Newspapers / The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, … / July 1, 1916, edition 1 / Page 20
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844 (20) M"ti(i Mi u in a ROCER1ES (Compare our prices and yon will readily gee how to save mon ey. If your ETocerles I are now costing you tlS montn yon can save nearly 150 a year. Our method of sell ing direct to consumer for cash makes possi ble such low prices. Order from this ad. the goods you need now and get our complete price . Qst, quoting money-saying prices on groceries seed and feed. - FIVE BIG HONEY-SAVINS Puritan Best Patent Flour . . . 18.15 per bbl. White Poppy, Good Patent Flour, 18.10 ," . . (All flour in cotton sacks) Fancy Roasted Coffee, 15 lbs, 15c; 50 tbl 15ft. Ib. Mackerel, In tubs, 100 count, , .... U,W Granulated Sugar, 2Mb. bag tl.00; 100 pounds loose, $7.65. Mixed Cakes, 85-lb, boxes, 8c per lb.; $3 per box HnsranUA You take no risk In buying from UUSXAClCe U8. We guarantee all goods to be pure, clean and wholesome, and allow you u return ax our expense any goods wmcn are tint aoflafanfnm. The best guar antee is that you wont want your money refunded Richmcnd Grain and CTREE Provision Co.. 212 S. Tenth St., RICHMOND, VA Write Today for our complete price-list quoting rock bottom pri ces on Groceries, Seed and Feed. - Start Now to Save Honey. DAVIS' 100 PURE PAINT easily leads in the quality race. DAVIS? PAINT can't be beaten Ask Yonr Dealer or Write THE D.B. DAVIS CO., BALTIMORE, Md. . For Information. "BUTTER FAT" Why sell your cream or butter at the low prices that usually prevail at this season of the year? Investi gate our Creamery proposition. Our output for high-class butter Is ex-" ceptionally good. We can handle .an unlimited quantity . the year round at the very - highest market prices for butter fat. Ship us now. We are sure you will find the returns are more satisfactory than any other Creamery you can ship to. Stop mak ing butter and ship us your , cream; it Is much more profitable. CAROLINA CREAMERY CO. Greensboro. Hickory. AshevHle. NORTH C A R O L I N A. lew Roofing prices still climbing. If you order now, we can pro tect you on price of celebrated FOX BRAND RUBBER ROOFING, toughest weather resister known. Anybody can lay Its strictly 1st srnwle; contains no tar; no seconds nor snort lengths; 1 ply 88c, 2 ply $1.20, 8 ply $1.60; 108 q. ft. per toll, nails and cement included; guaranteed by old . reliable house; circular and samples free. Our advice is to order now from this advertisement. Sr.'.ITH-COURTKEY C0n 821 LCarySt Rlchmond.Va. O (2) m YOU CAN HAVE The comfort and pleasure of cooling breexea ertui If you don't hare electricity in your home. Bun. on alcohol. No wires or springs to get out of order. Coats lea. than half a cent an hoar to oparste. Port able. Perfect construction thoroughly tested. Big 12-inch blades. Lasts lndefl- eiy. race delivered u. S. 1C CA lete Information on request. 