Established 1840. THE Seventieth Year. Southern Planter A MONTHLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO Practical and Progressive Agriculture, Horticulture, Trucking, Live Stock and the Fireside. OFFICE: 28 NORTH NINTH STREET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. THB SOUTHERN PLANTER PUBLISHING COMPANY. J. F. JACKSON, Editor. Proprietors. Vol, 70. FEBRUARY, 1909. No. 2, CONTENTS. SUBSCRIBE NOW! 101 FARM MANAGEMENT: Editorial — Work for the Month 102 Some Comments on the January Issue. . . . 105 Improving a Farm 106 The Kind of Plow to Cover Green' Manur- ing Crops and the Kind of Green Manur- ing Crops to Cover 107 Fertilizer Problems 108 From Planting to Farming 109 An Orange County (N. Y.) Farmer, 110 Acid Phosphate and Fertilizer Problems... Ill Plowing, Cultivation and Corn Production 113 The Plow Question Again 114 The Automobile on the I%rm 114 TRUCKING, GARDEN AND ORCHARD: Editorial — Work for the Month 115 The Virginia State Horticultural Socjfety. . 116 Annual Meeting of the Virginia. State" Hor- ticultural Society 119 Orchard Pruning 119 Shenandoah Valley Fruit Growers 120 The Gipsy and Brown-Tail Moths 120' Irish Potato Fertilizer 121 The Tariff on Basic Slag and Sulphate of Ammonia 122 LIVE STOCK AND DAIRY: Getting Beef Cattle on Feed The Beef Breeds and Milk Production .... Making Pork on Grazing Crops Prospects for Dairying in Virginia The London (England) Fat Stock Show. . Virginia Sheep Industry Record of a Virginia (Jersey) Herd THE POULTRY YARD: Poultry Notes Profits in Pure-Bred Poultry on the Farm — Annual Statement Poultry Keeping on a City Lot The Improvement of the Flock by Selection Feed Lots of Clover and Alfalfa THE HORSE: Notes (W. J. Carter) MISCELLANEOUS: Virginia State Farmers' Institute Peanut Growers Organize "The Big Snow" and Stuart Farmers' Clubs Cqrn Show at Blacksburg Necessity for Improved Rural Conditions in the South Virginia State Veterinary Association Enquirers' Column ( Dietail Judex p. 213).. 123 125 125 126 127 127 129 i::o 131 132 132 132 133 134 134 134 135 135 135 136 192 SUBSCRIPTION, 50c. PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE Most Wonderful Offer Ever Published! ■s9"* Save 30% to 50% on Your Purchases! ' v65^ Chicago House Wrecking Co.'s 1909 Sale of Merchandise! From Sheriffs', Receivers' and Manufacturers' Sales! Lumber and Building Material! 100,000,000 feet of Lumber for Bale. THINK OF IT. The Chicago House Wrecking Co. offers you an opportunity to buy Lumber and Building Material today at prices at least SO per cent below what you could purchase it for a year ago. We can do it because we buy in such enormous quanlities direct from the saw mill that we are able to control their output; we are also continually buying at Forced Sales. The Lumber we're offering consists of the very highest grades manufactured. Nothing "WRECKED" about it but the prices. It is clean stock and as good or better than your local dealer sells. We have Lumber of every kind. Lumber for your house or your barn, your church, meeting house or building of any kind. **■* Never again will Lumber be offered at the low price we are sell- ing it for today. This is not an idle statement. It is made after the most careful thought. Every year the supply is diminishing and the manufacturers must get more money for.it, hut we say to you that if you are ready to buy now, you can save from 30 to 60 per cent. Furniture & Household Goods! Our wonderful Furniture Catalog containing hundreds of pages of genuine bargains with beautiful illustrations in natural color effects is sent free on application. 10,000 bargains representing high-grade, brand new Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Linoleum, Stoves, Office Fix- tures and General Supplies. Bargains from Forced Sales of every kind, and nothing of the shoddy nature about the goods, either. Not the kind you would buy from the regular run of merchandise houses, but the sort of good furniture that is built "for keeps." Manufactured for city trade and now offered to you at as low a price as you can buy it if you were right in Chicago at our warehouse. This is a chance you must duly appreciate. We can supply your home com- plete, and we will do it at money-saving prices in every instance. You can buy everything you need to furnish your home. Every article is covered by a guarantee so broad that you cannot go wrong. Favor us with your order. Write for our wonderful Bargain Catalog and let's convince you our prices are right. Write us today. Hardware Bargains! Steel Shovels 30c, Steel Hammers 25c, Handled Axes 50c, Steel Hatch- ets 30c, Electric Door Bells 60c, Hot Lunch Dinner Pails 20c, Meat Cut- ters 75c. These are but samples of our ability. We have everything complete in the hardware line, Door Locks and Knobs, Builders' Hard- ware in general — a new clean s took of hardware at wrecking prices. STEEL ROOFING, $1.60 PEG SQUARE That's our price on our new high grade, semi- hardened steel roofing. $1.60 is our price for first; $1.85 for corrugated or V crimped. This roofing is light weight. Itcomesin sheets821n. wide by 6 or 8 ft. In length. It Is strictly brand new, flrst-cluss. At this price we prepay freight in full to all points east of Colorado except Oklahoma or Texas. Prices to these and other points on ap- plication. This freight prepaid propo- sition applies only to this roofing ad- vertisement and has nothing to do with any other offer. Write today. WATER SUPPLY OUTFITS, $48.00 Gasoline Engines, 2 H.P. $49.75 A strictly high-grade, brand new, fully guaranteed eneine, complete in every respect. l*rice includes eh otrio ianiter, battery lubricator, and in fact a com- plete out0t ready for use. Here is an engine simple to operate, which we sell on SO days free trial, so you take no chances. We give a five-year binding] guarantee against defective workmanship or material. 4 H.P. $96. ?r>; 7 H.P..$1?7.50; IP H. P.,»»65.0O. Sou can live in city comfort even though your home be on a farm. From $48.00 up wards you can buy a complete outfit needed to give you these comforts. With our compre- hensive instruction book you can install the outfit yourself. Let's tell you more about it. Our interesting book on water works systems is free for the asking. Remember it gives ample fire protection and re- duces your rate of insurance. 20-Inch High Galvanized Fencing, Par Pfirl Kt* 8 *i**0 rods of new sniiare mesh roi ILVU I W \i and diamond mesh fencing for sale. T f- '.a mitnn in Knllo sinnt-ntn !n ~ ■**\ nn a *■<« j_ .1 • • It is put up in rolls containing 10, It's new,clean Btock, bought by us at manufacturer's sale and now offered at 80 per cent less than regular prices. Better buy new while our stock lasts. We have but a limited supply for sale and orders are rolling in. } and 30 rods to a roll. Rubberized Galvo Roof lng,$l.25 £ The best ready roofing on the market. Its base is pure mineral wool and genuine asphalt. No tar, resldium orotuer injurius matters used in the construction of this roofing. It is positively guaranteed to give lasting service. We have it in three grades, 1-ply at $1.25 per square; 2-pl't at $1.40 per square audop/// at ©l.yS per square. By a square we mean 108 so*, ft. or sufficient to lay a square. Our price in- cludes nails, caps and cement to make the laps. At this price we prepay the freight in full to your railroad shipping point t- all points east of Colorado except Oklahoma or Texas. Prices to those points on request. 'UBBEBIZEg GAUVO ' Roofing Barbed Wire, $1.80 for 80 Rod Reel wire with the 1 0, 000 reels of this wire for sale. It's the best gal- vanized mat 1 erlal on the market. It is made of No.14 barbs S in. apart. It has all the strength of the regular grades of barged wire, but is lighter and costs less for transportation. Each ns exactly 80 rods, so that you know just to buy. It is not sold by the weight. It is made of high-grade tempered steel wire, with the proper tensile strength, and built for barbed wire purposes. You can't go wrong if you buy it. Each reel Nvrlghs about 55 Ids. Our price, per reel of 80 rods. $1.80 Iron Pipe, 3c Per Foot Wrought Iron Pipe with couplings. Thoroughly overhauled and practical for further service; in ran- dom lengths. Prices per foot: Y* In. Sc, V in. 2&e, 1 in. 8Kc, IX in. 4^c, 1% In. 6&c, 2 in. r^c, «M In. HKc 3in- 15c, 41n. Kile. Larger sizes in proportion. Our high grade lap welded light weight iron pipe, with new threads and couplings Is the best used pipe material ever offered. Satisfaction guaranteed. DOORS 40c: WINDOWS 29 GENTS Bargains of all kinds. Our special catalog shows a marvelous aggregation of bargains. Yon can't be right until you have a copy of It. Here are some quotations from our new price maker. Barn Sash 8(!c; Storm Sash 70cj Stall Sash 21e; Hot Bed Sash $1.55; Win- dows 50c; Panel Doors 80c; Glass Doors $1.75; Window Frames 01.25; Door Frames 50c; Base angles 2c; Corner Blocks 2c: Base Blocks 8Jic; Inside Trim 60c: Plate Rails 6c: Stair Newels $1.85: Stair Ralls 7c; Porch Balusters Civ; Porch Rail 8c. PAINTS, 30o GAL. This is our high grade Pre- mier ready-mixed paints put up In strong sbstantlal cans and packages. >.o better mixed paint on the market at this price. We can furnish it in all colors. Covered by a binding guarantee. Barn paints 80c per gal. Cold water paints 8c a lb. GALVANIZED FENCE WIRE, $1.50 PER 100 LBS. At this price we supply ■ ■.■■ «ww —~>vm ouf new g a i van j Z ed wire shorts. They are put up 100 pounds to the bundle. By shorts we mean wire that comes in lengths, rn ng- ing anywhere from 60 to 200 ft. It Is good for all general pur- poses. We can supply it in all guuges. Onr price on guages 1 1, 12andll $1.50 per 100 lbs. BB telephone wire 60 lb. colls, No. 12, $3.85 per hundred lbs.; No. 14, $8.10 per 100 lbs. Order today. FREE CATALOG COUPON Chicago House Wrecking Co- Send me free of all charge your )»*•«»« ilin^ated Catalog. I ttaw jour advertisement ii ^OOttfrB Plant" 166 Name Town Coonif ■ Stat* H. F. It.. P- O. Bom. KITCHEN SINKS, $1.40 That's the price of an 18x80 white enameled, cast Iron, flat rim kitchen sink. (Vo have bluesteel enameled kitchen sinks In one piece, seamless, size 18 x30at?5e. Kitchen sinks with backs from $4.00 up. White enameled Wash Stands or Lavatories at 84.00 up. A Lowdown Water Closet outfit with a white enameled tank, latest) and best closet tank manufactured. Com- plete with hardwood seat and necessary nickel-plated fittings, vitreous wash-down closet bowl, $11.00, Hogtroughs,*! 50 Extra strong, made of heavy Ji In. boiler steel. Best shaped tank manu- factured; absolutely in- destructible, cloan and sanitary. All metal, well rlvited, stands strong and firm on the ground. Satis- faction guaranteed. Regu- lar price 82.50 to 85.00. Our prices $1.50 to $2.75. How to Answtr This Advertisement Read carefully all we have to say about the different articles offered for sale. We would advise you to send us your order at once. We will ship CO. D. where a deposit of 25% in cash accompanies the order, balance to be paid after material reaches destination. If, hewever, you do not wish to order at once, then we suggest that you tear this advertisement out ot the paper, cross Ruch items on the ad as interests you most, fill in the coupon to the left and mail it to us, and we will give you more detailed informa- tion. If you do not wish to mutilate the page, just write us where you saw thli advertisement and just what items interest you most, and we win send you free of all cost our Catalog with full detailed Information. A postal card will do the work. Write us fully today. Our Wonderful Catalogue! We publish a catalog showing Illustrations and full descriptions of all the various stocks that we have for sale. It wilt be mailed free of cost to anyone answering this advertise- ment and following the directions as noted In the paragraph on the left. You ni'ok to each subscriber who pays $1.00 for a three years' sub- scription to the Southern Planter and s?nd ten cents to cover postage. 102 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, Farm Management. WORK FOR THE MONTH. When we wrote our article "Work for the Month" for the January issue (21st December last), we remarked upon the wonderful spring-like character of the weather. We had barely got the matter on the press when we had for the time of the year an almost unprecedented snow storm; for fourteen hours the snow fell continuously over all the State and covered the ground to the depth of fifteen inches. The fall was not accompanied with severe cold, but sufficient frost was in the air to keep the snow on the ground for more than a week, though the ground itself was but little frozen. Following the snow' we had, in the early part of January, a sleet storm which did great damage over a limited section of the Eastern part of the State, breaking down trees and build- ings with the weight of the ice coated upon them. Since this passed away the weather has been mild and dry and the land is now in condition to plow except upon the river low grounds. Farmers, we are glad to say, are at last awakening to the importance of utilizing the fall and winter months in plowing land intended to be cropped. We have scores of letters from farmers ^11 over this and adjoining States saying that all or great part of the land they intend to crop this year is already plowed and only waiting the time when it can with advantage be worked and prepared for the seeding of the crop. We have been for years urging this system on the attention of our readers, and it is gratifying to us to know that heed is being taken by so many to what we have said. It is true that there are still thousands who have not yet put a plow into the land since the wheat land was prepared in the fall. To these we would say, you have thrown away a golden opportunity of increasing the pro- ductive capacity of your farm at no cost beyond that of the labor involved, and that you have at the same time wasted grain and long feed in the maintenance of your teams for which thev have marie nn return and that to day the teams are worse unfitted for the labor they will have to do than if they had been steadily working during the winter. During the fall and winter months the team can do a much harder day's work with less wear and tear upon it than at any other season of the year and the work done at that time in the way of plowing and break- ing is much more effective of good to the land than that done at any other season. What nearly all land in the South needs is deeper breaking with the plow and subsoil plow so that the soil which is still practically virgin can be brought up to and mixed with the surface soil and there be exposed to the ameliorating influence of the sun. the air. the frost and the rain. These all working to- gether fit the natural plant food in the soil for the sus- tenance of crops and the deep breaking makes of the subsoil a reservoir to hold the moisture needed to insure successful crop growth during the hot weather. This deep breaking brings up from below* practically a new farm with all its latent possibilities of plant production to take the place of the one which has been giving up its plant food, for in many cases here in Virginia nearly 200 years, and that largely without any artificial help until within the past few years. The new farm thus brought up is in nearly all cases rich in the mineral ele- ments needed for crop production, but they are largely in an unavailable condition. They need exposure to the action of the elements and this for a considerable time to fit them for plant food, and the winter and early spring months are the time when this exposure is most effective for good. Until they have been so exposed and aerated they cannot become the home of that microbic life upon which most largely depends the crop productive capacity of the soil. Land without microbic life in it is "dead land." and dead land will never produce living crops profitably. This microbic life cannot exist in land in which the air and water cannot circulate, and such land is al- most invariably more or less acid or sour, and a sour condition of soil is fatal to microbic life. Whilst the admission of air into the soil and the drainage of water out of it will slowly correct this acid or sour condition. the true remedy for it is the application of lime. All our land needs lime. It has been the means of regenera- tion of the soils of Pennsylvania and Maryland and it will do the same for our lands. We have been for years urging this upon our readers and at last our iteration and reiteration of the subject has compelled attention. More- lime is now being used on the land in this State than ever before in its history and those who have used it all bear testimony to the good effects. We have had a long personal experience in the use of lime and never knew it fail to give results. These results are not always immediately apparent, but they eventually are seen. It should be applied after the land is plowed and at the rate of at least one ton to the acre and twice or three times this quantity will not be an excessive application. 3ut use a ton to the acre at least and then you will correct the acidity and the microbic life will have an opportunity to begin its good work. You will no doubt want to know how this microbic life is to be introduced into the land. Humus in the soil is essential to it's life, and with the introduction of humus the life will begin. The best way to begin this introduction is to spread some farm yard manure or other decayed vegetable matter on the land, even if it be only a ton or two to the acre, and work it in lightly and then to sow a humus making crop like cowpeas on the land and you will soon get all the life needed to revivify the land. If the land is to be planted in corn, let the peas be seeded in the corn at the last working and then sow crimson clover amongst the peas after the corn is cut, and in the spring following turn the whole crop down and the microbic life in the land will multiply and flourish and the crop producing capacity of the land will rapidly increase even without the use of commercial fertilizer, though it is usually advisable to use some acid phosphate on the land for a few years to ensure the growth of the legumes until the natural supply of phosphoric ' acid in the soil becomes available through the action of the vegetable acids of the crops turned under and the working of the microbes in the soil. You cannot get this microbic life in the soil by the application of commercial fertilizers. The best 1909.] THE SOUTHERN" PLANTER. 103 they can do towards this end is to provide sufficient plant food to produce a crop worth turning under. Do not delay the beginning of this deep plowing, as it is essen- tial that the new soil brought, to the surface should have all the exposure to the weather possible before be- ing seeded in any crop. If it has not this exposure it will not produce a satisfactory crop the first year. If circum- stances are such that you cannot do this deep plowing not later than the middle of March, then do not attempt it this year, but plow only an inch or two deeper than previously plowed and break the subsoil and leave it in the bottom of the furrow to be turned up at the next plowing in the fall. This breaking of the subsoil, how- ever, is very essential, as it will enable the soil to hold the necessary moisture for the best doing of the crop and will permit any excess of moisture to drain away. Do not turn the furrows completely over, but leave them on edge so that the new and old soil can be better mixed in the process of working the land for the crop. Do not plow when the land is so wet that the soil will not leave the mould board in a crumbly condition, nor when there is frost in the land. The location of the different crops should be determined as soon as possible so that the land required for each be prepared and fitted for seeding in proper time. This brings up the question of rotation of crops, which is one of the most important in the whole farm economy. The neglect of a proper system of rotation in the past is one great cause of the poverty of our lands and its intro- duction now will be one of the quickest and surest means of their recuperation, and also the first step in the way of saving in the great outlay for fertilizer, now one of the heaviest drains upon our farmers. Rotation of crops as a means of maintaining the fer- tility of land has in the past mainly rested upon the principle that one class of crops calls for and denudes the land of one kind of plant food whilst another class draws heavily upon other elements of fertility and permits of the recuperation of the supply of the fertility withdrawn in excess by the former crop. Where only one crop or one class of crops, lik^ cereals, are 'grown continuously, the result is an unbalancing of the plant food in the soil and hence a failure sooner or later in production. Whilst there is no doubt that there is great force in this reason- ing, as is evident from practical results everywhere, ex- cept it may be in rich bottom land subject to overflow, where the deposit o£ new soil on the land at frequent' intervals keeps up the balance of plant food, yet recent research has given considerable support to the theory that plants have a toxic or poisonous effect on the land and that the production for several years in succession on the same land of the same crop will so fill the soil with these poisonous exudations as to render it incapa- ble of producing this crop profitably and hence compel the planting of some other crop of a different family upon which this poisonous element has no injurious effect. Whichever may be the true explanation of the effect of a one-crop system of farming the conclusion is certain that it results sooner or later in failure and that the only way in which fertility can be maintained and profitable crops be produced is a system of rotation which shall each year bring upon the land a different crop and prefer- ably a crop of a different family. Grain should follow grass, and clover and the legumes — peas and clover — follow the grain and roots and vegetables follow the le- gumes and these be succeeded by the grasses and clovers. Two cereal or grain crops should not follow each other without a recuperating crop, like peas or clover, inter- vening, nor should one root crop like Irish potatoes Ruta- bagas, turnips, or beets, be succeeded by a like crop. Wherever the system of rotation has been strictly en- forced you find fertile land and great crops and this is one cause of the large yields per acre produced in Eng- land. In that country an occupier of land who fails to observe the strict course of rotation laid down by the owner is required to quit. There we find an average yield per acre of thirty-two bushels of wheat over the whole country, and like great yields of other crops which in itself is an abundant evidence of the soundness of a system of rotation. Wherever the system has been estab- lished here we find like good results. Whether the rota- tion should be a long one or a short one depends greatly on the character of the land and local markets, and must be decided by the farmer himself. Usually, on a light soil, a short rotation, say of three years, is best, whilst on a heavy soil a rotation extending over five or six or even seven years is often the best, as these lands are more costly to work under arable cultivation, and pro- duce grass and clover crops much more successfully than the light lands, and the extra cost of their cultivation has to be recouped out of the hay and pasture produced. Now is the time to start a proper rotation suited to the soil, locality and crops to be produced, and we would urge that attention be given to the subject and a system be started which will give a different crop on each field each year from that grown the previous year. In this way bigger crops can be produced at legs cost, the work of the farm be more equally distributed, the variety of products be greater and the risk of failure of crops be reduced. It is a rare season when every crop is a fail- ure. With the advantages we possess in our long seasons, we can practically secure the benefit of a long system of rotation in half the time that our Northern friends can do, as we can grow a recuperating legume crop in the same year as a sale crop, and this advantage ought not to be lost sight of in starting a rotation. In this way the area of land to be worked can be reduced, and inten- sive rather than extensive farming be done. It is the big crop on the small area which makes the profit. The question of the fertilizer which will be required for the production of the crops to be grown is a matter calling for immediate attention so that the goods may be ordered and be on hand when needed and thus no delay happen in the seeding of the crop. This question of fer- tilizer is a serious one for Southern farmers. Over $100,- 000,000 worth of commercial fertilizer is used by the farm- ers of this country each year, and a very large proportion of this is used in the South. We believe it is well within the truth to say that one-fourth of this results in no profit to the farmer. This is not because these commercial fer- tilizers do not contain the necessary elements of fertility, but because they are not mixed properly to meet the re- 104 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, quirements of the soil and crops, or are not used properly. In several recent issues and in this one the proper com- pounding of fertilizers to meet the needs of different crops and soils has been fully discussed, and if our read- ers have followed these articles carefully they should be now in a position to igo into the market and buy their fertilizers intelligently and save money in doing so. Whilst there is no doubt much less reliance placed by farmers, now on mere names of brands of fertilizers than formerly, and more men buy on the analysis than on the name, there is yet room for great improvement in this respect. Always remember that there is nothing in the name which will make the crop grow; it is all in the analysis shown on the bag. If this does not show that the goods con- tain the plant food in the proportions required by the soil and crop, the name will noit make the result satisfactory. A very large percentage of the mixed goods sold are of very low grade probably more than half the mixed goods sold in the South are 2-8-2 goods or proportions near these figures. To buy these low grades is to waste money. Two per cent, of ammonia and 2 per cent, of potash used at the rate of 200 or 300 pounds of the goods to the acre, cannot possibly be of any advantage to the crop. What can four pounds of ammonia or four pounds of potash spread over an acre of land do towards making a crop grow? And yet, the putting of these small quantities of these elements in the goods enables the maker to charge more for them, and the farmer pays this and gets no re- turn for his money. It is the phosphoric acid — the 8 per cent. — which helps the crop, and this being so, why not buy just a plain acid phosphate and get it for less money and thus be able to use it more plentifully. Phosphoric acid is no doubt the mineral element most largely needed in our lands. The ammonia the farmer can produce for himself by growing cowpeas, crimson clover and the vetch- es and the potash* except for Irish potatoes and tobacco is rarely needed in our lands East of the Blue Ridge. The use of lime on the land will make sufficient of that already in the land available for the best growth of all staple crops. Then why buy these two ingredients? Farm yard manure ought to be the basis of all the fertilizer used and ought to be the main reliance of every farmer. It can be usefully supplemented by phosphoric, acid, as it lacks this element to be a properly balanced fertilizer. The use of forty or fifty pounds of acid phosphate with each ton of manure will make it nearly twice as effective as a crop producer. Farmers will persist in saying that they cannot get the farm yard manure. This is because they do not try sufficiently. Wherever a pair or two of horses and a few cows and calves or feeding steers are kept and a few hogs, if they are properly fed and bedded, enough manure can be made which, with the addition of the acid phosphate we have suggested, will suffice to cover the average area of land planted in corn on a farm where that quantity of stock is kept, and this will give a better crop than the use of any mixed fertilizer which can be bought and will be used profitably, whilst mixed fertilizers can rarely be used with profit on staple crops. The place where these fertilizers can be used profitably is on crops like tobacco. Irish potatoes and other truck crops, where the relative value is high in proportion to the crop raised. On these crops, when the proper propor- tions of the ingredients used is observed to meet the requirements of the crop and the soil, they can be used with profit if there be in the land a sufficient supply of humus to make it sufficiently retentive of moisture to make the fertilizer available. The richer the land is in humus, the more effective will be the fertilizer. Nitrate of soda can frequently be used with advantage as a top dressing on grain crops and grass land intended to be mown. It should be applied at the rate of 75 to 100 pounds to the acre after the crop commences to grow in the spring and will often pay well used in this way. la our next issue we propose to write fully on fertilizing for the tobacco crop. Oats or oats and Canada peas may be sown this month if the land can be got into good order. The fall is the proper time to seed oats in the South if the best results are to be obtained, but oats seeded in February on land well prepared will usually make a fair crop unless the hot weather sets in very early. Much of this spring seeded crop is used for a hay or forage crop and cut be- fore the seed ripens and makes excellent feed. If the crop can be got in early in the month, the Virginia Gray Winter oat may be sown with a fair prospect of success, but later than this the Texas Rust-Proof is more to be re- lied upon. The Burt and the Appier, two newer varie- ties, may be sown in March, as- they are more quickly maturing, but they will not make the yield that the Gray Winter or the Texas Rust-Proof will. The Burt is the quickest maturing variety, but the oats are very light. Prepare the land well, and if not in a state of good fer- tility apply 250 or 300 pounds of acid phosphate per acre, sow two or two and a half bushels of seed to the acre, and cover well. Drilling the seed is better than broadcast sow- ing, as it can then be put well down into the ground, and this is essential if the crop is to make the best yield, as the plant is a cold climate plant and wants to grow in cool land. A top dressing of nitrate of soda applied at the rate of 75 or 100 pounds to the acre after the crop has commenced to grow freely will greatly add to the yield usually. In the mountain sections of the Southern States oats may be seeded up to the end of March. Oats and Canada peas sown together make an excellent early grazing crop for hogs and sheep, and a good hay crop if cut just as the peas begin to ripen. This is a cold climate crop and to succeed in the South should not be sown later than the end of this month east of Piedmont Virginia and in Eastern North Carolina. In the mountain sections the crop may be sown in March. The peas should be first drilled in or sown broadcast, if a drill is not avail- able, and should be covered to the depth of four or five inches. Sow at the rate of one and a half to two bushels to the acre. The oats should then be sown at the rate of one or one and a half bushels to the acre and be well har- rowed in. The crop will be ready for grazing by the mid- dle or end of April or early in May and can be cut for hay in May or June. It must be got off the land before the warm weather sets in or mildew will soon destroy it. The crop can then be succeeded by a cowpea crop and thus two good forage crops can be got off the land before time to sow a fall or winter corn crop. An experiment made last year by Messrs. T. W. Wood 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 105 & Sons. Seedsmen, of this city, demonstrated that it is possible to grow two crops of oats in one year on the same piece of land if the fall is a fine, late one. The winter oat crop seeded in September will come off in time to allow of a spring or summer seeded oat crop to ma- ture after it. There is, of course, some risk of the second crop not germinating and growing off well in the summer aud also of cold weather coming on too early to permit of its maturing, but the two crops have been grown. It may be tried experimentally, but we would not advise more than this as yet. It is much safer to follow the first ■crop with cowpeas or cowpeas and sorghum, or with a millet crop, any of which are to be relied upon to mature and make a profitable crop. Rape may be sown this month for a grazing crop for hogs and sheep. The land should be prepared finely, as the seed is very small, and if not rich, should have either some manure or fertilizers worked in. Acid phosphate and potash is the best fertilizer to use, say 250 pounds of acid phosphate and 50 pounds of muriate of potash per acre. The crop may be sown either in drills two feet, six inches apart to allow of cultivation, or broadcast. It makes the heaviest crop sown in drills and cultivated once or twice. Sow two or three pounds of seed to the acre in drills, or four or five pounds broadcast. Sow the Dwarf Essex variety. This crop is only a grazing crop. It cannot be made into hay or be put into the silo. It is a splendid food for hogs and sheep and lambs. Grass and clover not sown in the fall, which is the best time, may be sown this month and the next. Where the seed is to be sown on a fall seeded grain crop, the grain crop should be harrowed over first to break the crust and freshen the land. This harrowing will help the grain crop considerably. Use a sharp toothed harrow. Sow the grass and clover seed immediately after the harrowing and again run the harrow over, and then, if the land is dry enough, roll it. If the land is not in a good state of fertility, a top dressing of bone meal at the rate of 300 or 400 pounds to the acre harrowed in, with the seed will help materially to secure a stand. Sow two bushels of grass seed to the acre and eight or ten pounds of mixed red clover and alsike. For a meadow sow a mixture of orchard grass, tall meadow oat grass, red top and meadow fescue. For a pasture add to these Virginia blue grass. Where the grass is to be seeded on land not already sown with a grain crop, sow the grass and clover seed alone and you will be much more certain to secure a stand and will get a crop to cut in the fall, which will not be the case if you sow grain with it. The land should be well and deeply prepared and should be made rich with ma- nure and fertilizer, and a light dressing of lime worked into the land after it is plowed will help materially. After the lime is applied and harrowed in, let lay for a week before applying manure or fertilizer. Then work these in using 300 or 400 pounds of bone meal or acid phosphate per acre with the manure, if you have it. Sow the quantity and variety of seed mentioned above, har- row in and roll. Top dress wheat and winter oats with farm yard ma- nure, if you can spare it. Spread thinly with a manure spreader, a few tons will cover an acre sufficiently to greatly help the crop. A top dressing of manure will also greatly help in a meadow intended to be mown. With the manure mix acid phosphate at the rate of forty or fifty pounds to the ton, and it will greatly increase the yield of hay. Tobacco plant beds should be burnt as soon as possi- ble, and should then be worked fine to the depth of two or three inches, and a good dressing of a rich plant bed fertilizer be applied and the seed be sown and rolled in. Provide good drainage around the bed and cover at once with plant bed muslin to keep out the bugs, or they will take the plants as soon as they appear. SOME COMMENTS ON THE JANUARY ISSUE. Fertilizers. Editor Southern Planter: I think that Mr. Hicks overlooks the fact that the phosphoric acid and potash in the clover all came from the soil, while the larger part of the nitrogen came from the air, so that in his calculation for. fertilizing the corn crop he is losing this phosphoric acid and potash in his estimate of the needs of the corn crop. Of course, if the clover *is returned to the soil the corn will get this pot- ash and phosphoric acid, but if we deduct it in the fer- tilizer we will be decreasing the amount in the soil. Hence we should look to the demands of the corn crop for phosphoric acid and potash without reference to that in the clover, which came from the soil. In a soil abound- ing in phosphorus and potassium, Mr. Hick's formula would work all right, but if, as is the general rule, the legumes are removed for hay, we must look to the ma- nure to be returned for most of the nitrogen, while there will be a loss of potash and phosphorus. But in most of our old soils there is an actual deficiency in these min- eral elements, and it seems to me that the most profit- able use for the phosphoric acid and potash is in the encouragement of the legume crop, thus getting more forage and more manure-making. The New York Station demonstrated that the early potato crop could only use certain amounts of the three plant foods, and said that the Long Island potato growers were using an unneces- sary amount. But when the formula of the Station was used alongside the old formula of the potato giowers, it was seen that the growers were wiser than the doctors, and their unnecessary amount was more profitable than the formula worked out in the laboratory. While the legumes will certainly give us a great deal of nitrogen, the most profitable use for them is as food for stock, getting the feeding value before returning it to the soil. We need more manure making from good forage in the South than figuring out fertilizer formulas by the analy- sis of the crops, for these will seldom work out in field practice. Deep Preparation. / T. P. H. shows briefly and to the point the value of deep preparation of the soil. With a deep bed of loose soil to hold the water instead of letting it run down hill and make gullies, one can work a corn or a cotton crop 106 THE SOUTHEEK" PLANTER [February, with little summer rain, for with shallow and constant cultivation he can conserve the water that the soil gets in the winter and early spring, after the same manner that the dry farming does in the arid West. And yet, we find that a Southern agricultural college professor has heen trying to persuade the farmers that deep plow- ing and subsoiling are not only needless, but damaging. Fortunately, the Southern farmers downed him with their experiences. They have learned better and the im- proving farmers are not going to hark back into the old ruts. Plows. It seems after all that the disc plow will plow sod and trashy land. I am glad to know this, though, personally, I have had hardly any experience with disc plows, and, like Mr. Ruffin, thought that they were not made for this sort of plowing. And that team of Mr. Rufnn's! The hardest clay's work I ever did was with a team of that sort, with an old Pratt and Dlavis plow, and, with that long team and heavy plow, I was about as tired a man as ever worked. I have found that for general pur- poses three heavy mules abreast is an easier team to manage and can do about the same work as four hitched tandem. I hope the experiences given with the disc plow will help Mr. Ruffin. 'Corn Cultivation. Mr. Grizzard is evidently "sot in his ways." Doubt- less, his horses will eat the salted hay with relish, but all the same it does not help the curing. I had rather let the horses have salt than to interfere with the proper curing of my hay by salting it. But as to the corn, what is the advantage of cutting off its feeding roots and put- ting a strain on the plant to form more? "The advan- tage of one row of corn borrowing and returning plant food from another row" is that the plant is in its nor- mal and most thrifty condition, and any root pruning of any plant is a check to its growth and development Cutting off the only part of a corn plant's roots that are getting food from the soil certainly stops for a time at least the getting of food by the cut roots, and the formation of more root hairs is a tax on the energy of the plant which should be better devoted. If fertilizers are put in the furrow the roots soon get past it, and if the rows can reach over and borrow what is left in another so much the better for the crop. Mr. Jackson has well shown the results of root pruning. Then we may go further and show by experiments that have been made at a number of Southern stations that the common practice of topping and stripping is labor thrown away, for the loss of corn will usually pay more than the value of the fodder saved, and the farmer has his labor for nothing. Lime. This is a perennial subject. Mr. Stockwell has found that lime will not make poor land rich. But lime can be made an important thing in the improvement of our lands if used judiciously. Mr. Stockwell is right in think- ing bone meal too expensive. I had rather get, the phos- phoric acid needed in acid phosphate, slag meal or floats t T sing the Thomas slag as a means for encouraging the growth of the legumes, one will get about all the lime needed and get it in a very nice form, for aside from the per centage of phosphoric acid contained in the slag the remainder is all lime and iron oxide. Land that is deficient in humus is seldom helped at once by liming, but after one has gotten the legumes to grow well he can use lime to advantage, and as-the Thomas slag is sold on the baaiis of its phosphoric acid content, we can get the lime practically free of cost. If the tariff revis- ers will be wise enough to put this slag on the free list it will be of great advantage to our farming, since the most of it is imported. But what the steel trust will have to say is another question, since tariffs are usually made to suit those who are benefitted by them, and not for the people in general. Pure Bloods. Mr. Gates is a man after my own heart. He does not believe in dual-purpose cows, and neither do I. If I wanted a bird dog I would certainly not get a bull dog, for while he may be a good watch dog, that big nose would never trail a covey of birds. If one's interest is in milk and butter he should have the best possible machine for mak- ing milk and cream, and if he wants the best beef he will never top the market with a Jersey steer. Just to the extent that a beef breed animal is developed into dairy character to that extent it is a poorer beef animal. There has been a little discussion as to whether the "Dod- dies" will give milk enough to raise a oalf, but that is not so important as the fact that they top the beef mar- ket more frequently' than other breeds. They are built that way. And when a man who is interested in beef ridicules the Jerseys and says that the calves are worth- less I have only to say that from a dairyman's point of view the calves are no object except for raising more and better cows. The dairyman cannot afford to lose $50 worth of milk for the sake of a $5 calf for veal. W. F. MASSBY. IMPROVING A FARM. Editor Southern Planter: I have a long letter from a young man who writes that he has engaged to manage a large farm in the Southern Piedmont cotton section for a man of means, who is a lawyer and not a farmer. "He has tried for years to manage the farm with negro tenants, mostly old family servants and their descendants, with the usual results of gullied fields and abandoned broom sedge. . . . Through a mutual friend he learned that I was looking for a place to go into stock and grain farming, and I have contracted with him for a year, the contract to be exended indefin- itely if we agree. We have gotten tools and team to- gether, and I shall plow the corn land as soon as practi- cable with a three-horse disc plow, following with a sub- soiler. The soil is mainly reddish with a red clay sub- soil, while parts are grey and lighter, with some loose rocks. . . . How, when and how much shall I fertilize and how far apart? Shall sow to peas and follow with grain. The land for cowpeas is grey cotton land. What fer- tilizer for the peas. Shall plant an acre in sweet and one in Irish potatoes. Have sown five acres in rye for pasture, but it was sown late and is just coming up. Will it amount to much? Have fine fertile bottom land that I wish to get into Bermuda grass for stock next 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 107 year. The owner never read a farm paper in his life, but knows that he has been on the wrong track. I am used to Southern conditions, and have lived six years in Cuba, and though I know you are a busy man I hope that you will advise me." This is about the gist of half a dozen sheets of letter paper. The young man has evidently undertaken a large contract to improve a Piedmont farm of 1,200 acres. It reminds me very much of the time when I undertook a similar job with the same number o>f acres. But, like all Southern men, the first question is what fertilizer and how much. Our Southern farmers have gotten into a notion that the only way to grow crops is to use com- mercial fertilizer for their direct production. In the case before me our friend is obliged to show some results at once, seeing that he has made a conditional contract. He is right in the preparation of that land for corn, only do not turn it too deep at once, but let the subsoiler do most of the deepening now. The making of a deeper loose bed for the retention of the rain will of itself have a decided influence on the production of corn this year. While in all the experiments I have made I have found that it seldom pays to use a complete fertilizer on corn at the average price of the crop, nevertheless, in this case, I would start with some fertilizer and endeavor to get that land into a regular rotation, and grow forage for feeding. You do not say whether you intend to grow cotton at all. "While you are right in trying to make a grass and stock farm in that section I do not think that any man in a cotton growing section should ignore the cotton crop. I would put the roughest of the land into a permanent pasture, but I would not put Bermuda on the fertile bottoms. On these I would use the hay- making grasses to better advantage, and make a perma- nent upland pasture of Bermuda. On the bottoms I would sow a mixture of grasses for hay. Sow ten pounds of tall meadow fescue, five pounds red top and ten pounds of tall meadow oat grass per acre. This will be liberal seeding, and the seed should be sown in eafly spring, either alone or with a small seeding of oats. I would prefer to sow the grass seed alone. After sowing the grass seed I would scatter ten pounds of red clover per acre and go over with a smoothing narrow. Now, as to the corn, I would use this season a mixture of 1.000 pounds of acid phosphate, 700' pounds of cotton seed meal, and 300 pounds of muriate of potash to make a ton, and of this use 400 pounds per acre broadcast. After the corn is up I would apply alongside it 100 pounds of nitrate of soda per acre to give it a send off. Plant the corn in four-foot rows and two feet apart in the row This has been found the most profitable distance in North Carolina. Harrow the corn over before coming up, and as soon as up go over with a weeder both ways, and then use the riding cultivator with two mules and culti- vate as level and shallow as practicable. While the ap- plication of the fertilizer will increase the crop, I do not think that when you get to making more manure it will be profitable to use commercial fertilizers on the corn crop. I would suggest that you adopt a strict rotation for all your upland, devoting the bottoms to hay alto- gether. Sow peas among the corn and cut the corn off at the ground and cure in shocks, and disc the peas down and sow either wheat or winter oats, without re- plowing the land. Keeping the dead pea vines near the surface where they will act as a winter protection will be better. Follow this wheat crop with cow peas to be mown for hay, and disc the stubble and work in 400 pounds of acid phosphate and twenty-five pounds of muri- ate of potash, and seed to wheat or oats again. Follow this crop with peas again and sow crimson clover on the stubble. Turn this clover in spring for cotton and cul- tivate as advised for the corn, and in fall sow crimson clover among the cotton. During the winter haul out all the manure made from the feeding of the peas, cot- ton seed meal (which you can get in exchange for seed) and corn stover, and plow all under for corn in the spring and then repeat the rotation. After you have gotten so far along with the stock that you can make manure enough to cover the entire corn field with manure you will have the farm right where you can increase the crops rapidly. Stick to the rotation and you will in a few years find that the only commercial fertilizer you will need to buy will be acid phosphate and potash to apply to the peas, leaving the peas and the manure to do the rest. A well manured corn field will certainly grow a fine crop of small grain after the corn with the aid of peas in the corn, and the liberal use of acid phosphate on the wheat will give you a good crop of peas after the small grain. I believe that winter oats will be more profitable, espe- cially on a stock farm, than wheat, as you will need the oats in any event, and by making the stock and the cot- ton the sale crops you can make more from the other products by feeding. In short, I would put everything but the cotton into a more saleable shape than by sell- ing the raw products. I would use the corn largely for ensilage, the oats fed in the sheaf and the hay also fed either to beef cattle or dairy cows as is most profitable, and would try to make more cotton per acre than was ever made in that neighborhood. Leaving out the cotton crop, this is just about what I have done on a large stock farm and made it pay from the start. Forage making and and stock feeding are the foundation of all rational farm improvement. W. F. MASSEY. THE KIND OF PLOW TO COVER GREEN MANURING CROPS, AND THE KIND OF GREEN MANURING CROPS TO COVER. Editor Southern Planter: The Syracuse Plow Company is right in recommending plows of larger capacity than such as are in common use in the South for turning down green manuring crops. However, a plow that cuts ten inches and turns an inch or two wider is large enough to do good work with two average Southern horses or mules hitched to it, provided the crop is combed down with a spike harrow the way it is to be plowed. The old No. 2 "Dixie" did tolerably good work, but it was too clumsy and the mold board did not reach far enough over the furrow for just that kind of work. The "shin" of the "Oliver" is too abrupt to do such work well. But a plow built on the lines of the "Syracuse" steel beam, one horse, No. 457, and made large enough to cut ten inches, would be just the thing, and I have several times thought I would ask the Syracuse Plow Company to make such a plow for turning down 108 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, green manuring crops or for any purpose requiring- a broad, shallow furrow turned over flat as when a clean surface rather than a deep loosening of the soil is the object. With the class of work I have in mind a rolling coulter or a disc is not to be thought of much less a"jointer." Take, for instance, a rank growth of rye and sand vetch or a heavy growth of Wonderful peas or Velvet beans. No plow, no matter how large, could cover such until they were first harrowed down. Then it is essential that such a mass be covered as shallow as possible. To work at all, a jointer would have to go as deeply as it would be right to run even the plow itself. For were it possi- ble to use a jointer in such a tangled mass of vines without choking, the depth the plow would have to go, would be ruinous as the green vegetation would surely sour in warm weather. In the interest of morality, the fewer contraptions like a jointer or a weed hook you have on a plow the better; for turning down a rank growth of vines in summer is patience-trying work at best. In a word, the plow for such a purpose ought to have a long, low shin, a very ample mould board reach- ing well over the furrow, an extra high standard and deep throat, as with a steel beam, so it will turn and carry over a shallow slice of soil and place it bottom upwards over the mass of vegetation and not choke. A revolving coulter or a disc would be lifted out of the ground by vines such as I have described. I know some people will take issue with me about turning down such fine feed and call it waste and say it would be better to mow it and cure it and haul it into the barn and feed it out and haul back the manure and spread it evenly. etc., etc. To which I answer, no; not while such a poor class of labor as we have demands. $1 or even $1.25 per day and the poor white acres demand humus. It took years to rob these fields of their vegetable matter and no half-way measures or half-hearted effort will re- store it. Better wait until the land is fertile again be- fore removing anything, found. It pays no farmer to cul- tivate poor land. The restoration of humus to the soil is the whole "law and the prophets" and the "gospel" too of farming here in the South. JOSHUA FRANKLIN. Moseley Co., Ala. FERTILIZER PROBLEMS. Editor Southern Planter: Your correspondent from New Kent, Mr. H. T. Faunt Le Roy, has asked some questions which may be more properly referred to the political economist than the prac- tical farmer, who deals with conditions as they are, with- out much thought of the welfare of future generations. The question as to the necessity of applying mineral fertilizers or eventually facing an exhausted farm has been answered by many writers in the affirmative, yet the inquirer has only to enlarge his view point, and consider a moment to see that such a position is untenable. This world of ours has been producing vegetation for many years. We have written history to that effect cov- ering about four thousand years, and deposits of coal made from vegetable growths which ante-date written history many, many generations, and yet, we have only to abandon land where rainfall and sunshine are com- bined in the proper proportions for nature to resume her sway, and cover it with vegetation. It is also true that were we to depend upon the phosphoric acid and potash supplied by our mines for all the grain and hay and fruit and vegetables annually consumed on the earth, it would require millions of men to mine and manufacture it, and all the railroads and steamships now in the world would be inadequate for the transportation. It must be evident, then, that there is constantly going on in the ground some disintegration of soil particles, which al- ways has and probably ever will continue to furnish phos- phoric acid and potash in certain limited but well de- defined quantities. That these quantities differ on differ- ent soils, and in differing constituents mark the distinction between poor and fertile land as so frequently pointed out in this Journal. What, then, is the use of commercial fertilizer other than nitrogen? It seems that nature has endowed most lands with the foregoing attributes in sufficient quantity to offset the loss of the mineral elements entailed by the growth of vegetation naturally adopted to the soil and climate, or, if you please, the vegetation has adapted it- self to the ability of the soil to render its accumulations of minerals available, with the help of the sunshine, the rain, the dew, and frost, but, as a general thing, this gentle annual offering of fertility is insufficient to meet the demands of civilized man, who brings to them only the aid of the elements, and his plow, harrow and cul- tivation, thus hastening nature's process, and enabling him by judicious seeding to greatly augument any nat- ural production, and finally by the direct application to the land of any one or more of the constituent chemi- cals which experience has proven to have fallen behind the others in their power to yield to the afore mentioned treatment. This is the theory generally held by agriculturists, and of the many elements entering into plant nutrition, car- bon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, potassium, magnesium, phosphorus, iron, sulphur and chlorin, three stand out pre- eminently as those which nature soonest tires of furnish- ing — nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium — and these it is the province of the manufacturer of fertilizers to supply in such form as to be readily soluble in water or in the juices of the plant. That the application of these principles has brought suc- cess to many farmers in the Eastern part of the United States is true, and he owes a debt of gratitude to those whose labors and observations have led to this result, but how much greater will be his -obligation to the man who discovers the reason that causes some soils to render their stores more liberally than others' and to point out the means whereby the poorer lands may be permanently transformed or stimulated into the production which now only characterizes the most favored areas. Some work along this line is being done by the Bureau of Soils in Washington, D. C, and while the results obtained have pot reached a stage of practical application as yet, some evidence has been discovered which would seem to prove that the application of fertilizer does not materi- ally alter the composition or proportion of actual plant 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 109 food, but acts rather as a re-ageut to bring about a more favorable environment for the growth of cultivated crops. Further evidence leads to the conclusion that plants dur- ing their growth excrete matter which is deleterious to the production of future crops of similar character, but is not objectionable to plants of a dissimilar family, and thereby explains the benefit derived from a rotation of crops which had formerly been explained by supposing that different plants drew upon the land for different chemi- cal constituents, a position which was not borne out by the chemist, so far as phosphorus and potassium are con- cerned, because all plants, whether cereal or legume, an- nual or perennial, are shown by analysis to depend largely upon these elements for their proper development. Perhaps it is too soon to make any prophesy relative to results which our Secretary of Agriculture has barely alluded to in his annual report. In the meantime the Bureau will have the best wishes of every patriot, whether he be a farmer or otherwise, and its reports will be eager- ly anticipated and carefully studied by every intelligent tiller of the soil. I was much interested in the query of "X" as to the possibility of producing some artificial substitute for sta- ble manure, and while Professor Massey has probably given him the best advice as to the economical restoration of the fertility lacking in his soil, it may be that he has missed the point of the inquiry, and in that case the last word remains to be said. As I understand, "X" is a mer- chant, and has taken up agriculture more as a recreation than a business, in which case what he is after is imme- diate results rather than profitable ones. That he will eventually want to see the balance coming on the right side of the ledger is probable, but many men of means, who buy a run down farm to gratify the inherited tendency to get back close to nature and the soil, which is happily present in every well balanced mind, cares very little about immediate profit, being content to charge up the losses of the first few years to capital invested in the land. To such a man I would say that the thing can be done in many localities without entailing any great cost other than the labor involved in procuring the humus. Stable or ordinary barnyard manure analyses: Nitrogen. .49 per cent; phosphoric acid. .32 per cent.; potash, .43 per cent., and such a combination can be made at the cost of $2.11 per ton for chemicals plus the additional cost of the hu- mus-making materials in several ways, perhaps the most simple of which would be as follows: 61 1-4 lbs. 16 per cent, nitrate of soda = 9.S lbs. of nitrogen, or .49 per cent. 40 lbs. 16 per cent acid phosphate = 6.4 lbs. phosphoic acid, or .32 per cent. 17 1-5 lbs. 50 per cent, muriate of potash =5. 