Newspapers / The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, … / April 22, 1922, edition 1 / Page 8
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(3) onty fnTTiTTTi IT Oil ooaccc: ! f '1 :;f flftaiiiti: FOR CropVForage and Soil 9 m No crop is more vaiuaDie ror rattening than Soia Beans. : iliey are the surest of .summer;, forage crops. ', Tiey addlheavifr to1 the lands suppljr of humus and nitrogen. - For soil improvement purposes, they have few; equals. -; Far tts ScstL we fecommerid boll veevil.? ;-Two of the best our Mammoth Yellow tkt varieties to grow for yield arid - which yields both Leans and for combating the boll weevil. ;forage.m great abundance: Grt ideal sure Scrgtca b an exceLt'fecdl : hay crop for the South. Three for dairy cows. Stands drouth ; or,, four cuttings a season, better than corn and is a bet- Yields 4 to 8 tons of forage ter yielder on poor land. ' 1 per, acre. s Rrst cutting" 45 : Ex Bell Ccttoa Our stocks .Wrifc.terWodft Seed CMea'z mown fVom the bt yielding fd Sp .fun 0 . Vr1" - v - . formation and current prices on crops in districts free from the all seed Mailed free; : T. Wi WOOD & SONS, 13 South Kth St, , RICHMOND, VA. Lt5lL5aS? CJSJLRJ CttXVS 4V ,v t5 1 VH:fcf ALLtlio PACTS Resardsn Larro Dairy Feed N Turn Ycur Deary Lcca Into Profits! ; Are you getticg sit the milk you can sell?. If so, wrry v poi cux aown ine cost ot that xamc?. Get nd cf the : low imxlucers. Feed LARRO to the good cows. If ' - r nave ten cows, sen on the two poorest ones. ; J The remaining eight will give as much milk on - r i-akku aa you are now cettm!. Yotrll save hair. . labor arid trouble, and xnske a profit instead cf ctsnd. ows.;lf I hi V on 'iy:',ra 1 . j L . ; w U Ration tor; if - 4 . ; LARRO gives wonderful results because It isia blend "V of the very, best obtainable ingredients. LARRO is suc culent, palatable and easily digested It keeps cows in - good physical condition. Home mixed feeds too often - .vary in quality end analysis. LARRO never does. ; v . '- Go to your dealer. Buy a supply of LARRO on our moaey4acfc uarantee plan. Atrial will convince you that LARRO pays the f est profits.- If yon dont know the name of a LARROdealer. THE LAilRO VE MILLET 31 COM. asq Denx Cci. Every bag of LARRO con tains the same high quality of ingredients, and is of , the same high feeding value. LARRO high qua!- ity Is never changed. It. never did, it does not now., and never wilt contain materials of law feeding value. It is always the same yesterday today, . tomorrow . ', - t- , - .1 Saw Mills fi ' -;t"'"i lor Tractors;-: W ik ,jr TURNER'S NEW PONY SAW MILL C. H: TURNER, STATESVILLE, N. C- ;t & 1 ptove; Laiise and Heater Ecdhbmv , i i .1 t - ' Uffly;f Y SSWtWCpa ;FOR STOVES' AND -RAirGES; when JKrnmtdl Our price-.Ve not only . --v Carci.lar-irat your dealer's oi.te.ys.dffct- fj TTT Heaaqaartert Tri-Stato Tobacco Asjocat:, 11-! M. x ITlHN a week's time, the direc- , Auo throunhoiit ths nia ! tors of the Tobacco, Growers-, befrun in all tLr rfx tu. Jz?. r " f : : Cooperative Association, elected have Cone their duty. Thev nZ to lead the 70,000. organized tobacco vthe growers to do theirsr r Wge tanners 01 tne v-aroanas ana 'Y vginis, :; j everv s ner -.t . successfuUy-completed the firstjphare-, SkTtSrt'SSitS of the most far-reachmg economic rev-;: other member;to the S2dJ? ion olutwn of -our trmend section. ; the Vsuccesa of the5 vSS-Srrfr' : More tlian 150 warehonse properties, rrrovers should "equal Tthat of tff giving ample facilities for handling he 4 Kentuckuns rho have sold 7S0mS majority of the tobacco cropare now, pounds of -their tobacco and are on signed overdo the Tobacco Growers road to permanent4 prosperity Cooperative Association. : These were ' -' secured in four daysftime at the meet-V: TLlt C AIHfa PatcfcHjw ing of warehousemen;: and directors , T Fl . held in Vireinia. North Carolina. nd - - ' - irCit It VN outh Carolina from April 5 .tbrough ' THE success cr "failure of a fieM nf pru - - .. j ',-r ,. - -, - - anua can oe largely determiVd The first conference was with the by its first year's treatment. warehousemen, of ' Virginia, at-South-.'