158 (6) Mondyrmdking Machinery LH Used t ORROWED MONEY TO BUY HIS FIRST B1PROVED BIACIIINERY - -..- - . . - - . -. ". . r. - - I, Third Prize Letter ; I N .THE early, spring of 19 10 I , bought a disk plow, ; and it pays 'for itself over and over -again every year. ; In fall breaking I use it alto gether. -" It breaks the land deeper And more- thoroughly than other plows, - and turns all the rubbish ""completely- under.' With three" mules -1" can break my land 12 inches deep. : and am .now growing 35-or 40 bush- ' nip rnoGiiLssivi: fakmlu mention that it is goo&'also for sav ing soy beans for, seed. i ' f , I also own- a- double-row corn planter in cooperation with others. . , . "i "' V Vt w i'. w. ' - r..i One man. with tbis planter can easily, improved implements at once start now Machinery Dispenses With the plant 15 acres a day in rowsand'of out with a few and gradually in-... . Hired Man . course . it takes a Uttie more, time crease, or form a club with four, or " . wnen checking the corn - v ; nve good neighbors and buy together T? IRST in mind with' me is the ma- T A& 1 ridinK cul. Then instead of asking the merchants V nure spreader. because, of ; the fiAto? -btf ul 1 5dS ut-b to credit you. you will soon be ask- splendid work that it lMolng;for:me,i.J -0 " J ". " " " " 1 " " : -fAA mntinh T liaira-fTiA mnnhUA t.t. intr nf mnniirA nvor mv fllrU na fast uiui uu 'i;Haio w vuw?i. as made. '.- ' ; - V I believe in handling only once, and spread each week if possible, be-' -- m 11 ; 1 L. J . J. - . . cause oi me saving in lauor auu gei- A Time and Step-saving Fertilizer tIng ful1 value of the manure. I also V ... ' - j K. - , , - believe in light applications on more. ; , . , Llixer ana Distributor :. -ground and fields covered of tener.(I some money." Make a ' start - with good tools and you will never regret it v- :' E. M. SLEDGE, v Goldonna, La. - ' O ' - : : def perfect control; " The man or boy is 'comfortably seated while doing as much or more 'work in i a day than two men with the single cultivators! and doing it better. I can cultivate from seven to ten acres a day and be clean, and fresh at 6; 00 p. m. - V X . fVl A 1 . " " ... rels Of corn where I formerly grew 15. fPHE . piece of machmery -which put fourOns per acre.) v A good ma- ' jasil 1 wm mention my gasoline I also'have a two-horse mold-board 1 helped most to sate labor and ex- nure spreadermakes, a fellow feel f 6 f;J!U eJ 5 a nome-maae 'Plow, - but it is; not half -so satisfac- ; pense for me last year was a fertilizer like making more manure, then get- J. Which -makes it easily portable, r u 4 r-.- 4 , I use this engine with a small erain lory ail me way- rounu as my aiSK. wuwumao ucou paieuieu. uv img uiuic guuu vuwa tu iceu iuur ie- - - , . ...... J , - . . . ' . . . : . . , - senn.rat.nr unil thrpsh mv nwn wlifint a Mr. uroaie ana is now Deine manu- , cumes 10 mase more manure. Ana - .. " ':::W!5::::i;iS-i:$fe::::4:: ' r v ; vk r. 4t "kl s J 1 T V J - A V U44w M - - . , XT . After getting my "plow I saw how '? M B"d1? is nbw, being manu hnfliv T Wppflprf rtiQt harrnw anil laciureu in mis iown. i am manage .purchased one lmmediatelyi I vhad to borrow money to , get both of these' ; "implements but am proud to" say tnat at the end of the first year I . paid myV debt and 1 had something r left .: that--i,would not have had It I thad . not "used these tools : and now I can :; pay cashfoYothers. - The next year after v getting my disk plow I bought a one-row riding cultivator. This is a great labor - saver, and just after, a rain in late . spring - and- early - summer -you can stir your soil so fast that very little moisture ' can ' escape before you .form- a dust mulch wer your whole field. At the same time you are get- .ting, ahead of, the grass land weeds. I cultivate half as. much land again now as before . getting my cultivator and at the same time have increased my yield per acre.. - . . - .The next spring after getting- my cultivator I got' a mowing-machine and xhay. rake, and - during the sum mer I saved so, much hay that. I could .not store, it i loose, so I was forced to -r get a, press' or lose the hay. .