6 lbs. potash. or .43 per cent. 1,881 11-20 lbs. woods mould making one ton of manure analyzing .49 per cent, nitro- gen, .32 per cent, phosphoric acid, and .43 per cent, potash. I have suggested woods mould because, where forests are available, it is the cheapest as well as one of the best sources from whence to obtain humus. Prior to the _war I am credibly informed that some of the planters here in Tidewater who owned large numbers of slaves would keep a man and a horse busy all the winter hauling the accumulation from the forests to the fields, simply for its value as a humus former, and I suppose for the nitro- gen it formed during decomposition, and its value as a covering for the bare soil in winter as well. In composting the fertilizer in question any form of refuse vegetable matter, such as chaff, hay seed, pine shat- ters, leaves, or, in fact, any vegetable matter of little or no value would answer the purpose, the preference given to woods mould, being due to the fact that it is already partly decomposed. If "X" is located in a locality where cotton seed meal is cheap, a compost made with that would be even better than the one suggested, for cotton seed meal analyzing nitrogen .7, phosphoric acid .2, and potash, .3 would need only a slight addition of phosphoric acid and potash to form the bases of a compost not only closely approxi- mating barnyard manure in analysis, but also in its ren- dering of its constituents to the plant by decomposition rather than by direct absorption through being dissolved by the first rain. Dried blood combined with acid phos- phate and potash would also form an excellent source from whence to derive nitrogen for a compost of this character. In fact, either of the last, or any organic source of nitro- gen would be better than nitrate of soda for this purpose. With cotton seed meal analyzing 7-2-3, "X" would need to combine as follows: 148 lbs. cotton seed meal, 22% lbs. 16 per cent, acid phosphate, 8 lbs. 50 per cent, muri- ate of potash, 1,831% lbs. woods mould. With dried blood analyzing nitrogen 10, phosphoric acid 5, he will need practically: 100' lbs. dried blood, 10 lbs. 14 per cent, acid phosphate, 17 1-5 lbs. muriate of potash, 1,872 4-5 woods mould. • I do not think there can be any question as to the power of such a compost to increase the yield of corn, oats, or hay, whether or not it would be profitable would depend upon the character and cost of the woods mould, and the price for which the product could be sold. Here in this county there is hardly a place where the former may not be had for the asking in unlimited quantities, the cost consisting in the labor of gathering and transporta- tion only. PERCIVAL HICKS. Mathews Co., Va. FROM PLANTING TO FARMING. Editoi Southern Planter: It seems hard for the man who has been producing crops on his farm to sell as raw products to be convinced that he can change in part even to live stock production and then by the sale of finished products build up his soil and at the same time secure cash wherewith to pay his farm and family expenses. We agree that it requires a greater amount of thought to handle live stock than is required of the farmer to simply make crops for sale. Any business that spells suc- cess requires more thought than a business that leads to failure, either partial or complete, and any one who has made a careful study of farming conditions all over America will admit that the section or individual farmer that is practicing the sale of products in their raw state is making a partial failure in that the soil — the founda- tion of the farming business' — is slowly, but no less surely, becoming less fertile, and any business that leads to deterl- 110 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, oration of the plant or capital in which the business is conducted is unbusinesslike, to say the least.. The ma- jority of the farmers of our section are coming to realize this fact, I believe. But, as I have said, they fail to see how the change may be made as more or less capital and some time is needed to bring about the change and they are, the great majority of them at least, living right up to their present income. Something must be done, however, as all will admit, I am sure, that having a soil decreasing in fertility one or two things must happen. Either the farmer must be content with less income year by year, or more acres must be brought into use, and as the latter cause cannot be followed from the fact that our land is pretty well taken up at this time, only the former course seems open to the farmer, and this is not to be thought of for a moment by the bright American farmer. He is looking forward to a better living year by year rather than being content with less than he is now receiving. The writer has considered the question pretty thoroughly and has come to the conclusion that with the ordinary poor crop farmer the start in live stock should be made with hogs and cowpeas as the basis, and as time goes on, add a few head of good cattle. The cowipea is, I believe, our greatest soil improver. It is also one of the best forage and grain crops for growing pigs and has the farther advantage of being a quick grower. All the above points recommend this plant to the poor farmer as his best source of food supply. Then the pig is a rapid mover also. Start him off well by April 1st and by the last of August, when the first early peas are ready to turn into he will, be a good big fellow, ready to make good use of the crop, and if a little grass and clover can be supplied to add variety to his ration, he will, by the first of November, be ready to finish off with a month's feeding on corn. This corn, we believe, should be fed to him right out in a field of late peas that have been saved for use at this time; for our experience leads us to think that pigs that have been allowed their freedom all the season do better to continue right along in that way than they do when taken up and confined in a pen. Then, the late peas they secure, furnish in the most economical manner the protein the young growing hogs require to make their most rapid gains on the corn feed. Then, too, the manure made is left in the fields where it can be saved to much better advantage than it can be in any ordinary cheap pen. We know the main drawback to the hog-feeding business is the difficulty experienced in saving the manure resulting from the feeding of rich concentrated food. Let the poor crop farmer purchase a few good sows in March and he can have their produce in the market by the time he could have grown a sale crop on the same land and gotten that ready to market. He will have had his land growing a leguminous crop which fed off on the land has increased the fertility thereof and added a vast quantity of humus thereto, and when through he will find also that he has more hard dollars in his pockets from the sale of the pork than he would have received from the crops or corn or cotton he could have produced on the same amount of land. When the time comes that the farmer is able to handle some cattle on his farm also the profits will be still greater, as the cows will utilize the fodder and pea vines that the hogs cannot use. When this time comes we will hear more of the joys of real farming and less of "dis- tressed cotton" and poor soil. But let the farmer start out with the right quality of stock. Let him beware of the little "dumpy" sow that has a very hard time to pro- duce even three or four little runts of pigs. Get the big, roomy sow, long, thick and deep, with an udder like the keel of a fast-sailing yacht. Then he will be assured of from eight to ten pigs from each sow, and they will be large, growthy fellows a month old when they are born. A small permanent pasture of good grass will be needed for these sows and each should have a little conical shaped house that she may call all her own. Keep the pigs growing from the start on a little shipstuff, corn, crimson clover, rye, and vetch, if you have it, and when the peas and corn have done their work in the fall you will be astonished that you hadn't been into the hog business long ago, yup- plying the splendid markets we have all over the South. We think mighty well of the hog on "Sunny Home Favm," along with the cattle and sheep. A. L. FRENCH. Rockingham Co.. N. C. AN ORANGE COUNTY (N. Y.) FARMER. Editor Southern Planter: Mr. Rupert C. Hart is one of the successful young farm- ers of Orange county, New York, who believes that farm life offers plenty of scope for a young man to show the stuff that is in him. He has a beautiful farm within a quarter of a mile of the Station of East Walden which, from the neat and well kept appearance, proclaims it to be the home of a man in love with; his business. The spacious lawn is shaded by a beautiful sycamore tree which is probably 200 years old and is in such perfect con- dition that it bids fair to be a landmark of the country for the next 200 years. Mr. Hart believes in diversified farming and intensive culture, which he gives to all his crops, and his large yields testify to the correctness of this system. He makes a specialty, however, of dahlias and potatoes. He has many acres of dahlias, which he grows for the wholesale trade, and when they are in bloom it is a sight well worth coming miles to see. On both of the above crops, as well as on his hay fields, he has otbained especially good results from a high pot- ash fertilizer, such as a 4 per cent, nitrogen, 6 per cent, phosphoric acid, and 10 per cent, potash. In order to set- tle the matter and find out just what his soil needed, he decided to conduct an experiment with fertilizer on pota- toes. He took three plots of land of as nearly equal fer- tility as possible. On one he used no fertilizer at all, on the other a mixture of phosphoric acid, nitrogen and pot- ash, while the last received the same amount of phosphoric acid and nitrogen, but no potash. In spite of the very unfavorable season, the results were very decisive. The unfertilized plot gave 10 bushels of potatoes, the plot without potash 120 bushels, while where the complete fertilizer with potash was used the yield was 155 bushels per acre, a gain of 35 bushels, and as he sold them at $1.00' per bushel, it meant $35.00 for the use of about $3.00 worth of potash, or a net gain of $32.00 per acre._ Next year he intends to conduct the same experiment on alfalfa, using in addition lime. To show that on his 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. Ill soil lime is necessary for the best development of the al- falfa plant, he wrote the letters "1 i m e" about three feet wide and ten feet high on one field, using lime to make the letters, and these letters were very apparent from the highway all through the season by the ranker growth of the plants. Every farmer should experiment in this way, until he is satisfied that he is using the most economical fertilizer mixture on his crop and that he is not throwing money away by buying materials which are not needed on his land. C. F. MARSH. ACID PHOSPHATE AND FERTILIZER PROBLEMS. Editor Southern Planter; On page 1060 of December, 1908, number,. Mr. Hicks, in discussing fertilizers, protests against the use of acid phosphate as used in Tidewater: firstly, because they use too much, and secondly, because, in the presence of lime in the soil, the 'acid phosphate tends to unite with the lime to form an insoluble compound. Is this latter a correct statement? If so, is there any practical method of ascertaining whether or not there is lime in the soil? Also, if it is known that there is lime present, in what shape is it possible to supply phosphorous that will not produce this reaction, and thus occasion a useless outlay of money? If this statement of Mr. Hicks is correct, and the addition of phosphoric acid in this shape tends to neutralize the alkalinity of the soil by absorbing the lime, is the addition of potash the proper way to restore it? The addition of more lime would seem to be only a further waste of money, unless some other form of phos- phoric acid does not possess this tendency to unite with lime. And yet, Mr. Hicks, later in the same article, recom- mends the use of a fertilizer containing phosphoric acid, and in his article, page 7, of the January number, figures on "acid phosphate" to fertilize crimson clover without taking into consideration this tendency for acid phosphate to unite with lime. In the case of the mixed fertilizer, the phosphoric acid may not be in the shape of acid phosphate, but in the latter case he specifically says "acid phosphate." I do not feel myself competent to intelligently criticise, and am only asking for information, but it would seem that Mr. Hicks' two articles were inconsistent, for if his statement in the December number is correct he has failed to take account of it in the January calculation. I was just preparing to write you, asking your advice in regard to fertilizing crimson clover for land to be de- voted to garden crops, when the January number arrived, with Mr. Hicks' article on this question which, although he does not actually say so, I take to be authority for the feasibility and advisability of adopting this course, but which does not quite hit my case, because of the different use to which my land will be put, and which also leaves me in doubt on the acid phosphate question, because of Mr. Hicks' previous statement as to its action in the presence of lime. Prior to last year this land had been uncultivated for ten years at least. Last year it was used for garden crops with practically no fertilizer, and gave fair returns. 1 planted inoculated crimson clover about October 1st, and while it has started up very thickly, it has grown but very little. I am not enough of a farmer to know whether this lack of growth during the winter is the usual condi- tion, or due to lack of fertility of the soil, and as, of course, I wish to turn this growth under early In the spring, I am anxious to get as much growth as possible. I had practically decided that I would get, separately, phosphoric acid and potash and, dividing my land into two pastures, use on one part a mixture of these two with the phosphoric acid largely in excess, and on the other part a mixture with potash largely in excess, and would then expect the results to tell me which my land needed most. Is this idea correct? But then comes the question as to the best form in which to get these two fertilizers. Mr. Hicks has scared me as to acid phosphate, which leaves bone as about the only other practical source of phosphoric acid, and T. W. Wood & Sons' catalogue says that bone "should be covered or incorporated with the soil as applied to prevent escape of ammonia, which, of course, I cannot do; while Dreer's catalogue says that it is "excellent for restoring and quickening grass plots," etc., which would seem to indicate that it was proper to use as a tap dressing. In this connection I am led to believe from an article in another magazine, which de- scribes bone as an "insoluble" that it is only through its decay that it becomes available. Is this correct? An- other question: Is either bone meal or ground bone treated in any way. If not, is the difference due only to the fineness? The article above mentioned says that one bushel of bone treated with one-third its weight of H2 05 gives better results than four bushels of bone dust. T suppose this puts it into a form immediately soluble. Is this correct? If so, is it practicable. For potash, there seems to be three practical sources: ashes, kainit and muriate. The above mentioned article puts unleached hardwood ashes first, speaks highly of the other two, but says that the muriate contains chloride, which is liable to injure some root crops, as potatoes and onions, so I should prefer not to take any such cnances. Can you tell me what is actual per cent, of available potash in unleached ashes? I should then be in a position to know which was the cheaper per pound of potash, and should, of course, use that one, unless you can tell me of some objection to its use. I shall be greatly obliged if you will give me at your earliest convenience all the help you can to straighten me out on the questions. They are comparatively new to me, and so I am a seeker of information who is very much interested in this subject, and enjoy very much the articles in the Southern Planter, both by the editor and the contributors. A. W. CHASE. As this enquiry arose out of one of Mr. Hicks' valuable articles, we submitted the same to him with a request that he would reply to it. The following is his reply: In regard to the queries of Mr. Chase, forwarded by you to me for reply, I would say that here in the Tidewater, on our alluvial soils, we have long been confronted by the fact that large, and often repeated applications of acid phosphate, while successful in promoting the growth of peas and clover during the initial stages, will, if con- tinued, gradually bring about a condition of the soil very unfavorable to the growth of the latter. That this was 112 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, due to the direct accumulation of sulphuric acid (H2 S04) was the first conclusion of our most observing farmers, but when one considers that in the manufacture of acid phosphate the custom is to unite phosphate of lime, wherein the phosphorous is combined with two or more molecules of lime in such proportion as to cause, in the resulting mixture a combination of phosphoric acid, with one part of lime, and the formation of gypsum (CA, S04) from the residue, such a theory becomes at once untenable, for gypsum is a material which is commonly used throughout the Northern States to promote the growth of clover, and has presumably much the same action as lime upon the soil, setting free potash and promoting alkalinity. The point I was trying to emphasize, and which called forth the query of Mr. Chase is this: That we are, as a general rule, applying far more avail- able phosphoric acid to our soils than the requirements of the crop, as shown by chemical analysis, would indicate to be necessary, and where we apply phosphoric acid enough to produce, let us say, twenty bushels of wheat per acre, and find our crop to yield only fifteen bushels, that twenty-five per cent, of the phosphoric acid must have been wasted, which would not have been the case had our soils contained potash, and nitrogen enough to grow the twenty bushels of wheat. Now, if phosphorous is the principle element lacking in this soil, and this seems to be true, it by no means follows that because a little is good, a great deal must be better for in this case appli- cations of acid phosphate proportionate to the needs of the crop could probably be supplied indefinitely with beneficial results, but when we apply it at the rate of 300 pounds per acre, while the available potash and nitrogen can only balance about 100 pounds, 200 pounds lies in the soil seeking to form insoluble phosphates in combination with any lime with which it may come in contact, thus causing us to lose the benefit of the acidulation of the rock, as well as to rob our soils of what little free lime they may contain. I have heard it urged in reply to this, that it is possible to get an increase of crop yield by doubling the amount of phosphate applied, over that indicated by analysis, and this is often true, but a little reflection will show that when this is the case it must be due to either one of two conditions, neither of which is compatible with sound business policy: First. The phosphoric acid applied must revert, (that is, unite with lime to form an insoluble compound) before the plant can use it, in which case provided one-half is lost in this way your phosphoric acid is costing you ten cents a pound instead of five cents. Second. The increase of yield must be due to the chemical action of the gypsum in setting free potash, or in promoting alkalinity. Were we sure of the first, we would at once seek some other source of phosphoric acid, preferably an organic one, because such matter is more readily capable of chemical combination, as organic sources of phosphoric acid all depend upon decomposition to render them susceptible to change, which is a process so slow that the plant can, in most cases, take it up quite as fast as it is offered. Were we sure of the second alter- native, and did we desire it, we would, of course, apply limp, or gypum direct, for it can be purchased much cheaper in that form than vvhen combined with phos- phoric acid. It would seem that the laudable efforts of farmers to enrich their lands through excessive applications of acid phosphate are, in the end, more than wasted. In fact, the true use of commercial fertilizers is not to perman- ently enrich the soil, (that can only be done by deep plowing, drainage where necessary, and the formation of humus), but to supply a temporary deficiency of one or more elements in as nearly as possible the exact pro- portion in which they are lacking, and so used, I do not believe there will be any unfavorable result from the use of acid phosphate, no matter how long continued. So much for acid phosphate. Now as regards the pres- ence of lime in the soil, I know of no way to determine this, other than by chemical analysis. Soil alkalinity may be tested with litmus paper, to distinguish it from soil acidity, but this is of no practical value. All the alluvial soils of Tidewater Virginia that I have subjected to test have shown acid reactions, although some of them were growing clover and even alfalfa. The truth of the matter seems to be that a slight acidity will not prevent the growth of legumes, but a large degree of acidity will, and as yet we have no quantitative test, the litmus paper only serving as a qualitative one. Mr. Chase's proposition is a wise and practical one, if he desires to test the needs of his soil. I would advise him to divide his field of crimson clover into four pieces, of equal area; apply to No. 1 150 pounds of 16 per cent, acid phosphate; to No. 2, 100 pounds of 48 per cent, mur- iate of potash; to No. 3, 150 pounds of acid phosphate, and 100 pounds of muriate of potash combined; No. 4, no fertilizer. Do this at his earliest convenience, and when spring has come and gone he will have a pretty good idea of the needs of his particular soil in these constitu- ents. Should he desire to grow potatoes or tobacco on any of this land, the sulphate of potash should be sub- stituted for the muriate. It analyzes about the same per cent, of potash, but is free from the chlorine, which prejudicially affects the quality of the tobacco. I would not advise the purchase of bone meal or any form of phosphorous combined with nitrogen as an application to legumes, although I have seen it used to advantage and profit in growing red clover hay as a sale crop. The true purpose of the legume is to save the farmer the expense of purchasing commercial nitrogen, and while in some cases it may be necessary to have a little in order to carry the young plants along to the stage of providing their own, and in others where hay commands a high price, the result may be financially profitable, yet the practice is not to be commended. In no case where a good stand is already secured to produce a crop for turning under, would I apply anything but phosphorous and potassium. Yes, you are correct in saying that the phosphoric acid in bone meal, like that in all other organic sources, becomes avail- able only through decay. Raw bone meal is untreated chemically, but is, of course, treated mechanically when it is ground. It contains two and a half to four and a half per cent, of nitrogen when pure, hence its greater cost per ton, and greater value. Dissolved bone is raw bone treated with sulphuric acid, just as the acid .phosphate is, it should contain two to three per cent, of nitrogen, and 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 113 fifteen to seventeen per cent, of phosphoric acid, and is no better than a combination of acid phosphate and nitrate of soda, and generally more costly. One ton of raw bone meal would contain eighty pounds of nitrogen and 500 pounds of phosphoric acid, 120 pounds of which or six per cent, is classed as available in the form of a mono- calcium, or di-calcium phosphate, which eventually decom- poses, rendering up phosphoric acid and lime. Acidulated bone contains about fifty pounds of nitrogen, and a total of 340 pounds of phosphoric acid in a ton, 280 pounds of which are available at once, the balance slowly so. The value would depend entirely upon the crop, raw bone having the greatest ultimate value on any slow-growing crop like winter wheat or grass, while the acidulated bone would be far more effective on spring sown oats or truck crops. The best unleached Canada ashes contain about eight per cent, of actual potash, or 160 pounds in the ton. All ashes contain a small per cent, of phosphoric acid as well, and a high per cent, of lime, in some cases very nearly one-half the latter. Where they can be purchased for the content of potasih at five cents a pound, they form a cheap and most excellent source for supplying this constituent, and the phosphoric acid and lime are a clear gain. It is much to be regretted that this problem of fertil- ization should be so complicated. To the average farmer the mass of figures attendant upon an analysis of the plant, the soil, and the fertilizer expressed, as it usually is, in percentages, has little if any meaning, and in my experience the manufacturer and his agent are rarely any better equipped to elucidate the matter. Of course, every manufactory has, or should have, a capable chemist in charge of the work of compounding its goods, and if the buyer can get back to this source for his information, he will generally find out what he wants to know. But the general rule is to buy by the brand name or analysis on the bag without regard to the requirements of the crop, and the deficiencies in the soil to which the fertilizer is to be applied. The Hon. James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, says in his report to the President, page 34: "The amount of money annually invested in fertilizers' by the farmers of the country, now amounting to upwards of $100,000,000, will continue to increase seems certain. But just as certainly a large percentage of the money— perhaps a third — is annually wasted, and brings no adequate return, owing to lack of understanding of the soil's requirements." And, while I might not be willing to concede that his proportion is absolutely correct, I think, in the main, that the statement is true. The remedy appears to me to be with the buyer. He should first decide exactly what he wants, and then insist upon having it, free from adulteration, failing to obtain which, he must resort to home mixing. As the case now stands the manufacturer decides what percentages he will furnish, and gives the buyer nothing but a choice of ready mixed goods, very few of which supply the exact requirements of any crop, and that the mixture so offered will exactly supply the needs of the crops when combined with the deficiency of any particular soil is a chance so remote as to be without the bounds of the wildest probab- ility. In looking over the field then, it would seem that there was room for the profitable employment of a middle man to prescribe for the ascertained need of the crops and soil, just as the doctor is called in to prescribe the ^ares of the druggist for the benefit of his patients, an office which could be well supplied by our State Experi- ment Stations, were there one located in every section of the Commonwealth. PERCIVAL HICKS. Matthews Co., Va, „•■ j - — : .: 4 PLOWING, CULTIVATION AND CORN PRODUCTION. Editor Southern Planter: Referring to Mr. Bailey's query as to the "best plow" for turning fallows, I herewith give my experience for what it may be worth: Entire success has attended my efforts by the use of a No. 710 Imperial chilled plow with a disc coulter at- tached. I had nine acres with a heavy growth of crimson clover last spring, some had fallen flat, making it diffi- cult to keep the plow in the ground, but with a high' hitch and new point, the work was well done. Care must be taken to set the coulter right, so that it cuts as mucb as the point of the plow, otherwise the point will cause choking; but if properly fixed, there is no trouble, and the clover or other fallow is well covered. Of course a chain should also be used. The disc coulter is a blessing when used on turf and all fallows. I have plowed in weeds as tall as my head, (and a thick growth) so it could hardly be seen that a weed had been on the land Level vs. Ridged Cultivation. It has been my opinion for many years that level cul- tivation of the corn crop was "the way," but owing to weeds and grass, and the almost impracticability of check- ing my corn, I have only in few instances worked the crop level. Last year (1908) I had a twenty-acre field in corn, and decided to keep the turn plow out if pos- sible. This field was worked in the earlier growth of the corn with Planet, Jr.. single cultivators, and was "laid by" with the fine, or spike-tooth cultivator, leaving the land in. a beautiful condition, with scarcely any weeds or grass, the weather being quite dry up to this period; the corn was beautiful, with the promise of a good crop. One old farmer said it would be a sixty-bushel crop. This esti- mate was for eleven acres, which had not been manured. Just before the last working was quite finished the rain came, lasting for several days, making the land so soft that a large lot of the corn fell flat; not much of it stood perfectly straight. Right much of the corn is immature, and very few stalks have over one ear, the size of the ear also is not up to my general average. My neighbors plowed ridges to their corn, and nothing like as much of their crop fell down, they planted two or three weeks sooner than I did. The editor will oblige me with some remarks on this, as he is an advocate of flat work. I will now give some experience in the planting of corn on clover fallow. Three of the nine acres above men- tioned were planted in white corn, soon after the clover was ploughed in, and made a good crop; the other six acres stood about four weeks before planting, and was then put in yellow corn; it started well, and looked as if a large crop might be expected, but there was a very 114 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, small growth of stalk, and the ear is not up to expecta- tion. Does the editor think the fallow stood too long, and that some of the nitrogen escaped from the soil? Several acres of the clover were top dressed in the early spring, and judging from the growth of clover there should have been a large crop of corn. Please give your ideas on this also. Prince George Co., Va. A. R. CLARY. We trust our friend will not be discouraged with the mishap which happened to his crop last year. Be as- sured that the true system of cultivation of a corn crop is the level one with shallow cultivation all the time. This has been so fully demonstrated by tests in almost every section of the country that there can be no ques- tion as to it being the best. The trouble in your case was probably caused by the fact that the corn was not planted as early as it ought to have been, and when "laid by" the roots had not got so strong a hold of the land as they needed to do in order to resist the prostrat- ing effect of the heavy rainstorm coming upon it immedi- ately after cultivation, before the soil had become com- pacted again. Had the corn been more mature the root system would have had better hold of the land, and the corn would not have gone down. The plowing of a fur- row to the corn has little if any effect in holding up the crop; indeed, if the furrow is plowed deeply, it is almost certain to cut some of the roots, and thus weaken the hold of the corn on the land. It is detrimental to the well- doing of the crop in the event of dry weather setting in, as the furrows expose so much greater a surface to the action of the sun, and thus dry out the land so much faster. This is a danger much more to be feared than a heavy rain or wind storm. The failure of the yellow corn to make a good crop on the clover fallow may have been partly induced by its planting having been deferred too long after the clover had been plowed down, and thus part of the nitrogen sup- plied by the clover had been lost. Nitrogen is quickly lost out of the land if there be no growing crop to utilize it as it becomes available. Or, it may be that the fail- ure of the crop was caused by lack of sufficient mineral fertilizer in the soil to balance the nitrogen. The dry fall may have also had much to do with decreasing the yield. — Ed. THE PLOW QUESTION AGAIN. Editor Southern Planter: a "shot" He says I see where my friend, Mr. Ruffin, has taken at me, but like the rest, he missed his mark. I'll never "get there" until I use a jointer, but I do get there and stay there. I have used the jointer and wheel, but have long since laid them away. My opinion of them Is: they are not worth a hurrah in — Texas! The wheel is all right for a person who cannot plow, and does not know how to adjust his plow. The jointer will do good work on nice sod, but it is no more to compare to Avery's Moon coulter than a hand-rake is to a harrow. Let a person put a jointer on his plow, and undertake to plow down and under last year's corn stalks, with pea vines and wire grass also; and he will soon find he is not "an angel," and he will wish the whole rig was where "icicles never form." Whilst, if he had a Moon coulter and chain, he would do such nice work he would not want to take out at dinner time. He says "these at- tachments require more power than the plow itself." I think it does with the jointer, but let him put a dyna- mometer on his plow with the coulter (Moon) on, and he will find it registers lighter draught. I think if Mr. Ruf- fin will take a three-horse Syracuse plow, with good team like he keeps, with the Moon coulter and chain, h e can plow any land on his place, and when he gets through he will not know what was there before plowing. I use nothing but the Acme harrow (advertised in your journal) that does perfect work from any point of view. You can work one horse to it, or fix it so it will take three good ones. I have a steel peg-tooth harrow. I never use it, as it is a scratcher. I keep it for the accommoda- tion of my neighbors, who plow about three inches, then scratch. The Acme harrow leaves your land like a plant bed, and it will do as fine and light work as any harrow, and no heavier than a peg-tooth to work. Mr. Ruffin has a fine farm, (I have been on it) and is a good farmer, and it is possible if I were put to managing it, I might get left, but I'd make a lot of fuss, to let people know "I was there." Your subscribers seem to be "calling" me. Well, I am always ready to show my "hand," and whilst I may never have a straight flush, I'll often have a full hand and corn house, and not one rat; corn house is rat-proof: warranted. Next. L. H. CARLTON. THE AUTOMOBILE ON THE FARM. A new use has been found for the automobile. Frank Hardart, of the firm of Horn & Hardart, Philadelphia, re- cently called his friends and neighbors together to wit- ness an innovation in farm methods. At the appointed time, Mr. Hardart drove out from Philadelphia with a party of friends in his touring car. It is a drive of about an hour and twenty minutes from the Quaker City to Glenloch when the conditions are right. The automobile was jacked up in a few minutes, a belt attached to one of the rear wheels, and, in less than five minutes after the arrival of the car at the barn, it was doing duty as a piece of farm machinery of a unique type. The belt was attached to a fodder cutter and the efforts of two of the farm hands were required to keep the ma- chine fed with material while the big touring car did its work. The belt was then attached to a corn grinder and other farm machinery where power was needed, and the way it sent the wheels flying and he celerity with which it turned out the completed material was calculated to open the eyes of an advocate for up-to-date methods in farm appliances. There was no hitch in the work. The adjustment of the belt took scarcely as long a time as it takes to de- scribe it, and the wheels were whirring a few seconds after the belt was in place. All the men had to do was to keep the machine fed with material. To any one who has seen this sort of work done by hand it was a revelation of the possibilities of applying ready-made power to the machinery of a farm. There is no possibility of damaging the automobile. The wear of the smooth leather belt on the tires is considerably less than that of the rough roadway over which these tires are usualy driven, and the machine itself is subjected to much less strain in driving the farm appliances than in traveling over bad roads and up steep hills. — Ex-change. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 115 Trucking, Garden and Orchard. WORK FOR THE MONTH. It is too early yet to sow or plant out any crop in the garden or truck held except it may be in Tidewater Vir- ginia or Eastern North Carolina, where Irish potatoes and English peas may be put into the ground if it is in good order in the latter half of the month. The work of preparing the land for the crops should, however, have attention, as the weather will allow. Lose no opportunity of working of the land when it is dry enough, for upon the fineness of the tilth and the complete mixing of the compost and fertilizer with the soil will largely de- pend the measure of success which is to be attained. The frequent stirring of the soil will admit the air and sun into it and dry and warm it. The compost heaps we advised to be made earlier in the winter should now be getting into fine condition for applying to the land if they have been worked over as we advised. As they become completely decomposed haul them on to the land and spread broadcast and work into the soil, if the mineral fertilizers — the acid phosphate and potash — which we advised to be mixed in the heaps as they were made were not then mixed in' the compost, they should now be applied on the land with the compost and be worked in. Do not be afraid to use these liberally if you want to make good crops. All the vegetables are large consum- ers of these elements, and you can with advantage use 5C0 pounds of acid phosphate and 200 pounds of muriate of potash per acre. It takes time for these mineral fer- tilizers to become available, and therefore, they are bet- ter applied now than at the time of sowing the seed or planting out the crops. They will not leach out of the land — nitrogenous fertilizers, on the other hand, cannot safely be applied long before the crop is planted; indeed the most valuable of these nitrate of soda is better not applied until the plants begin to grow, as it is in an immediately available form, and its value is soon lost if there be no crop growing to utilize it — cotton seed meal and fish scrap are valuable as nitrogen suppliers, and may with advantage be applied some little time before the crops is sown or planted, as they have to decom- pose in the soil before the nitrogen is available. If no compost is available apply the best rotted farmyard manure you can get, and let it get mixed in the soil and be undergoing decomposition, and add to it the min- eral fertilizers we have mentioned. In this issue will be found an article dealing with the question of the best fertilizer to use in growing the Irish potato crop, and giving several formulae for mixing the same, to which we refer our readers. Few of the brands of commercial fertilizers on the mar- ket are rich enough in potash and ammonia to meet the requirements of the truck growers for successful vege- table production. We, therefore, submit a few formulae for the home mixing of fertilizers for crops now about to be planted. (For Irish potatoes, see the article on that subject in this issue.) For Beets and Lettuce. — 300 lbs. nitrate of soda, 800 lbs. of cotton seed meal, 600 pounds of acid phosphate, 300 pounds of muriate of potash to make a ton. Apply ai the rate of 500 pounds to the acre. For Cabbage, Cucumbers, Melons and Canteloupes. — 300' pounds nitrate of soda, 700 pounds of cotton seed meal, 750 pounds of acid phosphate, 250 pounds of mur- iate of potash to make a ton. Apply at the rate of 500 pounds to the acre. For Tomatoes and Egg Plants. — 200 pounds of nitrate of soda, 750 pounds of cotton seed meal, 750 pounds of acid phosphate, and 300 pounds of muriate of potash to make a ton. Apply at the rate of 600 pounds to the acre. Asparagus beds should be worked over as soon as the ground is dry enough, and be covered with a thick layer of good rotted manure, in which should be mixed the fer- tilizer above advised for this crop, and be then coverf.l with eight or ten inches of fine soil. Strawberry plants may still be set out. They should be got in as scon as possible, so as to get well rooted before the hot weather sets in. Strawberry beds coming into bearing should be culti- vated as soon as the land is in good order, and have a top dressing of 100 pounds of nitrate of soda, 400 pounds of acid phosphate and 400 pounds of muriate of potash applied to the acre. This should be spread down each side of the rows, and we worked in with the cultivator. Mulch between the rows next month to keep the berries clean and conserve moisture, using pine tags, waste hay or other clean vegetable trash. Irish potatoes may begin to be set out in the latter half of the month, if the land is in good order. Only set out the earliest varieties, and do not set the full crop of these until next month. Fertilize liberally with one of the special mixtures, advised in this issue. Do not cut the sets too closely. They should have two or three eyes left in each piece. If any indications of scab are seen, or if it affected your crop last year, soak the sets in a solution of formalin or corrosive sublimate be- fore planting. The formalin solution is prepared by mix- ing eight ounces of 40 per cent, solution of formalin with fifteen gallons of water. The corrosive sublimate solu- tion is made by mixing two or two and a half ounces of the sublimate with fifteen gallons of water. Dissolve the sublimate first in two gallons of water. Let stand for five or six hours, stirring frequently. Dip the sets and let remain in it for one or two hours before being cut. Both these solutions are poison, and they should, therefore, be kept out of the way of stock or man, as also should the dipped sets. English peas may be planted in the last half of the month if the land is in good order and the weather mild. 116 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. inc [February, Sow deeply in rows two feet, six inches apart, and com- pact the soil well around the seed by treading or rolling. If the land is dry enough to work well, fall set cab- bages should have the first cultivation. Cabbage plants may be set out from the seed bed. Small patches of lettuce, radishes and cresses may be seeded in sheltered situations. THE VIRGINIA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. The thirteenth annual meeting of the Virginia State Horticultural Society was held in Lynchburg on the 6th, 7th and Sth days of January, and was the most successful gathering the Society has ever held, the attendance being large, the exhibit of fruit the finest, and the addresses and discussions the most interesting ever presented. It is most gratifying to find that the efforts ms^e during the year and the increased support accorded to the So- ciety by the State has resulted in arousing the interest of the fruit growers to the importance of thorough organ- ization, so that our fruit industry, one of the most valu- able assets of the State, shall be placed in that posi- tion before the country which the quality and varietv of the products warrant it in demanding. The Hon. G. E. Murrell. the President, called the meeting to order, and presented his annual ' report, in which he reviewed the history and work of the Society since its organization, and declared that the past year has seen more accomplished than in any other year. The report told of exhibits made at fairs in Virginia, North and South Carolina and Wash- ington, these exhibits having been made possible by an appropriation made by the State Board of Agriculture, amounting to $1,500, these exhibits attracting widespread and favorable comment. Continuing, Mr. Murrell said: "After last year's meeting in Staunton, part of the ex- hibit of apples there shown was placed in Woodward & competition for the Emerson Cup— Fruit Exhibit, Annual Session of Virginia State Horticultural Society. Lothrop's department store, in Washington, where it proved an object lesson for two weeks or more, and was then distributed amon? prospective buyers as an education as" to the superior quality of Virginia apples. So favorable has this method of advertising proved, it has been ar- ranged this season to renew this exhibit, and place a similar one 'in New York, so as to awaken both buyer and consumer to the excellence of what we have to offer. In the work thus so far done, not only has the advertise- ment to the outside markets proved of far-reaching value, but inside the State it has stimulated interest and cor- diality between this Society, members of the Legisla- ture, the Department of Agriculture, and the people in gen- eral, that will leave an impress upon the Society's future that cannot be gauged by mere monetary appraisement. All this is gratifying, but it marks but the first step in the race for market supremacy. "A prominent New York buyer recently told me: "If you will pack your apples in boxes in Pacific Coast style, buyers will not know the difference, and will pay the same fancy prices, in which they will suffer no wrong, for they will get apples of better quality.' "If our apples cannot be told from Pacific Coast apples, and are superior in quality, why should they have to pass for these apples, to prevent discrimination in price? The answer is: That Pacific Coast apples have obtained an es- tablished reputation through liberal advertising and greater attention to cultivation, spraying and packing. Similar methods will place Virginia apples on the same footing with an extra quality to bring an extra price, but only by unitedly striving to increase the percentage of fancy fruit grown, and constantly advertising, can it be done. "Let these problems be a constant source of study, and realize and teach your friends to realize, that the State Horticultural Society is a' free school of assistance to this end, and that every new scholar that is added to its roll, marks the nearer approach of that State reputation and monetary profit that individually and alone we can never attain." His report was followed by that of the Secretary and Treasurer, Mr. Walter Whately, which was very exhaust- ive and full of much interest to the members. The mem- bership was shown to be 245, a higher number than ever before on the rolls of the Society. The financial report showed that the Society had received the sum of $2,486 during the year, and that of that amount there had been expended $1,518.32, leaving the sum of $930'.31 in the treasury. Last year the report showed the Society to be in debt $30.00, and no salaries of officers paid. The Hon. A. McNeil, Chief of the Fruit Division of the Canad- ian Government, addressed the Convention on "Canadian Governmental Control of Fruit Packages and Grading Fruit," the result of which uad been to place Canadian fruit in the front rank in the markets of the world, as buyers could rely upon the quality and quantity of the fruit offered in the inspected packages. He urged strongly the importance of the adoption of this system here. The Hon. S. B. Woods spoke on the adjustment oi express rates, and urged the attention of the Corporation Com- mission being invoked to correct the injustice done to fruit producers b the carriers. Mr. Wesley Webb spoke on "Fruit Conditions in Maryland and Delaware," and pointed out the increased prosperity which had followed the introduction of strawberry growing in those States. Dr. S. W. Fletcher, Director of the Virginia Experiment 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 117 Station, spoke on "Fruit Growing in the Pacific North- west," and illustrated his remarks by packages of the fruit grown in that section, which command the highest prices on the market owing to the careful manner in which the fruit is graded and packed. In comparing the condition of the West with those of Virginia, Dr. Fletcher was very favorable in his remarks on the Old Dominion. He said that so far as climatic conditions are concerned Virginia, if anything, had the advantage, and that apples can be put on the market here more cheaply than in the West. The main disadvantages in this State, he said, are these: Bad roads, insufficient organization of the grow- ers, and the fact that the Virginia horticulturalists have not "tooted their own horn" as the Westerners have done. In conclusion, the speaker said: "As far as natural advantages are concerned, we can grow apples just as cheaply as in the famous Western points, if we will only adopt some of the methods employed there." During the session of the Convention the following sub- jects were presented: List of Awards. Report of Judge of Fruit Exhibit — Prof. H. E. Van Deman, Washington, D. C. Address on Growing Chestnuts in Virginia — Dr. J. B. Emmerson. Albemarle county, Va. How to Raise a Fine Crop of Irish Potatoes — W. W. Sproul, Middlebrook, Va. Virginia as a Fruit State — Hon. G. W. Koiner, Commis- sioner of Agriculture, Richmond, Va. Fruit Packing: Report — First Year's Experience of Vir- ginia Growers' and Packers' Association — T. W. Woollen, Manager, Crozet, Va. Report — First Year's Experience of Shenandoah Valley Packers' Association — J. Lucian Moomaw, Secretary, Clo- verdale, Va. Canadian Experience in Co-Operative Fruit Selling — Hon. A. McNeill, Chief Fruit Division, Ottawa, Canada. General discussion on above. Executive Session and reports of Standing Committees. Future Policy of Society — Prof. W. B. Alwood, Charlot- tesville, Va. New Fruits — Prof. H. L. Price, Blacksburg, Va. Work of Crop Pest Commission— Prof. J. L. Phillips. Blacksburg, Va. (None but members admitted to this ses- sion.) Stereopticon Lecture — Civic Improvement and Shade Trees for City Planting — Dr. S. W. Fletcher, Director Agri- cultural Experiment Station, Blacksburg, Va. Reports of these will appear in the annual report of the Society. In presenting his report on Awards on the Fruit Ex- hibit, Prof. Van Deman said that part of it was the finest exhibit of fruit he had ever judged, and this was high praise, coming from such a source, as Prof. Van Deman is the leading expert in fruit judging, and has probably placed the awards on more exhibits than any other man in this country. The following officers were elected: President, W. W. Sproule: Vice-Presidents, W. A. McComb, J. Dickie, H. C. Wysor, Dr. W. L. McCue, J. B. Watkins and J. L. Moo- maw; Secretary and Treasurer, Walter Whately; Record- ing Secretary, Prof. H. L. Price. A correspondent sends us the following notes on the meeting: The Exhibit. The "old guard" of the Society was out in force, and all were enthusiastic over the exhibit, stating that it was the best in the history of the Society. Most of the fruit shown was high colored and clean, free from scab and worms, showing the' progress of spraying in the State. Prof. Van Deman said to the Society: "Parts of your Spraying Demonstration in One of Lynchburg's Parks. exhibit, especially the fruit competing for the Emerson Cup, are as perfect as any that I have ever judged in the East or in the West." No man has had more exten- sive experience as a judge of fruits than Mr. Van Deman, and the compliment was appreciated. There was much interest in the State Experiment Sta- tion exhibit of Western apples in comparison with Vir- ginia apples. Seven packed bushel boxes of the finest fruit from the Hood River, Oregon, Grand Junction, Cali- fornia, and Yakima, Washington, were shown beside an equal number of packed boxes of Virginia fruit, grown by James Dickie, of Roseland, Dr. M. L. McCue & Son, of Greenwood; H. C. Kelsey, of Crozet; H. M. Grasty, ot Crozet, and W. K. Gilkerson, of Fisherville. Much to the surprise of many people, the Virginia fruit did not suffer in the comparison. It was fully as perfect in size and color, and certainly equal, if not superior, in quality. But the Western growers often get as much for a bushel box of their apples as Virginia growers get for a barrel of equally good fruit. Obviously, the difference in price is due to their better packing, and to their co-operative organization for selling and advertising. It is evident from the discussion that these subjects received at the meeting, that Virginia fruit growers do not propose to take a back seat in these matters. The next few years will witness marked improvement in packing and organization. Resolutions. Aside from the usual resolutions of thanks, the follow- ing were adopted: A resolution appointing a committee to recommend at the next annual meeting a revision of the Crop Pest Law, "so as to make it possible for the small nurseryman to do business in Virginia." IIS THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, A resolution supporting the recommendation of the Di- rector of the State Experiment Station that a Fruit Ex periment Station be established by the next Legislature, appointing a committee of ten to further this proposition. The Society recommended that the Station be located as near the center of the largest fruit region of Piedmont Virginia as practicable. A resolution requesting the Legislature to exempt apple cider from the provisions of all liquor laws that are now or may be hereafter enacted, was laid upon the table, Notes on Talks. Hon. Wesley Webb, of Dover, Del., Secretary of the Peninsula Horticultural Society, stated the agricultural re- generation of the Delaware and Maryland Peninsula had been wrought almost wholly by crimson clover. The sandy land in this section used to produce only eight to ten bush- els of corn nubbins per acre, and then was rested for a year. With the introduction of crimson clover as a soil improver, and the culture of small fruits, especially strawberries, all this has changed. The same land that formerly produced only $5.00 worth of inferior corn, now makes $100.00 to $50'0.00 worth of fruits. The progress of peach yellows in the southern part of the peninsula has been stayed by the prompt destruction of diseased trees; in the northern section, where this has been neg- lected, the disease is spreading. The San Jose scale is spreading rapidly, except where thorough spraying is fol- lowed. Apples are replacing peaches quite largely since the fruit has fewer serious troubles. Dr. J. B. Emerson, of Albemarle, called attention to the chestnut tree disease that is spreading over Eastern America. It is a bacterial disease, and acts exactly like pear blight, killing the inner bark. No practicable rem- edy is known. Quarantine and the destruction of di- A Splendid Fruit Exhibit. seased trees are a help, but not usually practicable. The disease is reported already at several points in Virginia. It is fast killing the chestnut trees and forests to the north of us, and it seems likely that our own trees are doomed. The disease attacks all species of chestnut, both native and imported. Co-Operation in Fruit Growing. Hon. A. McNeill, Chief of Fruit Division, Ottawa. Can- ada, told his audience that Virginia fruit growers are too well off already to make much progress in co-operative work. As long as good prices are secured individually there is little interest in co-operation; but after two or three years of ruinous prices growers will get together. In Canada there are now about sixty co-operative ship- ping organizations, most of which are very successful. As illustrative of a small organization, he cited that at Chatham, Ontario. The region has small orchards, mostly of early varieties, on every farm. For years the growers got little or nothing for their fruit, culminating- in the especially disastrous years of 1895 and 1896. Eight years ago, Mr. W. P. A. Ross, of Chatham, saw the possibilities of organizing all the small orchards of the community. A number of growers were called together and agreed to ship their fruit together in carload lots, instead of indi- vidually. For several years this informal pooling of ship- ments was all the co-operation attempted. It was so suc- cessful that the growers incorporated, and made a spec- ialty of shipping early varieties. The manager has a list of all the varieties grown by different growers, and calls them in for joint shipment. Formerly these early varieties were worthless; now, they are the most profit- able part of the orchard. The organization has an educa- tional value in that it prescribes, under conditions for membership, that the fruit must be thoroughly sprayed. This is a small organization — only sixty-five members — shipping about forty carloads, and is an excellent illus- tration of how many small orchards, within a radius of six or seven miles, may be made more profitable. It is ab- solutely necessary, in all such co-operation, that the man- ager he given full control over all the fruit grown by the members, so that he may have a definite amount of fruit to count on. At St. Catharine's, the fruit growers have banded to- gether, and ship over 100 carloads of small fruits to the West, receiving not less than 100 per cent, more for it than • formerly. They have put up a cold storage plant. The Chatham Association co-operates only in selling: the St. Catharine's Association co-operates in buying also. In 1908 this Association gave a single order for one million grape baskets, and distributed fifty-five spray pumps, 100, 0^0 pounds of bluestone, 140,000 pounds sul- phur, etc. They find it best in distributing supplies, to make the price the same as outside dealers, and to return to the members a pro-rata bonus at the end of the year, this being the amount saved by the large order. Potato Culture. One of the most valuable papers was that by the in- coming President, Mr. W. W. Sproul, of Staunton. He grows potatoes in his young orchards, in the following rotation: Clover, potatoes, corn, sometimes making 250 bushels per acre. He found that the failure to loosen his heavy soil by plowing under humus was the most serious cause of loss. His seed is put in cold storage to prevent sprouting. Deep cultivation, with double shovel plows, he found to be very injurious. Don't work too deep or too close. Spraying has paid him, for nearly every year - the "early blight" cuts the vines. This may be prevented by using Bordeaux, which not only controls the disease, . 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 119 but also furnishes the best way to put on the poison for bugs. si,. His fertilizer experiments showed that his soil needed phosphoric acid chiefly. The potato growers of his vicinity have saved considerably by getting the Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer Co. to mix a special fertilizer for them, instead of buying branded goods. The formula now used is 600 pounds bone meal, 600 pounds acid rock • (16 per cent.), 400 pounds tankage (10' per cent, ammonia), 200 pounds ■cotton seed meal, 200 pounds sulphate potash. This makes 3^-11-5 goods in available form, and costs $25.00 per ton. In growing the crop he plows under a clover sod that has raised two tons of hay per acre, spreading upon it ■eight loads of manure. Plows nine inches deep in Decem- ber, and cuts the ground up the following spring. Drills in 500 pounds of the fertilizer, drags the land to level it, and plants four inches deep, sowing 500 pounds more fertilizer. In a week plows out deep with the double shovel, and the week following levels down the ridges. ANNUAL MEETING OF THE VIRGINIA STATE H RTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Editor Southern Planter: The fact that the Virginia State Horticultural Society is recognized as being most beneficial to the orchardists of the State, was strongly brought into notice at their re- cent annual meeting, in Lynchburg, January 6th to 8th, by the remarks made by members themselves, and by the daily press. Old members of the Society who have so patriotically persevered in the long, up-hill struggle for twelve year, to force this conviction on the people of the State, felt much gratified at finding that the seed they had been sowing, at first, apparently on hard and barren ground, is now producing the desired results. The Society was fortunate in having the attendance of Hon. A. McNeill, Chief of the Fruit Division of Canada, to tell them the re- sults there of the packing and grading laws, and of the benefits the Canadian growers had received through their co-operative methods of handling and marketing their fruit, especially at this time, when the Society has suc- ceeded in arousing so much interest in better methods of packing and co-operation in marketing by means of packing associations. The reports made by Messrs. T. W. Woolen, and J. L. Moomaw, the managers of the two established Packers' Association were most encouraging. The address given on this subject by the former gentle- man, attracted the greatest interest and attention. The exhibit of apples was magnificent, and the judge (Prof. Van Deman) after readjng his list of awards, told the members of the Society that he felt it due them to say that this exhibit contained, as a whole, the most per- fect lot of apples he had ever judged. That Virginia can produce the quality, and also the flavor we, who know Virginia apples, have always felt sure of, still we always like to be told this by our visitors, especially those who know whereof they speak. The whole meeting was marked by the greatest interest and enthusiasm through- out. The Society resolved to carry out an extended pro- gramme of education in the fruit-growing districts this year, in connection with the Farmers' Institute and State Experiment Station. The apples that were on exhibition were stmt on to advertise Virginia fruit in New York, under charge of the retiring President, Mr. George E. Murrell, whose former exhibition experiences pre-emi- nently fit him for this work — the intention being to at- tract the New York buyers' attention to the fine quality of the Virginia product. The members of the Society also resolved to increase the membership of the Society to l.OO'O by individual efforts feeling not only that the record of the Society deserves support of all horticulturists, but also that no horticulturist can any longer afford not to be in membership. New standing committees were appointed, whose special object is to interest vegetable and flower growers, and those interested in forestry, thus embracing all branches of horticulture. Mr. W. W. Sproul, of Middlebrook, Aug- usta county, succeeds Mr. G. E. Murrell as president. As usual, there are some changes in the list of vice-presi- dents. Prof. H. L. Price still continues editor of the Annual Report, which is sent free to members, and the Secretary-Treasurer remains the same, and, as usual, is always ready to enroll members. Since writing the foregoing, I have received a letter from Hon. H. C. Stuart, who desires to explain to the members of the State Horticultural Society that he regrets that an imperative call abroad prevented his making the address before the Society at their recent annual meeting which he had promised, and I trust you will allow me space to make use of your columns to make the explana- tion desired to them. WALTER WHATELY, Secy.