9X0.3V J.E.Harrison,StateAgt.BrandiTilIefVa. Solved Threshes cowpeas and soy beans from the mown vines, wheat.nats. rva and rtarlAV. A perfect combination machine. Nothing lute it vthe machine I have been lookipsr for for 20 years," W. r. Kassey'It will meet every demand," H.A. Moreen, Director Tenn. Exp. Station. Booklet 8g free, fieier f ea & Bean Thresher Ce., Merrlatown, Tana. Dca't Throw Away This Paper Never throw away a copy of The Progressive Farmer. It you don't file your paper for future reference, then rive the. paper to some farmer, farm woman, or farm boy. . Soms Scuth CtrcIha llsteS r 1 -bolLweevil are makmg us do, ;and im- W'TT , - ' V j lcss I xannot- read the-signs of the HILE as a general thing; the oat timeS arigiit; the cotton states, are and.wheat crops are not as good ,entering on an era of prosperity such as last year, there will be no scarcity as we have scarcely dreamed of here of stock feed until corn and early toforC4 peas are maiurea , ; T enough to feed, Cotton prospects are not good. I and. many a f ami- .recently traveled across the state 90 ly has a year's' IC5 r IUU" f "u M"u,'!,uuu supply From every side come reports of good corn pros pects. Velvet beans have been planted on the looked good everywhere, but cotton was irregular and in many places grassy. Large areas were needing rain up to the 17th of June, and. stands were. bad. Since then almost daily rains are making it a very difficult mr. dabbs largest scale ever Job . clean out, 5 graJ?- Much of The Threshing ProUem known. Some have them in the cen ter of six foot corn rows and others between the hills of corn. Cow peas are being planted as the corn is being laid by. Some 'farmers are it is just upt with big stalks scattered about the fields. There is some good cotton, but very little that is regular. ' ; The cold in March killed the tobac- preparing to hog off both corn co plants out so badly that some and beans, while others will harvest farmers did hot set any and a great in the usual way. More nitro-culture many not as much as they planned is being used than ever. In spite of for. Then the dry weather of April the low price of 40-cents per acre at and May was against securing regtr- which it is supplied by ! the State De- lar stands. There are a few fields of partment of Agriculture, agents for very pretty tobaco. The farmers who private propagators of the germs tell have it are looking for good prices to me they are selling more than ever make up for last year. at $2 per acre or $!. in hundred- acre lots. My tests of nitro-culture have not been conclusive, but then I have On the (daymy letter came but tell ing of the progress, we are making in this state, the Darlington Press de grown cowpeas so extensively and voted the .entire paper to the cream continuously with heavy applications e7 t tt.P1.1 a.finsuhwmg of kainit and acid phosphate, and f.f what cooperation can do. That sec with very little ammoniated fertilizer tion is blessed with good markets for and almost no nitrate of soda,in my Vv" y -;" system of farming that my soil seems gton. The farmers have adopted the xl 1 u At Guernsey cow for their dairy herds, ference is not so noticeable. I have! the?f just ordered from the state and a pri-: ea ?9geiner wnr maice i xne leaoing vate- concern a small supply for carej- agricuuurai secuon oi me oouin. ful testing in alternate corn middles ;: . -i':, an .rui- with check middles not inoculated. xurai. society tnai nas not missea a . . meeting on tne second xuesaay in From statements made to me by a AuSust since its organization 75 years rarmer on tne.iignt sanoyjianas oe- . ... low Sumter and from experiments of '- ; my own, I suspect deep breaking is NORTH CAROLINA MARKETS yields Of peas as nitro-CUltureS. But ducts In the markets of North Carolina as I am open to conviction. I know that .JSSX SK&jSXS? corn, ii iaia Dy witn cowpeas in tne Town o O' S, -S 0 U d 3 S & I It s' eJ o 'S o w O w o i t 4) n . TJ middles when