Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 11, 12 January 1923 — Page 24
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JAN. 12, 1923.
NEWS EVENTS OP THE FARM SRF.N THROUGH THE RYE OF THR HAMRRA I
CHAMPION!
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CANADIANS WILL TRY TO SECURE MILLIONS OF ADDITIONAL " CITIZENS THROUGH SELECTED AND DIRECTED IMMIGRATION
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TWO REAL CHAMPIONS FROM ENGLAND.
"Panama 110th.'
i At 1 the recent International livestock exhibition In Chicago, "Panama 1 110th" was awarded the grand championship honors in competition with the 'best bulk of the Hereford breed from all parts of the United States and Canada. He's a four-year-old and weighs 2,400 pounds. A. B. Cook, of Town ' send, Mont, recently refused an offer of $50,000 for him. CHAMPION" BUTTER PRODUCING COW HAS MORE NAMES. THAN FRENCH COUNTESS
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These fine specimens are the prize winning birds of the British Isles. Americans can will boast of their prize winners, but here are two. birds. hard to. beat.. At left is Cochin. Cock. At right. Wyandotta.
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19ZZ HARVEST APPRAISED AT $7,573,0000
iWfLLlONS OP 4CRES UE THESE IN WESTERN CANADA Alt WAITlMO FOR. SETTLERS
Mai-WaikcrrOllie. Iloraratead.. chain pi cm butter producer of the U. S. French countesses or comptesses and prima donnas have nothing on May I Walker Ollie Homestead when It comes to having high-sounding names. But why should they when May Walker is queen In her own right? May is a Holstein bovine of Austin, Minn., and all she did in her official test was produce 1.280 rounds of butter fat and 31,610 pounds of milk. Outside of hat. May took things easy during the year. t
SPEAKING OF CLASSIC LEANING TOWERS; " -FAMED PISA HAS RIVAL IN IOWA TOWN
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Canada is facmj; a ?reat need. She has an 8,700,000 population and a national debt of 5240,000,004 . She has vast untapped natural reso irces in her lands, forests, mines and fisheries and she needs a great influx of new people to develop these resources and, incidentally build op her manufacturing industries. How shah she achieve this endT Among Canadians vho ire well equipped by knowledge and -x-perience to advise regarding immiE ration and settlement are three anadian Pacific Railway officials: Lord Sharphnessy, K. C V. O.. Chairman of the Board of Directors, who has been for fo"ty -ears actively associated with Canadira development; Colonel J. 3. Denni3. Chief Commissioner of the Con pai.y's Colonization and Development Department and who is tbs Father of Irrigation in !anada. and Edward W. Beatty, President.
whose tenure of office uas embraced the after-war period of readjustment and who has kept the railway on a dividend-paying basis. The Canadian branch o the international organization of Kit anis is working hard to change existing Canadian immigration laws; not to lower the high, standard of character that Canada demands of intending citizens, bnt to tea; down bar riers that tend to- unnecessary hardships in entrance. The Kiwanis Club of Montreal recently held i dinner -meeting in that city which was attended by many prominent men. for the discussion and formulating of a campaign to encorra?e immigration. Lord Faughnessy was invited to address this meeting. The speaker made a strong plea for less stringent exactions in the case of worthy immigrants. He advised the ibolition of the "continuous passage from country of
origin" law and urged the admission of worthy settlers from various countries, stating that Canada would be the more vigorous for an admixture of bloods, citing the case of Great Britain whose mixture of English, Welsh, Scotch and Irish has made her so strong. Another thing he 6trongly urgco was the creation of a Ministry of Immigration and Colonization headed by a Minister well fitted for the work, as the Department of the Interior is so burdened with work that it cannot give to this important thing the atteition it deserves, Canada has room for thousands of settlers in her eastern provinces and for millions upon her western prairies, much of this vacant western land being within fifteen miles of existing railways. The proposed policy will not only select the settlers but will ext :nd them kindly direction after they reach their new homeland.
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POTATOES A
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OATS
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COPGHT 132e,BY SC'CNCC SCPVlCg, WASHINGTON, DC.
