r Our Farm Department j 1 Devoted to the Interest of Those Who I i W Till 11 le Soil A W ?UNMICTEI> BS J- M StA l\ A t,=, , ^ r, . ::_i ; A SUCCESSFUL FARMER. Mr. Epbraim Pittman, who lives one mile south of Micro, in one of the successful farmers of Johnston county. His father gave him a small piece of land where he now lives and be bought a little more making the tract contain sixty-nine acres. . lie went there in the woods and built a small log house with clay and stick chimney, and in Feb ruary 187b moved to it. No train carried his goods nor was there a wagon or cart or beast of burden used. He carried them himself in two trips. He procured a goods box twenty inches long thirteen inches deep and ten inches across the top which took the place of a wardrobe, a trunk, a chest and a valise. In this goods box he placed his clothing and other articles of personal property and taking it under oue of his arms it was carried to the little log house he had built. There was an old bed tick at his father's which had been laid aside and not used for sometime. Hal! of the feathers from a good bed were taken and placed iu this old tick and this piece of u bed with oue sheet and oue quilt and two little pillows were given to him. He took up his bedding and walked home with it. His wife had one chair, one home made bedstead, half of a feather bed and only h few other things to start housekeeping with. With this small start Mr. Pitt man set out to make a living which he has done and has gained considerable property and money besides. He makes good crops every year. The intensive system is followed in part. As much ol the land as possible is broken with two horse plows. Crop rota tion is closely followed. Peas are planted in all corn. He has accepted the idea of four feet rows for cotton for farmers who try to raise much of it per acre. He trades his cotton seed to the oil mills tor meal which lie mixes with acid phosphate and kainit to make guano. Last year with six hundred pounds per acre of guano and seventy.five pounds of nitrate of soda he raised eigh teen bales of cotton averaging 450 pounds on fifteen acres. The Boda was used as a second appli cation to the cotton in June. Several acres are devoted to to bacco every year, lie takes a great deal of pride in raisiugcoru and always has plenty of it on hand. We saw his piles of old corn and think there is now at least twenty-five barrels of it Six to eight head of cattle are kept. He raises from 2250 to 3000 pounds of pork per year. The hogs are fattened mostly on sweet potatoes and peas. The hillsides on the farms are ter raced. These are the first terraces we have seen in this part of the county. Mr. Pittman has raised a large family, thirteen children haviug been born in the home and eleven of them are living. He says he has never had to whip one ol them. He has good buildings at his home and good out houses He now owns 205!, acres of the beet land in the county. It hat a clay Bubsoil and will grow au\ crop which can be grown in thii section. He owns stock in the Selma Tobacco Warehouse anc in the Pine Level Oil Mill and bai besides between three and foui thousand dollars in money in the bank at Pine Level. Success hai crowned his efforts all throng! life and he is still making mone^ by farming. Have you paid up yet? FARMERS CATECHISM. We are anxious to tret the read ers of The Hkuai,i) more interest-! e<l in its Farm Department ami we want them to do some writing for it. It is our purpose to insert a number of questions such a* ma; occur to us or any of oik readers and get the beet answers we can to them. Every reader is at liberty to ask questions or answer them. We ask below some I questions in regard to corn. This is one of the most important; subjects a farmer can consider, and it is especially so since only j a few people know how to raise corn. The government report j shows that Johnston County farmers raise only i) 8-10 bushels per acre on an average. Many acres do not raise five bushels. | Why in this small yield? There is bad management somewhere. We are often reminded of the , saying of a certain farmer, "Any negro can raise cotton but it takes