-Treas. ORCHARD PRUNING. Editor Southern Planter: I have been a silent, though appreciative reader of your valuable journal for many years, and have been much benefited from time to time by the timely contributions to it by the most able writers of, this and other States. As the time is at hand when most of the pruning is done, I am writing this to plead for the young apple orchards which are so often butchered, rather than pruned. I be- lieve that hundreds; yes, thousands of dollars are lost to Virginia fruit growers annually by improper pruning. In fact, I have known some orchards that would have been valuable to be almost wholly ruined by the so-called pro- fessional pruner. I am not going to attempt to give direc- tions as to how to prune; this depends largely on the age of the tree, the variety of the apple, and the loca- tion of the orchard. It seems to me that a little experience and plenty of common sense are all that is needed. I will just say that I believe in light annual prunings rather than heavy occasional ones. I refer all who desire in- formation on pruning to two splendid articles in the Jan- uary number of Green's Fruit Grower, one by C. A. Green, editor, on page 33; the other by Prof. Van Deman, asso- ciate editor, on page 40. Standard pear trees, I believe, require about the same pruning as the apple, while peaches require much closer pruning to produce the best fruit. While your journal is not devoted specially to fruit growing, I hope this will be of sufficient interest to find a place in your columns. S. E. PUGH. Albemarle Co., Va. We entirely concur with our correspondent as to the 120 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, damage done to orchards by excessive pruning. Our own experience and study has convinced us that the best prun- ing is done without the use of the knife or saw after the young head has been properly started by the necessary cutting back at planting. Use the finger and thumb freely during the summer in rubbing off the excessive and mis- placed buds formed, and pinching back the too luxuriant shoots, and the heads can be kept in good shape and fruitful.— Ed. SHENANDOAH VALLEY (VA.) FRUIT GROWERS. Editor Southern Planter: The Shenandoah Valley Fruit Growers' Association met at the Assembly Hall at 10 A. M. The President, Mr. W. A. McComb, being detained at home on account of sickness, Vice-President Watson called the meeting to order, and with some corrections, the minutes of the last meeting were adopted. The majority of the stock being represented, the Asso- ciation went into the election of officers for the ensuing year, and Mr. McComb havi-rg resigned the office of Presi- dent, Mr. M. F. Gilkerson was elected to this office. W. H. Frothingham, of Front Royal, was elected Vice-President; J. L. Phillips and Mr. C. G. Crawford were re-elected di- rectors. The other directors are B. E. Watson, J. L. Moomaw, J. H. Piper. The following resolutions were unanimously adopted: Whereas, the San Jose scale, Codling moth, Hessian fly, Gypsy and Brown-tail moths, some of our worst insect pests destroying millions of dollars worth of property an- nually, and causing an expenditure of hundreds of thou- sands of dollars annually for their control, were intro- duced into this country from Europe and Asia, and — Whereas, the quarantine authorities of California have proven conclusively the value of requirements for the in- spection of imported nursery stock, fruits, etc., therefore, be it- Resolved, That the Virginia Senators and Representa- tives in Congress be presented with a copy of these resolu- tions, and requested to aid in the passage of a law to prevent the introduction and spread in this country of dangerous insect pests. That these resolutions be spread on the Minutes of the Association and a copy be sent to Prof. T. B. Simmons, College Park, Md., who is a member of the committee of American Horticultural Inspectors, having this matter in hand; also to Hon. James Wilson, Secretary of Agricul- ture, and Dr. L. O. Howard, Chief of the Bureau of En- tomology. Whereas, the use of arsenate of lead, Paris green, cop- per sulphate and other insecticides and fungicides has now come into general use, and — Whereas, the fruit growing public, without protection, is liable to obtain adulterated goods, or goods containing material injurious to their trees, etc., therefore, be it — j Resolved, 1. That we do hereby heartily endorse House Bill 21,318, introduced in the last session of Congress, by Mr. Lowden, of Illinois, which provides for preventing "the manufacture, sale or transportation of adulterated, or mis- branded fungicides, Paris green, lead, arsenate and other insecticides, and for regulating traffic therein." 2. That a copy of these resolutions be sent to each Virginia Senator and Representative in Congress with re- quest that he do all in his power to secure the passage of this or a similar bill. 3. That these resolutions be spread on the minutes of the Association, and that a copy be sent to the Hon. James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, and to the daily and agricultural papers of the State with request that they be published. J. L. PHILLIPS, Secy. THE GIPSY AND BROWN-TAIL MOTHS. European Insects that May Get a Foothold in this State, We have just received notice that seventy-five nests of the Brown-tail moth (Euproctis chrysorrhoea) have been found on apple, pear, cherry and other stock received from France, and wish to call the attention of nursery- men and importers of stock of all kinds to the serious nature of this insect pest, and request that every one, who has purchased any stock from abroad, notify the State Entomologist at once, in order that this stock may be in- spected. The Brown-tail moth is a common European insect, almost as destructive as the well known Gipsy moth (Por- thetria dispar), and was introduced into this country at Somerville, Mass., in 1890, on nursery stock imported from Europe. The Gipsy moth reached this country about 1868. Massachusetts is the unfortunate State in which it es- caped. While a number of insects have been introduced into this country from Europe, these are two of the worst. Fortunately they have not become generally distributed, being still confined to the New England States. Almost all fruit, shade, ornamental and forest trees, except pines and other conifiers, are attacked by the brown-tail moth, and the Gi»dy moth includes also the pines and other conifers and evergreens in its list of food plants. Almost nothing escapes injury where both these insects are present. They entirely defoliate trees after they become' plentiful. Trees wholly defoliated in this way, for two or three years in succession are usually killed, and partial defoliation greatly checks the growth and causes distinct loss in value. The great destruction of orchards, shade and forest trees led to the appropria- tion of large sums of money by the State of Massachu- setts and the "United States Government for fighting these pests, and preventing their spread to other parts of the country. Up to the year 1900 Massachusetts had spent, approxi- mately, $1,500,000 under the_ Gypsy Moth Commission and the Board of Agriculture to prevent the spread of these serious insect pests, and, if possible, eradicate them. These pests were so well subdued in 1900' that the appro- priation was allowed to lapse. The next few years showed, however, that this was a great mistake, and in 1905, the Massachusetts Legislature made an appropriation of $150,000 per annum for this work, and in 1906 the appropriation was increased to $225,000. The National Government has also taken a hand in this work, and spent several hundred thousand dollars in the last five years in conjunction with the New England States to control and prevent the dissemination of these serious insect pests. Every encouragement should be giveu 1909.] THE SOUTHEKN PLANTER. 121 the Federal authorities in preventing the spread of these pests. Fortunate, indeed, will we be if we succeed in preventing their spread to our State for even a few years. They are, no doubt, among the oldest insects of Europe, but do not become very destructive oftener than once in three or four years, because of the numerous parasitic insects, which prey upon them and help to keep them under control. When such an insect is introduced into another country, its parasites are often left behind. Also, the insect itself thrives where its parasites do not. There is usually, then, a long period in which such an insect, deprived of its natural checks, increases and spreads out of all reason. Part of the appropriation of the National Government is now being used in introducing the primary parasites of these two insects to help in their control. Even with all their natural enemies to help hold them in check, they are very destructive, and every effort should be put forth to prevent the spread of these pests to other parts of the country. Blacksburg, Va. J. L. PHILLIPS, State Entomologist. IRISH POTATO FERTILIZER. Editor Southern Planter: As the time is drawing near when the farmers of that part of Virginia known as the "Eastern Shore," which is fast appropriating to itself the title of the Early truck patch of the Old Dominion," will be preparing to fertilize the land for Irish potatoes, a few words relative to the home mixing of the brands most commonly used may not come amiss. An analysis of the potato shows a preponderance of nitro- gen and potash as compared with phosphoric acid, and were I so situated as to carry on some experimental plots I think I would be inclined to try to either cheapen my fertilizer by omitting some part of the phosphorous content or increase its effectiveness by greatly augment- ing its nitrogen and potash percentage by building on nitrate of potash (KN03). Such a plan might or might not prove a financial success, as the phosphate of lime and gypsum which go to make up commercial acid phos- phate, may have some effect on the soil, or plant, other than furnishing plant food, which is ' highly beneficial to the crop. The safest course is always to apply those fertilizers which have proved themselves successful in growing the kind of crop on the particular soil you are dealing with, for your main reliance, and upon experimental plots or rows in the main crop apply other constituents which, arguing from analysis, should produce equal re- sults with less cost, or better results with equal cost, or possibly a combination of both advantages. I will proceed, then, not to suggest any new formula, however tempting such a course would be, but confine myself to the formula for the home mixing of those brands most commonly used, showing the cost thereof at the market rates assigned by our State Board of Agri- culture for phosphoric acid, nitrogen and potash. As I understand the conditions, the great bulk of this fertilizer is purchased upon time, but as I presume some of the growers may be in a position to purchase chemicals at wholesale rates for cash, the difference in the cost of the two plans may be of some value in throwing light upon the premiums demanded by the man- ufacturers for mixing, transportation, interest and profit. First, let us take up the composition of a 7-7-7 goods, compute its cost and compare with lower grades. 20 per cent, sulphate of ammonia, 700 lbs. — N'. 7 per cent., costing 15 cents — $21.00. 14 per cent, acid phosphate, l.O'OO lbs. — P205, costing 4^ cents— $5.30. 50 per cent, muriate of potash, 280 — K2C03, 7 per cent., costing 5 cents — $7.00. Filler, 20 lbs. Weight of mixture, 2,000' lbs.; cost of mixture, $34.30. It is a difficult matter to get these chemicals in purity enough to substitute nitrate of soda for the sulphate of ammonia, but 875 pounds of 16 per cent, acid phosphate, 87 pounds of 16 per cent, nitrate of soda, and 250 pounds of 53 per cent, sulphate of potash come very close to it Another simple mixture containing very little filler to balance is composed as follows: 16 per cent, nitrate of soda, 875 lbs. — N. 7 per cent., cost- ing $21.00. 14 per cent, acid phosphate, 875, lbs. — P205, 6 per cent., costing $5.40. 50 cent, muriate of potash, 240 lbs .— K2C03, 6 per cent., costing $6.70. Filler, 28 lbs. Weight of mixture, 2,000' lbs.; cost of mixture, $33.10. It will be observed that I have selected the muriate as a source of potash which is not generally recommend- ed for potatoes, hut I am informed that it has no bad effect on the Eastern Shore soil, and it is a cheaper source for potash than the sulphate. Below is found a very common pencentage which is cheaper, but probably less effective in proportion to its value than any given. Nitrate of soda, 875 lbs., N. 7 per cent. — costing $21.00. 14 per cent, acid phosphate, 857 lbs. — P20» 6 per cent., costing $5.40. 50 per cent, muriate of potash. 200 lbs.— K2C03, 5 per cent., costing $5.00. Filler 68 lbs. Weight of mixture, 2,00*0 lbs.; cost of mixture, $31.40. Another common mixture is the following, which re- quires more filler than either of the others, but would probably be as effective on potatoes as any, except the first: 16 per cent, nitrate of soda, 875 lbs. — N. 7 per cent., cost- ing $21.00. 14 per cent, acid phosphate, 715 lbs. — P203 5 per cent., costing $4.50. 50 per cent, muriate of potash. 240 lbs. — K2iC03 6 per cent., costing $6.70. Filler, 160 lbs. Weight of mixture, 2,000 lbs., cost of mixture, $32.20'. This list of formulae might of course be lengthened indefinitely to include all the combinations of 7-6-5 per cent, of which there are almost an incalculable number, but probably enough has been said to point the way to any investigator who desires to take up home mixing. 122 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, As a general rule, it will be found the cheaper plan per cost of unit of ingredient to buy the highest grade of nitrate, phosphate and muriate obtainable and aim to reach as near 7-7-7 as they will allow, for not only will the P205 be, as a general thing, cheaper per unit in 16 per cent, acid phosphate than in 14 per cent, acid phos- phate, but as the freight and hauling are also less per unit there is of course an additional advantage there. As an illustration of this, suppose your 14 per cent, acid phosphate costs you $14 delivered your P205 is costing exactly 5 cents per pound, which we figure as follows: 14 per cent, x 2,000 = 280 x $14 = 5 cents. Now, suppose you are offered 16 per cent, acid phosphate, what can you afford to pay for it? 16 per cent, x 2,000 = 320' x 5 cents. = $16. Clearly, then, 16 per cent acid phosphate is worth $16.00 a ton when the 14 per cent, is worth $14.00, and if it can be bought for less than $16.00 it is the cheaper, and vice versa. Indeed, where freight rates are an item, it will pay to compound with nitrate of potash analyzing N. 14, K2C05 44, which figures l.o a value of $86.00 per ton. Where high percentages are desirable, this is a valuable material and combines well with any substance that does not contain lime. The question of home mixing is of course further com- plicated by building upon some organic substance like blood, fish scrap, or guano, and some recommend this practice for potatoes. Fish scran should be a convenient substance for the Eastern Shore farmer, for he has a fac- tory almost at his door. The idea in using this sub- stance is to supply a source of nitrogen less readily available than that contained in nitrate of soda upon the theory that the ground will lose some of the nitrate before the potatoes can use it all, whereas the fish scrap only supplies its nitrogen upon decay, a process that requires time. In the forcing of early crops of so short a period of growth as potatoes, more especially as they do a good part of this growth in cool weather, I am in- clined to doubt this hypothesis more especially when con- sidered in relation to the large crops of corn produced after the removal of the tubers, which can only be due to the grower's applying more fertilizer than is needed for the first crop, or by their using a source of ingredient of slow availability, and in either event the inference is fair that what has been applied is not lost until some time near the maturing of the corn crop at a date some seven months after its application. Mathews Co., Va. PERCIVAL HICKS. THE TARIFF ON BASIC SLAG AND SULPHATE OF AMMONIA. Editor Southern Planter: Probably your attention has alredy been called to a fea- ture in the tariff revision that is important to Virginia farmers. At the present time all materials used as fer- tilizers or manures are admitted free, as they should be, except sulphate of ammonia and basic slag. The duty on the former is $6.00 per ton, and the duty on the latter is $1.00 per ton, it being erroneously classed as a metal, rather than a fertilizer, notwithstanding that its use in this country is solely as a fertilizer. In the tentative schedule now being prepared for the use of the Ways and Means Committee, Basic slag is so listed that it will be impracticable to bring it into this country at all, while the duty on sulphate of ammonia remains. In 1907 we imported 32,668 tons of sulphate of ammonia, chiefly from Great Britain, and 7,000 tons of Basic Slag. If these articles were admitted free, their use by our farm- ers, as fertilizers, would be greatly extended, since slag is one of the best sources of available phosphoric acid, especially for soils deficient in lime (slag contains 30 to 40 per cent, lime) ; and sulphate of ammonia is the richest i, in nitrogen of all commercial fertilizers — 20 per cent. At the present time, neither material is used in Virginia to any appreciable extent, but undoubtedly both would be largely and profitably used if they were admitted free, as are other similar materials, so that they could be laid down here a.t a reasonable price. Objection to the free admission of Basic slag will come from coke, and steel manufacturers, since slag is a by- product in these industries, and to the free admission of sulphate of ammonia from the gas makers, it being a by- product of gas. The slag made in the United States is not nearly as rich in phosphoric acid as that made in Europe, owing to the difference in the ores; in fact, it scarcely pays to use it as a fertilizer, but it is used in making cement. The most strenuous objection to the free admission of both materials will naturally come from the fertilizer interests, which are now so combined as to prac- tically control all the fertilizer trade of the whole country. The interests of the fertilizer man and of the farmer are so closely allied that what hurts one will be felt by the other, and nobody wishes to impose a hardship upon the fertilizer dealers. But this is so manifestly a discrimination against these two materials, and an injust- ice to our farmers that the error should be corrected in the new tariff schedule. This proposition was unanimous- ly endorsed by the American Association of Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations, at their Washington Convention in November, 1908. The farmers of Virginia should be sufficiently interested in the correction of this error to communicate with their Senators or Congressmen and ask their attention to the correction of the new schedule. S. W. FLETCHER, Director of the Virginia Agricultural Exp. Station. We trust that our subscribers will act upon the sugges- tion of Dr. Fletcher and at once write their Senators and Representatives. Farmers get no benefit from the tariff as they have no protection on their products and have to sell them in the open markets of the world. It is too bad that they should have to pay a duty on the fertilizer they are compelled to use to make the crops. We have written the Senators and Representatives from Virginia on the matter. — Ed. Many experienced grape growers are of the opinion that grape cuttings made in the fall produce stronger plants than cuttings made early in the spring when the vines are usually pruned. Cuttings, if made in the fall or mid-winter, should be stored in moderately damp sawdust or moss and then placed in a cool cellar or buried in the open where the soil is well drained. The cuttings usually contain two or three buds and are five to eight inches>in length. The first cut is made from one-half to one inch below the lower bud and the other cut one and a half or two inches above the upper bud. 1909.] IT IK SOITIIKKX PLANTER. 123- Live Stock and Dairy. GETTING BEEF CATTLE ON FEED. (Continued from January Issue.) Editor Southern Planter: The problem of handling feeders is much more compli- cated than that of stockers. Animals unused to the sta- ble should be accustomed to it gradually and the same care and precaution should be taken in preparing a vari- ety of highly palatable foods suited to the peculiar needs of the cattle to be fed. Of course, the class of animals has a very decided bearing on the results of a feeding trial. This we have demonstrated by some seven differ- ent experiments made in as many years, and the feeder who hopes for success under the fluctuating market con- ditions he has to face will see to it that he has the very highest grade of animals to commence with. It is hardly necessary to state that long, lank, coarse-boned animals with cat-hams, light thighs, sloping, contracted hindquar- ters, flat ribs, narrow backs and coarseness in the shoulder and forequarters, generally speaking, will not make as good gains as animals that are short and stocky, compact- ly built, well covered with firm but pliable flesh, possess- ing symmetry and correlation of parts and a soft, yielding hide. People's ideals of what constitutes a good feeder vary so remarkably that it is a difficult matter to discuss this point and make one's attitude clear on it, but our own experience has shown us that many of the so-called native cattle that are considered profitable feeders by farmers have not sustained their reputation in our feed lots. This might by some be attributed to our method of management and feeding; but, in view of the fact that the gains obtained have frequently been as large, and, in many instances, larger than those claimed by practi- cal farmers, indicates very clearly that the fault is resi- dent more particularly in the class of animals fed and not due to their feeding and general management. ' Make sure, therefore, to get the right class bf feeders and then, if the proper foodstuffs are available, a gain of at lea-t two pounds per head per day lor a period of six months can be looked forward to with considerable assurance. When feeders are first put in the stable a week or ten days should be given to accustoming them to their new surroundings and teaching them how to eat a variety of foods. The environment cannot be made too comfortable. Some of us forget what a little thing will irritate a human being until he actually loses all self control. Yet we will subject our animals to a dozen different things that we know are, first of all, uncomfortable and, second, extreme- ly irritating to them. An animal in an irritating environ- ment will never use foods advantageously nor make satis- factory gains. This is a familiar platitude, no doubt, but it is one of those fundamental truths that will bear repe- tition even unto- the end of the world, for it covers an essential condition in successful cattle feeding. It is not an uncommon sight to see feeders kept in yards in which the mud is up to their hocks, sometimes even belly deep, and though they may not suffer so much from exposure to violent extremes of weather, it is most objectionable to have them exposed to cold, drizzling rains. Therefore, a simple shed-like structure for their protection during bad weather will prove a profitable investment on any farm. The objects in feeding these cattle should never be lost sight of and they are somewhat as follows: First of all, a considerable increase in size, which calls for a general development of the framework of the animal. This con- sideration is of particular importance during a long feed- ing period of say 180 days or six months, for cattle, if in proper condition, can, as a rule, be finished in three months, but to get them in condition to finish will require at least the same length of time, a point that should never be lost sight of. Second, in feeding it is particularly de- sirable that uniform gains be obtained. This calls for a nice adjustment of the ration and for the proper com- bination of foodstuffs and the use of palatable and tonic foods to keep the appetite sharp and the digestion good through a long period. Remember, an animal that is to be fed so as to make a large increase in body weight daily for 180 days is undergoing a severe strain and the adjustment of the feeding standard is a matter of great importance. It is not necessary that the animals should be fed one of the so-called perfectly balanced rations, but it should approximate the standard at least. The third matter which hould never be lost sight of is the proper distribution of fat and lean in order to secure the highest quality in the slaughtered carcass. The slaughtered car- cass that commands the best price on the market is the one in which the fat and lean are properly blended and not developed in separate layers, as it were. An overly thick ^ covering of fat with patchiness at the rumps and in other portions of the carcass is extremely objection- able, nor is an over-development of fat around the intes- tines at all desirable. The exclusive feeding of corn for a period of six months is likely to bring about some or all of these conditions with many classes of cattle, and particularly so with those that have not been as well bred and in which the assimilative powers are not as highly developed as in cattle of better quality. Bearing these facts in mind, it is now proper to consider how best to get these cattle on feed and handle them so as to bring about the conditions indicated. First of all, putting cattle on feed should be a very gradual pro- cess. Probably more mistakes are made on this point than any other by the farmer who expects to feed cattle for a long period and hopes for a profitable return on the grain fed. It is a very grave mistake indeed to give a heavy grain ration in the beginning. When cattle are first placed on feed they will eat more roughness in pro- portion than they will later on in the season; therefore, cheaper gains can be made by feeding a larger amount of roughness at this period than would be desirable or profit- able at the finish. For the first thirty or sixty days, therefore, only a limited grain ration is necessary, and naturally this grain ration should consist of foods con- ducive to growth and the development of muscle. Pro- tein foods should certainly predominate at this period, both in roughness and in concentrates. One of many rations that would be highly suited to the 124. THE SOUTHERN" PLANTER. [February, feeding of beef cattle would be from thirty to forty pounds of silage, with ten pounds of cowpea, alfalfa, clover or soy bean hay, fed in equal parts night and morning. In the middle of the day turn the cattle out in an open yard where they can get a moderate amount of exercise and provide racks in which sorghum fodder, nice shredded stover or oat straw is kept. These racks should be pro- vided with a top so the feed will not get wet during a rain storm, and it is surprising how much the cattle will eat under these conditions. Some will ask why more sil- age is not suggested, as good-sized cattle will eat a much larger amount. To gorge cattle on silage from the begin- ning would be a serious mistake, and this in our experi- ence, which now covers several years, is one of the rea- sons why many feeders have not found silage a satis- factory food for beef cattle. Where silage is not avail- able, clover hay with bright, shredded corn stover, corn fodder, sorghum fodder or cowpeas will make a very nice combination of roughness to use. In our judgment, it is not as healthy a ration as the one first suggested, and, of course, it is not so well adapted to many sections of the South as to the West, where clover and corn are grown in greater abundance. For the meal portion of the ration, probably no combina- tion of concentrates will be cheaper than a mixture of cotton seed meal or linseed meal in the proportion of two parts to one part of shelled corn, crushed corn, corn and cob meal, or even ear corn, though in sections where other protein foods can be bought at a low proportion of cost, they may be utilized, but it would be a fatal mistake to put feeding cattle on a six months' stretch on an exclusive ration of corn from the start. Moreover, though many feeders may not realize its truth, the" feeding of corn alone will not insure as rapid gains, as large an increase in frame, or as good returns to the farmer as the use of some of what to him may seem expensive and unnecessary concentrates. It has now been clearly demonstrated by our own experi- ence that the use of a considerable amount of protein foods in the fattening of beef cattle, even during the fin- ishing period, is a highly profitable practice. Protein foods tone up the system and keep it in equilibrium. A good, vigorous appetite and a healthy digestion are the essential conditions that must be maintained in any class of cattle where profitable returns are expected. It is, however, injudicious and unnecessary to feed a large amount of grain in the beginning. We frequently receive communications stating that "I am feeding eight, ten, twelve or fifteen pounds of corn to my cattle and they do not seem to be doing well," and this at the very begin- ning of a feeding period of from three to six months Cattle coming off grass and not accustomed to a heavy concentrated ration cannot digest and assimilate this feed advantageously, nor do they need it to make profit- able gains, as we have shown now by a number of fairly conclusive tests. While the data suggested in the following table is not considered conclusive by any means, it furnishes a fairly satisfactory guide to the feeder, and, by adjusting the grain ration as indicated, we have been able to ob- tain an average gain of from one and a half to two and a quarter pounds per head per day with various classes of cattle fed for six months. Increase of Concentrates. Initial amt. Increase Per Head in Pounds. Feb. 4 — 11 — 19 — 25. per head Dec. Jan. Group, per day — lbs. 14 — 27. 7—14—21— 1 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 4 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 5 4 6 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 6 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 It has been our practice for several years to start our cattle on a ration of about four pounds of grain per head per day, increasing it to five pounds at the end of fourteen days, and gradually thereafter as indicated until a total of fourteen pounds is reached on February 25th. From observations made this year, it would seem that we could increase the grain ration to sixteen and possibly eighteen pounds before the conclusion of the feeding trial. This, of course, would not pay with ordinary cattle to be put on a market where high finish and quality are not considered the most essential points, but for animals in- tended for export, or which are to be sold in a highly discriminating market, the increased amount of grain in- dicated can be fed advantageously. During the first period the protein foods constitute half of the meal ration and they can often constitute as much as two-thirds with • profit. This will depend somewhat on the market price of the various foodstuffs utilized. During the second periods, two-thirds corn and one-third protein will answer very nicely; while during the last period three-fourths corn and one-fourth protein will give satisfactory results. For the last thirty days corn alone may be fed if the animals are not quite so fat as the owner should like to have them. Of course, the amount of grain fed and the adjustment of the ration will depend a good deal on the character and individual appetite of the animals fed. These are points which the skilful feeder must determine for himself and it will not take long for an experienced man to adjust himself to conditions which confront him. It is more difficult, however, for the novice to do this, and hence many features of the subject have been con- sidered in detail in this article with the idea of being most helpful to the new beginner. In the next table observe what has already been stated — namely, that the amount of roughness consumed at first will be considerably in excess of that consumed later on in the period, and that the pounds of concentrates con- sumed per pound of gain at the beginning of the experi- ment increase materially towards the end. While the data given applies to six groups of animals, the differ- ences indicated in the amount of roughness and concen- trates required for a pound of gain were due very con- siderably to the different forms of rations fed. These will not be considered separately in this paper, the data presented being for the purpose of emphasizing clearly the relation of the amount of roughness and concentrates required during the various phases of a feeding period of 180 days. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 125 Food Consumed Per Pound of Gain. !« (!) "3 t/i O CO ■§» (Do 3 >• ■r >, .2 >> '£ i - at d) ctf 1- ct) S 1 c Q>TJ O.'O a> T3 O.'d 3 V a _ A X ° O o o o fa O WOO fl| ■Bio 51 o SI 0) 1 Concentrates 3.31 8.63 11.47 6.54 Roughness 19.26 19.72 25.08 20.65 2 Concentrates 7.57 11.66 15.66 11.18 Roughness 18.69 6.44 7.08 11.15 8 Concentrates 5.51 9.71 14.00 8.99 Roughness 13.13 8.76 11.45 11.24 4 Concentrates 3.64 9.63 19.77 7.83 Roughness 21.11 20.69 40.30 23.85 5 Concentrates 7.28 7.90 23.80 10.25 Roughness 17.39 6.19 14.19 11.54 6 Concentrates 5.61 11.52 16.20 9.91 Roughness 13.31 9.81 13.66 12.31 That the ration fed has a marked influence on the gains is borne out by the fact that in our own experience animals fed on corn meal, pea hay and corn stover gained 1.8 pounds per head per day throughout a long feeding period, whereas others fed on corn meal, cotton seed meal and sorghum silage gained 2.1 pounds. We have reason to believe that animals of a given weight and uni- form quality alike fed on different foodstuffs have made gains varying from 1.1 to 2.25 pounds per head per day. This is certainly a striking evidence of the importance of utilizing foodstuffs adapted to the needs, first, of the individual animals, and, second, to the object in view in feeding. In other words, by using one ration a given set of cattle in a feeding trial may make but one pound of gain. These same cattle fed on a different ration, which need not of necessity be more costly in its nature, may make from one and a half to two and a quarter pounds of gain. Surely, the question of the proper adjust- ment of rations and the intelligent utilization of food- stuffs is a complicated matter at best, one calling for expert knowledge and clear-cut reasoning where large profits are hoped for. The difference in gain as influ- enced by the various rations fed is not more remarkable than the difference observed during several consecutive years of feeding trials with a large number of beef cattle. The influence of the individual on the profits of the feeder is one of the most striking truths that has been brought to our attention. A careful selection of high-grade ani- mals for our feeding lots would often turn failure into succes. ANDREW M. SOULE. Ga. State College of Agriculture. THE BEEF BREEDS AND MILK PRODUCTION. Editor Southern Planter: I have read Mr. Hopkin's article in the January issue of The Planter and cannot imagine on what grounds he bases his criticism of my little note in a previous issue of the paper. I certainly never have claimed that cows of the Angus or any other breed would give a large flow on starvation rations. If Mr. Hopkins had read wheat I have written for years on live stock subjects he would have known that I have urged that breed, feed and heed are equally important if we would produce good cattle. What I suppose he has reference to is the statement I made that the pure-bred cow, Lady Nosegay B., was furn- ishing a gallon of milk- per day more than her young 100-pounds calf could consume, the cow meanwhile graz- ing in "common frosted fall pasture." The pasture was timothy, red top and sapling clover and not as he seems to have gathered — a mixture of hens' nest grass and fresh air. We don't graze cattle at any time of year on the latter mixture. The facts were as stated in my article, and can be proven. Again, I have never that I recollect claimed the Angus as a dairy breed. I simply made the statement that the majority of Angus cows would give milk sufficient to grow a big, sappy calf, and to do this they must needs produce as much milk as the average cow of other bresds. We don't do any pampering of cat- tle or any other fancy farming on "Sunny Home Farm." Aim to give our cattle what they need of good farm-raised feeds and grow these feeds on our own farm in the most economical manner of which we have knowledge. We believe after more than twenty-five years of experience (as boy and man) with beef cattle that the breeder who in his breeding operations neglects to give good attention to keeping of the milk producing function in his cows will come to grief and will nnt have dnne 'what he should have done by his favorite breed or himself. Rockingham Co., N. C. A. L. FRENCH. MAKING PORK ON GRAZING CROPS. Editor Southern Planter: The Alabama Experiment Station has recently published Bulletin 143, which records a summary of three years' work in swine production. During these three years there has been made a rather comprehensive study of the value of green crops as a supplement to corn for fattening hogs. Some of the conclusions of the work are: 1. Money was lost in every case where corn was fed alone to the hogs. Each hundred pounds of gain costing on the average $7.43. 2. When corn was supplemented with a partial ration of cotton seed meal the daily gains and the financial out- come were satisfactory. Four deaths occurred as a result of the use of the cotton seed meal, so while the hogs do well upon this ration there is danger of some deaths. 3. Tankage, a packing house by-product, proved to be an exceedingly satisfactory feed to supplement corn. Each pound of gain made while using the tankage cost 5.1 cents. 4. Cowpeas (the seed) were used profitably with corn until they reached a price of $$1.0'5 a bushel; then they were fed at a loss. 5. Peanut pasture was found to be a very profitable past- ure. The average of three years' work shows that when this pasture was supplemented with a half ration of corn each hundred pounds of gain cost $1.85 — grain cost. The grain cost of each hundred pounds of gain when soy bean pasture was used was $1.96. The same hundred pounds of gain cost $5.36 when sorghum pasture was used. With chufa pasture the gains cost $3.81 per hundred. 6. When corn was fed alone but 48 cents was realized for each bushel of corn used. When corn was used with cotton seed meal 59 cents was secured for each bushel of corn fed. When the corn was supplemented with the peanut pasture $1.53 was gotten for each bushel. 7. When hogs sell at from 5 to 7 cents a pounds live 126 THE SOUTHEKN PLANTEE. [February, weight the farmer cannot afford to sell his corn for 75 cents a bushel. DAN. T. GRAY, Animal Husbandman. Farmers who are raising hogs and making pork and every farmer should do this and not have his meat house in Chicago, would do well to read this Bulletin. A copy- will be sent on request addressed to the Director of the Experiment Station, Auburn, Alabama. — Ed. PROSPECTS FOR DAIRYING IN VIRGINIA. Editor Southern Planter: When we consider what is being done North of us with cows, as, for instance, in New York, Wisconsin, Minne- sota and Canada, where winters are much longer than in Virginia and much more severe, does it not occur to us that we can do as well and better than can be done in these higher latitudes. Wisconsin sells more than fifty millions of dollars worth of dairy products each year, and we in Virginia are buying each year from Wisconsin or some other dairy State dairy products amounting in value to many hundreds of thousands of dollars. Our larger cities are buying outside of the State practically all the butter and cheese they are using. In addition to having a better climate here in Virginia than the States which have been named, and markets right here at home for a large amount of dairy products. we have also in certain sections of the State grazing equal to any in the country. Our soil, as a rule, takes very kindly to improvement, and where dairying is being done conditions are improving right along. The dairy farmer feeds practically everything he produces to his cows and the manure is returned to the soil so practi- cally no fertility is lost. The farnfer who is producing hay, grain and tobacco and selling these from his farm is gradually selling off the fertility of his land. This is very evident to any one in the tobacco sections of the State, where field after field has been practically aband- oned because it does not pay to cultivate them any more in tobacco or anything else. On the other hand, the dairy farmer is adding to the fertility of his land all the time. The humus in his land is being increased, the nitrogen which is the most costly ingredient as well as the most important js being increased by growing leguminous crops. The thrifty dairy farmer keeps cows that pay him a large amount for the feed he gives them, this enables him to buy feed and keep more cows than he can feed from what he produces on his farm. When the dairyman reach- es this point then he can increase the fertility of his farm very rapidly because he is actually putting on more than is being taken off, and if he is buying largely then he is adding fertility rapidly to the soil. Holland is said to have more than two cows to the acre; this means that they must buy feed all the time. They undertake to grow what roughage they feed and buy such concentrated feeds as may be necessary to enable them to feed what they grow economically. As a result, Holland to-day is pro- ducing more on her land probably than any other country of the same size. To indicate what they are doing, lands are seldom sold at any price and are said to rent for as much as $50.00 per acre a year. In going over the State we find that the dairy fanners are producing more per acre than other farmers around them. The production of corn per acre can be increased almost indefinitely, as the fer- tility of the soil increases, by the application of manure, and as we increase the humus content of the soil, which is done very rapidly by the application of stable manure, we find that we can double and quadruple the amount of corn over what could be grown beiore such application was made. Corn put into ensilage is the dairyman's standby. When he can grow from eight to ten tons of ensilage per acre it can be seen what that means — ten tons is 20,000 pounds, and will feed one cow thirty pounds for 666 days, or for twenty-two months, or about four cows all winter. This would of course have to be sup- plemented to some extent with some concentrate and some little additional roughage, but it would supply in a large measure the feed for the cows. Crimson clover can be grown in connection with a corn crop, getting two crops off the land in a year. This crop serves a double purpose — it adds nitrogen to the soil through the stubble and roots left after removing the crop, as well as sup- plies a valuable feed at a time in the spring when the cows are very ravenous for some green feed, and it very materially increases the milk flow at that time. A good crop of crimson clover is easily worth from $25.00 to $30. 0*0 per acre. When land can be made to produce in one year ten tons of ensilage and $30.00 worth of crim- son clover per acre, and when the farmer has cows to consume this product that will give him a calf each year and produce in addition in dairy products value amounting to $100, then what value do you think he would put on his land? He could hardly afford to sell it at all, selling for $100 an acre would be almost like giving it away. Average cows can be counted on to produce from 125 to 200 pounds of butter a year and, by breeding these to a pure-bred dairy bull, the produce can be made to give from 20'0 to 400 pounds. Butter has been • selling around 30 cents for some time. The 125-pound cow, then, would, in addition to her calf, bring in about $37.50 a year. This is a small amount for a cow for a year; 200 pounds of butter, however, carries the income up to $60.00, which carries some profit with it. When you get your cows pro- ducing more than 200 pounds a year then you are getting a good price for all your feed, paying for all labor con- nected with your operations, and a good profit over and above. It might be well to say in this connection that the last Legislature created the office of Dairy and Food Commis- sioner and amongst other things he is expected to en- courage the dairy industry in the State in such ways as may seem to him best to be done. With this in view, va- rious parts of the State have been visited and where inter- est has been shown meetings have been held and condi- tions have been discussed with the view of establishing creameries. Those who may be interested in this matter should write the office of the Dairy and Food Commis- sion at Richmond, and when it should seem to be warrant- ed, various points in the State would be visited and meet- ings held and the dairy question be discussed fully with the farmers with a view of establishing creameries or other means of finding a market for the products. Creameries seem to be the best way of disposing of 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 127 dairy products as a more uniform product can be made and the quantity of cream or butter which can be offered is so much greater than in the case of small, private dairies that more buyers can be interested in its purchase. The producer has only to carry his product to the cream- ery where it will be cared for to the best advantage and offered as the market wants it. The small producer in any line has to work at tremendous disadvantage. The organization of farmers into associations for the purposs of handling and marketing their products seems at the present time to be the best thing to be done. Richmond. Va. W. Di SAUNDERS, Dairy Commissioner. THE LONDON (ENGLAND) FAT STOCK SHOW. Editor Southern Planter: Although the area of London is so enormous, yet an observant person could not fail to notice in December an unusual number of country cousins in well night all parts of the city, particularly in the theatres and similar places of amusement. Each year on the anniversary of the holding of the show of the Smithfield Club, advantage is taken of the cheap fares to London by residents in the country who make the show an excuse for an outing and a visit to their friends and relatives who are furtunate enough, or the reverse, to be temporarily or permanently located near the capital. The show was visited by about the usual large crowds and the exhibition of stock was well worthy of a visit, as it was one of the best displays of fat animals seen for years, whilst the portion of the show devoted to the carcasses of various kinds of stock and the dead poultry was most instructive and inconveni- ently crowded, so anxious were the public to be able to take a most valuable lesson in a part of their business which has been sadly neglected. The actual outcome of efforts in breeding and feeding stock has been to so many a sealed book. Occasionally a show animal is on view at the country butcher's shop, but this is an exceptional case and one not sufficiently attractive to repay the trouble of a drive of a few miles, whereas selected specimens of all breeds of stock and poultry are on view at the Smithfield show so that the various types of our domestic animals can be compared in that form which lends itself to the acquisition of practi- cal knowledge. As at the other fat stock shows of the year, the black polled cattle of North Britain, or, to give them the recent- ly adopted name, Polled Angus, were most successful, the championship of the show going to a pure-bred heifer and the reserve championship to a cross Polled Angus and Shorthorn heifer, so that it has been a black year and a female or suffragette year in more respects than one. In addition to these championship honors, the Shorthorn breed cup was won by a heifer from the North, which beat His Majesty, the King's white steer for this honor. Mr. J. Buchanan's Sussex heifer, Olive Bud 2d, also beat the male contestants for the breed championship. A won- derful specimen of the Galloway breed won the breed cup in this section, this steer was reserved steer champion at the Scotch National Fat Stock Show, held last week at Edinburgh. The King was not quite as successful in the classes for Highlanders as at the last show, although he had the best and second best aged steers, the breed cup was won by W. O. Dalgleich's younger steer. Cross breeds were a grand lot as well as more numerous than any spe- cial breed. The judging of these was said to have left something to be desired. The yearling heifer, Blue Bell, of Cullen, was declared to be the best of the young heifers, but Mr. Hudson's wonderful cross heifer had the most ad- mirers amongst the onlookers. The best Red Foil was found in the steer bred and exhibited by the popular President of our Board of Agriculture, the Right Honorable Ailwyn E. Fellowes. Here again the judges overturned a previous decision, since of the two steers shown in the class by Mr. Fel- .lowes, the Norwich judges had placed first the one which was only second in London, and further the breed cup at the former show was not given to either steer.. It is these variations in the decisions of judges which adds zest to the game of showing. Of the sheep the best were declared to be Hampshire Downs, from a flock which has supplied the short-wooled reserve pen for three years. The reserve pen for cham- pionship honors were Lincolns, so that there was a varia- tion of type, size, skin and mutton between the best and second best pen of sheep in the show. Both these pens belonged to tenant farmers. Mr. Fred D. Jennings, as did the best pen of Southdowns. Leicesters, and of all the other breeds save Shropshires, which were bred and ex- hibited by Sir Richard Cooper. Pigs were a fine and large show; for the championship there was a very close fight, the pen of Berkshires belong- ing to H. R. H., the Prince of Wales, eventually beating some cross middle Whites and BerkShires of which the sire was bred by. SANDERS SPENCER. Holywell Croft, Hunts., England. VIRGINIA SHEEP INDUSTRY. Editor Southern Planter: For the year 1907, according to the statistics of the State, Virginia had 355,366 sheep valued for assessment at %lfi(H$15, which was evidently low, in some case 3 sheep being appraised at less than the value of the pelt. The lambing season begins in January, in many sections about the first, and runs through February and into March. It is unfortunate that the breeding is not so regulated that the lambs would all come at least within a month and that month date from February 15th to March 15th, thus beginning after the worst winter weather and ending before the equinoxtial storms. Great loss in lambs and also of ewes in 1908 caused the Virginia Experiment Sta- tion to institute an investigation into the causes, which is reported in Bulletin 178, now ready for distribution. Thousands of lambs and hundreds of ewes died during the lambing season of 1908. The principle object of the investigation was to secure data as to the extent of these exceptional losses and the conditions under which they were sustained. Loss was found to have resulted quite at frequently from causes other than insufficient shelter during the severe weather of January and February. In fact, many lambs died after a successful introduction into this cold world at a very cold time. This we found could only have been due, in most cases, to insufficient nourish- ment, absolute lack of milk. This unnatural inability to 128 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, provide for the young on the part of the ewes was due to insufficient and im- proper feed and forage, not only at the time of lambing, but prior to that im- portant and trying time to both ewe and lamb. In consequence, both lacked vigor and ability, on the part of the dam to provide good, nourishing milk, and the lamb strength to resist the se- vere weather. Many of the losses ascribed to natural and unavoidable causes would not have occurred but for the abnormal and trying conditions. Not so great a loss as 24 per cent. — nearly one-fourth of the total losses — is hardly possible to be assignable to natural causes. This reason was assigned when no special cause could be given. The sheep farmer naturally dislikes to acknowledge that he has been short in preparation and care. Many breeders state that the ground continued so completely covered with snow that the ewes could not secure grass and had no succulent food. Dry hay or fodder is indigestible and an incomplete feed for pregnant ewes This resulted in a weakened condition of the ewes, causing them to produce weak lambs and having no milk to nourish them, they died when a day or two old, even when dropped in favorable quarters. The ewes, debilitated from lack of good and succulent food, became feverish from parturition, and, when not given special care, died. Let us consider the feeding conditions under which one of the greatest losses of lambs and ewes occurred. The loss of ewes was 25 per cent., the owner having a flock larger than the average. His loss of lambs was also painfully heavy, amounting to 37% per cent. He says the cause of his lamb loss was lack of milk. Before lambing he fed the ewes cut fodder and timothy hay, and after lamb- inng he fed bran and cut fodder. Could a dairyman expect returns from milch cows fed such a ration? It is a great mistake to feed sheep merely timothy hay or corn fodder before or after lambing, as neither contains enough protein and succulence to give an adequate supply for making milk for de- veloping the lamb soon to be dropped. The picture of the ewes and lambs in the orchard calls to mind the advantages of a small band of sheep on every farm and that they subsist so nearly on nothing (weeds) that the farmer should give them Sunday dinners every day in the week during lambing sea- son, especially since they paid for their cheap board full price and in advance last spring with their fleeces of wool. By the way, it should be remembered that Virginia has over 600 species of noxious weeds, of which sheep eat 582 kinds, relishing them quite as much as we do celery or salad. It will be noticed that there are more lambs than ewes in this picture and that all are strong. We desire to call attention to the type of ram usually used in the flocks we have seen. Not al- ways of any particular breed, but usually pure- bred, some of the Down breeds or Dorsets. The point we desire to make is this, that we fear, from general observation, not enough importance is placed on the strength and vigor of the ram. That he is not managed properly, but allowed to run down, from which condition he has not fully recovered in strength and stamina, if he ever will. The rams pictured do not appear in the best of condition and are lower in flesh than rams should be allowed to get. This half of the flock is not so expensive to keep that it should be fed short rations. The rams should be separated from the ewes after the breeding season. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 129 Another cut representing Shrop- shire ewes and lambs exhibits a bet- ter condition. They are vigorous and yet not overkept. We should say they are in the best money-making condi- tion. We believe there is no class of live stock that will give better re- turns for good shelter and feed and the absolutely necessary attention dur- ing the lambing and breeding seasons. The "ready for market" picture is, of course, the pleasing one of our illus- trations and represents the final and desirable outcome of the whole year's operations. If the flock has been in no way neglected and represents a hardy, prolific strain upon which good, pure-bred rams are used, the owner may expect as prolific returns as he can possibly secure from any other line of animal husbandry. At the same time, he can secure quite as much genuine pleasure in the ownership of a fine flock of sheep as in any live stock, realizing that he always has a market for his lambs .and wool and that his land is constantly in- creasing in fertility. Sheep manure is very rich in nitro- gen. The average value annually per sheep has been found over $3.00. It will pay to secure and read the bulle- tin mentioned above if done with the intention of follow- - m- ing some of the suggestions made for better sheep farming. V. P. I., Blacksburg, Va. WALTER J. QUICK, Prof. Animal Husbandry. This report emphasizes what we have so often said, that no sheep keeper ought to fail to grow some Rutabagas or Mangold beets for feed for the ewes before and at lambing time. Fed these, there will be no lack of milk and the ewes and lambs will be healthy and vigorous. — Ed. RECORDS OF A VIRGINIA (JERSEY) HERD. Editor Southern Planter: In your issue of last May you kindly pub- lished a notice of our cows (The Milwood Dairy) and photos of some of them. Thinking it will per- haps be of interest to your readers, I will give some records made by several of of them recently. Mil- Jo^'Sllf da^Vc&r?. re Peg°nlSS * S * nal ("0391). now old and a promising member of the In her 14th year, drop- Milnwood Dairy Herd. Maj. A. R. . . .. ,„ _ Venable, Jr., owner, Farmville, Va. P ed a heifer calf on Oc- She tested 6.5 butter fat. ' tober 18th last by Fly- ing Fox's Cash (72280), and when the calf was about three weeks old I weighed and tested her milk for seven days. Dur- ing this time she gave 225 pounds of milk testing 6.3 per cent fat, total fat 14.175 pounds, total yield of butter 85 per cent., fat 16.676 pounds. I know the government calls for only 84 per cent, and Holstein records are reck- oned on an 80 per cent, basis, but we Jersey breeders call for 85 per cent, straight. Her best day's milk was 34% pounds. She has a record of 52 pounds of milk a day in her younger days, but I did not try to force her as she is too valuable a cow as a breeder to feed too heavily at her age. Denny's Queen Bee (1S9254) dropped a bull calf by Marett's Flying Fox (imported) on May 1, last, and after milking seven months a great part of this time on past- ure alone, was tested for seven days, and though heavy with calf gave, with the regular herd feed and treatment, 182 pounds of milk testing 6 per cent, fat, a total of 10.92 pounds fat and 12.85 pounds butter, 85 per cent. fat. I am sorry that a yearly record of this cow has not been kept, as I feel sure she would have made a great one with proper care. You can form some idea of her probable yield from the fact that in her seventh month of lactation she is giving 25 pounds of milk a day right along. Carrioli (152628), after being fresh about two months gave in seven days 196 pounds of milk testing 6 per cent, making a yield of estimated butter of 13.83 pounds. She sometimes tests as high as 7 per cent. fat. She milked very heavily last year and is not doing so well this year. Eloise H. (214628) a heifer fresh with first calf March 1st and after milking nine months and far advanced with calf, gave in seven days 105 pounds of milk test- ing 6.5 per cent, fat, making a yield of 8 pounds butter, 85 per cent. fat. Miss Blandy (214629), a heifer calved at twenty months of age and, after milking nine months and fifteen days, gave in seven days 98 pounds of milk testing 6 per cent, making 6.92 pounds, estimated butter 85 per cent. She has tested as high as 8.2 per cent, fat at one milking and nearly always over 6 per cent. None of these cows were forced in feed or attention, but received the regular feed and care with the rest of the herd and the weight and test of their milk was recorded for seven days. The average of the whole herd was 6.14 per cent. fat. WOODSON VENABLE. Prince Edward Co., Va. 130 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February,. The Poultry Yard. POULTRY NOTES. I have been in the poultry business for forty years and have never known so much complaint about hens not laying. I have many letters before me from people in several States asking how and what to feed to make their hens lay. I cannot say more than I said in these notes last month. I want to say in addition to what I said last month that I believe that many hens do ' not lay because the houses are too damp and have not enough ventilation. One man asked me to come and see his flock and tell him why the hens and pullets did not lay. I visited his yards and found the feed all that could be desired, houses large enough and clean and plenty of green clover and spring water. This man had sixty early hatched Leghorn pullets, some large Barred Rock pullets, some White Wyandottes that were nine months old, and yet the egg yield was less than two dozen per day from over two hundred hens and pullets. I could see nothing lacking but sunshine and fresh air. The houses were 12x20, two of them with three windows in the South side of each. Houses built very tight. I inquired as to ventilation. He informed me that he kept the door to each house open a part of every pleas- ant day and that the flock had the run of the yards every fair day. I advised him to change the houses to the open front plan. He concluded to try one and had a space thirty inches wide cut out of the South side of the house the entire length and put heavy drilling over it at night but had it open every day. This was done the third week in December. There were sixty Leghorn pullets, and thirty-five Barred Rock pullets kept in this house and over 100 White Wyandottes in the other house. Feed and feeding has rot hppn changed. Last week (January 10th to 16th) the ninety-five pullets in the open front house laid an average of forty-four eggs per day, and those in the other house an average of nine eggs per day. I do not say that the open front made the difference, but I believe it did. I have twenty Single Comb White. Leghorn hens and pullets, ten of each, in a house 10x30 feet, open front, no yard, that have laid 238 eggs since January 1st (seventeen days), an average of fourteen per day. These eggs were sold for 36 cents per dozen, $7.14. The feed cost $1.25, leaving a net profit of $5.89. Here is ma- terial to make a great hen story and I suppose some town chap will figure it out about this way. If twenty hens made a net profit of $5.89 in seventeen days, 100 hens would make five times this amount, or $29.45; hence 1,000 hens would make ten times $29.45, or $294. 