V"; '"V ,-rv 4 i , V 1 - - y y i y C v J,-.'- r3- V.''J-'iV-r- .... r-v . - 1 11 4 A PLACING THE YEAR'S yOlUC-Pages 3 and 4. k ' "V- - i "J "n ! v r r: 1 .1 'VI' 1 jSBMli H A Farm arid Hom Weeklyfor the Garolinas: Vir&miaj . r " FOUNDED 1886r AT iRALEIGH; N. G. VoliSXVIL N6: SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1912. weeiuy : i a xear. 7 - For Better Farmm and Greater Fro ress! T"tr,TE have thought and talked so much about the low price of JvJ cbtt6n that there :is danger that some. of us. may have con- V Y T eluded that the year. 1912 ' finds Southern farmers in bad shape and that it will be necessary to wait another year for many of the things we had planned to mm 5 m & 1 P ':'; "':'. get and do. Really, there is no good reason; for any such idea : ; as this. It as hard,, of course, that the big cotton crop of 1911 Vi should bring more than $100, ; 000,000 less than the much smalU er-crop of 19101)6 hart! ahdf r unfair,- for the drop in price . has been out of- all proportion ' ito the; increased itilthsijeelofvl y the cropr but : still it;is well'to It y: remember : thatiexceptinmic V4 iwonaenuiiyproiwatuecrxc IMscro ivfen if cesxiontinuas theyl Kitafeti lf we farmers of the South? - Ihad farmed "wej; shouldr:last i ityriMMisMbur owii C:; :.i vNfn' V b'ri rife' m aq i '. i TVf ! Q i'-i Q n ifl mules;-it we had produced me ? ; poultry an4 itrucfe;n - prodticts to Supply our ntraie Sytownseve l thbuMithecbttoH crop had been as lai"ge iis; if never have igorie so low; , we nauor; inpug r -i -r: O A TCT7 DPTTPD t tVWGTAPtri.TUTCt VI? A T i cau w needed the cbttbhim6riey;td pay for things we should have , vprbuced:a : : tUust ibout the beM thing do without these things means to bring on again,5 sooner or later, another year like the one just passed; while to put our farming on a solid basis, by a rational system of diversification and general farming, means to make ourselves so thoroughly independent that we shall never . again have to place pur dependence in a single crop and never i again be unable to fight effectively in the markets of the world for a" ' fair price for the fruit of our labors. . ; . : J . ' "This, then, is the first message which The Progressive Farmer would' B bring to the cotton growers in this good year 1912: Things are not just '5 ras we would like them, but they are by no means as bad as some of us ; y" have led ourselves to believe, and it is - y , our duty to prevent any repetition - : of the past yearrs experience. It is our if y ; i duty because we can do it; biitf yy . tcan dp it . only by good; farpiirigf y 'I by . the raising, ot- livestock and v : the growing of food and feed, crops. - i?sUi ijy;u siuuy 01 more economical t&mMm crop. : prpaucuon, y py jnore laoor iissavinMacn more, horse- yyyfc "5s .. '' '::j''s-- L 4 fe I y" 1 li-,i"t'rf'P ftp'- 1 !W i I i jO. 1 I l IV, Bhiitake:f ba; liMmlde itSwei : .should be.Cwiser and khow-enoiigh - - . not - to - make it rasrain. And.it will: be l i " uiv pamv v i AO la IMS ; jl Ul ; a.li y illttlV IU 7: :f'aude(thaie aiuu. iiiswviK' less carenju ,0 !v, to; work, with .Uesis effectivetbbls.-: cyear is to fix clearly in our mind the facts as they are, and then prepare tp act upon them. We ma(Je a big cotton crop and h it for, less than it was worth,' and naturally this apes not mate us. ieei ; as well as we mighty but there is no use for us to conclude that we are d'all down and but"- that 'hard times" are due. or anything of that sort, y yThe facts and figures are against any such conclusions. The South is y still in fairly good shape,varid we are still able to go right ahead on the fS.-5SV OUU 1C58 1J, meiC auy-1 CUdUll ,1U1 US IU vuuviuvic iuai iiu w uuv "V ;7. Vyear tb prepare for and to do better farmings No more baseless con- k V1U51UU WUIU DC aillVCtt year's vork prbyed disappointing simply- because we refused to im bfbve our methods. We knew that a big cottoii crop raised at the y lxehs bl pthersl - went nthdand: sfflf iced other" crois and btlier : tespfciarm wont lo ine couoj ci;op y iu suwi, wc iwh.iu& y us " . i .We mav have less mohev tbsoend, but we have even greater reaspns :to:itterin saYiiigimplements do hpttpf farming. Our rieeds fbrvbrbfirress are now irreater than : ever ana iiisieau Miir u"us.wv "uai. wac "v" j'll,u. "'r.v - y?because o( theHlbwprice bfotlpn in;.Jiacu ?wiuie it may. necessary fi ttb : restrict hisjixpeMtures l;ihi sbme: feyiHbEreadety.c4n; i lesseny his! exbenditurefef br ?thbse5 fliSiSliMSiiii thinMhicfc.helbMm terminaxion anu energy. iu iai,;wc,vw7vWM yj";i"c wr,,iw;(uiv cotton makes iiiabf'jiecemflat wstfengthen ourselves in'bther ; linesvf This is t to ecciire the bettcry livcclbd rclv ?:y 1 ?rt 'crops"at the lct crpcr.ee and the worst of rM ' V. iy A ONE-HORSE FARMER EXP ERIEXCEAiiother Progressivie - f yryy ,xnv' :;dly:y BIGCORN'-IELlidFSOra ; aiwi w uiiv v tiA u Ait x -r-irpi. Massey 's - suggestions ; tor;l; . : f HARROWlNGS--A New Department with a 8peciarMissionfe-;.:;:S : 7 jtiu w. w .vuiitu J5miiAx ax iiuAiJii- iieinoas. vnr ? eaacrs ; iiave .; ; yW;STOl?TILE- HOW TO READ AND iWHAT-Southern Farm Papers" Arc STBmOFiEDEN---iWh ;fJiAW TALKS FOR FAR C I PUTV TnEfFAJlM ON- Al BUSINESS KA f kV!'More Land" Than Vbur C. -:t"lv;n "i START YOUR. INCUR ATOH I,C dlins It'. . ; . . .V . THE HORCT1 rc v;:iat.c: y-V" " v,. r;,y rcia?an'f c 1 ' " t:.L