Cfc' mmP . Vi i . ii 'I C3 3 ri 5-1 THE INDUSTRIAL AND EDUCATIONAL KTEKESXB OP OUE PEOPLE PARAIIOUNf 10 ALL 0IHE2 C0IHH32EAlI0rB 07 STATE POUCY. -5 fol. 1? Raleigh, N. 0., July if 1902. ITo. 21 4a " ' ....... 1 1 Agricu. jure. 1 s yjWS OF THE TABBING WOELD. ...Vuhington Correspondent Eeporti Ser Serai manors 01 aui jjui muuo. - r. cf The Progressive Farmer. I pr. A. C. True, the Director of the jce of Experiment Stations o the Apartment of Agriculture, points out &e forthcoming Yearbook of the jiepartment, ' "Some Problems of the !?-ral Common School," and he shows jeveral features pf the new movement r their improvement. "Without doubt," says Dr. True, ae character of our agriculture is tepidly changing. It is becoming ;cre highly diversified, its opera ':ns are becoming more' complicated, ie use of .intricate machinery is be- Iaicg more common and necessary, 3, in general, successful farming Ctf requires a wider knowledge and 1 greater skill. The discoveries of our cultural experiment stations and jie broader technical training of the paders of agricultural progress in our jrUeges are producing profound ef j'ects cn our agricultural practice, the ial results of which are but dimly 'preciated by the masses of our f arm- but which will surely make the lot tie rightly educated farmer of the jre more fortunate and the lot of i ignorant farmer relatively more iplorable. It is very important, nfpfn-rfv flint nnr a r-rifTi1tnTfll ren- e should study the problems of the liblic schools and should become alive : the relation of these schools to the PROBLEMS OF RURAL EDUCATION In the discussion of the subject, Dr. True states as the important prob es to be worked out as follows: (1) To provide for all the children to bring all the children into (2) To make the annual school term ixoughout the United States long 3ugh to give the children thorough Ltruetion in the fundamentals of pmon knowledge during the period J: their school life. (3) To directly relate the instruc :cn of the school to the practical bus :ess of the farm through the employ rest of teachers in sympathy with :'arm life and the enrichment of the school course by the introduction of irrieultural subjects. (4) The improvement of the mate equipment and environment of the :-iool by the consolidation of small schools, the improvement of school niLlings and grounds, and the estab hment of school libraries and collec ts of materials for illustration, (o) The making of the schools more iroughly the centers for the intel--taal life of the community by the -opf ration of the farmer and his knily with the teacher through asso cations like those now existing in itichiiran. or through other agencies. EVADING THE OLEO LAW AcfAr.ling to information received at thf- Department of Agriculture iere i a notice of the possible action f-f olf-f. margarine makers whereby they try to evade the law. Press dis latcV -tate that the oleo makers will to dairymen throughout the West V-iy high prices for pure country tf-r liijrher prices than the dairy t.. mselves could get in the city This butter will be mixed oleomargarine so that the "lr will thereby be imparted out in any way causing a con of the law that it is colored. h ' I Kir;- Tiif-refore only Va of a cent a j"!. ii.-toad of 10 cents as required 'Or ' ! -1 oleomargarine. In fact "f V of a cent is less than l'fM'ii paying for oleo. ' at the Department of Agri--.!"v-s that the officials are in r" -eoff at such action, for I , h:i, v admit that the law might be -vailed bv this action, still - : k the question is one of mere ""-.!,. rather than one of law. 1;v -tU- That if the oleo makers can -c-':- I:, ' i-'-.v bv sellincr butter as oleo- - :r;t:,. tJOn tjiey gouid g0 ahead. 1 1 veu, however, that sucn a "1 -how a loss instead of profit vho will carry on this prac- i tO r THE IRRIGATION BILL The irrigation bill which passed the House by the vote of 146 to 56, it is confidently predicted, will in its oper ation, show itself a better measure than some of the Eastern farm papers believe. It amounts to nothing more than an extension of the homestead act; it makes homesteads which are dry and uninhabitable, fertile and pro ductive, but the cost of this improve ment has to be borne by the home-" steader the government simply ad vanced the money, and gives him 10 years in which to pay it back. Again, it is shown that while it is hoped to ultimately reclaim a great tract of "Western land, the process "must, un der the most favorable conditions to the West, be very slow. If two mil lion acres a year should be reclaimed, and this is four times the amounted estimated under the bill just passed, it would take 50 yearjs to reclaim that part of the West which can be irri gated. This would not be a sufficient addition of land to nearly keep pace with our increase of population. This would be taking half a century to open up for instance, an area equal to the single State of Colorado. Such slow development it is claimed will never be felt by the Eastern farmer. Again, it is shown that the surplus product of irrigation will go in the future as they do now, to the Orient instead of coming East to, compete with Eastern farmers. GUY E. MITCHELL. Washington, D. C. FARMERS' BULLETIN X0 155. A new bulletin issued by the United States Department of Agriculture has just been received. "How Insects Af fect Health in Rural Districts" is its title, and it is written by Prof. L. O. Howard, the celebrated entomologist, whose investigation of the life and habit of the mosquito have made both famous. This little pamphlet will tell you more about mosquitoes than you ever knew before. Our readers