BUYING AND SELLING. SPECIAL. c mm 0 !! y El Q J m i?i Q J ' . .... .. -?.- s r- -. . " - J J (1 LJ LV IV AY M ? t; r -v A Farm and Home Weekly For the Carolinas, Virginia, Georgia and Tennessee. FOUNDED, 1886, AT RALEIGH, N. C. Vol. XXVII. No. 42. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1912. Weekly : $1 a Year. MARKETING T -INDIVIDUm s At. . w . . ..'25 5 o . -.r? Jiaariiia.-.'J ' GOOD ROADS HELP YOU TO SELL. They help you both because the cost of transportation is small and because the market can be reached when you wish. HE problems of economi cal buying and profitable selling are prob lems of vital im portance , to the farmer, and prob lems to which he has just begun to give attention. .The buying prob lem is probably of less importance than that of sell ing, since the far mer should be a seller rather than a buyer. Indeed, so great is his loss from wrong meth ods of marketing his products and so tremendous the possible profits from better methods and a better system of distribution, that many farmers, surprised at the great possibilities along this line, are saying that this is now the greatest of all the farmer's problems. It heeds but a little thought to convince one that this statement is incorrect that the main tenance of soil fertility, which is the very basis of his ability to produce at all, must continue to be the most important subject the farmer has to deal with; but .this does not alter the fact that the farmers must learn to market to better ad vantage before they can secure a just reward for their labors. This issue is offered with the hope that the suggestions and experiences presented in it may be of some service to the progressive farmers of the South. We do not attempt to solve the problem, nor does anyone of our correspond ents. Outside of a few special articles from men who have given the subject special study, the issue is made up chiefly of actual exper iences from farm folks who have learned how to sell or to buy to better advantage. It will be noticed at once that the two features most stressed in these experience letters are, (1) the necessity for raising the quality of product to be sold, and (2) direct marketing of this product to the consumer, or as close approximation to this direct marketing as is practical. A third feature might also be noted: Practically all of these little success stories are of the marketing of what we regard as minor products. They tell how to handle butter and eggs and vege tables so as to get more than average prices; but they do not tell how to sell cotton, or corn, or other staple products to better advantage. The reason for this is plain enough. The producer cannot carry his cotton, or hisjpbacco, or his peanuts direct to the consumer, and A PROFIT-REDUCING ROAD. If it costs a dollar a bale more than it should to firet your cotton to town, isn't the loss as great to you as if the price went down that much ? AND CO-OPERATIVE so eliminate the middleman or get the rewards of extra quality. This' does not mean- however that the farmer is helpless in the marketing of these crops, Individually he may be, but there is no reason why he should act individually. The advantages of joining his strength with that of his fellow farmers so as to be better, able to hold his own when selling and buying have been long neg lected, but that is no reason for continuing to neg lect them. Co-operation, based on sound business principles and not on unsound sentiment, will en able the farmer to go into the world's marts, not as a man with a few bales of cotton or hogsheads of tobacco to dispose of , but. as one of the men who have for sale the year's crop of cotton or tobacco. -Not until they learn- this lesson of united effort need the farmers expect to sell to the greatest prof it; and they will learn, it, not by beginning at the back of the book of experience with big National organizations , but by beginning with the first page friendly co-op- eration with their nearest neighbors. FEATURES OF THIS ISSUE. A PAIR PRICE FOR COTTON The Mississippi Warehouse Plan 5 BUSINESS MARKETING OF FARM PRODUCTS Where Southern Farmers Have a Chance to Get Retter Prices . : 5 BUYING AND SELLING EXPERIENCES Letters From Readers 6 GETTING THE MONEY OUT OF VEGETABLES From the Home Gardener's and the Trucker's Point of View . . 11 and 17 NEIGHBORHOOD CO-OPERATION Seven Things Your Commu nity Could Do 12 OCTOBER IN THE GARDEN What Prof. Massey is Doing Now. . 1 POOR PRICES AND A POOR PRODUCT The Farmer Must Learn to Supply the Product the Consumer Wants . . . , 3 PROBLEMS OF THE APPLE GROWER How Cold-Storage and Co-operation Help 17 and 22 SELLING POULTRY AND EGGS Build Up a Direct Market 10 TOBACCO MARKETING By Prof. Mathewson and Mr. Slate 8 and 22 TWO MEN WHO SELL BUTTER How They Make Money at It. . 15 TWO WAYS OF SELLING A HOG A Comparison of Individual and Co-operative Effort 10