THE POLK COUHTY ITEV7S, SALUDA, II. C. PASTURES NEEDED FOR PROFITABLE STOCK LIVE-STOCK-FRUIT-DAIRYIuG-GAnDEIIIUQ -FIELD CROPS-SIl OS-CIGS FAR M AND FIELD New Wrinkles Making the Farmers Business Profitable In Progressive Agriculture . x ATI f... ' Or. fhzii ft. TOLD IN fiN INTERESTING MAKHER EXPRESSLY FOR OUR READEHS FEED FOR THE DRAFT FOAlS WINTER FEED FOR THE COWS Youngster Makes One-Half His Mature Important for Dairyman to Provide an Abundance of Different Feeds to Keep Up Milk Flow. , 1 1 1 CAUSES OF MANY FAILURES IN POULTRY Bin Weight First Year of His LIfe-f Ration From Wisconsin. The feeding of draft foals is a very Fine Type for prepared by the ' United ;BUte Depart- ment of Agriculture.) The southern farmer who appre ciates the advantages of raising him eif ciuch of what his family needs, certain to be confronted at the outset by the problem of pastures. It is al most impossible to realize a profit upon any kind of stock without good pastures and even if the stock is raised primarily for home consumption rath er than for market, the first thing to hp done is to estaDiisn one Hitherto the South has been sadl deficient in this resect because all the attention has been given almost en tirely to cotton. The southern farm er, however, can, if he will, have ,as good a pasture as was ever seen in Kentucky or Missouri; and have it available more months in the year than is possible in those states. . For a permanent pasture a combination of bur clover and lespedeza and Bermuda grass v. ill afford good grazing for at least ten months out ot the twelve, for the Bermuda and Jespedeza can be grazecTthroughout the summer and the bur clover from January until the Ber muda comes on again. On light, sandy soils near the gulf coast carpet grass may do better than Bermuda. In any case, however, every permanent pas ture should have a good proportion of some legume i either one of those al- ready named or melilotus, vetch. white clover or alsike clover. No matter what combination is se lected it' takes iime and work to pro- There Is Money In Mules. duce a really good pasture. In fact such a cne requires as good soil, as much work in' its preparation and as, careful handling as any field on the farm": After the ground has been plowed or disked and the seed sown ao grazing should be allowed until the young plants become so firmly rooted that they will not be pulled out by the grazing animals. When seeding is done in the fall the, field should not &e grazed until the growth is well started, and no permanent pasture should ever be grazed so heavily as to injure the stand After the pasture has been, made, there are two weeds which sometimes make trouble; the bitterweedand the garlic or wild onion. The presence of bitterweed is an Indication that the pasture has been grazed too closely or has been trampled so heavily that tie surface soli is too hard and com pact for grasses and clovers to erow. The weed is seldom troublesome on a "ch soil in good condition and rarely 8a on a poor soil which is net too closely grazed. The use of fertilizers r decreasing the number of grazing animals will aid in eradicatine: it. The destruction of the wild onion is & moro Hiffliil vtM Tf Aon Vio killed by a deep plowing of the ground to September or October, followed by a yery shallow plowing In the spring and then planting the field with some titivated crop. However, this meth d cannot be followed in an ordinary Pasture w here there are many trees or ia any pasture without destroying the SfaSjS and so making the field Useless as ja pasture for about eighteen Months. When a pasture is not infest ed it should be watchedvclosely and My vjild onions which make their ap Parance removed at once. . 1 he permanent pasture- should be Bupp1emented by temporary ones, for whlch many crops are suitable. For Winter use the small grains .and etches will do for horses and cattle, artichokes, chufas, sweet potatoes and cassava for hogs. From December to April oats or wheat and vetch make best grazing for dairy cows. Horses and mules do not care so much for the vetch but they will eat the grairi until permanent pasture Is ready for mem. One bushel of turf oats or wheat and one Peck of vetch seed are suffi cient for an acre. If the rustproof oat 18 used, the amount should be in cased about one-half. Oats', however, Piay such an Important part in sound , p . , uinern jgriculture that it will pay Plowing. the farmer to study this question thor oughly. With a little forethought it should be possible for the farmer in the cen tral and southern parts of the South to have fresh pastures for cattle and hogs throughout the entire year. From ine following list a selection should be possible which will meet conditions on almost any farm. January and February Wheat, oats