a farming man to raise corn." Write us and answer i these questions. How Bhould land be prepared , for corn? How is the best way to select and prepare eeed corn? When is the best time to plant corn on low lauds? When should deep plowing cease , to be done in corn? How wide should corn rows be? How far apart should it be in the rows? How much hoe work should be done to corn? How large should corn be when It is laid bj? i When should peas be planted in corn'' In olden times farmers ran their rows both ways and checked their corn. Why was this done? Should this plan be continued? How and when should corn be harvested? We hope several farmers will write on each of the above sub jects for next week's paper. Corn 60 Cents. In view of the possible falling off in t he corn crop yield of some i 300,000,000 bushels, as coin- ! pared with last year's crop, corn touched 00 cents in Chicago lastj week. I know it is too early to make safe estimates on the grow ing crop, as ail now depends on possible frosts before maturity. If seyere frost does not come be fore the middle of October, as is frequently the case, corn promises to mature and will be a fair crop. Last year's yieiJ was unusually large, and lienor the possible fall ing off this year, as compared with thut. The short grain crops of the surplus nations of Europe is an other thing that has iultuenced j the rise in corn here. A few years ago we exported less than 50,-1 000,000 bushels, but this has i ; yearly increased, and before the | new crop is inutured it promises: . to be 100,000,000 bushels this j , year. It looks very much as if we shall never again see 25 and | 30 cent corn, as a few years ago.! ' Both the export demand and the ; new uses of corn have constantly i tended to stronger demands and prices. All this is very suggestive . of the importance of the work now going on to increase the! yield of this gr^at cereal in all the . corn-growing states.?Indiana j Farmer. 3 If real coffee disturbs your r Stomach, your Heart or Kid i neys, then try this clever Coffee ; imitation?Dr. Shoop's Health j Coffee. Dr. Shoop has closely matched old Java and Mocha 3 Coffee in flavor and taste, yet it r has not a single grain of real b coffee in it. Dr. Shoop's Health 9 Coffee Imitation is made from j pure toasted grains or cereals, with Malt, Nuts, etc. Made in ' one minute. No tedious long wait. You will surely like it. Get a free sample at our store. Hood Brothers. Commissioner Hudson Says Cotton Has ' Lost 30 to 40 Per Cent. Commissioner of Agriculture Hudson, of Georgia, has the fol ( lowing to sav in regard to tin j much advertised "bumper" cot ton crop of Georgia. "instead of the prospects of a two million halo cotton crop in Georgia, not more than a million and a half bales w ill be gathered "The great slump in the out look for a big crop is due to the lack of moisture duriug a large part of August?the month in which rain is absolutely neces sary to manure the crop. "The cotton crop was a full month late this year, owing to the backward spriug," said Mr Hudson. Though late when the crop got a good start it grew vigorously and fruited well. When the drouth came on, it found the plant at its tenderest stage. The stalks were well fruited, and the prospects wpre better in Georg-a than any other cotton growing state. "Hut now you can travel al most anywhere in Georgia and tig'cotton fields look likefirehad nwept them. The plant about half way down from the top is scorched, and bolls and squares and blooms have fallen off. The bolls below are opeuiDg prema turely. You cannot appreciate conditions unless you travel over the state a bit. And there is no way to remedy this state of af fairs. Kain won't help now, be cause the plant has shed its fruit, and won't grow new fruit this late."