7 5?3 U(l 2 f ' c 53 TIE IKDUSTEIAL AID ELUCATIOHAL ISIOESIB 0? CUE KDHH PAHAHCUH? TO ALL C7 fol. 1? Raleigh, IT. C, April 1, 1902. Bo. 8 j ii ie 5 1 e P T O tc Agriculture. ITSI50, PACKING AND SHIPPING Timely Article by Prof Irby , Formerly Wricultoriit of the North Carolina Ex- rimeat Static. . -n.r Ti a Pwumuilva lPrmT. 05". ,l. n.TrilArrA -.f oil rf nnr faraiers to have an abundance cf melons of good quality . Many jjy to raise melons with no work or ,?best melons can be raised on jijwndy lands, and by fertilizing tfl they can be grown to perfeo ton even on the very thin lands. Tar off the rows ten feet each way isd dig out at the intersections about 15 to IS inches. Js ill this witn wen stted manure, pine straw or woods f inld. Pat a good Handful oi oom TPTcial fertilizer on this manure. Pnll the soil on this fertilizer and manure, making a good broad hill, not too high, but about sixinohes in height and too feet across. Thus it will be seen that the surfaoe is aoous iix inches from the manure and then the seeds are put in two to tree inches deep, that they will be ibout three inches above the fertili- Ci The seeds will sprout and grow rigorously at first from what tetter have in the seeds, and by ttze the roots need extra food fcjliave reaohed down to the fer Caer. This preparation should be siis at least a week before the seeds replanted, and the seeds should be listed just before the last frost is ipected. I say btore the last frost nrder that they may come up just Mr t Vi o frrvftt. I h Central North Carolina the last .rsfc comes on an average about the ltd April. A good plan is to re- Ip plariing for market the first of an-lant on the South side of iS week later plant again on north fia regardless of the condition of ie first planting, and then one week iter plant again. In this way you lis advantage of the oldest and best jets. Suppose the seed planted ipril 1st should germinate April 7th id you should plant again on that r. If there comes no more frost, tea you are all right and have only s destroy the extra plants ; but if a I suuuiU uuuto aiii ivtu tucu t first planting will be destroyed, kUheseoond planting has been in ti ground three days and are of sctrse three days ahead of what be planted on that day. This Pa should be followed when the fc&xs are grown for market as a ie ta-s sooner or later will determ- ttaier the crop will pay a hand- lis fete can be protected with a piece cf bark, pine straw, or I n.Vv l i . .i i 'i in large turnips soooped the turnips set out in the vrhca frost is no longer ex The early melons are the ft&t I ring the fancy prices. ' grDxn for family use, a few '"slater makes no difference. grown f or shipping, they should c a t ngh, thick -rind variety, lM the Kolb Gem, Jones or the ;-pa. Pall about two days fir thfm vou would for home use, -ey 'will ripen some on the road. , careful not to bruise in the jH&n l t urefully pack in the cars. easier to show any one how to ;!f 11 cr han it is to tell them. It , Curing tnVm nnrk vnn Iiava tr j,' D7 actual experience How iU make a few suggestions. tVae !raw, or wheat straw into tJk-.ut 12 inches deep. Com- 3e7 tii0 en(s Rnd paok to the " u a ? car. First put down a er rf a Ci?ef ul that there is no play be 5 i vHt melon and the wall. f. tch these as nearly as pos- -H, xt nut a row on ton of - - t,. f.-:iinst tho waII and thn i;tjr 'tr tlQri top on the seoond lors are reached with , rs. 'fho melons should have . oiint eanh ntVio. .11 JJj y . " iuvx LUO Wail. otiJ ends are packed to the doors then nail plank across the doors three feet high. Paok in this square space as compaotly as possible and as near on the plan of the rest as possible and the work is finished. Sell on the side track if possible, as there is no telling what the car of melons will bring after they leave you; for often you are called on to help pay the freight. Be sure you know the man you ship to, as there is more rasoality perpetrated by commission merchants of fruits and vegetables than any other. Sell on the side track for $75 rather than risk getting $100 per oar by shipping yourself. For looal markets you can be gov erned by ciroumBtanoes and sell wholesale or retail them from the wagon. Remember an early crop, or a very late orop, is the one that pays best. Benjamin Irby. BEAUFORT COTJHTY FABM HOTES. Correspondence of The Progressive Farmer. Farmers in these parts, the central and eastern portions of Beaufort County, are right muoh behind with their work on account of unfavorable weather. Hence the hitherto early orops will be later than usual this season. The acreage in Irish pota toes, however, will be fully as large, if not larger than it was last year. The signs of the times indioate that our planters this year will diversify their crops even more than usual. Preparations are being made to cultivate some of nearly every thing adapted to our soil and olimate. Tobacco is one of the exceptions ; I hear of no one here who aims to cul tivate she weed. Several years ago there were many of our people driven to the wall by depending entirely on their cotton crops for all their supplies. Since then there has been a change for the better. There is now no farmer, large or small, known to the writer, in the county, who does not make it a point to raise most of his supplies at home. Everybody now, more or less, diversifies his crops with corn, cow peas, oats, grass, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, cotton, etc. Cotton