Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| en eel SUPPLEMENT TO GRAND RAPIDS HERALD-REVIEW, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1912. NINE We oeaonaoesoeteetoesonsondenteatnetnesecsecsogontonsonseetuetoeteesossofongansgessentenseesmimesesessessoonsosronseesoe soe soes a eaegongensonseaaeCar tame nnn onsen eae Pe ne ee Le oe ee ee ee ee eet A ‘ a : Ae i ER SoraerSocdecendonteresestosboniorgecintonioninsSocesdoniioniesesseatoniecestong etostonoessosiono essing z $f 3: & ¥ ? + » Sige < » 2 ¢ ~o «4 oe % 2% $3 $$ 23 % ans & & od 3 ¢ & & 3% % 4 } + $ 3 : 2 > a & } 3 + ¢ JOHN BECKFELT, Proprietor £3 z $ + % & ¢ 3 3 oe « 3 z 3 p : : | al veryth d : it Dealer in ever ing goo ee % & & +3 or the itiner and outer man +: , sg 4 & & a % 2s ee 2 > $3 $ % Ba + + + : % ¢ re 3 : zt oe 2% 2, $ as Es 9 9 $3 $3 $3 ey ae & 4 ss Lt ze 3s: & & + +} a e & & +4 » a & 4 zt aps OeSs roceries Cc 3 e: ’ 2 ’ ° z% 3 $ % 3 2 2% $ S s: e: :?Cor. Kindred Ave. 3rd S Grand Rapids, Minn. :: & & 3% ss t 4 £% % % 3 2 % 4 Weafoatoctentoctentontoetontoetontoeteateetoatoetentoetontoetoatontoatoateate Bfveteatoetoatoetoafonteelonteetontoetontoetoatontoatonsoatoetoetonroetontoeterloaieetonreetontoetontoelonleetesioetenloetestonieesonieeloaloetontoetoetoeten! Sostentotendontentonteetontoetontoete $ eee restoatestoatoctoatoetoatoetontoctoafontestoateetoateetoateeteate otesfostoetoatoetoatoetentoeteatoateetonteetoateetontoeteatoetoatontoateetoate Wl >efeefonteetontoetentoetontoetentoetentoeteatoatoesoateetoatoetontoetontoetbieatreloalenseaeateeloateess stocteetonte Meatoat<Seateeteatonten, secede eeteteefeteteetetecpetetestete Splendid Home Market For All Farm Products Lumbering is still an important industry in Itasca County.—Itasca Lumber Company’s plant. Markets condition farm profits. What’s the good of fertile soil if it costs more to get to market than the stuff will fetch? Itasca county has a market at its doors, better yet within its boundaries. Right in Itasea county, the villages and mining towns’and lumber camps have had to depend on supplies shipped a hundred or five hundred or even a thousand miles. The Itasca county producer can get the same price and save for his profit the freight, the shrinkage and the middleman’s charges. There is not enough raised yet to supply the local market. The Grand Rapids creamery, in this natural dairy country, does not even produce enough butter so far for Grand Rapids alone, not to mention the ranges. Close by are Duluth and Superior, 100 miles from the center of the county, with 125,000 popu- lation. They never can feed themselves. In St. Louis county there are 75,000 people in the mining towns, whose supplies are mostly shipped through Duluth. Itasca county growers reach these towns by an inside track without going through Duluth. In Itasca county itself, there is now a mining population of 8,000, which will be as big in a few years as that of St. Louis, a home market for Itasea county producers. There are also the lum- ber camps employing every winter thousands of men and teams. Itasca county farmers are in the best position to furnish not only food for the men toes, which cost $25 an acre to make a crop, return They have big appetites in a lumber camp and they eat five times a day. but feed for the horses. The yield is as good here as it is anywhere, often better. The market is here. And so pota- from $75 to $200 or even more to the acre. Hay, which costs little more than the labor of reaping, returns $50 to $75 an acre. Onions, carrots, cab- bage, run from $125 to $500 an acre or even bet- ter. These are not exceptional figures but or- dinary farm experience. Those who specialize in fruits, early veget- ables, market delicacies, will get higher returns as a matter of course. But this is most of all a dairy country. There is not enough butter yet to supply the local mar- ket. Butter production in the United States does not keep up with the demand. Butter, moreover, because it is the most compact product of the farm, can be shipped to any market. Even where there is no railroad, dairying is possible. When one can load $900 worth of produce on an ordinary farm wagon, hauling it to market does not eat up the value. Dairying is profitable in a new coun- try and even more profitable in a settled district. Naturally every community, and practically every farmer, aims to work into dairying—the most profitable branch of agriculture, the one that maintains at the highest point the fertility of the soil, the one that is best adapted to Itasca county. Farming pays in Itasca county, first, because the land is so fertile, the seasons so favorable, the results so sure: and second, because the market conditions are right. The best market in America is right at the door. Better than that, it is ac- tually here. Portable sawmills are a ‘great convenience to the home maker.—Scene on Prairie River.