Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 24, 1912, Page 24

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seatretostonsontoateetony o re ee foeg 1% ‘. Sete eS ‘e Fe ee eee ee ee ee t ‘TheM. J. BAKBRR GO. DEER RIVER, MINNESOTA SUPPLEMENT TO GRAND RAPIDS. HERALD-REVIEW, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1912. | THIRTEEN POoDrdo oD Setetetetetestetetetetetetetetetnseteintttdeabendrbebenhenhnbebnbnhnbntnenenetetetetetetetetetetetebetetetetbntenenoneenpamons enna rateetest att Sass Re a cot retoatons % “| i Largest General Store in Itasca County | ‘. songs soegens 2 yt . = ose a os ote eo a5 o rte" o tes eo oe seats e eS eo soe " a te" Sete Stet + & . 2 _ _ e + : 3 } > ae « . & & % t Dry — Notions = We make a specialty of our ¢ z i $% Furnishings, Clothing, Hats an 10c and 25c department. Heavy ¢ _ 23 Caps. A large and complete d Shelf Hard w $% | % % stock of work and Dress Shoes — mii: o e 3 for Men, Women and Children. and Farm Implements, Crock- : 3 { $ 3 Furniture, Bedding and House- ery and Glassware, -DeLaval : = { . . x * % holh Furnishings. Cream Separators. & -t ee _ = : & PS & & & 7 P a & & i BE - ps e 3 : 3, —| $e ‘ ‘ h F ‘ R S zs 'tEasy payment plan if you wish on Furniture, Ranges, Separators, ¢ } 33 3 Wagons and Farm Implements re zs $ ¢ a —% & o Be Beene eee enna Saaterteatestestestestestectestest SoaPeateatestestestest Saatesteateateatesteatestestectests sretoctoetoeteatoateateateatoatoetoetoetoetoetoeteetoate! roatoatnalnoatoateatoatostnetue’ aeatoatoatoatoateatoetoeteetoetoetoetoesoatoatoatoatoaloloeloetoetoetoetoeloatosloataleateatocWeeloeloeloeloeloaloaleateatoetoetoe’s Sostestestestoatoateatoatestestectected toatostostostent Postestoateats sostoateetontoetontentontoetontostoatoated foatostoatoetoatoetontoetoatoetonteetoatoeteatoefoatoesoatneteatoeteateefeatoe 2, SoPoatoats Oe oon oon ons erase RSs a aaa aS Where Crop Failures Have Never Been Known Never a Failure in Nineteen Years, “‘In nineteen years I have farmed this land there never has been a failure,’’ says A. M. Sisler, | who has a cozy house and a big red barn with ce- \ ment foundation, near Grand Rapids. He has eighty acres, nearly all under plow and a ten acre river pasture. It was white pine land, some poplar, some y brush, when he took it. There was four or five \ acres of an old camp clearing that had been farmed after a fashion. Mr. Sisler began lumbering in a small way and worked gradually into farming. He cleared a few acres at a time when men were looking for work and, though there was some heavy pine stump land, the cost of clearing averaged him not over $15 an acre. Very early he got in the way of selling bottled cream to the retail trade and that is his main business now. Eight or ten cows, with pigs and chickens, are easily looked after. With that many — Arm of Pokegama Lake with 300 miles of lake shore. E. L. Buck’s herd in foreground on { his Cohasset farm. es | cows he can keep up his soil. ‘‘It is getting better every year,’’ he says. He varies his field crops, but potatoes is the main product. **This is a potato soil and a potato climate,’’ says Mr. Sisler, ‘‘and we ean’t do bet- ter.’’ Starting With Almost Nothing. Ben Post and William Mathiesen came _ to- gether from western Minnesota, before that from Towa. ‘‘This country has been good to us,’’ they say. They have lived side by side and worked to- Substential buildings are the rule, not the exception in the Deer Lake country.—Gust Hed- quist’s place, Deer Lake. gether seven years at Goodland. ‘‘ We landed here in December with our families and not even a hole to crawl into. And all the money we had between us was $1.50. But we never had any trouble getting work and we did not have to go in the lumber camps. ‘*As soon as a man has an acre cleared he can get his living off it. One can make $2 to $2.50 a day peeling posts and as much as $5 a day hewing ties. ‘This country is good. One acre will keep This field of barley on the State farm returned 40 bushels to the acre. a family and when a man has five or ten acres cleared he can lay up a little money. Potatoes, cabbage, small grains, all do well. Vegetables of all sorts, you never saw better. Potatoes run over 300 bushels to the acre. There is a good market for everything.’’ Land Better Every Year. C. A. Buell, farmer, near Grand Rapids—‘‘T have been here twenty-six years, coming to man- age a store for the lumber company. I took up this homestead in ’87, but it was townsite property then and it is only the last eight years I have given much attention to farming. I have 26 acres under cultivation and milk five or six cows. The cows will support me. On that four acres over there I raised last year 1,200 bushels of potatoes. You can call that the profit of the farm. ‘This is light soil but I believe it is the best in the county. See how black it is. It was almost white sand when I took it. It is growing darker with the humus and it is getting better every year.”’

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