?The Cotton .Journal. Manufactured Exports. More than three-quartern of a billion dollars' worth of manu factureH passed out of the ports of the United States in the tiscal year just ended. To foreign countries alone the total was 740 million dollars, while to the non contiguous territories of the Uni ted States the value of manufac turers sent was 10 millions, thus bringing the grand total to con siderably more than three quart ers of a billion a dozen years ago. Iron aud steel manufactures form by far the largest single item in the year's exporations of manufactures, the total value of this single group being, as above indicated, 181 millions against 161 millions last year. Copper forms the next largest item, amounting to 89 million dollars, of which a large propor tion went in the partially manu factured form of pigs, bars, and ingots, aud of this 89 million dollars' worth of copper export ed, probably 85 millions went to Europe. Manufactures of wood exported amounted to 80 million dollars, and of this about 05 millions went in partially manufactured form, chietly lumber.?Indiana Farmer. Women have decided that in case they cannot vote, they will cut out the "t.tork" proposition. Perfectly proper to take Hol hster's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets.?Hood Bros. Enormous Wealth, Tbe Comptroller of theUu rrencv a few days ago pointed totkefaet that everything was teudiug to the continuance of prosperous conditions in the United states, and among other thiugs said: ?'The element iu tbe situation due to the season of the year, is the fact that we have raised between $">,000,000,000 and $<>, 000,000,000 worth of grain, cot ton, cattle, hogs and other farm produce, iu addition to the coal, iron, steel, copper and other wealth that is being produced. This is not a situation to get frightened about, or to make it necessary to call on every one suddenly to pay their debts, but it should rather encourage the banks to take care of their custo mers and make loans conserva tively, wherever there is proper basis or credit. We should take courage from the fact that al though this situation doubtless is as claimed, world-wide and international, we have in this country enormous elements for recuperation in this vast produc tion of wealth. It never was so great as at the present time, or more available for our progress and development. Prosperity is proverbially hard to stand, but there is no sense in letting such evidences scare us to death."? Indiana Farmer. Young married people and old ones too, That have no children to laugh and coo, Find their troubles will "little ones" be, If they take Rocky Mountain Tea.?Hood Bros. i Don't Gin Green Cotton. The penny wine and the pound ! foolish policy ot picking cottou I ou uu.J briUiiing it right oil to j the gin m entirely too extravu ' gaiau uielhoU ot handling the j cotton crop that nas cost you bo , inucf^ to make. It id the custom j j of dome larmers to take the wag oh on i tie field ttU.l loaJ it a? the pickers empty their baskets and haul it off to the gin from the Held. This in done of course to save the time and labor in emp tying and reloading; but does it | '? lu the latter part of the season it may be all right, but not so in the early part ot the picking. There is a mistaken idea with some farmer* that it pays to rush it off to market "before it dries out." This is a manifest waste when you thiuk an iut it a little. Now, by careful observation uud experimentation it is touud mat it takes the I nt from ti<) to DO days to fully develop. There is no loss iu Weight, out an actual [giiiu 111 hut, which also improves I in color, being more oily, creamy j and f?iikun m texture and com mauds a better price, seed kept | iu this way will not he>jt and are worth BO per cent, more than heated seed. True, the seed may lose some in weight, but the man who buys green seed knows this, so that the difference iu price more than compensates for the difference between green and dry seed. It is verily a wasteful, peuny wise and pouud foolish policy ?J. NT. Bigham in Charlotte News. LAND FOR SALE. About thirty-five acres ot land in woods well timbered for sale. The land is four miles north of Selma and is a part of the John Broad well tract. It ad joins the lands of Wiley Batten. J. H. Broadwell and othe-s. Terms cash. Unless sold pri vately it will be sold at auction at the Court House door in Srmthfield Monday, Nov. 4th. This August 28tli, 1907. K. Broadwell. FARMS FOR SALE. I offer for sale twenty farms in Selma and Wilders