NEXT WEEK FARM MANAGEMENT SPECIAL - 'S " EASRN EDITION . i A Farmed Home Weekly for The Garolinas, Virginia, Georgia, and Florida. FOUNDED 1886, AT RALEIGH, N. C Vol. XXXII. No. 36. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1917 $1 a Year; 5c a Copy Detcriiiie Mow fiat You Will Save Some Eflowey Tlis Fai MTHE wealth-producing power of the rural South," says Prof. E. C. Branson, "is enormous, but its wealth-holding power is feeble. Our great problem is not only to produce wealth but to retain it. " Seriously as our farmers should consider this statement at any crop marketing season, it now deserves tenfold greater emphasis than ence. Don't let any slick-tongued traveling agent, any wily clerk, any over-persuading merchant, inveigle you into spending this money. Fool it away on something you might get along without and you will lament too late that you have swapped your birthright for a mess of pottage. Don't do it. Put the money in a savings bank and keep it - .... H Avv A. 4 Jf-v 1 ri a, HAYING TIME SCENE ON FARM OF. JA9. BELL.WOOD, BELLWOOD, VIRGINIA usual. During the next few weeks hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars will be paid out to the Southern farmer for 'the garnered largess of the fruitful year." The question is how many hundred millions he will keep for himself and his family. The question is whether he is going to save or will again exemplify Dr. Seaman A. Knapp's saying that the Southern man "seems to have a weakness for letting 'money slip through his fingers." We have made this appeal once before on this page, but " the opportunity this year is so remarkable, so unusual so un precedented, that we cannot refrain from making it again. ; Right now at the vir tual beginning of the crop-selling season we want every Southern farm er to register a vow before Heaven that he is going to save some money that he is going to make at least a start toward thrift and independence. . First of all let us say a word to the man who has been a slave of the crop lien and "time prices." For you, at least, the year of jubilee Vhas come. For ypu, at last, there is an emancipation proclama tion. Resolve now that you aregoing to put aside enough money so that you can pay cash for your supplies next year. Don't neglect'this nest-egg of independ- DON'T FAIL TO READ- Winners jnOur 1916 Boys ComClub Contest 6 Soil Bacteria and Their Relation to Soil Fer- tility . : . . ... . . .( . . '. . V . 7 How to Ship Hogs .... ... . ' 8 More Glimpses of South Carolina Progress . 9 Make the Acquaintance of Your Local Bank er . . . . . . . .. . 10 Twenty-five Cents Is a Fair Price for Cotton 10 My Son Has Gone to the War; What Is to Be Gained By It? ' Tl Now Is the Time to Install Improvements . . 14 Poultry Notes for September . . ' . . . . 17 Working With Other Folks: Suggestions for September . ."18 there or else, put it in a horse or implements that will both enable you to make a bigger crop next year and will constitute security on which you can borrow at 6 to 8 per cent interest instead of paying 40 to 80 per cent a year in the form of ''time prices." This year at least, with high prices for all we sell and a live-at-home policy demanded by every circumstance we ought to bury the. "crop , lien and time-prices system" so deep that even Gabriel's trumpet will not revive it. Then there is the. farmer who has been running himself but owns no land. This is his chance to become a home owner. Let him either buy land now or put enough aside to make sure that he will at least soon sit under his own vine and fig tree. " And then, the more well-to-do farm owner: there is tEe call for pure-bred livestock; for better farm machinery and equipment; for a better residence and bet ter barns perhaps; and at least for "paint, lights and . waterworks" a subject on which we shall have more to say next month. Let's save for alV these things and so make 1917 memorable as "the year that brought freedom" to tens of thousands of farmers from the Potomac to the Rio Grande. . " ..