the corn is bunching to tassel, will;. stand more drbuti, and make more corn than without the peas. Also that soy beans and velvet beans planted at that time in the corn do not take the place of cowpeas. they grow too slowly when young, cJaJStte ' in fact, need to be cultivated at least Durham once to give them a living chance Gofdsoro116 with crab grass. But the cowpea will Greensboro ! take possession of the land and jJSerto'n smother the grass. Whether this is Maxton . . .! due to shading the soil, or to the corn jJewBern'." feeding directly on nitrogen gathered Newton . ... '. by the peas, I do not know, but I sus- faisSry ' pect both. There are varieties of scotrdNk".! peas that make very little vine to Jfoffoik" suauc 1.11c io.uu, auu my uuacivaiiuu ? tliat ttiA rnm rlnAC tint. maU cr Chicago, 111. -No. 2 white corn. 72075c " .V r" v (delivered in Raleigh, 87 90c); No. 2 yellow weir nor IS the Succeeding crop SO corn, 7479c (delivered In Raleigh, 89 good when these are planted as when 8'94c)- usA : No. 1 potatoes, per barrel: New York. 13.2S iuC liiul.61uig ;Muu ia pwuicu. a3.76! Pittabure. 14. 25(3 4 Kft- Wo ' There IS another fact about peas that $4.4.50; Cincinnati, $55.25; Cleveland', is well to bear in mind: . If planted to grow seed not more than one peck YorkWlild Tbasket) Pittsburgh, '(SX of Seed per acre should be Used eith- MO; '.Boston. $38.25; Washington, $2 2.ov; uincinnaii, tis.ioii. BUTTER, EGGS, AND POULTRTTRICES 12c 12c 12c 12c 12c 12c 12c 12c 13c 12c 12M.C 12c 12c 12 a i2yc $0.96 .95 .95 .90 .85 ..90 1.00 1.00 X00 .95 .90 .96 .92 .90 .91 .85 $0.51 .63 .53 -.53 t .50 .57 .55 ,60 .60 55 .65 .56 .50 $1.25 1.15 1.25 1.00 I 1.25 1.00 1.00 1.00 .95 1.25 1.00 1.25 1.25 $1.25 1.50 2.00 1.55 1.50 1.40 1.10 1.50 4 1.40 1. $4.75 8.25 4.50 3.25 S.00 3.00 4.50 4.00 8.50 ) 4.25 8.75 8.50 THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER PUIlE-OnED UVESTQCKjj POLAND-CHINAS Rcnlstcrcd W.? We have over one hundred -rood ni . to ship, write for prices and booklet? eady N. J. Dell, CalhnnTi au mm w g-m mJ - MR TrVlH t..l I . .. "TT.. PROLIFIC rtTmonroK POlD rowed 5pi tois sprinT Jhr: B.K. lUUMfSON, - GalllAn A.- -iv, ESSEX PUREBRED- Esaex. Berlrahipoa. Pa1oti4 rvs . wo" Jersey uame. 5 varieties Peas J. E. COULTER. CONNELLYS SPWNCS m h Town er in corn or rows alone. On some lands I have seen one bushel used to plant a double row of peas in each corn middle on five acres, arid the vines covered the entire land and corn stalks, and were loaded with peas. I have seen a half bushel or a bushel of seed used per acre, and if every pea could have been saved that ' ' much would not have been harvested.' - cJa?Stte '' One of the reasons for high-priced . Durham6..'.' ..' seed peas is that sowing too heavily a.y.e"evllle . 1 rr. GolasDoro . . no peas are made to be picked. The Greensboro, pea season is not yet over, and I trust l2ietU: ' these observations may help some Lumberton'! one.' The biggest yields of peas are JJaxton : ... made when planted June 20 to July 20, New Bern V July 1-5 being the best time that I Rewih v have found, when I want to make Sallsburv . . Scotld N'k.. Winston-S. S d U 0 a rt 4) h - n Ui 32c 35 c 32c a 35c seed. 32c 35c 31-32c 83c 33c . 