway I am a. girl 18 years old in the seventh grade. .I have four brothers and no sisters. You or- »some of the girls and boys'may be , lucky and have sisters. For pets I.- ' .have a. cat whowe call Scat. Some cats would run away if you said "scat" to them but our.’s doesn't. We live on a ‘large farm, We have 5 horses, 3 cows is sips-lac. offer; to every, girls who writes. jond'rnyphotograph. Now see how many “to Uncle Ned and the children. ‘ wishes to Join your merry circle. 7 write to me and I would be we' . ss‘ 1 _ Dear Uncle Ned:—-—I am a. girl 12103“ old and in the 6th grade at school. 1 to ; to school every day when I am not sick. I hayedark hair, blue eyes and light 'com'plection. _'I would like to Join 'ydur merry circle. May I? I live on an 80 acre farm. .NVe have-"4 horses, libead :ot, cattle, about 100 chlckensand some ducks. My father takes the M..~'B.‘ F. and likes it fine. I like the. children's page best of all. I will close with love . Hope some of the boys and girls will write to me. I will answer all letters—Margaret A. Cosens, Akron, Mich, R—3. Dear Uncle Ned:-———May I join your merry circle? I am a farmer girl x11 years old and in the sixth grade at school I have never written before. 135 acre farm. We have 3 horses, 5 cows and one calf. For pets I have a cat' and a Shetland pony. My father has a. Ford tractor. a truck and a touring car. I live a mile and a nalf from‘school. I have two sisters and one brother. I like to see the Doc Dads and the letters and hope to see my letter in print. —— Lois Amos. Owosso. Mich, Route 8. Dear Uncle Nedz—Here is another who ‘ I am a girl 12 years old and in the 6th grade. My father takes the M. B. F. and likes it very much. We live on an eighty acre farm. We have 3 horses, 1 colt, 6 cows, 80 hens,» 10 pigs and 4 rabbits. I iave two brothers and three. sisters.— Iargaret Phetteplace, Decker, Michigan.~ Route 2 Dear Uncle Ned:————-I am a little girl seven years old and in the third grade. We take the M. B. F. and think it is very nice. My mamma reads the letters to me every week and I like to hear them. For pets I have a dog named Fluffy and a, kitten named Mitty. I wish some of the boys and girls would sure and answer their letters—Georgia. Kaser, Montgomery, \ Michigan. ‘ Dear Uncle Nedz—Thls is another farmer girl who would like to join your merry circle. My mother has a. nice garden this year. We had lots of straw— berries this year. and I think we will have lots of raspberries if they don’t dry up. We have red beets, radishes. on- ions, blackberries, lettuce, peas, pickles, '- are I live on a‘ is . .b‘ answer cry one at te hoeing corn- nowahd so, u. ever, your niece. 0 .As "‘ fiber. Freeland. Michigan. Dear IIncle Nedz—May I merry circle? I am a. girl 13 and have passed into the 7th. live in the country and like two very much. 24 chickens and 4 pigs—«Ida. We have 2 horsesr‘élr camp, Bay City, Mich, Route" 4. Dear Uncle Ned:———I have -very much. 14 years old. brothers. We live on an I have 5 sisters likes it very well. girls would write. letters—Lois Garver. Michigan. Harbor eighty . farm. My father takes the M. B. F. anti I wish some of» the I will an'sWer Pal ' read s V 7 Children’s Hour page and have liked . I am a farmer's daugh and, acid Dear Uncle Ned:——I am a farmer boy." and my father has 8 head of cattle. 55“ horses and 1 pig. For pets I have a big cat and 11 rabbits. ers and two sisters. the M. am 12 years old and in th at school. I would like to the boys and girls write to me. Nichols. Thompsonville, Dear Uncle Ned:—--May I merry circle? I have four broths , My brother takes ‘ B. F. and likes it very much. I , sixth~grade ave some at ——Georg¢ Mich., R-Z. " join you: ~ I am a girl ten years old " and go to school every day and am in“. the fifth grade. We 400 acres. I and also the D00 Dads. funny little fellows. and no brothers. 1 boys and girls would be sure to answer wish some their live on a farin‘ 015' read the Children’s Hour They are very I have two. sisters would write to me. » ~w. For pets I have a bird, a dog and four We have some goslings andchick~ What will go up the chimney down that will not go down the chimney up? Answer.‘ Will close with a riddle: Umbrella—Your niece, Corrine Six Lakes. Michigan. _. Herzog; ' ‘ Doar Uncle Nedz—I am a little gm :8" yoars old. and next year I will be in this fifth grade. F. and T like it very much. My father takes the M. B I think th :.. Doo Dads are funny little fellows. I like" to read the letters from the boys and} girls so I. thought I would write my first letter this morning, I have 3 brothers v and 2 sisters and we live on an 80' acre farm. We have a big dog namedfiovenfl , We have 65 little chicks, 9 head of cat- tle. 4 horses and 12 sheep. also 5 big pigs? and two little pet pigs. As my letter is getting long. I will close. Wish some of the girls and boys would write to me.— Martha Badour. Au Gres. Mich, 1-1. A s .f‘ v./, ', -./,, figs? RPMES /PIRE..- ’tgit' Tire y... 2 _. {suit affix: studs w. W _ , witey' ‘_.:mischlevous , ,was; . J. 'w . ,cold bath at any rate. Roly was out eXercising "on his. brand new bicycle and when air unmannerly tire bumped in him he lost control of his wheel a. d ran into old man Grouch. Poly was getting'a'free ride without hav- .as if he might be willing mg to work for it. Flannelfeet'il‘ to, a. someone for upsetting him, in. manner. Sleepy Sam is movln ' this week than we move for a long time. 1 or will be able to sell scrambled, if he can ever pick up the ram 01 the eggs in the box. 4.. - l , W‘;N§p%’~xi.‘nf~1e¥4fi ' “1)? >9 ' . “one «use me our _ :guw «fiat-(e of- w. ‘ = v A teem rooms «New e. do wvfiuwoflnxefi us.- dmes" ? rm - ' 1. Holstelns. Howell serve 62.? — ~ Tuna-cox Alloflflm mmmu, men. limp Baud» Whitley, 1“ ram Ester: Rapid» r Home, Hudson, lgcli. m ' r: momma furnished by the Dairy. Bidder! .0! the United States Department of Agricul- iture. show first the dairy cows. of the coup“? “my only. 41500“ lbs. of milk per your. K. good: Holstein bull will increase the pro— ' fl‘o’n of the ordinary herd 50- par eent’ in * ' fie Argo ream-sum. M us help you find a. good one {:0 use on your herd. You cannot make It better in~ Earnest. ! 'mn. KGLSTEIN' - FRIESMN » - ASSOCIATION . i91“!" Stato- Block Lansing Mich. 3 snow was " sired by a Fortune Audi Komdybnongef- ‘. void Defer bull from a ueerly IQ lb. show: 1 EirIuprlu junior c3115 Jeohon' Ehl‘r. ‘ ' 20. more in color and load» individual - an £11130, 831328? to like ' FARMS mefl’. MM“. 'Hohtdn' *Brend’err Show 1906‘ oversee . ' of his four nearest dams an ‘ $3.12 183. hunter and 7‘30 lbs. milk in seven; “as from: A. .Ré. 0. doses representing the- lead.- fnmllim o! the baud: wltzh records up w 29- . Priced. to NHL L. o; KE-TILER Fllnc‘. Mich. 8M" UV SEGIS Lad. rum- Hengerveld ‘ To C OLVE“! ‘10“ m mu I000 sile- fiom their herd. We pm» well pleased! will ' 'cuveev from-our Junior Herd are "Kine Pol. Lunl’t Korndxke who is n so: 9 ‘ " ‘ 0&1? r :1 3.5.“;‘1 angultr“ if ’9‘“. 'oOlo is be 0- 'ew u ant.“ h '1‘... W". firmwe. B 2. Bottle Susi. m ‘AM lirremrw Lion-r coconsgl 5:110: " -"' ‘ n bull 1 your old rom . . “om “1:51: whose six. nearest damn are 3&34 ‘ he, "butlbr. Herd- under state and fedoras]. sup- m‘ni'flallln. mm Farm. Unlanvme. mun. Registered Holstein Bull ” on from King 0m and” from n 22 £95 dedivcmd your station. Write for "gist; areas. North ’nrmu. lllcl'l. ., .J._ . n iB-un born pt. 28,, 191:9. even-1y marked and a fine- lndividual.~Sir- ‘: .ed by my 3'0 1b. bull and t-rom a. ".20 lb. daughter of Julian Hens. Lad,,‘tull' sister to a 32 lb. cow. 3 5333.111: will start on yearly test: W110“ 15. - k ’~ , WY F; FICKIES .- ‘ng. Mich. mm" vs“) he no ' .e ALCA‘RTRA PONTI '~. ’ ‘ ‘ see of $e’850;00?0 mu, CL DE NO. 2473-67 a double , _ n ’, .> :P! EGHO SZLVIA the champion $363: val: e y ‘ 1 50s as King; from .- f 18.48 butter. £11 0 3878 ‘h1"15'.rr'“suw¢r. _, A ’ me._y‘earhng grand A , .mc?3138e each. P l ‘ '11:. man. 9*“!"W ,0... we“ ,» yearly milk. record. at 1‘ 1-,. 5 made niobium static record for 6 years. Only :» one worm. cow- with higher milk record today. >1..\m.r>. ,.-‘ sea. mm to- ; i A. PRDVEN BLOOD use l... r ‘ diction! over dreams milk in 1.11 E Mala ' l ready for service. from r9 1-2 end 24» 1.4 lb. a“, r u .se'qu’lu. A l lira! “He mum. an m“_ d“% dawn M , annexe—I94“ suns of m Messrs-s.” .. cw- ?gfium mm we . w W . $01.3 ‘ . m.mlurom.n:: A FOR ifllp—ETFREK on. viral]: realm fierr Maser-vice from (inns Wm: D.H .O‘RI sick—mo Hut]. CALM", A flat.- fun. and? Durham I“)th 3‘ months old. Born.- m- dame: Not remand. 950» ‘oflflfl fit It a 1366? MIT 81%! FARE. mum. mi. ' ' I RO’IMLF GRID m ' Bank in". 1‘8, 1911:; m what and: “680$. mwKnmdebnmm n. 15 lb. 2 yr. old granddaughter -of Pontiac! 9' Nijlander. whose records of. 35.43 at 5 1-2 ml. It 41 1-2 ears and. 30‘11 at 3: 1-2 Yum put her it the t ranks as I fimdficer. Fffi'st died' 91 gets him. Rad: Federally Supervised: BRINMHILL FIRM. 0mm, men. .bim: I. MI, rm CHM 8V..- Demtte Ilium mama: COW" PURE mm ILl‘VES'lm. . ‘ .. smother-u. and! Easier-d castle; Moerrsey. Pound; China and: gamvpshire» how emf-cub Shropshire, minim. 689..- K pllrce to buy good' Medina ms at mam-r able prices. FRED B. SWINEHAM. O. E. ATWATER. Freddie v. Sweeney. [1 WM?» Mich», ‘ Fairlawn Herd—Holmium Hire» Sir-9,. Emblme emu» musician Bis sim’a darn. Counter: mast scheme.- world-1 first; 35 lb. cow, and. world’s linoleloghlb. com. The only cow that ever held all World’s'bumar the some tlme. labs. dam recordsfrom one day to one year, and the world’s ' Kai. No; 93:7ah6. oven 1,150- lbs. ‘ 924 Domain of milk in a ldf's: 2nd‘ highest milk record when. me two newest- drum swarm: Bum. one: year . .. . . . . . . . . e . . . 1,199.22 MIR ..... .. . . . .... . . . . . . “28.5162? Chamois. sons from choice A. R. O. dame: ml]: your! herd and money to your A J. F. RIEMANL Owner Fllnt. Mich. H I‘KEVIEW om FARM HmSTEINEFRlE-O‘I“- inns. Herd Hire Pm‘l Pieterje Wane Prince. Tm nearest (inns average 31.9 lbs. but". 