XR V,a>^ THE BULLETIN or TBB AORONOMY DIVISION INORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE RALEIGH Vol. 33, No. 1. JANUARY, 1912. Whole No. 163. "THE INFLUENCE OF THE SOIL TYPE ON THE PLANT VARIETY" BY J. L. BURGESS Parts I and II. PUBLISHED MONTHLY AND SENT FREE TO CITIZENS ON APPLICATION. Entered at the Post-office at Raloigh, N. C. as second-class matter, February 7, 1901, under Act of June 6, 1900. STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. W. A. Graham, Commissioner, ex officio Chairman, Raleigh. H. C. Carter Fairfield _ First District. K. W. Barnes Lucama Second District, R. L. WooDARD- Pamlico Third District. I. H. Kearnet - Franklinton Fourth District. R. W. Scott Haw River Fifth District. A. T. McCallum -.- Red Springs Sixth District. J. P. McRae... -Laurinburg Seventh District. William Bledsoe Gale Eighth District. W. J. Shuford Hickory Ninth District. A. Cannon. Horse Shoe.. _ Tenth District. OFFICERS AND STAFF. VV. A. GRAHAM Commissioner. ELIAS CARR Secretary and Purchasing Agent. Miss B. W. Pescud Bookkeeper. D. G. Conn Bulletin Clerk. B. W. KILGORE State Chemist, Director Test Farms. J. M. PiCKF.L Assistant Chemist. W. G. Haywood .....Fertilizer Chemist. G. M. MacNider Feed Chemist and Microscopist. L. L. BniXKLEY... Assistant Chemist. E. L. Worthen Soil Investigations. •W. E. Hearn Soil Survey. W. H. Strowd Assistant Chemist. J. Q. .Iackson Assistant Chemist. E. W. Thornton Assistant Chemist. J. K. Plummer Assistant Chemist. J. F. Hatch - Clerk. F. S. PuCKETT Assistant to Director Test Farms. H. H. BRIMLEY ^...Curator of Museum. T. VV. Adickes Assistant Curator. FRANKLIN SHERMAN. Jr .Entomologist. Z. P. Metcalf .Assistant Entomologist. S. C. Clapp Assistant Entomologist in Field Work. W. G. CHRISMAN Veterinarian. B. B. Flowe - Assistant Veterinarian. W. H. Eaton Dairyman. L. A. HiGGiNS - Assistant Dairyman. R. VV. Grabber Assistant Dairyman. VV. N. HUTT Horticulturist. S. B. Shaw Assistant Horticulturist. 0. M. Clark Second Assistant Horticulturist. T. B. PARKER..- ..Director of Farmers' Institutes and Demonstration. J. M. Grav - - : Second Assistant Demonstrator. W. M. ALLEN Pure Food Chemist. W..A. S.MITH Assistant Pure Food Chemist. — '- Assistant Pure Food Chemist. Miss O. I. TILLMAN Botanist. Miss Susan D. Allen Assistant to Botanist. J. L. BURGESS - Agronomist. G. M. Garren Assistant Agronomist. R. VV. Scott, Jr., .Assistant Director, Edgecombe Test Farm, Rocky Mount, N. C. F. T. Meacham, Assistant Director, Iredell Test Farm, StatesviUe, N. C. John H. Jefferies, Assistant Director, Pender Test Farm. VVillard, N. C. R. W. Collett, Assistant Director, Transylvania and Buncombe Test Farms, Swannanoa, N. C. 'Assigned by the Bureau of Soils, United States Department of Agriculture. Raleigh, January 17, 1912. Sir: — I have the honor to submit herewith a manuscript covering a study of the relations between the plant and the soil type out of which it grows. It is hoped that this paper will suggest reasons for a more careful study of the different soil types of our State and point to the value and wisdom of the work that has been done and is at present being done, by the North Carolina Department of Agriculture in mapping and analyzing the different soils as they are found in our different physiographic section. I recommend the publication of this manuscript as the January bulletin of this Department. Respectfully submitted, J. L. BUROESS, Agronomist. Hon. W. a. Grahaai, Commissioner of Agriculture, Raleigh, N. C. LEAF TOBACCO SALES FOR DECEMBER, 1911. Pounds sold for producers, first hand 13,656,005 Pounds sold for dealers 412,214 Pounds resold for wareliouses 697,744 14,765,96a THE INFLUENCE OF THE SOIL TYPE ON THE PLANT VARIETY. By J. L. BuEGEss. Part I. THE PLANT ENVIRONMENT, Environment of any plant is composed of but two elements, namely: Climate, or the combined effect of light, heat, air, moisture, etc., into which the stalk rises and the leaf spreads ; and Soil, or the medium into which the plant sends its roots in quest of food and drink. SOIL TYPE. In general, what the farmer terms "a kind of land" is technically known as a type of soil, possessing distinct characteristics as regards crop production. The soil type has, as a whole, definite texture, struc- ture, color, origin, depth of soil and subsoil, topographic and drainage features, organic and mineral composition, native vegetation, and natural productiveness. It may be said that any factor which materially influ- ences crop production on a given soil type in a given locality may be considered an element serving to differentiate between the given soil type and another in a distant locality, otherwise identical with the first, but not influenced by the same factor in the same degree. The number of distinct soil types that have been recognized in differ- ent parts of the country is very great. Variations in any of the above characteristics may necessitate the establishment or recognition of a new type. For example, allowing texture, which deals with the size of the soil particles, to remain unchanged, variations in one or more of the other characteristics have enabled the United States Bureau of Soils to name over fifty types of clay soil; upwards of sixty different silt loam soils; more than 164 sandy loam soils, etc., each type differing from the others in some one or more essential qualities. Every farm has one or more types of soil on it. Most farmers recog- nize this and, in general, soils are differentiated into types according as the best farmers perceive them to have different crop values. On close examination, however, most farms will reveal more types than their owners have suspected to exist. The United States Bureau of Soils has recognized and mapped upwards of 400 types of soil in the United States and the number goes on increasing as the subjects of soil classifi- cation and crop adaptation are studied more and more carefully. ADAPTATION TO ENVIRONMENT. Much has been done in this and other countries to discover- the en- vironmental conditions of both plant and animal life best suited to the fullest interaction of all parts of the organism. 6 The Bulletin. The environmental conditions of plant life have generally been de- fined as climatic, geographical and physiographical location, and con- ditions of food supply. Climate has hiiJierto been stressed more than any other factor in plant production. And while no one will assert that climate is not the controlling factor in the latitudinal and altitudinal distribution of plants, yet, in the same latitude, where climate is uniform, except over small areas of different elevation, this factor can not be said to account for the wide differences observed in the character and development of the different varieties of the same species of plant; and while we would not care to minimize the very important place occupied by climate in the production of crops, still, snice this factor has been so generally empha- sized by leading scientists and experimenters in the field of agriculture, we may be excused for calling attention more particularly in this paper to the influence exerted by the type of soil in which the plant is forced to grow. The soil has, indeed, always received a passing consideration as a factor associated with the food supply of plants, but we hope to show in the following pages that soil, or soil type, plays a vastly more important part in plant production than has hitherto been accorded it. ADAPTATIONS GENERALLY RECOGNIZED. When the plant is confined in a new environment it either dies or so readjusts its physical structure as to become gradually adapted to the new conditions surrounding it. The plant organism responds to every touch of environment. There are certain broad adaptations of plants to soil environments that are recognized by every man possessed of a fair knowledge of agronomy. In the great wheat and corn sections of the central west a heavy clayey loam, occurring in what is technically known as the Miami series of soil, is admitted to be best suited to the former, while a silty loam, belonging to the Marshall series, is best adapted to the latter cereal. For early truck any experienced gardener will select a light sandy soil for outdoor culture. Every experienced grower knows that the alfalfa plant, regardless of climate, requires a large percentage of lime in the soil — a calcareous soil — to make its best yield. ISTot only do the above named conspicuous and rather well defined adaptations of plants to peculiar soil environments exist, but on close ex- amination we shall find that plants have adapted themselves to every physical environment in which it is possible for them to exist, or, as Bailey has put it, "Every physical environment produces adaptive changes in plants." This theory of adaptation of the plant to the environment has engaged the serious thought not only of leading agriculturists but of leading biologists as well, and the only defense of this paper is that too little attention has been given the part played by the soil type per se in the many observed adaptations. This thought could hardly have been more strongly or fittingly expressed than by Hilgard when he said: "Under given climatic conditions every distinct soil type bears a charac- teristic vegetation." He further states that the natural vegetation of any area represents the best adaptation of plants to soils in the results The Bulletin. 7 of the long period of the struggle for existence between competing species. In other words, under given climatic conditions, the species make the best development that are best adapted to the soil in which they grow. Scientists have recently concluded some experiments and made some discoveries that throw great light on the subject under discussion and go far in the confirmation of what they have believed to be true for over a half a century, but have hitherto lacked experimental data sufficient tc justify them in drawing general conclusions. Much of our most valuable information on this subject has come from our own and foreign agricultural experiment stations, and no small pari from various botanical laboratories. These scientists have arrived ai extremely interesting conclusions relative to the adaptation of plants tc soil environments, but have been put at great disadvantage in being unable to make practical use of many of their discoveries. To illustrate : The discoverer may say his variety does best on a clay soil. We pointed above that we have already found over fifty types of clay soil. To which one of these is his variety adapted? He may say his varietv makes its best development on a sandy loam soil, but we have about a hundred and forty or fifty difi"erent types of sandy loam soils. To which one of these is his variety adapted? Most frequently we find the new variety best suited to a loam, but we have seventy-five or more distinct loams. You thus see that the amount of good the agricultural scientists, especially the agronomists, can confer on the public bears a direct ratio to the amount of his knowledge of the location, extent, and general characteristics of the type of soil with which he is dealing. His discovery is of interest only to science and too often has nothing of value to the practical plant grower. !N'ot only so, but the seedsmen are likely to get hold of his plant novelties and scatter them all over the country, thus doing an injustice to the man who desires help. Returning briefly to the work of our experiment stations and others, the Kansas Experiment Station found two native grown varieties of corn (not the highly selected seed) to be often more hardy, better producers, and better adapted to the soil of the station (Oswego silt loam) than even the best and purest improved varieties. In this experiment the director of the station concludes, "There is no question but that there is a great difference in varieties of corn in their adaptation to different soils and climates." In its experiments with oats this station concludes : "The strain of red Texas oats which has given the largest yield for the last two seasons, '05-'06, has been grown at the station for four years and has seemed to improve rather than deteriorate in quality and yield." This shows some of the possibilities of a plant that has perfect correspondence with its environment or is perfectly adapted to the soil and climate in which it grows. The Indiana Experiment Station finds after testing a number of varieties of wheat that "standard varieties have maintained their yield and quality on the same soil for fifteen years and most of the new varieties have, as a rule, failed to do so well as the standard varieties which have long been grown here." 8 The Bulletin. In his admirable work at the Minnesota Station Professor Hayes found that it was best to obtain beets adapted to the various local condi- tions, and that the seed could best be bred under conditions similar to those where the crops were to be grown. That Mr. Hayes appreciated the influence of soil type on the plant is shown in his statement that ''Special varieties are needed in many localities where peculiar soils exist." Speaking with particular reference to Minnesota he was con- vinced that Minnesota alone needs numerous varieties of corn bred for its various types of soil. • Per baps we could quote no greater modern authority on this subject than Prof. Hugo De Vries, who states that local variations in soil (and this is known only too well by all practical beet growers) will directly effect percentage of sugar in beets, and that the variety of beet, etc., must be developed on the same kind of soil as that on which it is to be grown. He says further that this principle has been tested and found reliable and has supplanted almost all others at the Svalof Experiment Station, Sweden. Prof. De Vries thinks also that "all trouble incident to im- perfect adaptation to soil can be avoided by the farmer only by selecting his own seed on his own land." From our point of view this statement is certainly true, but any one conversant with the amount of knowledge, time, and tediousness required in developing a good and distinct variety anywhere will see how impossible this remedy is of general application. The development of varieties of plants for distinct soil types is a State or National problem and can scarcely be accomplished without the aid of one or both of these institutions. The United States Department of Agriculture has collected a great many interesting and valuable data on this subject. It has studied plant growth and adaptability almost all over the known world, yet, from our point of view, nothing of more far reaching importance has been brought to the notice of the American people than that expressed by Mr. A. B. Schamel when he said : "The farmers suffer great annual loss from the growing of varieties not adapted to the soils of each region where the crops are grown." "The range of adaptability of varieties has never been determined so that, with known soil, growers can intelligently buy seed for planting, however, with more knowledge of the relation of the different types of soil to the different varieties of crops it will be possible for the breeders to produce and distribute seed especially adapted to particular sections." INFLUENCE OF SOIL TYPE ON DEVELOPMENT OF PLANT VARIETY. It is a fact of utmost importance to agriculture that plants can be, and are, greatly modified by the environment in which they are placed. It has long been known that the different varieties of our staple crops make better yields, both of quality and quantity, when grown on certain soils than when grown on others. Until recently, however, our soils had not been differentiated into series and types, consequently, no law of general application could be deduced from the many observed facts. In as much as each environment produces adaptive changes in plants it follows that widely different environments will produce marked varia- tions in the same variety of plants. The Bulletin. 