and vetch, artichokes, rape, bur clover, velvet beans. March Oats and vetch, artichokes, rape, bur clover, crimson clover. April Oats and vetch, rape, bur clover, alfalfa, crimson clover. May Oats and vetch, rape, red clov er, alfalfa, crimson clover. June and July Sorghum, cowpeas, red clover, alfalfa. August Sorghum, cowpeas, oy beans, alfalfa. September and October Sorghum, cowpeas, soy beans, chufas, sweet po tatoes, corn, peanut?. November Cowpeas, soy beans, chu fas, sweet potatoes, corn, rape, pea nuts. December Cowpeas, chufas, sweet potatoes, corn, rape, velvet beans. i nrougn the ' use of such pasture crops as these pork can be made more cheaply in the South than in the corn belt. It costs, it has been calculated, from one-third to one-half less to raise hogs when pastures are used than' with concentrated feeds alone. Moreover the hogs harvest the crops without danger of loss from rain and without expense, and finally both the soil and the hogs gain. The soil is enriched by the legumes and the health of the hogs improved. WHEAT BRAN IS EXPENS VE Southern Farmers Can Increase Profits by Growing Every Possible Pound of Feed for Stock. There is no doubt that wheat bran Is one of the best feeds that can be used to produce a large flow of milk. yet, it is about the most expensive feed the dairynfan can use. One pound of cottonseed meal has a feeding value equal to one and one-half of wheat bran, but of course it will not do to replace the meal with bran. Cowpea hay has value almost equal to that of bran, the exact ratio being 1,800 pounds of bran to 2,000j pour Is of hay. I Many feeders believe that alfalfa Is fully equal to that of bran, pound for pound, and if the bran has to be bought in the open market the value of alfalfa-is certainly greater, because the growing of alfalfa or any other good crop always improves the land, while) feed brought In from the outside only adds its manurial value to the soil. Farmers in the South can hardly af ford to buy bran; being so far from the big markets the price Is generally high from twenty-five to thirty dol lars per ton. In any other country where the soil is poor and commercial feed high, effort should be made to grow every pound of feed possible up on the land itself. Southern farmers are beginning to appreciate the value of thi3 practice, and more stock feed is being grown ia that country than ever before. While it Is a gratifying fact, also, that more livestock Is being raised in the South, there is no doubt that the amount of stock food per head grown on southern farms is steadily Increas ing, h Cottonseed meal Is a favorite feed for the cows In the South and a good many farmers feed too much of It. If they would grow more cowpeas, hairy vetch, clover and alfalfa, and buy less prepared feeds, their profits would be larger and their soil greatly Improved. COTTONSEED MEAL FOR COWS It Is Very Rich In Protein and Animal Easily Get Too Much of It Makes Butter White. Dairymen In 'some localities have made much use of cottonseed meal, and have found It, good feed. It should be used with care and not too much fed at a time, for it is very rich Id protein and cows easilyget too much of it. It Is also thought that it has a bad effect on color In butter, mak ing it much whiter than where corn Is fed. But the buying of cottonseed by our dairymen is at an end for now all have from fifteen to thirty ftre of alfalfa, most of which has tveo sown within the last two years. Important matter. One only appre ciates this when he realizes the fact that a draft foal makes one-half his mature weight the first year of his life. The foal must be fed, not starved, if he is to develop into a good draft horse. The foal fed an ImDroDer and unpalatable ration the first winter usually has a big middle and two very poorly, developed ends. Considerable attention has been given to feeding draft foals at the University of Wisconsin the last few years. At one .year of age they have weighed from 1,000 to 1,200 pounds. These" foals were all accustomed to a Email amount of grain before five months of age when they were weaned. After weaning they were given the following ration until turned on grass at about thirteen months of age. . Ration for 100 pounds mixed feed: 65 pounds crushed oats, 15 pounds corn meal, 10 pounds bran, 15 pounds finely, cut alfalfa or clover. They were fed all of this mixture they would eat three -times a day and were given no hay other than that in the mixture until they were about one year old-. The amount of this mixture eaten per foal per day varied from 9 to 15 pounds (20 to 30 quarts) Fine Type of Draft Stallion. according to age. Much of the time the feed was dampened and thoroughly mixed before feeding. The advantages of. th damp 'mixture seemed to be the variety