613' we milk in. 7 dhys. Dam milked 117_lbs. fix. an. ,_ dual-1,218 lbs. in 30 days; 122.37 lbs. hut-Er hr Bonds”. His bull calves for sale. One tum. e 22' 1b.. bro-yearble Good indivldhnls. -I’rloes mantle. Age from 2 to 5 months. ‘ E. I. BUTTERS, Goldwater, Blob. ‘ 1v. m1? SEGIS tranmitted to his sons me Mr ‘ t to their daughters the greatest. of amalgam over long ,genggs. It w hiys ofisprizm Me ma e 6‘ W d of. 37.383114: pound: of Ir. yeu. ‘ , . _ . We have for all: at moderate prices bosom ‘ 'mrls- ot show type KIN‘G snore bulls: humid onmo swan s-roox mares { Gorey J. Spenser, miner Jackson. Mich. Under SW and Federal Super‘vfidon 7'0 WU. GIALVES Registered- Hollteifl-B‘rlesien, mod up 39.31 nu bull end from huv! producing young” con. Thea al'v’ee ~uo very nice and will be priud’ ones, It ld'eoon. ” HA“? 1'. TUBES. Elm". Mob. 7 REGISTERED HoLs'TEnr enmi- ’ 1. From calves to full—wed cows. ‘ m “E. E. 7 oooona, Richmond. Mick. HOLfiTE‘II' BULLS euro A. .n. _r \fi 0“ SALE—2 REG. Herd on ec- emrlu. - Home Mich. dune. Price 1100‘ and $125. credited list; . ‘ - wm. u HEREFst “EMSTEm HEREFORD CATTLE -— KlNO‘ “ summers 713941. and Bean Perfection 327898 ' our Herd: Bulls ere sold’,’ My. some very fine heiress for sale, b- -ri or opened, Bred so out loud: 1mm Come and e them; they .' 171] phone you. - . B. m, Iron. Inn “Hula. Herdsman. " mereman are“ sung. Mas-ion. Mlohlgan I on meme“. seen or RIG. Hans. fords. B‘elwidcw 569766. heads the herd. Rm 6,. SMITH. Kandle Mich. arms» affirm?“ "Wm ' W “"1 so .2.*:rr‘......3*““" ill“. 1% ' mm and t my - low-- price, re 4100. me extrs. cod Herd "headers. We. hue else e. lei-go e of rgflmred Hampshire Hop. : any» 39m “denus, tell us whet you “of and 'get our prices. . “ A immense sushi airwormm how ' it: was firm .Ui't . me momma-my 2they usually pass fihe night. va. 4. _ 'V I I m or“ sonic 1 pound; lemons or 01531155855. Wenonam"m .' n ammw? 2: mm "Elias and or m use» lawnmmmvmm.mrcm the fruits arevthen finely chopped and added. and lastly the molasses old Ame Intestinal. - A m t most. desirable although when: file can not he ob- snsflFy amm- middling: at Ma noel may be samba?in a low-grade serous-smelling. em or molasses, however, is essanfifal' to the coffin: mess of me undertak- ing; Crushed claps. common, water- melon, or Mme: ms be smut-italics: tor the lemon: or ormes, it. necess- seey. Ordinary M‘ifl’ofl: WW so.» sonic (arsenious 11¢de contains nearly twice a.- emuela. arsenic; as. 19mm green tori is: comparatively low in: price. The powdered [form of massacreahasbemflm in this case twice as much of lit! must. be._usod' as of. the. Ports groom 11m California and ' other comm regions. water should: be. started; to: claw mm at the! rate: all 4 gallons to 25 pou-‘rrd’s of brat», as. imth‘ese CM- mates the bait dries out very rapid- ly and the extra moisture» is neces— sm'y in order to attract the gran- hoppers. Another efl‘ec‘ti‘vsbellfi ofi simmer character is. the Griddle minim. This is unpaved as fish- l‘owsz. Fresh horse: droppings, one: Mkfi‘ barrel; Paris; greenc 1L pound, of powdered whl‘te arsenic, 1 pound; finely chopped ormgesl or l‘er’nonsela‘ to 8 fruits: This bait must be thor- oughly mixed before‘ being“ distribute 5 ed and as most people object to : handling this mixture with use? We hands, a pair of cheap rubber glov— es may be used for the purpose. Boil]; the poisoned. bran bait and: the :5 modified Griddle mixture are disr» mibuted over the infested fields by sowing! broadcast, either on! food or from a light wagon or buggy. In applying the poisoned; bran. bail: in orc ds, care must be taken to avoid distributing it“ close to the trees, because severe injury eon-1m trees occasionally nesu-lisfrlom such applications of arsenical podbonm. ' Proper Time for Applying the Bali:- soned. Baits The time of day chosen for <1ng- tributing the poisoned barns has“ an secured. In California. -en-d other semi-arid regions the bait should be distributed in late afternoon or early evening, just before- the grasshop- pers ascend the plants: on which They! are apparently hungry and thi'rSty 7 at this time and greedi-ly take the bait if it be available. In the moist~ er portions of the country, such as New England and Florida, the bait is best; applied early in: the momng ,in order that the best results be , secured. Farmers should not be discouraged if the grasshoppers do not drop dead immediately upon eel;- i-ng the poisom as it usually takes: feet of the hoists to become appar- ent. . , mus OF 911: (Continued from page; 5)’ terraces, depending upon their part.- _ icular shape, are: round to be com- { {rolling factors in causing accumu- lations. Where the rocks are expos- ‘ ed as in. Wyoming. the, anticlines . can be, discovered by ordinary field Investigation. In regions Where the rocks are concealed . the structures V can» be discovered only thrbugh the study and comparison of the‘frecords and. samples oil wells in a- given ,On Soul. Ghoix‘ Point; Queen miles a? Mofiiofiduo' in choofcraft. 'casn'vy.i”tbe rocks are e at :hjn'd chow a, definite arching .ry e. important. bearing upon that results ' from one to five days for the full el-. A known on and “rebooting , . _tlenr.,m “WNW? n. . ‘ ems-set 1emmm, we re. 8 pooli‘ , cannof Bo to:le ‘fm “Vance of ’ tie drill. - " ' v ’ ' 'm. lot. the sine: reported to m W-mmmmfl “this? cum . or mm" " is nails-int m ’m-wmelim cultichth fem» m" , Ivonne swings M “M Momma-{inseam - 1 on g ,. shoes: mm have prowl/o, ' a. to be: to so. In: swamp? “x marshy vim, ml. quantities ct ye have: been no- mtedi. In nearly every cue'eucl! sale “women” have: been proved: to be. nothing. but w. "due to do; mom or vmfifiblo matter Ill! ‘ der water. » ‘ , , . ‘ Such occurrences. 01 month gee are in no wayrel’at’ed to oil and gas dlcposlifs in: the; socks. We. ‘ “have m nmb‘er of swing: mm ‘ shallow water wells which yield: true 2’ natural; One-er the: not. ‘ ‘wvorthy grom‘e‘! small shallow ears ' face as wallet »‘ oceums in. the my a! Wanton; and Royal: Oak. ' Fear many years farmers have ~ ntflW' these mace: gas. supplies- to? month}? lag 37nd: Missing purposes. In Ali- . cons: and. Montnwre’ncy' there . are l were my large gas: seepage». They occur in connection with springs. ‘ In summary it may be stated that whll‘c m\aud’ goss- seepages- in lgan are relatively common espeo- . lazily is» overlain: areas they are gen- ' orally at very, Wale significance or importance so its: as indicating the ; presence at commercial: quantities a! all and gas. With. a proper under- , standing or the figmffimcebt mm- fece signs 1‘11- Ml’chigarr most of the promiscuous drilling m'the state I would not have been made—R. A; Smith, State Geologist. [" The pup-gone of W is Go 'toot our stoma-Ines: m Mulent mung: or um“ reetment ' peasant. or concerns 3a dim . ‘ w — In more we we mu: do our more mole ye utlsfictory Mom; or m won. for ' We ear “'0' E Swims!) no chem M our Iver be ml“ saws n. ' '.-‘ ecem lemht d-up sub- Esorlflen' as The. auction (tamer. . arr—m ohlm. It not men than 6 mos. eld. ' m—Vhewfllfiw r: mm.» gm poo- IHO‘ swim my em of one another. glues would be sealed: no in: land and not ,attenmtod! by. mm ' , Am m~m gluing. full‘ particulars, ,emums, um... em, eman duo» your ad- .drm later Mm- fil‘w Mm eon-en at any Issue tee prove the!» you' a‘ paid-up subscriber. (klleotbn Bax RM J‘un' 80 “19921 “Ml'clflme Med ass o m l W‘ . . .....,... ....oe.eee . n . ' pow GTaflne Md'..............-. 818 ' Amount bonnet ............._..-.... .837 . rm: m. m oonecuon Box, ‘I. Geri-rm Iron. ' _ CRANDELL Bans UP nae- . IN j As my father is a; subscriber or: you!" 1 ‘ by l. 1 papa I wish you would oblige me making Barry T.. Cramdel‘l' WCas City Michagam, settle accounts with me. , a. pm bred 0. I. C. gilt which. ' he said was to farrow in ‘May. Sh.» 1, hasn’t famwed yet and I have Written. . him thaw times and .he hasn’tansweredl. . I wrote the first time in May. I don’t ~ think the gilt will fanow before a. month.- j from now if she does them. ,I received; the hog April 11:11. As I am a boy and. got this hog for pig club work I wish; v you: would have him make. it“ right, wanking you—G. 6., Michigam , June 17’, I921. I p . ‘ We pride ourselves on our success ‘ In inducing people. to come acrosa ‘ when. we present the just claims 03 our subscribers, but when. it comes to Barry 1’. Crandellg of Cass City, we simply throw up our hands. To say. _the least it’s too had‘ that ambition: , boys like you who buy pigs for such ,w-orthy purposes, I should, hav‘ 1 such difficulty in getting parsquam . deal but if you had carefully read previous issues. of. -the. qumns'l FAiBMER you Would not have gutted into this mess with. Brandon. By-tho wary "G. G.” you didn’co-rder your pig from We ad.’ on the 'BUSINESI me He'd havo‘_,';h§erd work L< , breaking folio our: advertisers pole. umne with} brow-bot". ' ', .’ 9 meta dim- , .. .. , hm 51;: on.- rgug - u ' “is” .a'» " " , rm » * companies. us. "see" {filled at like ma x m; , firmers’ Arrested}: mantean mm- mljttee of fifteen'held in" Chicago re- cently. , v - > as a a a Utah: "Bureau wool pool M's reached nmrox‘ima‘tely a half million pounds...and. auditioned sh: \-* ments are “doing made dairy accor- - in}; to an announcement; by . ‘13.. D. McKay, chairman of fire answering ' committee of the Wa'h State Farm ‘ Milken-h Wool dimmers,‘ Inc. \ .fl I xi . 