9 If we take a particular variety of any plant, as cotton, and grow it in "widely different soil environments (climate remaining the same) certain adaptive changes will appear, enabling the plant to correspond more •completely with the various new conditions. Now, if by careful and persistent selections the grower each year weeds out all plants but those most nearly corresponding to the new environment, he will soon find these adaptive variations to have become so intensified and his plants to have undergone such a pronounced physiological change that he can legitimately say a new variety of cotton has appeared in his field. If, for example, we take a variety of cotton having a small stem, leaf and boll, grown for generations on the Norfolk sand, and transplant it to the Yazoo loam, we will have changed the environment of the plant by -changing the soil type. We will have increased the food and moisture supply of the plant enormously. In order to utilize the increased supply ■of feed and drink the plant begins to gradually enlarge its stem, leaf and boll. JSTot all the plants in the field may show a pronounced adaptive change at once, but here and there will be found a plant with an iibnormal development. The enlarged boll may appeal to the grower as ■a desirable characteristic, and he may, therefore, select for seed only those plants that have the extra large boll. The following year he will plant these selected seed in the same soil environment and again select seed only from the plants having the enlarged stem, leaf and boll. This practise of selection and adaptation is continued till every plant in the field closely corresponds to the ideal set by the grower, and, perhaps ■without intending to do so he has produced a new variety of cotton, thoroughly adapted to the new soil environment. After this, big boll variety of cotton has been grown for a number of years on this rich bottom land soil, we w^ll suppose the grower takes the seed and plants them on the upland soil again. He will have again changed the environment by changing the soil type. The available food and moisture supply will have been greatly decreased, but the desire of the plant for a large supply of these will not have been diminished. It is thus subjected to a process of starvation, which causes it gradually to decrease the size of stem, leaf, and boll in order to continue its existence under the changed conditions of life. Early maturity or some other •characteristic of upland plants growing under restricted food supply may «uit the grower's fancy in some of the plants, and these he will select for planting the following year. Should he continue this practise of select- ing and adapting the plants to a particular type of upland soil for a number of years, he will finally have developed a variety of cotton having a small stem, leaf, and boll peculiarly adapted to the upland «oil, as he did in the case of the bottom land soil. It is thus possible to take a variety of plant and, by changing the soil environment, induce a radical change in its characteristics, even to the extent of creating a new variety. Some twenty years ago Director Tracy, of the Mississippi Experiment Station, found that "many varieties of cotton which will produce a strong, long, silky fiber when planted on rich river bottom soil soon lose their superior qualities when grown on the dryer hill lands," and that "the percentage of lint also varies with the soil on which it is grown." 10 The Bulletin. He also found "where samples of the same variety have been accurately measured the lint varied greatly in length owing to differences in soil." Mr. Tracy found further that "some varieties gave enormous yields when all conditions were favorable, but failed miserably when planted on unfavorable soils." After a long series of carerul investigations in citrus fruit-growing in the Gulf States, Prof. P. H. Rolfe concludes: "In the production of oranges it is absolutely necessary to choose the particular variety which is adapted to any peculiar soil." Relative to the production of wheat in Tennessee, Director A. M. Soule, of the Tennessee Experiment Station, after testing a number of varieties, concludes : "The selection at random of varieties of wheat has led the farmers to conclude that the soil and climatic conditions prevail- ing in Tennessee are antagonistic to the production of a superior grade of wheat, but careful research has revealed the fact that when the varie- ties are found specially adapted to the soils in this State, the results are quite as satisfactory as those secured in other part of the United States." During our study of the adaptation of varieties of plants to soil types we have found in every case investigated that each variety has been developed in a quite distinct type of soil, and our study of the later history of these varieties goes to show that they give best results only when grown on soils similar to those on which they have been developed. Indeed, it appears to us higlily improbable that a good and distinct variety of any of our staple crops can be developed in a field where there is a medley of soil types. Uniformity of soil is essential to the produc- tion of a uniform variety of plant. The Toole variety of cotton wa* developed on the Norfolk sand, and may be expected to give better results on this and closely allied types of soil than any other variety of cotton. It is hardly too much to say that the farmers of this country lose millions of dollars yearly by not knowing the particular varieties of corn, wheat, cotton, etc., best suited to the different soil types found on their farms. SEED SELECTION. There is, perhaps, no more potent factor in the adaptation of varie- ties of plants to soil types or soil environments than that of careful seed selection. As we said above, when a plant is forced to grow in a new environment it at once begins to adjust itself to the new conditions of life. In case of the cotton plant, for example, we will see here and there in the field, during the first or second generations, a few plants making a better growth and setting fruit more liberally than the general run of the field. The grower will mark these plants and select seed from them for planting the following year, etc., and in a little while will have his whole field set with plants that are rapidly adjusting themselves to the new soil conditions. This practice of selecting seed from the best plants and planting these selected seed again on the same type of soil is the best — the only — means by which to force the plant to its highest point of productiveness. Indeed, seed selection is beneficial mainly in that it accelerates the complete adaptation of the plant to the particular soil environment. The Bulletin. 11 cumuiative effect of seed selection and adaptation. It is generally true that any variety of plant will sport or change, even though it be kept on the soil to which it is specially adapted, but the variations in this case are generally in the desired direction. The Minnesota Experiment Station, after many careful experiments to determine the effect ol growing the same kind of plant in the same kind of soil (not in the same field, however), for a number of years in succession, concludes : "The old idea that seed tended to run out when grown too long on the same soil is false," At the Nebraska Experiment Station a new variety of wheat was introduced some years ago and grown for several generations on the same type of soil (the Marshall silt loam). As the variety adapted itself to the new soil environment the yields increased. The seed was carefully graded each year and the variety showed a tendency toward continual improvement. Mr. W. W. Toole, the originator of the Toole variety of cotton, has for years been improving his cotton along the lines of early maturity and increased proportion of lint to seed. He now has not only one of the earliest ma- turing varieties, but one in which he has increased the per cent of lint from 38 to 44. He tells me, moreover, that within a short time he expects to put on the market an extra early variety, yielding 46 per cent lint, and that within ten years he will produce a cotton yielding as high as 50 per cent lint. We thus see that when careful seed selection is combined with uniform soil conditions, the variations of the plant are cumulative in the desired direction. 12 The Bulletin. Part 11. CHANGE OF SOIL ENVIRONMENT. "If the environment remains tlie same," says Lamarck, "the species also remains the same." Spencer had in mind practically the same idea when he said : "If the environment remains unchanged for many genera- tions the plants becomes thoroughly fitted into the conditions and then remain in a state of equilibrium." You will recall that the variety was, in Darwin's time, pretty generally considered an incipient species. From the foregoing definition of plant environment it is evident that a change in either soil or climate will produce a change in the environ- ment- Suppose we take as a simple illustration some of our potted plants that apjjear so beautiful along the thirty-second parallel and move them fifteen degrees north, leaving them unpi'otected. The change of climate alone kills the plant. Now take a plant that has been grown for a gen- eration in a rich, moist loam, and repot it, putting in place of the rich loam a very poor sandy soil. With no change of climate the plant dies. Of course every one knows that with an extreme change of both soil and climate the plant must die, but how many scientific agriculturists have noted that with a change of soil type, it may be but a few yards away, the cultivated plant may not only have its form and habit of growth changed, but its yield so reduced as to place it far below the point of profitable production? We could bring forward more illustrations to substantiate this proposition than the limits of this paper will justify. We will quote, therefore, only a few of the leading authorities who have either conducted experiments or have observed in this field of thought. While Mr. Hilgard was in Mississippi he noted that "A single variety of cotton, planted on two adjoining soil types, was so changed by the two soils as not to be recognizable as the same variety in the two fields." This observation has not only been made in the case of cotton, but also in the growth of corn, oats, wheat, beets, etc. This breaking up of corn in habit of growth has, as a rule, been accompanied by reduced pro- ductivity. Most experiment stations have demonstrated this conclusively. Kansas station has found that "the purest bred corn secured from other States, when grown under new conditions of soil * * * varies greatly in the type and quality of the corn produced, and must be carefully bred and selected again when planted in Kansas in order to secure a hardy and productive type of corn which is adapted for growing in the new environment." This bit of experimental knowledge is in perfect accord with Darwin's observation that "When plants are removed from their natural conditions they are extremely liable to have their reproductive systems seriously affected," and that "Organic beings, long habituated to certain uniform conditions in a state of nature, when subjected to a considerable change in their conditions, very frequently are rendered more or less sterile." The works and observations of Messrs. Bailey and Webber have enabled them to voice practically the same opinion as that advanced by Darwin. The Bulletin. 13 Contrary to popular opinion, Mr. A. M. Soule, of the Virginia Experi- ment Station, found that corn developed on thin land will not yield well when first grown on rich ground, and that, while western varieties will outyield our home-grown strains when put on soils made comparable to those found in the west, they will not yield as much on the thin lands of the east as the home-grown varieties. The Illinois station found that many varieties of wheat, when grown elsewhere, were worthless when grown on the Marion silt loam in south- ern Illinois, and that the Turkey red wheat, the best wheat for the Mar- shall silt loam at the station was out of its element when grown on the Marion silt loan in southern Illinois. Returning again to plants as we see them in nature, who has not noted that certain varieties of plants are radically changed when their seeds fall on distinct soil type, though the seed may not have fallen ten feet from the parent plant. Mr. Hilgard states that the black prairie belt, composed of a heavy black limy clay, in Mississippi, produces a stout, vigorous species of post and black jack oak, but when the seeds of these trees are placed on the non-calcareous clay soil of the flat woods country, they are so changed in form, habit of growth, and size that the inhabitants believe them to be a different species. Mr. Hilgard makes another interesting observation. The upland cypress has a character- istic cone shape, while the lowland cypress has an umbrella shape top. But, says Mr. Hilgard, when seed of the upland variety falls on the swampy land it produces the lowland variety of cypress. This observa- tion might have been doubted had it not come from so eminent an authority as Mr. Hilgard. The above interesting data are hardly more remarkable than some given by Mr. De Vries. He found that two alpine varieties of milfoil, so nearly alike in botanical marks that many would think them the same, made quite different demand on the chemical constituents of the soil. The one was adapted to a silicious soil, the other to a calca- reous soil. When both were placed on the calcareous soil only the one adapted to or developed on this soil can survive; the other is crowded out. Bateson also found that "the common dandelion (Taraxacum densleonis) has in a dry soil leaves which are much more irregular and incised, while they are hardly dentate in marshy stations where it is called Taraxacum palustre." Both Darwin and Lamarck believe that not only the great amount of variation observed among our domesticated plants, but the great differences seen between the present plants and their prototypes, is due to the new environments to which they have been subjected, but the amount of variation due to the soil half of the en- vironment never came up for much consideration. Any practical alfalfa grower knows that alfalfa is very choice in its soil requirements, demanding a rich, heavy loam, heavily charged with lime carbonate in order to make its best development and that when placed on a soil lacking in these essential qualities it makes a miserable failure. Apropos of this subject the Minnesota Experiment Station observed, "Buying seed every few years from regions having different soils is unwise." 