of wholesome feed and the1 relish with which it was slowly and thoroughly chewed. Where one cannot feed so varied a mixture as that described, a ration of 20 per cent bran, cut alfalfa or cut clover with 80 per cent crushed oats fed as described will prove very effec tive. Foals do not appear to be able to make as good use of whole oats and hay as an older horse. When fed those feeds separately and whole they eat less feed and have a greater ten dency to "pot belly." It is a practice of some successful Wisconsin breeders to feed liberally bran and crushed oats for grain three times per day and hay and sorghum stalks each once per day for roughage. Combinations such as marsh hay and corn should be avoided. Although corn silage can be fed to idle horses it should only be given is a very limited way or not at all to foals. One cannot economize by limited feeding of the foal. What one saves in feed the first year he sacrifices from five to ten times in the final value of the animals. Only well bred draft foals are capable of making 1,000 pounds at one year and developing Into a good draft horsed It generally does not pay to practice liberal feed ing with mongrel or scrub animals for there is but little margin between the final value of the animal and the cost of feed consumed. PICKED UP IN THE HOG LOT Overcrowding Is Anything but Eco nomical Plan Alfalfa Furnishes Excellent Grazing for Pigs. Do not keep too many pigs together and compel them to sleep in one nest. The most economical" gains in pig feeding are obtained by a judicious blendine of nitrogenous and carbo naceous foods. Crossing may improve the hogs for the feed lot alone, but not for the pur pose of perpetuating their kind. Every hog grower should make a great effort to have a few acres of al falfa, because it furnishes unusually valuable grazing for hogs, and can be pastured off several times during the season. There is nothing more disgusting than to have a lot of unruly hogs run ning at large about the farm buildings. With modern woven wire fence, it is easy to confine them within their proper limits. There Is nothing gained by mixing corn meal with chopped alfalfa, except to insure larger consumption. The longer any herd or family of hogs is subjected to a ration of corn or confined to small pens and barren yards the lower will be their vitality and prolificacy. f - (By R. G. WEATHERSTONE.) During the winter months it is gen erally found difficult to provide such food as is necessary for the dairy cow to keep up the regular flow of milk. At this season of the year feed is generally scarce the proper kind for the daiiy cow and that which we have on hand is often of an inferior quality. After coming oft the green fresh grass they do not relish such dry feed and being of an inferior quality. one will soon notice a great decrease in the flow wf milk. For thia reason it is very important for the farmer to try to provide an A Fine Type of Dairy Cow. abundance of different feeds to make up for this dry or inferior feed. Of course the flow of milk cannot be kept up to what they give during the spring and summer when pastured, but with plentyof first-class hay, such as alfalfa and good clover, and fine feed of bran and corn meal kept on nand -that it may be fed liberally two or three times a day as slops, there will not be so much decrease in the milk supply after all. That is, if it is given to them liberally and regularly Do not think it is a waste to feed such feed when there isn't anything .but dry hay of some kind to feed on. On the latter, the cow can barely maintain her flesh, much less keep up the milk supply. When we have good clover hay and alfalfa, not so much of the bran, fine feed or meal is required, as both, when cured properly, are very strong feeds and cattle thrive on them. I am not going to attempt to give the amount that should be fed, as I leave that for the dairyman to decide for himself. What I wish to impress upon the reader's mind is this: The necessity of having on hand always a liberal supply of bran, meal, fine feed, etc., to go with the dry hay or corn fodder, which is generally of an in ferior quality, fed at this season of the year. Without the above feed mentioned, it is impossible for the dairyman to obtain good results during the season when cattle are not pastured. TASK OF DEHORNING CATTLE Operation Is Most Frequently Per formed to Prevent Animals From Injuring Each Other. Cattle have been dehorned since about 1790. The operation sometimes is performed to remove horns that are broken or otherwise injured, but most frequently it is to prevent horned ani mals from injuring one another. Usu ally it is considered justifiable on ac count of the bepefits that are derived from the operation. The growth of horns on calves may be