0n Mamas 4L 192.1). mks «the Quenching and the stationed mn- hatiom, the dam bemoan mmip comes spasm. December 1 of the same year this total W M- ed tho €44,401 ma the hit amount- Llug on flit-m ll rimmed the rm];- was total! at 13523114. ’ . . ‘ a: 4 at ' ~ T-he'lpne'fimimary of the U. S. M's use, is some on :I‘Wy an! In a wry mmry winner. . at Wiz- ers has actually begun in Missouri and IMP-OBTING WGN W 'L‘ION’S of noun-also! southern grown French and ~Italian clover seed, imported into this conn'try within the past year. constiitu‘te a menace to American "farmers, says the state farm bureau. which is :new’angthng a Vigorous seed campaign ‘to ‘insure that ‘M-ic‘higan. farmers will an; amnectefl ileum that" mt of eta-Hing, bash by seeing the in M good ms #3 war-We and by seething the standard rim Midniigan seen so high firm 4111 send distnibut- 1 {the ‘ mm, has 'heeri'dumpeid -; Agricultural News @9599 we: ‘ .seed unggspted 'to the rigors of the men the American market and to- s: helm Wasted over the ; country. ,Dul‘iIm the 11 months [may 31,. more than .13.,”00'0r V 999 pounds arrayed. In the wee!!!A ending dune :4 t-hejfiggnre Jumped to .4 2,235.30!) tor the weak. a i ‘ ‘Su‘c‘h seed, says the 1am} bureau, a; will not stand the rigors of even a' vmma win-tor. This was movefl_ by fire "Virginia. department of 's'grl- F culture end emigraltfieng ilndians declared the French ~"arid Iceman silo-ver- ssecd u't'terdy unfit éf'o-r her eon— ‘ edifices. Under yordr‘msr‘y conditions of seed purchase, she *fn-rrneik has-mo ms of telling what he is getting A and "stands a hit chance of picking“ «up some bad seed. ' .The farm bureau has No plans do! anatoming Warn farmersq' by naming am (example gummfiee- f in; will «of Hits seed, and being mule to h minest the. means of . who am, and by seeing to st sum/H "where is attainable in the state MW ‘of am, newborn grow-n ’ med ; that gnaw gin Sweden I_ is said to .set world an example by all .imnorteduseed .as a f matter of pmtecbion to her farmers. {i JOHfi HAS MEG-EST BUREAU @WA has the largest .fa-J‘m bureau i membership in the American Farm Bureau: Federation which is 118,009. Illinois is second with} B -:Dver 1.10.9100; [mic .and Texas each We over 1.9.0.000. which M‘Imdisnartoldow with—nearly 1:00,- -. .09.!) mash. The American Fla-rm f Dewartment .of Organizanion has sent its at 1,250,091) mem- 5 View: by Member 1.. 19.21. BIG 1mm A. ('1. AST LANSING. June .24.———‘.We E are having a busy week at “the . ’M‘ixcrlfigan Agricultural Gollege. “ll‘he Michigan Farmers” Automobile Tour flms been mm ill-eve nor mo m. The W are hem. me k'Starte .are on the job. r. Joint conference on consolidation of schools and econom: 19 problems of agriculture is in ses- sion. ... ‘ v . t p Through she efforts of the feelings .experts are brought here to instruct and inspire these various «groups. ‘ Dr. T. ,‘N. Gamer of "Harvard Uni- versity, .3 deep thanking economist, is forcing us its more than we Have ever drone before on the fundamental Wk of » the farmer and his :family, "building the strong nation. fir. R. W. G:me of Chicagp he: been touching up rm ministers on the matter of religious education for rural communities. Hon. Lee Driver, with his illus- trated lecture has been driving home the lesson of the consolidated school Mrs. Dora Stockman, Of the State Grange with her: splendid enthusi- asm and bent for leaderde is a real booster. Added to firms}; 1%.. 3.. Cook, Hale Tennant,. Dr. Eben Mum- ford and many others contributed their 1m. - " I This 13 W M our organization; the Farmem" math. ithe Wm. {the Grange can 8. common wanna! at the diallege. {In a nomad! table they can Wand work out Mil-"mus for the npro'bleJfi Mt rwhcrwfise would sat be possible. -mey we 83H stronger for working: together an! mo‘sinagle tarmernan afford Lite .flock am 11 we farmers don"t dim 4together, it» will hang separately and whole morning thug W111 4 ' tio‘n 1and all. we tasuner'emrgx- pacts to ‘Pkfl'uwn'priceoa'! his form stuff as the mufactnrers and mr-‘.’ shdnts a" 80' m "u? new snag-the time . tgi. gas ‘ mm‘ciens, the Farmers" 'thlb 18; .23. flown of organization that can be had in .sny community and orgasm: ed subjest 'to‘ .10ch control. There is no arouse aim the tumor .4104; to .be mandated. A11 Mose zmtsanjza: axioms m find Wanton through she .12de and Me imun human—— ‘17. A. Grass lease, .1»..>>:-3r V LIVINGSTON MIGNS AS BUR- a EAU on mar-nu.st CHIEF 1 . ‘EEORGE Livfingston, Chief Of the. . 3mm x as: Markets, Unitedfel Hates Dem-ant of Agricul-J tu-re, has resigned effective July 1,. according *to an announcement by; of Agriculture. In' tendering his resignation to Secre- M “Wallace Mr. Ilivingston ex-é planted that “I must give due con— do my :personal welfare.” Mr. Livingston said last week he had. under consideration several business opportunities but that he had not. vet made a decision with negand 130‘ them. A successor the the markets chief has not yet been named and, Secretary Wallace has asked Mr? Livingston to .sontlnaue to {assist the -x.. department for a few months as a z I ‘ monska wecialist in maliketing. V In his hotter of resignation Mr. Livingston .saxid .he 31nd been plan— i, using for some time “to sheave the gov— E emm'enlt servdce. At the :same time: me said he negretted ,to ileawe be- " muse “a :feel that dike ewe-11k which is Mn; .on here is or far reach»; 1mg fi'mmmwmse :to me agricultural MLe'wdm elf the mtry.""- ' 7 «OVER, 1.1mm AGREE: OF ‘ ’ “EN @ANMA ~ . sour. ares rmmaztefi to hei 1303111“ 1.9 wheel in Mada. for tlue ft . . v mussel- is i8.6§5.1940 ; r head 1mm man I . mm a t :nnd 1m goric w "are... . JUST 1W9 bun calves left. m. ail u‘tey‘me mad m. ‘ flak 41m lie “98- t Motrbhod. 00 .'d.‘l' m out: four bulls. on! a. grandson of Mrs “$9.500 ’Bxfllion 4th. Also I v Isms-lea. me and see. — ml, mm. .110 ' Wm. a. ma". amt-M. link. 553508 WM sun. ME ii.“ 85E. - breeders of Herefords for fins ‘Dlh our herd. yearllm More 3nd s Let ‘know YOU-r wants me I mine 0118’! Ham 5 ‘choice yearling hulls. {ow shake .csvu tint sash. ARM. Own creek. 50 years. winner '. Mlch. . ' “ORTHONN ONE EXTRA GOOD 18 M08. old Bed Bth bull ammo Aha several com a seer-vice of a. me who was Masai-and champion of Milken.- Ilu 0. W0 Ohm-lotto Mich. ~airways carry-inc to and son of 51m». muons m SRLHIILLS OLD also a few ~> ‘flnouflh .fnr .scwice; ‘hcfiars. .cm anti W- 8- m mm. Mich. Eamon: before January first. 11' a coma. MEWS. . Mend sit ~ tmcu‘ue prices 3 Will trade or m. . m1. floss any. 501-1.. 0d and. Ian. From ‘tbs Maple. Ridge ‘hebrg of ‘Ba 8 0 EXTRA aooo soul. mums FDR one. ' a to.» h rt- Suom-Homu on“: no mono sown: Both t” 501' g. m sheep. a sale . {alum ,Mlch. EMT GOUNTY SHORTHORN BREEDERO' Ana‘s are offering bulls and heifers Qor sa'lq. all i can. $111 ’the scrub and “buy a purebred. A. 'BAAI. ‘SWW. cahdmfla, Mich. HIML MIN-MGM “OBTHQM BREED. ' 'eu' chhmm loser for sale 755 head; :11 abolh milk and beef breeding. Sand for new I in. E. MILLER, Sec’y, Greenvlllo, Mlnh. re‘ i bulls. one ~ W MIMI!“ 4, r ' mi Bruce .J use; snicin pix». either sex; two 1 ms the and one 5 months 01 Several ' en'fers firm i months 1130 .2 years 01 Scotch ‘ on 11nd 'Batea bred. Address » .. 'D of MD OWLD Willlsmsburg. R 1. Mlohloan IKE MAN EILEEN .00.. WORTHORN BuEEm . .! I l. and end beef breeding. Write the secretary. FRAN K 3AM?” Halibut .Mllh. M Mills or quick and 001W “Hen .fiih fined reg. cod lines zand show man to rimndlln. v nan ,and M 0.! ,b1 JASMh {flint . .1333 n- was, for ‘mflieuhts. 8.:1e. 'Fsir Both Acres GOOCh mum .112" year l C: H. P4300038: Seas {was {0 lty. ‘Mhh. 30V :SHORTHO'RNS ‘ rherd that «without an x n . NOW, motor. 4TH ANNUAL flame minim ls. , 8 WI G :39". Rad 0L“. y of Daulmengy. mire W '. . Champion Fame. ls. .oflemfl in! sale. mm Ji-‘l' i - ‘ Theflomeof ' ; Imp. Edgar of Dalm‘eny '3 mummy i The Wedds’ fireatest MLL Blue Bell, supreme Champion at the .Smithficld Show, 1919, and the Birminr ' "ham Show, 19.20, is a. daughter of Edge-r Oinmfiion "Bull, Dhanmion .Calf Herd and {Ernst Me ;..qujor 3119K“ HCalf. Mich- igan :smte $930. were also the get .of Edgar of publicly. ' 'A "very choice “lot of young fbmfigiled [by :Ednr of mummy are. at this time. .Bend in: Illustrated Catalogue. W'ILDWOOD 1mm .t (Chiba, flick. * -.W.. .E. Era-lam. -=Emn.. .Bldmr smith. mm. iunior Wm M! GRID ANGUS cm , _ Mir ME m 9.2: sfi‘m‘ ' .am “flan. man. may. W finned. mmflminary 'est—i- l j sure Domin— 5' Last year’s- «um sass 2.374; gems. Priced to m 6- Inspec Farm 'ABEEDEEE-‘ANQM—o-‘WMQ, I mom and mm r “Ln , Mm. :mnn‘ . or '.RU.SSELL 3903-- “ , an. .4" 4 ‘ elm-arr do: ,.,Jm=' mm seem... W . ' “.mn. m; , V f -—1_~:L --— «n 34“ 3 ~ nwho .hasgco «per cent blood of flophie M. ed herd. High lpmduetion. MGM m and.» breeding. Write an your wants. . ‘ Mum Odell. .m. m M MI Show. mm ~ ‘ ‘ I F n 4u-.x. ‘ .1- r m? w; l a I 8. “BIG nos have stock ‘for 38:19:. both milk V I'F world, Alma: a firm. aWiDll the bred .for .mu m .1" starchy *fa‘ll tilts, ‘from 'best 1m! . e I . ' mms a w. W‘m r Kenna ,com 333 by minty’s Oxford ‘Shylock 1456:0172 3.15.0 *blflls sired ‘by rgmnm Master ‘Pogls ‘1. . , .9. h and SW~1W1 . . ; .th mum at the breed. “new: prlcguslrnd pedigree. ~ ‘. A .9. menu. .a 1. mum ouch; much would a «son of ‘Pogis 99th‘s Duke 8th worth .m your head? " , Let sue send you par mas and unless on bulk calves from this bull on see is Torman mm. «Fm «no ll . A m. MM! mu warms revenues“ gunman nun. cm .7 mos. .oLn. was; . ,Langymter Prince Charmante, .A. .R. 4 A.« ‘R. daughters outage ,416 lbs. Int 2 :142 yrs. Dam: ‘Lawtou's Lady ‘Lu. A. ‘R. 416 'lb. fut elm; ‘ A. A. summers class) 1 A. B. daughter. 409' p .1135. fat D. D. Write _ »- ' GIN .BROS.. R R 1, 'Mlchigan m_ QUERNfiEY 1'15.an p . more than fort A. .R. ancestors." Due Sept. 2. by .a son of Abbie . ' record 14,201.10 lbs. milk, 8113.112 'lbs. batten; fat. Herd tuberculin tested. fiend for sale list” of females. ' . .G. A. WIRENI. Wawnlllfl. MILO!!- M0 Allegan, rim-Him iron FILE—«REGISTERED Armenia! f bulls and bull calves. heifers and *ha‘ifer we; Also some choice .cows. FINDL- Mlch. AW 33308.. R '5. Nasser. ' SWINE POLAND CHINA THE LA’MST BIG TYPE 1’. 6. IN MID". Got .8 buyer .and better bred lbOfl!‘ mic sham an, herd, at n rpasonn‘ble gptice. Come and m Mum. Expenses. paid if rm". an wept-muted. 'T-heno boer - g! “lowlife; Lin] 3?