-. I ; sold .enough hay that winter to pay for , my -press, and last-, fall I pressed . enough hay , for my neighbors to pay ,for my mower. I. do not expect to . sell anyi more hay, . but ano( going, to feed it on my tarm and sell livestock. ; rSince .getting my hayl saving imple ments I 'have realized how cheaply cattle. can be wintered and-I am in- ucreasing my head as rapidly as pos sible. 4 , t . '; ,r;r Last spring , I added , a binder to my, list. si Tnis , was . somewnat ;; ex gumes to make more manure. And manager the cows pay for; the trouble. : of two large farms, and used some- One man can spread 10 to 15 tons thing like 300 tons of fertilizer this of manure a day with a good spread- HOW DO YOU RATE YOUR LABOR? Ilii " 1 3SgMsf& ; THE WAY THEY DO OUT WE&T. ' ' L 4 1 w VND yet, in spite of these improved implements and machines, there -y re thousands of ; farmers who do not own a single machine of any s kind that requires the power of two or. more horses to operate it i These farmers, instead of utilizing the muscular power of dumb animals to do two-thirds or three-fourths of the hard work on their farms; are them- selves, or by their hired laborers, doing half the work. R: J. Redding. oats, peas or beans very successfully and with ; much ; saving of outside 'i labor and cash I pull it to the; wood pile and saw tip 1 2 to 1 4 : cords - of wood, a - day. - This output can i be profitably used at times,- . sawing ' . wood for neighbors. This- same en gine turns a. feed mill crushing corn and cob meal or any: other - feed for-, my cows,' saving -toll and going Ho ' mill; and last, but not least, it pumps; fresh water in my pneumatic tank each day while I feed, supplying fresh" water to the kitchen, bath room and barn which means untold comfort to the wife, not saying any thing about the stock. This is front 4 actual experience, - - v Nohead, Va. H. L. MARCHANT. pensive, but. I could not afford tQ. use saying. in cost, I bought all unmixed - spreading as thinly as four tons ber an old cradle to cut .my oats. "Last fall ? nearly , all' of my neighbors planted large ; fields of oats, and 1 will get .all; the cutting I -can do when they are ready, for harvest. At cfirst I was a little blue over the pur chase but; now I : feel that I have ; helped the . community, by encourag ing -the farmers to grow more oats. goods and find that with this machine .acre.' This , machine saves money-as fertilizer can "be mixed" exceedingly wejl as labor. v well and at no additional cost. The ' have A utag sulky plow just like machine, is an, octagon-shaped .box, the, cut you see on the front page of uum oi wooa ana neia logetner wittt-The Progressive Farmer, which savingdevices. uuu uuus. n win uoiuraDoui a ion maKAS' TRA ninw nv a ni i. . . .... . . - , r j.w .t, iita.ou.ic Hi- OI fertilizer and is amounted on two stead of . a hard and dirty job. A wheels. One of these, wheels is free, ; 10-year-old boy can' do perfect work ttuo.wiug ior iurnmg snarp corners, ; witn tnis plow and find sport in the Threes Machines That Do the Work NEARLY v every year we add -some labor-sating implement . or de- vice to the' home, both for field and house, but: I will only mention three r' that have been of special value to us. Four years ago we . bought a pea - thresher, v as we- had. had much dif- ; Acuity in saving our pea crop by beating the peas from the hulls by hand. We . raise a great many peas every year, and the task 0 separat-l lng them from the hulls was one to. b5 dreaded. Now,when the" peas are " gathered, . they are, run through the thresher in a short time and every pea comes from , the hulls clean and .no -bits of hulls are left in, the threshed peas. , . They are stored away in boxes or barrels to be used, sold or fed to stock and poultry as V we. need themiV The thresher is not only a labor saver, hut a .money saver as well,since iio peas are lost as tfiey were by the old