should not forget that these bulletins are is sued free by the Department of Agri culture on request. They contain the latest knowledge of subjects relating to all phases of farm life and consti tute a liberal education without cost. Every farmer who can read should avail himself of this free "correspond ence school of agriculture." Rural World. GOOD FARM lit G FAYS. i We clip this suggestive item from the Roanoke-Chowan Times: In the spring of 1901, Mr. R. C. Benthall and brother of iMenola, Hertford County, bought a Roanoke farm situated about five miles from Rich Square, paying $9,500 for it. Many predicted that the Benthalls wouW lose money on the farm, but those who knew them well sai'd "wait and see." Their farm man ager told us a few days ago that an accurate account of expenses were kept and that they cleared over and above expenses. $3,200 on that one farm last year, notwithstanding the unfavorable seasons. There are hun dreds of instances of successful farm ing in this section. We ask our cor respondents to occasionally relate some of these that our young men may learn that there is money in farm ing. The following Chicago dispatch should be of interest to Southern far mers : Plans that were first taken into consideration about a year ago have been developed in the last few days to the point where some of the great packing establishments in Chicago have begun experiments on what may prove a revolution of the cattle in dustry of the country," says the Inter Ocean. "The project involves the settlement of several hundred thous and acres of what is at present value less land in northern Florida and southern Alabama, the cultivation on a large scale of the cassava root and its use jn feeding cattle and hog6. If this plan fully develops the Southern States will become the centre of the cattle-raising industry." I I t ,1 - HARRY FARMER'S TALKS. IXXIX. Cor. of The Progressive Parmer. We next find a copy of the Farmer with these words stamped in red let ters "Sample Copy," and we follow it. After travelling , n whole day on a star route we come to a little post office and the postmaster calls out, "Here is a sample paper for Jack Johnson." AN IGNORANT FARMER. .Now Jack does not get mail often and the postmaster tells him there is a paper in the office for him. He gets the paper and goes home. Jack can read a little, but he does not send his children to school or believe in educa tion. He regards it as something or namental or useful for merchants, bus iness men or any one following a pro fession, but for a common laborer it is a hinderance, so he does not encourage his children to study. They know nothing except a few bear and ghost stories. They think it nice to use snuff and tobacco, both boys and girls. Jack thinks it mighty funny to see his boys drink so they can cut the fool. His house is no better than it was when he moved into it over twenty years ago. He makes a little crop, but not enough to last him through the year. Really,, his conditions is far worse than when he commenced keep ing house. His garden is not half fended; consequently he lias but few vegetables to supply his family and does without a large part of the year. Jack bitterly opDOsesvaliy thing pro gressive; he has opinions of his own. HIS SUPERSTITION. . His ideas are certainly "amusing. When a cow gives bad milk, the rem edy is to put some old silver in the bottom of the milk pail just before milking and leave .it there until the milk is strained. In order to keep the hawks from catching the chickens a small rock must be kept in the fire and as long as it is warm the chickens are safe. He believes that snow birds turn to toads in the Spring and that toads turn to snow birds in the Fall. He will not plant or sow any seed when the wind is from the east. Nothing must be planted except from new to the full of. the moon. OLD FASHIONED METHODS The corn must be plowed so many times and in certain ways. His father, grandfather and great-grandfather all plowed their crops that way and lived till they died. Jack thinks he can do it, too. His fields have some old stumps in them that have been worked around enough to have paid for tak ing them out many times, but Jack did not put them there and is not go ing to take them out. HIS POOR WIFE. Jack wife does not .use any cook stove. Jack doesn't like food cooked on a stove. He says it is not so good as that cooked in the old pots, ovens and spider. (Harry Farmer agrees with Jack to a certain extent along this line.) She has no sewing ma chine. It takes too much sewing thread. Poor .woman! She has a hard time of it, but quietly goes along with her work. HER CHICKENS But we must mention her chickens. They are the same kind that she 'com menced keeping house with. She gets eggs from February till July and the balance of the year the hens do not ay. She i would not have any of the "new fangled" kind. They eat too much, and some of them are not healthy. They have such long legs that they are hard to run down. The most of her's are little duck legged kinds. Well, we can find but little here to make us happy so we must go away with a sad heart. A NEW CROP OF JACK JOHNSONS GROWING UP. - . And we are sorry to know there are more homes over the country where the children are so treated that there will be another crop of J ack Johnsons, for many children are kept at home in ignorance which is the ground log of all the trouble. HARRY FARMER. Columbus Co., N. C. TO BANISH DRUDGERY FROM THE FASH. There is a good deal of hard, back aching work and absolute drudgery on the farm unless the farmer can in some way transform this drudgery in to something in