}; sIGmge, Lox-g Clan-mug, rs ge rice-um 3'3 . A - romeo ' w. E. “wives-rd)”: gums. Mlnh. as and by Caldwell m; nob champion ad th! V Hrs dam film is .A's Mastodon. sound Champion at Iowa State Emir. manual: 5.3“. 1 have a. firm ,ngember Boar PM that Mini-“Mfr . herd boar s'md lbyliig Bob. and a fine 'lot at spring pus when weaned. .Book on! .oldermw c. E. GARNAN# ' lam Remus. woman. “sips discishomarmo a am. am 1'7??- . o n ‘unas. ‘ne extra m 18:36 10110. . bls finned smooth gent been in Wis Glam: ~ [Sn’nSbO'Pnce $100. $130 younger 11 :380 tn 0 . . . Mom-KEV 8808.. “mm, “Mich. .L. at. .P. but: all ma. A Saw am a»... ' nd . .lome slits left. Will. all with .bmdw Mali?“ ’- 7Bears on service: 'fllsmmn's image M W. £831, «0mm and Smear!) ‘Wnnder. Whiter: > , M. O. malul. r' r ' We lush. ' A ‘ ‘PEW TOP all” ’m To Highland mt. “be $500 boar. m" bred .to 'Wu?".s .2st nation. .W. ‘ ht. .101) At .15 M, the DH“ WILEY, . choplsraft. ‘Mlnh. . «21:2. .0. was your: «save mm In! 'BLT. 1’. 0. ham? Vote as and order :8 Bend gone. gilts 880 1'0 ‘8 ; spring boars. $16 to 525. 15: as! ll 2‘31 $3159 1 j ‘ 1. c F. . "an?c 81. Lotus. :uum. mu; me me o. e. m rt weaning time. from Mich. Giannini: ’1 325 'iYI-fll pedigree. Satisfaction ‘ “r3 ' or mite n. monomer», ms. t. .' c1; 2 m wLm cmm.‘ Mia". either sex wired by “Vendor 39b. the b! r, r . Illhe :bigibonod, seemed} m, an .4. crown. an: rm: Pouuo name an» 1am in... sold. but than some .fall , ts at my}. mvgs. Moon. huh. I . .som. smug alas ' ' 'Jum'ho thud. am 800 Jb. . m :ch “bear ;b x bMMmen. , mflmgxn‘gnrm. Exact. man. ~41 noses or emu 9 ‘L s 'P ’e 1.0.: .end .81: .Derandac‘ extra 300d. ‘Bnd {gum sdld. a. swan .. 'Schoolocsfi. film! a. AM swim NEE PQLANDS. ' CALDWELL s! 30H, Sprlm 7 m 1’. n. was was . 1mm Mm mutter mama w, herd Malia. moms and m un‘ reasonable. ‘ . , I “s. 'V stats fairs In the I Troika. Hill Crest Farms. ‘ . . Gretiot Co. _-4 . . v . . n. c. , r . . -.ueueu'e§ron we, ronoyoe.‘ er. Louie. Mlell.» " “coo. ' unoc Jensev BOARS., Q mm .ansn v. FOR 8ALE: 2 fiflgfgctnn guaranteed. i . .83- .911! 9 YA] as you wish. p rs’ Auction Sales # Ending-e nouun'eums v mere seen for summer and fell ferrow from .825.00 to Boers ready for 'rrloe. $25 00. .mo. 0. BUTLER. Plgrtlend. Mich. ’ Alumni-in. Leree Type II'olaMr chine tows. bred to t “he. F's Orange st reasonable prices. Write or. call. ' T F. FISHER. R 8. St. Louis, Mich. DUROCS . am! noon noes now from one of the largest herds of registered Duroee In the state. Open fall gilts at $25. Bows and gilt: bred for summer and fall furrow. Booking orders for spring pigs. Will accept a few sows to be bred to good sons of Great Orion Sensation and Duration. Write. or visit us. - .Mlehlgene Farm.‘ Pavilion. Mich" Kalamazoo .co. ' on SALE—FINEJMAROH AND APRIL PIGS hired by Gladwirr Col. 188995.~ Write us your wants. HARLEY FOOR e SONS. R 1. Gledwln. Mich. V'um Jersey 3...: Stock en Sold. Orders taken ,‘ for, worming-pigs. 1.000 pound herd boar. J98. SOHUELLER, Weldman. Mich. _ Boers of the large. heavy—boned type. st reasonable prices; Write. or better, come and see. i F J. DRODT, R 1. Mich. ’ REGISTERED DURllG PIGS $10.00 ‘each. Write your wants. F. A.‘ LAMB. Campolis. Mich. PEACH HILL FARM TRIED sows and gilts bred to or sired by Peach Hill Orion King 152489. Satisfaction guer- enteed. Come look ’em over. 'Also a few open gilts. INWOOD BROTHERS Romeo, Mich. Monroe. ‘ FINE LOT OF SPRING DUROO JERSEY », pigs, either sex. Brookwster breeding’ at rea- sonable prices. SOHAFFER BR08.. R 1, Leonard. Mich. AM OFFERING SOME HIGH GLASS SPRING DUROG BOARS at reasonable prices . A few gilts bred for 8ep< 'ksnber {arrow at bargein prices. . O. TAYLOR Milan, Mich. . smoheree use» we heedlne women s w , fem: Better still write ‘eut whet you , proof and tell ‘you what it “will eon for 18. 20 or}: times; > ,__ I cited 0e 'pr cherries met : . > - issue. lreede . . novel-med» ere at’speciai low-return“ for them. Write bode! Elf-IRE DIRECTORY, .THE MICHIGAN BUSINESS FARMERL Mt. let ' ' roar a do have to be reeelve‘d‘one week" Clemens. I'Miohleen, _ CHESTER a." Tree JUNE“? naowf'fofii'. an. peers, ., m... was... s... .- youu igs.. .Write me your wants-Prices, right. a R L3H, GOSENS. R 1. Levering, Mich... . :— umsmnns ' " “EADOWVIEW FARM REG. JERSEY HOGB, Booking. orders for spring pigs. J. E. MORRIS a. SON. Fermlnoton. Mich. ' O R OALE~REG. DUROC-JERSEY SPRING gilta bred to Rambler of Sangenio .lst. The boar that, sired our winners.“ Michigan State ' Fair and Nstionsl Swine Show. F. HEIMS e. SON Devleen, Mich. ._ OAKLAIDS PREMIER GHIEF ’ Herd Boar—Reference only—No. 129219 1919 Chicago International 4th Prize Jr. Yearling BOOKING ORDERS FALL PIGS AT ‘25 BLANK J POTTER Potmville. Mich. UROOHOWS AND OILTS ALL SOLD. Here a few choice fell bosrs at reasonable price. ' - OWER. Jerome. Mich. i‘ . " LII SALE—40R” FALL GILTS. WE ARE booking orders for choice spring pigs. $15. 8 to 10 weeks-old. ‘ «JESSE BLISS a SON. Hendemn. Mich. REGISTERED .King 515 up. Satisfaction guaranteed. I .E. E. OALKINS. Ann Arbor. Mich. UROO PIGS 8 TO 12 WEEKS OLD. $10.00 _' ' 0 each. ‘Pedigreed. / 8. 0. WEEKS, DOGRAFF, Ohio one. ounce aoen snore Brookwater breeding stock. Choice spring pigs. JOHN ORONENWETT. Carleton. Mich. uroe sews and elite .u-ea to Walt'e King ’2940 ~ who has sired more prize winning pigs st the last 2 years than any other Dn- Newton Barnhart. St. Johns. Mich. roe boar. Bred and open end gilts. Bears and spring pigs. 100 head. 'Fsrm, 4 miles straight S. of Middleton, Mich" Newton 6; Blank. Perrinton. Mich. TYPE, QUALITY ' and size. Pathfinder, - Tartan C ‘erry. King and IProud Colonel breedinl. . Address : silIOQE‘R- GRUBER, Capac. Michigan A raw WELL-DRE!) sauer- Duro'e Boers. else bred sows end ,‘.~ 1 i d wt" Call or wrl 3...... m - FF“ 0.. I“, Q- , i .r. examine perm... knew-ravioli: go err. Mic -l- I BOAR pigs by Defender’s Cherry ~ 90 . or fen-ow.” A'Harch p‘igs'thet hm hm - Write a =: r low. I 1 “surname seen GILTS now nzsov To ship. A bargain in .fall'and spring boar pigs. JOHN W. SNYDER, R 4. St. Johns. Mich. An Opportunity To Buy ' “‘ Hampshires Right We are offering some good sows end‘ gilte, bred for March and, April farrowinc. Also' a. few’ choice fall pigs. either sex. Write.er_,csli . . GUS‘THOMAS, New Lothrop, Mich. ; SHEEP 1 Fee snaorémne ewes seen 70 LAMB in March, write or call on ' snmsrnoue snos.. a a, Fowler-ville. Mich. -REG. LARGE ENGLISH YORKSHIREB, ~8HORT broad heads, prolific. best strains. Spring Dis! $12.00 to $15.00 apiece. Almont Farm .J. Homer Rooms. Luthorsburo. Fe ERINO RAMS FOR SALE. GOOD BIG- H ned heavy sheerers. ‘ HOUSEMAN BROS. R 4. Albion. Mich. A FEW EXTRA. FINE SHROPS'HIRE AND Hampshire Yearling Ewes for $25 each. These ere extra nice. . M. WILLIAMS North Adams. Michisen HAMPSHIRE SHEEP A few good yearling rams and some rein lambs left to ofl'er. 25 eWes all ages for sale (or fall delivery. Everything guaranteed as represented. CLARKE U. HAIRE. West Drench. Mich. 3mm ssssnmc 811ch For the best in Shropshire and Hampshire rams write or visit KOPE-KON FARMS. 8. L. Wing. Goldwater. Mich. . See our. exhibit st the Ohio and Michitan State Fairs. HORSES Two-YEAR-OLD PERORERON S'I'UD. GREY, big boned, high class colt, from ton mare and imported stud weighing 1,160 pounds. Price $250.00. JNO. G. PET STOCK ‘1 ,, 0R SALE, FLEMISH GIANT RABBITS. DOES. breeding age, 86. Three months old pair. 35 Registered does 812 each. Stock pedigreed. Q ty guaranteed. E. HIMEIAUOH. Goldwater. Mloh. Read the Classified Ads _1N__ . M. B. F.’s Business Farmers’ Exchange PI‘OD. I UTL E R. Portland. Mich. WANT TO SELL ANY’ LIVESTOCK? ’l‘ry M. B. F.‘s Breeders’ Directory / mm WANTED; A reliable house, “well an or‘ably known among the farmers in Michigan has an ,opening for an honest, energetic man to sell“ to farmers. _ The man for this job must rea- lize that he will ~be expected to work hard and steadily and. that his advancement willrdepend en- tirely. upon the amount of energy enthusiasm and loyalty he puts buggyfl' Preleifg gelling." earned. once. desirable absolutely Remnants?" ' .Iffyou are .1 n .0 hi ested do ~no‘t. 2a . ‘ ' Tim i your. - is“ us]:- ._ into the»LWOrk. Applicant- should» v have avFord‘ car or ,horse.and_" ’ (exude: ". ’ "gr _ 7 herons 7.:mrghgéteii "to 1: mate: : and \‘7’r‘o‘11'vld’_"i necesserauyrhgvre "to be ' -_ carried over to the next-season,” thus involvingjfiespens‘e withoutgprclducing. a litter of pigs. 1 .Thiscondition may ‘ be partly overcome bythe useof {the populerity, _ . . , Some news when. in ’heat' will not take the boarreadily and will often hinder a, successful service . by low- ering the vitality of ‘the male. When breeding crate", .whichds growing in-- a smallpsow, is bred to a,large,v.heavy , boar there is danger of injury to. the sow if some mechanical device is not used to help bear- the weight of' the boar... Such a device can also 'be used 'to advantage when a. boar_is mated ‘to a large sow. \ There are many types of breeding' crates. which the farmer may con- struct. The accompanying illustra- tions'show acrate that can be :op-, "erated by one man and is easily ccn- ‘ structed on the average farm with- out involving .much expense. Directions for Operation The/sow is driven into the 'open 'end of the crate until her hind feet: are 'in front of the crosspiece of the T-shaped lift. The sow is elevated by means of the lift, which is drawn up‘by a Windlass as .shown in the illustration. A ratchet on the wind- lass holds the sow at the desired height. The partition at the front end of the crate Operates on a slide and .can be arranged to suit the length of the sow. Thus, if the sow is large the partition’ can be moved toward the end of the crate to al-- low plenty of space without cramp- ing her, and in the case of a small sow the partition is moved closer to eliminate an undue amount of space. The point to remember is that the animal should be in a natural posi- tion in order to obtain the best re- sults. When the, sow is properly placed the boar. is brought up. 