14 The I^ulletin. It is a matter of common knowledge that the Norfolk sand produces a very high grade of cigar wrapper tobacco, but when this variety of tobacco is grown on the Orangeburg clay it loses its superior qualities. Not only have the experiment stations ascertained that definite varie- ties require definite soils but many practical farmers who have taken the' trouble to keep careful notes tell me of similar experiences. I have known two varieties of cotton, grown in the same field in which the soil was all alike, one to outyii:ld tlie other a rbousand pounds of seed cotton per acre, and that with identical cultivation and fertilization. The same is true to a greater or less degree with com, wheat, and oats, and. indeed, with all other plants whose actions in changed soil environments it has been my privilege to study. It is common among farmers to hear some man say the Early Rose potato gives him best results, while his neighbor, just across the road, may say the Early Rose is all but worth- less on his land. I have never found a case of such complexity of opin- ion whei-e an examination did not reveal two distinct soil types. A characteristic case of changed environment comes to mind. A few years ago two brothers who had been making a splendid success growing pota- toes on the high priced Wabash silt loam soil of the Kaw Valley, Kansas, heard of cheap land in Texas and made a purchase of several hundred acres of the soil known as the Orangeburg sand at Rockdale, Texas. The natives of that section volunteered to advise these brothers against such an attempt, saying they had never been able to grow any variety of potato on that "kind of land." But the advice was not heeded. The brothers brought their whole equippage with them from the Kaw Valley and proceeded to plant their crop of potatoes. They placed in the bank at Rockdale $5,000 with which to pay expenses. When the crop was harvested their books showed a loss of $3,000, with $2,000 of the original $5,000 in the bank. This they speedily drew out and returned to Kaw Valley. There is, so far as I know, no variety of potato well adapted to the Orangeburg sand, though one might easily be developed. In this case there was a change of both soil and climate, but a change of either one would have produced the same result. The broth- ers gave but $10 an acre for their land, but it sells now, I am told, at about $30 an acre, for peach culture, to which it is well suited. In his paper on the Modification of Cereal Crops by Change of En- vironment, Prof. T. L. Lyon says: "It is desirable to breed a strain of any cereal under, as nearly as possible, the conditions under which it is to be grown. The more strongly bred a strain is the longer it will retain its quality under the new environment. The better suited it is for one set of conditions the more difficult it will be to adapt it to those that are radically different." READJUSTMENT TO NEW ENVIRONMENTS. Since plant organisms are so profoundly influenced by every touch of environmental condition it follows that when they are changed from one environment to another they must, of necessity, undergo a corresponding change in their physical characteristics; and this change must be more or less pronounced according as the change of environment is great or small. If the variety of plant has been thoroughly fixed by years of The Bulletin. 15 •selection and adaptation to the previous environments, the first, and maybe the second, generation of plants may be expected to show a tend- ency to reproduce the qualities of the old strain, but since environmental conditions of life are always exerting a greater influence on the plant organism than its inherent qualities, the plant soon changes its habit of growth, etc., to fit the new conditions. It is during this period of read- justment that the plant is liable to become unprofitable to the grower. One example must suffice to illustrate: The Harvest King variety of wheat, adapted to the Marion silt loam of southern Illinois, beat a variety of the same name from Indiana three and nine-tenths bushels per acre, and a variety of the same name from Michigan four and eight-tenths bushels per acre. After three years, however, the foreign variety yielded as much as the home-grown Harvest King. This ex- periment showed not only a loss during these three years, but no gain over the home-grown variety after the complete readjustment. We have a large number of similar illustrations where the differences in yield are very large, but since the limits of this paper will not admit their introduction they will occur in another paper on this subject. It is here, also, that the farmer is deceived, because his new variety, having done well last year, he has faith in its future action, but the yields generally get lower and lower. Moreover, few farmers will keep a poor variety on their farms until it becomes thoroughly adapted to the new conditions, or, in other words, till their soils develop varieties adapted to them. If we take the cabbage plant for example, which in its domesticated state is adapted to a rich, moist loam soil, and grow it on a poor, dry sandy soil it will, as Darwnn puts it, ''Eevert to a large extent, or even wholly, to the aboriginal stock, due largely to the definite action of the soil." Strickland big boll cotton is especially adapted to a rich, moist bottomland soil, the Waverly silt loam. The Toole variety to a rather poor, well drained upland soil, the ISTorfolk sand, when either of these varieties is grown in the soil environment particularly adapted to the other, the yield is materially decreased thereby. If we take the Drake cluster cotton, which has been kept pure for twenty-five years on the Houston clay, and grow it on rich, moist, bottom land soil, it at once "goes to weed" and yields comparatively little fruit. The Minne- sota Experiment Station has found that varieties of grain adapt them- selves to local conditions, and "varieties from seed brought from a distance must usually become acclimated before they can do their best." But when the readjustment to the new environment is complete and the plant begins to produce good yields, close examination will reveal a variety quite different from the one originally planted, as we said above. To illustrate : The Strickland big boll cotton was the result of the complete readjustment of the Bohemian big boll from the black, waxy land of Texas to the Waverly silt loam in Alabama. The result is a much smaller boll. It takes over sixty bolls of the Strickland to make a pound of seed cotton, while forty-six to forty-eight of the Bohemian are quite sufficient. Many other instances that have come under our personal observation might be given to show that varieties of plants transferred from one soil type to another to which they were not adapted 16 The Bulletin. have so decreased in yield as to make their continued cultivation unprof- itable and have been discarded after the first season. The present practice of our farmers is to purchase a new variety of plant, as cotton, corn, or wheat, wholly on catalogue descriptions or the advice of some friend, and without regard or information as to the type or character of the soil on which the plants have been developed. The originators of these new varieties never think to say anything about the soils on which they were grown, never, perhaps, suspecting that the soil type could influence the future tendencies of the plant. These different varieties are thus taken out of their original soil environments, subjected to a continual round of readjustments to new conditions, and as a result, our crop yields are kept permanently below a reasonable average by reason of the adverse circumstances in which the plants are forced to grow. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. In this paper we have found (1st) that with given climatic conditions the plant, sooner or later, becomes adapted to the soil type on which it is placed. (2d) When the variety is removed to a radically different soil type the new soil type and the plant variety react on each other in such a way as to break up the original characteristics of the variety and gradually develop a variety better suited to the conditions. This we called readjustment to the new environments and tried to show that during this period the productivity of the variety is likely to fall far below the point of profitable production. (3d) We have tried to show also that the remedy recommended by some that each farmer should become a plant breeder and breed varieties for each of his soil types will almost surely prove impracticable since the great majority of them would require to be taught both the characteristics of a distinct variety and what constitutes a distinct type of soil. This, we, feel, is a State and National problem. When a State has a large number of soil maps it is ready for the soil expert and the plant breeder to go to work. Other- wise the national government should not be slow to launch out into this new field of agricultural research. (4th) We have found also that the most important result of systematic seed selection is in accelerating the complete adaptation of the given variety to the given soil type. (5th) That a radical change produces a change in the characteristics of the variety and generally greatly reduces the yield of the plant. (6th) When seed selection and adaptation are carefully combined we find the results to be cumulative in the desired direction. We conclude, therefore, that, from an economic point of view, it pays best to grow our staple crops only on soils to which they are adapted or on soils similar to, or identical with, those on which they have been developed. THE BULLETIN OF THE North Carolina Department of Agriculture RALEIGH Vol. 33, No. 2 FEBRUARY, 1912 Whole No. 164 COTTON CULTURE IN NORTH CAROLINA PUBLISHED MONTHLY AND SENT FREE TO CITIZENS ON APPLICATION. Entered at the PostofEce at Raleigh, N. C, as second class matter, February 7, 1901, under act o June 6, 1900. STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. W. A. Graham, Commissioner, ex officio Chairman, Raleigh. H. C. Carter ...Fairfield __. First District. K. W. Barnes. Lucama... Second District. R. L. WooDAKD Pamlico Third District. I. H. Kearnet Franklinton Fourth District. R. VV. Scott Haw River Fifth District. A. T. McCallum- --- Red Springs Sixth District. J. P. McRae Laurinburg Seventh District. William Bledsoe Gale - Eighth District. W. J- Shdford ..Hickory. Ninth District. A. Cannon ..Horse Shoe Tenth District. OFFICERS AND STAFF. W. A. GRAHAM Commissioner. ELIAS CARR .Secretary and Purchasing Agent. Miss B. W. PESCUD Bookkeeper. D. G. Conn . Bulletin Clerk. B. W. KILGORE -. State Chemist, Director Test Farms. J. M. PiCKEL - Assistant Chemist. W. G. Haywood. ..-. Fertilizer Chemist. G. M. MacNider Feed Chemist and Microscopist. L. L. Brinklet Assistant Chemist. E. L. WoRTHEN Soil Investigations. •W. E. Hearn Soil Survey. W. H. Stroud _ Assistant Chemist. J. Q. Jackson Assistant Chemist. E. W. Thornton Assistant Chemist. J. F. Hatch Clerk. F. S. Puckett Assistant to Director Test Farms. H. H. BRI.MLEY _ , Curator of Museum. T. VV. Adickes Assistant Curator. FRANKLIN SHERMAN, Jr _ _ Entomologist.. Z. P. M ETCALF Assistant Entomologist S. C. Clapp Assistant Entomologist in Field Work' W. G. CHRIS-M.4N - Veterinarian- B. B. Flowb... 1... Second Assistant Veterinarian- W. H. E.\TON Dairj'man- L. A. HiGGiNs Assistant Dairyman- R. W. Grabber . Assistant Dairyman- W. N. HUTT . Horticulturist- S. B. Shaw .".Assistant Horticulturist- O. M. Clark .Second Assistant Horticulturist- T. B. PARKER Demonstrator and Director of Farmers' Institutes- J. M. Grat. Assistant Demonstrator- W. M. ALLEN Pure Food Chemist. W. A. Smith Assistant Pure Food Chemist. C. E. Bell Assistant Pure Food Chemist. Miss O. I. TILLMAN , Botanist. Miss S. D. .4llen Assistant to Botanist. J. L. BURGESS Agronomist. G. M. Garden .'Assistant Agronomist. tE. G. MOSS Co-operative Assistant in Tobacco Investigations. tE. H. Matheson Co-operative Assistant in Tobacco Investigations. C. R. Hudson Farm Demonstration Work T. F. Parker Assistant Boy's Corn Club Work. R. W. Scott, Jr., Superintendent Edgecombe Test Farm, Rocky Mount, N. C. F. T. Meacham, Superintendent Iredell Test Farm, Statesville, N. C. John H Jeffries, Superintendent Pender Test Farm, Willard, N. C. R. W. Collett, Superintendent Transylvania and Buncombe Test Farms, Swannanoa, N. C. 'Assigned by the Bureau of Soils, United States Department of Agriculture. tAssigned by the Bureau of Plant Industry, United States Department of .Agriculture. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Botanical Relations ^ History of Cotton Growing in North Carolina 5 Cotton Production in North Carohna 7 Yield per Acre 8 Cotton Soils of the State — Piedmont Section 8 Cecil Sandy Loam ^ Cecil Clay Loam 9 Cecil Clay ^ Fundamental Treatment 9 Methods of Handling Green Manure in Piedmont Section 11 Plowing 12 Fertilization 1<^ Cotton Soils of the State — Coastal Plains Section 15 Norfolk Fine Sandy Loam 16 Norfolk Sandy Loam 16 Portsmouth Fine Sandy Loam 16 Fundamental Treatment 16 Methods of Handling Green Manure— Coastal Plains Section 16 Plowing 18 Fertihzation 18 Preparation of the Seed Bed — Piedmont Section 20 Ridge or Level Culture? 