which he takes a gen uine pleasure. There is a great deal of drudgery as bad or even worse, in any other profession or business. There is a whole lot of really hard work to be done in this world by the men who make a success of life. In fact, there is no way that we ever heard of making a success except by real, downright, hard, honest work. Genius is simply the power 'of doing hard work intelligently and right along all the' time and taking delight in it. Work on the farm, however hardn need not be mere drudgery. It will inevitably be drudgery, howev er, unless the farmer takes delight in it, sees the reason for doing it, and studies how to do it in the easiest way. It is exceedingly hard work to dig ditches. We did a good deal of that in our early days, but a study of how water rose in the ditch, how far the ditch would draw, how deep it ought to be, and the best way to level the bottom of the ditch and uniform a grade used to relieve it of.the drudg ery, and make itrvhile not an unal loyed pleasure, yet endurable. . Drudgery is simply work in which the body is solely engaged. Get the mind onto any subject, become thor oughly interested in it, interested suf ficiently to study how to do it in the easiest possible way, and it ceases -to be drudgery. Nothing, for example, could possibly induce us to engage in a game of football. As played, it seems to us to be far harder and more dangerous than any farm operation, more dangerous than feeding corn fod der to a shredder, and yet we notice that the boys absolutely delight in this rough and tumble, rib-breaking work because they are intensely interested in it. We remember when a boy on the farm that we worked at play about as hard as we ever worked shaking straw from an old man-killing thrash ing machine, because we delighted in it. To play was anything but drudg ery although involving harder work than tramping on the straw stacks. Doctors perform the most disagreea ble surgical operations and yet delight in it because it calls into play their best knowledge and skill. The dentist will pull teeth and fill them while gusts from the bad lands are blowing in his face, what would seem to us the worst kind of drudgery, and yet his mind is so intensely occupied that it is simply skilled labor. Any kind of work that we do not like is drudgery; any kind of work which does not employ the in tellect and for which there is not a good motive is drudgery. We can transform drudgery into pleasant, healthful toil by becoming interested in it and doing it, not as time ser vioe, but as a duty to be performed conscientiously. Drudgery kills men. Honest work performed with brains and skill ac tually lengthens life. Whether work is drudgery or whether it is a pleasure depends altogether on the spirit with which we perform it. Wallace's Farmer. Pender Chronicle : The bean xsrop, which has just been marketed, was very satisfactory in this section. The crop, however, was considerably short ened by lack of mosture during the latter part of the season. The contin ued dry weather is reported as having had a vry harmful effect upon the potato crop. The crop is shortened by more -than one half. In addition to this, the potatoes produced are, it i3 said, of a very inferior quality. Goldsboro Argus: The fa'rmers of this section have been engaged in housing their grain crops, which have been cut very short by the exceeding dry weather of May, when their crops most needed rain for filling out and maturing. However, owing to the un usually large acreage planted, an aver age crop in the aggregate will be housed. THE VALUE OF BIRDS TO NORTH CARO LINA AGRICULTURE. Importance ai Insect Destroyers TlireelHun dred Species not Frotected by Law Reckless Destruction of our Feathored Friends. To those who have thought but little concerning the practical value of birds to man, it may be a new idea that their usefulness is a very pronounced reality; this usefulness lies chiefly in the service they render as destroyers of insects which are injurious to veg etation, as consumers of small rodents, as 'destroyers of large quantities of seeds of noxious plants? and as scaven gers. Birds constitute the chief force in keeping down the surplus number of insects which otherwise would be far more destructive to the agricul tural products of the country. As mat ters now exist, one-tenth of the entire agricultural product of the United States each year is a total loss through the inroads of insects, and we are told that owing to the decreasing number of ?irds, this percentage is annually increasing. The work which birds do simply as preventives is enormous. The young of some species eat more than their own weight of insect food daily. The adult birds of many kinds subsist chiefly on an insect diet, and two-thirds oi the varieties found in North Carolina are almost wholly in sectivorous, Birds digest their food so rapidly that it is difficult to esti mate the real amount which they con sume. It is known, however, that a swallow will eat six or seven hundred flies in a day.y The stomach of a cuckoo shot at six o'clock in the morn ing, contained twenty-three tent-caterpillars partly digested; how many would have been destroyed by evening cannot well be 'estimated. The stom achs of chickadees not infrequently have been found to contain over two hundred eggs of.the canker worm, and as many as twenty-five of the female moths, each holding over one hundred eggs. It has been estimated that dur ing the one month that these insects infest the trees, each chickadee would destroy over 130,000 eggs. A pewee, which I once watched, captured six teen insects during a period