'His hind feet should rest on a flat cleated platform laid on the ground to give' cleats . him a. solid footing. The should be 1 by 2 inches to prevent slipping. His front feet will fall upon the rest as shOwn in, the draw- ings, the sow being required to bear only a small part of his weight. The r . J..- ‘u . "- small I 7 mensions: nit? ’f firs "molasses-"ts hort- v~ by . a» email- to‘pirests are» extended to hold her“... "A firmly in p'Osition. : .. r'.‘.. ” After- bre‘edingg'the boar isfggdrovhi, on to his pen or paddpck. ~ T330330!" leiremoved from. the crgteéeitheiffyhti releasing: the ratchet; on the windlsss. , and‘.;allowing- her to b‘a‘clr’ out“ or ‘ by removing the sliding partition to; that she may welk, out . . the __front‘ end of thefcr’ate. z . = Bill of gear Consuming , “a” 7 _ . Gram : . A. , Dressed or undressed lumber may! be used" in the contraction of” a breeding crate. ‘Thewmater-ial ‘re- quired will total about~-"’140fiboard* feet of lumber, of ’the following di- .5 pieces, '2 'by 4 inches}:in feet” long, for uprights and sides.~ "2’ long. for sidesand fluoring. Hardware, Etc. ‘\ . /. l,._. «14* pieces, 1 by 6" inches by 1.2 test ’ p‘ I: 2 pieces, 1-2:inch iron rdds,‘ -‘ H inches long. With .2" wi-pgnnts, as shown in illustration. for sliding partition. -v . ‘ 1 piece, 1-inch pipe 2 feet, 10 in: ches in length, ~with “handle and ratchet, for windlass. 12 feet sash cord for Windlass. 1 pair hinges. 4 angle irons, 3-8 inch thick by 1 1-4 inches in widthgand made 2 by. g 3 inches, as shown on partition. I i v . 5 pounds 10-penny wire. nails. ‘2 pounds 20-penny nails.s It isnot absolutely necessary“ construct the crate ,as,,shcwn. er methods of making a ~windlass the' sliding 0th-’ ' that will answer the desired purpose A For I in- of may suggest themselves. stanCe, instead of being made iron- it could be made of woodlp " much the same manner ‘as thefdld, Wooden- windlass used over wells. The canvasser knocked at the ot- Vfice door and walked in .with,.a con- / , _ . fident smile. “Sir,” he said. “I have for gal; ." p '. combined carpet-sweeper, r talking- ” : machine, potato-peeler, and .2. _ “Not today,” interrupted rthevman-g ~ ager, “I've got one. 'I was married twelve mbnthsag'o." ' ' - ; Mfl’mflfie» ' inserted. finder this needle: «9t 30..oente perfunefper'is'euo- Special rates for '13‘ times or Jon 1‘! out ‘t loll, have, to. 0301' 3nd lend,“ in.: We will put it in tine, send proof and quote rates by return 'Ii'l I iohigan Eucharist-Farmer, Advertising- Department, Mt. 0 onions. Michigan. A ‘ ,-n5r-th atlzfiilniipéheeni ' 1 '- — o . ~ c or: ~ mm... in men to-” ; 30W? ~ -« ‘ l 1 size? -‘lan’d" neat-l" all under cultiva- v- I. ' _ r I ‘ V noon. notifier-n. mi. in a i . r: . w nouns e *. BREED-ms . . ""Kréiéfjof [second growth timber. - L4'5°°§ggam?ufi§g:Bfigntfiggginfifilnéna: . .l. L. ' ., -1 y ' HATQHING EGGS Alsil’mptuous’lunch was furnished. ‘ 1 $3. 3"“- smd ‘5" 9‘71"” “d d“ 5‘ “a BREAK,“ up m,“ BREED.“ n. l._ nan HATGHING toes. Tnomrnih'e' . the-host 50f aJud. the cor- .. I, ‘ ~ {a angsgngeroflggfif yogoglusmmxe?biendsm€: stating: til-0 per 100: baby chicks. 25c each. . FROHM. New Baltimore. Mloh *dl‘orwelcome exténd‘ed to all, severe ;.. , . y b S m u ' ‘1 I " 0“ wan a‘ no on guaranteed. . HRTOHING zoos mom BilllllED BOOKS .T”ed*~”o£.'thatr old-fashioned courtesy I . . i" "' ' " v r M . p k 200 t in. Bichl .;;’. '15: 31945. 110119 tOQ D'lentiml - ‘ & C0. in the blood at Park's abred: podiger‘eid' Fine :2 ‘ . .finwadajs, " v > I »h~ . CNN“. u Wm . - East Seuoatuch. 'Mlch. per 15. $6 per 50. $12 per 100. Prepaid-by ’ - ' - ~ ~ " ' " writ... I d oh t. ‘u “M... x percel post in non-breakable containers. 2:136 :yreigden; oi: the . $301138; ' . o ’3: 3‘. $5133. "93.13:. ‘Mloh. ’ c I ~ n. o. KIRBY. n 1 no Lamina. llloh. _V ' tea are assoc on, .. - -~ - ~ ‘ ‘ - i ‘ . - . " ' - r » l - n l ' . . c. an. LEGHORN zoos, 31.50 non ill. 3' . O’mstmm “eat- J-Ohn’s! Mich" ORPINGTO 5 AND LEGHORNS' DANGER ngglsxhiglflde'rghim 0111116 "F Pekin duck $1.50 for s. w. Chinese M was in the chah’ and hewvas ably. 8,8- v ‘ N best Echiikss aver pfgducsd. Art . eggs 40¢: each. Mrs. Claudio Bette. Hillsdalo. moh- ‘ ' ' ‘ " . on n aye. o . . 1 ' 7 ‘4 .. j ' . . TWO wrest breed-101' profit. _ Write today for i - '3 . v s sized by the secretary. H G. Ray, “names!” 0‘ mum. m“. Mb, cum “4 ggoehngHgt'fii‘iggdegaggmigucgglJ-lu Catalog. Earl! Am“ Em m “mm”. 5° mm. cm m The leading speakers of the day b [slice 3 . ti“ - . i , .. - . - r r r ' . . scum“! “Arougnv cents. Cookerels 8 wks. Write for special prlip. c was Gem J.‘ .Hicks’. Saginaw, Prof. -cYPI-l HATOH‘mggzlPullflx: 14. Phil. Ilde- as 2 Lyon so. Grand Rapids. Mich. EVA rnvou. Jerome. Mich. . o. E. Reed: of. the M. .A. C. dairy‘de: Ferment and K- 3- «mm-Ti “eld‘ " unmv cmcks. auox Mmoncn. um" “ElliilE” FOBEMAI. THE 'GULLIIIG WIZARD man for the National - Guernsey Brahma; 25c eech Barred Bock,'R. L Red . .Br-eedmr Association me 00w ‘ 18T?gt°sue§eh§ou|-mv FAR" Fonion‘ lm h Contributes to the June number of the Modern Poultry Breeder his latest and greatest work— “ ' ” ’ . ~~ ' ' oucan'aor tom sgresa ce. emcs mp0 n oi nssinco I by 3- wt Wigmanwmmsmg- I.“ a - WYANDOT'I‘E Hogan published "The Call of the Hen.” As Sll‘e‘crintendent of gigs Pong-gm 1m 1 Form r " - ' u m shaft talk, Mack,_ market ed- of Ontario Agricultural College, as Extension‘flpeciallst of Mic n _ ' ‘ (where 2,000,000 hens were culled under his direction). as a practical breeder whose bird! .itorof this paper, urged the breede t lvan LAOED comm Ann wu‘n’: wv.‘ have made winning records at egg aying contests, (his pen of Barred Rocks took highest place . OTB present to I mmulf‘ PEI; 3,1118%; bargains in Jchicks and - um, both In body of ad. and In address. Copy must be in our hands before saturday for W - g. 1.-.—lls there any successful way of . for free dining. .3. an “my “‘y‘ wm‘ dated following week. The. Business Farmer Adv. Dent" Ilt. Clemens. men. 3 grill! of thistle: \ggen cultivating? INTERLAKES FARM , -—4 '- was oun', ears a o ' Box 4. , , - . ' - found-ensuing Canidegthistleg whilegci'iitif ‘ “WM” m" A. How To nouns Ans. UNDER “mfg: zoggRngLfg—go-zg "7;" Talc“; m0 , vatingjcorn. I pulled Out every-one I ,. ‘ . Words ,.1 time 3 times Words time ‘ e .6“ 9,931? 1- apes m onanJ_Ne§t,_h¥ear lnoats {found stew ‘ LANGSHAN 20 ...sl.oo 36 ...s . $3.60 . fetttgncfiichl‘nswre HARfm J. HEUsseueB. Men ' and IV ulied' every on}? I'htoll‘iild all sum- ' ' 2 ' ' menu; . t . emit ed. M l t e. g In Ma- on. smrsou'e LAuoeHAns or I ' comb wunthwhere } Was born I know- Bred for type and ooio: since loigumivihtlu ~0f thistlefl' ing kii‘ed by.one cutting, laying strsm 0! both Black Ind White. Hue . on July 3rd or 4th. but in Clare county '0'” “chm- !” ulc- Eur antes-on. ~Iit can't be done. -Three years ago I 0“. “etict We‘lMP'ON ’ cut "thistles with a. hoe down where ’° ""“9' “"h- stock is white, in week to ten day. in- e . , . teryals, in corn all summer. New _ 03PI1NGTONS fhereEare very few in ie rriich blaclijc hoi- ow. tema vigi once 3 t e wstc word. cocKERELs AND Yours for» thoroughness-.——A. E. 'Hains, for sale. Bugruu“. Clare County. . _ ‘ Bllck Coda“!!! 1“ 37. ‘8. end 310. ‘ ’ 1 p 3 and $5. iiso earn [1 You can get rid of them if you have ‘ . - Y . 3 "it 33 . . » . Hatching eggs, $6 pgr “t n f 15 - "fl FOR SALE—l BINDER: 1 IOWER' 1 . lots of patience and-will. do plenty of mus-ow K -‘ ° ‘ - k. 1 - - - ' ' hard; work... I had- 5 acres of black, - s E 3303-, R 4. Merrill. Ml)!» & w 23:13:35: t:l'otes gtnltgfiemfg: "in": .. sandy Sands: . fungi '3 acres were B “5 A ’ '”‘ ‘ FERGUSON. Glennie. Mich. ecov gw -_ 3 es. to. cm exce' t . ' AB & V a} Gui vated' crop. and not a tug onevgt ' * Y CHICKS ‘ FARM W”?! 300 .FRU'T TREESJ HORSE' GENERAL thin kind. could .‘be “swim on thisdand. I ’ " " . . ‘ - 1 . ' "99’- 6 ‘30“ “d belie“ nhidesi {milemafié I 'I'pvla'nfed um field. t97-99m and Started ‘ ‘ ‘ BABY 33Tpi‘55i1‘53i‘2i $331er {iglo'ne'lliléi’i‘t't'h :éctilgxyp lg IOHTNING noes EXCLUSIVE Aemv cultivating just as soon' as ‘com was .’ e u ' ' 850 000 for 1921 fruit farms: 112 “CM 0" 300d mad- 1 1‘2 nd quick sales to Live Dealers selling “BID. 7 large enough. I cultivated «the field over . '~ . ‘ ' , miles Village, advantages: machine—worked .fleids' DIEBLITZEN nous," our 9 times withva-hand cultivator andvhoed p . v ‘1' int" “awn- Cblckl 003' spring-watered pasture: abundance wood. timber? 99.96 per cent PURE. Write for Agency. Prie- it 5 times beginning as soon as th‘istles f ; mini 3*." 691""! lunar flue orchard over 300 apples. new. plums. 0h? are right. L. M. Diddio 00., Manhiield. Wis. -appeared abo’Ve the ground. The last ju :Z‘L‘i-Ihfl‘l‘gxzhfigfh. liar". An- riesé Eraimsl.‘ enscb:ftcmd 6—rootm b‘liouee.2 magllltl’fl- » 4 . time I hoed it was after the corn was . ° - -" "9"“ “n °“F°° 3 ' “semen "" i W“ W HOMESPUN smoxmo on cnzwmo With the exception of around the v ' ' . 9332.33.33‘3333 “3:21;: is°2° s%‘b““a§§° tenTiZ. Beg: 01:2? E’9 3:313:11? bacco 10 pounds $2.50; 20 pounds, $4.0 ->~“:i:€“.‘;iiy .2332. this“? “elegant: ' "It 825:.in it‘ll“ "m"- , .— . . ‘ . . .. l. c -»County. . ~ ‘7 ,' ‘ . _ " 2°"‘~°°"‘35' 'f‘mwflv 3" 5 AGE'NCY' 814 BE' 0rd 3 .m KENTUCKY TOBACCO—DIRECT FRO. ,' .. ‘ ‘ fl 9“ hell "9‘0". Ohio » . figure“. “Sal'el'i'? per-0108!}: (Lgllgouroggxcg NIL ‘ '» t ' s 01.. me (WV 011 . 82" 1 ~. , ‘ ii I“ ' SHIPPED QAFELV EVER“ mgiaEQRf'glfcecfl-gv wnegsl.) 68 acres crops. fair fr'g‘gkngbo 3Aslg§fi 311333)") “figfféglmlng'EUm QUES'N‘ON No- 5 “here by mall- White Les- buildings. H. HOY. Rose City, Mich. J ~ ' ' - Gan any farmer tell ‘me how to t horns. Anconas and Rocks. The ‘ _. bore a horse or balking?-—M. a... $35... “ifiiirfiaci‘fii‘fi, 5.9%???“ 13‘“ ' °°“”‘- . HELP WANTED .Maoomb county. . liable 'deniing's. Price 310 pe,‘1oo uf”$.fi: WANTED. To RENT on Buy. A SMALL g.