20 Application of Fertilizers 21 Cultivation 21 Preparation of the Seed Bed— Coastal Plairis Section 22 Thinning 22 Topping 22 Seed Selection 22 Rotation 23 Variety Tests 24 The Best Variety 25 Sources of Seed Tested in 1911 36 LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL Raleigh, February 8, 1912. Sirs: — I beg to submit herewith a manuscript on cotton culture in North Carolina. This is a short general treatise on cotton growing in this State, The materials for this paper have been gathered from vari- ous sources — from work done by this Department, the other Southern Experiment Stations, bulletins of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, and the works of a few independent authors, of which I desire to make special mention of the excellent little work by Prof. E. C. Brooks, "The Story of Cotton." I recommend the publication of this manuscript as the February bulletin of this Department. Respectfully submitted, J. L. Burgess, Hon. W. a. Graham, Agronomist. Commissioner of Agriculture. COTTON CULTURE IN NORTH CAROLINA BOTANICAL RELATIONS. The cotton plant belongs to the Malvacew, or mallow family of plants and is known scientifically by the generic name, Gossypium. There are some eight hundred species of this family, only a few of which, however, are used either for economic or ornamental purposes. The most important member of the family is, of course, Gossypium, or the cotton species, of which there are a number of varieties. To this may be added the Hibiscus esculentus or garden okra, and the Althaea Rosea, or well known hollyhock, and the Hibiscus or cotton bush of our lawns. The cotton plant is indigenous to tropical and subtropical regions, but under cultivation its range has been extended to almost forty degrees on either side of the equator. With us cotton is an annual, but in the tropics the entire plant lives through the year, just as the peach and apple trees do with us. Here the plants attain the size and height of small trees, some of which pro- duce a great many pounds of cotton during the year. The quality of lint from this cotton is not good, however, and is not used for commer- cial purposes. In the extreme southern part of the United States a second crop has been harvested from one planting by covering the base of the stalks with dirt in the fall to protect them from the freezes of winter as is done Avith sugar cane stubble. It is not certainly known from just what species our upland short staple cotton came, but it was probably from Gossypium herhaceum. Authorities are agreed, however, that the Sea Island, or long staple cotton, originated from the species known as Gossypium harhadense, a native of the West India Islands. The types or species of cotton grown exclusively in the United States are Gossypium herhaceum or short staple cotton and Gossypium harba- dense, or long staple cotton, known generally as Sea Island cotton. The yield of lint from the Sea Island cotton is much less than that from the short staple variety, but the uses to which it is put, together with the comparatively small amount that can be grown, causes the prices to range high enough to compensate, generally, for its lower total yield per acre. HISTORY OF COTTON GROWING IN NORTH CAROLINA. Botanists do not know just where or how early in history the cotton plant was first used for human comfort. It seems to have been used for clothing from the earliest civilizations. When the Spaniards came to America they found it cultivated from the West Indies to Peru and from Mexico to Brazil. 6 The Bulletin. Its cultivation in the United States seems to date back about 175 years before the industry became at all important. Like tobacco, its cultivation was first begun at Jamestown, Va., about 1608 or 1609, and subsequently spread southward through North Carolina and South Carolina to other southern territory where the climate was more con- genial for its production. The northern limit of its production was not confined to Virginia, however, as historians point out that it was grown, at least, on a garden scale, as far north as the 39th parallel as early as 1736, and at the time of the Revolution the supply of cotton in Pennsylvania was sufficient to supply the domestic needs of the State. Cotton was grown in Mary- land as late as 1826. After its introduction into Virginia in 1608, or thereabouts, it was grown to a very limited extent from Pennsylvania to Florida. Nowhere was it produced on a commercial scale sufficiently large to make any impression on the markets of the world prior to 1793, when Whitney invented the cotton gin. From that time on the production of cotton in the South has steadily grown in magnitude and importance, till now it forms the most important money crop not only of the South, but of the United States ; the export of which brings more foreign money into our country than any other single crop we produce in addition to giving year-round employment to hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children in factory, field, and mill. As early as 1708 ISTorth Carolina seems to have grown enough cotton to supply clothes for at least one-fifth of its population at that time, but cotton growing was first, probably, introduced into North Carolina by Sir John Yeaman, along the Cape Fear River, in 168.5, when he was placed in charge of the Claiendon Colony. Each colonist grew a small patch of cotton which was picked, carded, spun, and woven into cloth or knitted into hosiery by the members of the family. At that time growing, ginning, and manufacturing were all done on the farm. The ginning was usually done by the younger members of the family during evenings between supper and bedtime— the usual task of each one being to separate by hand a "shoe full" of lint from the seed before retiring. And as noted above, this practice of separating the seed from the lint continued till 1793, when the inven- tion of the cotton gin came to the relief of the planters. Early in the 18th century John Lawson wrote in his history of North Carolina, "We have not only provisions plentiful but clothes of our own manufacture, which are made and daily increase, cotton, wool, and flax being of our own growth and the women are to be highly commended for industry in spinning and ordering their housewifery to so great an advantage as they do." Little or no cotton was sold in North Carolina at that time, it being a difficult task to get enough for home consumption. In 1788, how- ever, the industry had grown considerably and we were beginning to sell some cotton out of the State. Our competitors in cotton growing at this time were the West India Islands and Brazil, from which much cotton was imported to make up the deficiency of the home-grown The Bulletin. 7 product for certain classes of goods; not only so, but the quality of cotton from these countries was better than could be grown here and fabrics made from it were preferred by the wealthier of our citizens. It is of interest to note that in 1789, Nathaniel Macon, then a Mem- ber of Congress from this State, proposed a tariff on cotton to protect the Southern States against the West Indies and Brazil. The bill was defeated. Whitney's invention was patented in 1794 after which time he visited the Legislatures of the different cotton-growing States and urged them to buy the patent rights for use in their respective States. The South Carolina Legislature purchased the right for that State, paying $50,000 for it. In 1804 the JSTorth Carolina Legislature bought the right for this State, for which it paid $30,000. From this time on the development of cotton manufacture in this State took rapid strides. In 1813 our first cotton mill was erected in Lincoln County. The machinery Avas purchased in Providence, Rhode Island, shipped by w^ater to Philadelphia, and hauled from there to l^orth Carolina by wagon, a distance of over 500 miles. The Battle cotton mill on Tar River was built in 1816 and the mill near Burlington in 1837. N"ow there are over 330 cotton mills scattered over the entire State. The introduction of the cotton mill into our midst revolutionized the body politic and sent a thrill of energy through our industrial system that has today put us in the forefront of the farming and manufactur- ing States of the Union. In 1790 the price of cotton was 26 cents a pound; in 1799 it was selling for 44 cents. As the price of cotton went up the price of slaves rose ; the cotton patches grew into 1,000-acre fields, and the slave labor- ers multiplied from tens into hundreds on a single farm. The planters of a few acres in 1780 became the landlords of vast estates at the begin- ning of the 19th century. Many of the plantations were small com- munities with each individual looking to the landlord for advice and support ; his vessels landed at his wdiarves, unloaded the goods he had purchased in Europe, and took on board his cotton, corn, and tobacco to be carried to London and other parts of the world. But as time went on and economic conditions changed, these vast estates were gradually broken up and divided among the growing popu- lation—sons and daughters of the landlords and others seeking invest- ments in farm lands — till now there are few farms in the State having 1,000 acres, and fewer still with 500 acres under cultivation. In 1790 JSTorth Carolina produced less than 1,000,000 pounds of cotton. Since then the production has gradually increased as shown in the following table until now we are growing 1,000,000 bales per annum : COTTON PRODUCTION IN NORTH CAROLINA, 1801 1910. 1801 8,000 bales 1860 145, 514 bales 1811 14,000 1870 144,935 1821 20,000 1894 479,441 1826 20,000 1900 502,825 1834 _ 19,000 1910 675.000 1850 73,845 The BuLLETI^^ YIELD PER ACRE. It will be of interest to note that during the last five years the aver- age acre yield of cotton in North Carolina was higher than that of Texas, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louis- iana, Arkansas, or Tennessee, for comparison of which the following table may be consulted : AVERAGE ACRE YIELD (In Lbs.) OF COTTON IN NORTH CAROLINA. (Year Book, 1910.) STATE North Carolina- Texas Louisiana Arkansas Tennessee South Carolina.. Georgia Florida Alabama Mississippi 1906 1907 210 205 225 130 272 210 215 195 180 190 175 215 165 190 95 115 ' 165 169 215 228 1908 211 196 145 215 218 219 190 112 179 233 1909 210 125 130 153 158 210 184 110 142 1.57 1910 227 149 130 175 198 212 174 110 158 173 COTTON SOILS OF THE STATE PIEDMONT SECTION. Cotton is grown with more or less success on all the soils of this sec- tion, not because they are equally well suited to cotton culture, but be- cause the study of the relationships existing between the soils and crops has not advanced far enough to enable either the farmer or the scientific agriculturist to ascertain, with accuracy, just what crops will, under given market conditions, yield best results on any particular type of soil. That each distinct soil type should be better suited to one crop or lines of crops than to others, is but a reasonable assumption ; the prob- lem of the agricultural student, therefore, is to find this particular crop or lines of crops, to which the particular soil type is best suited. Since the cotton plant is a native in its original state, at least, of insu- lar and maritime regions, where the air is generally moist, seasons long, and temperature uniform, it would seem that this plant is entirely out of its environment when grown in the piedmont section. The wonderful power man has over his environment has enabled him, however, to gradually extend the growth of this crop and make it a leading product of the temperate zone. He has taken the cotton plant, accustomed to the long-growing seasons of the tropics, and caused it to so readjust its physical make up as to mature in the comparatively short season of the foothills of ISTorth Carolina. The short season for cotton in this section is largely compensated for, liowever, by the perfect surface drainage of the soils that enables them to warm up earlier in the spring than soils of more open texture nearer The Bulletin. ' 9 the coast but which are not so well drained. The proverbial midsummer drought that occurs in this section also aids by checking the vegetative growth and maturing the crop earlier here than it would mature farther east. While making a fair yield on practically all the soils of this section of the State, there are some two or three that should be considered the leading cotton soils of piedmont iN'orth Carolina, both on account of greater areal extent and greater adaptability. These are the Cecil Sandy Loam, the Cecil Clay Loam and, to less extent, the Cecil Clay. CECIL SANDY LOAM. This soil is a sandy loam of a brownish, yellowish or sometimes grayish color, ranging from a few inches to ten or twelve inches in depth, depending on the amount of local erosion. The subsoil is a red clay containing an appreciable amount of coarse sand, both soil and subsoil carrying fragments of quartz or "white flint rocks." The surface of this soil is gently to heavy rolling and hilly. Some- times rather large areas are found, however, that are as level as a farmer would care to have agricultural land. This type of soil may be characterized, in a general way, as having a gray top and a red clay bottom. CECIL CLAY LOAM. This is, perhaps, the next in importance of the cotton soils of the piedmont section. The soil is about six inches deep and is character- ized by a red surface soil and heavy clayey subsoil. Both soil and sub- soil contain an appreciable amount of sharp sand, quartz, fragments of undecomposed crystalline schists, and other metamorphosed rocks from which the type is largely derived. CECIL CLAY. The surface of this soil is characterized in general by its red color and absence of an appreciable amount of sand. It is a heavy red clay which is in its typical development, very sticky when wet and rather difficult to cultivate. The depth of the soil, which usually marks the depth of plowing and the incorporation of organic matter, ranges from four to six inches as a rule. While not a specially good cotton soil, still with proper treatment, as much as a bale and a half to the acre has been secured from this type. All three of these soil types are found scattered over the whole pied- mont section with the possible exception of the slate belt where they will be found developed here and there where the rocks that give rise to this series of soils outcrop. They are typically developed in the counties of Iredell, Mecklenburg, Cabarrus, Davidson, Randolph, Guil- ford, Alamance, and Rowan. FUNDAMENTAL TREATMENT. In discussing the manipulation of these soils preparatory to the production of cotton, only general principles and broad generalizations 10 The Bulletin. can be dealt with, due to the fact that at present we have no accurate experiments or exhaustive data that show in detail just what fertilizer formula must be constructed to meet the needs of cotton on all of these types of soil in their present rather "run-down" condition. There are large areas of these soils that might be termed in a good state of fer- tility, but most of them which have been under cultivation for thirty or forty years are in need of special treatment before satisfactory results can be obtained. But when properly treated there are no better lands in the country than these. Organic matter, combined with deep plowing, is the first fundamental need and until this need is supplied any amount of superficial fertiliza- tion with commercial