50' in seventeen days, or $520 per month. Counting ten months for the laying season, we have the modest sum $5,200. But, alas! figures do not lie, but they lead us into error many times. I write this to show how these great stories are made and yet tell the truth as far as they go. Men are often led into business ventures by these errors of figures in not giving all the facts. One thousand such hens can be kept on a five acre lot and can easily be made to yield a net profit of $2.00 per hen, and one man can care for them easily and have time to spare. In addition, this land will produce many bushels of fruit, such as plums, pears, apples, peaches, cherries, quinces and grapes. The finest lot of grapes that I have ever seen growing were in a poultry yard near Cleveland, Ohio. They were trained on long wire- trelises and an extra row of small posts were set near each side of the row of grapes and when the grapes were nearly full grown poultry netting was stretched and tacked to these posts . and left there until the grapes were ready to pick, then it was taken away and the fruit gathered and sold and the hens kept the land rich, free from grass, weeds and insects. I intend to plant fifty vines in a row in one of my yards within a week or two and try the experiment with Leghorns here in Vir- ginia. I will plant Moore's Early, Concord, Niagara and Worden. I am also planting plum trees and will plant them very close together in the row. My yards are 150 feet long and I will plant thirty plum trees in each row, or five feet apart. Will I succeed? There is » plum orchard in Southern Indiana (Switzerland county) planted in rows twenty feet apart and the trees five feet apart in the row that produced more plums per tree than any trees I have ever seen. The varieties are, Abundance, Red June and Arctic. I will plant Red June, Abundance and Climax. It is folly to attempt to grow vegetables and chickens on the same ground at the same time, but tree fruits can be grown successfully in the yards and I shall under- take to get my five acres of land in fruit and hens as quickly as possible. I intend to plant and have growing on this five acres 1,00*0 fruit trees and vines and 1,000 hens. The soil is good and quite rolling, some old field pine, a few nak. some snim. dogwood, etc.. now growing on part of the land will be cleared away and the trees and vines planted in rows to form yards 20x150 each. My plan is to build one colony house 10x16 feet for two yards and keep twenty-five to thirty hens in each house. I feel sure that the hen business will pay, but as to the fruit, time will tell that tale. When one pays nearly $400 per acre for land, or rather $50 per acre for the land and $350 per acre for the loca- tion, it makes one think seriously several times daily. Houses, fencing and nursery stock will increase this to fully $500 per acre. This will make $2,500' invested. Interest, insurance and taxes will amount to $200 per year. With feed of all kinds away up in high C, it makes the cuticle on top of one's cranium creep up in ridges, to contemplate the possibility of having old "biddie" scratch hard enough to keep it down, but she will come as near doing it as anything on earth. Fortunately, I am not susceptible to nightmare. This will enable me to meet all my bogies in broad daylight. And so with the cluck, cluck, cluck And the peep, peep, peep Of the old biddie hen and her chick, I will trust in Providence and luck To long nights of good, sweet sleep And very, very little in the "Great Big Stick." 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 131 This is the time of year to expect wonderful things in the new incubators, brooders, chick feed and 300 eg.? liens. This fake advertising has grown to such ridicu- lous proportions that very few people are misled. Sev- eral firms advertise "insurable incubators." This is new! I know of a great many incubators that are insurable at very low premiums because they are stored away in some outhouse with no fire or- lamp flame near them from year to year. Last year I had occasion to write to one of these "dead sure" hatcher manufacturers and he assured me that he did not have "a single dissatisfied customer." I have in my files now, and had at that time, more than fifty letters from people asking advice how to make that very incubator hatch chicks without having from fifty to ninety per cent, die in the shell. I suppose these people were all married. Not a single one among them. Another hatches chicks by steam. I presume he hatch- es cold storage eggs and uses steam to thaw them. The chicks hatched in this steam machine must be ironclad. In that event they should have one of the "Metal Mothers" advertised so extensively. One of my neigh- bors bought one of these non-moisture, absolutely self- regulating, insurable, germ developers, and put 140 eggs into it. Good eggs, too. The thing regulated, non moistened, insured and developed for twenty-two days and brought forth seven little cripples. „ All of them went to the high roost in less than three days. This man is a satisfied customer. He is satisfied that his eggs, his oil. his time were all wasted. One man advertises a 200 egg size incubator for $7.00, freight paid, providing you live East of the ' Mississippi River. I wonder what the poor people on the other side of the Father of Waters will do without this great wealth producer? One paper advertises "poultry secrets made public." I was not aware that poultry had any secrets. Can it be possible that President Roosevelt has set his sleuths to lay bare the private life and individual business of our modest biddies. I have one hen that steals her nest, but I have never known her to try to lie out of it. It seems that all the secrets from the United States Senate to the hen yard must be dragged into public view. Why do I write in this way? To show how ridiculous such advertising is and appears when we look at it from a business point of view. Every incubator must have good care and attention. It must be understood and managed in every detail or it will fail to give good re- sults. There are no secrets about poultry that have not been published time and again. Seven dollars will not buy the material to make a good 200 egg size incuba- tor. I am paying $75.00 per 1.000 for lumber and it takes fifty feet to make one incubator. The regulator, tank and lamp cost more than $7.00. Add to this $3.75 for lumber, besides nails, alass. screws, hinges, glue, varnish, wire, labor, etc., etc The hen is honest goods and gives us honest products that cannot be adulterated or imitated: Let us be honest with hei. CAL HUSSELMAN. PROFITS IN PURE-BRED POULTRY ON THE FARM- ANNUAL STATEMENT. Editor Southern Planter: From time to time I have told your readers of the progress we were making and the methods pursued in developing the oldest flock in the world of pure Barred Plymouth Rocks from a small family or door yard flock up to the limit of convenience and profit on a ninety- Pen of Single Comb White Leghorns — Illustration from Southern Poultry Guide. five acre farm with an available force of five small children who are helped out as may be neccessary by the one hired man or by myself. We have begun care- fully, not plunging nor buying expensive fixtures nor putting up any elaborate or costly buildings. We have originated a few labor-saving devices, have hatched over 1,100 chicks with hens, of which we brought about 440 into winter quarters, this being the limit of our housing capacity. We have purchased practically all the grain and prices have been high. Your readers were promised the figures and I give them here as accurately as my system of accounts will permit: On January 1, 1908, we had a total stock of about 80 fowls, of which possibly 60 were, females, including some August chicks, and about 20' were cockerels held for, breeding and sale. The feed on hand consisted of about 40 bushels of corn, which had been damaged by too early housing. For about four months during summer three farm horses were fed all their grain from the chicken bin and their keep must be credited to the flock in the final account. The bills for feed, meat, shell, etc., for the year amounted to $301.60. Small fixtures, such as watering dishes, shipping boxes, etc., $2.85; Mongrel hens bought for sitters, $21.95. Total expense, including four months' grain for three horses, $325.60. The total cash credits for the flock for the year amounted to $408.57 and we then had on hand over $50 worth of wheat bought ahead and charged in the fore- going account, and we also had on hand a total stock of 437 fowls as against the 80 of one year ago. While many of these are late chicks, yet the difference in value of the flock may be safely put at $275 to $300. Counting the horse feed as being worth only 10 cents 132 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, per horse per day, we have a credit for the flock of $36 on the feed bill. The summary, then, is as follows: Cash sales $308 57 Credit by feed of 3 horses* 4 months 36 00 Credit by feed on hand Jan. 1, 1909 50 00 Credit by value of increased stock 275 00 Total $669 57 Feed bills, sitters and sundries 325 60 Profit, representing our labor $343 97 This would far more than pay for all our coops, build- ings and permanent equipment and leave us as large a flock as we had a year ago. The eggs consumed by the family and the fact that a household of ten persons have eaten chickens more freely than ever before have been ignored in this account, though this is really an important item to the credit of the flock. Although we consider this a good showing for a start with eighty fowls, we have been handicapped by moving everything to a new location and into new buildings on September 22d. We lost about a dozen chicks in a mink raid, and since the fowls have been too large for hawks to carry off we have had not less than fifteen killed by these depredators, representing a loss of nearly as many dollars. We have been fortunate in catching six of these hawks in steel traps set around the chicken after the first meal had been eaten from it. Hawks often return after forty-eight hours for a second feast, even though putrefaction may have begun. In case any of your readers may think that my esti- mate of the value of the stock on hand is excessive, I will add that for the first sixteen days of the present year the cash sales, largely of breeding stock, have amounted to $123, and we now have on hand and unsold 388 fowls. As we wish to make this venture pay its way at every step, we will probably sell down to 150 females. The carrying over of a large number of good cockerels for breeding stock has been justified by an active demand at fair prices. We are doing fully twice as much of this business as ever before. We have never had a large enough stock of females to enable us to do the business which has been offered , in supplying large incubator orders, but we hope this season to bo able to supply all demands. We will probably build two more small houses enabling us to keep six separate flocks all on free range with choice of woodland and field. I never want so large a flock that I cannot take each bird in hand once or twice a year and note all defects, if any there be, so as to know just what I am breeding from. Vienna, Va. W. A. SHERMAN. FOULTRY KEEPING ON A CITY LOT. Editor Southern Planter: I again give you report on my city lot poultry farm of half an acre: January 1, 1908, stock on hand 256 January 1, 190*9. stock on hand 209 Stock sold for the year 179 Eggs laid for the year 12,888 Cash from eggs sold $319 63 Cash from stock sold 102 60 Manure sold 11 65 Total receipts $433 88 Expenses— Feed, etc 180 39 Profit clear of expense $253 49 Not quite so good a return as in 1907, on account of buying new blood stock for 1909 breeding stock. Warwick Co., Va. R. H. HARRIS. Geese should not be permitted to have the freedom of the farm. They will foul more food than they will eat. A bog meadow is the place for them, or any rough pastur- age that is accessible to water. A small number will take care of themselves during the summer with very little if any grain. They are equal to horses and cattle as graz- ers. Timely cut corn stalks, clover and vegetables should be the main winter food. They will prove better breed- ers in the spring if not much grain is given them. A building with a good roof where they can get in out of the wind and storm and have their feet dry is about all the shelter they require. We haven't all bog meadows, but we can find a piece of grass large enough to raise a few geese for our own eating, and they' certainly are good in the winter, and so little expense and trouble to raise. Two geese and a gander can't hurt very much of the pasture, and you'll have a few profitable dollars worth to sell around Christ- mas time. — Blooded Stock. IMPROVEMENT OF THE FLOCK BY SELECTION. Increasing the egg producing capacity of a flock requires selection. The mistake made is not in the selection of the hens, but of the male, as he is the sire of all the chicks hatched. Eggs from the best layers only should be used for hatching, and the male should be hatched from an egg laid by the best hen in the flock, using only pure-bred fowls, and avoiding kinship, if possible, as pro- lificacy can be transmitted to the progeny. If this rule is adhered to there will be a marked im- provement in the number of eggs laid by each member of the flock. The difficulty is to discover which hen in a flock lays the largest number of eggs. This cannot easily be done, except by watching the hens, which is impossi- ble: but the difficulty is lessened by using small flocks, as then the hens are known. One method is to have the nests in a location so arranged that after a hen lays she cannot get back into the yard from which she came, but must pass out of an entrance leading into another yard. At night all the hens that have laid will then be together, leaving the others in the first yard. FEED LOTS OF CLOVER AND ALFALFA. Hens need bulky food. Clover hay, or alfalfa, cut in half-inch lengths, helps to make an ideal ration. If cooked and mixed with bran it makes an excellent breakfast. Clover and alfalfa not only promote digestion, but also largely assist in supplying the elements necessary for the albumen. 1900.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 133 The Horse. THE HORSE. By W. J. Carter, "Broad Rock." Horsemen all over the country are being attracted to the great possibilities of the South as a fall racing sec- tion, which is well, seeing that this exhilarating, time- honored sport is annually increasing in importance in this territory. This being so, an annoucement likely to be well received by horsemen, breeders and others is that at an early date a called meeting will be held of repre- sntatives of the Associations that made up the Virginia- Carolina Circuit in 1908. Not only are representatives of the various Associations in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina expected to be present, but those from other Southern States will also be welcomed. The suc- cess of the fairs and race meetings that made up this Circuit during the present season was pronounced and leads to the belief that the chain wiH be strengthened by the addition of new members, which would require an earlier opening, something that could be done easily • and likely to prove rather beneficial than otherwise at the Virginia end. For several years past the Circuit has begun at the mountain town of Galax, far down in the southwestern part of Virginia, during the first week in September, but there seems no reason why a month earli- er should not be an opportune time, while the South Carolina and Georgia meetings could be held right along until at least the middle of December, as weather condi- tions in either State are usually favorable to open air affairs until a later date even. Such an adjustment of dates would render it possible to avoid conflict of dates, which has worked to the disadvantage of different Asso- ciations in North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, while it would also permit the addition of new members in Virginia, as it is understood that both Petersburg and Emporia, in the latter State, desire to join. No fairs have been held at Petersburg for a generation or so past, but it is likely that an organization will be formed at an early date. The- Emporia Fair Association has been in ex istence for several years and is now one of the thriving organizations of its kind in any of the States mentioned. dam, La Jolla, dam of Binjolla, 2:17%, trial 2.10, by Ad- vertiser, 2:15i4; third dam, the famous Sally Benton, 2:17%, former world's champion four-year-old trotter and dam of Serpol, 2:10 and three others, by General Ben- ton; fourth dam, the wonderful great brood mare, Sontag Mohawk, dam of eight trotters, among them Con- ductor, 2:14%, the sire of Walnut Hall, 2:08%, who got The Harvester, 2:0'8%, the greatest three-year-old trotter of 1908, for whom $40;000 was refused. This is rich breeding; in fact, advanced students regard it as the cream of the Trotting Register. Petaurist will make a limited season in the stud at the Southern Stock Yards, at the moderate fee of $25.00 the season, and that with return privilege granted, after which the son of Peter the Great will be placed in train- ing and prepared for a fast record. Joseph Lassiter, who has been prominently identified with the horse and mule trade of Richmond for many years, and than whom there are few horsemen more widely known in Virginia and the two Carolinas, is now probably more actively engaged than formerly, as his semi-weekly auction sales at the mammoth and splendidly appointed plant of the Southern Stock Yards Corporation, at Richmond, are features of the trade here. During his entire career, Joseph Lassiter has been a loyal patron of the light harness horse, and that the fancy still lingers is aptly evidenced by some good ones now in his stable, of "which the best known is the bay stallion, Petaurist. 42431, a good looking bay horse, with a trial of 2:27%, trotting, and demonstrated ability to trot quarters handily during any part of the mile in 35 seconds — a 2:20 gait. Petaurist is by Peter the Great, 2:07%. a great race uorse himself, and now in the very front rank of famous trotting sires, with seventeen new standard performers to his credit in 190S. The first dam of Petaurist is Telka, a young mare, by Arion, 2:07 n i, a world's champion trotter at two years old and sold for $125. WO at that age; second The annual meeting of stockholders of the Virginia State Fair Association was held in Richmond on January 10th and, after disposing of various routine affairs of more or less importance an election of directors was gone into, rendered necessary by expiring terms of mambership and retirement, due to other demands. J. G. Corley, -whose term had expired, was re-elected by acclamation. M. E. Doyle, who declined re-election, was succeeded by W. J. Carter, for a term of five years, while John Stewart Bryan and A. R. Holderby, who were prompted to resign by pressure of various other matters, were succeeded by R. W. Spillman and C. H. Ratcliff, the former for five years and the latter for one year. In addition to Messrs. Spil- man, Ratcliff, Carter and J. G. Corley, who was re-elected, the Board of Directors of the Virginia State Fair Asso- ciation includes Hon. Henry C. Stuart, E. B. Sydnor, O. J. Sands, M. A. Chambers, L. O. Miller, Legh R. Page, Samuel Cohen and J. M. Miller, Jr. At Springfield Stock Farm, Gordonsville, Va., W. W. Osborne is wintering one of the best collections he has yet owned of hunters, jumpers, saddle and harness horses. The finest heavy weight hunter in the stable is Oriflame, the big chestnut gelding, by Blue and Grey, thoroughbred son of Hindoo. Oriflame won two blue ribbons and a silver cup, offered for horses in his class last fall at the Lynch- burg Fair. Mr. Osborne's stud is headed by Racine, the California-bred son of Bishop and imported Fairy Rose, by Kisber. Raciue is a richly coated bay horse of sixteen hands and 1,100 pounds, and there are few finer specimens of the thoroughbred stallion to be found. He was a great race horse during his turf career and since retirement to the stud this well bred and handsome son of Bishop has sired a number of good winners, both on the flat and over the jump. John Baker, who for some years was located at Cham- pain, in Essex county, Virginia, has disposed of his farm there and removed to a new location, near Lloyds, in the same county, where he owns and has in winter ^quarters the big and handsome bay stallion, J. W. Parrish, by Dum- barton, dam Maud Elliver, by Conductor, 2:14%; Lucy Taylor, by J. W. Parrish, and other trotting bred horses. Parrish will be in stud at Lloyds during the season of 1909, and a number of good mares are being booked to the son of Dumbarton. 134 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, Miscellaneous. VIRGINIA STATE FARMERS INSTITUTE. ' The Committee appointed by the Virginia State Farm- ers' Institute at its session in Richmond last August to secure a charter, met at Murphy's Hotel, January 10th, and perfected an organization. Those present were: T. O. Sandy, of Burkeville; Westmoreland Davis, of Leesburg; Samuel B. Woods, of Charlottesville; J. F. Jackson, of Richmond; James Bell wood, of Manchester; Henry W. Wood, of Richmond, and Joseph A. Turner, of Hollins In- stitute. Hon. J. Hoge Tyler, Leslie D. Kline and C. N. Stacy were absent, owing to other engagements. The charter was accepted, by-laws adopted, and a gen- eral plan of work outlined. T. O. Sandy declined another term as president, pleading a pressure of Farm demon- stration work as greatly interfering with the proper atten- tion to the office. Mr. Westmoreland Davis was unanimously elected his successor. Joseph A. Turner was elected Vice- President; B. Morgan Shepherd, of Richmond, Secretary, and James Bellwood, Treasurer. The county Vice-Presidents and standing committee will be named and announced later. An informal discussion was had as to the place for holding the next Institute, but no definte decision was reached. Richmond, Charlottesville and Petersburg pre- sented invitations, which will be considered by the direc- tors of the Institute. The general plan and scope of the Institute under its incorporation contemplates a great deal of hard work on behalf of the farmers of the State. In addition to holding Institutes, the organization proposes to assist the farmers in their transportation, legislative and other problems. Every county will have a representative, who will be a member of the Advisory council, and every member of the Institute is invited and expected to keep in touch with the central body through his county representative. Every farmer in the State is urged to become a member of the organization. The annual membership fee is $1.00. PEANUT GROWERS ORGANIZE. Editor Southern Planter: At a meeting held at Dendron, Va., January 5, 1909, farmers from Surry, Isle of Wight, Prince George and Sussex counties effected the organization of an Associa- tion to be known as "The Peanut Growers' Union of Vir- ginia. Incorporated,, with a capital stock of $50',000 maxi- mum, $5,000 minimum, in shares of $5.00 each. Every member of the Association must own at least one share of the stock, and no one member may own more than 10 per cent, of outstanding stock. It is the purpose of this Association to bring the farm- ers of the peanut growing counties together so they may by united effort educate themselves in their profession; learn to farm so as to reduce cost of production, and learn to do business on a cash basis. Its object is to buy, inspect, grade, brand and store, sell or consign the produce of its members and their tenants, and, by means of fixed standards in grade and package, and sellinc: through a central agency, establish and maintain prices for produce, and, by purchasing sup- plies through said central agency, in large lots for cash, get them at better prices than now rule. Having in mind the mistakes that have wrecked similar efforts in the past, sources of dissension, such as politics etc., are barred. Our aim is strictly to further the material welfare of our members. Actual farmers, or those who advocate our cause, only are eligible for membership, and we invite these from all the peanut growing counties to join with us, and help themselves and us. If you want to form a county association, write our President, Mr. P. O. Goodrich, Surry. Va., he will instruct you and help you, or write the Vice-President nearest you — W. E. Laine, Orbit, Isle of Wight Co.; Edmunds Gee, Disputanta, Prince George Co.; J. A. Brittle, Wakefield, Sussex Co. Form "Locals" wherever penuts are grown, and send a delegation to our next meeting, to be held at Dendron, ^ Va., the first Tuesday in April next, at 10 o'clock A. M. Spottsville, Va. J. B. JONES, Secy., Peanut Growers' Assn. of Va., Inc. "THE BIG SNOW" AND STUART. Editor Southern Planter: How it does snow! It is lying now from eighteen to twenty-two inches deep. How beautiful it all looks. Never have I seen so much snow fall in such a short time in old Virginia as on this 22d day of December, 1908. It is a far cry from the old home to the station — one mile and three quarters. The telephone wires must be broken for no answer comes to my call. Christmas is near and there are still some things to be gotten. Bui now the roads are covered too deeply with snow. Stuart has gone to care for the stock. They need extra care and plenty oif feed in such weather. Some of the barns and stables are quite a distance and I feel sorry for Stuart. As I am looking towards the stables I see him coming, driving before him a horse hitched to some implement. Out of a few planks nailed together in V-shape, he has made a snow plow, and wherever he drives he leaves be- hind a clear path fully two feet wide. Now he is driving towards my chicken house, now to the wood shed, now he swings around the horse and calls to me: "Going to make a path to the station," as he starts along the main road. Nearly an hour and a half have passed when I see him coming back. At the station he has spread the planks further apart, and on his trip home the path has been widened to between three and four feet. Now he is hitch- ing two horses and is spreading his plow boards to the full width of a wagon track. This time the horses have solid footing and the trip to and from the station is made in an hour. Yesterday was Christmas, our roads have been in splen- did condition, almost entirely dry. We can drive at a good trot nearly all the way. And all over the farm yard are good, dry paths. The work of clearing the roads took 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 135 over three hours, but the time has been saved over and over again since. . We are driving to town in ten minutes with a buggy and the horses can pull a good load in the wagon. But look at the other country roads in our neighbor- hood! Slush and mire, half frozen every morning and impassable for walking or for a heavy load, and as the snow melts and sinks into the ground and mires with the clay they will be still worse. Stuart has put his plow in the shed until the next bliz- zard. Who is Stuart? Oh, I forgot to say. He is my man in the Moon. ALICE N. FARMERS CLUBS. Editor Southern Planter: In your issue of December, Dr. Walter J. Quick has a capital letter on Farmers' Clubs, a letter which will well repay the most careful study and consideration. Mr. Quick finishes his letter with a quotation from R. L. Stev- enson, which is not quite in the form in which I have previously seen it. In the author's work it runs — "There is so much good in the worst of us, There is so much bad in the best of us, That it ill behooves any one of us To talk about the rest of us." Your readers may prefer this version to the one given in December, at least this is the view of Holywell Croft. SANDERS SPENCER. Hunts.. England. CORN SHOW AT BLACKSBURG. Editor Southern Planter: The First Annual Corn Day was held at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute at Blacksburg, January 21st. Judg- ing from the attendance and the interest shown by the visitors, the meeting was a success. There were over 130 farmers present. The proceedings consisted of two ad- dresses at the morning meeting, one by Judge G. E. Cas- sell, of East Radfard, Va., and the other by T. O. Sandy, of Burkeville. Va. In the afternoon some time was taken up in organizing a Virginia Corn Growers' Association and placing the awards on the exhibits of corn. Judge Cassell, in his address, discussed the methods of growing a corn crop which he has found successful. He stated that the farmer should have begun preparing for the 1909 corn crop last fall; that he should have had his seed sorn selected and the ground plowed deeply. But, as he stated, it is of no use to dwell in the past. The best thing now is to get the ground plowed as early as possible. He emphasized the need of thorough tillage in preparing the seed bed for corn. A few days after the corn is planted he goes over the field with a weeder and continues using this implement until the corn is all up. One statement which Judge Cassell made should be given more than passing notice, and that is: "A farmer has not time to thin or replant a crop of corn." If the farmer will select good seed corn and take care of it dur- ing the winter, there will be no necessity for planting more than is necessary for the crop. It is a well-known fact that corn "planted in" never amounts to anything except to furnish a little fodder. The speaker referred to some of the big yields that have been reported in Northern agricultural papers and dwelt at some length on the work of a farmer in Pennsylvania, who is reported to have raised over 100 bushels of corn on one acre of land without the use of commercial fertilizers. While Judge Cassell did not condemn the use of commercial fertilizers entirely, he made it plain that they should be used in limited amounts and that the fertility of the land should be kept up with legumes and barn yard manure. The next speaker, Mr. Sandy, endorsed all the remarks made by Judge Cassell, but stated that he was in favor of the use of commercial fertilizers in the section where he lives. Mr. Sandy's methods of farming are so well known to the readers of your magazine that they hardly need to be repeated here. He urges the use of lime on all of the broom straw land of Virginia, stating that one application of a ton of rock lime to the acre would greatly reduce the quantity of this pest, and that a second appli- cation of lime four or five years later would entirely de- stroy it. At the close of his address there were a number of questions in regard to his cultural methods in raising corn and also his success with grass and clover crops. At the afternoon session the Virginia Corn Growers' Association was organized with J. R. K. Bell, of Pulaski, Va., as President; T. C. Commins, Rumford, Va., Vice- President, and Lyman Carrier, Blacksburg, Va., Secre- tary-Treasurer. It was the sentiment of the meeting that an annual corn show be held in connection with the Vir- ginia State Farmers' Institute at their winter meetings. The Constitution and By-Laws of this Association will be perfected and published later. In the corn show the first prize and sweepstakes, which consisted of $10.00 worth of seeds, given by Diggs & Beadles. Richmond, Va.; one bushel of clover seed, given by W. H. Miller & Son, Lynchburg, Va., and a silver loving cup, given by T. W. Wood & Sons, Richmond, Va., went to Dr. C. TJ. Gravatt, of Port Royal, Va., for ten ears of Boone County White corn The second prize in the White Class was given to R. T. Montague Christiansburg, Va., one inch of advertising space in the Southern Planter to continue three months, given by the Southern Planter Publishing Co. The third prize was given to George Frank, Rice, Va., $2.50 cash. In the class for yellow corn, the first prize was given to Mr. W. G. Routt, Roanoke, Va.. and consisted of $20.00 worth of seeds given by George Tait & SonB, Norfolk, Va. The second prize was given to Mr. Charles McDonald, Blacksburg, Va., one inch of advertising space in the Southern Planted to continue three months, given by the Southern Planter Publishing Co. The third prize was given to Mr. J. S. Pechin, Buchanan, Va., $2.50 cash. LYMAN CARRIER, Agronomist. THE NECESSITY FOR IMPROVED RURAL CONDITIONS IN THE SOUTH. Editor Southern Planter: The aim of the Farmers' Co-operative Demonstration Work is to place a practical object lesson before the farm masses, illustrating the best and most profitable methods of producing the standard farm crops and to 130 THE .SOUTHEKN PLANTER [February, secure such active participation in the demonstrations as to prove that the average farmer can produce better results. This work also shows that there is no necessity for the general deterioration of farms and the too common pov- erty of the rural masses. When these facts have been demonstrated the first step in the improvement of rural conditions has been taken. Every substantial advance in the progress of hui.'.an so- ciety costs money and must be maintained by an increased earning capacity of the masses. Food and clothing are the first requirements. If the earning capacity of a peo- ple is only sufficient to supply these, progress is blocked and it is useless to insist upon better houses, more home comforts, schools, or any upward step. The problem is, are the rural masses unwilling to provide the betterments which a progressive civilization in the country demands — ■ comfortable houses with improved home and farm equip- ment, good schools and more months of schooling, bet- ter highways, rural free delivery, telephones, etc. — or do they lack the means. Organization of This Special Work. As organized under the Bureau of Plant Industry, the working forces of the Farmers' Co-operative Demonstra- tion Work consist now of one Director with assistants, ten State agents, and 188 district and local agents. Local agents must be practical farmers and thoroughly instruct- ed in their duties by the State and district agents. The compaigns for the ensuing year are planned in September and active work commences in October by calling public meetings in every district to be worked, at which is shown the great advantage to all the people of increasing the crop yield two, three or four fold, and lit is made clear that this can be done by adopting better methods. In country villages the banker, the merchant, and the editor join with the leading farmers of the section in endorsing the progressive plans of the demonstration work; farmers agree to follow instructions, and demonstration plots of one or more acres are located so as to place a sample of the best farming in each neighborhood of a county or district. The following farmers in Halifax county have signified their intention to demonstrate with from one to five acres the coming year: J. S. Newbill, H. C. Lacy, Dr. R. C. Beck- itt, T. Y. Hundley, T. J. Owen, A. A. Farmer, J. M. Lacy, J. L. Waldon, J. L. McOormick, J. W. McCormick, S. A. McCormick, C. H. Dance, W. H. Dance, Lohr & Lanz, Robert Lacy, J. H. Hastings, C. J. Childress, all of Scotts- burg; Thomas A. Adams, Danripple; H. H. -Edmunds, Houston; A. F. Wilkins, Turberville; J. E. Thomas, Rep. Grive, C. G. Pollard, R. T. Edwards, J. T. Noblin. R. E. Perkins, C. W. Salmon, Thomas Hudson, all of Crystal Hill; Tom West, Jr., A. H. Dunn, George Hunt, T. S. Armistead. H. C. Canada, all of Lennig; Gran Craddock, Houston; J. R. Blackstock, J. E. Conner, W. H. Dorin, of Mount Laurel, and numerous others. While the State agents of the Farmers' Co-operative Demonstration Work were in Washington. September 1, 1908, arranging some details of their work for the year 19(V8-1909, they called upon Secretary Wilson and, in re- sponse to inquiries made by him, the following facts were brought out: Mr. T. O. Sanay, of Burkeville, Va.. Stata Agent, reported that the demonstration work was com- menced in Virginia in January, 1907. Up to this tiir.f it has been exclusively conducted in the counties south of the James River, where tobacco was the staple cash crop, under the effect of which farms had deteriorated in productive capacity and value until many farms were on the market a short time since at $5.00 to $8.00 an acre. Most of the hay and corn f'3: the work animals was imported. Two hundred and thirty-two thousand dollars worth of hay was imported within a radius of a tew miles of Burkeville in the year for home consumption. W. H. DORIN. THE VIRGINIA STATE VETERINARY ASSOCIATION. Not in the history of »the Association has there been a more interesting or better attended meeting of the State Veterinary Assocition than there was in Richmond on the 8th of January, at the annual meeting of this Asso- ciation. The members from different portions of the State and from Washington, D. C, were as follows, viz.: Dr. Charles McCulloch, Howardsville; H. Banister. Roanoke; C. C. Faville, Norfolk; W. T. Gilchrist, Norfolk; H. S. Willis, Rapidan; Thomas Fraser, Richmond; Fra3er Smith, Rich- mond; W. Van Lloyd, Richmond; Charles Epps, Rich- mond; H. H. Adair, Newport News; Edward Ferneyhough, Washington, D. C; W. G. Chrisman, Charlottesville, Va.; R. R. Clark, Hampton, Va.; J. G. Ferneyhough, Burkeville, Va.. and E. P. Wood, Washington. D. C. Dr. McDonnagh, of Richmond, and R. E. Ferneyhough, of Warrenton, were elected to membership in the Asso- ciation. The State Examining Board met on the 7th, and exam- ined four candidates. The Association has determined that every one who enters Virginia in the future to prac- tice veterinary medicine shall comply with the law and pass the required examination before they will he allowed to receive money or other compensation for their services, it matters not what institution, they claim to be from or what papers they can show from other States. Virginia is tired of being the dumping ground for incompetent men from other sections. The Association and Examining Board meet twice every year and thus every one has an opportunity to take the examination who wishes to do so. The next meeting will be on the 8th and 9th of July, at Hampton, Va. As usual at the annual meeting, officers for the year were elected. Names of officers: President. S. C. Neff. Staunton, Va.; First Vice-President, .1. G. Ferneyhough, Burkeville, Va.; Second Vice-President, Charles McCulloch, Howardsville, Va.; Secretary and Treasurer, W. G. Chrisman, Charlottesville, Va. Examining Board: S. C. Neff, Staunton, Va.; H. Banis- ter, Roanoke. Va.; H. S. Willis, Rapidan, Va.; Thomas Fraser, Richmond, Va.; J. G. Ferneyhough, Burkeville, Va. Committee on Program, for next meeting: Charles McCulloch. H. Banister, and George C. Faville. J. G. FERNEYHOUGH. State Veterinarian. 1U09.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 137 THE Southern Planter PUBLISHED BY THE SOUTHERN PLANTER PUBLISHING CO., RICHMOND, VA. ISSUED ON 1ST OF EACH MONTH. J. F. JACKSON, Editor. B. MORGAN SHEPHERD, Business Manager. B. W. RHOADS, restern Representative, S44 Tribune Building. Chicago, 111. MANCHESTER OFFICE. W. J. Carter, 1102 Hull Street. ADVERTISING RATES Will be furnished on application. The SOUTHERN PLANTER is mailed to subscribers in the United States, Mexico and island possessions at 60 cents per annum; all foreign countries, $1; the city of Richmond and Canada, 76 cents. REMITTANCES should be made direct to this office, either by Regis- tered Letter or Money Order, which ■will be at our risk. When made other- wise we cannot be responsible. SUBSCRIBERS failing to receive their paper promptly and regularly will confer a favor by reporting the fact at once. WE INVITE FARMERS to write us •n any agricultural topic. We are always pleased to receive practical articles. Rejected matter will be re- turned on receipt of postage. No anonymous communications or •enquiries will receive attention. Address THE SOUTHERN PLANTER, RICHMOND, VA. ENTERED AT THE POST-OFFICE AT RICHMOND, VA., AS SECOND- CLASS MAIL MATTER. TOWERS FISH BRAND WATERPROOF \i OILED CLOTHING looks belter -wears longer and gives more fe<~^ J ' bodily comforl >^T\y because cul on -s^V, large patterns, yel costs no more than the "jus! as good kinds SUITSWLICKERMQO SOLD EVERYWHERE. \ .Every garment \$NER\ bearing the „ * ,, ^. ** , sign oi the fish < «?OBfc*^ 1 :, waterproof "J//BRN^ catalog .r-vr\. Pl&nt Wood's Seeds FOR THE Garden and Farm. Thirty years in business, with a steadily increasing trade every year — until we have to-day one of the largest businesses in seeds in this country — is the best of evidence as to the superior quality of Wood's Seeds. Wood's Descriptive Catalogue and monthly "Crop Special'' have done more to encourage diversified farming and profitable market-growing of vegetable crops than any other similar publications. If you want the best and most profitable crops, Plant Wood's Seeds. Wood's Descriptive Catalogue and monthly "Crop Special,'' mailed free on request. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, RICHMOND, ... 7 VIRGINIA. t^V PUBLISHERS' NOTES. TO ADVERTISERS. Please bear in mind that we must have all copy or instructions for ad- vertisements by the 25th of each month without fail. Every month wp are compelled to omit advertising in large volumes for the simple reason that copy does not reach us in time. A NEAT BINDER. If you will send thirty cents to our business office, we will send you a neat binder made of substantial Bris- tol board, in which you can preserve an entire volume of the Southern Planter. Many of our readers And this a useful device, as they always save their copies for reference. WINNINGS OF STANDARD-BRED POULTRY FARMS BURKE'S GARDEN, VA. At Bristol, Tenn., Dec. 16. |1908, under Drevenstedt: Barred Plymouth Rocks. 1 pen, 1, 2. 3, pullet; White Wyandottes 1 hen 2. 3 pullet; 3 cock- erel, 2 pen; Bronze Turkeys, 1 pair. At Charlotte. N. C, Jan. 16. 1909.. under Simmons: White Wyandottes, 1 pen, cup special, (nothing else en- tered). POTATOES PAY Make them pay by using the machines that really do the work- CUT, PLANT, SPRAY, DIG and SORT There's nothing in potato ma- chinery up to ASPINWALL EQUIPMENT Write for copy of our free book telline how to make money, growing potatoes. ASPINWALL MFG. CO. 408 Sabin St., Jackson, Mich., U.S.A. Pioneer Makers of Potato Machinery HARVEY BOLSTER SPRINGS BANK OF RICHMOND Main and Ninth Streets. CAPITAL, $1,000,000 00. SURPLUS, 9475,0OO.»t. Special attention pr'd to out-of-town accounts. Correspondence invited. 1 Three per cenV. Interest Allowed In Savings Department Compounded Seml-Annually. ! 138 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, The On!y Harrow That Will Crush, Cut, Lift Jurn, Smooth and Level i $p%^ lowest priced, 111 ONE LIGHTEST WEIGHT Operation RIDING HARROW MADE ACME The only harrow suited to every farmer's needs, every kind and every condition of soil. It is the Pulverizing Harrow, Clod Crusher and Leveler When you examine the construction of this harrow, and especially when you have tried it, you will understand why it has alwas'S been the favorite and why it is recommended more than all other harrows combined, in books written by agricultural authorities. Not an inch of soil escapes the sharp sloping knives, and these knives cut through to the undersoil, chopping the sod or trash buried by the plow tnd leaving it buried, instead of dragging it to the surface. Sizes from 3 ft. to 1 7 & ft. Wide The Acme is the lightest riding harrow made, guaranteed against breakage, and will last a lifetime. Made of steel and iron. Ask your dealer. If he doesn't carry it, we 11 ship direct. Book for your farm library Free. Write us now for our valuable book by high authorities on "Preparation of the Soil." It is an education in itself. We'll send complete cata- logue and prices also. We want you to see what our customers say of the Acme. BUANE H.NASH, Inc. 146 Central Ave.. Millington, N. J. Fertilizer! Sower Handles All Commercial Fertilizers wet or dry, coarse or fl PoBltlve teed, no choking, no skips. For Broadcast (Top-dressing or Drilling in Rows. Spreads to width of 6 ft. 10 Inches, 200 to 1000 lbs. per LOW— EASIEST TO LOAD Broad tires, no ruttinfj. Quick chanpres from drill- ing to broadcasts also for thick B7id thin spread- ing. FurnlBhed with shafts or tonsrue. Write for descriptive circulars and testimonials. Special Largo Size, Sows 8 Feet 3 Inches Wide. BELCHER & TAYLOR A. T. CO.. Box 25, Chicopee Falls, Mass. De LOACH Z'A to 200 H. P. Steam, Gasoline and Water Power Planer*, Shingle Mills and Corn Mills. WE PAY THE FREIGHT. Send for Catalogue. DeLoach Mill Mfg. Co.. Bridgeport, Ala. Box 265 WITH THE ADVERTISERS. Three young men have a splendid opportunity offered them in our "Want" columns. The Quality Poultry Farm is a new advertiser this month. White Wyan- dottes are a specialty. The E. W. Jones Nursery Co. has several ads. in this issue to which at- tention is invited. C. M. Gibson offers Cabbage Plants in lots of 100 or 1,000,000. The Belcher & Taylor A. T. Co. has a couple of ads. in this number of in- terest to farmers. The Kemp & Burpee Mfg. Co. is advertising its Success Spreader on another page. The Waterloo Gas Engine" CoT has something interesting to say about its engines. A valuable treatise, "Modern Sil- age Methods," can be had of the Sil- ver Mfg. Co. for 10 cents. The Salzer Seed Co. has three ads. in this issue, to which attention is asked. Write the National Lead Co. for free paint test equipment No. 14. See ad. on another page. The Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. starts the season's advertising this month. Canning outfits and machinery are advertised by A. K. Robbins & Co. The Sharpies Separator Co. has a prominent announcement on another page. The Oaks Mfg. Co. is offering a splendid line of seasonable machinery. See the ad. Percheron horses, stallions, mares and teams are offered by O. E. Jordan. The Seay-Dillard Hardware Co. is n new advertiser this month. A com- plete line of farm implements and ma- chinery is offered. W. R. Fensom has a splendid offer- ing of high-bred Berkshires. Sans Tache Poultry Yards makes a bid for a share of your patronage. Look up the ad. The International Harvester Co. has several prominent ads. in this is- sue, to which attention is invited. The "Want" columns teem with bargains this month. No better value for the money in the United States. Albemarle Co., Va., Dec. 7, '08. I will state that I have been a sub- scriber to the Southern Planter for a long time and, in my honest, hum- ble opinion, it is the best of its kind. I take a good many papers and the Southern Planter surpasses in re- gard to facts, good sense and useful knowledge, and it is worth double its price to any farmer. G. A. TAPSCOTT. FEARLESS Manure Spreader Why put money in a wide, cumbersome, heavy manure spreader which distributes only the width of its own box, when the "Feakless" spreader, built narrow and bandy, covers a strip six and a half feet wide. The "Fearless" is the most economical spreader built— saves time and horse power. Tracks with an ordinary farm wagon and passes any gate or bar-way without trouble. The "Fearless" circular beater shown be- low is the key to "Fearless" superiority. Its circular form makes it spread outside the wheels. That means more ground covered per load and no driving overspread manure. Investigate the "Fearless" spreader before you buy— it will pay you. Write to-day for free booklet. HARDER MFG. COMPANY Box 32 Cobleskill. N. Y. The Improved New Stumo Puller Write for Prices Chamberltn Mfg. Co., Olean, If. The ' MONARCH" STEEL STUMP PULLER. The best and simplest on earth. No- cost to you. except freight, until it is set up and giving satisfaction. Nine years experience in this business. Write for catalogue and prices. JOS. W. RITCHIE, Agent, Route 1, Grottoes, Va. V ui CtnlPater 2 Reims Ahs oiutely Fne "Have you three rooms that need papering? Buy your papers from us — we'll save you halfthe cost, and show you how easly any man or handy woman at home can hang them and save labor ex- pense, too. You can beautify three looms for what one has post you before. Send for free Spring sample-book andin3truc- tions tod ay. r - "TESTS" WALL-PA PEK MILLS, -_Z* Dept. SPhilB. Always mention The Southern Planter when writing advertisers. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 139 Free Books Write your Name on a Postal to Deere Here is the Greatest Time Saver RfiMBS Cotton Plant fields before plow- ing. When you need it— you need it badly. But only "Deere Durability" will stand the test anil do this work properly Deere Stalk Cutters are High Frame — oi Strong. Rigid Steel— Instantly Adjust- able - Lightest Draft — with Double Edged Knives that positively do the work. teere Stalk Cutters are made in single and double-row, 5. liorT knife. open or closed heads. All open head cutters have oil soaked hard maple bearing boxes. The lever raises both head and stalk hooks in one operation, leav- ing one hand free to control the team. Spring Hitch with both pull ana cushion springs, drag .hooks spring controlled, cutter I heads have spring pressure. A i double leaf seat spring insures comfort to the operator. Durable Steel Frame with Double Edge Knives for fl Corn or Cotton Write ua a POSTAL so we can put your name on the DEERE PBBK MAILING LIST. Then you'll get regularly all latest farm implement uews of linp-ovemeata. Mention this paper wiien writing. k Deere & Mansur Co. le-fey-- Moline. Illinois HARNESS By Mail You can liny cnatom-made ak-tanned harneBsdiirect iron lr factory at wholesale prii ou save two profits — the jobber's and dealer's, write for our new il- lustrated catalogue and Bee for your- self just how mucb money yon can save. All onr harness is guaranteed, and we leave yon to be the judge. If yon're not satisfied, money back. Every farmer should have our booklet. Write to-day and ask lor catalogue o. THE KING HAKNKSS CO., 16 Lake St., Out-go. Tiocu Co.. N. V. A.K.ROBINS & CO. CANNING MACHINERY CANS CASES LABELS. 726 E.PRATT ST. BALTO.MD. PROPERLY DESIGNED TOOLS. FARM Wide awake farmers, such as we number among the readers of the Southern Planter, are learning that true farm economy consists in having farm tools designed for the work to be done. In a few weeks farmers will begin spring activities, and right now is the time to decide what implements will be needed for the best work. For putting the soil in best tilth, the disc harrow stands at the top. A well-disced field retains the largest amount of moisture, keeps the soil in best condition so that it receives the full warmth of the sun's rays, and al- lows the atmosphere to permeate to the full depth of cultivation. Disked land leaves openings and channels for the passage of the rootlets and al- lows the plant to extend its root growth so it can gather the soil food that later results in bumper crops. In the orchard, too, the disc har- row is invaluable for spring work, particularly if it is fitted with an ex- tention frame, allowing the discs to work near the trees, later on there are binders, mowers, tedders and, in the great corn belt, the corn binder — all paying big returns on their cost. The Johnson Harvester Co. has representatives almost everywhere, all supplied with Johnston "Librarys." as the hooks descriptive of their line are called, with instructive informa- tion about farm machinery and its use. It would be a good thing if these books were in the hands of all our readers. The Johnston dealer at your post- office will gladly supply you, but if you do not know who he is, drop a line to the Johnston Harvester Co., B atavia, N. Y., and you will receive the Library free with directions where vou can inspect the Johnston line for 1909. DEATH OF CHAS. E. WHITMAN. Charles E Whitman President of the Whitman Agricultural Company, of St Louis, Mo., died at his home in that city Thursday, at 1:15 o'clock P. M., January 7, 1909. Thus another of the pioneer imple- ment manufacturers has been gath- ered home. He was born in 1837 at Winthrop, Maine, his father, Luther Whitman, being an inventor and large manufac- turer of machinery and implements in that place, hence it will be seen that Mr. Whitman was born and reached his majority in an implement atmos- phere. Mr. Whitman is survived by his wife, a daughter of the late Mr. A. P. Waterman, of Belott, Wis., and his sister, Mrs. Henry R. Sayward. and brothers. Gustavus F., Henry L. Wil- liam E.. and Albert S., the first three brothers mentioned being connected with the factory in official capacities. YOU Gan Save a Lot of WorkJ Can Save a Lot of Mone y) Can Increase Your Comfortli Can Increase Your Profits If you are interested In those thin co r we'd like to send you our new book about ELECTRIC Wheels and iho ELECTRIC Ha w%,on ^» More than a million and a quarter of them ara In use and several hundred thousand farmers say that they are the best investment they ever made. They'll save you more money, more work, give bet- ter service and greater satisfaction than any other metal wheel made — because They're Made Bettar. By every test they are the best. Spokes united to the hub. If they work loose, your money back. Don't buy wheels nor wagon until you read our book. It may save you many dollars and it's free. ELECTRIC WHEEL CO., Box 146 Quinoy, Ills. Larimer Ditching Plow. with subsoil attachment. If you have ditching to do this plow will save you more money than any implement you have on your farm. Reduces cost of digging ditch from one-half to two-thirds. Send for descriptive circular. LARIMER MFC. CO., EOLA, (near Chicago,) ILLINOIS. . ONE MAN DOES ' WORK OF TWO With Iron Arc Riding Culti- vators. You can do it easier and better, because they are built on lines that make this possible. Hoes are under perfect control. Can regulate depth and keep hoes desired dis< tance from growin; plants. More ad- vantages in onr IRON AGE Book.lt'. FREE ENGINES FOR SALE, Ten horse traction $260; 10 horae portable, $160; 12 horse portable. $200; fi horse boiler and engine, $90; 1 horse gasoline engine, $40; 3 horse, $60; • horse, $126; 10 horse, $175. Boilers and engines from 1 to 100 horse carried In «tock for Immediate shipment. fluey Boiler 'Works, Springfield, Ohio. WHEELS,* FREIGHT PA1D*$8.75 for 4 Buggy Wheel*, Steel Tires. With Rubber Tire*. JltM^I mfg. wheels X to 4 in. tread. Bu«gj Tops J5.60. Shafts JlOO: Ttf Baf ties U3; ttantas,tS. Learn taw to bar/ direct. CaufofM Pree. Repair, Wheels, |6 60. Wagon Umbrella free. ,v V BOOB. WaclaaaU, 0.' 140 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [February, That's what you Ret Deiore you pay one cent on a Waterloo Boy Gaso- line Engine. We send you the engine fora real 30 days free trial. Let it saw the wood, grind the feed, do the pump- ing, churning and all the time-taking, profit-eating jobs. Then if you thinkyou can get along without the Waterloo Boy ship it right back at our expense. We take every bit of the money risk off your shoulders, so why shouldn't you accept our Free Trial Offer. Write to-day for fine catalog and say: *'Send me your Waterloo Boy for a free trial at ny work." WATERLOO GASOLINE ENGINE CO. ^0.") West Third Ave., | Waterloo, Iowa. KELLY DUPLEX GRINDING MILLS Superior to any other make. Do more and better work, require less power and produce a better grade of feed. Write for Catalog and Special Price. corn Belt Mill Sent, Freight Paid, FREE On 20 Days' Grinding Test This is the only mill that grinds Corn and Cob Meal perfectly. No other mill grinds the cobs evenly with the kernels. It cut* before it grinds. Doesn'theatthe groundi feed. Unequaled for easy grindin and fast work. L_ grinds feed that fat- tens in shortest time, at lowest cost. Any responsible stock owner can have one on 20 days' free trial, freight paid in advance. Write i~. . FREE BOOK ON FATTENING STOCK Worth dollars to stock owners. Gives full facts about J our famous Sweep and Power Mills. Write for it now. SPARTAN MFG.CO.,Dept.1 1 40, PONTIAC, ILL. EP YOUR CATTLE QUIET F Dehorned cattle are quiet nndP f docile. Cows give more milk— J ' steers fatten quicker. Dehorn ) your cattle with the (L_ KEYSTONE DEHORNER j!|Mift .„ , simple operation. The &(si»».'ma'liesa [clean cut; does not crush horn or bruise flesh. |Money back if not satislled. Write for booklet. M. T. PHILLIPS, Box 45. Pomeroy, Pa. Wp Will Ril/P A RURAL MAIL BOX, Tf C ff III UIVC The best and h an dsomest Galvanized Steel Rural Mail Box made, to the first person sending address of party canvassing for peti- tions for new Rural Route. Write today. KKSTl'CKI STAJIf-IMi <<>.. UEPT. 85 1,01 1S.VIM.F, KV. He was a member of the Manufac- turers' Association, a director in the Latin-American Club, a member of The Missouri Athletic Club, and a Knight Templar. The pall-bearers were eight of the company's employees, who had been longest in their service, and the fac- tory employees attended the funeral in a body. FREE TRIAL OF STOCK TONIC. There is really no secret about stock tonics, neither about their in- gredients nor their effects on live stock. There is also no doubt about the usefulness of stock tonics. Their good effects are as certain as are the nutrient action of feeds. In fact, the benefits of a rightly com- pounded tonic are more certain than that of feed. Feed sometimes nourishes and sometimes it doesn't. It depends al- together on the condition of the or- gans of digestion assimilation. But a good tonic, used as intended, always acts with a stimulating and restorative effect on the functions that make nutrition possible. The Wilbur Stock Food Company offers to demonstrate the certainty of the benefits of their stock tonic in every case by giving away, in loca- tions where they have no agent, a 25- pound pail to any stock owner who will ask for it accompanying the re- quest by a statement of the number of head of stock he owns. They have been making this stock tonic for twenty-five years, and know absolutely what it will do. They run no risk in giving away the twenty-five pounds as they are certain it will be its own solicitor in the hands of the intelligent stock owner. Every keeper of live stock ought to take advantage of the offer for his own satisfaction and profit. Write the Wilbur Stock Food Co., 541 Huron St., Milwaukee, Wis., stating the num- ber of hogs cattle and horses you own, or fill out the coupon attached to the Company's advertising and send it with request for a pail of stock tonic, which will be sent promptly without any charge. DEERE FLOW BOOKLETS. Perhaps you have often wondered, as you. were plowing with modern plows, what kind of implements peo- ple used a thousand years ago. You can see pictures of such ancient plows by writing to Dee^e & Company, Mo- line, Illinois, for their three booklets. The booklets' Deere & Co. are sending out this year are very fine. They are printed in colors and illustrated from photographs. Besides the pictures shown, the information concerning plows from the days of Pharaoh until 1909 is both interesting and valuable. Write for these three plow booklets. They will be sent free if you mention this paper. A Postal Card To Us Will Save You Money on any FARM IMPLEMENT — OR— MACHINE It Ma tters not whofoiv where you^are Jf. Write us for Pricesi Seay-Dillard H'd'w. Co. BLACKSTONE.'VA. "The BigfStore^in the- Little|Town." The FARMERS' GARDEN A Seed Drill and Wheel Hoe is in- dispensable—not only in a village garden but on largest farms. Farmers should grow all manner of vegetables and "live on the fat of the land." Should provide succu- lentrootsforCattle.S\\i?:e, Poultry, and save hi^h priced leed stuff. Great labor-sav- ing tools of special value for the home as well as the market gar- den. Send for fro© book. BATEMAN MFG. CO.. Box 167G GRENLOCH, N. J. 1909.] THE SOUTHEKN PLANTER. 141 OOFING? If So. Let Us Show You the Money Saving Way and How to Get Fire Protection At No Extra Cost You will be interested in our samples and prices and our instructive book about — J-M ASBESTOS ROOFING I-M is the only Asbestos rooting and AS- BESTOS is the only fireproof, practically indestructible material from which ready roof- ing- can be made. Because of this and other equally good rea- sons—after a thorough investigation of all the leading roofings — the U. S. Government Super- vising Architect reported J-M ASBESTOS ROOF- ING to be "Distinctly superior to the others. ' ' NO PAINTING, no coating, no expense or trouble to maintain. Conies ready to lay. You need only a hammer and a knife. Use Asbestoside The cheapest and most durable siding material fcrbarns, poultry houses, etc. Keeps out the cold in winter and the heat in summer. Resists fire. Write for Free Sam- ples. Prices and Book No. 62 H. W. JOHNS-MANVILLE [ 100 William St., New SAVE MONEY ON ROOFING $-4 ||A buys full roll (108 sq. ft.) of strictly high ■ B^J^J grade roofing, either rubber or (lint coat sur- I p^pjpjej >• with cement and nails complete. * Most liberal offer ever made on first class roofing. Better than goods that sell at much higher prices. Don*t spend a dollar on roofing until you have seen UNITO ASPHALT ROOFING You send no money when you order Unito Roofing. Satisfaction Guaranteed. "Write today for free samples for test and comparison and our unparalleled selling plan. UNITID FACTORIES CO. Depl. A6. Cleveland, O. FIX YOUR ROOF •ir Pop Cniiarp ~T? "'',' s uarantee to Pit any tfv 1 cr tJtfUarc. old leaky, worn-out. rusty, tin. Iron, steel, paper, felt, pravel or shlDgle roof 1 n perfect condition, and keep it In perfect condition for 5c per square per year. The Perfect Roof Preserver, makes old. ' worn-out roofs new. Satisfaction guaran- teed or money refunded. Our free roofing * book tells all about it. Write for it today. square per year. Roof-Fixi The Anderson Manufacturing Co., Oept. 61 Elyria. 