has not been king with us for some time. The most fertile and productive land in our county is a large area of swamp containing several thousands of acres known as South Creek Poco sin. Quite a large acreage of this land has been held for many years by wealthy owners for speculative purposes, the terms of sale being such as to render the farmer unable to buy. Two traots of the lands thus held have been sold to other speculators within the last two years. These have recently been divided up into plats of suitable size for farms and are now being sold to farmers on long time, but at high figures. Some tfyenkyftve or thirty of these plats have already been sold to the work ing men, and though the price of the unsold portion is rapidly advanoing, nearly doubling in less than a year, there are still buyers to be found. Of course, the speculators will realize by far the greater profit out of the transaction, and some of the buyers (farmers) will probably go under" in the end, for it is certain that the situations places them largely on the tender mercies of the parties of the first part the speculators. This condition, however, is better and more hopeful for the future than it would have been for all this produc tiveness and richness to be entirely lost to the oounty. Every stroke of well direoted labor on this land means increased production and the general enhancement of property in this section. Our public roads are perhaps bet ter than the roads in some parts of the State, but they are not so good as they ought to be, and might be greatly improved at a comparatively small oost. Clod hopper. Beaufort Co , N C. DuDlin Journal: Onions are the leading article of perishable stuff now being shipped to the .Northern markets. There ha been quite a de mand for them this season, and from the hundreds of packages that have Kaon trunannr tfld to the cities of late. we must believe they are highly per HAEET FAEHEX'S TALES. LXVII. Correspondence of The Progressive Farmer. The boys will want to go fishing occasionally nowadays. Let them go; it will do them good. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Some times it is a good idea to assign a task to be done at or by a certain time, and when it is done, let the boys have any extra time they may have gained. We liked fishing when a boy and used to do our best in order to get through a oertain job in time to go fishing. We have spent all day along the banks of a cieek, wading through the mud and water, doing without dinner and go ing home late in the afternoon with about two cents' worth of fish, and far more weary than if we had plowed all day ; at other times we would have more suooess and oatoh enough for a good "mess." A day off from home will do any farmer good. It will help him by taking his mind off of his work and he can take hold next day with greater courage. Many farmers stiok too olosely to work. It will help them to see what others are do ing, and make life more pleasant. How often have we enjoyed a pionio, a fish fry or a ohuroh meeting,where we could meet our old friends and neighbors ! Some times men waste too much of their time this way, but such cases are exceptions. The Sunny South oolony at Chad bourn, this oounty, have adopted the stook law by a good majority. They claim that it is necessary to keep stook confined, and think it too oostly to fence their stook in and have to fence their neighbors' out. We are glad to know this, as our people can see how it works before it becomes the law of the whole State, whioh will only be a few years at least. We are glad Mr. Franklin Sher man is working to get the farmers to spray their fruit trees. We shall try it ourselves and see what effect it will have. The high price of ap ples and other fruits which can be grown in North Carolina should stimulate fruit growing. When young we often went to our grand father to get apples (not having any at home on aooount of young trees) and have often wondered why peo ple do not raise them now like they did thirty years ago. My grand father did not take muoh trouble with his trees, yet he had them by the hundreds of bushels. Brandy and cider were as plentiful as one could wish. You could find them then on every farm of any size But it is different now. Apples sell here for as muoh in the summer now as they did in the winter twenty years ago. We do not know the cause of the decline in this part of the State, but will give our opinion another time. Harry Farmer. . Columbus Co., N. C. CABTERET COUlfTY FAEH NOTES (Correspondence of The Progressive Farmer. Farm work is somewhat delayed on account of the wet weather, very little plowing done the last week. These will be about as muoh fer tilizer sold this year as last for to baooo and more for potatoes, but not over one-fourth as muoh for cotton. Our farmers have sow a consid erable amount of oats this spring be cause of the shortage of crops last year. Cattle and hogs seem to be in fair condition, considering the oold win ter we have had. We hope for a good crop year. Farmers here didn't make over a half crop of tobacco last year and not over a fourth of a crop of ODtton; corn, potatoes and pea nuts were not one half crops. D. McCain. Carteret Co., N. C. Many farmers are gradually learn ing that their condition may be im proved by keeping less but better live stook. There is still a tendenoy to keep a larger number of stook on our farms than can be well and profitably