fertilizers must be done at considerable loss to the farmer. No system of cotton culture on these soils can be counted safe and sane that does not provide for the incorporation of a liberal amount of organic matter or humus in the soil each year. The more decayed vegetable matter we have in these soils, the less complete commercial fertilizer, within limits, will be required to make a fair crop of cotton, and the less humus we have, the more pounds of a complete mixture will be necessary. That is to say, good farming, unless special fertiliza- tion for special crops is desired, always reduces the required amount of mixed fertilizer for fair crop production, and poor farming always increases the amount of commercial fertilizer needed. To illustrate : If you use 300 pounds of commercial fertilizer this year to produce one-half a bale of cotton, the soil being uniform and the season being normal, next year you may have to use 100 pounds additional to get the same amount of cotton in case you have failed to use some green m.anuring crop as peas, rye, or crimson clover, to be plowed under and incorporated with the soil prior to the pitching of next season's ■crop. On the other hand, if you obtain one-half a bale of cotton by the use of 300 pounds of complete fertilizer this year, and plant cow- peas between the cotton rows and sow either rye, or crimson clover, •or both, to be plowed under, you will not likely need more than 200 pounds of commercial fertilizer to produce the half bale of cotton, and the chances are that you will produce the half bale just as easily with- •out the use of any commercial fertilizer as with it. It must be borne in mind, however, that the more organic matter we have in the soil, -within reasonable limits, the more commercial fertilizer can be used .to advantage. The use of a liberal amount of stable or green manure is entirely necessary to any rational system of cotton farming on these soils. We mention stable manure because it is, perhaps, the best form of organic matter we can get, but in the absence of the desired amount, one should not hesitate to use green manure, such as rye, crimson clover, cowpeas, eoy beans, etc., almost anything that will readily decay in the soil, as a source of humus. Remember that almost anything you can find in the line of organic matter will analyze as high or higher in plant food ele- ments than stable manure and the cost of hauling and spreading is, in The Bulletin. 11 case of the green crops, entirely avoided. Do not fail or hesitate to use green manure for cotton as it is the cheapest, and, on the whole, the best manure you can apply to the land. METHODS OF HANDLING GREEN MANURE IN PIEDMONT SECTION. If cowpeas are used they should be planted between the cotton rows in May or June or at the time the cotton is planted. The cotton may be planted in 5-feet rows with a row of cowpeas between. When the peas have matured seed, these may be picked and the vines left in the row. After the first or second picking of the cotton sow a bushel of rye or 15 pounds of crimson clover seed or both, broadcast, to the acre and harrow in between the rows before the cotton opens again sufficiently to be knocked out. Let the green crop grow till about two weeks before you are ready to plant cotton, then take a sharp disc harrow and disc the land two or three times, cutting the old cotton stalks, peavines, and the green crop into short bits after which the land should be plowed thoroughly some eight or ten inches deep and disced once more. This done, the land may be prepared for cotton in the ordinary manner. Do not fail to cut all vegetation into small bits before plowing under. We hear a great deal about the "souring" of land by the too liberal use of green manure and many farmers are afraid to use it to any extent on this account. The real explanation of this ''souring" effect lies, generally, in the method of handling the green manuring crop and not in the subsequent development of an excess of organic acid in the soil. The crop is generally plowed down with a good strong team hitched to a big plow on which is fastened a chain for the purpose of enabling the plowman to "wrap up the vines" and bury them deep enough to be out of the way of subsequent cultivation. This places a layer of very porous vegetable matter some two or three inches thick, say eight inches under the surface. The crop is then planted and cultivated over this bed of vegetable matter, and if the season is at all dry the farmer is likely to lose his crop. Why ? If the farmer should examine this vegetable matter some weeks after it was plowed under, and when his crop is looking worst, he would find the soil just under this bed of vines, etc., almost as wet as mud, while the soil just above it would likely be as dry as dust. This, then, is the explanation of the "souring" effect of green manure as generally handled. The rain water goes rapidly down through the soil and through the layer of vegetable matter and is stored in quantities in the subsoil, but this bed of noncapillary vege- table matter entirely cuts off the rise of this moisture from the subsoil to supply that taken from the surface soil by evaporation and plant growth. There has been a mechanical and not a chemical condition set up in the soil that cuts off the water supply from the plants and causes them to starve for water in spite of a normal rainfall. The remedy is that suggested above. See that the vegetable matter is cut fine by your disc harrow before it is plowed under and, when plowing, edge the furrow slice and thus incorporate the vegetable matter with the whole soil stratum and have it uniformly distributed through- 12 The Bulletin. oiit from top to bottom. The moisture can thus move dowTi and up in the soil to meet the needs of the crop throughout the season. It is always observed, on well drained land, that the following year, when the land has been plowed deeply again, and the layer of vegetable matter torn up and mixed with the soil, that the "souring" effect disappears, showing, if rightly interpreted, that it was the localization of the vege- table matter and not the vegetable matter itself that produced the dele- terious effect. Care must be taken not to turn under organic matter too deeply in these soils, since the processes of decay go on very slowly below ten or twelve inches. It has been found that the microflora or bacteria, etc., that cause the organic matter of the soil to decay, and thus give rise to the formation of the various nitrates in the soil, do not act freely below nine or ten inches under the surface of heavy soils. It is also true that these all important organisms can not exist in the first two or three inches of the surface soil on account of the too great aeration and drying effect of the sun's heat. Their greatest activity, therefore, is confined to that part of the soil stratum lying between three and ten inches of the surface. ISTow these bacteria feed entirely on organic matter. An important by-product of cattle feeding is the manure produced, but the principal product of the feeding of the bacteria is the formation in the soil of natural nitrates which are fundamental to crop production and which are immediately available for the plant as soon as formed. If we cut off the food supply from our cattle they die, and the same is true when we cut off the food supply from our soil bacteria. It will be seen, moreover, that the proper feeding of the soil bacteria is fundamental to the feeding of cattle or any other farm animals as well as to the suc- cessful production of crops. PLOWHSTG. These soils should be plowed at least eight and not over twelve inches deep. Subsoiling might pay in preparing for corn which requires a very large amount of water but in case deep plowing and turning under of green manure is practiced, it will not usually be worth while to subsoil for cotton. In general, subsoiling is doubtful economy in humid climates on heavy soils not well filled with humus for the obvious reason that when clayey soils, without humus, are loosened up to considerable depth, the first hard downpour rushes through the soil into the depths of the subsoil and fills it with water very quickly and in so doing the soil particles previously loosened by the subsoil plow "run together" and the subsoil becomes cemented and puddled again, and, on drying it will be found as hard, compact, and impervious to moisture as before. On the other hand, if the soil is filled with humus, the water falling on the surface is caught and held in the upper three or four inches of the surface and allowed to percolate more slowly down into the sub- soil which is thus gradually filled with moisture and, at the same time, the subsoil particles remain in a more or less open and porous condi- tion and will thus receive and store a number of inches of rain during The Bulletin. 13 one or even more seasons without again becoming puddled and im- pervious. These soils should generally be plowed in the fall for most crops but in case a cover crop for green manuring purposes is grown accord- ing to the plan outlined above, the impossibility of fall plowing isj evident. However, since fall plowing may have a number of beneficial effects on the land, chief of which would seem to be the pulverizing of the land by the freezes and thaws of winter and the destruction of the eggs of numerous insect pests, we would siiggest that once in three or four years the green manuring crop be omitted and the land be thoroughly plowed "ip the fall or early winter. Spring plowing for cotton is safer than for corn as cotton does not require as much moisture as corn. These soils should not be plowed over six or eight inches in the spring on account of the drying effect it has on the subsoil, also, the subsoil is likely to be very wet early in the spring and deep plowing might bring to the surface puddled soil that would remain cloddy all summer and thus intensify the deleterious effect of the midsummer drought which nearly always occurs in this part of the State. FERTILIZATION. Stable manure or green manure should be the basis of any system of fertilization on these soils, that is to say, commercial fertilizers should invariably be used in connection with some cheap form of organic matter. Otherwise, a large percentage of the phosphate and potash applied is sure to revert to insoluble and unavailable forms before the crop can utilize them. Large amounts of humus in the soil not only render available the natural mineral elements originally in the soil but help to hold in a soluble form the fertilizers applied artificially by the farmer till the growing crops can absorb and utilize them. In 1845 Peruvian guano was first introduced into the United States. In 1846 David Dixon of Hancock County, Georgia, "saw an advertise- ment in The American Farmer, Baltimore, of the wonderful effects of Peruvian guano. (He) procured three sacks of it, and finding it paid, used it in increasing quantities till 1855 or 1856, and then went into it fully." This was likely the first use of concentrated fertilizer for cotton on soils of this series. The Experiment Stations of Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and the Iredell Test Farm of North Carolina are on soils that are very similar in origin. There are individual differences in these soils, how- ever, that are likely to assert themselves under scientific treatment. All of these stations have, for a number of years, conducted fertilizer experiments with cotton, and, as might be expected, the results all have many points of agreement. These stations all find that neither potash, nitrogen, or phosphate give best results when used alone ; that for most profitable production all three must be used in combination, with phos- phate greatly predominating in the mixture. These stations are pretty well agreed, also, as to the optimum or best amount to use on lands in the piedmont section that possess average fertility. Furthermore, they agree on the method and time of application of fertilizer to these soils. The Bulletin. 15 The Alabama station found, after a number of experiments, that the cotton plant needs a complete fertilizer mixture on the soils of the station farm and that the best amount to apply ranged between 500 and 700 pounds per acre. The Georgia station came to practically the same conclusion after a number of experiments which showed a 10-3-3 to be a good formula for their soils. The South Carolina station found all three of the elements, nitrogen, phosphate, and potash, necessary in the mixture for best results on the station farm, with phosphate in considerable excess. Mr. B. W. Kilgore, of this Department, conducted fertilizer experi- ments with cotton for a number of years on the Cecil Clay Loam soil at the Iredell Test Farm at Statesville and here found the most economi- cal fertilizer mixture for cotton to be one containing about 10 per cent phosphate, 2 per cent potash, and 2 per cent nitrogen. All these sta- tions, therefore, located as they are, on soils derived from the same geological formation, and which have a number of qualities in common, find the fertilizer requirements of these lands very similar both as to the elements needed and the amounts to be applied. After repeated experiments all of these stations concluded, moreover, that an application of 400 pounds to 600 pounds of fertilizer should be made in the drill and applied some two or three weeks prior to planting. In case more than 600 pounds and as much as 1,000 pounds is used they suggest that the amount either be broadcasted or put on in two applications. These stations find that an application of cotton-seed meal or dried blood should be thoroughly mixed in the furrow just before planting, while stable manure should be placed in the soil at least one month before planting the crop. It was found, also, that an application of from 50 pounds to 100 pounds of nitrate of soda a month or six weeks after planting gave increased yields. COASTAL PLAIN SECTION. What we have said above is intended to apply to cotton soils outside the coastal plains section and known generally as piedmont or middle ISTorth Carolina soils, all of which are called residual in origin as dis- tinguished from the coastal plains soils, all of which are sedimentary deposits, having been laid down under conditions similar to those exist- ing today along the sea coast. As in the piedmont section, cotton is grown with more or less success on most of the soils found in this region. There are some two or three types in this section, however, that may be thought of as the leading cotton soils of the coastal plains region of the State. These all belong to either the Norfolk or the Portsmouth series of soils which cover the vast majority of this section. The Norfolk fine sandy loam, the Norfolk sandy loam, and the Ports- mouth fine sandy loam are the most important cotton soils of these two series, both in areal extent and adaptation to the crop. The areal extent and relative importance of these soils follow, so far as we have studied them, in the order given above. 