Newspapers / The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, … / May 1, 1915, edition 1 / Page 8
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fit M .';.v' i .f;'. If-!, ft" r V ', 1 : 'I i , ; , ii .it- '! . !4 i -: THE P.10CSESSIVE 1 - - Eddie Collins Drinks considers it the premier; all-' round wholesome v ttoret-quencher for athletes. This comes well irom one or. wnom vomisRey saia, aiicr pay my $50,000 for to- ' I secured shim forthe White Sox fans because I believe he swill prove that he ,fe the greatest exponent of quick thinking and the brainiest player in " . j. the game;' -? v--: . ' Demand the genuine and avoid disappointment 1."'':' The Coca-Cola Cor .. Cotton iced meal in protein and fat combined ia five times as valuable as ; com, and in pfotein alone, six times as valuable as corn. While too rich to be fed by itself, when combined with corn in the proportion of about two parts corn and one part cotton seed meal, gives a ration which, with ordinary grazing,' almost exactly nus ue scicnunc requirements tor a Daiancea nog leea. - . ; i ... ; All hogs thrive on it, from the tiniest feed on earth. It is not only the best and grunter to the lord of the herd. For piggy i cheapest feed, but an efficient prophylac ot suckling sows, it is especially valuable, - tic, and vhogs : fed on , it seem immune giving both beforehand after farrowing, a from the ills that hogs are heir to. V - growth and vigor attainable with no other . . It's the cheapest protein you can use, FARlm : AND: DAIRY make fen Livestock' Suggestions for May. the pigs become old enough to miTH the cattle on pasture, atter should bt ready in i W a 'long, hard winter,' the cattle tember; - gUst and Sep. raiser' experiences a feeling of relief. ..: If trie ' pigs, are starved If the cattle have not been turned oa .." the:will hive to h, ' the pasture too early and there -is . through - the winter, which win??- ample acreage to furnish an abund- considefable feed: It win k take ance of feed throughout the : season v; economical 'tb givehemtW a comfortable feeling U L justified But now Qvide 5 many a man who has been delighted fall and save carrying hem f th? with the rapid gains of early summer, lhe wjnter., luem trough when'moisture is generally abunaani . ; r yil - and pastures luxuriant, has been sad- ea1:5' ' tL -ly disappointed; later in the' onlonct every week when dry shorf pastures, ticks .and W ? flies destroyed the,gains made-earlier ? w.f in the season. " ' Wdntltwl H 1 - 1 I I I t I I 1 Frco Boole on FcDdinc It doesn't pay to feed protein that It costing fou from Sc to ISc per pound, when the protein in cotton seed meal coed yon lett than Jc Yet thousand Tret, mUliona of dollar are wasted bf teeauK grain wnen cotton teed meal u cheaper and better. A ton of cotton teed meal met f 55.40 worth of other feed. Write today for our big trainable book on feeding giving the best and most economical formulai for cattle, bortea, bogs, sheep and poultry. PUDUplTY DUREAU Inter-State Cottcn Sec j Crushers' Rss'n CC3 Main Stt ' Dallas Texas A REAL REFRIGERATOR MILK ,CAN alniostcertainly pay. , .. i - " V - .'.V. . IF III Cattle on good pastures seldom givfc " - - v " 1U large profits for grains or coricen- M ein.S '. the pasture crops trates fed. - If, however, the dairy cow W tick-inf ested cattle means will pay for a liberal allowance! taking, less f or your, feed. If you re grain, with a profitable increase in'- gard jt as, good business to sell your milk; she should get the grain feed, grass on. the- best market, you will A'dairy cow ' giving less than 30 ot Jeed to ticks. Here is a chance pounds of milk a day, if on good pal- , for- many farmers to put into effecf ture, is not likely to give profitable some.of the better marketing" they Returns on'any concentrates general- talk so-much about. We have knowa ly available in the South, exceptor- manra-farmer, to -become much ex-' tonseed meal. As much as five pounds cited- abouttiie need of better mar. a day may be safely fed when the cow ts for;.s products, who marketed is on pasture, if she will pay a profit ;nui'ipass through ticks and four-cent -over and above its cost by an increas- cattle,, instead of through six-cent ed flow, of milk. - . - ' "-ca"fr J better fS v none more than for our grass. Ticks If the pastures are heavily stocked, xan(i scrub cattle furnish a poor mar- feed is likely to become scarce when fcet for'feed, but the furnishing ofan the usual dry weather of August and improved market is within the reach September arrives. Underi such con- of"ahylfarmerrho'will"use''a'i) " ditions it may pay to r fee d three or bred sire and kill the ticks. -.." r.' four pounds of cracked coV .seed ; :: .: 7 ' caWea day W , ' ' -t . " ' 41 to be sold this season. By