prevented entirely by the liberal use of a strong solution of ordinary lye; or if the use of a solution is not desirable it can be purchased at drug stores in the form of sticks known as caustic potash. This should be ap plied immediately after birth to the place where the horn makes its ap pearance. Care should be exercised when using this remedy "because the lye will eat away all the skin with which it comes in contact. Various kinds of instruments are used for the removal ef the horns of pilder animals. If an "ordinary saw is tfsed it should be sharp and fine, as this lessens the danger of splintering the bones of the head during the oper ation. If a large number of animals are dehorned, quicker and safer work can be done with a "dehorning , in strument." This can be purchased of any veterinary supply company for $7.50 to $10. It is best not to dehorn during the fly season. Sometimes the horn is cut close to the head and cavities are opened which become filled with mag gots if flies are prevalent. The ani mal suffers intensely, if this happens, and there is a rapid loss in condition. If cavities are accidentally exposed a small piece of cotton, smeared with tar, may be applied to the wound and held In place by means of a bandage around the head. This also Is of great value if excessive bleeding follows the operation. If maggots gain entrance to the cavities of the head they should be washed out with a weak, watery solution of ordinary dip. lf .7:4! 1 A Badly Mixed, Every failure In the poultry busi ness can be traced, according to James G. Halpin, poultry man at the Wiscon sin College of Agriculture, to one or more of the fallowing reasons : u 1. Too expensive and too impractical buildings. Flocks do not require cost ly equipment, anJ of course the poul try man must pay interest on his in vestment. 2. Lack of experience and failure to raise chicks properly. Many a man has jumped into the poultry business with little or no experience, and naturally has lost money in his plunging. 3. Failure to market right To pro duce a superior product is not enough. It must be advantageously marketed. 4. Starting: with Door stock. It costs little or no more to start with profit producing stock than it does with in ferior fowls. 5. Neglect in improving breeding stock. By carefully selecting the hens and mating them with well chosen males more improvement will be . se cured. 6. Neglect In cleaning. Filth is a certain cause of loss to the poultry man. ; 7. Neglect in fighting lice, and mites. These pests are a source of heavy loss to all who do not fight them. 8. Poor management. Like every other business, poultry raising re quires close attention to details; Should Go Slow. The more common cause of failure is too heavy investment. Many farm ers start with expensive buildings as soon as they get the "hen fever." They run into debt, become discouraged after a few mistakes, and quit the business. It is wiser to patch up the old poultry house and make improve ments gradually as your profits war rant the expenditure. All amateur poul try man should go slow and build up his flock from humble beginnings. The next most common cause of fail ure is lack of experience. No one should enter the poultry business off hand without any experience in rais ing chicks. He should serve an ap prenticeship on some poultry farm, or TEACHING CHICKS TO ROOST Difficult Matter to Keep Little Fellows Clean if They Are Permitted to Remain on Floor. It is often advisable to teach the chicks to roost when eight to twelve weeks old. When they are allowed to remain on the floor it is difficult to keep them clean and to keep them from crowding. If wide roosts, three to four inches are used there is but little, if any, more danger of crooked breasts than if the chicks are allowed to remain on the floor. The chicks can generally be taught to roost by putting the perches near the floor and placing with them one or two old hens or older chicks that are in the habit of roosting. If this plan is inconvenient or does not prove effective, the chicks may be placed on the perches after dark for a few nights until they have learned to go there on thejir own accord. - FOWLS DEMAND PROPER FOOD Green Feed, Meat Scraps, Grain and Lime Are Required Fresh Water Is Also Necessary. Laying hens, like the milch1 cow, de mand proper food. A mixed ration comprising green feed, meat scrap and grain, will, with the addition of lime in some form, supply all that is re quired. Fresh water Is also a neces sity. Chaff from alfalfa or clover af fords green food. The former, ground ready for use, may now be bought by the pound. Hens eat it readily. Being rich in protein it is better for laying fowls than most forms of green food, and makes necessary less meat in the ration. Color Affects