16 The Bi'lletin. NORFOLK FINE SANDY LOAM. This soil consists of a pale yellow or gray fine sandy loam eight to twenty inches deep, overlying a fine yellow sandy loam subsoil grading into a light sandy clay at an average depth of twenty inches. It occurs on level areas and gently rolling uplands and generally has good drainage. This is the best cotton soil in Pitt, Edgecombe, Chowan, Craven, Duplin and other counties. NORFOLK SANDY LOAM. The soil of this type consists of a gray, yellowish gray, or light brown medium to coarse sandy loam, varying in depth from eight to thirty inches and overlies a yellow light sandy clay subsoil. It is gen- erally well drained. This is the best cotton soil in Robeson, Scotland and some other counties. PORTSMOL'TH FINE SANDY LOAM. The soil is a brown to black, more or less mucky, fine sandy loam carrying, as a rule, a large amount of vegetable matter in an advanced state of decay which gives to it the dark color and open texture. The soil is from twelve to eighteen inches deep. The subsoil is a mottled drab, or dark gray, sandy clay, rather heavy and impervious to a depth of thirty to thirty-six inches. It is found in low-lying areas usually in the neighborhood of swamps, sounds, and rivers of the coast country. This soil forms the most important agri- cultural land in n number of the extreme eastern and northeastern • counties. FUNDAMENTAL TREATMENT. Here, as in the piedmont section, it must be borne in mind that liberal amounts of some cheap and easily obtained organic matter lies at the A^ery foundation of successful cotton growing. There are large ai-eas of these types of soil that have been brought to a high state of production but the vast majority of them are sorely in need of humus as a basis of proper and economic fertilization. There are a number of practical difficulties in the way of any exten- sive development of the live stock industry on these soils, hence stable manure can not be relied upon as an important source of organic matter in crop production. Happily, however, the use of stable manure does not have to be relied upon for successful cotton culture. In this sec- tion the farmers, many of them at least, have come to know the value of green manure in the improvement and maintenance of the fertility of their soils. Such crops as burr clover, crimson clover, soy beans, cowpeas, rye, vetch, etc., have long been known to the fanners of this part of the* State. METHODS OF HANDLING GREEN MANURE IN THE COASTAL PLAINS SECTION. Burr clover should be one of the leading green manuring crops of this section, since, by proper handling it will reseed itself from year to year, The Bulletin. 17 and at the same time enrich the land with nitrogen, sometimes in excess of what might be desired for the growth of cotton. One good method of using burr clover in combination with cowpeas in cotton production is the following: Lay the cotton rows off 5 feet apart, and plant a row of cowpeas between the cotton rows, thus having a row of cotton and a row of cowpeas every two and a half feet. In September or October, sow broadcast about 15 pounds of clean burr clover seed to the acre and harrow this in between the rows of peas and cotton. When the peas ripen pick them and let the old pea vines and old cotton stalks remain on the ground over winter. In the spring bed the new cotton rows exactly where old cowpeas rows were the summer before, leaving the old cotton stalk row stand in a six to eight-inch balk, till the burr clover has ripened seed. This may be after the cotton has been planted in the old cowpea row and worked once or twice. When the burr clover has ripened seed, cut the old cotton stalks to pieces with the stalk cutter; break out the old cotton stalk row some six or eight inches deep with the "middle buster," and plant cowpeas as was done the previous year. This method puts two leguminous crops on the land each year, one in the summer, the other in the fall, winter and early spring. The sum- mer crop concentrates the nitrogen in what will be the cotton row next year while the winter crop broadcasts the nitrogen over the entire field, and both, together with the leaves, stems, and roots of the cotton plants, add large amounts of organic matter to the soil. This method has been followed with great success in some of the Gulf States and burr clover and cowpeas grow here as well as they grow there. Green manure may be safely plowed under more deeply on these soils than on those of the piedmont section. This is because the soils when well drained are more open and porous and the air penetrates more deeply. We would expect the organisms that produce decay of vegetation to work at a much greater depth in the Norfolk sandy loam than in the Cecil clay loam for the obvious reason that water drains out of it more quickly and the subsequent ventilation is better. Therefore, where green manuring crops are to be plowed under in the spring preparatory to planting cotton, they should first be disced a number of times to cut the vegetation and reduce it to rather small bits, after which it should be plowed under not less than eight or ten inches deep where the soil is well drained. Where drainage is sluggish, the plowing should not be so deep since soil bacteria can not work at all in Avater clogged soils, and after all it is principally to feed the soil bacteria that we turn under the vegetable matter in these soils. In all these loose soils we need a deep soil stratum in order to con- serve moisture. It is too well known to the farmers of this section that the first three or five inches of these soils dry out rather rapidly during the summer. This drying effect quickly kills the surface roots of what- ever crop happens to be on the land and the plants must feed, frequently in the midst of their development, from the deeper layers of soil in which there may be, and frequently is, but little available plant food. In these sandv soils, therefore, we want to develop a deep soil stratum, 18 The Bulletin. at least ten or twelve inches deep, by turning under deeply the vegetable matter grown on the surface. We must be careful, however, to incorpo- rate this vegetable matter uniformly throughout the whole soil stratum as outlined for the piedmont soils, otherwise disastrous results may be expected the first season, before the material has entered the state of rapid decay, by the cutting off of the water supply from below. PLOWING. The need for deep fall plowing is evidently not so great for these light soils as for the heavy soils of the piedmont section. The pulver- izing effect of the Avinter freezes is not necessary as they are already sufficiently loose, but the destruction of the eggs and larvae of certain insect pests may occasionally be desirable and in this case fall plowing should be resorted to. It must be borne in mind that much greater latitude may be taken in the plowing and cultivation of these loose soils than the farmer would dare take in the handling of heavy soils. Being loose and sandy they may be plowed sooner after a rain without becoming puddled and cloddy; they may be plowed deeper in the spring without detrimental effect ; and more of the subsoil may be brought to the surface at one time than should be turned up from heavy clayey subsoils. Green manures, such as cowpeas and soy beans should be plowed under in the fall, unless they are used in connection with burr clover as outlined above, while all winter legumes must be incorporated with the soil some weeks before the cotton crop is planted in the spring. FERTILIZATION. In the early history of cotton growing in this State no artificial manuring or fertilization was practiced. The bulk of the crop was grown on new land, and when the new lands were "worn out," other fields were cleared and put under the plow. Why should "new lands" be preferred for the crop ? Fundamentally because they were always well stocked with humus which rendered soluble the mineral matter of the soil and thus developed an abundant food supply for the crop. This, then, should give us the cue to the proper system of fertilizer application to these soils. Organic matter first, then the necessary plant foods and soil correctives. Curiously enough no extended experiments in the fertilization of these soils for cotton growing have, as yet, been brought to any satisfactory conclusion in any of the States. At the outset, however, we must bear in mind the difference in origin of these soils from that of the soils in the piedmont section. The soils in the latter section have moved but little, if any, from the parent rocks from which they were derived. We say they were formed in place or in situ, which indicates that most of the less soluble mineral matter present in the original rocks still remains in the soil and subsoil. N'ow there are many different kinds of rocks in the piedmont and mountain sections of the State, each extended area of which gives rise to a distinct type of soil. But during the processes of soil formation a The Bulletin. 1& great deal of the fine eartli from the original rock is washed from the surface by the rains and much of the soluble potash, phosphate, and lime is also carried away by the surface and underground waters, depos- ited along the seashore, and left dissolved in the open waters. The sand, silt, and clay is deposited along the seashore until the lands, such as our present coast country, are built up ; but much of the soluble potash, lime, and phosphate is carried out into the ocean, remains in solution for a time, and is deposited in quantites only here and there where shallow lakes gradually dry up. We would expect, therefore, as this soil material became irregularly laid down, the mineral elements contained in it would also become irregularly deposited. The larger soil particles, as coarse sand and fine gravel, being first deposited by the moving waters, would contain little soluble mineral plant food which would be carried beyond and laid down with the finer materials as silts and clays, in sounds and shallow lakes. From what we can ascertain the mineral plant food requirements of the coastal plains soils are much more irregular than those of the pied- mont section. Some need an excess of potash, some of phosphoric acid, some of nitrogen, and some of lime. In the coastal plains section it is not safe to say the whole area needs an excess of phosphate or potash in the mixture, but both, in varying quantities, seem to be needed, though the optimum or best amount, for the different soil types must be determined locally. The Agricultural Department is at present carrying on local fertilizer experiments on a number of soil types in the eastern part of the State, with varying results in different localities. The farmer might get some interesting suggestions by putting out a series of small experimental plots on his own farm after the following plan : 2 rows 16% Acid Phosphate. 2 rows Thomas Phosphate. 2 rows Kainit. 2 rows Muriate of Potash. 2 rows Nitrate of Soda. 2 rows Dried Blood. 2 rows Cotton Seed Meal. 2 rows Swamp Muck. 2 rows Pish Scrap. 2 rows Stable Manure. Study carefully the development of each plot during the season and in the fall pick and weigh each separately and note the difference in yield of seed cotton per plot. This will give some indication as to the leading element to be used in the fertilizer mixture. It is the policy of the Department to conduct carefully planned ferti- lizer experiments on the different soil types of the State long enough to find out not only the most needed fertilizer elements of the different soils, but to ascertain the relative amounts and proper combinations to be used in the production of cotton. We may state, however, that all soils in the coastal plains region need nitrogen and most of this should be gotten through legumes. 20 The Bulletin. PREPARATION OF THE SEED BED PIEDMONT SECTION. As previously noted in this paper it is not wise to sanction any system of cotton farming that does not include the incorporation of liberal amounts of organic matter in the soil. This organic matter may come either from summer legumes combined with the stems and leaves of the old cotton stalks cut fine and plowed under in the fall, or from some of the winter legumes and noulegiiminous crops, such as crimson clover, vetch, and rye, so-mi in the fall, together with the old cotton stalks, cut fine and incorporated with the soil in the early spring. In view of this system, shall the land be plowed in the fall or in the spring? If cotton follows cotton, which is generally a bad practice, the land, it is evident, can not be fall plowed, and must be plowed in the spring or early winter. If cotton follows a pea stubble or peas turned under, which is much better, as a rule, the land may be, and should be, plowed deep in the fall and receive a winter cover crop of rye or crimson clover, to be cut fine Avith the disc harrow and plowed under six to eight inches deep in the spring, some ten or fifteen days before planting. RIDGE OR LEVEL CULTURE? Some speculation has been indulged in by the friends of cotton wlion the question of ridge or level cultivation has come up for decision. One will say the cotton plant owes its tap root to the fact that it has for decades been growm on a ridge and forced to send its roots downward instead of laterally in quest of food. But we recall that the farmer who grows his cotton by the ridge method grows his corn by the ridge method also. Another says it is a typical tap rooted plant, but years of poor treatment have so reduced its vitality that it is subject to all sorts of diseases and insect pests. We recall, however, that various other crops, many of which have received first rate treatment, are still subject to disease and the attacks of various insects. But which shall be used, level or ridge cultivation? From whatever cause, we know that cotton always sends a tap root down deep into the subsoil in quest of moisture, but in addition to this tap root there are numerous fibrous roots running out in every direction in quest of food and drink. We stated above that the elaboration of plant foods was largely con- fined to that part of the soil stratum lying between three and ten inches, hence it is easy to see why these fibrous roots should seek those soil layers near the surface, since it is here that the richest feeding ground is found. Here the soil bacteria are at work; here the great bulk of soluble fertilizers recently applied are found; and here it is that every operation looking to the warming, fining, and sanitation of the soil, is performed. We may, it is true, attempt to confine our fertilizer appli- cation to a narrow furrow, over which we make a ridge, but the rains will eventuallv carrv much of it in solution out from the ridge into the 1/1/ *— The Bulletin. 