this means , ?re - not going to Overlook thTFfatfeiraiKe be fit for market the latter part- ot . July, when cattle are scarce on the - smg something on this r subject ia market and prices good, thus reducing . thesevSuggesti ; ;ns. some time in the the number of cattle to be grazed . past, t are ju going to keep down when the pastures are yielding least, the non-pasture plants m the pasture ,v this .season?; That is the question. ; : ; Just :Vov'4onVsVwe -see weeds, brieri, There is nothing better than a gdod .'and brush growing in the pastures,1 liberal acreage of sorghum to help wjiere grass: bought 40 grow, we are out or supplement the dry, short pas- going to keery "harming" on this sub tures, which are almost certain to jecti All we ask is that, those who ' come; laier m me season. 11 it is noi don t believe it pays to Keep.aowa needed for soiling feeding', when the. non-pasture plants, just ask the green it makes good silage or splen- opinion of -the: cattle. They are no did dry roughage for late fall or win- theorists and. they, won't know that v ter feeding. The sweet sorghums are v a theorist insists that it pays to keep not appreciated or used'as largely as. down the weeds and briers; so if you they should be in the humid South. As mow Half the pasture they will give the non-saccharine' sorghums, milo, ybu a genuinely practical opinion on kaffir, feterita, etc.; are more valuable,; the subject. Any man who is not so because more certain and productive blind that he won't see, can under than corn in the dry sections of the stand the answer the, cattle; will give Southwest, so will the sweet sor- to this question. We insist the cattle ghiims usually produce more feed are not theorists, even if we are, and than corn on the lands of those parts that they ought to know where the of the South -where the rainfall is get the most feed. O, yes, it looks more abundant. hHr frt hnf that is not the reason . V 7 ; atHe cattle like to graze bnthemowejl. Corn will be scarce and high-priced part of the pasture. ' in the spring, of 1916, as it is .now; ' -"k fe-X . ' : Much of it will be fed to hoes this : ' t. l.i,. aAU and a breed- - - v " iwm, Yiint me ucAi spring the work stock will have their allow ance cut or corn will have to be bought at a high price. A bushel of corn saved is one made, and the time to both make and save it is now. Make the corn by planting a large area of the best land and save .it by piantine sov beans: ntanue A "v"' . .!e.u tio s peas and velvet JZ7 Z:: ecessary tor a nog, -; . , fatten the hogs.iaih :An of 7 sweet potatoes : or artichokes to bal- C cleaned out oc; .; ing: place for disease that the j seem tor enjoy on a hot day, or .is u Wapr fhat attracts them? . NpTt PEClAtCOVtW-. NOTf FELT v (NOTE CORK INSULATION KSefr'5 Note the heavy insulation between the .imww-. A vj niiiuiaikU V,J V 1.1 ilia 111 l(J neck on th principle of a ball-and-socket joint and locked by a half-turn Into a cleat device. Double protection against loss of refrigeration or the admis sion of dust or germs is secured by our paraffined Paper cap set into a groove in the neck about one men below the bottom of the cover. The only air tight, dust proof milk can in the country. - s .r:,rt Sfarges Refrigerator Milk Can BoffiWklW "turdyenonghtoontlartSplato "Th CariB of Guarantttd Capacity" ' oona tor ciuuog no, u Srnrorpt ftr Rnm Mf Pa 608 So. s. Chicago: ill! long as we like hog meat, vr? ham and bacon, as much as v w . . j. x jif that a nog we are not, going w. U4" v .Tyi wc arc not, guius . . doesn't like clean : water better . tn filth. Water, except to drink, is j lit- casi ance the soy beans and peanuts will still 'further save the corn. If corn is to be fed the hogs, why not plant the corn and peanuts or tne corn and the soy beans together : :o wait until 1 could get the and allow the hogs to gather both?vimViitSm"Sfli to It will ho Mima.. lne renewal. I never miss an w witn pnrn nfiJ ii. i i . help It. .'I vat tnat can uc , onally f 1 00 muui - it we have- known men wno too much trouble to take a bam. . 1 never a up .. trson AO close "J' corn and feeding it alone in dry fbTi-ii IxiVW lot ... - r. follow-you.- This I do Jthem hear iMj ' , f - grand .paper, and then et them x d -t w nfid as fast as P0SS'ul.0: the lea I " ' for us to get gre vu .,..infnn. It may not pay to push the growth Sit SJS'ind'fonow our of the young pigs now being weaned,- trying to do us good.-i. o- - .v... inuwu ui iiiKu-priceu iceas. P.,- Houston, Dut it will probably pay to feed a little. Wffpr corn and tankage, or rice polish and -for ii,?! Tr. ;tankage, or other grain feeds, until KonKa - .
The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 1, 1915, edition 1
8
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