method of beating them out by hand. ; :t But of all the labor anH wnrW " L like the incubator . - -- .o w-w ..w.,..uo t u.uue u V , vuiuwb, , mm iuib puw ana una sport in the confldenc With, this-machine and three horses and the other is attached to the box, work . However, if you have eood nnfirntnV vl can easily cut; 10 or. 12 acres a day. . ;I expect to make this. machine -pay for itself and .then have it left; -I' am nowplannlng to get a gaso line , engine. - I , expect to . get one large enough to run :any machine best. Fr years I was afraid to tuy dn incubator because I hadn't much faith in themnor did I have -much confidence In myself as a HiiABfni One 4 spring Jhe mites making the box revolve with'every teams, would turn of the wheel. This .boxhas plow and make one man equal two ' pouTtr flutes inside which-hold the. fertilizer : "It is well to plan to ha Tsomeflll ' 2? until it almost reaches the top of the. and wlnTer Pl6whto do in Tdero Wyf 'kgg box. and then droos it all toeethpr ftt. avofH ihi JLll .?,r ? -m.a?nIn 1 watched the first setting tne Dottom. As this is a contimimift mnoarva mniaf.i. that ..I neer4. . With, the engine am' process It takes only a short distance seed bed from good deep plowine -going-.to 'get- a; pump, ' feed grinder to thoroughly mix the fertilizer.' "I use a 10-foot spike-tooth harrow and pea thresher. rThen I expect to; Inasmuch -as the fertilizer has to ; which be .krte4--totliefleld.V-wli---W,iriii-rfiik " ;ui, ana tnis i mixed or; unmid'I "tola -that by "r"'"" !ll!ra, .se,flderice.T Once, -build a silo and get . an ensilage "cut ter. I will then be ready to do away . -withiny; old ;hay press, and get one to be run by my engine. In another . year L will be. ready for real stock , wun rear and trembling, . and with the instructions that came with ;the incubator ' ever under my 'noseor eyes," rather; ' From the first 50 eggs X KOI 4 6 CnlCkfL and tTifa trotra wa ... ..7 9 Q V V AUW hauling to field and mixing at v the same; time there is no additional ex pense added; while there is a largo thefirst working of my corn with fin ti1compan3 The disk-liarrow is a L ?LUL 3?. ?ubarv . Wen iarming, ana men py aeep breaking, saving in buying the' unmixed goods, most farms in nrenarlnc a 7. -V a "ermometer it reg- , thorough cultivation and .barnyard ThereMs an opening on one side" ot '-bed. A ?oy can Xive U iwt a ISJi ' 1 iF?i :1 L - ' 'u Mfint -manure P am going to try to have tHe box to put in and let out the fer- a a manMne , tho best :tarm in rthe whole: ;.com-; tflizer, and there is nothing about the 12-foot cut -buid be?& to cool thoroughly munity. , - machine to wear out or get out of fix. team is good "er the before relighting . the . lamp. . The For three years I farmed with the The fertilizer is simply poured into Kext I'll mentim, h Artu m-A':'.? common; - unimproved tools; and; the opening when it Is at the topand low farmers, if there T are L IH nT bcom ited. over trifles. . : barelymade expenses, anoI honestly; let out at the same opening when it who do not know therfl Instep oj drawing water' tor "the believe that if I had notborrowed is at the bottom. - . 'money Ho, K first gold Imple- -i The simplicity T of the machine you will in tZJJ? P.umP d by means of iron pip- : i-;b.ecom ter result, with Tesi 3 : LI..fr?m:: the !!o a I. . . ; . . "' , ' : we : pasture; even a . . . . small child can-toiihthtowtiro .j . . m o - wir UD WSk couraged,.that I would have Vaunted of buying unmixed fertilizers against some; more promising profession; ; mixed fertilizers- has made - it es :but ;wlth good implements thSre . is specially valuable' 'to us. V -no profession like rf arming. .'; ; J. B. DODSON, i-vAA.ywu ru ooie to,puy.4set?rflI Aberdeen, N. 0. : t w tiji , . ' small child can ptihip the 'water for others, but of course we all know the ii r fun toidd 22- Swii??.:1! cunt oniy f iu ' - w nil iiuuw iue uecefsity - ot this machine, where wheat or oaU are raised. I might Pelitanj La.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view