21 middle of the row. Aud did you ever notice how vigorously the little fibrous roots attempt to go along with this soil solution? But you have your plants on the ridge and every time the heel scrape, or other cultivator, passes along the row these little feeding roots, for such they are, are cut off and the plant is forced to make its develop- ment in the small space of the ridge allotted to it by the grower. Any leachings from the ridge and middle are carried out into the depression between the rows and the surface waters carry them out of the field into the drainage. 'Now suppose we use level culture. The tap root goes down deep into the subsoil as before, but the fibrous, lateral roots, instead of remaining confined in the narrow ridge, spread far and wide in the upper layers of soil and obtain nourishment wherever it can be found, whether in the middle of the rows or in the immediate ridge where the stalk is stand- ing. These small roots will not, however, rise above the depth at which the heel scrape or the cultivator tooth runs, hence shallow cultivation is necessary in order not to cut off these small feeding roots that carry nourishment to the cotton plant. On examination the fibrous roots coming from one row will be found to meet and pass those coming from the other and the whole soil layer between the rows will be found full of these small roots just below the culture zone. This is not true, however, where the plants are confined TO tall narrow ridges with deep dead furrows between. On well drained soils, therefore, we can see no good reason Avhy the cotton crop should be cultivated on a ridge. APPLICATION OF FERTILIZERS. Having prepared a good seed bed by plowing, harrowing, dragging, etc., the cotton rows should be laid off from three and a half to five feet apart, varying with the fertility of the soil and the amount of fertilizer to be used. A medium sized furrow should be opened and the fertilizer applied some ten days or two weeks before planting. The concensus of opinion seems to be in favor of putting the fertilizer in the drill in case not more than 400 pounds to 600 pounds are used, but, if heavier appli- cations are put on the quantity should be divided into two parts, one of which should be put in the drill, the other to be used as a side dressing some weeks after planting. CULTIVATION. A small ridge is necessarily made over the fertilizer and when the middles are broken out, which is sometimes necessary, the field is thrown into a series of beds which should be quite low. Just before planting these low ridges should be dragged still lower and by the time the cotton is planted the field should be reduced to practically a level surface. Planting should begin as soon as all danger from killing frosts has passed. It is not possible to set any definite date for the first cultivation. Some find it good practice to run over the field with a weeder before the cotton comes up in order to break the crust and destroy germinating weed and grass seeds. As a rule the cultivators should start as soon as the crop is 22 The Bulletin. well out of the ground and continue every week or ten days till about August 1st, Avhen cultivation should cease, unless the weather has been unusually dry and extended drought is expected, when one or more culti- vations should be given to conserve moisture, otherwise there might be a too free ^'shedding squares" and the crop yield greatly reduced. Cultivation may be some two or three inches deep early in the season, but must become very shallow as the season advances in order to allow the greatest amount of root development in the upper layers of the soil. COASTAL PLAINS SECTION. On the soils of this part of the State the same general methods of fertilizer application and cultivation obtain, except that here there is generally some necessity for using ridges rather than level culture, on account of the poor drainage of some of the soils, particularly those of the Portsmouth series and to some extent the fine sandy loam of the ISTorfolk series. The cotton plant delights in a warm, well drained soil and this condi- tion must be secured at all hazards. Instead of the tall narrow ridges commonly used", however, it would likely be better to use a combination of the ridge and level culture method and throw the fields into narrow lands with deep dead furrows for carrying away rapidly any surplus water. These narrow lands might be made wide enough for about four rows of cotton which should then be cultivated on the level and thus get the benefit of all the plant food in the entire soil stratum where drainage is sufficient for bacterial action. THINNING. Thinning or ''chopping" should begin as soon as the cotyledons have given way to the true leaves of the plant. When the first or second true leaf has appeared, thinning should begin and continue till all probability of dying, and thus destroying the stand, is past, which will be about the time the fifth or sixth true leaf has come out. TOPPING. There is some difference of opinion as to the advisability of topping cotton. A number of experiments have been planned to solve the ques- tion of whether it pays to top cotton, but none of them have given conclu- sive proof in favor of this practice. On the other hand, many farmers seem to find the topping of cotton to pay, and so practice it every year. It would seem that the soil and season might have some influence on the results. On the whole, however, in this latitude and where the soil is rich and inclined to prolong the vegetative growth too far into the latter part of the season, the topping of the main stem and the larger branches would seem to be advisable in order to check the growth and hasten ma- turity. The operation might also result in forcing the plant to put on more bolls. SEED SELECTION. The selection of the seed is an important matter in cotton culture in JSTorth Carolina, first, because we must accentuate the tendency of our The Bulletin. 23 leading varieties toward early maturity; second, by carefully selecting our seed the total yield per acre may be materially increased. When selecting seed from the general crop, the individual plant must form the basis of the operation. The grower should take a careful look over his field and note the size, form, shape, and general vigor of the plants he would like to reproduce next year. In addition to these char- acters he should note the relative number of bolls, relative date of maturity, general disease resistance, and distribution of fruit on the plant. Located as we are on the northern limit of the cotton belt of the United States we must have a cotton that matures early, therefore, characteristics that make for early maturity must be present in our ideal plants. Some of these characters may be noted as follows : An early matur- ing cotton plant bears most of its crop toward the base of the stalk and does not produce a heavy "top crop." The basal branches carry most of the fruit or bolls. The plant should range in height from three to four feet and have the well known sugar loaf or cone shape. We want our plant to be vigorous and have a good leaf surface. The yield must be considerably above the average for the field and the selections would better be made where the stand is perfect in order to bring out the individuality of the plants. The relative date of maturity is very important. Cotton that is not matured when frost comes does not make as good lint as that maturing earlier. Having found the plants desired, only the largest and best bolls, those having four or five locks preferred, should be selected for seed. These should be taken from the lower half of the stalk and never selected much, if any, above the middle of the plant. Enough seed should be thus selected to plant the next crop and ginned and kept separately from the other seed. This operation repeated every year will hand- somely repay the time and expense required. ROTATION. In the piedmont section the rotation must be chosen with a view to adding organic matter to the soil each year if best results are to be obtained. The old time three-year rotation of cotton, corn, and small grain is all right, with a slight modification, namely, rye or crimson clover should be sown in the cotton field in the fall and plowed under in the spring before corn is planted. Where the corn is not cut up and shocked preparatory to shredding, the old stalks should be cut to bits with a good sharp stalk cutter or disc harrow just before sowing small grain. This small grain crop should generally be wheat, as oats should be sown some weeks earlier and before it might be convenient to get the corn off the land. Peas or soy beans, sown broadcast, should follow the small grain crop to be cut for hay, if the land is in fair fertility, or cut up and plowed under if the land is in need of humus. The land should now be seeded to rye and crimson clover to be cut up with the disc and incor- porated with the soil just before planting the cotton crop the following spring. 24 The Bulletin. This rotation, together with deep plowing and the fertilization sug- gested above, which, however, will need to be varied as the fertility of the soil increases, will insure a good crop every season on most of the Cecil soils, even in the face of decreased rainfall, such, for example, as we had during the summer of 1911, provided the surface of the land is kept mulched by frequent shallow cultivation. The best rotation for the coastal plains section will depend on the crops to be grown, but, in general, the organic matter requirements of these soils must also be considered in any well ordered farm manage- ment scheme in this territory. Most of the well drained soils need more humus. The poorly drained soils first need drainage, after that the humus supply must be kept up by a judicious use of leguminous and other crops. It is likely that the rotation suggested for the piedmont section will, in many cases, suit the coastal plains section except that, as a rule, oats should be substituted for wheat. In case it is desired, for any reason, to grow cotton after cotton, the use of burr clover outlined above will be found advantageous. VARIETY TESTS. The Department of Agriculture has, for a number of years, been testing different varieties of cotton at different points in the recognized cotton district of the State. An effort has been made to get a variety test on each of the leading soil types and thus ascertain the existing varieties best suited to the different types of soil. In 1910 cotton varieties were tested at the Edgecombe farm with the results given in Table No. 1 below. It will be noted here that the three highest yielding varieties were Bradbury's Improved, Russell Big Boll, and Cook's Improved, in the order named; while the lowest yielders Avere Excelsior, Morgan's Climax, and Bank Account in the order named. During 1911 we made variety tests in eight different counties, the results of which may be gathered from the following tables : Table 'No. II shows the results of the work at Goldsboro in Wayne County. Here the best yielders were Summercur, Rosser No. 1, and Thigpen's Prolific, in the order named; while the lowest yielders were Webber, Allen's Multiplier, and Hawkins', in the order named. In Table No. Ill we find the results of the variety tests of cotton in Halifax County, on the State Penitentiary Farm at Tillery. Here the best yielders were Thigpen's Prolific, Bank Account, and Brown No. 1, with Webber, Hartsville, and Dean's Special standing at the bottom of the list. At Williamston, in Martin County, we made the variety test, the results of which are shown in Table IV. In this test the best varieties were Cook's Improved, Round Boll, and Culpepper's Improved, while the lowest yielders were Simpkins', Bank Account, and Brown No. 1. Table No. Y shows the results of the variety test at Whiteville, Colum- bus County. The best varieties at Whiteville were Russell Big Boll, Cook's Improved, and Morgan's Climax, while the lowest yielders were Bank Account, Webber, and Allen's Multiplier. The Bulletin. 25 All of the above tests were made in the coastal plains section and on soils of the JSTorfolk series with the exception of that made at Til- lery. Here the soil was a rather heavy silt loam soil found in the ancient flood plains of the Eoanoke River. There were a number of tests made in the piedmont section. Table Xo. YI shows the results of the work at Salisbury in Rowan County. Here the best yielders were Excelsior Prolific, Simpkins', and Lewis Long Staple, while the lowest yielders were Rosser No. 1, Allen's Multi- plier, and Culpepper's Improved. In Rutherford County, Morgan's Climax, Webber, and Thigpen's Prolific made the highest yields as shown in Table J^o. VII, while Summerour, Cook's Improved, and Simpkins' made the lowest records. At the Iredell Test Farm, Summerour, Lewis Long Staple and Cul- pepper's Improved made the best record as shown in Table 'No. VIII; while the lowest yields were made by Allen's Multiplier, Hawkins', and Shine's Early. Attention should be called to the unusually high per cent of lint made by some of these varieties during 1911. Those that made an unusually high per cent of lint were : Varieties. Per Cent Lint. Summerour (Iredell County) 48.5 Russell Big Boll (Iredell County) 41.6 Excelsior Prolific (Iredell County) 41.2 Toole ( Iredell County) 41.1 Bradbury's Improved (Iredell County) 40.6 Brown No. 1 41.2 Hawkins' (Rutherford County) 41.1 Simpkins' (Rutherford County) 40.7 Webber (Rutherford County) • 40.5 Summerour (Wayne County) 43.2 Morgan's Climax (Columbus County) 43.3 Excelsior Prolific (Columbus County) 40.3 Culpepper's Improved (Columbus County) 40.4 Tables IX and X show the compiled results of variety tests that have been in progress at the Edgecombe and Iredell Test Farms during several years past. While a great many varieties have been tested, a number of them were for one reason or another, in the tests of only one or two years, and it was not thought proper to admit them to the compiled tables. The last columns of these tables show the average yield in seed cotton during the years tested. 'No variety was admitted to the tables that was not tested as many as three years. THE BEST VARIETY. In case you have been careful in the selection and adaptation of your seed, we unhesitatingly say the best variety for you to use is the one you have developed on your own farm. By adaptation we mean the growing of the same variety on the same kind of land for a sufficient length of time to allow it to become adjusted to its soil and climate surroundings. 