Price. The color of eggs has something to io with their sale in most markets. Some prefer the brown tints and some the white. In preparing baskets for sale It is well to cater to these tastes. Put all browns in one basket, all whites in another. Paper cartons for transportation, holding one dozen eggs, can be had at paper dealers'. Brown shelled eggs are apt to be large, since most of the larger breeds of fowls lay colored , eggs. Color really has nothing to do with contents. Well-Fed Hen Pays. . Are you going to allow the price of grain to cause you to underfeed your chickens? Better sell them now. It does not take a half -starved hen long to eat her head off. The well-fed hen will lay enough eggs to more than pay hr keep. ,! I But Busy Family. if he can, and before he starts out for himself, he should take a course at some recognized poultry school. After he has learned the ways of the flock he may have some assurance of suc cess. But many mistakes and failures are sure to beset the path of the inex perienced. Many poultry men fail to market correctly. They either get too far away from the market or try to force themselves upon an overcrowded mar ket. And they often fail to put their goods up in attractive packages and do not advertise efficiently. A good understanding of the market condi tions of a given locality is essential in building up a trade there. It is absolutely essential to have good stock to start with. No poultry man need expect to have any success if he starts out with a flock of board ers. The stock need not be pure bred, but it must be good enough to more than pay for its keep. The flock must be improved by care ful selection and by the introduction of new strains when necessary. Each brood of chicks must be better than the last if the poultry business is to be a success. The boarders and the stragglers must be culled outl Con stant improvement is the surest road to success. A very common cause of failure is just plain neglect neglect In cleaning up the house; neglect in spraying and in fighting lice and mites. There is no excuse for this kind of failure. The poultry man should be continually on guard against insects and diseases. And above all, he must always kep his house and his birds clean. All of these causes of failure may be summed up in one word. And that word is "Mismanagement" The three great laws of success in poultry may be summed up as follows: Get some experience before going into business. Improve your stock. And keep clean all the time. The only cure for mis management is common sense, and the farmer who expects to make a suc cess out of poultry should keep a good stock of it with him. COMFORT FOR SETTING HEN Should Be Guarded Against Fussy Work of Laying Fowls Plan for Arranging the Nest., In setting a hen-well one must Bee that every surrounding is the best pos sible. That the nest is not too deep and rounding in the bottom, but near ly flat, with rounded sides so that tae eggs will He in a single layer and not pile upon each other in a manner that is more than likely to cause them to get broken. In cold weather it Is a good plan to line the nest box first with paper, then the nesting straw or chaff. This pre vents the cold from getting to the egg so easily from below. It is essential that the setter b guarded against the fussy work of the laying hens. A laying hen using the same nest will soon break up all dossI- f bllity of a good hatch. On the other hand, the setter must not be confined so closely that she cannot come off at will to feed and dust herself. USE ONLY GOOD INCUBATORS Many Little Details Require Skill and Intelligence In Operating Mar chine Successfully. Homemade incubators are not gen erally desirable, since they' are sel dom scientifically adjusted, nor made of best material, nor properly fitted up. The lamp, its burner, its wick, its chimney, its location for heating, all require skill and intelligence. So does the body of the incubator, as regula tor, ventilation, the moisture supplies and the tray. j Do not buy from any old firm or buy any discarded machine. Get the best by test and give it the best that is in you.. Then keep a record of hatches from both hens and incubator and compare results, not forgetting that your hen is free to lay again while her first eggs are hatching. Legs of Birds for Show. If show birds have rough legs, band age them in cloths spread with vase line, for a week before the show! washing them first, of course. The vaseline leaves a stain on the feath ers which is hard to get out in the wash, so be careful to push the feath ers back and bandage under them: Onions for Poultry. Onions make an excellent feed and, chopped fine and fed to the poultry oc casionally during the winter, will na- terlally help to keep them In good dittos. i