35c 80c 35c - ft- 80c 32c 35c 30c 37c ...I 35c 20-21c 22c 23c 20-22C 20c f20c 20c 22c 20c 22c Poultry Per Pound w a mo n H 23c 25c 20c 20c 20c 22c 45c 25c 22c 18c25-30c 30c ...i 35c 30c 22-24c 18c 20-23C 25c ,20c 25c 18c 30-40C 15c 20c 21c 22c 12c 15-17C 10c - 10c 15c 14c 50c 15C 12c 40-46c 20c 12MsC 14c 50-60C 12c 13c Pnpphrpd ESSEX.POLAND cZZ ,TT1 "?!AS & DUROC PIGS uraiu isurow, service Doars, pork pies. An. bS.K ' SCy catUe- Satisfaction orSone? J. E. COULTER, Connelly Sprlngt, n. C. O. I. C SWINE IV. I. OWEN. O. I t'a Bred gUtsand ser. rice boars all fold, loo choice nlra now ready at $10 each, (is p? pair, no akin, or $37 per trio, pedl greed. The beet of breeding. Pontc 2. Bedford, Va. TAMWORTHS f "r:jf?i," ? A 9' American bred. awesi cuoinoD nera in me south. dutch rocis truck farm CoSarabla - - - South Carolina i uuiyi uo. ntld7 for gervice for Iale at reasonable prices, All well bred and none but rood individuals offered for sale. - ? . VESTVIEW STOCK FARM, D. J. LTESaOX, ISgr. R. 1. Whuton Salen, R. C. a o ABERDEEN-ANGUS Registered Angus Heifers V -; . ABOUT ONE YEAR OLD A FEW STRICTLY CHOICE At prices that ordinary ones sell for., A. L. FRENCH & SON, , CASCADE, VA., R. F. D. 2 1 Registered Angus Ball For Sale 20 head from 10 to 16 months of age.; Price for 10 days $125. Bred in the purple, properly fed and reared to insure use fullness. - Send order at once ind J yea can fee taken care of nicely. SIMON E. LANTZ, Congervllle.nl. Whal Artnuf- rnH nn ? ClVt wroll Jf ra Butter Chicago .(creamery), 25 80c . nat aD0" coon Un, well, if we ew York (extra) 29 80y.c; New Orleans give more attention to peas and live- (fancy creamery), 82V4c v stock to eat the peas, cotton will still Eggs Chicago (firsts), 20 24c:;. New he Ung. Jhat.is what war. and! the , TBSeS' U f'.Si ANGUS CATTLE-K.,US ready for lenrice by Trojan-Erica and Queen Mother tires. Abo an exceptionally handsome Pf RCHIRON STALLION, registered la P. 8. A., coming years old, weight 150 lbs. 10S1 PALI STOCK FARES. Jellcrsonton, Va. Abergeen-Anflas LrVS: 1 ass cows and heifers, good Indiridaals and well bred at moderate prices. Stock registered, f. a CLACK1VELU Fayette, Missouri SHORTHORNS FREE SnORTUOnN SERVICE ', The American Shorthorn Breeder;1 AsiociaUon tarttei prospecUve buyers to avail themselves of the i free r. vice offered by the Association's Extension Department It invites Shorthorn breeders to inform the Association from time to time of their salable stock. . f In the past twelve months, the Extension Department, has placed over S.000 Shorthorns in ,ection that wouia not nave oeen reacnea oy raaiviauw "SPd '0' Shorthorns Is ste me nexi numoer oi inn Dnwiiu - - -- ... wiH be jmbUshed July 1st. Keep this pubBeafloB on me. Address Amartoan Shorthorn Braadars Association! IS Daxtor far Av. Chloaoo SHEEP Have YOU any to Sell? If so, an ad the same size of this will pwduc88 results; as we are receiving inquiries every day asking us "Where Can I Buy hatpT" no hf,t XhttH nat! Money grows! THE PgOGBESSIVE FARMER. j HORSES AND MULES KENTUCKY SADDLE & DAIWESS -DOnSES-Sft'w SR horse yon want, we can supply you. tered stallions, brood mares, younai ' ttgg and heavy prize winners always ready. NJ. better, We warrant safe delivery ana guw antee all stock. . -idhi Put it up to us. JOur &keo Si' S. ALLEN S. CDKLEN, Ttmrr ,UKW'"'i " RENEW ALL YOUR SUBSCRIPT019 TUROUGII US lftdly Our clubs save you money. We will f make a special club on any papers yu wish. ; . it's ftU One letter, one money order ana " Attended to. May we serve you? V THE PROGRESSIVE FAlM sv t
The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1916, edition 1
20
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