. Be t::t C3 xsl!ulgcnt "with it asou Boston. This resulted in the sign-up of . can." Do net cut it until hlnnm hLw more j than 40 warehousemen and the to appear. If .veeds come up lettaem fining -of 23 : out of 35 .marketing- irrov. . Do net become dispnM.i - points in Virginia by the marketing as- :,.They may bids the alfalfa. That will sociation. ; k , -; , ;s - . ; be all right, .Do not cut it until it be Offering all . warehousemen in the ' sjns to blocrs. Then cut it leaving a : sttat an nnnortnnitv. tn" selT or lease - three-inch stubble. Do not cut it closer their properties, AarbnSapirotattoK.,tI,n.that T"2 "wiU kill the weeds and. ney for tlje Tobacca Growers. Cooper- will let the alfalfa grow, ative Association, and also, counsel for . At no tine cut your alfalfa too closed 14 successful cooperative, exchanges of hThree-inch stubble , will be a safe California, "stated: .The,wehouse-rule.; Do net try to cut it too often meli.are among the; most, essential .After the first year. I cut four times. xncnas orinc ianncr, anu as ucn wc - ine nrsr. Time - aoout May IU, and have drawn this. contract as j among' second, about June 20, the third, about friends and hot as though these propv August 1, and the fourth time about erties were being thrown on the mar- the middle of September. I leave the ; ket by forced sale." v f 4 ; . - . aftergrowth for winter protection. Horth Carolina V arenouserjea Tender . ?!n f LJ?3 jfiJ? 5- PSS..nS V 00 not pasture alfalfa nder any cir- Carolina warehousemen in x a- confer- r A ' r r- 1 w '"v , fnrp in Grrifihoro. anrf at a meetincr ..:Do not put m a large acreage until in Raleigh, which completely filled the v you have learned how to handle the chamber of the House of-Reoresenta- r0Pr- One or two acres will do to ex- tives in the capitol building. More thant Penmenl ' with. Do not become dis- Pn wftrerinmTnn ni North "ramfina. COUraged if VOU fail the first time V0U - have , signed contracts," tendering prb-i try "?If a! a : -Th.? cr0P " is' t0 v,al?aMe perues, wmcn . assure ine xnarKexing rsv Jat)vvp association a majority ; of desirable,- . B. PARKtK. .. points in orth Orolina. ' . - r - .l, A n ' Arf , n " ' Mr. Sapiro came directly from ther ? 13 ncwiy successful,. Kentucky ..Association" of-ANE eye cn the alfalfa' should be the burley tobaccoCgrowers and prophesied order cf the day now. This is the that the organized Kentucky . growersT season when alfalfa grows by jumps aiw would their the-c on. their desire to aidf the farmers inf; The stage of blooming isn't altogether . gaining "similar, economic, freedom for. a safe guide for the first cutting. Jkrly the growers of their state. ; in the year, and especially following the ; The directors leHt be knon'triat al- masons of general ahd. plenteous rains, , though they had offered in all fairness gf alfalfa plant is OKSfK to meet vith the. warehousemen from, secondary shoots, those 1 that are 0 every market in the .state, relative to Ajf se,c.?a? h the sale . or lease of their propertied, ; a 6lt aea.d f 5 Sff 5 they. were pleased that it would riot bfe?TOte"f- nd if ; you dont looj necessary to consider some of the high- SiSSt fS' priced properties in the congested cen- -fcjiV T?SS ave vour fit ters which they could do ell without, fe Fair Play aa Cooperation Shown at vsecond- " r flJ' ': ;.-ri--A:-norenceX l;T; -cv-I", The, alfalfa plant is usually so sawy.; spirit; of fair play and constructive tsiet m the cooperation between , tobacco growers,; season when soil water is riot so plenty and ,warehQusemen more;: strikingly the plant is riot growths the secondary exemplified than at; Florence, S; C, on .' shoots do not grow so rapidly, and there , April 8. .Like business men eager to4 is a tendency for the blooming to he a share in the performance of a big-.con-, little, more forward. - . ' , . v ' is the reasolJ experienced alftlg; pioneers m a.high adventure in uplift, .growers are being guided primarily by ,40, warehousemen of South' Carolina, the stage of the secondary shoots b de supported the movemeflt;with;enthusi.:;.ciding when to cut alfalfa. ;Of -wursj asm and .signed. marketing contracts;, weather frequently faterferes.1 Ifl thna; which assure the, cooperative "associa- , case, every man knows that all he can tion allfbut two markets in the state 7 do is to do. the best he can under tnc; which.jwere.of 'importance under, the -circumstances.; ' - '.K' Old system..; vy - " v . . What are secondary shoots? you a' Thus, under the skilful guidance of They -are- the little buds, close to their leaders the ownership, of the ma-: ground on the stcm'of the plant: -TL . jority of warehouses passes into the" vatch you can easily ; see, them. , possession; of a majority of the grow- Cow out to make the new stems. ersme men wno produce the vast iat rmu' . old s wca ui wi.xne TODacco crop receive 5 cents a pound more for nounds and is ready f Or tne nrst cunms tobacco than growers sellingxori almost before you know it And if you men market. He concffatulated : don't,, keen a sharp lookout it will oe 01 the Larr t irr?:-rxr,nrr-r-H'iit, i 1- . 11CT 5 --nrA ill- rjfPVlI UW"-. Virginia.; lm patifsj tftA . - v--r- r;.-ufacturcd, beginnms qf a-oeW praorproseriif';- u-h-r;:Sfli of 'Wtf.b,.-.rvtr; tiJri. f::;::s frcn crV i . :r3 relative to
The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 22, 1922, edition 1
8
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