THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1955 A FAMILY OF SIX: Farm ife Blends Work, Rewards 280 Acres Set Scene For Brandts When Lawrence D. Brandt was a boy his father offered some ad- vice: "use your head and your feet together, and take care of yourself." Today the counsel is put to good use by Red, as friends call him, and his family on their 280- acre farm near Litchfield, Mich. Hogs, corn, wheat, oats, Holsteins, Guernseys, lambs and people are raised with equal success on the farm's rambling premises. Nobody forces them to, but by preference the Brandts, who do all the farm work themselves, start most days at 5:30 a.m. When the chores are finished there's time for the sidelines-the school board, the Litchfield Farmers Club, the Baptist Church Missionary So- ciety and affairs of the local 4-H club ,to which the older two Brandt children belong. No Bad Luck A 1932 graduate of the Litch- field High School, Red was the only member of his family not to go to college-one older sister has a PhD. "Earning a dollar, in those days, was plenty tough," he re- members. BUt since that time things have gone well for the family of six. "We've been lucky," Red claims with an engaging grin. "Whatever sickness we've had has been in the barn-not the house." Red doesn't like the idea of de- pending on the government for social security, but he isn't politi- cally affiliated. "I'm a redheaded Dutchman," he explains, "and that about covers it." Life Isn't Simple The farm routine isn't as simple as it might seem. The Grade A milk must be sold daily, except for two quarts kept for family use. Hay must go from the field to the barn, via costly machinery. Wood must be cut, corn picked and stored , in the elevator and meat butchered. Obstacles, like the troublesome Hessian flies which last summer found their way into stems of the wheat, must be met squarely. But to Red Brandt and his fam- ily farming's a good way of life. It's their way, and as they see it, the only way. DAILY PHOTO FEATURE Pictures by CHUCK KELSEY Story by JANE HOWARD and LOUISE TYOR .4 ' WHILE THE REST OF THE FAMILY VACATIONED LAST SUMMER KENNY, 12, STAYED HOME AND HANDLED- THE CHORES: e 4' PICTURESQUE WINDMILL DOMINATES THE RAMBLING FARMHOUSE ~' .: The Biggest News for dus IGi t BU O Cbristmgs! t le, V :. :.. 125 HAMPSHIRE HOGS ARE A VITAL AND PROFITABLE PART OF THE BRANDT MENAGERIE., ,qqq DANIELS Sensational New "WHERE YOU CAN CUT CORNERS," RED MAINTAINS, "YOU DO IT." AN AMAZINGLY SIMPLE BOOKKEEPING SYSTEM IS ONE RESULT OF THIS PHILOSOPHY. EDUCATION THE RURAL WAY - TRANSPORTATION PRO- VIDED. BEHIND THE BUS IS THE BRANDTS' 1955 AUTO- MOBILE. r For His Christmas ... anI Yourst, too. VIYELLA SHIRTS VIYELLA, of course, is the illustrious British fab ic woven of lamb's wool and long-staple Egyptian cotton. Washing can't shrink or fade it, it's warm without being bulky, and it won't wear out. We have a magnificent selection of plain colors, neat checks, and authentic tartan plaids. Ladies' from $1.1.954:>% Men's from $13.50 . OPENFRI.Cv MN. EENINS . f. o y $ I!/ $4950 AMERICAN GIRL 17 jewels, Unbreakable mainspring DOWN 7 SENATOR "A" S17j ewels, Shock resistant, Unbreak- 9 able lifetime main- spring,,.luxury ex- pansion band. u ,' Waterproof is tong as crystal is intact, case unopened. Only a *ampetent jeweler should replace crystal or close case. 1'rices tnd fed. Tax I OPEN FRI. & MON. EVENINGS i