oared for. One animal well cared for is more profitable than three or four half kept. A. J . Smith, Clearfield County, Pa. SETS OF THE FAEZXinO WOELD. Our Washington Correspondent Tells What Progress is Being Made in the Various Sections of the Country. Correspondence of The Progressive Farmer. Mr. G. Wm. Hill, the editor of the Department of Agriculture, is now engaged in the preparation of the Yearbook for 1901 and despite his efforts to make it a volume easily handled, it seems as if this one will be even larger than that prepared last year. "In making up the new Yearbook, ' ' said Mr. Hill, "I am not losing sight of the well known fact thot tho peo pie generally do not care to read long exhaustive articles, and so I am cautioning the various heads of divis ions to oonflne themselves to dis cussions whioh will not use up more than eight or ten pages. Despite this, however, many come, unless properly edited, whioh would oooupy double that space. EVILS OF FREE DISTRIBUTION OF DOCU MENTS. "I am still heartily in favor of making the farmer pay for the docu ments he wants. What he does not care for, he will not receive, and thus be compelled to throw them away, as is often done now with the free distribution in vogue. What I mean by paying for them is that they should pay the mere oost of printing and paper used in the exoess number published. The composition, of course, we must pay for, as the pam phlet must be printed anyway ; the excess number should be paid for. "The present method of free dis tribution will kill itself , if one would consider the faots. Last year we distributed over 7,000,000 documents nearer 8,000,000 ; this year the total will mount up to nearly 11,000,000. The 7,000,000 oopies did not go to over possibly 300,000 farmers who get on an average of ten pamphlets a year. The latest census figures show that there are 7,100,000 farmers in this country. We should reach at least three-fourths of them and allow them to read 10 or 12 oopies annually. To do this would require the publication of from forty-five to sixty million doouments annually. When we consider that last year over $750,000 was expended for the print ing and distribution of these publica tions, a proper distribution to an equitable proportion of our farmers would cost in the neighborhood of $6,000,000 per annum. ,4The Yearbook of last year was received with favor all over the country and the demand upon us for oopies was unequal to our supply as Congress allowed us to have 35,000 of the 500,000 printed. The balance the members distributed themselves. The annual appropriation for this book does not come out of the agri cultural funds, but is provided for especially by Congress. This amounts to $300,000 for printing and binding. An official of the Postoffice Depart ment informed me that this book alone cost the government in the neighborhood of $125,000 for postage or transportion. "Mr. Wilson, our Secretary, is op posed to a measure placing a prioe upon the agricultural publications, believing it to be too stringent, but there is no doubt but if Congress were asked to appropriate $6,000,000 for publications of the Department of Agriculture, there would at once be a howl of dismay come from that body over the enormity of suoh an expenditure." FERTILIZER EXPERIMENTS An experiment in Russia with green manuring was made in order to oompare the availability to higher plants of the nitrogen of green ma nure with that of nitrate of soda, various kinds of animal manures and other nitrogenous fertilizers. In small plots of sandy soil oats were sown, the nitrogen being applied from nitrate of soda ; liquid manure ; fresh horse manure; rotted horse manure ; fresh cow manure ; blood meal, and green manure, The largest orop secured was from the plot on whioh green manure was applied, the other fertilizers being effective in this order nitrate of soda, blood meal and liquid manure. The horse manure did not increase the yield, the cow manure diminished ' it and the decrease was very marked where fresh horse manure was used. This experiment, whioh probably is of value, is not of course to be taken as accurately indicative of the re sults of similar field applications. THE GREAT VIRGINIA ROAD CONGRESS. For more than a hundred years, the pathway leading from Charlottes ville, Virginia, to Monticello, the home and tomb of Thomas Jefferson, in the beginning a bridle path has, by the tread of countless feet, become worn to the size of a narrow road. This road is in some places very dangerous, having a rise of 16 feet in the 100 in many instances. The enterprising people of Char lottesville have formed a Memorial Road Association with Gen. Fitz hugh Lee as President. It is their desire that the Department of Agri culture shall undertake the construc tion of an object-lesson road over the route leading to the tomb and former residence of our great "Ex pansion" President. In laying the plans for this new road a distance of two and one-half miles it has become neoessary to re-locate almost the entire length of the old road over a new course, re sulting in an easy grade with a maxi mum of only 4 feet in the hundred. "When this road is completed," said Mr. M. O. Eldridge, the Assist ant Director of the Offioe of Publio Road Inquiries, "it will not only serve to benefit the people in the looality where it is built, but as well visitors from distant places who make pilgrimages to the tomb of the immortal Jefferson. "In our