-- sf} v ' " ' liable catalog free. . poultry farm in southern Michigan. southern WANTED_LEARN How Any on; 0‘. - v — Heme“ CO~ Preferred- BOX H- cam “10mg”. own n high grade tractor on the "Easy Payment ‘ . ‘ Busmes" Farmer- Mt- ClemeI‘S' Mich" Plan." Address P. 0. Box 1131. Indianapolis. Indiana. M M 0 0 he CD 0 .q 0 9’ so a o. FOR SALE~NEW OUTFIT 15—30 "Am" and 28 x 48 separator and been thresth Ulld one season. HERKMANN 81103.. R 'l. Clara. Michigan. x CORN HARVESTER OUTS AND FILES 0N harvester or winrows. Man and horse cut: " shocks equal Com Binder. Sold in every Only $28 with fodder ticl'ng attachman monials and catalog FREE showing picture harvester. PROCESS HABYESTER 00.. lina. Kansas. WWWWWCANMNMNNNw UlflWNHOCDm-glfiafiWNH rrrrrrrrrrHrHHH fiflacanQfllhfiwwlONHI-‘O GIOUiOU‘O‘JlOCIDUiOUiOUl weerrwwwnnnnnnw M-wal—‘OtchQ‘Ji-flwwu OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO awaho+hwawswww ocmqmufiwwr‘oamq encepnwrrnnerw QluerWWNN-‘p-0000w CD‘O‘J‘OU‘OU‘OU‘OU‘OV‘ P‘E‘N‘PPW?‘N“:"?‘ OtDm-JQMISNNP‘OED 000000000000 R. 7,‘ Holland. Mich. BAltuhdmin gnnzcllj 120 Inches ' . ,.‘ . 1 ' ‘ n. . ‘00 so or enera arm- THE BABY chicks hLL soLo. WILL HATCH 5%m§2::§§§e“Eggnog?” tilyr’ibcir'zensérgan 11301;? ’ SEED '._ _- -. , ~ Rocks and oth. tad d l: . '- ' 13' - —- ' - BLUE-FEW}? . -~ , u. u. assholes: W" ,_ §§i?‘hot.§lm%i‘§. d§3‘§edw. aisignL'siPofir‘Jia ...§°:...:“§..i“55.23%. 2.53.. “$2.3”, » I ' I." ’ ‘ n ". - ' ,. f v . 24 bis. per acre. 1920. I‘OBT. P. REA yourgubscrlptioujiaq-i1' . - . a . _ 5; 503:. Caro, R 1, Michigan. "flawed a900,!91'l‘8ma-Om‘erecomn- " ' " .4 , - « I!" ' , - FOR sue—co Acne, lemes'rou co. - end: one will : greatly eannreciatevav. - 2 $8.00. ;‘ .- ‘ . . l gnafi‘loiktfiiglgwgmviogs Frggmpalrtliiliggs wnce FENCE POSTS tn,“ , A._,. . ~ ., , _.-_»f_ ’d- ‘ » ..,e i -. .. .. 7‘ ‘ rev ‘ . i , , 0 , i e ‘ £933.”.itmltifillceein.therenelosbn . per--100; - - . envelope ' i- v «— We suv FENCE POSTS DIRECT rnom non. 7' v ‘1 :‘ “ ‘ 7 " pail ‘1. 'S. C. HOTEL AND ICE CREAM PABLO“ F0" at. All kinds. Delivered prices. Address "Mir ‘ sale cheap in a busy town. Selling, on account u,“ can Michigan” 33mm” Farmer, ML cum... ' h flats.th~-50*”i5§9ni,cfianzed. ' ‘ and English . ’r. ' ' .w r » . Le o. ‘ -, ' LEAVE 320 ACRES LANo'lu~ALcouA ‘ ' ' ” - 5‘ ‘ -‘ . us”. ' ‘ ,coll‘nty.'Two good spring. some building timber ~ ~ '» _ 1-. . ,.; , »~z~ -- v ‘ j' _ 13° 5,va ~1 ‘ also. no improvellients. Will sell cheap. MRS. ' . ~ _ . . . . . v .1 Every. :5th MLOFFETT. Applegate. R‘2. Michigan._x‘., ‘Write out a plain descriptlon , 1 .. r ' ~ , ' ‘ v~ figure 10a§for each word, intia some: F RM ran-sALs—eoooo noose _ -« .» » ', r twig igrrnsyslilocgranaryfi neg igngeryh $3.1;in ion)? ‘grqup of figull‘les forthrtegui’nsert .‘ . 0 1m es rom to r03.- 8 he 00. ‘c t There is no c aaper or, er v d. ERNEST mane North . . _. , .. , _ . ' ...i‘i.m.,,‘i“i‘iin.“’m‘,” , . ; ' selling alarm 'in Michigan 9. I f '3- ’ deal direct, with the buyer, to sell or trade your’tarn}. , agents comm'iSSiOnBT M i ‘ “ 'your ad. today. Don’t a}? WWW ii " a {about l,t.f".-Ou'r_:Busin"ess, IF‘rYOU., YE a; - ‘ no". 'r.~/Whit&e,,~.& .Brown ,of sickness. LOCK BOX 10. Boon, Mich. m mm , p 'fieneral.’ Mollie-gs 1 ' cm that what the ' ma- of _ need mos-o: than mm on...” bum, bacilli a commence: of em 'pooepen’ film. is in. W i e it our am Me: with man a". wide «1in% of” am- fimn aunt‘s mom-mg; the host meat- ' ov‘s- to‘ be adapted! to Bring: more this expansion. trade. The Eoov- or flow, which: has been given an malmea approval of Wzfll 133,. just now, und‘er fire from the: middle-west, bankem’ associa- tes; an Wauhhugtomv dusting: them week representatives of .tlie above -‘menfihneu mam brought! the matter to the moments! the: pm ident,, their contention .Befng that an increase in the vohune of em: m. with BMW that. necessitated? a cor.- renpmm increase in: Ghee mount European. nations: will’ be W eb- ns; is undesirable- aw chi!" time. Attention was called: to tie prospective refunding of the 665m at present due us from foreign countries and. the medium: was” made than: it 67mm ppm is pushed to the extent which will be necessary im order to; ling about: conditions: that will» We thwar- alfl’y' with time!- years, the baslmme‘ of trade, between us and our foreign neighbors), will become so lopsided that. exchange rateé» will they to lower l‘evel‘s- than have yet been re;- eorded. . ' Ban George? M. Reynolds, of. Ghicago;~ called the attention of the msldént to the rapidly growing mfimwt, among a certfm’n chase of Mex-loam“ demanding that out for- eign (lb/liters be; thrga‘ven. their e‘blf- my. channel-3%.. and the amount 'added to the national expense ac- count chargeable to. the was“. be ex- pressed apprehensiew that Europe may try to side—step her trade obli- gations in» the. same manner: A. tre- mendously strong: oppohi'ttfon is de- veloping, in American firm-new ctr- cl’es', against every proposition that will! reeulr’t’ in loading. this- «mum Mn with the bonds of foreign confides. especially, bonds issued By the German govemnen‘t‘ with which to raise money for reparation pmess ‘ - The recent: medium or! foreign exchange has Been to an effort, on the mum of the German government, to seem American- deb M will} which to make reparations It now seems: We W the mm of mo. firmwares “mt can be made in- gen! mks o“!- oflier Germ legal: tenth»; me- . Dean naflona! tb- pnvdlwe our com- modities“ in‘ larger quantities Before. 1 Iron; steer, l’umher emf many an.- ‘: .., _ moons of" Dbli'afy. a " will) me: upon! an em; terl'als are experfiexcing a. period _ of . filmsnmmer dullness;- first new, that ha- othcrr years has. azfivmys been may {all as a» matter of con-ac during fie“. mes season. Increwes" m: the: ‘ .‘finmber- 00:" men emol'oyc'd‘ in certain? V :Wmcturi‘ng. lines are ' ,m (flamenco. M hwo. , me' we... of Routine 191119 3’ ad‘d. 1,000 men. to it"s , '5‘! ‘0‘ Mg M of am SoMy' by ‘wl‘fi‘ehl "l- elm mammal: ». -W~=§ I 'fnflependcué; at m; whim, ' .e .. .1. i Q! t ‘. I l g. l l E ’ . : ~- 9.- .. a dull. of; wine to. mess! Edited syn. If“. . .. . Macrame. f time; Hayfirm; easy; g . I ' I! ‘ emcee-own grains. easy. Hogs M«’Sfi3‘3F' Tower. Came mmw m new mm lMItlo'n um mu m- It: ‘ kel page Is so: In tiyopo. It contains)”: mlnuto lnformatlon: up to withln one-half hour. of H r: -. ‘ ~ V._V.._-_r _.~..V_.__.W can of’ mu mar‘ Mm where! moisture: hast (fo- ficlent, ’i’sv- Wing some £8841)de mefifi'fio flie manuth fnterests which had' pfa‘nn'ed‘ to 3611‘ mm seal- m output farmers of the country. {EM new Yolk Stock Exchange Rm a flat, it“ the: current; M m may am new of m- m mode may”; one. util- webs: mom and! mo- tousi were weak“ and" lower me last Way when nearly .eoorytmng took. a turn. for the WM «Ibsen ‘ mug: Gaul money to available at; 5 per cent: 4 - mam v ’ \NHEEA‘J? omen DER- IW..- £1113?»ij a.“ mgr l'fihgrl} .132.“ y . . . ' use: v - mm «so: -. .1.“ PRICES one YEAR AGO V ; INQsa Redl Ngfiwmtel- M2 Uller 29E 1! 2w l3 2.90 'mt I _ The Wheat market was unsettled all last week with trade night and confined? ho, mostflly £00310 The De- t‘mfit mma' charred? qm‘et sceadry on» Tuésday,. .I'un‘e‘ 2‘02 There was a. decline early in the day but this was soon turner? mm a gain amounting to 2 comm. Wed‘nesdiay- the market was firm' and prices-again advanced.- The trading on TueStfa‘y was bearish but on ‘Wexin-esday it became bullish1 owing to news from Europe. stating: Germany wanted 5-,- 000,0‘I(I‘0i bushels amf.‘ dry Weather in France which was doing: consider- able dlaxnage to the; grow-1mg cm». Threshing returns 11mm the south- west reported the yield not’ as‘ hfgh as. expectefl‘. "The firm com? can-- anneal into" Thursday’s trading and there was a gain or r «we; Howe-v96, mm. was seen: lost because 0:. heavy com. The comm news couwlm uedl Whom. The: Chicago market? ficllhmfi Mrei‘t close up So“ F'rhialy’ when: wheat at Chicago: ad- Vaneedi whale. it only hello may at Belfth with a: bullish tom. me contains. at. 136th dosed! the. 2 cents higher W-hicfis malght prices up to those offered on’ Monday." morn-- June. 270‘. Saturday the market and . W 8 Wheat! Was m mug“: wmtieFany HOW. i'nfl'uence‘s (furi'ng mo weal}. But those" already at. work develop- ed chiefly in the direction of bull- fsfin‘ess. The (Try weather that was. mm? wheel: 1'8“ still‘. at work: and causing \a great deal. of alarm. There is: new about the hm rust; it is still in Wee;.,but has shown - no increasing tendency. Dealers are Myig. to penetrate themebves: that was is one on the years whom. Nook rust does" not fnmre the wheat. Har- vestlhg has Been fnte‘rrup’t‘e‘d‘ at a number of porn-t9 m the Water wheat; states; man? We: are many complhdms; that made are“ short. mac mull 'llhe ylehfss are. @8- appming. - - N-‘e: large: We have .been reporter!” 1m; Wheat ,is goin‘g. mm 04! the country at a" satisfactory rate“ atan more fit. a 9mm“ tone or stmgm in: the dealt. The Worst feathre atom. a human; stmmnr is. that the monk-"ct. is not. to mom ' Me Mucus; The: open-mu: always meet lama 93mm: and as Bafer fol-» laws.“ This is always the case when harvesting {a m progress and? creates: are attrale of; lucreaam ne‘eei’pbm. GW‘ conu PRICE. hwflm. a NE 28, 1921‘ “"“7534‘9 ‘EDel‘rolt Ichlcagzgl N} v.’ .03 may. E sol/51‘ Ewe—Yellow ,aa ‘5, 8' Yellow “$11.4: Yonow My. .59 I1_ mmfii‘our mm , 1.33.31 Vollll no.4 Yell W $.90 I! as: Com markets were also mamas 1m week. All lire‘allox m woes: tome commission mousse good? boxy; ers causing: sellers" to" soon”: talks to cum; Blouses 2;er 1 con- mm claim- may are gmg no bids b'ut fill w More business 13' hem: done in this 1‘i’neof' trading than Was awe mum to admit! to the new News 15mm; the: coun- try show the growing crop» 1h; gem! “neuron fit ‘most stamens W in m them is?- n‘eod‘a efi palm Small” losses were shown: in": oats: last, week: The. market was “affected heldl it‘s“ Mm» by linme in: the: earl, Mum m..