township. They are different sizes and most of them have new buildings on them. Terms one-tenth cash and balance on easy payments. September 1st, 1907. N. E. Ward, Selma, N. C. VALUABLE FARM For RENT I now offer my improved farm for standing rent for term of years; also my new saw mill, cotton gin and store. Not a finer farm anywhere and a fine place for business. All to be rented to the highest bidder. I will sell my stock of goods on easy terms. Renter to furnish team and all tools. September I 4th, 1907. Respectfully, R I. Lassiter, R. F. D. No. 4, Four Oaks, N C. YEARLING STRAYED. Two-year old heifer, well grown for age, dark brindled, un | marked, strayed away from my j place about first of April. Suita-! I ble reward for her return. Ira Woodall. Ben-on. R. F. D. No. 1. | Don't Be Nervous I ladies, but get rid of the dis-W ease which is the cause of 9 most of woman's nervousness, ? viz., female trouble. "I was I very nervous," writes Mrs. 91 T. L. Jones, -> of Gallatin, m Tenn., "and suffered six years 9 with every disease peculiar to a my sex. I had headache, m backache, and acute female |g inflammation. I took three 9 bottles of Cardui and it cured 9 me. I gained 35 pounds in ? weight. I tell my husband 9 *-CARDUI | WOMAN'S RELIEF 9 ? was worth hs weight in gold I 9 to me, and I recommend it to 9 | The- FrurniturE 1 | You W/ant | |g 1 want everybc?i .'-who adcs at Chiyton, toki.ow, that raj S4 I am here to keep for sal a first-cla^s stock of Furui- jjg B ture to fill the needs of any home I have Baby Carria- fll ?aj pes, Gocarts, Bureaus. Sideboards, Bedsteads, Spring w -Mattresses, Tables, r(,uch. , Etc. Etc. 1 shall carry a ffl ? complete stock. Wdi sell for cash or on easy payments. B ra I ask your patronage You will find me in the store K formerly occupied by Gulley A: Gulley. ? | S. /VI . Finch, | ^ Clayton. N. BENSON GRADED SCHOOL Fa.ll Session Began Sept. 2, 1907 ? J2* 0" ? ^ ? ** ? 9-9-9 Full Corps of Teachers for each Department. Instruction given in Primary, Intermediate, Common School and Higher Branches. 0* 0* CHARGES SI.25 to $5.00. 9 Music S2.50 Board Reasonable. Discipline Firm For further information, address, L. T. ROYALL, Principal ? Or E. L. HALL. Trustee Benson, N. C. IrTURNIR - SEE D 1 Just received one hundred pounds of Buist's best Turnip Seed. Several different varieties Isold by Weight. J. W . BENSON I Druggist : arid : Seedsman BENSON, N. C. Cotton - Sales - Books! We have a good supply of Cotton Sales Books. Very convenient for Cotton buyers to keep complete records of sales. BE AT V <& LASS ITER, The Herald, Smith field, IN. G ::T::xi:x::xi:xi:r.TXitrs:xitXit:LLix;LXu.nxt:x;;i::n;r::r::3tnxnmr::TnTax I"FE1T MATTRESSES"! I N K jj ? = s M H m About one third of our lives is spent in bed. there- y> h fore we should have as comfortable bedding as ^ * Possible. " A good Felt Mattress makes the most ^ r comfortable bed to be had. We now have a better W M N y and more attractive line of Felt /Mattresses than y ever before, and especially invite you to visit our y h store and give them an examination. * Our line of * Furniture and house furnishings is complete in every m * respect and we can sell you at prices to suit you. * * We also have the largest and best line of Carriages ?? H and Cocarts we have ever had. As for attractive ^ y styles, quality and price, we cannot be excelled. ^ y y ? Yours very truly, 1 ROSE Sc CO., I * BENSON, IN. C. ? H H * ??xTTxrrrr.x::x::x;;xiix:iX" xnxsxaxn ::XT.XUXSX;: XkXSXii r::x;: xirxnxzil r .VAVVWv \ Up-to-date Hardware < < . Do not forgot tha . i . ep an up-to-da 1 Hardware store. Come and you will find what you want. Hardware for the farmer, the J house keeper, the car- f penter, and if a mau I hunts or fishes occas- \ ionally we can supply him also. I Jj&ewarn)fr \ W+Fcnce(| ^ //Cheapen than wood. Will last t lifetime.\\ 'I ^Hlghaat Awarda Wor'.d's Fair, St. Lout*. 1804. \\ I ^^gfrKART LtoN$? (Wt\\ S I 0|0 CINCINNATI, o. II \ 1 Oitt 100 l.lijs. el Iron Fnc? then lo en ciln/J lo?M. Low OticM ?lN ItipriM |OI. M?y S S Clayton Hardware Co., c i C* w. CARTER, Prop, m: Clayton, N. C. %

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