LUTHER BURBANK WARNS OF 4 - DETERIORATION OF RACE
EX SENATOR WINS PRIZES WTTH LIVESTOCK
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Ja-fieoator i. Al. Camden, wltj overcoat, Ua manager and ' iiaruand Woodford" and "Lady Woodford."
Prominent Farmers
Ko iiolitlcal victory ever gave exSenator J. N. Camden, of Versailles, Ky., more satisfaction than do victories In livestock shows where he exhibits his Herefords. He won the grand championships in the recent Ameri-,
can Royal Livestock show in Kansas City with his Herefords, "Hartland Woodford" and "Lady Woodford.' Cal. Kinzer, manager of the stock. Is shown above with Camden and his winners.
Leaning silo at State Hospital, Cherokee, Iowa. Pisa, Italy, has its famouj Leaning Tower, but so also has Cherokee, Iowa. The American freak is a silo at the Cherokee State Hospital The foundation has givenway, bnt the silo still is In use every dayr
OIIIOAN ELECTED NEW PRESIDENT OF FARM BUREAU
CONSUMER TO BUY , DIRECT FROM FARM
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MILK PRICES VARY 9T0 Z5 CENTS A QUART Range Of FWces Id Each State To Farrily Trade Reported By Agn'caltare DepaLrtmeDt
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The United State is producing1 more lunatics, more criminals, more men of fine ability, as well as more men of ability than ftny other nation," declares Luther Burbank in the January issue of Hearst's International Magazine. "Racial improvement, like plant Improvement, is all a matter of heredity, environment, selection and crossing of types. The United States at this moment is the scene of such furious crossing of type-t as never before took place anywhere. "We are making very little use of the opportunity for racial im-
nrovement that sex gives us. We
are little more thaj r. field" of wild
human weeds in which, here and there, is a superior typo. "Nature is so plrtstic that it is a crime to waste her forces. Plants are distant relatives. A flower is sometimes like a child rooted to the ground and a mat. suggests tree that walks. With proper heredity, environment, selection and crossing, we. can do with plant
BURBA NIC,
life almost what we will. WJrjt
should we neglect to do with human stock what we will? "In human breeding as in plant breeding, there is no substitute for intelligent selection and crossing. One law governs alL "We are only at the beginning of plant improvement. "I have worked for more than sixty years and have learned something not only about plai.t life, but also about human life. The strongest conviction I have is that what can be done with plants can be done with human beings and must be done if our civilization is not to be overwhelmed by the unfit." Mr. Burbank, who evolved the
Burbank potato, who removed the spines from the cactuo, who gave a tree one hundred years growth in ten years, who made walnut meats large and the shells thin, and has produced the greatest marvels of plant breeding the world hr.s ever known, discusses the dangers threatening civilization today, in an article entitled, " What Plant Have Taught Me About Men."
L. E. Kinsey of Greensfork
Oscar E. Bradfule. ; Oscar E. Bradfute, Xenia, O., jras unanimously elected president of the American Farm Bureau " Ieration, at the annual convention it Chicago, to succeed Jamea. R. Howard. .
E.TS- rieaton. E. B. Heaton, director of the dairy marketing department of tha American Farm Bureau Fed tion, announces that the co-operative dairy marketing association of America are planning to aat up a national sales agency for coilective selling of butter, cheese and fjsimilar products, with .branches in iil larjje centos.
I9E ;HAKVPW0U1 n SJ&OIOOOTO FARMERS VaJae All Crops lr Eetcb State Reported By , department Of Agriculture
QM7TED:DoarJ5ns AncjOOO 's
CROPS WORTH
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Photo try Bundy George Kuhlman of Boston Township
if6,06W) ACRE5 SWN TO WINTER WHEAT ..Areau Rlsmted 3.27. ftelow Last Yeau-; Agriculture - - - Department Report
Acreage Planted States And Perceptae
rtr "182,000 rJi&
N"VuTter,Wr)eat
Acreauge NE6LIGI5LC