- a... .. | u v r .4 swarm-Imogene D. 6., ‘ July; 2,. {‘9 w. stem. will“. :3 cents; mm holographic: ans-hp " oi M M may...wa 11:. is» mewWerm-merimnt Boson that M or g 4 8} ‘ “the wow \ drrél {'et'o‘lrfh'sv ‘ .36 an Atlanth :‘f w,,m§r§h% 'Tna Wan: KER eons-[rant ween. AS‘I‘OW 3! W: '15 m for The W. Eminent Mei? V I A . any ' for the. expect M j «meme thesen‘ . . line -' to ram when of these» storms will: reach on. “he! mti‘nm‘t. In some places. oats will: be. in: bloom. and easily damaged by severe. warmer- 1' am‘ emmng‘ the mt dangerous: .3 l ‘ my flo- we- hear m- a w mu! 2:4: Near , these Me‘s you: chum!" watch 1b:- the thunder head‘s; the dart? am!” .- angry elbow and! we 11mg. light- l nlng, - . . \ M 3 Last bulletin. the .wrong date ‘ - hurricane; to organ!- flm can the, was: coastline! more. W . 5 is the data.‘ ‘Thw Bumme- move westwamde'hut gills my; Maul}: 'r-a say how! ml? y «MW meg, 11mg» lest; em'd‘ence I: have 0" ‘ ms: om S I *\ - .4.“ e. I l ‘l‘ l I!“ tenderly (are. ls ll and? the", weakness fin other Krm- ' However, m ame are market by’ commit-slow concepts. owing to the receipts of ' m news From Sleuth: Damn. Domestic summing demand 13; Mom W.’ at inhumng Arrfiwnlc mummies" 80 m then Mansions? the commute nor 1 limit sot-undaym’cmagm being W- at at. 1125. cam. mummy warm cm am“ am saw to be; light. . , RY]! - a . m. 2 at W is W $13.36;" no: certs we com m that when m.Wn-g; and" am We. to no- comp cmwabw at m, grain. Em pawns no our: anew: Grade [Detroit l Chlomll: N; W. _c.“‘H."P. . . . . ..l 3.6073250. 430‘ new ..(....|: ' law : "was on: vzn-nvaoo _ I . in. H. L bDetr-olt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,. . . .I 1.25 The W hem mamfih'hfi "ro- p'cnt‘cd} unchanged: a M' do- m'amd‘ am! last. week; Ming tints the ‘ price adgmccd'. This wmrI’d- Item!l one to hett‘eve Wrens were gm“ out mmfeadigm stato- mren-vs" Beams why: the nice adlvasnoe when. there. is we demand? The mm Wally must be there in volume. I MMOES‘ l m “1 was 28.11834: W E "M "AM." ii sound If mm, -’ 1-bit" . . . . . .. . . . . . . ..|" .6!!! I! M.......:I p I .w ..,..l' .IW l .111...|1uw_,|- _ 5 _ , 9mm do": "in ma lacuna: . . Ml; 11:13:13 em potatm continue to: give my 80 the news-My and; newer page. are noted! on most? marinate. ause jar]: hart scammed“ 1s m as new Mam can he Wd at reasonable prices. ‘ K V nm. 1-. mv mam.» we“ at “menace egg“: 2 fl _ :1- ' I ‘ cannula Hm r. mu: 1‘ No.13 9 no.4: llil gnhr. {chug-fin om ‘ rmuawommooxofl smug“. .‘g% 42:14 glazwdtwcg ,- mmmiv .migigmwemmuom‘ p "W'kmm ni- nui’m‘“w * l INKiAflinj—ifilefiTllfi-zfiw a m .. ..lmgsjarac.50 consuls a.“ 1‘ ' "" ' Imf I .No.‘ No.1 Wu robs-ill 2'. nun-r . 2% *"lzmaoimwoanMo @ our . who; ad’yenfi cf- I‘acxg’e' ot gnacs—‘l’eci may? in the ‘mank'ets: of the. country iejwvoc‘llfilg' I‘sad' havoc with». current. mutations on all kinds. The butcher ‘cfafitle V » trade, which was weal? anal-tending Tower, ' all week. m‘m. took. the may“ V‘ coinage, last week and closer? Saturday at the. extreme 123w price ' man: tor the: scam (in. Month: of the current week another slice; was taken. off nearly everything on ‘ the» infill: mom: had, WW alum My; ‘ misc» tom'd‘w mm. . mags we sarcoma? for » $39.10*- bmt Gil-(Man'er «(mouth steer Lolasé'? was§ " _ wants: «a: can ' l . _. .122: autism filMfiW v IIIWMIw-WJ omit. v' . ) ._ v e. Mffli'tffifl‘ftfid an, and". weight» .‘ fluesday of last Week fibres carlmds “at/Hemord mars afiram 1.3.00 “Rwanda, sold on them mt ' In: $9.10. VEam‘last week, one Med ‘01! old-fashiOned cattleI aver- ‘ Aging 1,800 sold {or $8.25 and later " f‘ Inn, some 'splendidly.f.flnlshed loads of \» ,Angusfiteers averaging from 1,400 £61,500 pound’s‘sold‘ for $9 per cwt. In" the Detroit market $7.25 takes the, best am am! tfih‘b mu) .i'dr lbw jweights is around $7. . 3 ‘The sheep and lamb trade has ' teen going hand in hand with wat- "lile, down «eye-r the breakers, ito lithe lowest price fiestas what lira-ye then: known in many years. The and! kind that have held steady at latte. In the sheep division, 'have been ' uh’ose of may weight. --'Ean‘hy last week, the matures; «conned zen sad- '» wance buth '05 W was 3519 » cents mono with flit bottom the meek 'was gone. At the-dines last .Saztfix- (day, salesmen tound'it very hard; (to gel] common and dull sheep at any plaice; manly Mm..ttha males at ‘50 to 75 name in mud ram-d me first ' gold for 25 cents apiece. ' . Heavy fat cows went begging .tor buyers 'in‘ Wedge during the ‘last half ‘of the. weak. omega! mars firom Oregon sold for $3.25 and yearljngs tram the same atom. 34.5.0. {The demand for breeding ewes 'Was inctive, all Gast Meek. hire run—monon- Qd kind gating rat'mmm $3 the 5-1! mar cwt. . Fat lambs, 43.1mm the range and «the corn belt, made a sharp advance, early last week, the gain ranging ‘flrom $1 to {$1.26 iper aowtr; an to: time above gain, was lost themne the Weekend and 5c per cwt. with it. Buyers of feeding sheep and lambs were operating with extreme-caution and only a stem ‘meshmnrllambs went so the intmim' nit .nmioee was from 56.59) m, 7.35 ,wner «mt. " Mat last man . ligametoh'and. ~ M ‘strwendons loss-f I V_ W H / v ’5, ‘ ch'i'cafp .got“:ano~_thm'hi¢ hm “mal' "lass: was, the-showing an ex- "cess of 110,000/hogs. Thetnade was nativemd stronrnemily all the meek the top "or $8.85 bein'g made on ’Fri—' day for high—grade Yorkers. The ing Magma a naked uniden- ing {tendency all the week, because of the “WW weight mama. ., for the week, was 240 pounds. The . v . ,pork .onmmndity list is gaining in -astrnenglfh as :a direct mesult an! an initiate Mud firms muntin- ental Emma; it is (dittiwlt to say Just What will hahpen When Great Britain names ’into memmet, ‘which «some she must ibsfiore Many dong. ,mniwalls zed Kline (hogs, tin mkets outline (eff micago, have been com- ;pamatiynly small, of date; eastern cities are said 'to be muse up on their waxwork supplies and robe south is 'a vapiemrdi'rd lbw zed nuned meats. in m speculative mnemisim' ifluhures, lend its taking the lead. Just .now, with ribs, hams .and bacon playing argued second. Meat shipments :fnom Chicago, last week, were 19,- Mamas) mud: «summoned smith 9, 384,000 pounds tor the same week, last year. Of lard, 1,629,000 pounds were sent out compared With 5,- 58dfuwdi pounds flat the 3am week last year. Steaks .0: was beer and lamb are confiderahly lighter than a year ago. but there is an ample supply of other moms. statement to! the harm. or mindsets, issued last week, shouts 28d,7s90.,000dbs. at drown beef against 3.30.0.h9y01l0 Jabs. .a year ago, and 194,600,000 .lbs. of frozen pork, ' compared with $56.;963NOIO lbs. The moment, W3! shook sot unozen thumbs and mutton has iheen whittled .down to 15,910,000 flbs. by the export ex- pedient. 4 ‘Imrd shocks aggregate I 11%‘052‘0/090 Elbe. against 1158.307.- «auovlhs. a new ago and l5~2.5.2i8.000 I V Farmers Geii'inéffieady toSlart flaming 'Bugs ‘Plent'iful, Rain Needed, Hay Short, Say Crop Reporters mssaukeo-w-V-mw dry in .Mlssaukee .azounty Saturday, {rune 1'8 'We ‘had our first good min tfor about ism «make new it is Very hot and dry and not much is normed .of the rain anymore. Crops are very poor. ’Gorn which was planted ea'flty flocks dam": 'tbat which was planted Mg 1811112 all shows around yet, and it has vbeen planted or three weeks already. . m mans sugar ibma this year; most farmers narrowed them (out and put {in mimosa L‘Pfltafloes am average are coming slow but sure. Small may crop this year, very short. Farm-, cars as start it? My and melt aft-will : Ibo done by . 9 41mm duly. ‘Rye worth: the a large crop this yeah- 7 my the fair if ‘we have enough rain. "On a. - whole farm is 'W discourse. an . and about e. regions ,9! Failure -,—- Jesse Schaar . ' , Emmett—M $110M;- M some from drought. .Ciorn .looks g . Potatoes am fin. finest haw its . good Seeding looks fine. .Mn 3113‘ elped seme. Resorters coming heavy which 157111.41!“ .manket Jar mgntahlou, milk and eggsr—JthK. Bungalow—swam ripening very that. Some will'be'scut next week. Crop is about normal. Very“ few cherries. Ap- les. not so [good as expected. .yOats and gang .- may at min \dnr aw .\ tweaksex dummflmasm flocking good. Hay short, except al- ' Housman—In several localities hay is ‘flbe Work is being one in poisoning the a. “9.3 g 5 a «E: E i i Mumson—Very dry: No 38.111 of'arry ‘ ~ " . roousnt’ for several weeks. North ‘ of aotlmtr .mn't-phad rain {at "six. Weeks; 31mm short. Oats .hea. in: E many. ' Eases «I—Iubam clover standingf drought ‘ be. fiemal Gamma-mien: . . fl” .- v, spell at the present time Hey is Very short. ‘Peas and oats «need rain. The glam or mom in being held up for want of rain. Alfalfa and sweet clover making a. ood showingI-JVL C Varyhan, County .ent- Montana—The farmers are cutting they. lane day its wear. earnest alfalfa; - it .is ~3on most all toner .and some good sweet clover fields. “The weather it hot .and my and rain goes in streaks. The farmers are ‘rbusy fighting vpotato bugs; worst ‘a‘n naturism—Geo. B. Wilson. mules-vrfihtumm dry. Some nexus of potatoes a corn ‘wtthstand— in: diam KW well but rye, Wheat, oats, sugar \‘beets, hay and pastures are a mom ~hqpe. on range ‘land are destroying still more pasture. A Mar t3. daut .fiezmrdaly helm. . m 0. more ram :nee — ed.-—-1P. ‘8. n" ‘Stoubqn Guilty, midi-Na We a hit «crop at Wait. The first sump of fair dune relays: its short Bent better than we tho hit it was. flats are mm and ma. 1' mm. (film iis ".look- mg fine. There .18 no Inuit up this .coun- ,ty except in who fame-8' gear-dons. Just a little for his own usable—Cyrus Bunch. Emmant. I Ind. ’ lanthanum-may, wheat, rye cam. *bar- ley are light. Corn is {fairly good. P0- are looking airly rut-ts “egg W imam. '. I n nah-Conn "is dais. {Oats we headed 'out but very short and next to . p i «this an aunt men it!» minder ms iit gatvery .sh%t Barley .is ’%e «same moo. , and mam - flair. r Ms M » mam ass: = film" tton.’ inferr'lowfi . 