work we have been aided by the National Good Roads Asso ciation as well as by the Southern Railway Company, which will bring the good roads train to Charlottes ville. "The object-lesson of this road should be of great value to all who see it, especially when it is consid ered that the variations in the differ ent sections of the road are suoh that it will be a good example of moun tain road construction. "On April 2nd, 3rd and 4th, the Jefferson Memorial and Inter-State Good Roads Convention will meet at Charlottesville to yiew the road, see the progress of the work, and discuss road questions generally. On this occasion General Fitzhugh Lee, Gov ernor Montague, of Virginia, and Seoretary of Agriculture Wilson will speak.. In addition, the President and his Cabinet are expeoted to at tend the exercises if possible." fe Guy E. Mitchell. Washington, D. C. GOING INTO THE BRICK BUSINESS A WOED OF WAENING. After so muoh wet weather we will feel as if we are almost obliged to plow. We will get impatient. We will think the time to plant has come and that we cannot wait. The temp tation to plow will be very strong. But we must remember that to plow when the soil is wet means to go in to the manufacture of sun-dried briok bats. The sunshine and wind will harden these thousands of small clods which we have made into some thing like a sun-dried brickbat. They will then be worth no more to the orop than brickbats. The plant food in them will be insoluble. We cannot afford to make this mistake. Better wait and plant later. Dust and not mud is what we need in the farm to make orops with. Plowing land wet is the quiokest way to destroy fertility. This is the chief oause of the poverty of South ern soils. The damage will last for several years. Southern Cultivator. Whiteville Press: Messrs. O. F. Brown and M. H. Sweet, two com mission men of Providence, R. I., have recently acquired lands adjoin ing Whiteville, whioh they intend to devote to the production of straw berries for their own market. The demand for berries has excelled the supply in their market and they have been reduced to the necessity of growing for themselves. Fifteen acres will be put in berries at once and the acreage increased to 200 in the future. STATE CHEHIST EILG0BE'8 EEASGSS FOB. WAEUIUa 7AE2XXES AGAINST TIES "SICEET PEOCESS" FEETIII ZEE SCHEME.' ' As promised in last week's Pro gressive Farmer, we give- herewith the State Chemist's convincing sum mary of reasons for warning. farmer against the agents of the Lipps' fer tilizer prooess scheme. After pub lishing in full the Lipps process as . obtained from the Patent Offioe, Dr. Kilgore comments as follows : 1. There is nothing new or ingen ious in the materials employed, ma nure, dirt, aoid phosphate, muriate of potash, nitrate of soda, sulphate of ammonia, lime and salt, being familiar and well known substances. Except lime and salt, these ma terials are, and have been, in fre quent, if not constant, use for years by farmers and fertiliser manufac turers. Salt is not plant food and the lime as used works far greater injury in driving off the, ammonia from the manure than it does in pul verizing the manure. The main value of the manure resting-in-its ammonia, it is mistaken economy- to throw a part, at least, of it: away, merely for the sake of getting the less valuable residua in oondition to be put through a grain drill;. 2. Great stress is laid on the ar rangement of the materials j it being olaimed that this is suoh as to bring about complete disintegration of the manure with the release and reten tion of the valuable plant food in the compost heap. Not only is this not so, but the arrangement is very un desirable, in that the lime is placed where it will do the greatest injury in driving off the ammonia (let any farmer who has a son in any of our schools, taking even elementary ohemistry, put this question to him), and likely also injuriously effecting the aoid phosphate by making it less soluble and valuable as plant food. The nitrate of soda is also in danger of being lost, not because of being put in the worst plaoe, but because anywhere in the entire . mixturo ii bad for it. The chief object in com posting is to protect and render bet ter fit for plant food the nitrogen (or ammonia) compounds. The Lipps prooess helps to defeat this aim, and if the compost does not go wrong, it is certainly not its fault, as the temp tation is great. 3. But the proportions of these materials are said to be suoh as to make a speoially "well-balanced" fertilizer. For the good of the mix ture it is to be hoped that there is something in this contention. Let us examine The constituents which, give to a fertilizer its value are am monia, phosphorio acid and potash. In what amounts and proportion do these enter into the Lipps Compost? Using his formula we have : -3 a " D CD 58 0 2: 0 n B . s .et- n 1 I- SB a o -t a- o. O P O CP? CD o P 5 : -a o on y 9 x o S.c T O rt O g m0 so a . op cs 5 Z CD O a CO o a o r er SB 0 to o o o OS &9 o O o to to at o O M Oi cn O o T3 d E w o o a f QD O 4 a - s 9 B o o. 01 rffc. to CO u 0 9 o oB a ol a o o. a - p CO en 00 to a 01 CD O to Of O C to O O 00 to to l ZJX Or There were, therefore, put int9 the mixture, phosphorio acid .99 per cent. ; potash, 1.59 per cent. ; and ammonia, .81 per cent., or one and one-half times as muoh potash as phosphorio acid, and twice as muoh as ammonia. What farmer would,. continued on Page 8 fumed by now. ,1 . r t -