0hi» VETERINARY COIRSE AT HOME. ClOfin year and upwards can be made taking our Veter- w I tUU iuary Course at borne during spare time; taught in simplest English; Diploma gTanted. positions obtained for successful students; cost within reach of all; satisfac- tion guaranteed; particulars free. Ontar o Vetorlrl" ary Correspondence School. London, Can. i Please mention the Southern Planter. CLIP YOUR HORSES. One of the greatest improvements ever introduced into stable manage- ment, according to the opinions of leading veterinarians, is the custom of clipping farm horses, which has now become so common! A clipped horse will not only do a greater amount of work on the same amount of food than a horse with his natural coat on will do, but he will also be fresh and full of vigor, while the horse with the heavy coat will be dull, out of condition and seldom or never dry or clean. Clipping removes the tenden- cy to sweat, and there is no compari- son as between a long, wet coat and a short, dry one. When the long coat is warmed up and the horse is being worked regularly, it is next to impossible to thoroughly dry the coat, and this causes the animal to lose flesh, in addition to making him a prey to a multitude of ills. Big com- panies, which require hundreds of horses in carrying on their business, have experimented, and have found that where their horses were clipped coughs and pneumonia have been practically eliminated. Clip your horses if you want to keep them healthy and in good condition. You can make money by saving ing money! and you are surely ahead of the game when you can purchase a good clipping machine for less than eight dollars and save wearing out your horses and get work from them that otherwise could not be got on account of their condition. Keep your horses in condition by clipping them. They need to be clipped even more than they need to be shod. Shoeing them makes them comfortable in their feet. Clipping them makes them comfortable in body, and more, it makes them healthy and vigorous. The clipped horse feels better, works with spirit and gets there. It's to your benefit, means money for your pocket and satisfaction to your feelings. Health and appearance add valu^ to your horses — clipping makes them healthy by taking off the heavy coat of hair that mats with sweat and lies tight against the skin, covering up the pores and preventing healthy ac- tion in the sweat glands, causing irri- tation and finally sores and other skin disorders. Then. too. after a horse has worked himself into a sweat, or is wet from the rain, he is led into the barn where he remains in the chill night air subject to colds, rheu- matism and fevers, because the natur- al heat of the body cannot find its way through the matted coat to thor- oughly dry it out. When the horse is clipped the hair is short and free and is quickly dried out by the natur- al heat given off by the body, and averts all tendencies towards dis- eases. Clipping makes your horses look better. This is evident. You know that if you had the choice between Trinidad Lake Asphalt gives Genasco the life that makes it resist the weath- er and last for years. Genasco Ready Roofing doesn't crack, rot, rust or break. Mow long do you suppose roofing- lasts that's made of — who can tell ? Get Genasco— the roofing you know about. Guaranteed in writing by a thirty-two-million- dollar organization. Mineral and smooth sur- face. Look for the trade-mark. Write for samples and the Good Roof Guide Bbok. THE BARBER ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY . Largest producers of asphalt and largest manufacturers of ready roofing in the world. PHILADELPHIA New York San Francisco Chicago 'MODERN MACE METHODS' Send for this new 224-page book on Silos and Silage. 1908 edition — size SMx 7'i-in.— indexed — over 40 illus. Used as a text book in many Agricul- tural Colleges. Contents by chapters follow: "Advantages of Silo,"25 pages; "Silos: How to Build," 7b pp; "Concrete or Cement Silos." 10 pp; 'Silage Crops," 16 pp; "How to Make Silage," 19 pp: "How to Feed Silage," 22 pp; "Feeder's Gulde,"J etc., 56 pp. Avast amount of knowledge boiled down—nothing so complete ever published— answers every silage ques- tion. Mailed for 10c. coin or stamps, tf If you mention this paper. SILVER MFC. CO., Salem, Ohio 70 c SILOS thai make and keep real ensilage; thai have the utmost strength, con- venience, and durability; that are used by the I'nited states Govern- ment. Send for free eat alogne. HARDER MFG. COMPANY, Box %2 , Cobleskill, N. Y. € kgjtok 7 LEARN VETERINARY DENTISTRY d $2000 « year. We teach you nt boma In make ^aww^ three months of your spare time by illustrated lectures and grant diploma with degree. Particulars Free. Detroit Veterinary Dental College* Detroit. Mich. 142 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, BARGAINS IN 2nd Hand Machinery. THK WATT PLOW COMPANY, Richmond, Va. 1—15 H. P. (8x10 cylinder) Pitts En- gine and boiler. Mounted on Steel Wheels. 1 — 8 H. P. Gelser Engine and Boiler on wheels in first-class condition. 1 — 10 H. P. Gelser Engine and Boiler on wheels. In fine condition. 1 — 12 H. P. Gelser Engine and Boiler on wheels in good condition, 1 — 12 H. P. Ames Engine and Boiler on wheels. 1—20 H. P. Geiser Engine and Boiler oa wheels in first class condition. 1— No 2 American Saw Mill with saw and belt" as good as new. 1 — No. 1 Lane Saw Mill with 52-Inch saw, all belts. One swing cut off saw. Both in good order. 1 4 Inch, 4-sided Molder. 1 — 22-Inch Planer, Matcher and Mold- der complete with countershaft and pulleys. Wc Invite your correspondence and wUI gladly give any Information de- sired. THE WATT PLOW CO., 7 426 E. Main St., Richmond, Va, f^iZQLMore Water -^£ ^ M /yJ than is produced by any other ■■■■■ ^s^ pump using ttie same power or a given amount of water can be raised with 25% less power by the American Centrifugal Pump Guaranteed blebest mechanical effi- ciency. Give us your pump specifi- cations. We can save you money and labor. Catalog ■tor the asking. The American Well Works General Offices and Works Aurora, - III. u. s. «'. 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg., Chicago. Sydnor Pump & Well Go. Richmond, Va. Rockford Engine Work". Dept. 36, Rockford, 111. The Engine that will please you ' Before yop contract or bay write lor our proposi- tion Neat-Nobby-Handy. All Styles 3 to 30 h. p. WE PAY S8U A MONTH SALARY ond furnish rig and all ecDenses to Enfroduce poultry and stock powder*; new plan; steady work. Address BH3LER COMPANY, X378. SPRINGFIELD. ILLINOIS. A Neat Binder for vour back num- bers can be had for 30 cents. Address our Business Department. a dispirited, shaggy haired nag and a smooth, shiny-coated spanker you would pick the latter. What makes him look like that is a clipping, which takes away the bunches of dead hair, and makes grooming a snap. Furthermore, the half-hour you give to each horse in clipping him early saves you three-fourths of the work of currying and taking care of him the rest of the season. No long hair sticking in your curry comb and brush. No going over the horse a half-dozen times to get all the loose, long hair off. No shedding of hair for a whole season to have them blow over everybody and everything. In short, there is every good reason for clipping and none for not doing it. HEALTH FOR LIVE STOCK AND POULTRY. This is the title of a booklet issued by The Black-Draught Medicine Co., of Chattanooga, Tenn., in the interest of its stock and poultry remedies. The book is chock full of rattling good testimonials from prominent breeders, scattered all over the coun- try. You are requested to send for a copy of the book which will be mailed to you free of cost. The Company's announcements will appear regularly hereafter in the Southern Planter. It will be well for you to follow them. FREE BOOK ON GROUND FEED. It is significant of the times that more and more manufacturers of spe- cial appliances are realizing that it is not enough to simply make a good machine, but that they must tell the purchaser and user how they can use it so as to get the most out of it. Such a book has just been issued by the Spartan Mfg. Co. of Pontiac, 111., makers of the famous Corn Belt Feed Mills. It is called "Grinding Feed into Dollars," and it certainly makes its title good. It not only shows how the grinding of grain saves about 25 per cent, of the grain itself, but since the "Corn Belt" Mill grinds the cob as perfectly as it does the grain, a still further economy is effected. The value of "Corn and Cob" meal is just beginning to be recognized. Formerly cobs were a waste product, or were used with indifferent success for fuel. Now, by grinding corn and cob together, a superior feed mixture as obtaihed. It is the .nearest ap- proach to a perfectly balanced ration which nature has provided. But the "Corn Belt" mill cuts and shears the cob before it reaches the grinding burrs, which reduce both grain and cob to an even granular product, which is eaten with greater relish and is perfectly digested and assimilated. The cob meal not only increases the nutritive value of the feed, but it so lightens the mass that SHIP J1E YOUR OLD METALS HIDE5 RUBBER SCRAP IRON Car Lots a Specialty 50,000 Hides Wanted Write for Prices. Satisfaction Guaranteed. No Commissions. Checks Sent Same Day Freight Bills Abe Marked Paid. Clarence Cosby, BaUMIshod 1890. RICHHOND, VA. Largest Dealer iw Serap Iron, Metals, Hides, Etc., in the South. REFERENCES: , National Bank of Virgin a, Bank of Richmond, Bradatreeta and Don. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 143 PERFECT POTATO PLANTINC Every farmer knows the importance of proper potato planting. Here's a machine that does it perfectly. Has none of the faults common with com- mon planters. Opens the furrow perfectly, drops the seed correctly, covers it uni i'ormiy. and best of all never bruises or punctures tne seed. Send a postal for our free book. $ & No Misses No Doubles No Troubles BATEMAN MFG. CO.. Box !67P GRENLOCH. N. J. lUMPS WATER P g Day and Night Automatically Low In first cost, easy to Install, no expense ^^^_to operate, any capacity desired for Country ^^Homes, Farms, Dairies, Gardens, Irrigation, Town Plants, Railroad Tanks, etc Rife Hydraulic Rams Raise -water SO feet for every foot of fall. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Over 7,000 In use. If there is a stream, spring or pond within a mile- Write For Free Plans and Book. Get our Free Trial Offer. Rife Engine Co. 3118 Trinity Bldg. NEW YORK S£ DAVIS Get It direct from Factory at Factory prices and J£i# SAVE 20% to 50% of your money and all your cream. ,Our Improved cream sepa- rator which doubles profits and cuts dairy work in two. Ab- solutely the simplest, easiest run- ning, easiest cleaned separator inthewor.d. Just belt high to a man. Its bowl gets the last drop of cream. Investigate our lib- eral selling plan. Send your name and address to us on a postal card and get our money saving catalogue No. 126 by return mail. Davis Cream Separator Co., 56B North Clinton St.. Chicago, U. S. A, Buaranteed $100 that the 20th CENTURY FARM GATE is the most simple and practical farm gate ever produc ed. Do you want to make mon- ey? Lodl, Ohio. ^Bi H. H. MYERS, Sole owner Pats. IT. S. and Canada. 15 Cents a Rod For a 22-lnch Hog Fence j 16e for 26-inch; 19c for 31-lnch; 23 l-2o for 34-inch; 27c for a 47-Inch Farm Fence. 60-inch Poultry Fence S7e. Lowest prices ever made. Sold on 30 days trial. Catalogfree. Write for It today. KITSELMAN BROS., Bos 14, MUNCIE, INO. the digestive juices of the stomach get into quicker action. Every reader of this paper is urged to write for a copy of the book, "Grinding Feed Into Dollars." It will be gladly sent to any address. Write to-day to Spartan Mfg. Co., 1140 Main St., Pontiac, 111. W. A. WOOD CATALOGUE. The Walter A. Wood Company, whose advertisements are appearing in our columns, is the world's oldest and largest independent manufactur- er of harvesting machines. It was founded by the late Walter A. Wood, who was one of the pioneers in the harvesting machine business. He first placed his machines on the market in 1852. His first factory was located only a stone's throw from the great Walter A. Wood plant of to-day. Walter A. Wood machines have been made every year since in ever in- creasing quantities and have made the name of Walter A. Wood famous all over the world. The Wood Company have recently placed on the market their latest mow- er, The Admiral. This mower has created huge interest wherever intro- duced and is now in use in all parts of the world. Every up-to-date farm- er who wants to keep posted on the new achievements in farm machines should get acquainted with the Wal- ter A. Wood line of modern machines and implements. Their new cata- logues describe the many different models and is of great interest to every one engaged in farming. It may be obtained from your dealer or from the Wood Company. COURTSHIP IN IRELAND. An Irish boy marries when he has a rid house, and an Irish girl just when she pleases. Sometimes she so pleases while yet her years are few; at other times she is content to wait upon wisdom. In the latter case, of course, she makes a wise choice; but in the former almost always a lucky one — for Luck is the guardian angel of the Irish. "You're too young to marry yet, Mary," the mother said, when Mary pleaded that she should grant Laur- ence O'Mahony a particular boon. "If you only have patience, mother, I'll cure meself of that fault," was Mary's reply. "And she's never been used to work, Laurence," the mother said to the suitor, discouragingly. "If you only have patience, ma'am," was Laurence's reply to this, "I'll cure her of that fault.", And he did, too. Bland Co., Va., Feb. 18, 1908. I cannot afford to do without the Southern Planter as it points the way to success for every Southern Farmer. GEO. T. BIRD. Your stock Is | kept inside and other stock out- side If your pastures' 1 | aro enclosed with SUPERIOR WIRE FENCE This is unquestionably the most substantial fence made owing to the high carbon coiled spring steel wire and the Superior Heavy .VetghtLockusedinitscon-"' struction. All styles, weights and spacings. Steel Gates for every purpose. Low Prices Easy Terms Write for Free catalog. THE SUPERIOR FENCE CO. Dept. J, Cleveland, Ohio | BALL BEARING AUTOMATIC GATB W 'NOT THE BEST AUTOMATIC GATE ON TBB MARKET SEND IT BACK Iff!; is? feat? {0NEYREFUNDBP IF NOT SATISFACTORY IN EVER.Y VVM.V E.W. ADAMS, STATION A. TOPEKA.KAN. Union LocK Poultry Fence BARB1WIRE Highest quality, su- perior lock, easily erected, strong, low priced. Write for new catalog describing the Union Line of Field. Hog. Poul- try and Lawn Fences. Union Fence Co. Oe Kalb, III. Kansas City, Mo. mk TBE NEW CENTURY GATE Can be opened or closed from your wagon by small child. fffigipf No springs, no hinges, nocast-|lyj|i[jjj ings, no cog-wheels, no wood, 'V,.'r .,-- r_ jLV.., no saging. no draging. So sim- \vf— 1 — -^— rCW ti- |>le, so easy, no harness and almost nomachinery; nothing to wear out or break, nothing to be getting out of fix. Not affected by drifting or deep snow, sleet or ice. Always ready for use and will last a life-time. A model of simpli- city, durability and cheapness. If there is no Agent in your locality, please write N ew Canny Steel, Wire S Iran Worts, eOS S. REGISTER ST. BALTIMORE. MO ALWAYS IJV ORDER MANLOVE E Automatic Gate Saves time, adds to value, safety, beauty and pleas- ure of home. MANLOVE GATE CO., 272 E. Huron SI., CHICAGO, ILLS. t,t*eA^t.i..tl.MWM FENCE ■ /--»»._ — Many designs. Cheap aa wood. 32 page Catalogue free. Special Prices to Churches and Cemeterie*. Coiled Spring Fence Oe. Box Q Winchester tod. ft -Vp»»»^'j >W#>' Poultry. Oldfashionedgalvanized. Elas- tic spring steel. Sold direct to farmers at manufacturers prices. Write for particu iars. Ward Fence Co., Box 517 Decatur, Ini HI THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, jniimmiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii minimum mi ilium hi. | 30 — SUGAR GranuTated IDS : i SENDNO MONEY. Wewlllshlpyouthe following :: z goods to your city with the privilege of seeing them before S z paying the agent S7.58 and if not found In every way as :' = represented and what you would have to pay your merchant ~ = $12.86 they can be returned to us at our expense. •' = FREIGHT PAID If the full amount of cash Is - E sent with order. Merchants Our :: ~ Price Price - S 30 lbs Sugar beet granulated 11.80 .15 ~ Z 2 '" A& H Soda or our own .20 .10: S2 " Corn Starch best quality .20 .10 I 5 1 " Pepper Pure Gr. in tin can 40 .20- ;1 "Cinnamon" " " " " 60 .39: = 4 oz. Vanilla Extract strictly pure 6C .?'■ ' • 4 " Lemon " " " 50 ik Z 10 bars Castile & G.P.Tar Soap(Heach) 1.00 .60 ; S 1 lb. Chocolate Bakers Best 50 .35 z SI " Cocoanut Shepps Best 40 .19: ; 5 " Coffee Pure Java and Moca.roasted 2.10 1.60 - Z 2 " Tea Y.H.aP. or Eng. Break, best 1.80 1.20 z 5 10 bars Soap Lenox or our own 50 .25 i 5 3 large cans % size Mustard Sardines. . .30 .20 S Z 3-2 lbs. cans Peas E. J. Finest 36 .20 s S 5 lbs. Prunes choice Cal 60 .35 1 ;5 " Rice best Japan 60 .30 1 S 5 " Rolled Oats Quaker 30 .10; Z 2 Pkgs. East Foam 10 .05 z - Price list FREE — — — = = Crocery, Jewelry Merchants Price $12.86 7.58 = Z Hardware Etc. Our Price 7.58 z Z Your saving $5.28 5 OEERING MERCANTILE CO. - Z 60 WABASH AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. = ■MlllllllllllllNrillilllllllllglllllllllliliiMlllnililllllir PLANT CORN Peas, Beans, Beets, Buckwheat, etc Plant and Fer- tilize at same time. "KING CORN FIELD" marks out rows and plantain drills or hills *}£, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36 or 72 inches apart. Corn and any other seed at same time. Distributes all commercial fertilizers, wet, dry, lumpy, etc., 25 to 700 lbs. per acre. A great labor and time saver. Built to last. Full guarantee. Agents wanted. Send for Catalog. Belcher & Taylor A. T. Co., Box 26 tt Chioopee Falls, Mass. Money Maker for every TOBACCO, CABBAGE, TOMATO AND SWEET POTATO GROWER Masters Plant Setter takes away all the tedious work of setting out a Held of plants. This Setter is a great labor saver, a crop producer and a drought breaker. Is worth TEN TIMES its co.st to every farmer and grower in the U. S. Send us your name and address and we will tell you all about it and whatit will do, price, etc. COUNTY AGENTS WANTED MASTERS PLANTER CO 134 So. Water St , Chicago, III • J to complete your IflDllPv education, buy a inuiiuj home, or start in business. For particulars address P. B. R. MOSS, Chase City, Va. Make A Neat Binder for your back num- bers can be had for 30 cents. Address our Business Denartment. BETTER HIGHWAYS. A meeting of the officers and Board oi Directors of The Greater Highways Association of Southeastern Virginia, recently organized, was held December 8th, in the hall of the Chamber of Commerce, Petersburg, President Charles T. Lassiter, presided, and there were present Vice-President Wil- liam M. Whaley, Secretary and Treas- urer, H. L. Harwood, Richmond, Va., and nine of the seventeen directors, lepresenting the cities and nearly every county in the limits of the As- sociation. Letters from several of the directors were read, expressing regret at their inability to be present, and showing their interest in the organiza- tion- and its objects. After discussing plans of work, etc., for several hours, the following con- stitution was unanimously adopted: Constitution. 1. Name. — The name of this Asso- ciation shall be The Greater Highways Association of Southesatern Virginia. 2. Objects. — The objects of this As- sociation are to secure the permanent improvement of the greater highways of the State, and particularly of the highway from Richmond, via Peters- burg and Suffolk, to Norfolk, and also to secure the co-operation as soon as possible of representative people from all parts of Virginia looking to the for- mation of The Greater Highways As- sociation of Virginia, having for its ob- ject the permanent improvement of those public highways extending through one or more counties and con- necting the cities of the State or con- necting other important points with main lines of traffic. This Association recognizes that in order to carry out its program and to secure its objects it will be necessary to secure the cordial co-operation of the people of the whole State, so as to secure from the General Assembly of 1910 the passage of such acts as may be necessary to insure the build- ing or permanent improvement of said highways. 3. General Plan of Procedure. — Rec- ognizing that it has undertaken a great work of internal improvement affecting the entire State, and requir- ing resources which can only be ob- tained by taxation, this Association submits the following plan: (a) That this association call a convention to meet in the city of Richmond at some convenient date in February, 1909. for the purpose of or- ganizing the Greater Highways Asso- ciation of Virginia, said convention to be composed of delegates from all of the cities and counties of the State, from the various automobile associa- tions and from the Travelers' Protect- ive Association, to be appointed by the Governor of Virginia. Upon the or- ganization of The Greater Highways Association of Virginia, the Greater Highways Association of Southeastern Virginia to become merged in the State Association. The $7,500 Fowls Bought by Madame Paderewski r like most of the high priced _ f jw.s you hear ■> (out, were ^ hatched in a 3ta.. lard Cyphers -^ incubator ano ra;sti in a Cyphers ^.•oodnr. Buy the Be.t— Ciphers Fire-Prcofed, Insur* i>bSc Incubators and Brooders 'i'u^itc PfM Insurance Inspect, 'n Label ev«r leJued on In- oul» .• .- jn'2 Brooders hanjur- -,t -n granted to Cyphers Incu Sr >V " ,JWPT bj tD * NaUoni > '■>■ "4 °f Fire Underwriters. ■ "Ji v Vc m » ur «J>' , " , '"':>."»'or, l.roorlerand buildings 0»il/ it ?"■ * GRENL0CH, N. J. Jake Your Own Ferfilfztt M SflS'i COM'* w«tft WILSON'S PHOSPHATE MilU imltoioB.p, AJv>Bon« " srs. hand and powei M 'he ponltrrmea; rrU •rid ahell mtUs, farm fe«3 mills. family grist mills. vena «ak» mills. Sendfsi onr catalog, v mCBilgn,l> ■ Mntp«i km! lndi f *i tt om Co . A veterinary Remedy for w. '.hroai an-J ct cm u\t troob a Strong recommend* |100v can.ofdealeis orexf prept The Newton Homed » f -> Toledo. Ohio HORSES Going Blind. Bar- ry Co., Iowa City, la. Can cure. Please mention the Southern Planter. and number were marked on their hats, which was fortunate for us, as all coolies look alike at first, but after a little we came to think there were no two other boys equal to our Toku and Yuma. They knew Yokohama thoroughly and understood the tastes of taurists, so there was no need to give them any directions. They wait- ed on us every morning, bowing and smiling. Then they tucked us snugly into the rickshaws with a pillow at our backs and trotted off to the shops. Sometimes we would go to the brass shop in Moto Mache, where we would gladly have brought everything away with us, including the girl who wait- ed on us. There were all sorts of wonderful candle sticks and incense burners, swinging vases for flowers and quaint hot water jugs. Nearby was our favorite post card place where we would get eight to ten dozen at a time, but never had enough. Yama- moto, the best embroidery place, was also not distant. The big foreign shops did not appeal to us, but we knew very little native place by heart. Shienos' silk shop was our favorite resort. Here we found soft silks, embroidered in chrysanthemums, and gauzes, with cherry blossoms or forget-me-nots. Then there were ki- monos and sacques embroidered all over with flowers and birds or butter- flies, and there were wadded dressing gowns and smoking jackets, besides every sort of silk imaginable. Yoko- hama is an excellent shopping place, because the best products from all over Japan are brought here. On bright afternoons we drove into the country and never wearied of the trip to Mississippi Bay, where Commo- dore Perry anchored in 1853 and made a treaty that opened Japan to the world. Our patriotism was much aroused by looking out over this sheet of water where American enterprise had accomplished so much. It was a pretty sight with all the white sails on it and the bath houses on the beach /where Yokohama society indulges in surf bathing during the season. The return trip was through the rice fields, past many tea houses where we would stop for refreshment. The tea house is universal in Japan and from the accounts I had read of it I fan- cied it would be as gay and Bohemi- an as the cafes of Paris, for the Japan- ese are considered the French of the East. On the contrary, we found the tea houses eminently quiet and gen- teel. Possibly the geishas, with their naive and engaging ways, may be mis- understood by foreieners. but though they are often very pretty and rather naughty, they are never bad. They are young girls from twelve to six- teen, chosen for their personal at- tractiveness and trained from child- hood to the task of serving and danc- ing in the tea houses. The tea house itself is a flimsy structure, like most buildings in Japan, with tiled roof and walls made of You Can't Talk it" too strong. What 7 = Gombault's = Caustic Balsam As a Liniment For the Human Body Springfield. 0., Sept. 19, 1904. Lawrence- Williams Co., Cleveland, 0. — Lewis Evelsiz- er , Urban*, R. F. D., a farmer, had a bad cancer on back of his hand. When I first saw it he was on his way to havo his hand amputated. I persuaded him to first try GOMBAULT'S CAUSTIC BALSAM, which he did, and on second application could rest well at night — the first for weeks. In less than three months he was at work on the farm. He will certify to this statement over his signature. Then Mr. Jenkins, storekeeper and post- aiaster atSeth, 0., had a bad cancer on his cheek-bone. I saw him at a grange meeting and told him to use CAUSTIC BALSAM twice a day, rubbing it in for five or ten minutes. In three months it was healed over and is now all sound. These two are all that I have the address of just now, I have had CAUSTIC BALSAM used on old shin sores. One man had walked with crutches for more than a year, and several pieces of bone had come out. I persuaded him to try CAUSTIC BALSAM, and today you •vould not know he was ever lame. Then, it is a sure cure for piles, using it with sweet oil. I could tell of dozens of cases where I have induced diflerent ones to use CAUSTIC BALSAM. I have been the means ol more than fifty bottles being bought, because I know just what it will do. You can't talk it up strong enough. I wish you success. R. L. H0LMAN, 1 In charge Co-operative Work of Ohio State Grang*. Price S 1 .60 par bottle. Sold by druggists, or s«nt by us express prepaid. Write for Booklet H. The LAWRENCE-WILLIAMS COMPANY. Cleveland, Bog. ipavini Cure the lameness and remove the bunch without scarring the horse— have the part looking just as it did before the blemish came. Fleming's Spavin Cure(Liquid) is a special remedy for soft and semi-solid blemishes — Box Spavin, Thoroughpin, Splint, Curb, Capped Hock, etc. It is neither a liniment nor a simple blister, but a remedy unlike any other— doesn't imitate and can t be imitated. Easy to use, only a little re- Quired, and jour money back If It ever I ul Is. Fleming's Vest-Pocket Veterinary Adviser describes and illustrates all kinds of blem- ishes and tells you how to treat them. Uov. ers over 200 veterinary subjects. 192 pages, 69 illustrations. Write for a free copy. FLEMING BROS., Chemist*, 880 Union Stock Yards, Chicago, ID. Save Doctor Bills Baton Rouge, La., March 3, 1908, Dr. B. J. Kendail Co., Enosburg Falls, Vt., Gentlemen: — Kindly send me your "Trea- ti se on the Horse. " I would not be without your little book and remedies as they have saved me many a doc- tor's bill on my plan- tation. M. P.McCarty. The experience of thousands of others. Kendall's Spavin Cure Infallible cure for Spavins, Ringbones, Curbs, Splints, Lameness. Greatest known family J.ini- nient. At all druggists, S1 a Bottle, 6 for 35. Write for book, "Treatise on the Horse," free. DR. B.J. KENDALL CO., ENOSBURC FALLS, VT. Please mention the Southern Planter. 150 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, SEED POTATOES The second crop Virginia grown are acknowledged the best potatoes to plant for early crop. They ma- ture earlier and yield more than Northern grown stocks. We offer splendid stocks of these Potatoes, grown especially for seed purposes. Write for prices, stating quanti- ties wanted. DIGGS & BEADLES, The Seed Merchants. RICHMOND, VA. Ask for our free Catalogue. Cow Peas! Clay, Black, Wonderful, Whippoor- wlll. Mixed and other varieties. SOJA OR SOY BEANS, Canada Field Peas, Millet. Buckwheat, Etc., Etc. Write for prices to headquarters. WALLERSTEIN PRODUCE CO., Richmond, Va. Gregory arc raiBcil with Itie preatest care from superior tiand-seleotert stock and sold under three warrants covering all risks. This year we are offering Yellow Globe Onions at the remarkably low price of J2.86 a pound. Sold for *G.OO last year. Our packages of vegetable seeds are larger this year, and our NEW SEED BOOK— FREE tells about the special cash discount' we are making. This book is an invaln able guide to farmers and gardeners Send for copy to-day. J. J. II. GREGORY A SON, MarblchiMid, 91afl. ONION SEED 6 a°,r See Salter's catalog page 129. Largest growers of onion and vegetable seeds In the world. Big cata- Ior free: or. send 16c In stamps and receive catalog and 1000 kernels each of onions, carrots, cel- ery, radishes, 1&00 each lettuce, rutabaga, turnips, 100 parsley, 1 00 tomatoes. 100melon8,1200charmlng flower seeds, In all 10,000 kernels, easily worth #1 .00 of any man's money. Or, send 20c and we add one pkg. of Earliest Peep O'Day Sweet Corn. THE 8ALZEH SEED CO., LaCroaao. Wla. Tell the advertiser where you saw his advertisement. sliding screens of rice paper, over which heavy boards are fastened at night. The rooms are partitioned off with other sliding screens, which are beautifully painted and ornamented. The floors are covered with soft, white rush mats, fitting closely, and the decorations of the house are bright cushions, for seats, on the floor, with an occasional scroll on the wall, a vase of flowers in an alcove, or a brazier of coals in cold weather. In the walls are cupboards where soft quilts called ' futons" are kept during the day, and spread on the floor at night for beds. There is no furniture of any sort in a Japanese house. The tea house generally stands in a garden which has pots of dwarfed pines and maples in it, an artificial lake with a high drum bridge, a pond of goldfish, and rocks and sand ar- ranged in art motifs, as, for example, the sleeping oxen rocks. In it are benches where visitors may sit and have tea, without removing their shoes, which are not allowed on the highly polished floors and white mats inside. Tea is served on a wooden tray, in a fat little Japanese teapot, with a straight handle at the side. It is poured into cups without handles and s served without either sugar or cream. It is a mild looking beverage, a green- ish straw color, but is stronger than it looks. By degrees, we grew de- pendent on it, and really missed it. With it came dreadful little cakes, made of rice flour or a paste of peas. One bite of them sufficed us ,but the girl always wrapped what was left in a paper napkin and gave it to us as a souvenir. Most of the tea houses are named, as, for instance, "The Hun- dred Step Tea House at Yokohama." This is one of the oldest and best known in Japan. As its name indi- cates, it is ait the head of a hundred steps, and it commands a magnificent view. We used to sit on its balcony and watch the sacred mountain. Fiuji- Yama at sunset. In its guest book are many distinguished names, begin- ning with Perry and coming down to Grant and others in more modern times. We stayed on in Yokohama long enough to plan out an itinerary for our trip through Japan and to arrange our passage to Manila. We could not get a sailing on our stop over, as soon as we wanted, but thought we could join my brother in Decem- ber. Now we were anxious to travel northward in Japan before cold weath- er came upon us. Yokohama was very pleasant, but we realized it was super- ficial Japan. It is a busy, commercial city, the largest and most important of the open ports. It has such a large foreign element that it has lost its dis- tinctive characteristics. The appear- ance and life of the place are to a great extent foreign and we felt whilst SEED CORN. The Excelsior — A Pedigreed Corn. Eight generations in ear row breed- ing plots under most intensive meth- ods known in the breeding up of corn has produced in my Excelsior, a corn of greatest productivity and perfection. In a variety test plot of 35 leading va- rieties of corn, conducted under the supervision of the Md. experiment sta- tion, the Excelsior far out-yielded all other varieties. At the Maryland State- Corn and Wheat Show, held in Balti- more December, 1907, Excelsior won 1st prize in every class for white corn. Also the Bolgfano Cup as sweepstake prize for the best corn, any color, in the show. Again last December' (1908) did Excelsior sustain its reputation at the Maryland State Corn Show, win- ning over three-fourths of all prizes for white corn. While bred for high- est yields, it is also a most perfectly typed corn. Free Corn Booklet describing meth- ods employed in its production. High- est professional references. Write to- day to W. Oscar Collier, Corn Specialist. Easton, Maryland. PURE- BRED Boone County White Seed Corn This corn, grown and handled es- pecially for seed purposes, is offered at the following rates which. In view of the expense of selecting, curing, sorting and testing, are as low as can be made to allow a reasonable mar- gin of profit. Boone County White Corn won all premiums at Va. State Fair, 1908. One bushel on cob $2.25; shelled, $1.75. 10 per cent, reduction for 10 bushels and over; f. o. b. here. C. U. GRAVATT, M D., Port Royal, Va. SEED CORN "ALBEMARLE PROLIFIC" The finest sample I have ever grown. Book your orders now. Write for prices, stating quantity wanted. ARROWHEAD STOCK FARM, Sam'l B. Woods, Prop., CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. rf%M SEED CORN I offer a choice lot of carefully bred and selected Seed Corn, yielding as much as ninety bushels per acre. Also a choice lot of Cocke's Prolific Ensilage Seed Corn. Write for prices, stating quantity. J. B. ANDREWS, Drawer 7G2, Roanoke, Va. PURE-BRED SELECTED FIELD SEEDS. We are headquarters: Cocke's Pro- lific and Boone County Corn, Buck- wheat, Beans, Potatoes, Peanuts, Mil- let, Chufas, Pop Corn. Onion Sets, etc. Vegetable plants in season. Write for prices. E. W. Jones Nursery Co., Woodlawn, Va STRaWBERRV PLANTS. Send $2 for 1000 plnnts — Excelsior, Lady Thompson, Aroma, Klondyke, Candy, etc. — first class stock, true to name. 5,000 enough fo* 1 acre, only 18. Cat. free. JNO. LIGHTFOOT, Dept. T. East Chat- tanoogra, Tenn. 1909.J THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 151 Peaches for Profit or lor home consumption — if you grow UK -tn >ou need the new catalogue of Harrison's Nurseries. We have produced more Peach trees than any other Amern in concern. We have now 600.000 fine young 1'each trees, Including every good kind, new and oM, and of the \ik'"r and hardiness possible in our exceptional soil, under our advanced methods of culture. All Good Fruit and Ornamental Trees are in our stock , and our 1909 catalogue describes them in a prac- , illustrated from photographs, some in color. The most pact and useful nursery book of the year ; worth a good deal more than the trouble of writing for it— that's all it costs. HARRISON'S NURSERIES, Box 214. BERLIN, MD. There is scarcely any limit to the possible improvement in seeds, but it takes time and money. We have been improving 1 flower and vegetable seeds for over 50 years. More than 2000 people are working to make Ferry's Seeds suit you. Buy the best — Ferry's. For sale everywhere. FERRY'S 1909 SEED ANNUAL FREE ON REQVEST. D. M. FERRY & CO., Deiroit, Mich. SEEDS JOUANNET'S GIANT ARG r NTEUIL ASPARAGUS Are the Best. Price: 100 Roots fl.00; 1.000 for $3.00. JOUANNET'S CABBAGE PLANTS Give Satisfaction. All lending' Varie- ties. Price, 1,00 for $1.25; 5.000 and over, $1.00 a 1,000. Everything shipped from Charleston, S. C. Cash with order: Please. ALFRED JCU.tNNET. Mount Pleasant. S C. Cabbage Plants Frost proof. Grown in open air. Prices: 1 to 5 M, $1.50; 5 to 9 M, $1.25: 10 M and over, $1.00 per M, F. O. B. Meggetts, S. C. The largest Truck and Plant Farm in the world BLITCH CO. SOUTH CAROLINA N. H. MEGGETTS. THE RAY PEACH. The most desirable new Peach; sells in market at $3.50 per carrier while other sorts sell at $1; ten other va- rieties. Cumberland Raspberry and Straw- berry plants. If interested in fruit we will send you two nice plants with our circular. Write to-day. E. W. JONES NURSERY" CO., Woodlnwn, Va. Always mention The Southern Planter when writing advertisers. we were there that we were only on the threshold of the true Japan. P. S. — The word printed Lampan in the December article should be Sam- pan, and the words Peerless Lara should be Peerless Sara. CATALOGUES. PAMPHLETS. ETC. We acknowledge receipt of the fol- lowing publications, all which will be sent free to any applicant who will write to the various houses issuing them and mentioning the Southern Planter. Ratekin's Seed Book. Ratekin's Seed House, Shenandoah, Iowa. This is a handsome catalogue and contains full descriptions and prices on all seeds and especially seed corn, for which this house has quite a reputa- tion. Farmers' Almanac and Encyclope- dia. Issued by the International Har- vester Co., Chicago, and contains lots of valuable information. Farmers will find this a handy little reference book. Harrison's Nurseries. J. G. Harri- son & Sons. Berlin, Md. These nur- eris comprise more than 1.200 acres and a full and complete description of their stocks will be found in this neat catalogue. Register of Merit of Jersey Cattle, of interest to dairymen and Jersey breeders especially. Send 10 cents to cover postage to J. J. Hemingway, Secretary, 9 West 17th St., New York City, if you want the book. Everything for the Garden. Peter Henderson & Co., Seedsmen, New York City. This is the superb annual catalogue of this firm and is up to their usual high standard of merit in every particular. The Oaks Mfg. Co., New Bern. N. C. A very neat and attractive cata- logue, describing its practical, labor- saving machinery. Thorburn's Seeds. J. M. Thorburn & Co., New York. This is the 108th Annual Catalogue of this Company. It is richly gotten up and contains full descriptions of its various offerings in the shape of farm and garden seeds. Alfalfa and How to Grow It. Pub- lished by J. E. Wing & Bros. Seed Co., Mechanicsburg, Ohio. This is a valu- able treatise and is sure to interest a number of our readers. Farm and Garden Supplies. Grif- fith & Turner Co., Baltimore, Md. This is a large, illustrated work con- taining full descriptions and prices on all kinds of farm and garden supplies handled by this well-known firm of seedsmen. Avery Company, Peoria, 111: A very large and handsome catalogue describ- ing its full line of engines, threshers and steam plows. It is profusely il- lustrated and will be found to be ex- ceedingly interesting to any one who wants information on the subjects treated. Send Your Order For SEEDS TO DIGGS & BEADLES, 1709 E. Franklin St., Richmond, Va. "We are headquarters for superior seeds of all kinds. Garden and Flower Seeds, Grass and Clover Seeds, C'nion Sets. Seed Potatoes, Fertilizers, Poultry Foods, etc. Write for our Free Catalogue. Your correspondence solicited. 60 cts. per acre Cabbage Seed See Salzer's catalog page 129. The biggest money making crop in vegetables is cabbage. Then comes onions, radishes, peas, cucumbers. Big catalog free or, send 16c In stamps and receive catalog and 1UU0 kernels each of onions, carrots, celery, radishes, 1500 eauh lettuce. rutabagas, turnips, 100 parsley. 100 tomatoes, 100 melons, 1200 charming flower seeds. In all 10,000 kernels, easily worth $1.00 of any man's money. Or, send 20c and we add one pkg. of Ear- liest 1'eep O'Day Sweet Corn. THE SALZER SEED CO., LaCrosse, Wis. • Choice Strawberry plants, strong-, healthy, true to name. A trial will convince you of their superiority. Second- crop seed potatoes, Asparagus Roots, Seed Corn, choice var- ieties. Ringlet Barred Plymouth Rock Eggs, Maryland Farms for sale. Write for free catalog. JOHN W. HALL,, Marion Station, Did. REE To prove that our Blizzard Belt Ever- greens will grow in all parts o! the country we offer to send 6 Fine Spruces x 4 to ^ ft. tall Be to property owners. Whole- sale value and mailing expense over 30 cents. To help, send 5 cents or not as you please. A postal will bring the trees and our catalog containing many colored photo plates of our choice Blizzard Belt Fruits. Write today. The Gardner Nursery Go.. Box 10":. Osage, la. NEW WARD BLACKBERRY ONE OP THE BEST. Fine stock of plants for fall delivery. Send for descriptive circular of the Ward. For other nursery products, send for general price list. FRED. SHOOSMITH, Chester, Va. COW PEAS (lay. Black, Whip-Poor-WUl, Mix- ed and New Er* ISOY BEANS Hollybrook and Mammoth Yellow Write for delivered prices. Hickory Seed Co., Hickory, N. C. 152 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February,. RARE BARGAINS IN Northern Virginia Farms A Few Specimens: No 162. Contains 280 acres — 80 acres In timber, balance cleared. This land is a splendid quality of grass, hay and corn land. It is smooth and level. Fronts on a good level road 3% miles from station. Farm Is very well fenced and watered by streams witn a good well at the house. About one acre in orchard, apples and peaches. Buildings: A new six-room house, barn 30x40 for horses and cows, corn crib and hen house. 75 acres of this land is in meadow. This a bargain for a progressive man. Price $5,000. No 172. Contains 315 acres — 40 acres In oak and hickory timber; 5 miles from station, situated near the village; considered one of the best wheat and grain farms In Fairfax County. The land Is a little rolling; machinery can be run all over it. The land is all In good state of cutlvation; well fenced and watered by springs and running streams. Improvements are a good 7- room house with elegant shade, good stable and all out-houses In good re- pair. Price $20 per acre. No. 176. Contains S46 acres, about 70 acres in timber, mostly oak and hick- ory, situated 1 mile from store, school church, shops, etc.; 6 miles from R. R. station. This land is a little rolling and is a fine quality of chocolate clay soil, excellent for grass and grain of all kinds. Good orchard of about 200 apple trees. Farm is well fenced and watered by never falling streams. Spring In every field. Improvements: A good 2% story dwelling with 8 large rooms, 4 attic rooms, basement, barn, 40x70, in good repair, other out-build- ings, all in good condition; farm Is lo- cated on good road, and about $10,000 is subscribed to macadamize this road to the railroad station. Price per acre, $30.00 No. 193. Contains 156 acres, smooth land, chocolate clay soil, with good stiff c_lay subsoil, just rolling enough to drain well, 30 acres in good timber, balance cleared, watered by running stream, very well fenced. In good neighborhood located 7 milei trom railroad station, In Loudoun county, sufficient fruit of all kinds for family use, 5-room house In fair repair, other small outhouses in good repair. Price $1,000.00. No. 194. Contains 175 acres, 26 acres In good timber, balance Is cleared, 9 acres In orchard In full bearing, good six-room house, old barn, good gran- ary, hen houses, dwelling In a grand oak shaded lawn, spring at house farm watered by streams and springs, situated on good pike. One hour's drive from Leesburg, Va. Owner is anx- ious to sell. Price $3,600.00. Send for my Complete List, Wm. Eads Miller, HERNDON, VA. Farm Weeds. American Steel & Wire Co., Chicago. An illustrated treatise on th per 100. Utility strain, Satisfaction Guaranteed. Valley View Poultry Yards. J. D. Glide, Prop. Route 1, Box 41, Dayton, Va. Silver Laced Wyandotte* Eggs for hatching from choice matings at $1 per 15. Now book- ing orders. Vigorous Cockerels, $1.25 to $1.50. Trios, $4. Choice lot of birds to select from. Can furnish in any quantities wanted. All stock strictly first class and healthy. DR. H. n. LEE, Poplar Hill Poultryrarm, R..F. D No. 4, Lexington, Va. 1909.] T 1 1 E SO UT 1 1 EE X PLA X TEE. 101 HINTS BY .MAY M ANTON. The one-piece or semi-princesse, house gown is the one that active ■women are sure to require. The waist ;md skirt being joined by means of a belt, there is no possibility of annoy- ing separation, and the gown can quite easily be slipped on and off, so that it is a genuine boon. This one is made in shirt waist style and closed at the left of the front. In the illus- tration the material is one of the heavi- er cotton fabrics, and a great many women prefer gowns that can be laundered at all seasons of the year, hut light weight wool materials also are much used, viyella is a pronounced favorite, and is absolutely durable as ■well as attractive. 6183 House Gown, 32 to 42 bust. The gown is made with the waist and skirt. The waist consists of fronts that are tucked over the shoui ders, and a plain back with moder- EGGS FOR HATCHING Pens No. 1 — Fancy Orpingtons that win. 15 for $ 4 00 45 for 9 60 90 for 14 50 Pens No. 2 — High-Class Breeders. 15 for $ 2 00 45 for 4 80 90 for 7 20 Pens No. 3— Thoroughbred Utility Stock. 15 for $ 1 00 45 for 2 40 90 for 3 60 Single-Comb Buff Orpington Stock for sale at all times. Write for prices. HENRY J. and CHOS. G. SANGER, Proprietors of The Ethermore Fruit and S. C. Buff Orpington Farm. R. F. D. No. 2, DAYTON, VA. The Best AlUPurpose Fowls Known BURKE'S GARDEN POULTRY S. C. W. LEGHORNS BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS PARTRIDGE WYANDOTTES MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS S. C. B. LEGHORNS WHITE WYANDOTTES RHODE ISLAND REDS DUCKS "WHITE HOLLAND TURKEYS Fr.om Rest Strains *~/isslble. E.:,ch breed on separate farms under persona! ca t -e of specialist. Stock correctly bred and VIGOROUS. Stock, $2 to $5 for single specimens; trios and pens at special prices. Eggs $1.50 to $5 a sitting. Unequaled bargains in White Leghorns and Muscovy Ducks. (Look up our record in lists of winners at recent shows at Richmond, Va„ Bristol. Tenn., Charlotte, N. C.) STANDARD-BRED POULTRY FARMS, Burke's Garden, Va. QUALITY STRAIN OF White Wyandottes^Only! I have only heavy layers combined with high scoring, vigorous birds that are fit to win in any company. No birds used in my breeding pens that are not up to or above STANDARD WEIGHT. Am now booking orders for eggs at following prices: — From three best pens. THE BEST MATINGS at $5.00 per setting; $12.00 for fifty eggs or $20.00 per hundred. From six pens of next best, ALL HIGH SCORING BIRDS, $3.00 per set- ting; two settings for $5.00 or $15.00 per hundred. From 11 pens of GRAND BIRDS, that score 90 points or better, $2.00 per setting, three settings for $5.00 or $10,00 per hundred. Write for illustrated "BOOKLET" describing our plant and breeding pens. QUALITY POULTRY FARM. F. A. Mason, Mjtr., R. F . D. 2, Forest Depot, Va. My aim "QUALITY! first, last and ALWAYS." Life member A. P. Association. FOUR BREEDERS! FOUR BREEDS. EGGS FOR HATCHING From high-class, pure-bred fowls. S. C. RHODE ISLAND REDS. Eggs from 1st pen at last Va. State Poultry Show, $5 for 15, from other good pens, $1.50 to $3. BLACK LANGSHANS. Eggs from choice birds of Black's Original Egg-Laying Strain, State Poultry Show winners, $1.50 to $3 for 15. S. C. WHITE LEGHORNS. Lakewood Strain, Eggs from high-scoring, vigorous, farm raised stock $1.50 to $3 for 15. PARTRIDGE WYANDOTTES. Healthy, vigorous, fancy stock. Eggs from 1st pen $2 for 15; 2nd pen $1.50 for 15. Good breeding birds of nil four above varieties for sale. TAZEWELL PURE-BRED POULTRY YARDS, Tazewell, Va MRS. J. D. S. BROWN. STAUNTON, VA., - Route 7. Breeder of Pure-Bred R. C. RHODE ISLAND REDS. Eggs for sale — $1 for 15. A few ■oekereis for sale. MISS LOUISE V. SPENCER, Blackstone, Va. Headquarters for pure-bred R. Rhode Island Reds. EGGS FOR HATCHING. Member R. I. Red Club. 162 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, S. C. RHODE ISLAND REDS. I have a stock for sale carrying as good blood as any in America. They are descended from prize winners at Jamestown, Providence and Nash- ville, the greatest shows in the country. Eggs for sale at $2 per set- ting of 15. I never have seen finer birds than I offer for sale. Write me if you want the best that can be had at moderate prices. I breed for fancy and utility purposes. ROBERT G. HUNDLEY, P. O. Box 118, Farmville, Va. SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS EXCLUSIVELY. Eggs for hatching, $2.50 for 15 from 4 pens containing 1st pen State Fair 1908. 2nd pen Va. Poultry Show, pen headed by 1st cockerel State Fair, 1907, and pen of fine, large uniform birds. From general run of the yard of 75 hens, $1.50 per 15, good utility stock. A. R. VENABLE Jr., Farmville, Va. S. AND k. C.kRrlODE ISLAND REDS Columbian and White Wyandottes; B. P. Rocks Eggs for hatching, $1 for 15; $1.75 for 30; $2.75 for 50; $5 for 100. All stock has free range. Riverside Poultry Farms, J. B. Coffman & Sons, Prop., Route 19, Dayton, Va. SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS Eggs for hatching (Thompson & De- Graff strain) $1.25 per 15. MISS BELLE BROOKE, 201 Thompson St., Staunton, Va. R. AND S. C. Rhode Island Red Cockerels and Pullets for sale. Eggs in season. Prices right. Miss Mamie H. Herbert, Route 2, Blackstone, Va. ROSE COMB RHODE ISLAND RED Pullets from prize-winning stock — for sale. Orders for eggs received, $1 for 15; 3 sittings for $2.50. Place order early. L. E. SMITH, Appomattox, Va. SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS Prize winners at Herndon Poultry Shows 1908 and 1909, Choice cockerels from $3 to $5 each. Well mated trios good foundation stock. $5.00. Eggs from special coatings, $2 per 15. ately full sleeves. The neck is fin- ished with a neckband and either a collar of the same or those of linen can be used with it. The skirt is cut in eight gores and laid in inverted plaits at the back. The quantity of material required for the medium size is 8 7-8 yards, 24, 7 1-2 yards 32 or 6 yards 44 inches wide when material has figure or nap; 8 yards 24, 6 5-8 yards 32 or 4 3-8 yards 44 inches wide when material has neither figure nor nap. The pattern 6183 is cut in sizes for a, 32, 34, 36. 38. 40 and 42 inch bust measure, and will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper on receipt of ten cents. A. S. HARRISON. Herndon, Va. 6195 Girl's Gibson Dress, 6 to 12 years. The Gibson dress is such a gener- ally becoming one that it is not sur- prising its popularity should be con- stantly increasing. This one is made of light weight serge finished simply and plainly, but it would be found just as satisfactory for the pretty bright plaids that little girls are wearing so much, and for the wash- able materials that will be shown in such variety before many weeks. Among the latter, linen, madras and PURE-BRED RHODE-ISLAND REDS Cockerels $2, pullets $1.50, eggs, $1 for 15. My fowls were imported from RHODE ISLAND in 1907. They are good layers and the young chicks very hearty. Address, A. B. BURRUS, Fordwick, Va. PURE-BRED R. C. RHODE ISLAND REDS Eggs, $1 per sitting of 15. Special rates for Incu- bator Eggs. MRS. J. A. UPSON, R. F. D.. NVellville, Va. In dian Runner Ducks . Greatest layers on each; easy to raise, no lice. Prize winners Virginia State Fair and Poultry Show. Also R. C. Reds and S. C. B. Leghorns. Ducks sold out. Eggs in season. MRS B. J. GRASBERGER, Bumpass, Va. ) MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS and Pekin Ducks. Turkeys of Wolf, Bird Bros., and other strains. Ducks of Rankin and other strains. We have the largest and finest birds this sea- son that we have ever bred. Shenandoah Valley Stock Farms, Leslie D. Kline, Vaucluse, Va. MAMMOTH MWf JJAW 8 PLYMOUTH ROCKS WYANDOTTES MAMMOTH BUFF VERY RARE MAMMOTH TOULOUSE BOFF GEESE PIIINEAC AFRICAN WHITE UUlNtAo PURPLE VERY RARE JOHN C. FOWKE, Baldock, S. C. MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS 67 beautiful, pure-bred toms and hens for sale. ENGLISH SETTER PUPS. Good ones, Blue Belton strain. Also Berkshire Pigs entitled to registra- tion. Write your wants. MRS. GEO. M. WEST, Vlnita, Va. TURKEYS THE OAKSHADE STRAIN OF M. B. TURKEYS FOR SALE. NONE BETTER. Write for Prices. HUGUENOT POULTRY YARDS, Dublin, Va. PURE-BRED Mammoth BronzeTurkeys Bred from toms 40 to 45 lbs. and prize-winning stock, the best I ever raised. Also Silver Laced and Pen- ciled Wyandottes, stock and eggs. ELBERON POULTRY YARDS, Otho 31. Cockes. Prop , Elberon, Va. PIRE-BRED MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS Hatched May, 1908 — also a few two- vear-olds. fine size and plumage. Bred from prize-winning stock. Prices rea- sonable. G. W. P\TTE«0\, Manteo, Va, 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 163 Ft. L ewis Stock Farm THE REST PLACE FOR BLCOD AND REGISTERED BERKSHIRES White Leghorn, all breeds of Plymouth Rock. Black Minorca and Rhode Island Red Fowls. Eggs from these pure-blooded birds for sale. DR. W. L. NOLEN, PROPRIETOR, SALEM. VA. fine ginghams are especial favorites, and many girls wear them at all sea- sons. The dress is made with fronts and back, and is laid in plaits in each shoulder, the opening being made in- visibly beneath one of the tucks at the left side of the front. The full- ness is held in place by the belt, and the simple sleeves are gathered into straight cuffs. The collar can be made to match or the neck can be finished with a neckband and the dress worn with separate collars of linen as liked. The quantity of material required for the medium size (10 years) is 51-2 yards 24, 3 7-8 yards 32 or 2 7.8 yards 44 inches wide. The pattern 6195 is cut in sizes for girls of 6, 8, 10' and 12 years of age, and will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this pa- per on receipt of ten cents. THE MASTERS PLANTER. Every farmer who has cabbage, to- bacco, tomato, cauliflower, strawber- ries, potatoes, sugar beet plants, etc., should know of the Masters Flant Re- setter, advertised in another portion of this paper. We believe that when a machine does better work than can be done by hand and at the same time is cheap, that every possible user should know of it. Please note the following letter, which speaks for it- self: Dear Sirs: — I used your Plant Set- ter on 35,000 cabbage and tobacco plants. I did the setting in the hot- test and dryest weather in June and every plant lived. This is wonderful, considering the heat and drought, and compared with the work of the horse planter. Your Planter is simple and absolutely perfect and I would not be without it for $50.00. This planter en- ables me to set the best plants from the seed beds and not sacrifice the smaller ones, and the method of wa- tering and fertilizing ensures perfect planting. Yours truly Syracuse, N. Y. E. A. CORNWALL. A TESTIMONIAL. Miller, S. Dak.. Oct. 1. '08. Chicago House Wreckina: Co.. Chicago, 111. Dear Sirs: — Car of lumber received September 24th, all checked up and can say am very well pleased with it. Can recommend your lumber to any one you refer to me. Verv truly yours, ( Signed > J. W. ALLEN. RHODE ISLAND REDS. Single Comb. Pure-bred stock at reasonable rates. First Pen, First Cock at Bristol, 1908, with 8 high-scoring pullets. Eggs $2 for 15, $5.50 for 50. Second Pen. Third cockerel Bristol, 1907. Eggs $1 for 15, $3 for 50. A few fine birds yet for sale. SANS TASCHE YARDS, (without blemish) Seven Mile Ford, Va. SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND REDS. The supremacy of the Reds, not only from a stand-point of beauty, but as a money-maker on the farm and in the back-yard, is questioned only by the ignorant. One hen of the $50 trio, on which my strain is built up, has laid in 6 years over 800 eggs and is still active and busy. I have reduced my flock to forty layers in four pens, and every fowl is beautiful, healthy, prize-worthy. I believe this is the best utility-fancy strain in the country. To avoid disap- pointment, I advise booking orders for eggs ahead. BIG, PINK, FERTILE EGGS, $2 for 13. A few magnificent cockerels to spare, $3 to *5. DR. J H. C. WINSTON, ' Hnmpden-SIdney, Va. SYDNORS Rose Comb Rhode Island Reds SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. Won 40 Ribbons and Silver|Cup at Richmond, 1908. Eggs from the winners now ready for delivery. W. 1) SYDNOR, Barton Heights, Richmond, Va. Matthews' "NEW UNIVERSAL" Garden Tools Double or Single Wheel Hoe Cultivator, Plow, Eake. Changes quickly made. Cultivate he- GOOD TOOLS IN ONE 6 Styles Seeders Opens farrow, drops in pl»io sight lOTeromtrka. 8*™^ cultivator. Single or double wheel. Adjust ments easily made. For planting and all kinds of cul- tivation. Send for Free Booklet — — * „ /^S^f^ Note High Arch and Plant Guard* giving full description of implements. kW^Scfe^&S Bent Oak Handles on all Tools. AMES PLOW COMPANY, Depi. 56* BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS FOR SALE BY GRIFFITH & TURNER CO., BALTIMORE, MD. BLACK MOTOR SURREY Removable Rear Seat /Don't pay two prices— Buy direct and get one of these most popular Black Motor Surreys— Illustrated and fully de- scribed In our "Black Motor Buggy" Book. FREE showing all single and double seat cars wttli or without tops — This Surrey is most dependable— handsome ilnisu — durable— Guarateed fully and ^ Takes All The Family Safely and Quickly There and Back Again ^^r Costs only J575— Air cooled— 2 cylinders of 4Y-lnch bore— Villi 1S-H-P.— Speed 4 to 25 miles per hour ^r on high gear and 2 toll miles on low gear. Carries 7 gal. gasoline— Iiuns2u miles on 1 g-l.—iireat in ^r sand, mud or on hills and splendid for country roads. No tire troubles. Easy riding. U Rnnlr Ua A99I CDCC ^'"te for book today— Investigate before rou bur anycar ofany make. I DUUK ntti Ht£l rllbC Get as good as the best and save money on Hrst cost and lowest up-keup. \_ BUI 124 E.Ohio St., CHICAGO, ILL. 1 64 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, FOR SALE AT FARMERS PRICES GUERNSEY CATTLE, DAIRY MACHIN- ERY; GRAIN DRILL, PRIVATE CAR- RIAGE. Two registered Guernsey Cows, Adv. Reg. ancestry — due to calve March or April, by a Registered Guernsey bull; .2 registered Guernsey bull caves, 6 months old; 1 Davis Cream Separator, capacity 450 pounds, power or hand; 1 new Davis power churn, capacity 20 gallons; 6 — 10-gallon milk shipping cans, new; 1 — 30-gallon hot water ex- pansion tank, new; 1 — 4 H. P. Charter Gasoline engine, now in use. 1 pump jack; 1 Buckeye grain drill, all latest attachments, used one season; 1 hand- some rubber-tired station carriage, ex- cellent condition. Liberal terms, 60 days credit to re- sponsible party all amounts over $100. Address "GUERNSEY/' Care Southern Planter. Duroc Jerseys . We are offering twenty young sows bred to a good son of the great Com- modore. These sows are first class in size, bone, color and breeding. They are the choice of their respective lit- ters. Buy a bred sow or two and be- gin breeding a profitable and prolific hog. Write for our circular and prop- osition to the purchaser of two or more sows. WARREN RICE, Vaucluse, Va. Frederick Co. QUALITY Poland - Chinas. Lest you forget we have the best breeding and Individuals in P. C. blood In Va. at farmers' prices. Young pigs and bred sows "the best ever." A son of the "King of Them All" at head of our herd. Write us your wants. H. B. BUSH & BRO., Nlchanx, Powhatan Co., Va. Reg. Poland-Chinas Sunshine Perfec- tion Strains. Choice 3 months pigs, either sex, $5; Gilts and Ser- vice Boars, ?10 to $15. Write for prices on any age wanted. All stock healthy and vigor- ous. F. W. HOUSTON, Clifton Farm, Lexington, Va. TAMWORTHS. The lean bacon hogs — pigs, bred sows, and service boars, all regis- tered and of best blood. BERKSHIRES. Fine pigs and service boars en- titled to registration and of blue ribbon stock. Am out of Poland- China pigs at present. J. C. GRAVES, Barboursvllle, Va. SUNNYSIDE BERKSHIRES. Boars In service. "Premier Dnke." •on of Premier Longfellow; "Peerle«» Premier," sired by Lord Premier III., and imported "Hlghtlde Commons." Also a number of sows rich In Premier Diood. Prices reasonable. VV. R. Walker, UNION, S. C. NEW STATE TUBERCULOSIS SANATORIUM. Virginia State Board of Health Makes Important Announcements. Richmond, Va., Jan 23, 1909 — (Spe- cial). — The State Board of Health an- nounced to-day that Dr. Robert F. Williams, of El Paso, Texas, who was elected Superintendent of the State Sanatorium for Consumptives, has ac- cepted the position, and will assume his duties by March 1st. Dr. Williams is a native of Vir- ginia, and a nephew of Bishop Chan- ning Williams, of Japan, hut he is not a relative of the Health Commis- sion, Dr. Ennion G. Williams. The new superintendent is a graduate of the University of Virginia, and was for some years a professor in the Medical College of Virginia, at Rich- mond, and moved to Texas in 1906. The selection of the Board is con- sidered a particularly fortunate one, in view of Dr. Williams' wide experi- ence and special training for this line of work. The Board also announced that the Sanatorium at the old Red Sulphur Springs would be opened in the course of a few weeks, with accommodations for a considerable number of patients. This number will he increased as rap- idly as arrangements can be made to house the patients. The Board has decided to call the Sanatorium the "Catawba Sanatorium," in view of its location in the valley of that name. In speaking of the outlook to-night. Dr. E. G. Williams. Health Commis- sioner, said: "The State Board does not intend to make the Catawba San- atorium a resort for hopeless con- sumptives, and we will for the pres- ent at least, admit only those pa- tients whose cases are deemed cur- able. This regulation is necessary. in order that cases which can be cured may not be crowded out by those who have no chance of recov- ery. The Board has also decided that a minimum charge of $5.00 per week will be made to all natients admit- ted to the Sanatorium." A GOOD ROOFING. Amatite is a self-reliant roofing. You don't have to go out and coat it every few months or patch it up to stop leaks. After it is laid, you can go off and forget about it. and it will stay at its post and do its duty year after year. A booklet about it and a sample may be had for the asking from the Barrett Manufacturing Com- pany, New York. Chicago, Philadel- phia. Cleveland. Cincinnati, St. Louis. Allegheny, Kansas City, New Or- leans. Minneapolis. RED POLL CATTLE The great breed for the South and the greatest of all breeds for milk, butter and beef. We have the right breeding and good individuals at prices to suit. DORSET SHEEP Are reliable for early lambs. Early lambs are what the Southern farmer, through natural advantages, can beat the world on. POLAND CHINA HOGS. PURE-BRED POULTRY, ALBEMARLE PROLIFIC SEED CORN, ALBEMARLE PIPPINS and FANCY RED APPLES. Arrowhead Stock Farm, SAMUEL B. WOODS, Prop. