This Paper and HomevMagazine Rest of Year for 50 Cents'! f I and Oje (KofiteM Mmt - I J n,irT!STVE FARMER VOL. XX. NO. 18. THE COTTON PLANT-VOL. XXII. NO. 17. RALEIQH, N. C, JUNE 13, 1905. Weekly $1 a Year. Tli6 Prooressive Farmer AND THE COTTON PLANT. (Consolidated September 27, 1904.) Entered at Raleigh, N. C, as second class mall matter. THOUGHTS FOR FARMERS. CLARENCE H. POE. B. W. KILdORB, "I C. W. BURKBTT, Editor and Manager. Agricultural Editor. A LITTLE LETTER TO THE SAMPLE COPY READER. My Dear Sir: This number of The Progressive Farmer and Cotton Plant has come to you marked "Snr Cony." That means that you are one of a number of wide-awake farmers and truckers in the Carolinas and Virginia who ousrht to read The Progressive Parmer, but don't. It's not fasnionable nor profitable to. try to farm here without The Progressive Farmer. And it's not fashionable because it doesn't pay. Every week the most successful aDd enterpris ing farmers and. truckers of our territory write our paper of methods and ideas which help them make money and which . will help you make money. : ""' ' There are some. papers you can't afford to take, ori tLoro ta Rfvmfi vou can't afford not to take. The Progressive Farmer is one. you can't afford not to take. ' It is not an expenditure, but an investment, and pays for itself every issue.. "Most money pays only 6 per cent a year," says Mr. Asheley Home, "but the money I pay for The Progressive Farmer pays me 6 per cent a week."- "The Progressive Farmer," says Mr. J.M. Paris, "has given me $100profit in improved land, crops, and stock for every one dollar I have paid for it." But there's no use to arue. Here's the paper to speak for itself and here we are making the bijrgest offer in the history of the paper: To anv man who has never taken The Progres sive Farmer we will send our paer and the Min neapolis Home Magazine from now till January 1, 1906, for only 50 cents I You know The Progressive Farmer is worth while, and we assure you that the Home Magazine is also worth while. It is a large 24-page illus trated monthly, one of the best of the women's masrazine, the regular subscription rate being 25 cents a year. It is filled with strong editorials on women's affairs; interesting romance; travel and decriptive articles ; fancy work" and fashion arti cles, and departments of housekeeping and flori culture. The regular subscription price of The Progres sive Farmer alone from now till January 1st is 65 cents, and in addition to this, we offer a first-class monthly magazine for the women readers of your famil all for only 50 cents! This is unquestionably the biggest offer ever made by The Progressive Farmer management a special cut price open only to those not now subscribers no profit in it for us and made only to insure 1,000 new readers before July. Ve count on you as one of the lucky thousand. And the quicker you respond, the more you get for your money. Order to-day. The Oat Drill. Some time ago J. O. Greene, of Franklinton, N. C, made some inquiries in regard to an oat drill TTa was answered throuerh The Progressive "Ffl-rmer. "Rpoentlv another North Carolina farm er who reads The Progressive Farmer, wrote for the name of the manufacturer of the drill. We will state for th information of all farmers that oats planted with that drill were not injured by fhft cold of Inst, winter. Even the Amler and Red oats, tender varieties, were fresh and luxurient after the February ice and sleet melted. The Appier oats sown October 20th to November 5th, wfr readv to out tho last dava of May. Oats sown February or March mav be nut in with a wheat drill, for all danger of freezing is then over. But the best time to plant them is Uctober when they should go m the open furrow. Nitrate of Soda. Farmers in this county who have used nitrate of soda on small gram are, satisfied with the results. Nitrogen is the most expensive of the commercial fertilizers, and nitrate of soda is the most active of all the nitrates used. Sometimes it f ails be rnns!A rnmlipd nt. the wroiiff time. The writer neiArl KO nmiTida to tho acre on some oats when they were three or four inches high. When they were ready to reap the indications were that the Vld hnd hpn inerased 30 to 50 ner cent. There was a lot of wheat close at hand that had been well manured in, the fall. It seemed that there Tern a nmmnniil enOUffh to make . the wheat. But nitrate was applied to small portion of the ground and in two weeks the wheat was a dark green, and now when ready for cutting, it looks as it tne yield would be doubled. In sowing small grain in the fall use no ammoniated fertilizers. They will the winter months. Wait till March or April and use 50 to 100 pounds of nitrate of soda, which will cost about $2.75 a Vnndrd nonnds when bouerht by the ' ton. Fifty pounds to the acre applied at the right time will make a great difference m small gram. present they are here. They are going to stay I T. ? il ' 1 - A 3 