3E 1"." f’e‘th'e inmates: the: ‘9' total ‘nmfi‘ber .ex- ‘3' spread, between Ygonkers and pack-, ,KRES :Parasificide and augment; i 1 . No. 151-1”!!! SWAN". .flmfibcs and . alfatta 'is in out of the way' and was , I 5 No. 137—‘DDG’BOOKLET. Tells howtomidtthc ' gman “Write dor these mu: swag, DAVIS & co. our No. ,1 Is sow IN ORIGINAL ' .A'l' as. mun “lam: . a I1 . . | . . , . now at. Camp Custer. $30 per thousand fleet. ’ 99cm mg wiper and mum monk. at Camp C uster _.. for Michigan People Yam nan‘mke tremendous savings by buying your lumber. A‘Il lumber is just like new, thoroughly seasoned. 'The nails have beentcarefu‘l‘ly .rhmoved, and only the best pieces saved. : If yen machine with ynur meighbors so as (no make .a ~c'ar10ad; ~ the pnice be only $22 per thousand feet. {Ln less than carload .L lots, the price is_.$2.5 ,per thousand tent. HERE ARE .‘SOIME "BARGAINS: 3 1-4 inch 'Yéilow ‘Fme Flooring, ‘ Matdhed Yellow f'Pline Wainseoiiing, N0. 1 'lYélilow'Pine lDimension FStodk, Square-edged Boards, gheafthing, Shiplap, Novelty “Sitting, $25 per thousand feet. DOORS $3.50 up. You can also make flit-g Mugs in plumbing, wall board, root- a’i you .cammet .come, write tor stimulate bulletin of ibargains. . Michigan )Bzaihlflfid ‘llnnlley ’direst to .xcamp- ‘ Buffalo Housewrecking & salvage Camp Custer Battle Creek, B611, Phone 7188 C0. b . 6006th on? . Farm Samiahon ‘ teli'you how to preventi disease among ivcstock and {poultry and describe ' in detail the many uses of i .3 .: Oflal, (STANDARDIZED) _ tells how to prevent diseases common to , livestock. ‘ dog of fleas and to help prevent disease. No.160-m mm. Covers the com- mon hog diseases. "No. 195.1106 mums. Gives compich directions for the construction of a,con- . mete 3hongdllow. ' 63m. .How to get rid of 'licc ' and mites, also mgrcvcnt . Mmllqdum mom “DETROIT, 'MICHIMN :50er " ” ONE YEAR TO DA“! --r—-———~Eveery ' Breeder” r i . Orin quaint. B. F.’s Breeders’ Directory to good advantage. Run your ad. and watch the returns come in. was; am YOU $00 xflFfliR 1’ Alli m same To; HIE “R I}! .so me lhatwe a proposition that .will tenable >non {to go each day and combine ,proht with pleasure. ‘It you want to attend your home county *fair and at the same time make :3. tidy sum of money wntte nim- jxm‘ liberal pitquSitiOIl and tall us which fairs you would like to aa- tend. Do it today before some other dellorw gbeats you to it. THE MICHIGAN F . Mt. .Glemans, Mich. aw DESK? .WDERS . advertise in 'The ‘Michigan Business *Farmer. “It will 'be worth your whale so, need the mm“ mmws in every issue to keep-posted on what they have to‘rofler. 8% W the publisher for full 'ul-ars regarding the . cent preferred steak ‘Rural Publishing Com” “ lWhiOh pays 4 par mt m You can invest little as 3.100 .10.!- tan you have' em ‘ Within" ' 3-year!“ ' '——‘if your money bringing loss A 0 w“ :1". ,-.(< - BUSINESS TO the’Mothe'rs, Wives and\Sisters Off r the Business Farmer's» of Michigan: p p I ' COME INTO ms OWN AS OUR PROBLEMS thess days, dear ladies, remind me of the hardships of the early Pilgrim mothers—,- For be it remembered, that the Pilgrim'fathers, land- ing in early winter on the bleak, rock—bound coast of New England, faced an unknown land, filled with blood-thirsty savages and no provisions for the long winter—— While the Pilgrim mothers had not only all of these things'to face, but the Pilgrim fathers as well! ' You have to face not only the hardships of depress- ing markets, which father has to face, but in'addition you have 'to take his word for it and some times he was mighty‘ blu’e, wasn’t he? . _ - But you cheered him up and told him you’d sailed together over rougher seas and reminded him that every r cloud has a silver lining and that a dOg can’t keep run- ning into the woods forever, because when he gets more than half way in, he is runningout of the woods! SO right now, ten to one, father and the boys too, probably are out sweating and working their heads off to get a big crop to sell within the next few months or weeks! And you—well, you are working just as hard asthey are and perhaps a little harder. Maybe more hours and work the boys wouldn’t do on a bet! But, like every woman, you mix some'thought with your work—you may be washing, or scrubbing, or baking or mending—BUT EVERY MINUTE YOU ARE - glgljh'IKlNGI—that is why this message is addressed to WHAT MADE DAD SO BLUE? k _ You know what is wrong with the farming business—- ’ it’s the selling end! ' r The farmers of America never failed to raise enough foodstuff to feed all of this country and part of the world besides—more often they have raised too much! But it took them a long, long while to find this out! At one time America was threatened with becoming like Europe and Asia, where poverty-stricken peasant work the fields for luxury-loving landlords who became known as aristocrats! , _ America’s greatest farming states, Illinois and Iowa, were cursed with this plague until there were more ten- ants or peasants on their farms than farm owners. Mich- igan, thank God, was more enlightened! Eighty-five per cent of our farniers still own the land-they till! But last year the blow which awakened the farmers of America came! . Before the foodstuffs the farmers had sweated to raise could be hauled to markets, the prices had toboggan— ed to levels comparable only to before the war! That was the Big Ben which aw'oke the farmers from their lethargy—since then they have been organizing mar- keting associations, passing new laws at Washington to control the grain markets and the packers-— AND THE AMERICAN FARMER IS GOING TO I wee . P a g . It will payathem, Oh, so well, to relax their muscles _ and exercise their brains, by keeping up with what is, hap- ' V' I u" " . -, ‘ ‘V': IZCL‘ . ' ’2‘. ING THE NEXT’FIVE YEARS! ‘ . . . And it is because father and'the seams/ta; working hard with their hands and coming inbtoo at night to read The Engine” Farmer, that We ihavé“ ' en this page to . . write you this message- i YOU HOLD THE KEYS! 7 .. ! You know that although father may ‘arguv he with (you, yet after all it is what you say'to himithatmakes the big” and lasting impressions, sowe want‘youfto encourage him : and it will not be false encouragement as you 'w'ill'p’rove toyourself when you read the steps: forward which are be- , ing taken in the farming ,huSiness. _' . _ Encourage him to stick by the. farm organizations; local” state and national-which are fighting for, his bus- mess. ‘ . I ‘ ” ’ ‘ ‘ which are spread by paid gamblers. _ f I Show him that the' way to make _anything a success is not to’be criticizing but by getting. in and doingsome of the work. Every .man will make mistakes. If the wrong. man is at the head of snyfarmers’ proposition in Mich- . ganftell dad‘tO‘use his vote to oust him, but go 10);: a, - he is in, boost him and help him! I I > And all the while, make, fathenand the boys! happy that they are farming in Michigan this year d Where we grow no one single crop—+- , a. _ ' ‘ scarcely a farmer in Michigan but ers Or pork raisers Of other states who placed theierliol‘e ‘ year’s work in one basket andthen‘ the felliout 0f the basket! V _, - , THEN. LAST BUT NOT LEAST! .' ' , l ‘ For if we were less modest, we would put _ it first4tell father and the boys to take the time neces. sary{ to sit down and read The Business . Farmer every pening in the big business of which they area part. . No successful business man", but who reads trade paper from cover to cover— » _ 1 AND YOU. -WANT YOUR .MEN TO BE BUSINESS ' FARMERS, DON’T .YOU? ~< r ' Of course, you are interested in. all of these things too, else you would not harm read this far in this message, but we want you to. convince your men folks that it will not profit them a penny, to work their heads 03 now-rais- ing a crop, if they sell it at-a loss this fall! " SO, we leave “it to you, the faithful, IOyal wives, moth: I of Michigan, to . ers and sisters 'of the business farmers show them the way! W was; we 1 five to a dozen different products which he can f the markets.‘ Thinkhf the grain farmers or cotton plant ‘ = Tell him to a deaf. ear the lies'abo'ut them - hirelingsof the old ‘ market _ ' 0 \ ’ HAS FATHER FORGOTTEN TO RENEW? I. , - A E HOPEevery-xwoman who has read the above message will now turn.” p. . .. -. the, saddres'sdabel which appears on the front cover. «’ Iii/the, date. , g -‘ following your name is anymonth‘hefore August, ,1921 (Aug; 21) you}: sub; 7 .scriptioh' has‘expired and YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY RENE Nahum» _; _. spasm. RENEWAL OFFEI: l The Michigan Business Farmer, Mt. Clemens, Mich. i In seem-dance with yOur special offer for July only, i I’_ enclose s . . . . . . . . . . . . .which’pays up my I flon to JANUARY FIRST, 19...... ,. ' .. l . : iNG 'JULY.._ I A - We like to "have all our sflbsllriptions' expire lithe , first of January, se‘li'lfor; _ this month onlyLWe will make you this ofier: " . . . , , ~ , . END. FIFTY CENTS and we‘wlli change your. label to .192?,“ ,- -_";}‘— SEND pit-E DOLL‘AR'ians will change your label 129. rm: -‘ “SEND TWO DOLLARSIsadwe will; change you - Eternal“ " "ary,.;'first,' 1935 .SENPJPHREEDDLJJARS-$155“in Chéhge'yéur" hf "' $831.92 . .~ 7719.151:NEW§51Sfi§§CRmER¥s .miiE—é—ws m .s -.4- A, a .‘e 0 0.3.43 o e 10’ .’f. . :‘Po 0. ..oo..o~.00.o--J..-.n I l - ' " C = -' - * L any hewsubscrrhsrs yOu’sehd?with-’yo_ur{r new " ' _...t_si’ :the’ balmée‘létfthe New: ‘791‘! Fifir can :‘cwmfthns. ~by.—:ask1fisia few "at your 1.16.1511 1 . 7 ,- s ’2 ‘ ,.- -.. , . ! embrcollwtinsiths seen!” Wheaties , ‘(Be sure and enclosesmr gownrenewalwlthoutsay expense, to‘" ’ ‘ Whover otjny recent lss’ufi so 1 i I - - ._. .. .7 , WINE. 7 _ ,l' _;',,’«4.. v, ,.,,,.. v P“ V cf», .~ on... , r' R; Do No. ' eV 0 ' 9.: .1i ole I e' o 113; ' 1 [Al ‘ I 1 fl '7' z!