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. REDlANDSF/iRM RED POLLED CATTLE One splendid young registered Red Poll Bull; beautifu conforma- tion; exceptiona animal. One fine Red Poll Bull calf. Three specially fine pure-bred SHROPSHIRE BUCKS 2-year-olds. Address: AARON SEAY, Manager, Carter's Bridge, Albemarle Co., Va. Campbell Co., Va., Dec. 12. '08. The "Work for the Month" in the Southern Planter has b een of the greatest possible benefit to me. MISS ANNTE RODE. RED POLLS Will Virginia and North Carolina farmers be convinced that these are* the cattle for them? Write for pho- tos and records. We will interest you. Second prize bull at last Inter- national now at head of herd. Two- prime cows now ready. Most any time you can buy a calf. H. B. ARBUCKLE, Maxwelton, W. Va. Devon Herd Established 1884. Hamp- shire Down Fleck Established 1880. DEVON CATTEE BULLS AND HEIFERS, HAMPSHIREDOWN SHEEP, RAMS AND EWES. ROBERT J. FARRER, Orange Va. THOROUGHBRED BERKSHIRE BOARS, JERSEY BULL CALVES, DORSET BUCK LAMBS. Sire of Calves, FLYING FOX, 6S458, ■on of Flying Fox, who sold for $7. SO* at the Cooper sale, 1902. All stock In best condition and guaranteed as represented. F. T. ENGLISH, Centrevllle, M*. Please mention the Southern Planter. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 165 GALLOWAYS Registered stock of both sexes for sale. No orders taken for bulls except calves for future delivery. Cows and heifers, all ages. Sold on approval. I take all risks. Prices moderate. Built like hogs, fatten like hogs, and make fine robes. N. S. HOPKINS Gloucester, Va. Ingleside Hereford's Polled and standard bred — 200 head In herd. All ages, both sexes. Write for catalogue and prices. Inspection Invited. Farm near Alderson, W. Va., on C. & O. R. R. Address. S. W. Anderson, Blaker Mills, W. Va. VALLEY FRONT FARM. Sassafras, Gloucester Co., Va. I have a nice lot of registered Here ford Bulls and Heifers, for sale at farmers' prices. Also a number of grade Heifers and cows. My herd rep- resents best strains and choice indi- viduals. Wm. C. Stubbs, Prop. ANGUS CATTLE. 80UTHDOWN SHEEP. E88EX PIGS. Three fine bulls, 4 mos. to 2 years old; one choice 5-year-old cow, bred; a number of young cows. A few early spring lambs left. A number of young pigs for November and December de- livery. All stock first-class. Prices reasonable L. G. JONES, Tobaccovllle N. C. Fine Angus Calves. Two beautiful registered yearling Angus heifer's, just bred to our herd bull, at $60 each. W. M. WATKINS, Saxe, Charlotte County, Va. Aberdeen-Angus Bulls FOR SALE. Reporter Lad, No. 97135, 3 years, ex- cellent animal, can't use longer on my herd; also 2 grade Angus bulls, rising 1 year. Price and full particulars. J. McPHAIL, R. F. D. 5, Richmond, Va. ROCK SPRING FARM Offers for Sale REGISTERED GUERNSEYS of the best strains ; Registered Duroc anerk-dB shire Swine ; Breeding stock and eggs from B. Rocks, Pekln Uucks, White Holland I ur- keys and Guineas. H. T. HARRISON, Prop. Leesburg, Va. Please mention the Southern Planter. ENLIGHTENED SELF-INTEREST. There is one motive behind all business dealings, the mainspring of all business transactions. People buy and sell with one fundamental object — the hope of gain. It is a matter of self-interest pure and simple, and doubtless will remain so to the end of the chapter. The difference in mer- chants lies in the fact that this self- interest may be brutal and unprinci- pled with the result that it is short- sighted and considers only temporary gain or that, on the other hand, it may be controlled by the highest aims and be rewarded by permanent suc- cess. In the United States one of the most conspicuous examples of self-in- terest wisely consulted is the seed business of D. M. Ferry & Co. It would be hard to better serve the purchasing public than by their meth- od of supplying annually every local dealer in the country with seeds fresh- ly put up, and then at the end of the season reoving from the retailer all stocks left on hand, thus preventing the possibility of unfit seeds being carried over for another spring. By regarding primarily the interests of the purchaser, Dl. M. Ferry & Co. have grown to be the largest seed house in the world. This success has neces- sitated systematic organization, and made it possible not only to special- ize, but to have the best physical equipment in America. Learn more about reliable seeds by writing to D. M. Ferry & Co., De- troit, Mich., for their 1909 Seed An- nual which is sent free on request. KEEPING RECORDS. On large poultry farms careful rec- ords are kept, but the ordinary poul- try raiser has little idea of the re- sults he is actually getting. Therefore, "Ertel's Poultry Diary," is something that is likely to prove very valuable. It has pages for re- cording the egg output, the incubator output, cost of feed and supplies, and the amounts received for eggs and poultry sold with space enough to last at least a year and perhaps two. No matter how small the flock it is worth while to know the returns se- cured. There is no doubt that if many gen- eral farmers had the records they would find that their hens are doing better for them than other live stock. The Diary also contains hundreds of hints and helps valuable to the poultry raiser, and an article, "Uncle Sam's Advice," is well worth reading by those who have not had access to the original government bulletins. This book is free., and the George Ertel Co., Quincy, 111., will gladly send copies to readers of the South- ern Planter who ask lor it. A SPLENDID OPPORTCNITV. STOCK FOR SALE I offer at moderate prices, two Registered Percheron Stallionx, one a bay, coming 4 years old, one a gray, coming 8 years old; several % Percheron Mares in foal; a few Registered Saddle Horxe*; also a. few choice Red Poll Cattle. Inquire about this stock. My Motto. "Satisfied Customers." M. M. JARMAN, Elkton, Va. Tell the advertiser where you saw his advertisement. Berkshire Hogs M. B. TURKEYS, S. C. B . LEGHORNS. I have for sale, at all times, Berk- shire hogs and pigs from some of the best English and American strains. Pigs 10 weeks old. $5 to $15; boars ieo.uy for service, $15 to $25; berd gilts $20 to $60; bred sows $25 to $65. I have a few choice M. B Turkey toms left, $5 each. S. C. Brown Leghorn cockerels, year- ling cocks and pullets $1 to $2 each. Nothing but strictly choice stock is shipped from my place. Satisfaction guaranteed; your patron- age solicited. W. A. WILLEROY, Brett, Va., Kiner William Co. Edgewood Stock Farm DORSET SHEEP Our lambs are coming again, so we are ready to book your orders. Don't delay writing. Our lambs are out of large, strong-boned ewes and sired by rams descended from the best blood in England. Give us a trial. We can please you. Address, H. H. ARBUCKLE, Maxwelton, W. Va. WOODLAND FARM DORSETS. A few yearling rams and a lot of ram lambs for sale. Order early be- fore the flock has been culled over. We are offering a splendid bunch of ewe lambs, excellent quality and bar- gains at the price. J. E. WING & BROS., Mcchanicsbnrg, Ohio. TAMWORTH PIGS. From Registered Stock of Fine Breeding. Knowle of Cook Farm 5057 at head of herd. Sire 2nd prize boar it Royal Show, Eng., 1907., Dam, 1st prize gilt at same show, 1907. volney osnuniv Blnemont, Londonn Co. Va. DUROC-JERSEY and TAMWORTH SWINE. Sterling Stock Farm, R. W. Watson, Petersburg, Va CHESTER WHITES Best hogs on earth. Pigs now ready for fall delivery. Stock A No. 1 Sntlnfactlon Gnaranteed. S. M. WISECARVEn, Rnntborg, Vft. 160 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, Buy a Stallion Now before the season is on you and your horse will get used to his new home. No man or firm can or will sell you a stallion, PERCH ERON OR =SADDLE= as cheap or as good as I. I have eight stallions and four- teen mares— all with foal. My stal- lions are sure foal getters, having been bred and reared under proper and natural conditions. I can sell you , SHORT HORN CATTLE AND =BERKSHIRE H0GS= cheaper, class of stock considered, than other breeders. Come jand See. I JOHN F. LEWIS, Ljimood, - Hens two years old weigh 20 lbs.; toms 40 lbs. Hens, $3, toms, $4. C. S. Hamlin, Route 1, Box 5, Leakes- ville. N. C. TWENTY-FIVE WHITE HOLLAND Turkeys for sale. Toms $4 each. Hens $3, Trio $9. E. M. Harns- berger, Orange, Va. FOR SALE — PURE-BRED RUFUS RED Belgian hares, $1 per pair. Jas. H. Whitten, Amherst, Va. TWO TRIOS OF WHITE HOLLAND Turkeys for sale, $7 a trio. By W. L. Elliott, Formosa, Va. a C. RHODE ISLAND REDS. FINE bred roosters for sale. $2 per bird. F. H. Board & Co., Lynch's, Va. FOR SALE: — PURE-BRED MAMMOTH Bronze Turkeys, Toms $3.50, hens $2.50. M. K. Trice, Buckner, Va. WHITE WYANDOTTE EGGS FOR sale. $1 per sitting of 15. George Osborne, Hurlock, Md. COLUMBIAN WYANDOTTE COCKER- els and eggs per sitting, each $1.50. C. V. Campbell, Oliver, Va. SINGLE COMB WHITE LEGHORN hens, pullets and cocks cheap. W. E. Sheppard, Front Royal, Va. ONE THOUSAND HENS FROM THE best birds now ready for sale by the Edgehill Poultry Yards, Luray, Va. B. P. ROCK CHICKENS — CF THE finest quality. Charlie Brown, Route 1, Cartersville, Va. LIVE STOCK. HOLSTEIN BULL CALF, OUT OF cow now giving eight gallons, four per cent, milk a day. Born Sept. 14, 1908. Will sell right. $36. Regis- tered and transferred. Very large and well grown. Wm. W. Jackson, Bizarre Dairy Farm, Farmville, Va. IMPORTED SPANISH JACK, GRAY, 6 years old; 14 hands; 3 and 4 year old black Jennets, price $315, also a 15- month Red Poll bull calf, price $75. $375 will buy the lot; cheap enough for a dealer to buy. Call on or write to C. J. «Armand, Fairfax, Va. REGISTERED BREED OF YORK- shire hogs at farmers' prices. W. E. Stickley, Strasburg, Va. WANTED— LARGE YORKSHIRE young sow to farrow in 30 to 60 days, also yearling Holstein bull for light service. All must be well bred at farmers' price. Two young Hol- stein cows to calf in 60 days. C. F. Hodgman, Diamond Springs, Va. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE— ANGUS Cattle for first-class trotting bred stallion or Percheron mares, Hack- ney mares and colts for sale cheap. All stock registered. Myer & Son, Bridgeville, Del. FOR SALE AT BARGAIN PRICES— Combination horses, matched pairs. Mules and mule colts, Angus cattle, Berkshire hogs. Fine 8-year-old Jack. Oak Hill Farm, Wenonda, Va. PONIES — SEVERAL SHETLAND AND others for children, well broken. One pair matched roan mares, 5 years, kind; single and double. J. M. Cun- ningham, Brandy Station, Va. REGISTERED JERSEY CATTLE AND large Yorkshire swine for sale. Choice stock at moderate prices. Ad- dress Riverside Park, Morgantown, N. C. _^^ FEW MALE POLAND -CHINA PIGS yet, $4. Seed corn yielding 80 bu. to the acre; also yellow seed corn, each $1.25 bu. W. B. Payne, Crofton, Va. W H. COFFMAN'S ILLUSTRATED herd catalogue of his magnificent Berkshire Hogs is now ready to mail free to breeders at their request. Ad- drss, Bluefleld, W. Va. CHOICE BERKSHIRE PIGS AND M B. toms $5 each. Try us, we might g-ive better value than the others. W. G. Hundley, Callands, Va. SADDLE STALLIONS, GOOD ONES, Prices $300 to $700 each Registered Shorthorns, good ones, $40 to $150. J D. Stodghill, Shelbyvllle, Ky. LARGE YORKSHIRE PIGS AND bred sows, Hampshiredown sheep and Buff Plymouth Rock Chickens. J. D. Thomas, Round Hill, Va. FOR SALE^TWO REGISTERED Percheron yearling stud colts. Mc- Cloy, Agt, Birdwood, Va. POLAND-CHINA PIGS— OF THE BEST breeding. Charlie Brown, Route 1, Cartersville, Va. • REAL ESTATE. FOR RENT OR WORK ON SHARES— a fine farm especially adapted to dairying, stock breeding and truck- ing Near splendid market for all dafry and farm products Station, cost office, express office, church and Ko° on ia?m. Excellent neigh- borhood A bargain for the right man Apply Oak Hill Stock & Dairy Farm, Wenonda, Va. FOR SALE— AN IMPROVED 200-ACRE farm in Piedmont Va., on easy terms. Buildings, fences, etc., in good repair and ready for business. Fine young 7-acre orchard of standard apples lust in full bearing. A bargain. Write for particulars. Also mill and crusher with 2-horse tread power to run them, making a complete out- fit for grinding feed in barn. All in good repair at closing out price. Ad- dress, Box 33, JefCersonton, Va. SALE DELAWARE FARMS — FULL description, grain, fruit, truck, poul- try farms. Level land. Healthy cli- mate. Free catalogue. Chas M. Hammond, Milford, Del. VIRGINIA— ABOUT 400 ACRES OF land at railroad station, 20 miles from Norfolk, Va. Good schools and neighborhood, etc. 250 acres cleared. Grows corn, cotton, timothy hay and truck, 2-3 fenced with stock wire, lOf-room dwelling; 4 three to five room houses, barns, stables, etc. Good pastures. Price $10,000, easy terms. Write owner, Jos. R. Ives, 143 Plume St., Norfolk, Va. TWO FARMS FOR RENT, BUCKING- ham County, Virginia, with good James River low grounds. Rent for money or part crop. Possession given one farm forthwith, other Nov- ember 15th next, can sow wheat. Good productive land, convenient de- pots. Correspondence solicited. Camm Patteson, Howardsville, Va. WANTED— FARMS AND BUSINESSES everywhere. Don't pay agent's com- missions. We find you cash buyer direct. Describe property fully nam- ing lowest price. Get our free ad- vice as to best property to buy. American Investment Association, 518 20th Ave., North. Minneapolis, Minn. TIMBER AND FARM FOR SALE — Between Richmond and Lynchburg, Va. James River Valley. 650 acres. All in good timber. Less than 3 miles to station. Must be sold. Box 8, Appomattox, Va. FARM 150 ACRES, SOME CHOICE Cotton land, new buildings, stock, implements, etc. Richmond 11 miles. Price $3,800. Owner, care Southern Planter. POSITIONS — HELP. WANTED CN A VIRGINIA FARM which is being operated under the direction of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, three strong, healthy, industrious young men who are will- ing to work as farm hands, at reg- ular farm hand wages, with a view of perfecting themselves as practi- cal farmers under the new Scientific plan provided by the Department of Agriculture. No man need apply who is afraid of farm hand work and who is not ambitious to prepare himself for farming with a view of following that calling. Address with refer- ences. Box 752, Richmond, Va. WANTED — Responsible man with horse and buggy in each community, sal- ary $5 to $10 per day to take orders from owners of farms, orch- ards and home gardens. A splendid opportunity for farmers' sons, also fruit tree and sewing machine agents to make a business connection which w'll become more profitable each ye or. Address: P. O. Box 6, Young's Island, S. C. PARTNER WANTED— A HONEST man with first-class references and $500 to join me in buying a few horses on speculation. The man wanted is to select and buy the horses and bring them to my farm stable to be cared for till sold. Only a thoroughly competent horseman need answer. Money in the business as advertiser knows from twenty years experience. Write for particu- lars. Wm. M. Watkins, Saxe, Va. WANTED — GENERAL FARMER FA- miliar with gardening, care and feeding of all stock, wife to care for butter and milk and board help State size of family, ages, wages expected and references. Address E. G. Craig, Box 296, Charlottesville, Va. WANTED — SITUATION AS MANAGE on a gentleman's place or large dairy farm. Address R. S. Davis, R. F. D. 3, St. Johnsbury, Vt. 170 THE SOUTHEEN PLAN TEE. [Eebruary, POSITIONS — HELP. (Continued.) WANTED— TENANT FOR FINE FARM 600 acres, 42 miles west of Richmond. Will furnish land, team, implements and new dwelling, 5 rooms. Practi- cal dairyman preferred. Applicant must have sufficient capital for his expenses and labor. Apply to R. P. Burwell, Tobaccoville, Powhatan Co., Va. EXPERIENCED FARMER, WHO HAS made a specialty of raising hogs, cattle, and sheep for market, wants to work farm on shares or superin- tend. Location convenient to trans- portation within a radius of 50 miles of Richmond or on the James River. Address S. J. B.. care Southern Planter Pub. Co. POSITION WANTED AS MANAGER by a thoroughly practical man of wide experience in modern farming, horses, dairy, sheep, poultry, forage crops, silo and silage; strictly tem- perate and can handle men. Address with particulars, "Temperate," care Southern Planter. WANTED: MANAGER FOR CITY MILK and Ice Cream Plant. Must be com- petent business man, capable of handling the buying and selling, as well as the inside work. State ex- perience, salary and references in first letter. X, care Southern Planter. SITUATION BY EXPERIENCED Lo- comotive, dinkey, or stationary en- gineer, with large lumber plantation, or mining company. W. W. Lewis, Luckets, Loudoun Co., Va. V WANTED — FIRST-CLASS FARM hand, married. W. D. Robertson, Route 4, Box 28. Leesburg, Va. MISCELLANEOUS. FOR SALE — A SPLENDIDLY BRED Collie dog, 3 years old this coming spring. This Collie is from the cel- ebrated Maplemont (Vermont) ken- nels, and is of the very best blood. The price of this dog when ten days old at the kennels was $40. He would be invaluable to any one who desires to raise a high grade class of Collies. Will sell at some loss simply because have no use for him. Address Box 752, Richmond, Va. WANTED — TO BUY ALL KINDS Wild Birds and Animals, particularly Tame Deer, Wild Turkeys, White Squirrels, Peafowl, Otters, Red Foxes Gray Squirrels, Partridges, Pheas- ants, Beaver. State price when writ- ing. Dr. Cecil French, Naturalist, Washington, D. C. SEND 15 CENTS FOR ONE YEAR'S subscription to best semi-monthly farm paper published, three beauti- ful colored pictures for framing and pictures of 42 beautiful girls and 397 babies. Agents wanted. Central News Co., Bank Block, Chattanooga, Tenn. 42 EARS CF CROOK'S WHITE GIANT seed corn shelled one bushel; this corn cannot be beaten for size of ear and yield per acre. I will send one pound for 30c, peck 75c, % bushel $1.40. Reference Citizen's Bank, Lexington, Tenn. Address W. C. Crook, Huron, Tenn. COLLIE PUPPIES F-»R SALE. FARM raised, from registered stock. Price $5.00. Pedigree with each. Black and white or yellow and white, male or female. Norfolk & Western Rail- way Farm, Ivor, Va. S. M. Geyer, Manager. FOR SALE— BEES, SEVERAL KINDS various prices. For spring delivery. Pure honey in various style pack- ages. 40 White Plymouth Rock pul- lets, spring hatched. B. F. Averill, Howardsville, Va. WANT TO MOVE TO TOWN TO EDU- cate your children? Have nice brick home for sale. Splendid educational facilities. Write T. H. Strohecker, Salem, Va. County Seat Roanoke Co. Amid the healthful mountains. COLLIE PUPS FROM CHAMPION IM- ported stock and brood females cheap. R. I. Red Eggs, $1 for 20. Shady Brook Farm, Route 2, Roan- oke, Va. FOR SALE— ARTICHOKES, $1 PER Bushel, 10 bushels for $9. White Wyandotte eggs, $1 per sitting, from extra fine layers. B. H. Walker, Stevensville, Va. WISH TO PURCHASE ANY PART OF 100 bushels of cow peas. Whippoor- will preferred. State best price for cash. R. G. Bickford, Newport News, Va. FARMERS! — STOP THE LEAKS. "Whelpley's Money Maker for Farm- ers," will do it for you. Write J. H. Bonnell, State Mgr., Falls Church, Va. for information. WANTED — SOMEONE TO STAND A thoroughbred stallion on shares for the season of 1909. I have a good horse in the wrong locality. Percival Hicks, North, Mathews Co., Va. FOR EXCHANGE— PRIVET HEDGE plants, two years old, branched, first class. Write what you have. L. A. Reynolds, Clemmons, N. C. RICHMOND VIWQINIA W OOD WARD & SON, RICHMOND, VA. Lumber, Laths, Shin- gles, Sash, Blinds, Doors, Frames. Mouldings, Asphalt Roofing. Yards and buildings covering ten arces. REPLACING MY SHARPLESS CREAM Separator No. 4 with larger machine, will sell cheap. Used five months. Perfect working order. Boxed and delivered on cars here, $45 cash. Jno. T. Nicholas, Remington, Va. FCR SALE— SET "SOUTHERN PLANT- er," paper bound, 1889-1908. Address Room 124, 39 Cortlandt St., New York. FOR SALE— ONE CYPHERS INCUBA- tor, 240 eggs, $20. 2 brooders, $12, used one season. A Zacharias, Mos- ley's Junction, Route No. 2, Va. FOX, DEER, COON AND OPOSSUM hounds and pups $3.60 to $15 each. For bargains write me. &. F. Wil- mouth, Shelbyville, Ky. FOR SALE— 4 COON, POSSUM AND Fox Hounds. Best in two states. R. J. Dillard, Kendalia, W. Va. $15 WILL BUY 360-EGG CORNELL Incubator, good as new. Laurel Hill Poultry Farm, Roxbury, Va. SCOTCH COLLIE PUPS — SECOND TO none. Charlie Brown, Route 1 Car- ter svi lie, Va. WANTED— BUYERS FOR BEST VIR- ginia farms. J. H. Bonnell, Falls Church, Va. JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES WANTED. State price. F. L. Faison, Warsaw, N. C. 117 SQUARE MILES OF FARM LAND SOLD. If you were to count the farms you pass when taking a drive through the country some day, you might get a faint idea of what it means when you are told that one real estate company sold seven hundred and twenty-two farms during the past twelve months. But even then it would be only a faint idea at the best, because those 722 farms contained more than 75, (V00 acres, or more than 117 square miles of farming land. If stretched out in a straight line they would cover a strip more than 200 feet in width all the way across the continent from New York to San Francisco. The to- tal value of this immense tract, or more properly, collection of tracts, which were sold through the E. A. Strout Company, of New York, Bos- ton, and 'Ph'iorlplrjhiR during 1908. was more than $2,000,000. BILTMORE FARMS. | POULTRY AND EGGS Barred Rocks, White Rocks, Brown Leghorns, White Leghorns and White Wyan- dottes. BERKSHIRE HOGS A few young boars and gilts, and a magnificent, uniform lot of young fall pigs. Prolific, good type, large size, low prices. JERSEY CATTLE A few select young bulls and heifers from dams having large YEARLY milk and butter records, and by well known sires of tested cows and prize-winners. APIARY Pure Honey for sale. Also full colonies of bees. For full particulars, addresss, BILTMORE FARMS* R. F. D. No. 2, BUtmore, N. C. TELL THE ADVERTISER WHERE YOU SAW HIS ADVERTISEMENT. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 171 > A Eggs A-Plenty That's what the poultry man gets who follows right TT^SSl^ ideas about feeding, and that's what you should get. Just as well have eggs in winter as in summer — just as well have them when they are high and when other folks don't have them. A hen can be made to lay almost the year 'round. What all hens need is Dr. Hess Poultry Pan-a-ce-a, given (a little of it) in soft feed every day. Dr. Hess Poultry Pan-a-ce-a was formu- lated to provide hens in confinement with elements they need to make eggs. It does this, not because of any food value in it, but because it makes more of your ration available. In otherwords, it makes your hens digestall that's possible for them to digest, and thus they have everything they need for growth and eggs. DR. HESS Poultry PAN-A-CE-A is very different from so-called egg- foods. It is not a stimulant; instead, it brings about a natural increase and consequently a steady one. Increasing growth and egg production by increasing digestion is known as "The Dr. Hess Idea.** Sound reason is back of this idea, and leading poultry associations in United States and Canada endorse it. Besides tonic principles, Dr. Hess Poultry Pan-a-ce-a contains blood-building elements like iron and nitrates which eliminate poisonous matter. Give it as directed and you will be amazed at the wonderful increase of eggs. It also cures gapes, cholera, roup, etc. It helps old hens and all market birds to fat in a short time, and saves young chickens. A penny's worth is enough for 30 fowls one day. Sold on a written guarantee. 1 ': lbs. 25c; mall or express 40c Except in Canada DR. HESS & CLARK. 5 lbs. 60c; 13 lbs. $1.25; 25 lb. pall $2.50 and Extreme West and South. Ashland, Ohio. Send 2 cents for Dr. Hess 48-page Poultry Book, free. D* HESS STOCK F®0D Peed a steer a heavy ration ; continue it any length of time, and yon are likely to bring on annoying and costly digestive disorders. Animal organs can't stand this strain without help, and Dr. Hess Stock Food is the tonic to give it. It was "The Dr. Mess Idea" to provide a prescription acting directly upon stomach and intestines, giving strength and "tone" to the organ and thus main- taining appetite and healthful assimilation of a large amount of food The profit saved by keeping stock in condition, free from disease, is another valuable feature of "The Dr. Hess Idea." Thousands of feeders testify that Dr. Hess Stock Food is the foundation of their success. It is sold under a written guarantee. 100 lbs. $5.00; 25 lb. pall $1.60. Except in Canada and Extreme West and South. Smaller quantities at a slight advance. Send 2 cents for Dr. Hess Stock Book, Free. INSTANT LOUSE KILLER KILLS LICE If you want to save money on your purchase of fence, write Kitselman Brothers, of Muncie, Ind., for their free catalogue. They are selling fence direct to the farmer on thirty days' trial for 15 cents a rod up. See their ad. in this issue. Buy fence at wholesale — 15 cents a rod up. Write Kitselman Bros., Mun- cie, Ind., to-day for free catalogue. See their ad. in this issue. PLENTY GOOD ENOUGH. Aunt Chloe was burdened with the support of a worthless husband, who beat her when he was sober, and whom she dutifully nursed and tend- ed when he came home bruised and battered from a fighting spree. One Monday morning she appeared at the drug store, and asked the clerk for " a right pow'ful linerment foh ach'in in de bones." "You might try some of this St. Peter's Prescription, Aunty; it's an old and popular remedy, cures cuts, bruises, aches, and sprains. One dol lar the bottle. Good for man and beast." Aunt Chloe looked at the dollar bot- DUROCS SHORTHORNS POLLED DURHAMS SHROPSHIRES THE DUROC Is the most prolific hog on earth. The large fairs of th« West prove that they are the most pepular hog of that section. The demand for them In the South shows conclusively that they are the coming hog of th« Sout h. We have the largest herd In the East and one of the most fashion- ably bred herds In the world. Our herd averaged over eleven pigs t» th« litter this year. Send for printed catalogue if you are Interested In hogs. Boars, Sows in pig, Shotes and Fall Pigs for sale — two hundred In all. Send for "Dnroe Facta.** Shorthorn Cows, Heifers and bulls, dual purpose, pure Scotch and Scotch topped, at prices that will make you buy. Shropshire Rams and Ewes, Yearlings and Lambs. LESLIE D. KLINE, Vanclose, Va. JERSEY CATTLE. My herd is headed by the Pure St. Lamberts Bull, "RInora's Rioter of St. Lambert's, 69,478. His dam gave with FIRST CALF 17*4 pounds butter, 301 pounds milk in 7 days. Granddams — one, 23 pounds 6 ounces butter, 319 pounds milk; the other, 23 pounds 12 ounces butter, 320 pounds milk in 7 days. A few of his sons and daughters for sale. Cows and heifers due to calve in the spring. Address EVERGREEN FARMS, W. H. Gates, Prop., Rice Depot, Va. TELL THE ADVERTISER WHERE YOU SAW HIS ADVERTISEMENT. 172 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, Hygeia Herd Pure-Bred Holstein-Friesians. The herd offers a few more well bred bulls and bull calves from large milk and butter producing dams and sired by Pontiac Calypso's Son, No. 394-69. The dam of this richly bred young sire, Pontiac Calypso, No. 61,100, has an official record »f 28.43 pounds of butter in 7 days, with a milk record of 660.3 pounds, or an average of nearly 10 gallons per day for 7 days. His sire's dam, Beryl Wayne, No. 32,496, produced 27.87 pounds of butter in 7 days. The breed not only holds the milk, bnt also the butter records of the world. It pays to get the best blood to head your herd, therefore write for pe digrees and prices. No females offered for sale at the present time, as the herd will be numerically increased as rapidly aa possible. HYGEIA HERD. W. Fltzhngh Carter M. D., Owner, Crozet Albemarle County, Virginia. Address: W. F. Carter, Jr., Agent. tie and then dubiously at her flat purse. "Ain't yo' got some foh fifty cents?" she ventured. "Some foh jes' on'y beast. Ah want it foh ma ol' man." SOMETHING TO REMEMBER ABOUT HENS. A, B, C isn't simpler, or more easy to learn, than the business of poultry keeping, if the keeper will take the pains to remember one or two facts about hens. In the first place, the hen is a lib- erty-loving bird. Her natural in- stincts prompt her to roam far a- field in search of natural food — bugs, worms, grasses, etc. In the second place, the exercise she gets in this daily search for food is a perfect preventive of disease, and a guarantee of long life and great productiveness. Now, the hen-man, who wants to carry on a big business, catches Mrs. Hen and imprisons her in a close coop and a little yard, so that he can have her handy to feed and not trot his legs off hunting her eggs. But it's fa- tal to the hen, and also to a full egg basket, unless something is done to replace natural conditions in the hen's life. Here is where "The Dr. Hess Idea" is of great and permanent value. Dr. Hess — a stockman and poultry farm- er — after long study, formulated Poul- try Pan-a-ce-a, a preparation used al- most universally by successful poul- trymen everywhere, and which is real- ly the actual cause of their success. Anyone possessing medical knowl- edge or a clear idea of the digestive process, knows how difficult it is to preserve health in idleness, especially if feeding be heavy, as in the case of the hen forced for eggs. Thus, the maintenance of a healthv activity of the whole system is, in the case of the hen, as also in that of feeding animals, the one object to be constantly sought. If, then, you are struggling with a lazy, droopy, inactive flock of hens, you can change a disheartening situa- tion into a cheering one in short or- der, by the use of Dr. Hess Poultry Pan-a-ce-a. It is tonic — in no sense, DAIRY COWS. Do you own cows that will give y«u from twenty-five to thirty quarts of milk daily when fresh and 5,000 quarts in a year? These are the kind we keep and offer for sale, and they are the only kind you can afford to feed. Do not keep "cow boarders" any longer, but write us to-day stating what class of dairy cows you want. We sell Registered or high grade Holsteln, Guernseys, Jerseys, and Ayrshlres. Address, One of our grade cows that gave .___ 11,000 pounds of milk in a year. 414 Dillaye Bldg., SYRACUSE BREEDERS ASSOCIATION Syracuse, N. Y. THEtHOLLINS HERD OF HIGH-CLASS HOLSTEIN-FRIESIANS. A WORKING HERD— WORKING EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR. This herd of 22 head, of which 14 head are heifers with 1st or 2d calf, milked from the 1st of October, 1907, to the 1st of October, 1908: 195,941 Lbs. of Milk an average of 8,906 Lbs. Per Cow Per Year REGISTERED YOUNG BULLS FOR SALE. JOS. A. TURNER, General Manager Holllns Institute, Holllns, Va. Silver Spring Herd of SHORT HORNS ROBERT R. SMITH, Proprietor. Charlestown, Jefferson Co., W. Va or Wickliffe, Clarke Co., Va. Cattle are going through the winter in fine shape. I still have two one year old bulls and some bull calves for sale. Will have 20 Short Horns, some of them fine, all good ones; 15 Poland-Chinas, both sexes and 10 one year old draft colts to offer at my Public Sale, May 27. PUBLIC SALE THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1909. EXCELLENT SHORTHORN HEIFERS AND BULLS. By the Scotch topped Bull, Royal Lad (advertised by the old reliable breed- ers, P. S. Lewis & Son, as the best bull ever bred on their farm) by th« International winner, Frantic Lad, son of The Lad for Me, champion •* America in 1900. Also a few fresh Shorthorn Cows. Pure Yearling SOUTHDOWN RAMS by Senator, a prize winner in Can- ada as a lamb and a yearling. He was bred by Hon. George Drummond, th» foremost Southdown breeder in America. m. J. HANCOCK & SON, "Ellerslle," Charlottesville, Vm. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 173 MORVEN PARK ESTATE The Property of WESTMORELAND DAVIS, Esq. Large Yorkshire Swine. These pigs are hardy and prolific. The two boars that took the first prize in their classes at the Virginia State Fair had been exposed without cover or shed for a year in the open. They had, as have all our pigs, well developed carcasses, covered with heavy growth of hair that insures against scurf or skin troubles in hot climate. These pigs mature early, are good mothers, and are very pro- lific. They are the bacon pig of England and of the West. WE HAVE THE FINEST STRAIN OF IMPORTED BLOOD FOR SALE. Registered Guernsey Cattle. Dairymen shipping to the city markets will find a Guernsey bull most valuable to cross on their herds, thus increasing the content of butter fat in their milk or cream. Especially is this cross desir- able when shipping to cities where dealers pay upon the basis of butter fat. At the Pan-American Exposition, the only time the Guernsey met other breeds in competition, the Guernsey led all breeds for the most economical production of high-class butter. We Have Brilliantly Bred Bulls For Sale. Dorset Horn Sheep. We have the largest flock of Imported Dorsets in America. They are of one type and both thrifty and prolific. WE ARE BOOKING ORDERS FOR EARLY DELIVERY OF LAMBS. For further particulars, address, LIVE STOCK DEPARTMENT, MORVEN PARK ESTATE, LEESHURG, LOUDOUN CO., VA 174 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, ROSE DALE HERD ABERDEEN-ANGUS CATTLE We offer to the farmers and breeders ef the Bast strictly choice Young Registered Bulls from weanlings to serviceable age. They are of the straight, broad-backed, low-down, compact, blocky type. Many of them show ring animals. They represent the blood of Mas- ter II. of Meadow Breok; Gay Lord, Jr.; Heather Lad IL, Zaire V., Ermine Bearer, Blackbird of Corskie IV., Black Abbott, Abbottsford, Coquette X., Kto. They are well grown out. In thrifty condition, but not pampered. Come and see them or write us your wants. Prices right. We can please you. Angus Cattle are our specialty. We raise ne other stock, but give them our undivided personal attention. To avoid Inbreeding we offer an exceptionally good herd bull. "Write for particulars. Address ROSEDALE STOCK FARMS, JEFFERSGNTON, VA. a food alone; its mission is to make food available. That is, it aids di- gestion; strengthens the digestive or- gans, so that the hen gets more out of her food — elements that make flesh and bone, feathers and eggs. Thus, though confined and denied the hen's natural right to forage at will, she is yet as prolific and healthy when getting this preparation in regular daily doses as though at large. But, further than this, if there are old hens, unfit for layers, which are better disposed of, Poultry Pan-a-ce-a fats them in a very little while, and for the same reason that helps the laying hen — -it aids digestion. HOW TO SAVE SEED AND HAVE BIGGER CROPS. Every farmer is interested in this question. He realizes if it is possi- ble for him to save seed and get big- ger crops ' it means his betterment financially.. To learn how it is possi- ble to do this, write to the Goodell Co., Antrim, New Hampshire, and ask for a copy of their Seed Sowers' Manual, which is sent free to all in- terested parties. This Manual contains a lot of in- formation on how to get bigger crops ■ — knowledge that every farmer should have. Incidentally it also describes the most accurate and durable Hand Broadcast Sower made — the Cahoon Seed Sower. It is claimed for this seed sower that it will do more and better work than any other hand seed sower made, and that it will pay for itself many times over every year. Write to-day for a copy of the Seed Sowers' Manual. EFFICIENT HOUSE HEATING. To every housekeeper who studies economy and efficiency in house heat- ing, the plan of having auxiliary heat- ing apparatus to the regular system will appeal with peculiar force. In very cold weather the usual house furnaces, stoves or boilers have THE SUNNY HOME HERD Is one of the well-bred herds of ANGUS CATTLE And the people know it. We sell cattle all over the South and have sold more Angus bulls in our own county than in any other section. This is as good proof as you need that the cattle are of the right quality and that our methods appeal to our neighbors. We have only one bull of weaning age for sale. He is a grandson of Gay Blackbird on sire's sid'e, and of the great Erica bull Ermoor on dam's side. He is not a herd header, but is a good blocky calf. If you need a herd header we have a little fellow that will ''fill the bill" nothing better in America. Station Draper. A. L FRENCH. Rockingham Co., N. C. R. F. D., Byrdville, Va. REDUCED PRICES ON BRED BERKSHIRE GILTS for shipment. THOS. S. WHITE, for next 30 days only. The panic drove hundreds of breed- ers out of business. The next twelve months will see them tumbling over one another to get back — as the de- mand and prices advance. I staid in the boat, kept up my herd and adver- tisements, hence am well equipped for orders. My Berkshires are as fine as the world can produce. Price in easy reach of everyone. Scores of pigs ready Fanaifern Stock Farm. LEXINGTON, VA. Glenburn Berkshires. Lord Premier and Premier Longfellow are dead, but we have their best sons. Our LORD PREMIER III is net only a son of Lord Premier, but is a litter mate to Lord Premier II. and a brother in blood to Lord Prem- ier's Rival. Our PREDOMINANT and DOMINANT are probably the best sons of Premier Longfellow. IMP. ROYAL HUNTER Is a great indi- vidual. We have Lord Premier, Premier, Longfellow, Masterpiece, Cham- ber's Duke XXIII., and fine imported sows. FORFARSHIRE GOLDEN LAD JERSEYS. Write for Catalogue. Dr. J. D. KIRK, Roanoke. Va. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 175 ou r r " Percheron Horses. O. E JORDAN Successor to W. J. Jordan & Son, Established 1876. Now the Oldest Breeders of Percherons in the South = ^ m K CAN furnish young registered stock of the best Percheron Blood in America, every one of them from Winners. What is more important, our horses are all broken to]work, consequently are healthy, strong and ready to do their share of the farm work. Don't make the mistake of buying pampered, over-fed, fat horses, subject to acclimating fever, soft, not fitted for work and likely non-breeders. Can Furnish Grade Mares and Geldings, in Fact, any kind of Breeding or Work Stock. Prices Reasonable and Terms for Breeding Stock Made to Suit Purchaser. Write us for particulars and especially for pamphlet showing value of Percheron Mares. O. E. Jordan Dublin, Va. o o o o o o e o o o o o o o o o o o o o © o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o ©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©SO©©©©©©©©©©© 176 THE SOUTHERN" PLANTER. [February, Pure- Bred POULTRY Eggs for Hatching in Season. Farmers, now Is the time to order your Breeding Birds for 1909. I have choice birds of the follow- ing breeds. Barred, White and Buff Plymouth Rocks, White, Brown and Buff Leghorns, White and Sil- ver Wyandottes, White, Black and Buff Orpingtons, Rhode Island Reds, Silver Spangled Hamburgs, Indian Games, Black Minorcas, and White Face Black Spanish chickens; Rou- en and Pekln Ducks, Mammoth Bronze and White Holland Turkeys. Do not delay, place your order today and get advantage of lowest prices. Address JAMES M. HOBBS. 1521 Mt. Royal Avenue. BALTIMORE, MD. Pure-Bred WHITE HOLLAND and MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS. Eggs for Hatching in Season. Farmers do not delay. Now is the time to buy and save money. Choice 15- to 16- pound White Holland Toms, $5 each; Younger Toms, $4 each; 25-pound Yearling Toms, $7 each. White Holland Hens of this year's hatch, 8 to 12 pounds each, $4 each, or $7.50 for two hens. My Mammoth Bronze Turkeys are extra good this year, and the prices for February are as Tollows: 28- to 30-pound Yearling Gobblers, $7 each; 18-to 20-pound Young Toms, ?5 each; Later hatched, 15-pound Toms, $4 each; 12- to 14-pound Early hatched Hens, $4 each; 9 to 11 -pound Hens, $3 each. I can please you, and have over 200 Pure-Bred Turkeys for sale all in perfect health. Order to-day and secure the choicest birds. Address JAMES M. HOBBS, 1521 Mt. Royal Ave, Baltimore, Md. Pure-Bred HOGS I have the finest lot of Berkshire, Poland-China, Chester White, York- shire and Tamworth Pigs and Hogs I ever owned. I can mate Pigs and Shoats for breeding 2, 3, 4 and 6 months old, and have fine 160-to 200-lb. Service Boars and Bred Sows ready for immediate shipment. Now is the time to order and get them in their winter quarters. Write to- day a list of your wants. Satis- faction guaranteed and references furnished. Address, JAMES M. HOBBS, 1521 Mt. Royal Avenue. BALTIMORE, MD. to be driven to the limit, and even then there are many days when still more heat is needed in certain rooms. With a Perfection Oil Heater, the trouble and expense of driving the furnace can be greatly reduced. The "Perfection" is a handsome oil heater, finished in japan, nickel mounted. It is equipped with a safe- ty burner which cannot be turned too high or too low, and the heater can be carried from room to room with perfect safety. It also has a smoke- less device. The "Perfection" will warm chilly hallways, the bath room, the break- fast room, any room that happens to be cold, in a very few minutes after being lit. When too warm for the regular heating apparatus, and too cold to do without heat entirely, the "Perfection" will keep the home com- fortable. Another great contributor to home comfort is the Rayo Lamp. Its light is soft, steady and easy upon the eyes. The Rayo is all metal except the shade, is equipped with the latest im- proved burner, which makes it in every way safe to light and handle and overcomes the danger of carry- ing about a glass lamp. Dealers everywhere handle Perfec- tion Heaters and Rayo Lamps. Prize-Winning BERKSHIRES FOR SALE. Our herd won 33 ribbons at Rich- mond 1907, and Lynchburg and Rich- mond, 1908; also won sliver cup offered by American Berkshire Assn. for best under-year herd (3 sows and boar). We have Masterpiece, Lord Premier, Beryton Duke and Biltmore strains. BRED SOWS, GILTS, YOUNG BOARS AND PIGS FOR SALE. MOORE'S BROOK SANITARIUM COMPANY, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. rom SALB! «W^MM)fi#MW , ^*<- - ■ ~-~— ! n BERKSHIRE GILTS and BOARS. WELL DEVELOPED ^^ JERSEY BULL CALVES CORRECT DAIRY TYPE. . GREAT PRODUCING ANCESTORS.' Forest Home Farm, pu ^rgrEZfc 1 * SYSONBY GARDENS. We have pleasure in calling atten- tion to the advertisement of Sysonby Garden's, Petersburg, Va. The poultry yards of this concern are among the most extensive in the South and are making quite a reputation for breed- ing blue ribbon birds. At the recent Virginia Poultry Show they entered 28 birds, 23 of which took the ribbons. Their Barred Buff and White Ply- mouth Rocks are among their special- ties. Look up the advertisement and write to Mr. Sam McEwen, Manager, for prices and information. BEGIN THE NEW=YEAR Give them good attention and watch your mortgage disappear or your bank account grow large. Start with a pair or trio of pigs from my Large Eng- lish and American bred Berkshires. The big, long, and deep kind that far- row and raise large litters. I have some choice young boars, bred gilts, and a number of very fancy pigs out of litters of 10 to 14 each. They were sired by my great herd boars Hunter of Biltmore 3rd, and Earhart's Model Premier, and are as good as can be reasonable, and remember: I guaran your money. Write for prices and description to D. E. EARHART, WITH A BETTER BRFED AND LARQER HERD Oh- HOQS. found in America. My prices are very tee entire satisfaction or will refund Bristow, Va. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 177 fl Incorporated 1907. "STANDARD OP EXCELLENCE." Capital Stock, $100,000. a THE VIRGINIA STOCK FARM CO. Incorporated* Bellevue, Bedford County, Virginia. J. ELLIOTT HALL, General Manager. Copyright, 1908. By The Virginia Stock Farm Co., Inc. PERCHERON STALLION Standard Type of The Horse of Gold. Drawing by Geo. Ford Morris. M y°U are interested in pure-bred stock — Percheron, Hackney or Standard-Bred Horses, Short Horn Cat- tle, Poland-China H T ° es > D °rset Horn Sheep — then you must certainly want a copy of our handsome, illustrated catalogue entitled Inaugural Announcement." This book cost us many hundred dollars to publish and we want you to have a copy absolutely free. There is no other breeders 'catalogue just like it. Write us a post card stating (1) Your Name. (2) Tour Address, Street and Number, P. O. Box or Rural B Route and Number. (3) Tour Post Office. (4) The Countv in which your Post Office is located. (5) Tour State. (6) J, Please say you saw this advertisement in The Southern Planter. Please write plainly! Address the company as above, or write direct to the General Manager, as below. J. ELLIOTT HALL, Bellevue, Virginia. Write To-day. Do It Now. FOR SALE.— ROADSTER. CH. M. 15.2 HANDS; 1100 POUNDS. 10 TEARS; SOUND AND CITT BROKE. LADY £ CAN DRIVE HER ANYWHERE. A BLUE RIBBON WINNER. BROKE SINGLE AND DOUBLE AND TO RIDE. $J BJ CAN ROAD TEN MILES AN HOUR. BRING TOUR WATCH. WE CAN SHOW TOU! A BARGAIN. PRICE $350. g '*n*ffltn*C4 C4^'[• nl! I , 1 ■ ••,'.'. ^ IWWltlll JMJxgmf. ,_, U : ' l;;;V\Mfl&- PAINT TALKS No. 1-Exterior Work " I am going to tell a number of specific and money-saving facts in this paper from month to month. Space is limited and bare facts only can be stated. Those who want reasons, explanations, fuller informa- tion, etc., need only write National Lead Company. Exterior paint is exposed to the weather, hot — cold — rainy — freezing. No risk should be run with faulty materials or faulty methods. The priming coat should not be ochre. It's cheapbutfatal. Thebestprimer — our pure White Lead mixed with linseed oil, some turpen- tine (enough to drive the paint into the pores of the wood) and a bit of Japan drier. The body and finish- ing coats need exactly the same materials but they should be mixed thicker. Points to Avoid— (a) adulteration in pigment (a guarantee of absolute purity goes with our White Lead) — (b) adulteration in oil — (c) too much turpentine — ( CABBAGE PLANTS EARLY HEADERS MONEY MAKERS cab^ef/taWe I THESE ARE THE KIND THAT MADE SOUTH yielde shfp n p d er. g ° od I CAROLINA FAMOUS FOR CABBAGE GROWING They need no introduction. We guarantee FULL COUNT, safe delivery, and satisfaction or your MONEY REFUNDED. Send money with order, othetwise plants will be shipped C. O. D. and you will have to pay return charges on the money, thus adding to the cost of your plants. Prices F. o. B. Young's Island: 500 for $1.00; 1,000 to 4,000 at $1.50 per 1,000; 5.000 to 8,000 at fl.25 per 1,000; 9,000 to 20,000 at $1.00 per 1,000. Special prices on larger quantities. Prompt attention given all orders and inquiries. *»M*»i«»e*»M«» rr «, - . , _.«.'«» v Illustrated catalogue mailed free on application. C M. GIBSON, BOX 55, Young S Island, S. C. . valuable assistance to Mrs. Anna Cora Ritchie in getting up a series of beautiful tableaux from "Paradise and the Peri," the proceeds of which went to the Mount Vernon Association. She was equally as kind in lending her aid to these Maryland concerts, and sang in several of the concerted pieces. The other Richmond ladies who took part in these concerts were Miss Helen McMurdo (aunt to Amelie Rives), Miss Sallie Palmer, and Miss Althea Morgan, also Miss Evelyn Cabell, of Buckingham county, Va., afterwards Mrs. Rupell Robinson. Both concerts were very largely attended and favorably received. Amongst the audience there was a con- siderable sprinkling of Baltimoreans, as, for instance, the famous Miss Hettie Cary, who, as some traveler said of the city of Florence, "was too beautiful to look at except on a holi- day." Richmond society was rendered more attractive by this Maryland ele- ment, and, in addition to the female contingent, there was during the win- ter quite a number of brave young offi- cers visiting the city, as, for instance, Lieut. Frank X. Ward, Lieut. Frank Markoe, and many others. General Bradley T. Johnson and Col. Snowden Andrews were amongst the distinguished officers furnished us by "Maryland, My Maryland." But, to return to the concerts, which were received with plaudits loud and long. In addition to the regular pro- gram, there were several lovely bal- lads sung as encores, an especially charming one being given by Miss Evelyn Cabell, "Come When Thou Wilt, I've a Welcome for Thee." "Come in the spring time, come in the summer, Come when the autumn makes leaf- less each tree, Or when the chill winds of winter are blowing. Come when thou wilt, I've a welcome for thee." Partly from the beauty of the song and partly from that of the singer, this ballad brought down the house. The blockade affected music as it did most other things in the Confed- eracy, keeping away the professional singers, so we had to rely almost en- tirely on amateur music throughout Wm. O . GE^BATY EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD.. CHARLESTON LARGETVPE. SUCCESSION. " AUGUSTA TRUCKER, SHOMSTraiiS" I _*. n ® "" IMt WAKEFIELD, Th« Earliest A little late- Fl AT miTTH TRADE MARK COPYRIGHTED 1868 1908 Forty years Experleace and Reputation. Fifteen Thousand Satisfied Customers. Our stock guaranteed to prove satisfactory or purchase price paid for same re- . - - funded. Thirty Thousand dollars Paid In Capital and our Reputation behind guarantee. Ask yourBanker about us. Why purchase plants from unknown or inexperienced growers,, taking tb* chance of losing your crop? when you can buy from the Original Cabbage Plant Grower, plants sure to produce satisfactory results. PRICE: In lots of 1 to 5,000 at $1.50 per thousand, 5 to 9,000 at $1.25 per thousand, 10,000 and over at $1.00 per thousand f. o. b. Young's Island, S. C. Our special Express Rate on Hants is very low. Our Cabbage Plants are Frost Proof. To produce the best results they should be set in the South Atlantic and Gulf States in December and January. In the Central States just as early in spring as land thaws sufficiently to get the plant root in the soil Send for our Catalogue ; it contains valuable information about fruit and vegetable growing, home mixing of fertilizers, etc. We grow a full line of Strawberry plants, Fruit trees, _aod Ornamentals. Special terms to persons who make up club orders. We are sowing this season six thousand pounds of cabbage seed. Wm. C Geraty Co. Box 6 Young's Island, S. C CABBAGE PLANTS. S"" TEN MILLION OF THEM FOR SALE During the months of February and March at reduced prices to clean up our fields. These plants are grown from the same strain of seed that we set out our own larg'e acreage with and are guaranteed to be the best that can be bought. Grown on the Sea Islands of South Carolina they are strong, vigorous plants and absolutely frost proof. We plant no inferior seed and ask the public to look us up before giving their order to others. We guarantee- the plants, the count and the safe delivery to your express office. Varieties are: Early Jersey, which is the earliest variety grown, next the Charleston Wakefield, which as about ten days later than the Early Jersey; in late flat varieties we have tjhe Succession and Late Flat Dutch, both large flat cabbage. Prices as follows. 1,000 to 4,000 at $1.25 per thousand; 5,000 to 9,000 at $1 per thousand; 10,000 to 20,000 at 90 cents per thousand and special rates on large orders or to agents who can sell for us in their town and neighborhood. We make a specialty of supplying associations and large growers. Plants pulled, packed and shipped same day order is received. Cash with order but will ship C. O. D. to those who prefer. THE CARR-CARLTON CO., Box 15, Meggetta, S. C. SEED CORN 153BU. ACRE Diamond Joe's Big White — A strictly new variety. None like it. It is tjie Earliest and Best Big White Corn in the World — Because it was bred for most Big Bushels, not fancy points; because grown from thoroughbred inherited stock; every stalk bears one or more good ears, because scientifically handled, thoroughly dried and properly cured and had the most rigid examination. Big Seed Catalog FREE. It tells about all best farm, grass, garden and flower seeds grown. W 7 rite for it to-day. Address, RATEKIN'S SEED HOUSE, Shenandoah. Iowa. 1909.] THE SOUT1LK1LX PLANTER. 183 FIELD SEED. BEANS. PEAS. POTATOES. ETC 7 7 We have in stock all different varieties of Field Seed, including CLOVER, TIMOTHY, HERDS GRASS, ORCHARD GRASS, KY. BLUE GRASS, TALL. MEADOW OAT GRASS, ALFALFA, ALSYKE, CENTRAL PARK LAWN GRASS SEED, RYE GRASS SEED) also SEED OATS, RYE, VETCHES, SEED POTATOES, Maine grown, early and late varieties, MILLET, SORGHUM, KAFFIR CORN, REANS, PEAS, SEED CORN, ONION SETS, MILL FEED of all kinds, CORN AND OAT CHOP,. MEAL and HAY Wlren you order our AA brands of Field Seed, you may be sure that you have gotten the highest grade seed obtainable. We fill orders as low as possible, quality considered. We pay special attention, also to our Poultry Department. There is no better mixture than our National Chicken Food. We also handle Meat Meal, Shell and Crab Meat Scrap. We are also large buyers of home grown Seed, Grain and Grass Seed. Send samples and we will make you offers delivered your R. R. station. We will be glad to make quotations and send samples on application. N. R. SAVAGE & SON, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. the War. Blind Tom, to the best of my recollection, was the only public musician who performed in Richmond during the War. In the dearth of pro- fessional music, amateur concerts were eagerly attended, and so were ama- teur theatricals, which were especial- ly popular in Richmond during the winter of 1863-1864. Mrs. Semmes and Mrs. Ives, from the far South, were especially active in getting up charades and theatricals. "The Rivals" was performed at the house of the latter in January, 1864. Miss Con- stance Cary afterwards Mrs. Burton Harrison) enacted the part of "Lydia Languish," and Mrs. Clay of Mrs. Maloprop, and Mr. Page McCarthy, af- terwards so well known as a duellist, and as a newspaper man, took the part of Sir Lucius O'Trigger, if my recollection is correct. M. W. E. A TRIBUTE TO DR. FERNEYHOUGH Dr. J. G. Ferneyhough, State Veteri- narian, Burkeville, Va., has recently been offered the position of State Veterinarian of North Carolina at a salary considerably in excess of the amount he is at present receiving from the State of Virginia. While fully appreciative of the monetary advan- tage of the offer, at the same time Dr. Ferneyhough remained true to his maxim, "Virginians for Virginia," and so declined to leave his native State, or present field of action. This love for his State and intense interest in the affairs thereof has been a controlling influence through- out Dr. Ferneyhough's career, each step of which is clearly marked there- by. After graduating at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute, taking the de- gree in Agriculture, B. S.; he went to Washington, D. C, and entered the United States College of Veterinary Surgeons of that city, and, upon grad- uating there, immediately returned to Virginia, and began the practice of ESTABLISHED 1850. <£ TREES! 1,200 ACRES. *£> We are wholesale growers •( flrat class nursery stock of all kinds, Fruit, Shade, Ornamental Trees, Shrubbery, Hedges, Small Fruits, etc., Asparagus, Strawberries, and California Privet In large quantities. The BEST Is the CHEAPEST. Ours is the CHEAPEST because It Is the BEST. Handling Dealers' orders a specialty. Catalogue free. FRANKLIN DAVIS NURSERY COMPANY. Baltimore, Maryland. ONION SEED!! 1 — Grown by a farmer. 2 — For farmers direct. 3 — At farmers' prices, though superior 4 — Fresh, threshed Jan. 16-23, 5 — Cleaned by special process, 6 — Germinative power guaranteed. 7 — Sold on Government plan, 8 — See U. S. Farmers' Bui. 111. 9 — Yellow Globe, Danvers, U. S. Standard Onion. 10 — 12 years improving the strain, 11 — Tested by Government on germin- ation, 12 — Plump Seeds and large, 13 — No old seed adulteration, 14 — No sediment, 15 — Don't forget — grown on upland. The world challenged to produce bet- ter. ■WORTH LOT TO KNOW IT'S FRESH." Extra large packet 10c; instructions free. 1 lb., $2; 10 lbs., $15. Express prepaid. New Haven, Ind., Dear Friend McCoy: — I am 71 years old; have been a farmer all my life, never saw anything equal to them. They cams up so strong, and every seed must have grown, for they are lying there almost in piles. This tape-strip shows the measurements round some of the onions. Wishing you success, I am Yours truly, LEROY SPRAGUE, (The tape-strip is 10 inches.) Address. I. A. McCOY, Grower, (Not a Dealer) Green Plain, Va. Pittsylvania Co., Va, Dec. 17, '08. I like the Southern Planter better than any farm paper published. C. W. ANDERSON. Brunswick Co., Va., Dec. 12, '08. I enjoy the Southern Planter and wish my name to be kept permanently upon your roll. THOS. FT.OURNOY. 184 THE SOUTHEKN PLANTER. [February, veterinary medicine. After two years of private practice he was appointed State Veterinarian, and as that office was then located at Blacksburg, he returned to his alma mater to re- sume the duties of that office and al- so those of Assistant Professor of Veterinary Science, later being pro- moted to Associate Professor of Veterinary Science. In the fall of 1907, owing to the want of railroad facilities at Blacksburg, it was deemed expedient to move the office of State Veterinarian to some point easily accessible to the railroads, and Burkeville was selected for that pur- pose. But while Dr. Ferneyhough relin- quished his professorship upon mov- ing to the present location, Burke- ville, Va., yet he has never allowed his interest in the V. P. I. to flag, but has kept in close touch with the In- stitution, ever ready to lend his as- sistance in any manner calculated to promote the interests of the college. Last year, for the "Short Course," he was called upon to lecture during the week devoted to Dairy Husbandry, and, for the same course this year, has been requested to lecture on "Horse Breeding in Virginia," during the week devoted to Animal Indus- try. In this connection a most in- teresting feature will be the day de- voted to Horse Judging, when a num- ber of stallions and mares of several of the finest breeds will be exhibited with a corresponding number of indif- ferent animals, and their relative good and bad points will be pointed out and fully exemplified by Dr. Ferney- hough. During the recent outbreak of hog cholera in the State, Dr. Ferneyhough was indefatigable in his efforts to check the disease and render all pos- sible aid to those whose herds had the infection, and the reluctance to leave his Board at a time when they were relying on his assistance was a strong factor in his decision relative to the offer of our sister State. His alert, wide awake interest in all that pertains to the sanitary care of the live stock of the State prompts him to keep in close touch with the Bureau of Animal Industry, Washing- tan, D. C, and served well its pur- pose when foot and mouth disease was recently located in Maryland, by enabling him, through his Board, to at once forward the Governor of Vir- ginia a declaration of State quaran- tine, with the request that the Gov- ernor issue his proclamation concern- ing same as speedily as possible, with the result that forty-eight hours after Maryland was placed under quaran- tine by the Federal authorities, Vir- ginia was likewise safeguarded by quarantine against all infected States. Born and raised in Virginia, Dr. Ferneyhough feels that in holding a State office he is being given an op- portunity to promote the welfare of his State along certain lines, and fiiV^feul More Corn in the Crib is the result of the vigorous, thrifty plant growth insured immediately upon the application (at plant- ing time) of Nitrate of Soda Test it for Yourself Entirely Free Let us send sufficient Nitrate of Soda for yon to try, asking only that you use according to our directions, and let us know the result. To the twenty-five farmers who get the best re- suits, we offer, as a prize, Prof. Voorhees' most valuable book on fertilizers, their composition, and how to use for different Crops. Handsomely bound, 327 pages. __ Apply at once for Nitrate of Soda by post-card as this offer is necessarily limited. "Grass Growing for Profit," another book of vsel'ul information, will be sent free to farmers while the present edition lasts, if paper is. mentioned in which this advertisement is seen. Send name and complete address on post-card V/ffi. S. MYERS, Director, John Street and 71 Nassau, NEW YORK niu.».«**. 42 YEARS EXPERIENCE. OLD DOMINION NURSERIES. W. T. HOOD & CO., Prop., Richmond, Va. Growers of High Grade Nursery Stock. "Special Inducement* In Peach and Klefler Pears for Commercial Orchards. Full line of Fruit Trees, Ornamental Trees, Roses, Shrubbery, Etc. Plant a California Privet Hedge — none better. Write for our descriptive catalogue of 64 pases — Correspondence Solicited. RATEKIN'S 100 BU. OATS Ratekin's Big Banner 100 Bushel White Oats — The biggest, prettiest, plumpest oat in existence. Side by side with common sorts they yield 100 bushels per acre where other sorts make but 25 to 35 bushels. Strong, stiff straw; sprangled heads; ripens early; never rusts, blights or lodges. There is none like them, and when our stock is exhausted there is no more to be had. Samples Mailed free. Also our Big Illustrated Catalog of farm, field, grass and garden seeds. A postal card will bring them to your door. Address, RATEKIN'S SEED HOUSE, Shenandoah, Iowa. OF/ie YORK Improved Wccder Write and let us tell you more about Weed era. Strength of frame and flexibility of teeth are combined in the York Improved Weeder. The teeth are made of square spring steel with round points. Being narrow they do not injure the plants. No clogging. Ask your dealer to show you The York Improved Weeder, examine it carefully, and you will see that It has the adva ntages of efficiency and economy over all other weeders. 