of ten minutes. N The bird would dart out a few yards, seize a passing insect and return at once to her lookout perch. When some hours later I again saw the bird, she was still busy at her work. The raal value of birds as insect destroyers has not been appreciated generally. One reason for this is that their work is not apparent to the cas ual observer, who rarely sees a bird except when it is alarmed, and there fore is not feeding. Superficial ob servation has been a cause for much suffering to birds, and a great pecu niary loss on the part of observers. We, as a people, have failed to ob serve carefully the feeding habits of our feathered friends, and thus have not learned their intrinsic value. For the same reason we have not been suf ficiently interested in their preserva tion to enact adequate laws for the protection of non-game birds. There have been recorded in North Carolina 312 species of birds. Three hundred of these species are not protected by the laws of the State except in a few counties. Public sentiment is so lax in many sections that these laws are really little better than no laws at all. There is scarcely a bird within the limits of our Commonwealth that is not regarded as a legitimate mark for any gun. Numbers of men and boys in almost every section of the country at time3 shoot non-game birds indis criminately. Thousands of chimney swifts, swallows, martins, and night hawks (bullbats) are shot every sum mer, "just to see them fall." The small boy plunders the nests of their eggs for his "collection," and does so unrestrained by parental authority. Our sea birds have been almost exter minated by the plume hunters, who gather the. feathers for the great mil nery houses. In some sections of the central and eastern portions of the State thousands of young mocking birds are annually taken from their nests by people who attempt to rear them by hand as singers for the'ever ready northern and western markets. Irresponsible parties wandering about the fields, without the least instincts of sportsmanship, shoot woodpeckers redbirds, sparrows and thrushes. Only a short time since I heard a gentle man complaining that he had seen a boy shooting, mocking birds in the cemetery of one of our chief cities The boy said he "was trying to see how many bird's he could kill in an hour."" This kind of thing has gone on toe long. Many observing people will tes tify that the common birds are not as numerous in their sections as in for mer "years. The problem with which Nature is conf ronted, of adjusting the habits of her wild creatures to meet the chang ing environments occasioned by the advancement of civilization into the wlderness, is a stern one. When,, therefore, man adds to her difficulties by causing the wholesale destructions v of any particular form of wild life,. thev rapid falling off in numbers of the persecuted necessarily, follows. The alarming decrease of the number of birds in the United States of recent years has been the occasion of much anxiety to the minds of thoughtful persons. Many States have already passed laws for the protection of their birds, and there are those who believe that the people of North Carolina will not longer consent to see their inno cent and valuable friends wantonly slaughtered by thoughtless and vicious men and boys. T. GILBERT PEARSON. Guilfrd Co., N. C. 1 JUNE CE0P CONDITIONS. We received just too late for last week's Progressive Farmer the North Carolina crop report for June, as is sued by the Agricultural Deepartmeni. Special correspondents in every town ship in every, county in the State send their reports in to the Department and from these general averages are made up, 100 being the basis of com parison. The June report follows: Condition of Irish potatoes, 81. Present condition of cotton, 89t Acreage of tobacco compared with last year, 105. Present condition of tobacco, 86 Present condition of corn, 97. Present condition of wheat,62. Present condition of oats, 68. Prospect of apples compared witJr last year, 79. Prospect of peaches compared with last year, 78. Prospect of pears compared with last year, 78. Prospect of blackberries compared wtth last year,, 93. General condition of trucking, 84.. Condition of peanuts, 84. Greensboro Cor. Post: Prospects of the tobacco crop have very greatly im proved in this section in the past few days. Mr. J. F. Fulton,' propretor of the Banner Warehouse, who keeps up With such matters closely, says that. Guilford crops are now fine and the growers are in high spirits, and that conditions in Stokes County, which were so unsatisfactory two weeks ago have greatly improved. The copious rains, with sunshine following, he says, has caused strong rooting, and disease has disappeared from the plants, which are growing off finely. The average planted in' Guilford, Mr. Fulton says, is at least a third greater than last season. . Fayetteville Observer: Major B. R Huske has received word from the United States Patent Office that he has beeen granted a patent for his vegetable harvester. It is a simple but ingenious machine, principally for the cutting of letuce. It is in the shape of a pitchfork, with a blade about two inches above the lines and a guard rail to hold the plant after it is cut. Major Huske has one in use now which he constructed himself out of a pitchfork more than a year ago and it proved of such value that he de cided to patent it.' Rockingham Anglo-Saxon: The cot ton crop was never finer at this season! of the year, but there is some com plaint about corn prospects. It is tas seling out too early, but recent rain will improve it a good deal. ' v' t----