1 A 1T nere. JLt is xne cneapesx ana Desx iaDor avaiiame and it can be greatly improved. UHAS. PHITTY. Spartanburg, S. C. The Negro as a laborer. Immigration Commissioner Watson, of this State, has established an office in New York, and ia -roo rlxr nn nnnlicatl on to furnish laborers or ten ants. He advertises that farm laborers will cost $15.00 a month with board and comfortable lodg er TViot nrt drmht. includes the washing. That wili bring the price up to $21.00 a month, or $252.00 a year, which is about six bales oi o-cenx nnHnn Tn at. will bft auite satisfactory to the farmers, provided each hand can make at least $450 worth of marketable produce a year. But immigration will come slowly. We have laborers here now. They need encouragement anu uyj t v,?o staia Tipirmps make and gather three- JLU. VillO KJVW - . f,,i,0 f nnttmi oron. The first duty of the landlords is to make this labor more ettective. It can be done. Build better houses for them. Em- rtr l-nam fnr lonCT teTUlS. SO that they may plant gardens, set out fruit trees and have a milch cow. Give them a square deal. Instruct -them in better nmAc Enmisn ffood horses, niules and tools. Never cheat them. Make them give opinions -as to best methods of work. Make them feel that toll i cent men and not mere hands. Treated in this way nine. negroes m ten will do good work. We saw several tenants on one farm 1- Tho. lnndlnrd saw them about every two iro Tli Ota was one white man on the place, W orvo. " mi -u o-r. clspT and not an overseer, lhese negroes have good mules. They take a pride m their work. A few days ago xuey wCre uu tVitpr or four of their white neign- , .:n ;n"tTiA ficrht. We are sure that negro labo. can be made much more effective. At uuiuusacu uuusca ui uie vuiuiujr. Messrs. Editors: T wonder if therA are as manv unfinished houses in every section of the State as there are m this section. If so, there are 1 a x a1 1 . e x.- Tl .... aDOUt xwo-xniras oi xao nouses m me rurai sue- - tions unfinished. ' " This fact tells a atorv which shows an indiffer-' ence for home, and want of love for home and home things. Many a wife's heart has grown faint and sad over this condition, and the bright and cherry hopes of the boys and girls have been shattered because of the unfinished house" at - home. When they go over to see their friends and find the house finished and everything fixed" -i r i i i2:U J l they become dissatisfied with their own homes. ; Thev cannot take tho interest and nride in their ... homes as their neighbors seem to njoy in their finished homes, xes, such a home-is not loved - and cherished as it should be, and that home feel-., ing, as expressed by the words, "home, sweet home," never grows so strong in the hearts of V-xra o-nrJ . rri-rla TOOTOrl in TinfininTlpd VlOllSfiS AS it JVfJTO UUU. - does in those whose homes are finished and, well UX A UU(3 A V A WV , ' v w . f ' . . on A rt th familv. Mv friend, why don't you finisli vonr house S Do vou know why? No, that you don't know. So I will tell you why. Why, you think you are enjoying life well enough and having about as good a time as most other peo ple, and as you are growing older you care less for these things, and so time passes and tne nouse is neglected and you conclude it is good enougn for me anyhow. Yes, and every one will agree with you that it is good enough for you. And anything else is plenty good for you and; all your like. You see, you never had a thought about your wife, who is silently going around doing as much or more work than you. You have not thought that by just a little more work the house couiu be nnisneu aim uuw n wumu xxx v" d hrino- hack the brisrht face and happy heart as she goes about arranging and fixing things in the finished house. . No, you never thought of the pleasure it would give those bright boys and girls for you to do. a little more work on the house and nnisn it. "VW liavA t bought only of self in the matter, and never dreamed of the pleasure one gets in making others happy, especially when the others are your 4 own wife and children. -My friend, just think over this matter now, and count up the cost and see how much it will take to finish the house. It only needs the latnes Vui on and -then plastering and painting, and it is done. You and the boys can do .nearly all this this summer and never miss the time irom xue fields A good plasterer can put the plaster all over the first time in one and a half days, and you and the boys can do the rest. Now what are you going to do about it? Are you going to finish it or go on having your wife to stick up paper and hang up sheets where xne iaxues auu plaster should be? Just xduik wimu r"1" and pleasure it will be to your family and friends, and go to woxk and nnisn menou 4-v, ntiier fellow and listen more Day icss liioxx wxw . , . f. than you talk, for when a man's listening he isn t xnaii b , flattering the fellow tening on uuuscia., , " who is. "Old Gorgon Graham."