1 ' ' If your dealer doesn't sell thisweeder, we will sell it to you direct. Spannlcr Corn Planters and Fertilizer Distributers always give satisfaction— durable, perfect in operation. Write for our free catalogue. SPANGLER MFG. CO., 604 N. Queen St York, Pa. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 185 therefore accepts the position of State Veterinarian as a public trust and a chance to serve others, rather than merely a salaried position, yielding a stipulated, monetary emolu- ment. W. WASHINGTON NOTES. Hybrid Zebras Born. Out at the Government Experiment Station at Bethesda, Maryland, the officials of the Department of Agricul- ture have two baby zebras — a hybrid resulting from a cross between the African zebra and the American bur- ro. These two are the first hybrids of the zebra born in the United States and the first of this particular sort of hybrids born anywhere. The mothers of these two youngsters are simon- pure Texas burros, dark colored, with light points. The father is a grevy, one of the two zebras sent by the Emperor Menelik to this country. The other beat its brains out in the inclos- ure at the Government National Zoo in Rock Creek Park. The Department of Agriculture is anxious to raise a hybrid from the grevy zebra, for it is thought that it might prove a valuable animal for a beast of burden, and as there are not many grevy zebras in captivity, it was the more desirable to have one of his get. The grevy is a decidedly larger animal than the coon zebra, and it is to be expected that the progeny will be a fairly large animal. One of the zebra's foals was dropped in January and the other in December. They are both getting on well and promise to be lively youngsters. They ought to be tough enough in all con- science, for the zebra is about the toughest thing in the horse line in the world, except the burro — the angel of the desert — the ranchman's goat. While the officials of the Depart- ment of Agriculture are very optimis- tic over the outcome, they are not taking any chances and therefore are nursing the little hybrids very care- fully, for though the burro is used to all sorts of weather, it is not known whether they will take after their mothers or have the tropical streak of their father uppermost. It is be- lieved, however, that they will make valuable animals for the mountain country, for if they have the good points of both their parents, they ought to be hardier than the mule and almost as big. Baron Parana, a wealthy Brazilian planter, has demonstrated that a val- uable hybrid can be obtained by cross- ing Burchell's zebra with the horse. This hybrid inherits from the former parent immunity to certain diseases POTAS CORN requires the best selected seed and the most thorough cultiva- tion; but the real difference between profit and loss on the crop depends on Potash. It makes strong, sturdy stalks and well shaped ears filled out to the very tip, with every kernel sound. Fertilizers high in phosphoric acid, with a little nitro- gen, won't do. They need Potash to complete them — 15 to 20 lbs. to the hundred. Supplement the manure or clover or fer- tilizer with 50 lbs. of Muriate of Potash per acre. POTASH IS PROFIT Valuable Literature. Free, on Fertilizing Corn and all other Crops GERHAN KALI WORKS, 1224 Candler Bldg, Atlanta NEW YORK— 93 Nassau St. CHICAGO: Monadnock Block SEED! CLOVERS, ALFALFA, TIMOTHY, ORCHARD, RED TOP, TALL MEADOW OAT, WINTER OATS, RUST PROOF OATS, BURT OATS, SPRING OATS, PEAS AND BEANS. ONION SETS, MAINE SEED POTATOES- EARLY ROSE, WHITE BLISS, RED BLISS, IRISH COBBLERS, QUEEN, BOVEE. MICHIGAN SEED POTATOES- ROSE, HEBRON. WRITE FOR PRICES. HORSE FEEDS DAIRY FEEDS POULTRY FEEDS THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT IN THE STATE. S. T. BEVERIDGE &, CO., 1217 E. Cary St., Richmond, Va. ■ H I I I " H"I "H t .Hn M " M " H -- H " I " H " M I I 1 I I ■ I " l " I " I " I " I " ! " I " H " M " H " H -4-> H "l- I » H ' TELL THE ADVERTISER WHERE YOU SAW HIS ADVERTISEMENT. DON'T BUY GASOLINE ENGINES UNTIL YOU INVESTIGATE 'THE MASTER WORKMAN," a two-cylinder gasoline, kerosene or alcohol engine, superior to any one-cylinder engine; revolutionizing power. Its weight and bulk are half that of single cylinder engines, with greater durability. Coots Less to Buy— Less to Run. Quickly, easily started. Vlbrationpractlcally overcome. Cheaply mounted on any wagon. It Is a combination portable, stationary or traction engine. Send fob Catalogue. TJBLE T£MPX.E PUMP CO., Mfra., Meagher and loth St*., Chicago. THIS IS OUR FIFTY-SIXTH YEAK.. ISO THE SOUTHERN" PLANTER. [February, which are particularly fatal to the horse, asses and mules, and is, more- over, valuable as a truck and artillery animal. Meanwhile the subject is being studied carefully by the government officials, for there is a possibility that the little youngsters at the Experi- ment Station may prove to be most valuable adjuncts to our beasts of burden. Trees as Scarce as Diamonds. During the past week the American Forestry Association held its twenty- eighth annual meeting, at one of the sessions of which Secretary of Agri- culture, Wilson, made an address in which he declared that our forest growth is getting scarcer and scarcer every day and that we are using three times as much wood as we are grow- ing. "The time is coming in this coun- try," he stated, "when trees will be as scarce as diamonds unless imme- diate steps are taken to preserve our forests." He emphasizes the impor- tance of the States, the various As- sociations and individuals in helping to solve the problem by planting trees in denuded places. "Do not let us sit down and make faces at Congress," he continued, "because that body has not yet seen fit to provide for the Appalachian and White Mountain forest reserves. We must not depend too much on Congress. What we want is a re- forestation of the country at the rate of about one-quarter of a million acres each year." The Reverend Doctor Edward Everett Hale, chaplain of the Senate and Vice-President of the Forestry Association, said that we must stop denudation, plant trees, and make the people who own the funds for the future invest them in forests. At one of the meetings there was a general discussion of forest fires and the best methods of prevention. The general opinion as evinced by the numerous speakers was that there should be uniform fire laws in the various States and that public opinion should be aroused for their strict ob- servance. A most startling point was brought out to show that many States are dis- couraging forest planting by putting a tax on trees planted and thus prohib- iting the reforestation of denuded areas, while it was agreed that the right way would be to encourage tree planting by remitting all taxes from land that was so reforested. Representative J. E. Ransdell, President of the Rivers and Harbors Congress, spoke on the relations of forests to inland waterways, and Bailey Willis, of the Geological Sur- vey, gave an illustrated talk on some effects of deforestation. Mr. Willis has made a special study of this sub- ject for the government and has ac- cumulated a large collection of lllus- No Land So Rich That Fertilizer Cannot Make It Better You use fertilizers for the profit you get out of them — and the better the land the more profitably a good fertilizer can be used on it. Do not imagine because land will produce a fair crop without Virginia- Carolina Fertilizers that these fertilizers cannot be profitably used on it, or that they were made only for land too poor to produce without them. If poor land will show a normal increase when fertilizer is used, good land will show at least double the increase. Use Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers to increase the quality, as well as the quantity of the crop — and you will increase the profits from your land. "I have been using your fertilizers for a number of years" says Mr. William Fraiser, of Glasburg, La.., "and find that it not only pays to fertilize, but to do plenty of it, and use the best fertilizers to be had, such as your brands. I have used a number of them and found them to be as recommended and to give better .results than any other fertilizers that I have ever used." Every planter and farmer should have a copy of the new 1909 Virginia-Carolina Farmers' Year-Book. Get a free copy from your fertilizer dealer, or write our nearest sales office. Virginia- Carolina Chemical Co. Sales Offices Richmond. Va. Norfolk, Va. Columbia, S. C. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Memphis, Tenn. BTFerCiiizcrsM ^Virginia Carolina! Sales Offices Durham, N. C. Charleston, S. C. Baltimore, Md. Columbus, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Shreveport, La. ..ELMWOOD NURSERIES. WE ARE GROWERS AND OFFER A FINE ASSORTMENT OF APPLES, CHERRIES, NECTARINES, GOOSEBERRIES, RASPBERRIES. ORNAMENTALS, PEACHES, PIiUMS, GRATE VINES STRAWBERRIES, ASPARAGUS, SHADE TREES. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. PEARS. APRICOTS, CURRANTS, DEWBERRIES, HORSERADISH, HEDGE PLANTS, J.B. WATKINS & BRO, Midlothian, Va. at ONE-HALF- City Seedsmen Prices ! ^^^^^^^^^^^■■■^■^■■■■■■■'■^■^^^^ Let us send you our catalog of seeds— It's different. It tells you facts, and why we can save you money, and give you a guaranteed SQUARE DEAL. Just drop a postal today and see the difference In buying your seeds In country or city. FORREST SEED CO., Box 42 Cortland, N. Y. Southampton Co., Va., Aug. 14, '08. I consider the Southern Planter the best farm paper I ever saw and I am recommending it to my friends. R. B. GRAY. Worcester Co., Md., Dec. 16, '08. I do not want to do without the Southern Planter as long as I can find the price of a subscription. W. BATES HANCOCK. lyoy.j THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 187 trations covering the whole subject. The government of India, on the ^OS-ISOS cotton crop of British India, reports the total area under cotton in all territories reported is 18,670,- 000 acres, as against the revised es- timates of 20,826,000 acres at the same date in 1907. This marks a de- crease of 2,157,000 acres. The total output is estimated at 3,641,000 bales, giving an increase of some ' 592,000 bales above the figures for the previ- ous year. A New Method of Preserving Eggs. Using as a theory that an egg de- composes owing to the entrance of bacteria through the shells, an Eng- lish firm has adopted a method of preserving eggs by first disinfecting them and then immersing them in a vessel of hot paraffine in a vaccuum. The air in the shell is extracted by a vaccuum and atmospheric pressure is then allowed to enter the vessel and the hot wax is pressed into the pores of the shell, which thus her- metically seals it. Evaporation of the contents of the egg, which has a harmful effect, is thereby prevented, and the egg is practically sterile. The yolk of pickled eggs and others artificially preserved will frequently break on being poached, but the eggs preserved by this novel process, it is stated, are quite free from such fault. Our Agricultural Wealth. According to the report of Secre- tary Wilson recently issued. It is in- deed very hard for any one to talk of the down-trodden farmer, and some question whether it is really needful for the government to engage in the uplift business on behalf of the agri- culturists. During the last year the farm value of all farm products reach- ed the extraordinary total of $7,778,- . OWI.OOO — four times the value of the products of the mines, including min- eral oils and precious metals. It would take eight billion dollar Con- gresses to dispose of this sum. In other words, enough money is now being extracted out of the farms of the country in a year to pay for run- ning the government for eight con- secutive years. Broadly speaking, the farmers of the country are better off this year than in previous years in two respects — the crops are hetter than the average, and the prices are much higher. It is not so much, however, by reason of increased production this year that the farmers are better off as it is he- cause of high prices. And yet, with all the allurements of such wealth on farms, the government officials have found it necessary to step in to establish a remedy whereby country life may be made so pleasant as to keep the boys and girls on the farm and not turn to the enchanting lights and witchcraft of the city where as clerks, salaries of $10 and $12 a week, with little cubby holes Wear STEEL SHOES Absolute Protection Against Sggijgjj Colds, Rheumatism, Stiffness, Discomfort mlhA. No More Blistered, Aching Feet WlmS GOOD-BYE to CORNS and BUNIONS! Pat. Dec 4, '06 FREE Write lor Book "The Sole o Steel" or order a pair of STEEL - SHOES on the M blank below.! like them, for they work in mud and the foot, and the ri No warping, no twi Off With the Old, Rough, Wrinkled Leathers! On With the Comfortable STEEL" SHOES! There's more good wear in one pair of Steel Shoes than in three to six pairs of the best All- Leather Shoes. And coinfrot! The very Art time you slip your feet into Steel Shoes they feel fine. They need no "breaking in." And -~-~ the longer you wear Steel Shoes the better you keep your feet warm, dry and comfortable — though you slush up to your shoe tops. Steel Shoes are shaped to fit gid steel bottoms and sides force them to keep their shape. sting, no leaking possible. And they are light shoes, too. How Our 1909 Model Steel Shoes are Made. T - - - Steel Bottoms Steel shoes solve the problem of the Perfect Work Shoe for all time to come. The soles of Steel Shoes and an inch above the soles are stamped out of a special light, thin, rust-resisting steel. One piece of seamless steel from toe to heel. As a further protection from wear, and a means of giving a firm foothold, the bottoms are studded with adjustable steel rivets. The adjustable steel rivets of the 1909 model Steel Shoes add the finish- ing touch of perfection. Practically all the wear comes on these steel riv- ets. When steel rivets wear down, you can instantly replace them with new rivets. And the rivets at the tip of toe and ball of foot are the only ones that wear. Steel Shoes never go to the repair shop, for there's nothing to wear but the rivets. And the Steel Shoes shed mud almost as easily as they shed water. The cost is only 30 cents for 50 extra steel rivets. No other repairs are ever needed. The uppers are made of the very best quality of pliable waterproof leather, and firmly riveted to soles. There is greater strength and longer service and more foot comfort in steel shoes than in any other working shoes in existence. It's in the steel and the pliable leather, and the way they are put together. THROW AWAY RUBBER BOOTS, FELT BOOTS AND "ARCTICS." Rubber or felt boots heat the feet and make them sweaty and tender. Nothing more uncomfortable or more harmful to the feet. Cne pair of steel shoes will outlast at least three pairs of felt or rubber boots. A man who wears steel shoes doesn't have to own three different styles of working shoes. No arctics or felt boots necessary. SECRET OF STEEL SHOE ELASTIC- ITY. Steel Shoes have thick, springy Hair Cushion Insoles, which are easily re- movable for cleansing and airing. They absorb perspiration and foot odors — absorb the jar and shock when you walk on hard or stony ground. They keep your feet free from callouses, blisters and soreness. STEEL SHOES SAVE DOCTOR'S BILLS Wear Steel Shoes and you need not suffer from Colds, Rheumatism, Neu- ralgia, Lumbago, Stiftneses of the joints and other troubles and discom- forts caused by cold, wet feet. Keep your feet always warm, dry and com- fortable in Steel Shoes. They protect your health and save doctor's bills while adding to your comfort. LOW PRICE ON STEEL SHOES. Sizes, Sto 12, 6 Inches, 9 Inches. 1Z Inches and 16 Inches high. Steel Shoes, 6 inches high, $2.50 a pair, are better than best all-leather $3.50 Shoes. Steel Shoes, 6 inches high, extra fine grade of leather, $3.00 a pair, excel any $4.50 all-leather shoes. Steel Shoes, 9 inches high. $3.50 a pair, are better than the best all- leather $5.00 shoes. Steel Shoes, 12 inches high, $5.00 a pair, are better than the best all- leather $6.00 shoes. Steel Shoes, 16 inches high, $6.00 a pair, are better than tire best all- leather shoes, regardless of cost. ONE PAIR OF "STEELS" WILL OUTWEAR 3 TO 6 PAIRS OF LEATHER SHOES. The comfort of Steel Shoes is re- markable. Their economy is simply astounding! Practically all the wear comes on the rivets in the bottoms and the rivets can be repaced very easily. Don't sweat your feet in rub- ber boots or torture them in rough, hard, twisted, shapeless leather shoes. Order a pair of Steel Shoes to-day. Sizes 5 to 12. SATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK. We strongly recommend the 6 Inch high at $3.00 a pair or 9 inches, at $3.50, as they give best satisfaction for general service. In ordering, state size shoe you wear. Enclose $3 a pair for 6-inch size, and the best and most comfortable work- ing shoes you ever wore will promptly be shipped to you. Your money re- funded if you are not delighted when you see the Steel Shoes. Send to-day. STEEL SHOE CO., Dent. 76. Racine, Wis. Canada Branch, Toronto,. Canada. ORDER FOR STEEL SHOES. Steel Shoe Co., Dept. 76, Racine, Wis. Gentlemen: — I enclose for$ ■ In payment for Shoes. -pair Steel Size- Name- Town- State- County- R. F. D.- 188 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February. for lodging are the reward instead ®f pure food, pure air and pure en- Tironments of the country. The temptation to leave the country is great, but the awakening is sad. Agricultural Reporters. The Department of Agriculture has its agents — reporters, we might call them — who are investigating the agri- cultural conditions all over the world, endeavoring to obtain some, plant or some crop which will thrive in some corner of this country. These men may be found in the aucasus chatting with the farmers as to the probable yield of their fields, shelling out the ker- nels of wheat and running them through their fingers, visiting scores of villages and hundreds of farms, or far away on the other side of the world other men are riding from one lonely station to another in the great Australian interior from ranch to ranch acress the Argentine plains, and in dust-covered buggies along Da- kota roads. From the time when the seed goes into the ground they are at work, observing and reporting, every factor that influences the yield of the quality of the world's great staple. In this way they are playing an im- portant part in the great work of handling the year's crop, for volume and quantity, regulating price, deter- mine the flow marketward, and inci- dentally, though not in a minor de- gree, they are keeping an eye on strange crops, strange vegetables, strange fruits which in our great land, reproducing a corner of the world, may add some wealth to the Ameri- can farmer. During last year the meat inspec- tion force exercised strict supervision over the slaughtering and packing operations of 787 establishments in 211 cities and towns. Of the animals inspected at slaughter, 175,126 car- casses and 704.666 parts were con- demned, 108.519 carcasses were passed for lard and tallow, and 53,689,692 passed for food. GUY F. MITCHELL. OUR DUTY TOWARDS THE NEWSPAPERS. In the first place, we can demand that the newspapers give facts rather than sensations. This is part of our public duty. Each one of us is given a share in governing the country be- cause it is supposed that he will take an intelligent interest in facts which affect its management. If he reads his newspaper primarily for the sake of murders and prize-fights, and only looks at the columns of public news when they are made as much like re- ports of murders and prize-fights as possible, he fails to do his duty as a citizen. Here is an opportunity for young men to make the standards of the next generation better than those of the last. — President Hadley of Yale, in The Youth's Companion. Stands Like a Stone Wall Turns Cattle, Horses, Hogs— Is Practically Indestructible I AMERICAN FENCE ' Buy your new fence for years to come. Get the big, heavy wires, the hinge joint, the good galvanizing, the exactly proportioned quality of steel that is not too hard nor too soft. «■ We can show you this fence in our stock and explain its merits and superiority, not only in the roll but in the field. Come and see us and get our prices Our complete Catalogue of Improved Farm Machinery sent to any address free. THE IMPLEMENT COMPANY. 1302 E. MAIN ST., - - RICHMOND, VA. STRONGEST FENCE MADE "% When you buy our High Carbon Coiled Spring Fence you buy strength, service and durability combined. Twenty years of experience— hard knocks, has taught us that the best fence is made from heavily galvanized Colled Spring Steel Wire - CLOSELY WOVEN FROM TOP TO BOTTOM Our Fence Is so closely woven that small pigs cannot "wiggle" through It. So strong the vicious bull cannot "faze" 1 1. We have no agents. We do not sell to dealers but sell direct to the user AT WHOLESALE PRICES FREIGHT PREPAID Coiled Wire provides for contraction and expansion and prevents sagging between posts. Every pound of wire In our fence is made in our own wire mill from the best high carbon steel. We give 30 DAYS FREE TRIAL That our customers may be sure they are satisfied. We make a full line of FARM AND POULTRY FENCE. Our Wholesale Prices will save you money. Write today for our 40 page free Catalog. COILED SPRING FENCE COMPANY, Box 32 Winchester, Indiana* Clipped Horses Work Better Look Better, Feel Better, Rest Better and Live Longer They enjoy their food more, are less liable to catch cold and can be cleaned in one fourth the time. The Stewart No. 1 ,11, Horse Clipping Machine is so simple in construction and operation that any boy can operate it with the greatest ease. This machine is guaranteed. Nothing about it wears out. All moving parts are enclosed, protected and swim in oil. It turns easy, clips fast and lasts a life time. Price, complete ready for use, is only $7.50. Your dealer has it, or just pin a $2 bill to your order and machine comesC.O.D. for balance. Catalogfirst ifyouwish. Send now. CHICAGO FLEXIBLE SHAFT CO., 150 Ohio St., Chicago 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 189 United States Department of Agri- culture, Bureau of Plant Industry, Farmers' Co-operative Demonstra- tion Work, Washington, D. C. A Common Economic Error. For many years it has been the cus- tom of Southern farmers to make their crop upon the "advance sys- tem," and while this his been regard- ed as an economic error on the side of the farmer, by many merchants it has been thought that it was a very profitable way of buying cotton. The farmer realized that as a mat- ter of safety it was better to make the food consumed by his family and his stock upon the farm rather than to purchase it, and especially when he had to promise payment out of a crop which had not as yet been made. I have been watching this phase of country life in the South for many years and have come to the conclu- sion that the "advance system" is just as great a mistake on the part of the merchant as it is on the part of the farmer, for the following rea- sons: First, the merchant takes great risks, which, of course, he tries to cover by increased charges. But even thou eh these charges are in- creased the staples of life are not such articles as a high percentage of profit will adhere to ; and the mer- chant is practically trading gold for a promise to pay. If the crop fails, he is obliged to carry and carry and carry and possibly may ultimately. as in thousands of cases, be obliged to take the farm, for which he has no use. and under boll weevil condi- tions, is difficult to handle profitably upon a tenant system. Under a cash system there will be a great reduction in the sales of some staple foods such as bacryi, po- tatoes, beans, lard, vegetables, can- ned goods, hay. corn. etc.. all articles that carry low profits. The farmer is rarely a hoarder of money and if he saves two hundred dollars or more by producing all his food supplies at home he has that much more to snend when his crop is made, and it is cash. Under a cash system the farmer will buy with his surplus more dry goods, clothing, shoes, furniture, etc.. for his family: better teams, farm implements, wagons, buggies, etc.. on which there is a much greater profit for the merchant than on staple arti- cles of food. The merchant can turn his money in thirty days, instead of a year. Ten per cent, clear profit turned monthly is better than 120 per cent, gain received annually. Some of the farmers increased in- come goes into permanent improve- ment to enable the farmer to produce more and snend more annually. Aeain. there is something about raisins: cotton, tobacco, etc.. to pay a debt, that sans the vitality of the farmer and affects the quality of his tillage. It really lowers the grade of \ <&T "W ^mnmM ,' tl 1 *** llllll ■ - •>. . .. m^*. '.TWbl Made of wire that is "*all life and strength — wire that stretches true and tight and yields just enough under impact to give back every jolt and jam it receives. Made of materials selected and tested \ in all the stages from our own mines, through our own blast furnaces and rolling and wire mills, to the finished product. Our A employment of specially adapted metals is Jm of great importance in fence wire; a wire Jm that must be hard yet not brittle; stiff and springy yet ^Kr flexible enough for splicing — best and most durable Mkmv fence material on earth. JmBF To obtain these and in addition apply a quality of gal- Jm WW vanizing that will effectually protect against weather jSk / conditions, is a triumph of the wiremaker's art. ^S These are combined in the American and Ellwood fences — the product of the greatest mines, steel , ,; ,- producing plants and wire mills in the world. ^g9 And with these good facilities and the old and skilled employes back of them, we maintain the highest standard of ex- cellence possible for human skill and ingenuity to produce. Dealers everywhere, carry- ing styles adapted to every purpose. See them. American Steel & Wire Co. "Jubilee Year" of Page Woven Wire Fence t>„™« c n _~ A ;„ *....» in ita OrtoiH-o^.Pjinf pnn ia! or ".Tubilre Yenr." It ■ *? — ^ ^ — ■ . ■ — — — .— '—■ — i Page Fence is now in its Quarter-Centennial _or Jubilee Year. It is the Pioneer Woven Wire Fence, having had 10 years the start of all competitors. It leads today in sales and in satisfaction. Admitted bv all to have doable the strength, life and elasticity of any other fence. Used as the Government standard of highest qnnlity and by many foreign Governments. Supreme throughout the world. - -- - - - . . n as j ug £ been 'Jubilee Edition" Of the Page Catalog teueT^copy FKEE to yon if you write prompts PAGE WOVEN WIRE FENCE CO.. BOX 51D. ADRIAN. MICH 190 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, farming. If upon the other hand the merchants will join with us in urg- ing farmers to raise all their food supplies and try to produce by better tillage double the crop per acre they now produce, the result as it affects the merchant will be this: All business will soon be on a cash basis and the volume will be three or four times as large from the farm- ers alone. The advent of more money will bring diversified indus- tries among the farmers and eventu- ally will attract manufacturers to the market towns. If there are idle farms in the country, instead of calling meetings for the purpose of raising funds to secure immigration, call meetings to encourage the farmers who know the country and are loyal to it to univer- sally adopt the following plan: First, provide their own food supplies from the farm. Second, double the average product on every acre under cultivation and let each worker on the farm by the use of better teams and tools till three times as many acres as at present, not in the one crop, but in a variety of diversified and profitable crops. This would cause an immediate demand for more land and would provide the money to pay for it. This makes every man on the farm more than six times the in- dustrial power he now is and gives him a love of the farm. This is bet- ter than to leave him in discourage- ment and secure immigrants to come and buy him out. I should not speak so positively, on- ly I have observed for a quarter of a century that where the Southern mer chants have changed from an "ad- vance system" to a cash system, they have prospered very much more than in former years and the number of failures is immensely less. Of course, it is not meant that there should be no credits, but practically there should be little necessity for them until the crop is actually ready for the harvest, then trade becomes a cash transaction. Or, better still, the farmer can get his money from the bank and pay cash in all cases, if there is a lack of ready money. The advance system bears down upon the cotton farmer with special hardship. His crop is either sold at once or is forced to the gin and the warehouse so as to secure loans. If the cotton farmer is not forced to sell to raise money or pay debts he will store his crop on his farm and market at his leisure, which is in the interests of all parties. It appears to me, therefore, that the farmer will immeasurably gain when he produces what he has hither- to bought in the way of living. He is not compelled to sell his crop imme- diately upon the harvest. When he does sell he trades for cash. The greater amount of money he has is very helpful to the family, but the stimulus to his self-respect is perhaps .OUCANTBAVELOVER^HANDH,^^ INTERNATIONAL AUTO BUGGY Farmers, stockmen, salesmen, doctors and others ride through the country safely, rapidly and in comfort in this Auto Buggy. It will go anywhere that a team of. roadsters can go — up steep hills, over rough roads and through mud. The International Auto Buggy is a vehicle of wonderful serviceability. It is alike adapted to the requirements of business and pleasure. It saves your time and avoids the necessity of keeping a road team or of taking a team away from the farm work when you want to go to town or on a business or pleasure trip. This Auto Buggy Is made so simple and strong that there is little chance for it to get out of order or cause trouble. It has a high clearance with its 40 and 44-inch wheels. The wheels run on roller bearings, and, being stand- ard gauge, they track with the farm wagons and other vehicles. There are no tire troubles because the tires are solid rubber. Both rear wheels are chain driven by a thoroughly reliable 14-horse-power air cooled gas- oline engine. The rate of speed is from 2 to 20 miles an hour. Control is one of the most important features in every horseless vehicle. The control in the International Auto Buggy has been worked out to a great nicety. One convenient lever controls the two speeds forward and the reverse. The steering wheel operates easily and effectively. Children and ladies operate the Auto Buggy easily. \ In addition to the rapid and pleasant means of travel afforded by the Inter- national Auto Buggy, it is also most economical. The gasoline tank holds seven gallons, which is sufficient for a run of 75 to 100 miles under ordinary conditions. This horseless vehicle has been subjected to the severest kinds of road tests. It has proven to its owners from Maine to California, operating under all condi- tions, that it is the car that meets country road requirements. These auto buggies are made to accommodate one or two seats and with single or full top. The Auto Buggy has greatpossibilities foryou. Investigate it fully. Call on the International local agent for catalog and particulars, or write to the home office. INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA (IN CO«**DOR»rfXTK.D) CHICAGO, \J. S. A. JTflSi BULL PROOF AND PIG TIGHT jEffl GET OUR FREE SAMPLE which we send for inspection. Test it for strength, stiffness and rigidness, then look to the galvanizing. File it and see how thick that is. We want you to satisfy yourself that for YOU Brown Fence is the best fence to buy for Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Pigs, Chickens, etc. Our fences are made of extra heavy Steel Wire — both strand and stay wires No. g gauge. SELLS AT 15 to 35c PER ROD DELIVERED. WE PAY THE FREIGHT. Easy to put up. Stands staunch, solid and rigid. Won't sag or bag down. Our prices are less than you would pay for much lighter fences. — fences not half so durable. Write today for sample and catalog showing 150 styles. . The Brown Fence & Wire Co., Dept. 68 Cleveland, Ohio. ~S^kMPI-E fbee: ARTISTIC DESIGNS WARD Cheaper than wood, contain- ing strength and art. Write for Catalogue. FENCE BOX 650 COMPANY DECATUR. IND. For Lawns, Churches, Ceme- teries and Public Grounds 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER liil the most important item to be consid- ered. The merchant prospers by the greater volume of business and by the quick return of his money. It seems to me that these points should be urged upon all the people. S. A. KNAPP., Special Agt. in charge Farmers' Co- operative Demonstration Work. WINTER CANNING ON THE FARM FOR COMMERCIAL PURPOSES. Many people, especially farmers, have the impression that canning is profitable only when the various fruits and vegetable are in season. This is a false impression for you can enter any merchant's store in every season and find his shelves lined with canned goods of all kinds, decorated with handsomely colored labels. All sorts are there — vegetables, fruits, soups, meats grains, etc. Nearly all of these originate with the farmer yet he is willing to pass them on In their raw condition to the 'middle man," who, of course, is more than glad to put them in such marketable shape as the consumers demand. By this procedure, there is not only an inestimable waste coming from the nicely matured portion not being in a fit condition for shipping, but, by virtue of incessant handling and natural withering and shriveling, the material is not fit for food and un- wholesome foods are forced upon the consumer at a price for which he should be able to obtain them fresh and pure. There are hundreds of housewives who, if they would investigate com- mercial home canning, would be able to provide the very best food for their immediate families and also deliver to their city grocer — freight prepaid — all the soups, meats, vegetables, baked beans, etc., necessary to supply the local demands for such varieties, thus giving satisfaction to the consumer, saving expense for freight and drayage to the merchant, and last, making a complete and highly profitable market at home for every bit of the produce grown. INTERNATIONAL CALENDARS. We acknowledge receipt of a beau- tiful set of calendars from the Inter- national Harvester Co., of America, Chicago. Each one of these calen- dars is a beautiful example of the lithographer's art. Each one is a separate and distinct design repre- senting the different makes of their harvesters — the Piano, Deering, Mil- waukee, McCormick. Osborne and Champion. Every farmer can have one if he applies to the Company's Agent nearest to him. DE LAVAL CREAM SCORES HIGHEST AT GREAT DAIRY SHOW At the great National Dairy Show held recently in Chicago, cream skimmed with DE LAVAL separators won all highest honors. The cream exhibits were made in two classes and the winners in each were as follows, all being users of DE LAVAL hand separators: MARKET CREAM. 1st Prize, Gold Medal, G. C. Repp, Ohio .... Score 98% 2nd Prize, Silver Medal, W. R. Newberry, Ohio .... Score 04 CERTIFIED CREAM. ist Prize, Gold Medal, Tully Farms, New York .... Score 94|/ 2 The contest was under the direction of the Dairy Division, of the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, and Mr. Repp's winning exhibit in the Market class was pronounced practically perfect and given the highest score ever awarded by the Dairy Division. For the past twenty years butter made from DE LAVAL cream has won all highest honors in every important contest. Sixteen of the largest 1908 State Fairs awarded their first prize to DE LAVAL butter, and now comes this sweeping victory for DE LAVAL cream in the big Dairy Show contest, which only goes further to prove that DE LAVAL machines are head and shoulders above every other skimming device in every feature of separator use. A DE LAVAL catalogue tells why DE LAVAL cream is always superior. Ask for it to-day, or, better still, let us demonstrate the merits of a DE LAVAL separator in your own dairy. THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO. • -• E. Madison St. CHICAGO 1213 & 1215 Filbert St. PHILADELPHIA. Drunim & Sacramento Streets. SAN FRANCISCO General Offices: 173-177 William Street MONTREAL. 14 .v Hi Princess Street 165-167 BROADWAY WINNIPEG 107 First Street NEW YORK. PORTLAND, OREG. -- SHELLS EASY AND QUICK Any man, woman — even a 6-year old eiuiu can run it. reo- Rl a pk Hawk pie have beendoingit for22 years. Black Hawk Shellers " " „ are so well made that. I give repairs free. Shells 8 to 11 !>u. COM ShOllOrS per hour. Parts built for strain are malleable iron; bear- ings chilled iron. Clamped with a twist of fingers to box, barrel, tub or } bin. Mighty convenient. If your dealer can't turnish a genuine Black Hawk, ask for price delivered your depot. Booklet r>ee. Write NOW. Agents Wanted. A. H. PATCH, Clarksville, Tenn. Maker of Corn Shellers and Hand Grist Mills exclusively. THE IMPROVED RANEY CANNING OUTFITS The Simplest and Finest Process Ever Invented. Made in All Sizes, and Prices from $5.00 Up, and Well Suited to Both Home and Market Canning — 25,000 of Our Outfits Now In Use. The finest Canned Goods in the World put up by farmers and their fami- lies. Write now, and get our free catalogue, giving full Information, and prepare for the next crop. THE RANEY CANNER CO., Chapel Hill, N. C. Western Address: Texarkana, Ark.-Tex. CANNING. MACHINES $500.00. Family Size to Factory Plant. Cans, Labels r-nd complete supplies. Write for FREE Literature to day. . _ory. canning for the MarKetwith MODERN CANNER METHODS. Have won Highest Awards. Capaci- ties lOO to 10,000 cans per day. Prices $5.00 to MODERN CANNER CO., Chattanooga, Tenn., Dept. M] 192 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. ENQUIRERS' COLUMN. All inquiries must reach us by the 15th of the month previous to the issue, or they cannot be answered until the month following. [February, IRISH POTATO FERTILIZER. In your January issue, page 74, in answer to a question from T. O. Mer- rick, you give formula for mixing Irish potato fertilizer in which one of the ingredients is fish scrap. Leaving this out, what would be the change in proportions. I see no advertisement of muriate ate of potash in your columns. Washington Co., Va. A. T. HULL. 1. The fish scrap was used to sup- ply the nitrogen needed by the crop and if you leave this out you will have to use some other nitrogenous fertilizer to take its place, or your crop will fail for want of nitrogen. In this issue you will find an article dealing with this question in which other nitrogenous fertilizers are sub stituted for the fish scrap. 2. You can get the muriate of pot- ash from any of the seedsmen or fer- tilizer dealers advertising in this is- sue. The German Kali firm are the primary source from whence the deal- ers get all the potash fertilizers and they will tell you their nearest agent to vour location. — Ed. NITRATE OP SODA AS A TOP DRESSING— BALING HAY— TOBAC- CO FERTILIZER. 1. What is the best time and man- ner to apply nitrate of soda as a top dressing to alfalfa seeded last fall? 2. Can hay, in this section, be baled direct from the windrow, or should it be stacked for awhile? 3. I expect to put in tobacco a lot which has been in corn two years in succession. What is the best fertil- izer I could use? Mr. Massey says the R-8-5 I thought of using is deficient in potash. How would it do to buy the potash and add to the 5-8-5? I grow dark tobacco. W. Charlotte Co., Va. 1. Nitrate of soda should never be applied as a top dressing to any crop until the crop has commenced to grow freely. Nitrate of soda is an imme- diately available fertilizer, being the only one in which the plant food Is already in that form In which the plant utilizes it. It Is as soluble as salt and therefore the root action of the crop should be in an active con- dition when the fertilizer is applied so that it can take up the nitrate as It dissolves, otherwise there is great risk of loss. We have seen nitrate of soda to show the effect of Its applica- tion in less than a week after being applied. Tt Is questionable how far It is wise to use nitrate of soda on a leguminous crop like alfalfa. Usual- ly It is not good policy to apply ni- trogenous fertilizers to legumes. They oan get their own nitrogen from "7 ^F wi ^T Lonj r omv — i uggies Best To Buy Everybody knows that the name Studebaker on a buggy or a farm wagon, orasetofharness.isanabsolute guarantee of Superior Quality Long Service and Absolute Satisfaction. That's the best sort of Econ- omy — it means a saving of money to you. Why then run any risk with "cheap" makes? See the Studebaker Dealer Let him show you how a Studebaker Buggy is made — its splendid con- struction, style and finish, and you can see for yourself how the purchase of a Studebaker Buggy means Economy for you. If you don't know a Stude- baker Dealer, let us send you his name. Mention this paper and send us two cents in postage and we will mail you FREE Studebaker 1909 Farmer's Almanac, containing "In Oklahoma," Cyrus Townsend Brady's inspiring story of pioneer days. Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co. South Bend, Indiana, U. S. A. ELKHART BUGGIES a»"5X.»; oest made, best grade and easiest .lSffiU'JDuggies on earth tor the money. For Thirty-Six Years we have been selling direct and are The Largest Manufacturers in the 'World selling to the consumer exclusively. We Ship for Examination and Approval guaranteeing safe delivery, and also to save you money. If you aro not satisfied as to style, quality and price you are nothing out. May We Send You Our Large Catalogue? Elkhart Carriage & Harness Mfg. Elkhart, Indiana "1\ fg.Co. J UNTH0URC0TTON SEED1N HIUS You will save half the labor and expense of "chopping out," save from three-^G^ quarters to one and one-half bushels of valuable seed per acre, and ~ grow an extra bale for every fifteen acres planted — if, instead of sowing the seed wastefully in drills, you plant it in hills, with oar THIS DROPPER may also be nsed for plant- ing Corn, Peas, Beans, etc Well Mnde Strong; and Compact. With One or Two Wheels IMPROVED SEED DROPPER The only Cotton Planter made that drops the seed at regular Intervals— just where you want It and enough in each hill to Insure a good stand. Seed don't have to be rolled or delinted for use in this dropper, and 1 bushel will plant 4 acres. The Improved Seed Dropper will save enough the first year— in labor, money and increased yield— to pay for itself three times over. Write TODAY and we will send full details— convincing proof— of the work of this wonderful, money-saving, crop-increasing Cotton Planter, and tell you where to buy it. THE HARRIMAN MANUFACTURING CO.. 03 River Avenue, Harriman, Tenn. BBW When corresponding with our advertisers always mention Southern Planter. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 193 ow many Caws Can* Are you keeping the most possible? Would it not be possfa'i for you to keep more cows on your present land if you adopted improved methods of dairying? If you will investigate the !. H. C. CREAM HARVESTER you will '"most certainly Tind tbi. ""' can increase your HnJ-y ficic, making greater profits witn even less labor and less expense than you require under present conditions. I. H. C- (."ream Harvesters are enabling hundreds of dairymen to sniarge their operations. They get a. the butter fat, skimming closer than you can by hand. r x y ive work, worry, time and trouble. They give ycu the warm skim milk, fresh and eet, as a nourishing food for your calves, pigs ar.d chicke . It re- quires only the addition of a little oil meal to take the place of the butter fat extracted to make it an excellent feed. I. H. C. Cream Harvesters are made in two styles: Dairymaid and Bluebell. Either machine will be a great help to you — v»ili enable ycu to keep the maximum number of cows. Dairymaid ' L '.';;. » machine is chain driven and is made in four sizi 350, 450, 650 and 850 pounds capacity per hour. T chain transmits power from the crank through the gears to the bowl with minimum friction. This makes the Dairy- maid exceptionally light-running, also very simple and dur- able. The crank and the supply can are at the most con- venient height from the floor, and the spouts are high enough to permit the separated product to be discharged :n*o ten-gallon milk cans. The frame is constructed to keep mi!k and dust out of the gears. In every feature the Dairy- maid is a winner. Bluebell The Bluebell is a "-■"<■• -'-'ve machine and made in four sizes: 350, 450, 650 and 85C poui.^ capacity per hour. The gears are accurately cut from the finest material procurable. A-l oiling facilities are provided, making the machine long- lived. The frame is constructed so that it is absolutely 'nt^jisiole jr milk or dust to gain access to the gears — this elimii ates about 90 per cent of ordinary separator fcoiibJes. Yet the gears are easily accessible. The supply can nrui crank ^liic; ^ro in d'e most convenient locations. Call on the International local agent and ex —l.-jv :he macnine be handles. 7." you prerez, wrr» •* direct to the home office for a, beauti'ul i. 'str->,E.c oaitJov ully .describing inese machines. International Harvester Company of America, Chicago, U. S. A. (In' oroorated) mm the atmosphere and on? great object in growing them is to get the benefit of the saving thus effected in the cost of fertilization. It has been demon- strated that where these cros can get the nitrogen from the soil they will not largely take it from the at- mosphere. They are like mortals in this respect. "When they can get their living easily they prefer to do it rather than work for it. 2. There is too great a risk in bal- ing hay direct from the windrow in our climate for us to advise it. Our atmosphere is too moist even in the hot summer months to make the hay so thoroughly dry as to exclude risk of moulding in the centre of the bales. However dry you may get your hay you will find that if put into a stack or mow it will heat more or less. This heating improves the quality of the hay. and when it cools off makes it. perfectly safe to bale it. Get more f& out of your garden Use the Planet Jr. Combination Garden Tools, and you'll do bet- ter work ; save two- thirds your time, and get a better yield. There's nothing like a Planet Jr. for profit- able gardening or farming. Made by a practical farmer and experienced manufac- turer. Fully guaranteed No. 4 Planet Jr. Combined Seeder and Wheel- Hoe saves time, labor, seed and money. Almost all useful garden implements in one. Adjustable in a minute to sow all garden seeds, hoe, culti- vate, weed, or plow. Pays for itsek quickly, even in small gardens. No. 12 Planet Jr. Double-Wheel Hoe, Cul- tivator and Plow, the handiest implement ever made for truckers and gardeners. All culti- vating parts are of high-carbon steel to keep keen edge. Specially designed to work ex- tremely close to plants without injury. Write for our 1909 free illustrated cata- logue which describes 45 Planet Jr. imple- , ments, including Seeders, VVheel-Hoes, Horse-Hoes, One- and Two-Horse Rid- ing Cultivators. Harrows, Orchard- and Beet-Cultivators. S. L. ALLEN & CO. Box H07X Philadelphia, Pa Planet Jr GardenTbols TELL, THE ADVERTISER WHERE YOU SAW HIS ADVERTISEMENT. 194 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [.February, 3. You will find in this column sev- eral replies to questions as the best fertilizer to use for tobacco production and next month we expect to write fully on this subject. We are now making investigations in the matter. A fertilizer lacking in potash can be improved in this respect by adding sulphate of potash to it. The Peru- vian guano now on the market makes an excellent fertilizer for tobacco in all other respects except that it lacks potash. We advised a grower to use forty to fifty pounds of sulphate of potash per acre with Peruvian guano last year and he said that he made the best tobacco he has made since the days of the old Peruvian guano sold before the war, which was a richer guano than that now on the market. — Ed. ROTATION. I have a ten acre lot set well in Herds grass and clover, off of which I got a very good hay crop last year. Can fence same with six bales of wire. Would it pay best to pasture that land to improve it while in sod, or would it be best to break for corn? I have other shifts for corn, but not quite so near by. Pasturing this land will put me on a four-year rotation instead of three years, which is best to increase fertility fastest? I have ten acres in grass and clover for hay crop this year, would you advise me to spread my manure on it to in- crease hay crop and fertility, or would you put manure on wheat? It is rather a difficult matter to get all on before April. Will sow timothy, Herds grass and clover on wheat and can use manure on sod next fall and winter. W. H. MOORE. Person Co., N\ C. We prefer a four-year rotation to a three-year one, except upon very light land, which will not hold a sod well. We would therefore pasture the grass land this year and then in the winter get manure on to it for corn next year. Corn land is the best place upon which to use farm yard manure, as it always tells more effec- tually on corn than any other crop, as the great root system of a corn crop can most effectually utilize the coarse manure. This is the place where we would apply the manure you now have. If you have more than you need for this purpose use the best rotted part of it as a top dress- ing on your wheat. On the grass land to be mowed we would apply 300 pounds of acid phosphate and 100 pounds of muriate of potash per acre at once, and then when the grass commences to grow freely would top dress with 100 pounds of nitrate of soda, and this should give you a heavy crop of hay. The manure which you can spare for the wheat will help you to secure a better stand of grass. — Ed. FREE BOOKS and Farm Paper Free ohnDeere Isi£kt Draft Plows Standard For Two Generations TRADE, <3"£* MARK \17RITE for our handsome booklet. It is printed in colors and shows beau- tiful photos taken in many parts of the world. There are pictures of plows used in foreign countries as far back as 5000 years. The highest type of modern plows, both walking and riding, are also shown. This Book FREE If you are interested in farming, we will mail you our 16-page farm paper for one year absolutely free. Fine illustra- tions, valuable information. There is no other paper like it. Write for Free Booklet No. 5 and get the paper free for one year. We will also send full information about JOHN DEERE p ows. By actual tests the lightest draft plows made. Finest finish, longest life. Simply give number of the booklet and mention this paper. DEERE & COMPANY, Moline, Illinois (Write for FREE BOOK on HOT- BEDS | Secrets of Success Growing Early Vegetables Under Glass for Profit and Pleasure \ u..............«««.«»«..»«««»«>»>«« This book gives money-making suggestions on raising Vegetables, Flowers, etc. How to Prepare and Care for Hot-Beds. Where to Locate Them. How to Make Cold-Frames. Brimful of helps and hints. Free for the asking. Write at once. Oi Hot-Bed Sash are made of Louisiana Cypress, with Blind- Mortised, Double-Shouldered Joints. No rotting joints! Our prices are 50£ less than at local dealer's. Hot-Bed Sash Ul.ied with I 6-ln. Glasi, ■ Dralera'Prlee $3.60 Start Hot-Beds Now and Have Fresh Vegetables Weeks in Advance of Others No time to lose! The earlier your vegetables are ready, the more they are worth. Send today for "Hot-Bed Secrets" Book Cut Prices on Hot-Bed Sash Size 8x6 ft., 1M. 6x10 Glass . SI. 69 Size 3x6 ft., 1%, 6x10 Glass . 2.08 Size 3x6 ft., 1%, 10x14 Glass . 1.78 Size 3x6 ft., l 3 i. 10x14 Glass . 2.14 Size 8x6, \H. with Bar, 10x14 Glass 1.87 Size 3x6, 1%, with Bar, 10x14 Glass 2.48 Glazed with Double-Strength Glass, add 20c net to above prices. Send Quick for FREE Book Be the first in your neighborhood to have fresh vegetables for your table. We make prompt shipment. $1190 Complete Outfit No. 1, Including Sash, Frames and Sub-Frames Consists of our regular Hot-Bed Sash and complete frames (for above ground) and Sub-Frames (for the pit). Frames are of Cypress. Each part cut to exact size. Angle irons with holes punched for screws. Here 3.vq the items i 2 Glazed Hot-Bed Sash, 3x6 feet, 196. 6-inch glass; 1 Cypress Frame for 2 Sash; 1 Sub- Frame, all carefully crated for m< a a shipment V I • •«"» For Double-Strength Glass, add 40c net to price of each outfit. Hot-Bed Frames, $5.70 each. Sub-Frames, 54.25 each. . Don't fail to send at once for the best book, on "Hot-Beds" that ever came off the press. It points the way to PROFITS. Gordon -Van Tine Co., 1542 Case St., Davenport, Iowa Easy to load -Close to Ground Your wagon is always in use. It is loaded day after day, week in and week out. It's no small job to put an average load of anything on the ordinary wagon. The EMPIRE FARMERS' HANOY WAGON %„" l ft£% &»£$ and back-ache. It is so close to the ground that it is 50 per cent easier to load and unload. Wide tires make lighter draft— twice the load can be hauled. Built for strength and the hardest and longest wear. "Good-Roads" Steel Wheels are the strongest and most perfect made. Spokes rigid with hub, can never get loose or pull out. Put a set of these wheels on your wagon and let It down for _, easier work. All sizes, all widths of tire, plain or grooved; fit any hub. Send for Free Wheel and Wagon Book — " *Good-Roads* Steel Wheels Make All Roads Good.*' Address EMPIRE MFG. CO., Dept. 725, Qulncy, III. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 195 QUALITY has made the Sharpies Separator Works the largest factory of its kind in the world. Quality has made the sale of Tubular cream separators greater than that of any other separator. Quality will be found in every part of the 1909 Tubular "A" separators and will place Tubular cream separators still farther in the lead. We k>ish ebery dairyman Ivho reads this could come to our fac- tory and see for himself the difference betlveen Tubular "A " sepa- rators and other separators, thousands of which come to us each year in exchange. We would like to demonstrate to every dairy- man the many points of superiority in Tubular "A" separators, a few of which we mention below:-- Perfection in skimming, Extreme simplicity of construction, Remarkable ease of cleaning, Most convenient oiling arrangement, Low, convenient milk supply tank, Freedom from complicated bowl parts, And twenty other especially desirable features- Our free catalog No. 290 will tell you all about it. Ask for it. THE SHARPLES SEPARATOR COMPANY, Tubular "A" San^Franciscb, Calif. West Chester, Penna. Portland, Ore. Toronto, CaD. Chicago, Ills. TOBACCO AND COTTON GROWING. I want to trouble you with two or three questions, having great faith in your suggestions as to farming, I have just read your article on tobac- co growing in the January Southern Planter. You are doubtless familiar with the soil of Edgecomb. The farm I am now running is of the grey sandy loam subsoil. Will the formula men- tioned in the above article suit this class of land? Will kainit answer for the potash and how much? Will fish scrap, answer in place of dried blood ? As it is not convenient to get this. If so, will you kindly give me propor- tions? Will a crop of rye turned under be injurious to cotton, say turned under in March, cotton to be planted middle of April, rye followed cotton and peanuts, could not get it in until too late for clover. SUBSCRIBER. Edgecombe Co., N. C The formula mentioned in The Planter will do very well for light sandy soil in Edgecombe. It was used in Granville at rate of 700 pounds per acre. Kainit will not an- swer at all for the potash, as the chlorides will damage the quality of S3S.-S5S; Roofing DONT spend a dollar for roofing until you have seen and tested the old. reliable Breese Bros, guaranteed waterproof.flre-reslsting.durable Rubber Roofing. Made by our own special process, of long-fibre wool felt, saturated In asphalt. Fp»p CementandSpeclalRoo!tna H S aT " y coated on b0,n «'«»••■ m. m. «,«, HaUs lnclosed ,„ Md ^ j^ Send for Free Samples and Booklet Hammer lays It j- ^ J h S 8 ^ ^""P 1 .? 8 of > pl y- ^P 1 * and S-ply roofing. Put them to every test you can think or and prove to your own sat- isfaction that Broeso Bros. Rubber Roof- ing is the highest quality roofing ca the market. We give the Longest Guarantee Send for samples or order now on our strong guarantee of satisfaction or money back. We pay freight to all points east of the western boundary line of Minneso- ta, Iowa. Missouri, and north of south line of Tennessee. Don't delay ordering; these special prices may not be offered to you again. Take advantage of them and write now, today. THJEBREESEBROS. CO.. Roofing Bent. 64 . Lowest Factory Prices Freight Prepaid on 100 lbs. or more 35-lb.RoU— 108 flj-i oe Sq.Ft.-1-Ply $1** l.i lb. Roll- 108 4 ec Sq. Ft.— 2-Ply 12? 55-lb.Roll— 108 n 9 e Sq. Ft— 3-Ply ^=? Order today , or write for Samples and Booklet Cincinnati. Ohio GMujne„ Stalk Cutter AVERY The Original Spiral Unite . For Corn and Cotton IT CUTS AT A SLANT. Does better work than any other, yet avoids that terrible jolting and jerking com- mon to others. Pleasant to use. Lasts a lifetime. Special Proposition m One or Two Row. for free Catalog now AVERY MFG. CO, 433 Iowa St., PEORIA, ILL 19G THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February. the tobacco. A man in Forsyth coun- ty, N. C., used this formula and put in the same quantity of kainit and, of course, did not get more than one- fourth the potash required, and that in a bad form for tobacco. Potash in kainit is a sulphate, but is associated with so much chloride of sodium that it acts like muriate would. Nor will fish scrap do as well as blood for the same reason. Rye turned under will help cotton. — "W. F. Massey. TOBACCO FERTILIZER. I should be pleased to have Pro- fessor Massey's advice through your invaluable columns on following: Land is medium fine sand and under- laid at about 12 inches to eighteen inches with clay. Has very little or- ganic matter incorporated though it has been in cultivation for perhaps twenty-five years. It. is purposed to grow togacco this season. 1. Is it advisable to sow Canada peas for green manuring? 2. Which seems to be most gener- ally satisfactory source of nitrogen — (a) cotton seed meal or dried blood? (b) nitrate of soda or sulphate of am- monia? 3. Is it advisable to use sulphate of ammonia where land has never been limed? I prefer to use the formula 5-8-7 (approx.) generally, but propose to double the potash on a test plot. How do you think this will serve? Relative to query 1, the peas will probably be in before your reply is set up. but the chances are taken not so much for the sake of the tobacco crop as for the permanent improve- ment of the soil. ROSEMONT. Williamsburg Co., S. C. 1. No. Cowpeas for summer and crimson clover in winter are far bet- ter than Canada peas anywhere, and especially in your climate. Crimson clover sown in September will make a far better winter cover than Canada peas and a better green manure crop 2. Dried blood is better than cotton seed meal as a source of organic ni- trogen for tobacco. Nitrate of soda is better than sulphate of ammonin 3. Sulnhate of ammonia often doos harm where no lime is used, and I question the propriety of liming for tobacco. In our experiments on similar land with tobacco. T found that the follow- ing formula gave the best results, and it was used bv a tobacco grower in Granville Co.. N'. C, at the rate of 700 pounds per acre, and he grew a crop for which he got $34.44 per 100 pounds, lugs and all. It is acid phos- phate. 900 nounds, nitrate of soda, 100 pounds; dried blood, f not blood and bone), 600 pounds, and high-grade sulphate of potash. 400 pounds. While tobacco needs a good supply of potash in the form of sulphate, I think the above 10 per cent, is enough, and doubling your mixture BALL BEARINGS LARGE DUST-PROOF OIL-HOLES COMBINATION LEVER SETS BOTH GANGS OR EITHER SEPARATELY This Feature Saves Discs Reduces Draft Improves Cultivation You can get it only on the Walter A. Wood Disc Harrow The flexible gangs pass over stones (as shown in the above picture) without injury to the discs. They adjust themselves in like manner to uneven ground and always work at a uniform depth. The roughest field is tilled as nicely as the perfectly level one. By means of a foot lever the driver adjusts the spring-pressure on the inside gang-ends to suit the nature of the soil. This exclusive feature, together with the direct draft and the high grade sharp steel discs, makes the work very light for the team. Simple in construction, durable and easily adjusted, the Walter A. Wood Disc Harrow is the favorite of thousands of farmers. Examine it at our nearest dealerjs. If you don't know his address, write us for it ; also for illustrated forty-page catalog. Don't buy without investigating this harrow. WALTER A. WOOD MOWING AND REAPING MACHINE CO. BOX 112 HOOSICK FALLS, N. Y. THE IMPERIAL DOUBLE DISC HARROW WITH F(H E TRUCK. A Combination Of Out-Throw and In-Throw Disc Harrows in a Single Machine. The Imperial Double Disc is a double machine with double capacity. It is nandled by one man with three or four horses, doing the work of two men aiiu six horses when using ordinary Disc Harrows. The soil is harrowed twcie in one passage over the field, being cut and worked outward by the forward discs and then cut and thrown back by the rear discs. The surface of the ground is left smooth and level. This double harrowing is exactly equal to two workings of the field with a single machine. The saving in time is just one- half and in expense nearly as much. The quality of the work is better be- cause the second harrowing follows immediately while the ground is mellow and because it leaves an even, level surface. The rear gang frame is hooked to the main frame, forming a flexible con- nection that aids greatly in turning corneers and follows the front gangs as the rear wheels of a wagon follow blie front wheels. The ground is not thrown up in ridges when turning, as is apt to be the case with a rigid frame, but is as evenly and smoothly harrowed as in other parts of the field. An important feature of this machine is in the quick and easy change that may be made into a single Harrow by detaching the rear gangs. This is done in a moment's time by removing a spring cotter and lifting the end of the rear frame bar where it hooks into the main frame. Having detached the rear gangs, tihe operator has a regular two gang Cut Out Disc Harrow com- plete in every particular and ready for work. Sen for our complete Catalogue, which gives prices of different styles of harrows, and our full line of up-to-date Farm Machinery. THE IMPLEMENT COMPANY. No 1302 East Main St.. RICHMOND, VA. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 197 r CJ a a NATIONAL WATER SUPPLY ' AIR PRESSURE SYSTEM. THOISANDS OF THESE SYSTEMS IN SUCCESSFUL OPERATION IN ALMOST EVERY STATE. THE LUXURY OF A CITY WATER SUPPLY IN YOUR COUNTRY, SUBURBAN, OR TOWN HOME WHERE THERE IS NO PUBLIC RESERVOIR. The system sketched here is the standard size for a fam- ily of six or seven persons, and is OUR LEADER. The cost of this plant is $75 f. o. b. the cars or boat Rich- mond, Va., and consists of one 365 gallon pneumatic steel tank, tested to 100 lbs air pressure; one double acting water and air brass lined force pump with all trimmings, water and pressure gauges, all pipe and fittings to connect from well, cistern or spring to tank, and thence to laundry, kitchen and bath room. The whole complete with direc- tions so plain that an ordinary mechanic can connect up and start the system to work. • > f W s> 1 i ;' ■ Mrii q'Sq & = r r f-\ WE ARE PREPARED TO FUR- NISH SYSTEMS OF ANY SIZE to be operated by HAND PUMPS, WIND- MILLS, GASOLINE or HOT AIR EN- GINES, ELECTRICITY OR RAMS,, I and furthermore WE GUARANTEE, NOT ONLY THEIR SUCCESSFUL, but their SATISFACTORY operation, to the purchaser. £$} --r^SX 1 :;'*-;- '■'■■'. 25s: :->'v a«§SS'-'> HBfSSS V HERE IS OUR GUARANTEE: You purchase a NATIONAL WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM, install it according to directions fur- nished by us, operate it for one year, and if at the end of that time you are not satisfied in every par- ticular, YOU CAN RETURN THE SYSTEM TO US, AND WE WILL PAY THE FREIGHT CHARGES, AND REFUND TO YOU IN CASH EVERY DOL- LAR YOU HAVE PAID US. We give each purchaser a GUARANTY BOND, which legally binds us to fulfill this obligation. Let us know the source of your water, whether spring, cistern or well — depth of same, distance from your home and quantity of water desired and we will furnish detailed estimate of cost, without charge. GRAHAM DAVIDSON & CO., Richmond, = Virginia. 198 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February* would make 14 per cent., which is needless. The above will give less than 8 per cent, phosphoric acid and Is an abundance. In fact, the tenden- cy of phosphoric acid in excess is to make very thin papery leaves and big ■terns. — W. F. Massey. DISEASE IN TOMATOES AND IRISH POTATOES. Will some one tell me what land meeds when tomatoes and Irish pota- toes die off and make no yield. I planted three acres in tomatoes last year and I lost about one acre in this way. They would commence to die aoon after being planted out, and some after the fruit commenced to ripen. Accomac Co., Va. D. P. MILES. It is not your land that is at fault. The plants were killed by a fungoid disease. The tomatoes from South- ern blight and the Irish potatoes from early blight. Bordeaux mixture spray- ed on the plants is the remedy for both diseases. In our March issue we shall publish a spray calendar with particulars of the diseases affect- ing different crops and the remedies for them and directions how to make these remedies. — Ed. DISEASED CHERRY TREES. I send this cherry problem for you or Brother Massey to solve. Our cherry trees are almost destroyed by the pest. B. F. RUBUSH. Augusta Co., Va. Your trouble is Black Knot. The only remedy known is to cut out every diseased twig or branch and burn it. If the trees are so badly infested as you describe you had better cut them down and burn them up, as you can never grow cherries with the disease about your place. — Ed. ASPARAGUS GROWING. Four years ago I planted out some asparagus roots of my own raising, set deep and covered lightly at first, as generally directed. Most came up the first season, but since many have died and others make small growth. Digging, I find the roots dead. Some- times all the roots on one side will be dead and the other living and the crown the same. Many roots left in the original or seed row are affect- ed the same. Can you tell me the cause? I would like to set more. Will they be liable to same trouble? Would you advise setting missing places with the old roots living In other rows, thus consolidating and diminishing the size of the patch, or reset with young one-year roots, or plow up all and start anew? Essex Co., Va. C. C. WARNER. We are of opinion that the soil In which you planted your roots is of too cold and wet a nature for the crops. Asparagus requires for Its best success a warm, sandy soil. In Don't Waste Money On Cheap Implements Cheap materials and flimsy con- struction can't make a satisfactory implement. They cost a lot of time and temper and the saving in price is but trifling. WALTER A. WOOD IMPLEMENTS are made of the highest grade materials and are carefully put together by competent workmen. A fifty-seven year experience is behind them. These are the implements it pays to buy, you get satisfaction in every respect. Take for example our Spring and Spike Tooth Harrows. They do good work under all conditions and endure severest strain. The I-beam steel composing their frames has no equal for strength in proportion to its bulk, while nothing makes as good a tooth bar as the U-bar steel we use, as it is the only material that yields properly to the strain of the teeth. The relief springs on the adjusting bars (exclusive Wood feature) allow the levers to yield to unusual strain on teeth, saving the entire harrow from injury and greatly prolonging its life. The triangular tooth on the spike harrow cuts the soil easier and stirs more of it than any other; has three sharp edges to be ( used in succession and is held more firmly against the tooth bar than any other kind. The steel runners on the spring tooth harrow have renewable shoes, allow adjust- ment of height of harrow frame saving it wear, preventing gathering of trash. Have our dealer show you these harrows. If you don't know his address, ask us. Get illustrated forty-page catalogue. Walter A. Wood Mowing and Reaping Machine Co. Box 212 Hoosick Falls, N. Y. Leading Independent Harvesting Machine Concern -CURKS Cutaway TOOLS ICLARK'S DOUBLE ACTION "CUTAWAY" HARROW. WITH EXTENSION HEAD Is needed on every farm. It will increase your crops 25 to 50 per cent. This machine will cut from 28 to 30 acres, or will double-cut 15 acres In a day. It Is drawn by two medium horses. It will move 15,000 tons of earth one foot in a day, and can be set to move the earth but little, or at so great an angle as to move all the earth one foot. Runs true in line of draft and keeps the surface true. All other disk harrows have to run In half lap. The Jointed pole takes all the weight oil the horses' necks, and keeps their heels away from the disks. We make 120 sizes and styles of J Disk Harrows. Every machine fully S warranted. Entire satisfaction guaranteed. Send to-day for free Booklet with full particulars. CUTAWAY HARROW COMPANY, 881 Main St., HIGGA NUM, CONN. HARROW Don't Forget that Steam is the Most Reliable Power Farmers and planters who install Leffel Steam Engines have no power troubles. There is no failure to start or to run — no tinkering, no coaxing, no vexatious delays. We have built thousands of ^^ Leffel Engines For Farm Use No planter ever thinks of exchanging his dependable Leffel for any other kind of power. He can under- stand his Leffel Engine. Quick, easy streamers. No other style of power so economical. The numerous styles and sizes of Leffels insure your gettlnga power tnat exactly fits your needs. Don't buy any engine till you write for our free book. JAMES LEFFEL & COMPANY Bex 2 1 3 Springfield, Ohio 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 199 Blount's "True Blue" Middle-Breakers Are Turning the South Upside Down! They Are Turning the Cotton and Corn Ground Over at a Saving of HALF in Time, Men, Mules! Big Crops and Profits Follow the "True Blue" Everywhere! Wide-awake planters have been quick to see the tremendous advan- tages of Blount's "True Blue" Middle-Breaker or "Splitter." Wherever this implement has been introduced, its success is unpar- alleled. It cuts the expense of Planting and Cultivating both Cotton and Corn at least half. This statement is backed up by s^ letters from leading planters in every Southern state. Possibly you never before had your attention called to the advantages of my wonderful "True Blue" Middle-Breaker. If such is the case, We ask you to write for our free "True Blue" Books and the actual letters proving beyond the shadow of doubt that this is The Greatest Labor- Saving Invention for Planters Since the Cotton Gin ! Thousands in Constant Use ! We made a study of soil conditions in Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama and the rest of the great cotton-producing states. Blount's "True Blue" Middle-Breaker meets these conditions better than any other Middle-Breaker made. It is compact— tremendously strong'— made of the highest grade Crucible Cast Steel that money can buy— has steel or wood beam. The beam is short, and you can make short turns in hilly land— you can go clear to the end of the row, close up to the fence. Wherever a mule can go, Blount's "True Blue" Middle-Breaker will follow. The light draft is simply surprising. "Good-bye to the "Stock" or "Scooter" A man can do double the amount of work with my Middle-Breaker that he can with a little Stock or Scooter. You will pay out more in a year for breakage on a Stock than the entire cost of a " True Blue." Light Enough for One Mule- Strong Enough for Two Mules! 3055 I Southern Planters Tell of Remarkable Results '"True Blue' is the best cotton tool we have."— James Spencer, Summit, Miss. "They are the greatest labor savers of any plow made. When the crop gets grassy, X can kill more grass, rain or shine, with the 'True Blue' than with any other plow. I don't think they can be beat."— L. E. Lea, Brookhaven, Miss. "They are very satisfactory. Their beams are short and you can make smaller tuin- rows and ditch banks. I have plows of yours that I have been usincr for 17 or 18 years. I am using over 100, and would not change f r any other make."— C. H. Teal, Colfax, La. "The plow is compact, the beam short, enabling me to get close to the fence without waste. We Southern farmers have small mules; many work hill lands, requiring much turning, and we want short-beam plows. The 'True Blue' is strongly made. Two yoke of oxen could not bend the beam! In cultivat- ing, one mule does the "work, the draft being wonderfully light." — Joshua Mulligan, Wesson, Miss. Use it in the spring for splitting out rows that had the cotton stalks in the year before. Use it later in cultivation. It scrapes the grass off and cultivates between the rows. It's strong enough for breaking— light enough for cultivating. Order from Your Dealer or Write for Free "True Blue" Books The "True Blue" Books tell the story of Blount's "True Blue" Middle-Breaker. Tells the many different kinds of work it will do and how it quickly pays for itself. Filled with letters from Cotton and Corn Planters who har" found it a labor saver and money maker. BLOUNT PLOW WORKS, Dept. 1443 , EVANSVILLE, IND. Sold by Leading: Implement Dealers at a Moderate Price in Every Section of the South Used from Bedding the Land to Laying by the Crop cold, wet soil the roots rot and die and this, we think, is your trouble. We would change the location of your bed and start afresh with year-old plants, which you can raise and which will give quicker returns than digging up and replanting the old roots. Old roots never replant well. Many of them will die. The young roots should be replanted as quickly as can be when dug out of the seed bed, as drying out soon impairs their vitality. Make your land rich with manure and bone meal and have it finely worked and do not cover the roots more than two or three inches deep. Then work the soil to them gradually after the shoots have come through. Heavy manuring and rich soil is tie secret of success in growing asparagus. — Ed. OHTJFA GROWING. Will you please publish In an early edition of The Planter an article on the cultivation of the chufa, soil re- quired, how cultivated, whether or not It can be profitably grown in this part of Virginia? J. J. FRANKLIN. Charlotte Co., Va. Chufas are not much grown In this State. Further South they are more Direct to\bu" IKAUi. MAI1K BJ£uIaT*J !We have more than 100,000 satisfied customers in more than 17,000 cities, villages and towns In the United States who have each saved from ti> to U0 by buying a Kalamazoo stove or range on 360 DAYS APPROVAL direct from our factory at actual factory prices. No stove or range has a higher reputation or gives better satisfaction- You run no risk. You savi all dealers 1 proflt3. We pay the freight. Send Postal For Catalog No. 400 and see list of towns where we have satisfied customers. Kulamazoc Stove Company, Mfrs., Kalamazoo, Mich. Our patent oven thermometer nukes baking and routing cakt . CLARK'S REVERSIBLE pw I Qk" DI HU/ CUTAWAY SULKY UI3IV rLUW The Only PERFECT REVERSIBLE SULKY DISK PLOW MADE. CLARKS Cutaway tools Plow When Turning to Right. la controlled at the end of the furrow by a foot trip lever which releases the Turning Disk, so that when the horses are brought in good position to continue plowing it inter-locks itself without any further use of levers or efforts of the driver. Can be used as a right or left band plow and is a perfect success. Is mounted on carrying wheels and is as light as is consistent with durability. The best results are obtained in plowing fallow land for the Cutaway blades shake out the edge of the furrow so'that it isn't neces- sary to harrow the land after once ploughed with this plow. Send today for FREE Booklet with full information. CUTAWAY HARROW CO., 861 Main St., Higganum, Conn. iiOO THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. f February. A WISE FARMER SHOULD USE LEE'S PREPARED AGRICULTURAL LIME 22 Top Dressing, Wheat, Oats, Alfalfa, Grasses. S Apply 400 to 500 , Lbs. Per Acre in January or February and Increase the Yields. MANUFACTURED BY COWPEAS— ARTICHOKES. 1. I want to plant about forty acres in peas this year in rows about thirty inches apart and give them two work- ings. Can I sow crimson clover at last working, and will the peas smoth- er the clover? 2. About what time of the year do you plant artichokes, and how many sets are required to plant an acre? Do you set in rows? I have heard they will grow on marshy land. Is this correct? A. P. G. Calvert Co., Md. 1. Yes; you can sow the crimson clover at any time after the middle of July. When the growth of the peas is very heavy the clover is some- times killed out. In such a case we would advise resowing the crimson clover later in the season after the pea vines have fallen down. The vines will shade the seed and keep the soil moist and a good stand is often gotten in this way. 2. Artichokes should be planted in March or April. They are grown from sets like Irish potatoes in rows, four or five bushels will plant an acre. They will grow on wetter land than Irish potatoes, but we do not advise their being planted on marsh land, as the object in growing them is to make a grazing crop for hogs in the HERCULES Steel Stump Machines- A. S. LEE & SONS CO., INC. RICHMOND, VA. Send for Circulars Department A. ^^ i Write Tor Split Hickory Buggy Book Today-Free §«■ Split Hickory Vehicles Sold Direct from Factory to Home. 30 Days' Free Road Test — Two Years' Guarantee. this acid is equal to that found in raw hone meal and ready mixed fer- tilizers. I have been a reader of The Plant- er for nearly twenty years, and think it the best and safest guide for the farmer's of the South. J. F. WATKINS. The phosphoric acid in raw phos- phate rock is in the same unavailable condition as in raw hone meal. It is not like the phosphoric acid in mixed fertilizers, which is in large part available at once from having been treated with sulphuric acid. When the rock is, as it ought to be, very finely ground, the action of the root acids and vegetable matter in the soil makes the phosphorus available slow- ly, and it is therefore a good perma- ment improver of the soil. — Ed. TEOSINTE. Will you give your readers what in- formation you have at your command about "Teosinte." I see it advertised at 50 c'ents per pound. The descrip- tion is something like what we call in the mountains fodder grass, others call it Texas millet. I would like to know if this can be bought from our seed houses. I want a mixture of seed for mountain land just chopped out and deadened that will take the blue grass, but requires about five years to form a sod. I think of try- ing to hasten a sod by sowing the fol- lowing mixture. Would be glad to have a suggestion to improve the mixture. Tall meadow oat, red top, white clover, and blue grass. Will not sow until February or March. How would it do to mix timothy, as it is cheap and gets out of the wav soon. Bristol, Tenn. A. D. REYNOLDS. Teosinte is a plant which much re- sembles corn or the sorghums in its growth, but is more leafy and suckers AMERICANSAW MILLS RELIABLE FRICTION FEED Ratchet Set Works, Quick Receder, Duplex Steel Dogs. Strong, ACCURATE AN0 RELIABLE Best material and workmanship, light running'; requires little power; simple, easy to handle; won't get out of order. BELT FEED MILLS In all sizes. Log Beam Carriages can be furnished with any of our mills. N«. 1. Warrantee to cut 2,000 feet per day with 6 H. P. engine. Seven other sizes made. Also Edgers. Trimmers,, Shingle Machines, Lath Mills, Rip end Cut-Off Saws, Drag Saws, Cordwood Saws and Feed Mills. Catalogue sent free. "Rowe, Mass., October 24, 1905. — I have a No. 1 American Saw Mill and 'send you an order for another just like it. I run it with my 8 H. P. portable gasoline engine; have sawed 5,000 feet of lumber in ten hours with it without any trouble. I use a 48-lnch saw. Yours truly, BRADLEY C. NEWELL. AMERICAN SAW MILL MACHINERY CO., 137 Hope St., Hackett»town, N. J. OUR AGENTS. — Watt Plow Company, Richmond, Va.; R. P. Johnson, Wytheville, Va.; Hyman Supply Company, New Berne and Wilmington, N. C; Gibbes Machinery Company, Columbia, S. C. Planet Jr. No. 33&iiiiri< -Wheel Disc-Hoe Cultivator and Plow is a handy tool for quick thorough garden cultivation. Discsareadjust* able for depth, and throw to or from the row. get crops with less Planet Jr. implements are the ^ greatest labor-savers and crop-t cersever used in the garden or i the farm. They do the work six men. and do it better than by old methods. Invented and manufac- tured by a practical farmer. Stron_ and lasting. Fully guaranteed. v No. 10 Horse- Hoe, Cultivator, iiller, and Vine Turner is the light est, strongest Horse-Hoemade. Worksirn a furrower. Write today for free 1909 cata- e of all Planet Tr. implemen S. ' Mien & Co. 1107X Philadelphia, Pa. Calvert Co., Md., Dec. 5, '08. I regard the Southern Planter as the most useful and instructive farm journal in the country. I always read it with exeat interest. THOMAS PARRAN. 204 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, much more freely than any of these. It is not adapted for sections North of Virginia and succeeds best in those sections of the South where the sorgh- ums and corn flourish best. We doubt much whether it would be found to succeed well in your elevated section. In North and South Carolina it makes a heavy yield of feed and can be cut two or three times in a season. We have seen it growing luxuriantly in the James River valley near this city. It does not usually mature its seed in this section, but as it is not grown for the seed, tout merely as forage, this is not of any moment. It is not so palatable or so readily eaten by stock as the saccharine sorghums. It is much like the non-saccharine sorgh- ums of which Kaffir corn is the best known. We have often advised its growth in sections south of this lati- tude. As to the grass mixture, we would add meadow fescue to the va- rieties named. — Ed. PTGrS WITH COUGH. Will you please tell me through your query column what to do for hogs that have a persistent cough that seems to be catching? The hogs have not been sleeping in dust and have fairly comfortable quarters and plen- ty of exercise. The boar pig I bought of the Woodside Stock Farm had this cough when I bought him and pretty soon every hog I' had commenced coughing. J. W. NASH. Mecklenburg Co., Va. Give the hogs a little saltpetre in their slop two or three times a week, say about half a teaspoonful per hog. It is no doubt some bron- chial affection from cold taken. — Ed. DEHORNIN G — PEANUT FER- TILIZER. 1. Is there any danger of death to cattle in dehorning, and what do you think of the method and effects of do- ing so, and is there much pain and cruelty attending it? 2. What analysis of guano would you use under Spanish peanuts on a good weed fallow? GEO. R. HATCH. Prince George Co., Va. 1. To say that there is no danger of loss from dehorning would be making an assertion which would not be strict- ly true, as occasionally death occurs, but this is so rare that practically it may be said that it is not danger- ous. Use either one of the patent de- horning clippers which you will find advertised in The Planter or a sharp saw. Fasten the animal so that it cannot move around and hold the head fast against a post and cut off the horns as close to the skull as pos- sible and then set at liberty. If done at a season of the year when there are no flies around, the wounds will heal in a day or two, no dressing being BUY Battle axe Shoes. Solid Made BATTLE AXE Shoes SAVE FARMERS MONEY. I Their — SPLENDID STYLE COMFORTABLE FIT LONG WEAR LOW PRICE Explain why the Celebrated, Solid Made BATTLE AXE Shoes are so widely known and called "The Farmer s Friend/' STEPHEN PUTNEY SHOE COMPANY, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. GROUND PHOSPHATE ROCK 28 to 30 Per Cent. Phosphoric Acid. Higher in Phosphoric Acid than Bone or Acid Phosphate, and at one- third- the cost. Unequalled for composting, mixing with barnyard manure, or direct application. For prices write, W. B. ALEXANDER & CO., Mt. Pleasant, Tenn. AGRICULTURAL LIME. from MANUFACTURER TO FARMER CHEAP No Agents Lime Screenings and Run of Kiln. TAZEWELL 'WHITE LIMB 'WORKS, - - - - _ No. Tasewell, Ta. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 205 ircct To You — At Reduced Price — A \ aker City Feed Mill 40 Years The Standard But let us tell you first how bi direct selling plan means. On FREE TRIAL No Money Down a cut in the price to you our We Pay Freight A Double Advantage For You That, in a nutshell, is the story of our new business policy, Reader. We have cut out Jobbers, Retail Dealers, Middlemen of all kinds. 'e come direct to you this year, the user, and you, on the most liberal terms you could wish, best grinder built and at the factory price. need hardly argue the quality of Juaker City Mills. They have been the standard for over 40 years. TtU^VTrlFy Besides, we are offering to send one to you on trial with- out trying in any way to tie you up to keep- ing it if it isn't satis- factory. "Claims" are a drug on the market. We want you to see that Quaker Quality means faster grinding, better prepared prod- ucts, less trouble — more satisfaction and more profit from your investment. We want you to see that a Quaker City Mill has the widest range of usefulness — that it is the best ntiapted to all kinds of grinding. THE STRAUB COMPANY Mmmmmmmmmmmm Although Quaker City Mills have been given added im- provements recently, which put them still farther ahead of any other mills — although the price would have to be higher than before, if sold through dealers — yet you can get one now for less, much less, than ever. And we pay the freight, remember. We take all the risk. We ask for no money in advance, no bank g but that you try Here is as liberal a proposition as you could get from any home dealer and we know that we offer better value. Let us prove it at our expense. cne quaniy oi _-«» ^itv ciiiiiv #-»„ vve asK ior no money n •ave ' uf OUAKER CITY FAMILY OF GRlMn.. deposit, nothin 11 Sizes— 22 Styles From Hand to 20-Horse Power Write For Free Book ■ — Guaranty — Trial Offer and City Mills will just meet pocketbook. Say that you want the FEED MILL Book. Prices, your One of the Quaker needs and fit your 3737 Filbert Street W. Philadelphia, Pa. required. No doubt there is some pain caused, but it cannot be serious as it rarely affects the flow of milk in a milch cow for more than one or two days. 2. Plow the land and then apply from 1,000 to 2,000 pounds of lime per acre., and harrow in lightly and let stand a week or ten days. Then work into fine order and mix a fertilizer made up of 300' pounds of cotton seed meal, 80 pounds of acid phosphate, and 240 pounds of kainit, or 65 pounds of muriate of potash in the place of the kainit and apply this quantity per acre. — Ed. ' Evan's "Model" Disk Corn Planter for Corn and Peas, COAL DEPOSIT. We think that there are indications of coal on our farm. Will you please tell me in the next issue of the South- ern Planter to whom I might write as to having the deposits examined, etc.? H. A. Dinwiddle Co., Va. Write the President of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Blacksburg. They have a Geological Department in the College and might be willing to help you. — Ed. MARL. In Prince George county, Va., I have a farm, a part of which at least. Is underlaid with marl. The soil is sandy with a clay subsoil. I am con- templating covering the place with this marl as I have been informed that it is an excellent fertilizer. Can you tell me whether I have been rightly Informed or not? If I cover the place how thick is it best to spread it? Our 1909 Cata- logue giving de- scriptions and prices of im- proved Farm Ma- chinery m a il e 6 free to any ad- dress. The Implement Company, No. 1302 E. Main Street, Richmond, Va. With or Without Fertilizer Attachment. It is made with steel frames, making it strong and durable. . Plates are furnished to drill ac- curately from 8 to 48 Inches apart, dropping the corn perfectly, covering it and crushing the clods. Also one plate for peas and beans. The gearing is chilled so that it will not wear out. has a positive force feed Fertilizer. Fur- nished with or without Fertilizer. The device for throwing corn and fertilizer in and out of gear is close to the operator and convenient to handle without stopping the team. which prevents waste at the ends of rows. As straight a row can be made with it as with a single shovel plow. Starts or Stops the Spray Instantly The "Kant-Klog" Sprayer Gets twice the results with same labor and fluid. Send postal today for free interest- ing booklet, explaining how the "Kant- Klog" gives Nine Sizes of Round or Flat Fine or Coarse Sprays _ or solid streams all from the same nozzle. g^-~ Ten different styles of sprayers for all kinds of spraying, whitewashing, etc., etc. AGENTS WANTED ■ v Bochtstcr Spray Pump Co., iggggV 206 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [ February, What is the best time of year to do this, and is there danger in getting too much on? How long will a coating last, and will I need other fertilizers in connection with the marl? The place has been pretty badly run down and I want to build it up as rapidly and permanently as possible and any suggestions you can give me will be appreciated. I have just started your valuable paper and, judging from the numbers so far received, must say that it is certainly chock full of good, solid matter. H. J. WHITTIBR. Peoria, Illinois. The Virginia marls are all valuable as sources of lime for improvement of the physical and mechanical condition of the soil, and some of them are also valuable as sources of phosphorus. You can safely and with advantage ap- ply a heavy dressing of the marl on your land. It is slow in action, but very lasting in its effect. You will need to use acid phosphate and may be some potash in connection with the marl in order to ensure a good growth of the leguminous crops like cowpeas and crimson clover. It is upon these leguminous crops that you will have to rely for the permanent improve- ment of your land. They supply the humus which all our soils lack and without which they cannot be made productive. The lime in the marl puts the land into condition to grow these crops when they have phosphoric acid and, in some cases, potash add ed to feed the plants. — Ed. TRISH POTATO CROP. I wish to submit to you a plan I have for preparing land for Irish po tatoes. I have already been very ma- terially helped by following the advice given in your valuable paper, there- fore desire to have your opinion on this plan. The land in question lays on both sides of a small stream, but is in no way wet, except in case of a flood, when some part is in danger of an overflow. The soil is a light loam, but, I think, deficient in vegetable matter. My plan is to sow Canada peas as soon as I can in the spring. upon which I will either use Lee's Pre- pared Lime or acid phosphate (which- ever you say is best). In May or the first of June, 111 turn the peas down and then use some good commercial fertilizer, say 1,000 pounds per acre, 500 broadcast and 50C in drill. This, in short is my plan. BENJ. P. NE.VTTT. Fairfax Co.. Va. We doubt much whether you can get a Canada pea fallow by May which will be of sufficient value to your crop to warrant the labor and cost. You ought to have sown crimson clover last fall and then you would have had a fallow worth turning down in May. If your land is in a good state of fer- tility nnd light and warm enough to force the pea growth, it may he that How a Reliable Engine Economizes Labor OF course, you, like other farmers, want to economize your time. Think in how many places a power would be a help to you — would save time and work — if you had it in a handy form ready for use in a minute. Think how much hard work it would save you in cutting feed — in sawing wood, posts or poles — in running the cream separator or churn — in operating shop or other machinery. The I. H. C. gasoline engine is a power that is always ready at your hand. It is not neces- sarily stationary, like the wind- mill, and on that account adapted ;o doing only one kind of work. The engine is built in many styles — there are portable engines on trucks and skidded engines which can be moved wherever the work is to be done. Then there are stationary engines, both vertical and horizontal, in sizes from 1 to 25-horse- power, air cooled and water cooled, and also gasoline traction engines 12, IS and 20-horse-power. Be- sides, there are special sawing, spraying and pumping outfits from which you can select The engines are simple in de- sign so that they can be easily understood. They are strong and durable — constructed with a large factor of safety, inasmuch as they have greater strength than would ordinarily be required. Yet they are not clumsy or too heavy. All parts are accessible and easily removed and reassembled. Every engine will develop a large per cent of power in excess of its rating — you get more power than you pay for. They are absolutely reliable— you cannot find one inefficient detail. They are unusually eco- nomical in fuel consumption — less than a pint of gasoline per horse - power per hour. This means that a 2-horse powet en- gine will produce full 2-horse power for five hours on only one gallon of gasoline. Would it not be a wise plan for you to investigate and learn how an I. H. C. engine will save time and lighten the labor on your farm? International local agents will supply you with catalogs. Call on them for particulars, or write the home office. INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA (Incorporated) Chicago, U. S. A. SPRAYERS AND WHITEWASHERS vV'e are ethe largest manufacturers of all kinds of Sprayers, Whitewashers, Prepared Spraying Mixtures, Feed Cookers, Poultry and Brooder House Heaters, in the Central, Southern, or "Western States. Write to-day for 1909 CATALOGUE, it tells you when, and how to spray. We give Government Whitewash Recipes and Spray Calendar with each Sprayer. SPECIAL OFFER — No. 20-4 gallon Galv. Steel Sprayer as shown spraying trees, $4.50, express paid. 4 gallon brass, $6.00, express paid. Rlppley Hdw. MfR. Co., Box V., Grafton, 111. Manufacturers Sprayers and Feed Cookers. TELL THE ADVERTISER WHERE YOU SAW HIS ADVERTISEMENT. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 207 the growth may be heavy enough to be of help. You should be able to turn It down in May in order to get the Irish potatoes planted in time to mature before frost. Acid phosphate — 200 pounds to the acre— worked in- to the land before planting the peas and a top dressing of nitrate of soda- — 75 pounds to the acre — applied as soon as the peas start vigorous growth, will help the crop most. In this issue you will find advice as to the proper fer- tilizer to use for the Irish potato. — Ed. CORN" GROWING. Please tell me how to plant two acres of rich land in corn to make the biggest yield? Land is rich and well manured. I want to get the prem ium. When must I plant. Halifax Co., Va.. X. Y. Z. If you have the rich, well-manured land, then the whole problem of rais- ing the biggest yield will be solved by perfect preparation of the land before planting and repeated level, shallow cultivation during the growth of the crop. If the land is not already plowed and subsoiled have this done at once. Do not bring too much of the new soil to the surface now, but let the bottom of the furrows be deeply brok- en by the subsoil plow.Apply a ton of lime to the acre as soon as the plow- ing is done and harrow in lightly and let lay for a week or ten days. Then commence to work the land with the disc cultivator harrow at least once in every week or ten days cross- ing the working at each different cul- tivation. It may be well, although ycu say your land is rich, to work in 200 or 300 pounds of acid phosphate per acre during the preparation of the soil. Do not plant before the first week in May. and have the land in prime order when planted. Plant only tested seed and use a planter that will put it in at an even depth so that all may come up at one time. Se P that you have no missing hills. Plant in rows three feet nine inches apart and drop the seed two feet apart in the rows. Cutivate with the weeder be- fore the plants come up and regularly once every week afterwards using the weeder as long as vou can and then a tooth cultivator. — Ed. FERTILIZER FOR MEADOW. I have a lot of several acres in orchard grass, what kind of commer- cial fertilizer would be best to use on it to increase the hav crop. It was not cut last year, but pastured by colts. King Georse Co.. Va. B. Apply 400 lbs. of bone meal per acre and 50 pounds of muriate of potash broadcast and then when the grass be- gins to grow freely, aive it a top dress- ing of 100 oounds of nitrate of soda per acre. — Ed. WATER-CRESS GROWING. Would like you to tell me when to sow water-cress seed. Pittsylvania Co., Va. DAVID JONES. The best way to get a water-cress bed is to plant cuttings of the plants and then turn the water on to them. They will root at every joint and you will soon have a bed from which you can cut and it will spread rapidly if the ground is suitable. The seed can be sown in damp ground or, better, on the edge of a stream, where the water will flow gently on to it any time after the first of April. — Ed. DOG FOR PROTECTING CHILDREN. What kind of dog in your opinion is the best for protection for children going to school, and where can I get one? SUBSCRIBER. Southampton Co., Va. We should prefer a collie for this purpose. You will find them adver- tised in The Planter. — Ed. CHICKEN PASTURE. I have a piece of plowed land on Farm Tools : \*j;w:';; The name Johnston on a farm tool stands for absolute satisfaction in the work it does and the length of service it gives. This has been proven year after year for over half a century. There can be but one explanation for this well merited reputation — that is, the simple fact that Johnston tools are me- chanically correct in working principle and construc- tion. That's why they do their work so well. An- other advantage to you — they are made by an in- dependent company, having no connection what- ever with the trust. They are Time-Tried Successful Machines You take no chances when you buy a Johnston Implement. They are not experiments. Every tool embodies the latest improvements. Every tool gives the buyer the fullest value for his money. Space forbids giving detailed descriptions of all the Johnston Implements, but we will gladly mail you our 1909 catalog which fully explains and ",' pictures in detail their many superior ad- vantages. It will interest you deeply. It will aid you to buy the best machines for your work. Write for it today. THE JOHNSTON HARVESTER CO. Box 528, BATAYIA, N- Y. 208 THE SOUTHEKN PLANTER [February, which I wish to turn growing chickens through May, June and July. Ground fairly good, having been in sod for some years. Would there be a chance of corn getting a sufficient start so tbat chickens would not greatly dam- age it? If not, what would you sow, and when, for a good and permanent poultry range? Would like not too rank a grass growth, but a dependable one, and a grass liked by the fowls. SUBSCRIBER. Nottoway Co., Va. If you will prepare the land finely and make it rich by an application of 400 or 500 pounds of bone meal to the acre and then sow two bushels of mixed grass seed — orchard grass, tall meadow oat grass, Herds grass, meadow fescue, and Virginia blue grass, in equal parts, and ten pounds of mixed red clover, alsike and white clover Der acre and have this sowing completed by the middle of March you should get a stand of grass which will make good grazing for the chickens through the summer and a permanent stand for future years. A top dress- ing of nitrate of soda at the rate of 75 or 100 pounds to the acre applied in April or early in May, just when the grass gets fairly started to growing, would greatly help it. In the fall top dress with well rotted farm yard ma ni.'re ■ with 40 pounds of acid phos- phate with each ton of the manure ap- plied. It will be useless to attempt to get a stand of corn if the chickens are turned on in May, and, if kept off and corn planted, you will get no grazing for the chickens, as grass and corn will not grow together. If you have corn you must have no grass in it. — Ed. ONIONS— IRISH POTATOES— CORN AND COTTON. Will you please give me the kinds of fertilizers and the way to mix it, for an acre of onions? Also, the kinds and mixture for an acre of Irish pota- toes? I will not have any stable ma- nure. When should I set out Prize Taker onion sets so I can harvest by August 1st to 15th? How many bush- els will it take of sets per acre? How many bushels of Irish potatoes will it take to plant an acre. Can you give me some points about how to cut the Irish potatoes for planting. The farmers here simply peel them and drop the peelings in the ground. What is the best corn I can plant and the fertilizer I can use? What is the best cotton I can plant, and the fertilizer I can use? I go out in the country and ask the farmers what kind of seeds they use for cotton and corn. They don't know. I am only going to try twelve or fifteen acres. Prepare it right and work it right, and see what I can do with it. I may fail, but I don't think I will. O. L. McFARLAND. Cleveland Co., N. C. We would not advise you to plant Prize Taker onion sets in the spring. They should have been planted in the fall. The best way to grow a crop of onions now is to sow the seed either under glass and then plant out the young onions in April, or to sow the seed in the field where the crop is to be raised in March. The Prize Taker is one of the best varieties for sowing under glass in February and then plant out the young « plants. It makes an early, good crop handled in this way. It will also do well grown from seed sown in the field, but will not be so early. The land should be finely prepared and then be laid off in furrows wide enough apart to ad- mit of horse culture. In these furrows not less than l.WO pounds of fertil- izer per acre, made up of 200 pounds of nitrate of soda, 750 pounds of cot- ton seed meal, 750 pounds of acid phosphate (12 per cent.), and 300 pounds of muriate of potash to make a ton should be spread. Two furrows should then be lapped over the fer- tilizer furrow and the ridge thus made be flattened down by rolling or with a hoe. On this ridge the seed should be sown. Sow plenty of seed and M THE OAKS COTTON AND CORN PLANTER. A machine designed to meet the long felt need of the Southern farmer. It opens the row, distributes the fertilizer, lists the row, pushes off the top, opens the furrow, plants the seed, covers rolls and marks off the next row. This is all done at one opera- tion, thus saving at least 50 per cent. The planting feature is the most essential as It does not drop the seed in a bunch, but scatters them by a steel spring so they will grow separately and make chopping easy. THE OAKS SIDE DRESSER, LISTER AND CULTIVATOR. There is no other machine on the market like it or none that can take its place. The yield of a crop will be increased 20 to 25 per cent. If fertilizer is applied with this ma- chine and cultivating done at the same time. It can be used for cul- tivating very young plants without the slightest injury. By using the listing discs rows can be bedded for cotton, corn, tobacco, potatoes or any other crop, making it a very desirable machine for any farmer. The Oaks Cotton and Corn Planter, THE OAKS Jr. COTTON AND CORN PLANTED This machine is designed to meet the demands of so many farmers who do not care for a machine as large as our two-horse planter. The planting at- tachment is the same as that used on our large planter, which puts the cot- ton seed in blocks and the corn in hills. It will also drill the seed if this is desired. In addition to cotton and corn it will plant a variety of other seeds. This is a very desirable planter as it is light and compact, werghing only 125 pounds. "Write for Catalogue. THE OAKS MFG. CO., New Bern, N. C. The Oaks Side Dresser, lilster, and Cultivator. Why Don't YOU Get This Phonograph on FREE TRIAL? penny. • oo lar you nave uiisseu an mia. vvuyr tot MY OFFER. For almost three years I have been making the most liberal phonograph offer ever known! I have given hosts of people the opportunity of hearing the genuine Edison Phonograph right in their own homes without charging them a single penny. So far you have missed all this. Why? Possibly you don't quite understand my offer yet. Listen— I will send you this Genuine Edison Standard Outfit (the newest mou?l), com- plete with one dozen Edison Gold Moulded Records, for an absolutely free trial. I don't ask any money down or in advance. There are no C. O. D. shipments ; no leases or mortgages on the outfit ; no papers of any sort to sign. Absolutely nothing but a plain out-and-out offer to ship you this Phonograph together with a dozen records of your own selection on a free trial so that you can hear it and play it in your own home. I can't make this offer any plainer, any clearer, any better than it is. There is too catch about it anywhere. If you will ^top and think just a moment, you will realize that the high standing of this concern would absolutely prohibit anything except a straightfor vard offer. Vnn rtnn't llavo tn Rnv It. All I ask you to do Is to invite as many IUU UU1I I lidVC III UUT ll. ^ p088ible o{ your friends to hear this wonderful new style Edison. You will want to do that anyway because you will be giving them genuine pleasure. I feel absolutely certain that there will be at least one and probably more who will want an Edison of their own. If they don't, if l a single one of them orders a Phonograph (and this sometimes happens) Iw blame you in the slightest. I shall feel that you have done your part when you ha given these free concerts. You won't be asked to act as our agent or even e in the sale of a single instrument. Get the Latest Edison Catalogs. Just sign your name and address on the attached coupon now and mail it to us. I will send you our superbly illustrated Edison Phonograph Catalog, the very latest list -of Edison Gold Moulded Records (over 1,500 of them in all languages) >_ x and our Free Trial Certificate entitling J&tf<§* «■ you to this grand offer. Sign the cou- jGfo? ^ ., pon now, get these catalogs and jfir^ , select your records at once. Re- ^r.C>2>T7>2>2>2>n>C>S)'2>2»C>2>Z;>S>2>2>S>S>2>2>2>C>a>a>S>S>E>CJ>S>S>3>2>2>C>S>2>S>n> 1909.] DETAILED INDEX. Irish Potato Fertilizer 192 Nitrate of Soda As a Top Dress- ing — Baling Hay — Tobacco Fer- tilizer 192 Rotation 194 Tobacco and Cotton Growing 195 Tobacco Fertilizer 196 Disease in Tomatoes and Irish Potatoes 198 Diseased Cherry Trees 198 Asparagus Growing 19S Chufa Growing 199 Cowpeas — Artichokes 200 Horse Forging 202 Winter Vetch— Crimson Clover... 202 Phosphate Rock 202 Teosinte 203 Pigs With Cough 20'4 Dehorning — Peanut Fertilizer 204 Coal Deposit 205 Marl 205 Irish Potato Crop 206 Corn Growing 207 Fertilizer for Meadow 207 Water-Cress Growing 207 Dog for Protecting Children 207 Chicken Pasture 207 Onions — Irish Potatoes — Corn and Cotton 208 Variety of Corn to Plant 210 Tobacco Fertilizer — Oat Fertilizer 210 Size of Hen House 212 Fertilizer for Tobacco 212 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. ■> 1 3 ALMOST AS GOOD. Little Ikey came up to his father with a very solemn face. "Is it true, father," he asked, "that marriage is a failure. " His father surveyed him thoughtful- ly for a moment "Well, Ikey," he finally replied, "if you get a rich wife it's almost as good as a failure." — January Lippin- cott's. Davidson Co., N. C, Mar. 21, 1908. The Southern Planter is as welcome to me and as invaluable as my break- fast, dinner and supper. W. B. MEARES. HOW THE' DEBT WAS COLLECTED. One of the problems that may sooner or later engage the congressional at- tention is the servant maid question. While some of the Solons are busy formulating laws to furnish material for the 1912 campaign, William Alden Smith comes on the scene with a Michigan story of the domestic prob- lem. It seems that in the home of a cer- tain influential family they arose one morning to find that no breakfast had been prepared — even the kitchen fire had not been lighted. Upon investi- gation the cook was discovered peace- fully reclining in bed. "Are you ill?" inquired the mistress. "Not at all; I feel quite well," was the surprising response, but still no persuasion would induce her to arise. After a time the doctor was sent for. He put to her his usual ques- tions but the girl insisted that she felt perfectly well. "If. as you say, you are not ill," said the man of pills and potions, "then tell me in confidence why you won't get up and go to work." •Well," said the girl resolutely, "these people owe me twenty-five dol- lars, and I won't stir until they pay it." "Do you think you'll get it quicker by staying in bed?" asked the doctor. "I most certainly do," she replied, with a gleam of the eye that expressed determination "to fight it out on' the same line if it takes all summer." The doctor advancing said: "Roll over and stay there, that's the only way you'll ever get it. They owe me eighty dollars." — National Magazine. ! MR. FARMER! Have yon heard of the NEWEST and MOST UP-TO-DATE GASOLINES EN- GINE on the MARKET?. If not, write us abont It at once. It's called the "NEW-WAY" air cooled and made In 2%, 3% and 7 H. P. — Prices guaranteed to be cheapest of any high cla»s en- gine. It can be used for every FARM purpose Imaginable, and Is so simple that anyone can run It. STOCKDELL-MYERS H'D'W. CO. Petersburg, Va. NOW IS THE TIME TO SPRAY We have the celebrated DEMING SPRAY PUMPS, Power Sprayers, Barrel Sprayers, Bucket Sprayers, Knapack Sprayers, for every . condition, every pocket- book, from $3.00 up. Catalogue and Spraying Calendar Free. SYDNOR I Gasoline Engines, Wind Mills, Hand Pumps, Power Pumps, Saw Frames. PUMP & WELL CO., RICHMOND, VA. DEPT. B. 214 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, CLUBBING LIST In this list will be found prices on | papers, magazines and periodicals which are most called for by our readers. We have club rates with nearly all reputable publications, and will quote them on request. DAILIES. WITH ALONE S. P. Times-Dispatch $6 00 $6 00 Times-Dispatch ( without Sunday) 4 00 4 00 News-Leader 3 00 3 00 Washington Post 6 00 6 00 Baltimore Sun 3 00 3 40 THRICE A WEEK. The World, New York 1 00 1 25 WEEKLIES. Times-Dispatch 1 00 1 25 Southern Churchman 2 00 2 25 Central Presbyterian 2 00 2 25 Harper's Weekly 4 00 4 00 Breeders' Gazette 2 00 150 Country Gentleman 1 50 1 75 National Stockman and Farmer 1 00 1 00 Hoard's Dairyman 1 00 1 30 Memphis News-Scimitar. . 50 75 Cotton Journal 100 100 SEMI-MONTHLY. Standard (Poultry) 1 00 60 Kimball's Dairy Farmer. . 1 00 75 MONTHLIES. Virginia Magazine 1 00 1 00 The Century 4 00 4 25 St. Nicholas 3 00 3 25 Lippincott's 2 50 2 50 Harper's Magazine 4 00 4 00 Delineator ..100 140 Scribner's 3 00 3 25 American 1 00 1 35 Cosmopolitan 1 00 1 35 Everybody's 150 175 Munsey 1 00 1 35 The Strand 1 20 1 50 Argosy 1 00 1 35 Review of Reviews 3 00 3 00 Field and Stream 1 50 1 50 Woman's Home Companion 1 25 1 50 Modern Farming 1 00 1 00 Reliable Poultry Journal . . 50 75 Industrious Hen 50 75 Poultry Success . . . ' 50 75 Blooded Stock 50 65 Successful Farming 50 60 Amer. Fruit and Nut Jour. 50 75 Southern Fruit Grower. . . 50 85 Shepherd's Criterion 50 75 Commercial Poultry 50 75 When two or more publications are wanted, the price for them can be found by deducting 50 cents from "price with Southern Planter." We cannot, under any circum- stances, furnish sample copies of other publications. We will cheerfully quote our best price on any list of publications sub- mitted to us. VICTORIA RUBBER ROOFING. Waterproof — Weatherproof. Always pliable — never hard or brittle. Any climate, all conditions. OUR PRICES WILL INTEREST YOU. SEND FOR SAMPLES. Patented and Galvanized Roofing Sheets, Roll Tin and Tar Paper. TIN *» TERNE PLATES. GALVANIZED FLAT SHEETS, R00F1N0 MATERIALS Kic NUFACTURERS .""JOBBERS 1104 E-CARV STREET. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. You Can Cover Your Roof With Mycoroid Rubber Roofing And Then "Forget It." Because It requires no coating. It la absolutely -waterproof. It Is practically Fire Proof. it does not taint water Write for Samples and Booklet. We also carry a full line of Galvanised and Painted Corrugated and V Crimp Roofing; In rolls and boxes MCGRAW-YARBROUGH CO. .Richmond, Va j& SAVE MONEY & By writing when in need of any description of Machinery, Boilers, Engines, Tanks, Cars, Rail Beams, Channels, Plates, Angles, Ihreaded Pipe sizes (1 to 6 inches.) All sizes iron pipe and shells for road draining, etc. Boxes, Shafting, Pul- leys, Hangers, Cable, Belting, and thousands of other useful articles in the Largest Stock in the South of used j& SUPPLIES j& CLARENCE COSBY. 1519-31 East Cary 8t, RICHMOND, VA. . L. D. Phone, No. 3526. When corresponding with our advertisers always mention Southern Planter. 1909.] THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. 215 Subscription Bargains SOME NEW OFFERS ADDED THIS MONTH. IF YOU DON'T SEE WHAT YOU WANT, ASK FOR IT. NO. 1. The Garden Magazine — Farming, Farm Journal (2 years) and The Southern Planter. Regular price, 92.50; oar price, $1. The Garden Magazine — Farming is the most beautiful of all agricul- tural magazines. The Farm Jour- nal — well everybody knows it — is a clean, lively little paper, read by millions of farmers. NO. 2. Pictorial Review and Pattern, Ladies' World, Modern Priscilla and Southern Planter. Regular price $2.50; our price, 91.50 The first three appeal to the la- dies, but will be found interesting to the entire family. NO. 3. Farm and Fireside, three colored pictures, and "Kid" Calendar. ar><» Southern Planter. Regular price 75c; our price, 50c. You get thirty-six helpful issues if you accept this offer. NO. 4. Southern Fruit Grower and South- ern Planter. Regular price, $1.00; our price, 50c. Surely these two monthlies are worth anyone's half dollar. NO. 5. Hen and Southern Industrious Planter. Regular price, $1.00; our price, 50c. The Hen is a breezy, up-to-date poultry monthly. We can furnish It on this offer for nothing. NO. 6. Farmers' Account Book. A simple and complete record for keeping farm accounts; good for 3 or 4 years; contains valuable tables and information. Retails for 50 cents. You may have one free for a 3-year subscription to the South- ern Planter at $1.00. (Send 10c. to cover postage.) NO. 7. The Times-Dispatch, any edition, Daily and Sunday, $6; Daily, $4; or Weekly, $1, and The Southern Planter, for the price of the Times- Dispatch alone. NO. 8. The Etude, for every music lover, American Magazine and Southern Planter. Regular price $3.00; our price $2.10. NO. 9. St. Nicholas (new) McClures', Woman's Home Companion and Southern Planter. Regular price $6.25; our price $3.75. NO. 10. Everybody's, Delineator, St. Nich- olas (new) and Southern Planter. Regular price, $6.00; our price, $3.50. NO. 11. Century, St. Nicholas (new) and Southern Planter. Regular price, $7.50; our price $5.50. NO. 12. Review of Reviews, St. Nicholas (new) and Southern Planter. Regular price $6.50; our price, $3.50. NO. 13. Success, McClures', St. Nicholas (new) and Southern Planter. Regular price $6.00; our price $3.50. NO. 14. Any $1.00 Magazine and The Southern Planter. Value $1.50, both for $1.25. NO. 15. Any $1 county paper and The Southern Planter, both for $1.10. NO. 16. Southern Poultry Guide, or Forty Years With Poultry, and Southern Planter. Regular price, $1.50; our price, $1.00. The Southern Poultry Guide is Cal Husselman's great poultry book. It contains 150 pages of hard, com- mon sense on the poultry industry. The author has had forty years' practical experience, and knows what's what in the chicken busi- ness. The book is nicely got up, and well illustrated. NO. 17. Farm and Garden Hints and Southern Planter. Regular price, $1.00; our price 50c "Farm and Garden Hints" is a 50- page booklet which we had Prof. W. F. Massey write for us. This Is a valuable little work which will retail for 50 cents, but we will give a copy absolutely free to anyon* who will send us a new subscriber to The Southern Planter at 50 cents. NO. 18. Duggar's "Agriculture" and South- ern Planter. Regular price, $1.25; our price, $1.00. This is the work which was adopted by the Department of Ed- ucation for use in public schools in Virginia. This fact alone is suffi- cient recommendation. NO. 19. The Winter Lamb and Southern Planter. This book, by Jos. E. Wing, sells for 50 cents but we will give one with a 3-year subscription at $1.00. The book is neatly gotten up and is a valuable treatise on sheep. NO. 20. Scribners,' Good Housekeeping and Southern Planter. Regular price, $4.50; our price, $3.75. NO. 21. Scribners,' American and South- ern Planter. Regular price, $4.50; our price, $3.75. NO. 22. Scribners,' Review of Reviews, McClures, Woman's Home Compan- ion and Southern Planter. Regular price, $9.50; our price, $7.00. Baltimc Planter. Regular NO. 23. re Sun and Price, $3.50; price, $3.20. Southern our special NO. 24. Feeds and Feeding (by Prof. W. A. Henry and the best work of its kind extant) and Southern Planter. Regular price, $2.50; special 60 day Offer, $2.00. NO. 25. The Virginia Magazine and South- ern Planter. Regular price, $1.50; our price, $1.00. This is a new publication and a creditable one, published in Lynch- burg. Send for a sample. To avoid errors, simply order by number, enclosing amount called for THE SOUTHERN PANTER, RICHHOND, :<»«******<<<*<<<*»««****«* >>»»»»»»»*» VIRGINIA. 21(5 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER. [February, Spotless Paint at only 98 cents Per Gallon. THIS LARGE TWO STORY HOUSE PAINTED FOR $12.21 A Large, Two-Story, Ten or Twelve Room House like this pninted with Spotless Ready Mixed House Paint, two coats, for $12.21. This large house, meas- uring 23 feet wide by 40 feet long and 24 feet in height will require 11 gallons for body 10 gallons at 93 cents per gallon... $9 30 1 gallon at 97 cents per gallon ■. 97 2 gallons for trim- ming at 97 cents per gallon 1 94 $12 21 DO YOUR OWN PAINTING and buy your paint from us and thereby saving; 010.00 to $20.00 on every building; painted. Make your house and buildings proof against time. Increase their value and have the handsomest house in your section. A Large Modern Barn Like This Painted with our SPOTLESS WEATHERPROOF PAINT, two coats, for $8.45. This large barn, measuring 30 feet wide by 50 feet long and 22 feet in height, will re- quire — 12 gallons for body, 10 gallons at 59 cents per gallon $5 90 2 gallons at 64 cents per gallon 1 28 2 gallons for trimming, at 64 cents per gallon 1 28 $8 46 of our Spotless Weatherproof Mineral Barn, Roof and Pence Paint, the most durable mineral paint made. Guaranteed to wear five years. We sell $1.50 Paint at 97 cents per gallon, or as low as 84 cents per gallon in larger quantities. It is as good paint as the kind you pay your dealer $1.50 per gallon for. OUR FREE TRIAL PLAN. We make every shipment under our binding guarantee that you may open and use any three gallons of paint you wish, putting it to the hardest test, and if you find that we have not shipped you a paint of as high quality as you can buy anywhere, regardless of price, just ship back the unopened paint and we will not charge youfor the three gallons used, but will refund all your money and freight charges. You mut admit that this is a fair proposition. OUR FIVE-YEAR GUARANTEE is that it will not blister, peel, chalk, crack nor rub off. Send us your name and address to-day for color cards and complete catalogue, sent free, or order from this ad. if in a hurry. It means a saving of more than one-third on your paint bills. SPOTLESS CO., INC., 122 SHOCKOE SQUARE RICHMOND, VA If you will write us the dimensions of the build ing you want to paint we will tell you the amount of paint necessary to cover it properly. SEND FOR OUR FREE CATALOGUE AND COLOR CARD TO-DAY. LABOR SAVING IMPLEMENTS AND MACHINERY. THE WATT PLOW CO., Richmond, Va. Smalley Elec- tric Pole Saw. Equally adap- ted for sawing wood and poles up to 16 feet in length. Smalley Cut- ters, Snappers and Huskers furnished with blower or ele- vators. No. Hi Smalley Hand or Power Feed Cutter. The best hand power cutter on the mar- ket. It has 31H steel kniveswhich make a down cut. Fish, Moline, and Weber 2 horse Wagons. Champion and Hickory 1 horse wagons. Root and Vandervort and Alamo Gasoline Engines from 2 to 25 Horse Pow- er. Circular furnished on request. Chattanooga Reversible Disc Plows made in 2 & 3 horse sizes. Acme Harrow Made entirely ot steel and' iron. It crushes, cuts, turns, smooths, and levels all in ne Success Manure Spreader. Has ^operation. Roller Bearings to lessen draft We give special attention to our mail order business and invite your correspondence. THE WATT PLOW CO,, RICHMOND, VA. 1426 East Main Street 1438 East Franklin Street. ^™ ^ North v, . '.era Mutual Life Insurance Company When you put the life insurance agent off with the promise of next week, next month or next year, do you ever reflect how very uncertain it is whether he can do you any good then? If you are alive when the time comes around, and want the company, the company may not want you. Any one of a dozen things may turn up to disqualify you for insurance. That Cough may return, or your weight may increase or decrease beyond the limits, or, added to a none too good family record, some of your near relatives may have been carried off by a prejudicing malady. It is a good day when the Man and Company both conclude they want each other and "Everybody wants the Northwestern now." SEE OUR AGENT NOW OR WRITE TO ME FOR RATES. T. ARCH/BALD C/XRY, Gen. Agent for Va. and N. C, Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, 601 Mutual Assurance Building, Richmond. Va. Society - - Corrugated V-Crimp Roofing - - painted and galvanized "Bestoid" Rubber Roofing Carey's Magnesia Cement Roofing Tarred Paper, Tin Plate, Lime, Ce- ment, Hardware, Terra Cotta Pipe, Wire Fence, Drain Tile, etc. SEND FOR CATALOGUE __ 1557 E. MAIN ST., RICHMOND, VA. THE EVERLASTING TUBULAR STEEL PLOW DOUBLETREES. Guaranteed not to Break or Bend. §| Send for Our Number 8 Catalogue. BALDWIN & BROWN. Furnished with Hook or Ring; for Flow Mosaic. also Traces. We manufacture a complete line of Dou- bletrees, Singletrees, and Neck Yokes of erery description. for 1909. Get acquainted with our complete Une. THEIR USE SPELLS ECONOMY. Ask Your Dealer for Them and Take no Other. This Pattern, Ifo. 105, made in three sizes. BUYERS GUIDE. The following are some of the houses handling the Everlasting Tubulai Steel Doubletrees, carrying stock of same and can supply customers promptly: Norfolk Farm & Supply Co Norfolk, Va. Hening & Nuckols Richmond, Va. Watt Plow Co Richmond, Va. T. R. N. Speck Staunton, Va. Brlstow & Worsham Co Richmond, Va. Stokes, Williams & Co •. Blackstone, Va. Seay-Dillard Hdwe. Co , Blackstone, Va. B - K - G111 Rehoboth Church, Va. Duvall, Son & Co Farmville, Va. Peterson & Jefferson . . . •< Petersburg, Va. Walker, Carroll, Adams Hdwe. Co Charlottesville, Va. Baker-Jennings Hdwe. Co '. Lynchburg, Va. Ainslle-Martin Co Lynchburg, Va. Graves-Humphries Hdwe. Co. Roanoke, Va. Pittsburg Tubular Steel Whiffletree Company, Sole Manufacturers, Pittsburg. Pennsylvania.