26 The Bulletin. Tlie varieties of cotton that have given good results in the' piedmont section during the past several years are King's Improved (native, that is, seed grown on the Test Farm), King's Improved, Russell Big Boll, Thigpen's Prolific, Simpkins' Prolific, and Brown ISTo. 1. Others have done well but these have been the leading varieties during the last four to six years. With the exception of the Russell Big Boll, these are all small boiled cottons of the Sugar Loaf or King type and seem to be adapted to the rather short growing season and the red clay soils of this part of the State. The varieties that made the highest yields at the Edgecombe Test Farm during the past four to nine years were the Webber, Hodge, Russell Big Boll, Edgeworth, Shine's Early, and Culpepper's Im- proved. NO. I— RESULTS OF VARIETY TESTS OF COTTON AT EDGECOMBE FARM IN 1910. . Variety GO Bradbury's Improved 313 Russell Big Boll 1 262 Cook's Improved 295 Hawkins 331 Climax 325 Toole's Early 323 Shine's Early 306 Brown No. 1 317 Mass. Improved _.. 327 Thigpen's Prolific 300 Edgemont 302 Lewis' Long Staple * 292 Sug&r Loaf... 272 Rosser No. 1 303 Williams 259 Ninety Day 305 King's Improved 338 Bank Account 264 Morgan's Climax 256 Exclesior 293 OS o 81.0 59.0 66.0 74.0 73.0 78.0 72.0 76.0 65.0 60.0 65.0 57.0 55.5 58.0 50.0 49.0 54 49.0 45.0 ■n " Per CO i-> Cent of 1 c -^ c j: is M-g ■^ -c |o 3 ; CB ^ 1480 1220 34 1140 37 1110 35 1160 32 1000 38 980 37 1080 32 980 36 900 28 Yield per Acre I 1620 ' 35 65 1180 49 51 1320 41 59 35 65 66 1400 34 1560 31 69 1440 33 67 1520 30 70 1300 36 1200 37 1300 34 64 63 63 65 68 62 63 68 64 72 567 578.2 541.2 518 496.4 483.6 475.2 456 468 448 424 421.8 385.5 371.2 380 362.6 345.6 352.8 252 1063 601.8 778.8 962 963.6 1076. 4 964.8 1064 832 752 858 (h u a> 0) »^ 0.3 ■S"" -0J3 •9^ hJ2 II t: « « ots £ « ^ 00 1^ r^ CO h^ CO r^ OS CO CO* jad paag aniB^ 0» panoj s CO CO K CD CO CD CD CO CO t^ CO o CO CO CO o OS Oi CO ge CO CO-»CDCDiO*OiO»OW3*0'^Tt<'^-^ r^ QO CO CO -^ ^H CO ^ ^ ^ **1* ^ ^ CO (V _ t. paag spuno^j CO O -^ (M O "^^ »— I ^ OSOCOcDCOCO-rt^C^liOOCOcOCOCOt^COOiOi— «JOOC^OOOOSCOOOSOOQOOSCOOS*— iQOt^CO spunoj CO ■It' t» CO COt~-^CD'^b-.OOCOI>-TtHt-COCVI(MCS'siioa-o>j 00 CO CO CD O) CO OO s s CO o OO g CO CO Oi OS GO OO OO CO -jaj q^m 9J3y spnno J ppi^ aioy J9d uonoQ p9ag spunoj pi9Tj^ COCOCOGOQOCCt^i-H»-ICO-COCS» o , C- CO CO CO »0 CO o CO -JD »0 IlO CO -^ -^ QO'-J^OOOOOOOCO i>-'^coot^coor^os COt— "-TfCOCOtOCO^Hi— t § CO s s § i s 03 CO ■>ll o cc U7 § c in CO p'nooag — ' ^B SJ(iB:^g JO ^qSiajj aSBjaAy No. Stalks Per Plat Tnno^ ' oocDTHOs-H^HOscoOit^OTjHoot^ooocot^o 4UllcJjJ OOCOOa^H^Ht^io-^OOOO^HOSeMCOCOCDCOOO [BniDy XjT COCOCO(NCOCOeOC4C^(NCOCO(M«COCOCOCOCOCO ^oajjaj JO j^ ■" o o o ir3 o o o »r3 s lO o o o in 03 > S CO bO a o »:pHHHuSHa3cqWSaHJ25«cBOW-<^ 28 The Bulletin. PP'A oi Suipjoooy 5{nBjj ♦-^C^Jr^'^tOOt^00C5O'-"C^CC'*»^Ot^X)0:O lad psag puB t^ t* b- CO eo «o pqsng t-- C^ CO Oi to -^ OS -^ C0i^00»—«QO00*—tC5OS punoj jad luji ani^A. CO CO CO paag spanoj CO C<1 s CO g QO o 05 00 Ci CD o CO s CO s s CD CO CO s i 05 CO C5 CO CO CO CD -^ CO ^ CO CO CO OS CO CM »0 CO CO CO C^l CO 1 i CO oo i 1— 1 spunoj CO .—I CO CO o CQ Oi Ci v: »0 CO OS CM s g CO o CM s CO CO 5 CO CO CO CD CO S CD CO 3 CO CO s ■* •9" PS 1^ H CO H >^ H H o H O Y O TIOMOQ paag spunoj oOl ui paag spunoj 00 CD CO CO CO •* S CM § OS 00 C-1 t^ cc CO CD OS CO XT) CO CM OS CD W3 g CD CO CO t* g CO U0J103 paag spunoj ooi UI ^ui'j spunoj n CO CO CO c^i CO 00 CO CO CM OO CM i-H CO CO OS o CO to CM oc o CO ci CM CD CM CO OS CO CO oo CM CO OS CM OS o CO uonoQ paag punoj auQ ajjBjvo^siioa-Oi^ - 1 t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 -ioj Ml'Ai ajov* spanoj pjatA C^COCMiiOiOiOCOTt*COtOCOTt-CMiOO>-iOt^ Oi0'^C0t^'^t0-^C0'^OO«0C^l0SC0CSTt«»0C0 '-«'— 'OiOOSCOOOO'^'— 'OOCOt^C>t^r^CO»OOOCD iOCOCOCJCMC'lCMCOC^COCMCMCMCOCMCMCMCOC^ICM • ajoy o o CO c^ o ->1< -i< (M CO CO CO oo (M -K C-J r:^ CM -1< ^ CO jad uo^iOQ paog CO s o CO C3 Ci g o o o CO s o> C5 s s CT o spunoj piav^^ c^ »-l •"* ..-J t-4 C^l c^ CN '"' ^^ '"' •^ s3ni5ioij g s C^ 03 CC g K g C3 CD S §g 1^ S i COrS ■^ J- 1 Sunjoij PmJL \ - - - - — — - 'Id Po otton Sui^OIJ puooag SursjoTj A'^ljn^BJlJ COCOCOOCOC^COCOCDCOCO- to »— t r^ to t^ lO oo CO CO CM CM CD »— 1 t- »-l r- OS IBn^oyAg 1 CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO ^ CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO Cs» CM CO pUB^g ■^ "^ --t* '■:t< "^ -^ ■^ ^ ■^ -t* ■*t* "^ '^t* ■-t* ^ Tf 'Tt* -^ -^ ■^ o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o CD o ^oajjaj ao^ »o »o »o "0 »c iCi i-O ^ iC iO lO >o »o lO "' o iC lO o >o 03 > •^ s CO y o a Pi -L. n " 3 .2 C ^ to O C3 " U U i^ P3 CQ a 3 O _: "o. . O -H> >. ffl M bO o •J . H pa o •~ 3 X Pi o E - o o Coo X O H C3 O ■3 12; P< o ^ ^ T3 e 3 o a a o The BrLLETiN". 29 VWA oi Suipjoooy ijuFy aaoy jsd paag puB pqsng ■e ogj ^B a jay jad paag aniB^v — * c-i re ^f •^ l^ X C5 O — C-l CC Tj- L'i :0 t^ X' OS o pnnoj jad %nvi an[B^\ Ci ^ __ -V* O: fO ^^ OS o o ■J^! , ,^ CO ^^ CD '-r CI y:: '» '— ' Cs oc lO Oi t-» CO oc t^ r^ c^ o -* -* T-l O rjT r- ,^ •o O CO _^ »-i o OS CD 00 00 t>- t^ t* t^ b- t^ t- t^ o to CO CO CD *o lO lO iO ^ Oi ■*!< cq on ^_, lO a> »f5 iri r^ r>- on CT> lO on Oi *— 1 CO i-H t>» o CO cc to ir^ oo iCi CI -^ t- oo ■^ OS CD r* 00 o O^MOi— Tj* r* o oo oc ■^CQOscsr^c^c;'— "Osc».'rt*CO^HOOO <— i»Ot— ■^CCI>-r^OCOCOCOO»OGO'-»»OCS'-'iO(M cc'Tf'McocMfMi— "Cocvjc^'-HOiO'— 'OOsr-ooor^ spunoj -^ r^ o to ilO CD t>- -^ OS en t^ C-l — o ;D CO -,0 (M O .-" OS "M C^ ^ -Tf CO CO •— ' c*i •— ' Cti iC lO lO *o »c to ■^ t-- CO T puB^g ■\:i^^ -aaj qiiJi aaoy jad uo^jo'q paag spunoj pjai^ ajoy jad noi^OQ paag epanoj p piA g IbVox toioiO'-HcO'^ocqcoooscsit^c^i^Hc^ioooom ^HOOiOOOOMt-ICOOC'iJ't^l^OOO^t^QOOOO ^H^HOiOoootooiooooco-^iot^wa-^jfeflCd-"* d Cott Plat ■p-tiqx "Id See Per p'uooag — — — i>H ■ ■JSJl J IB SJlJBlg JO 'mSiau aSBjaAy No. Stalks Per Plat ■junoQ puBig (joajjaj jo^ W3 kC 1 > o as la! a o o w Pi £ ^ a a a ' X OS ^ 2 -w o c o) W ^ M M O J _ 2 S M -r* "iu a> i2 ■3 Pi o a 'Z c3 Qj n — i^ a 3 o <-3 fSKn^CiSKSr-K^H a S w « m oQ a 3 o a a 03 o 20 The Bulletin. •J t— I > a i» H W o Eh H o O 3uipjO30y ^n^H ajoy jad paag puB laqsng ■B ogg ^B ajoy jad paag aniB^y ^ punO(j B OQI ^B aaoy jad 'iuyj anjBA --'MtfO'<1 co»-^ooo3t^eo«ou5e<5cce^^HO>oaoo«o GO CO IM -* CO CO 00 CO CO Ci ■* 1— « CO CO 00 CO 03 CO CO ■^ CO CO CO CO CO c^ CO c^ CO CO - CO CO CO c^ CO r~* .-« o C-1 00 t>- r^ »o ■«5* CO 00 C^C^C^C^OJC^C^C^C^MfMC^-^i-Hi-tT-tT-i paag spunoj s to O CQ (M 00 "-^ O to CO to iO »— ' O .-• ^ lO CO ^J* ^J* ^ ^J* a5-i* us M >o to OS eo W3 •« at CO s CO »o s 3 «o s § 3 s s Oi U5 to s s to £ CO I^ CO r* ■* CO 00 CO CO CO ■o 00 lO ■* - t^ lO to 1— 1 CO t^ »!^ "O CO CO CO CO UOMOQ paag puno J auQ ajlBj^o^jsjiog-ox ^ puBig loaj -joj M^i-tt ojoy jad uo^i^oQ paag spgnoj pia;A ajoy jad uo'>')03 paag spunoj piaiA e3ai5ioij OC0COiOt*-C5000>0>, 00»O**tOa to ■^ ■* •* •* ■4< a o o ^y!^5(Mto^*"#iOt^O^O»COO XiTjnjBj^ ;b s>jiB;g JO ^qgiajj aSBjaAV °(2 ^unoo OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO cocococococococococococoeococococococo o>05oot^O(Mi^'-"C0'*m'-'0>C000iM<3>t-C = 0) C3 O > fl « 2 := m 5 -"> o o g £ o 03 o S M m 03 o ^ Si Oh "o) >1 3 s - .- W "I a I •^ J ■^ i; o 6 ft m 0< Z - ft (U > a o — <5 1^ 2 5 :S H W < ^ 03 T3 3 O ft "ft la o ►J The Bulletin. 31 ^^C^CC-^*^?0t^X!0iO^^MCCTj*»0«OI^0C0iO CP HH < CO 02 W H >< H Pi t •z o H H O O O 2: 9I0V J8d paag puB jaqsng ■B ocj; ^B ajoy jad psag an[BA pnnoj o o» s s ?5 C5 CO rt* GO CO GO 05 05 CD M M* CO CO CO CO CV| 00 CO C*3 CO CO CO CO CO o CO cs oo UO 03 g t^ s CO CO CD o OS 00 CO § Cq OO 00 T-t UO CO CO s ■* -^ Tt> ■* ira \n lO -**< CO ■<*< -^ ■>JI ■* CO CO co CO CO ''^ 0»OOOCO-^COt--0^0.-'GOOO«C''— •COC5»-"0^0 g § § to o 1— < g o CO s CO oo o CO CO »— 1 CO oo CO CO CO CO o o CO s CO CO OS CI OS OS oo 00 CM CO CO CO CO CO C<1 CO c^ oo o o o ^1 t- 00 r<- a> cq i-H lO CO CO CO lO *— t t^ CO •* (M o> IM t^ CO s t^ s g 55 5S CO CO CO § s g CO CO CO g fe oo CO CO CO CM s eo C^J eo i-H 00 OS W5 t* ^* -^ lO OS CO t» CO 00 1— 1 oo eo 00 CO CO 00 ^ CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO 00 CO ^ CO CO CO CO eo CO cOOCOI>-t^OSCOt-» o r> lO (-> lO ^ ^ o in lO in in c-> <-) in in in rs C-3 lO o o •* CO CO CO (N t^ 1^ 1^ 3 leVox puooag 3nT3J0T 05 a> <» CO > M o <^ <; t; r-i fc o M n = w >'" ■S = ■> «i « O 9 ^ Z '" "^ ° bC ts . a 3 ° 3 2 Z => I P 1 1 = ^ I ° :a I § I § T3 > O u a 3 o OQ ~ o T3 a 3 o a CI o h4 32 The Bulletin. o H Q es o PS a H H « >^ Eh p:5 Z O H H O ^ i-i d 3utpjoooy J[UBy -^c^cc-'j^io^ot^aooao^-ojeo-^iccot^QOOi^ 8J0V jad paag puB -^ -^ t^ laqsng jad paag s^ib^ to-*"«*<-«**^-^'^«*«ccc*5i:oi:ococc'^c^c en u^ flO CD »o o o Ci h- b- •a U5 >o W3 o •^ >o ■<*< -<*" CO '^ '^ ■^ '^ '*}« ''J* CO CO 03 s i-> •*t< o O ^ (-1 ■^ CO o CO CO rM s JCOi-HOJMCoajjaj joj ■^* ^* ■^* ^' ^t ^1 ^t ^^ ^7^ ^"^ ^r ^^t* -rf -rf -rr > o m 'a a u O -0 > o O 1-1 fl a Z — S S ^^ t- > • 5 .SP £• Eg -g o 0) J3 3 o « o S: H O 2i K H ■ _: o- a) M M (U m 6 c o C3 "SI c O 55,4W ffl a ^ S < > o tn o S O 3 U -/2 T3 3 O a a OD ex c o ►4 The Bulletin. 33 PPTA o? Snipjooov JjoBy ^H 05 CO ■«# U5 eo t^ ajoy jad paag puB 00 05 o ^^ ca CO -^ w5 to r^ 00 oi o ni'j an^B^ P89g spuno.,-it^C^C^O(M»C-^ qoc^oOt-hoof- i»-i':ooooo^or-oooiOor^O'— iic-^cor^ ■^COCO^CO'^Tt^COCOCOCOCOCOCOCOCOTt^'^COCOCOCO p39g punoj auQ asfBjv o^ snog -o^ ■^ 'I** 1-< *-« CO t>. c^ t^ C^ -^ !>. t^ t- OS t» t^ CO -J9J q^iM ajoy J8d uo'^ioQ paag epnno J ppt^ ■^1S us us us us ■-. r> »o <-> in m S3nT3(DlJ[ Ui cq C4 »o t^ us CJ Cv) CM US 10 iO r- iC (N t^ io Cotton lat 01 t~- f^ CO r^ CO CO 1^ ■* CO CO ^H 00 on OS CO CM ,_4 ■>»« •V U5 •0 10 us US us XS us us us us ■<»< ■<)< ^ ■^ •<** •<** ■^ ■^ CO 3ur5{oij[ ' g 10 g s s g g UO W3 g p-iiqx ^ ^ CO IM *-4 a> rtl CO «-H IM r^ CO o ir> us us <-) <-> irt 3ai5(oi(j (M cq 10 c^ CI 10 iO CM pUO09g CO r^ on ira r^ CO ■* 00 CO »-< OS h- CO (-> ield cq M M c<> (M CO ^^ T-l (M *— < CM ^-t « »o us us us JH 3aiT[Dij C< MS t~ CS| <-. ^_, CO , CO 00 1—1 ns m in m s i-H CO »— 1 o> 00 10 on us 00 00 1^ N 10 CO r^ Yen%OY j?g -^ •^ •>»< "(J* ^ ■>}< ■* ■^ •<»" ■^ ■«i< ■^ •^ ■* -<*( ^ ^ ^ CO -^ ^ ■^ puB^g ! •* ■o< ■* -1< •^ •* ■^ •^ •* ■* •^ ■* ■^ ■!(< -^ ■^ t« IM ) CM (-o 10 in us us us us us US 10 lO 10 iC to 10 w5 ^ > ■d 01 O Oi O. _! ^ S o . „ cc i-H PQ la "o -at. M o PL,

.5 o o g- o 5; . o aj a) ° ° fi -J " - m ^ hS I a ._ 2 > T3 t. ft "! ^ S ^^ O 3£33c3xo0.aj5dooo.5aj22a)3 C3 3 C3 ^ a s o p. "a 03 CI o 34 The Bulletin. uo-noQ pass JO spnno J ni UAiOJO SiBaJ^ JOJ 33ej3Ay CO to to i 05 o CO to o CO 1— » CO OO CO OS to to c^ to Ci to o oc 00 CO OO c^ CO to CO »o OS o i OO o sionpoij iB^ox }0 M ^ 1 :-° ; t* 1 OO 1 pasg JO spnnod ni ppi^ i o 1 OO 1 too ■ ;gg ; o ! ■^ 1 ■^ 1 o 1 ■o ■ 03 scionpojj lB*ox P 1 ; 1—1 I— 1 a> paag JO spano 1 CO 1 t* ift lO to <0 lO lO 1 1 iO C^J 00 t^ 05 05 Cq t ' t^ lo r--^ CO 05 o c^ 1 1 W3 t~^ CO CO CO 00 CO 1 1 C3 O O ^H -fj* cq C* CO 00 2g 2 CO CO I e«l •* IM CO CO M CD ii^^coootooooco ■ ■»J is :: « CO OS o c- H 1-t 1.H 1- i 1 a 1 H i 3 I H 1 O •T3 09 > P i ^ P '■ T3 ; ^ ■ o ■ t« 3 e 3 a'- 3 > 3. ^ H . 5 t r ; PQ < i.s? ' " P3 3 m'- ^ '-^ ' S3 3 c u « > •' - c ' 2 1 J 3 3 1 i 6 3 '■ s . a- 3 3 3 3, -J 3 ' 1 I = ; f= ; c I) I 1 \ 1 3 3 3 n S I; H . li J ■3 r q : a ' o . 2 1 ; , c [ i c 1 n 3 3 ' S 5 f 6 ^ 2 - a 1- u a B m a • c3 - a 3 c J h n d 3 D. ■ B 3 (0 O n The Bulletin. 35 (-> W Q PS Z c O O O CQ OQ W > O 02 03 Q h:i t— t o o d 9J3V ■I^'J noMOQ paag jo spunoj ui UJAOJQ BJBa^\ aoj s3BJ3Ay CD CO o 1^ CO 1 CO CO -^jl CO t^ 't i OO 05 OS CO i CO 00 CO ci CO CO LO 00 cC o CM CD »D CO OS i s^onpojj iB^ox JO OS 1 ■* 1 1 CO 1 1-H 00 iC -H o o ^ T-i (N CM *-i 1 ° 9JDV Jsd uoMOO o • paag JO spunoj ni pjajA " — ; s '; : O 1 O 1 if3 O W5 »« O U5 t~- CO OO 1^ OO OS 00 00 o s'jonpojj iB^ox JO „ 8iHBj\ 01 Sujpjoooy TjnB'jj ed I 1 00 1 O 1 O ] ID 1 00 »D ''^^ 1-H ^H t-H . ajDV Jad no MOO ; g ; paag JO epunod; ni ppi^ '^ : o 1 CO • O ' CO 1 CO ' 1—1 1 CO ' ID ' CO 1 ■* 1 »— 1 1 CM 00 OS i-i CO CO 1-H I— 1 ft i sionpojj 1^10 X JO aniBA O'J Snipjoooy inBg 1—1 ■«j" r- c 1 ts 1 T}4 1-t 1 OS t- 1 P5 \Q 1— 1 »^ 8jay aad no^iOQ paag JO e;)unoox JO ,^ « ; i§c= S"S2S22:"'" ; paag JO spunod; u; pptA § ^ 1 OO CO 1 CO t^ 1 S d °. «. ^. c0 1-H 1— t «-H »-H I— ( t— 1 1 o s^onpojd; iB^ox jo 1 „ ^ an|BjV o!j Snipjooov Jin^H CD CO I »— 1 •^ t^ lO 00 CO 04 ID 1 "= ajov -lad no^^oQ i ^^ o paag JO spnno J ut ppiA S S CO O lO o »« o o O OS OS OO »o O CO kO CD CO CO CO s • j.' E^onpojj iTj'jox JO •* M O O »0 CO IT 00 CO Od »— 1 ajoy jad uomoq ^^ ^^ paag JO spuno J nt ppi^ g g CO -^ lO ■* CO ^ CO CO OO r^ t^ o -*** -^ CO OS CO CO I^- 05 Oi C4 CD 00 § s s t~ en 00 r-i S^onpojJ l^^OX JO eg-Ht^oo — to-HMOOen an|BA 0^ Sntpaoooy jiob^ '^ *^ '^ "^ 1 o •« ajoy jad no^'joo o'dusoooioomwo paag JO spuno J ut ppi^ gSSSKSSSSSSS § 1— t s'jonpojj I'B'jox JO anpA. 01 Sntpjoaoy j^u^y ^ c^ CO ta -^ fo txi ajoy jad no^ioo d .« o o «^ "o o paag JO epunod ni pjaiA S S S S S ^Si § I 1 g^onpoj^ IB^ox JO aniBA. o* Suipjoooy jju'B'jj ajoy lad uo'jioo paag JO spnnO(j ni piaj,;^ i s^onpojj lu^ox JO an^BA 01 Sntpjoooy 5[U'bij ajoy jad noiioQ paag JO spnnojj nt p^ai^ 1 1 ■d 1 .2 > 1 Si c e T c t5 □ i 3 ~ » c 3 ^ o M ! "c ; P- il 3 (i y t. c I It 1 "^ . c 1 t- ' c 1 ^ J c c c ) 3 3 3 T : 9 c C Si - i 3, 1 p: ^ 15 J 1 J c 5 p ! c M 5 P ' c : "i I I } 5-1 3 S 3 . 3 a 1 en I "a 3 E-i 36 The Bulletin. SOURCES OF SEED OF VARIETIES TESTED IN 1911. Cotton Source op Seed 1. Rosser No. 1 Hastings Seed Co ..Atlanta, Ga. 2. Thigpen'a Prolific R. L. Thigpen Mildred, N. C. 3. Dean's Special A. B. Deans Wilson, N. C. 4. Morgan's Climax T. W. Wood & Sons Richmond, Va. 5. Culpepper's Improved ' J. E. Culpepper Luthersville, Ga. 6. Hartsville, No. 7... Coker Seed Farm Hartsville, S. C. 7. Bank Account Hastings Seed Co Atlanta, Ga. 8. Toole W. W. Toole Augusta, Ga., R. 4. 9. Webber Coker Seed Farm Hartsville, S. C. 10. Lewis Long Staple E. P. Lewis Gastonia, N. C. 11. Allen's Multiplier C.M.Thomas ..Clayton, N. C. 12. Shine's Early J. A. Shine Faison, N. C. 13. Brown, No. 1 M. L. Brown Decatur, Ga. 14. Hawkins B. W. Hawkins Nona, Ga. 15. Bradbury's J. E. Bradbury Athens, Ga. 16. Russell Big Boll T. W. Wood & Sons Richmond, Va. 17. Cook's Improved J. R. Cook ...EUaville, Ga. 18. Excelsior Prolific Excelsior Seed Farm ..Cheraw, S. C. 19. Simpkins' W. A. Simpkins .Raleigh, N. C. 20. Summerour - H. H. Summerour Duluth, Ga. LEAF TOBACCO SALES FOR JANUARY, 1912. Pounds sold for producers, first hand 9,350,220 Pounds sold for dealers • • • • 454,848 Pounds resold for warehouses 625,181 Total 10,429,749 THE BULLETIN OF THE NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE •' •I'k Rmi-.-. h. By ■ Vol. 33, No. 3. MARCH, 1912. Whole No. 165. I. ANALYSES OF FERTILIZERS— FALL SEASON, 1911. II. REGISTRATION OF FERTILIZERS. PUBLISHED MONTHLY AND SENT FREE TO CITIZENS ON APPLICATION. / ENTERED AT THE EALEIGH POST-OFFICE AS SECOND-CLASS MAIL MATTER. STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. W. A.' Graham, Commissioner, ex officio Chairman, Raleigh. H. C. Carter Fairfield First District. K. W. Barnes __.Lucama Second District. R. L. WooDARD Pamlico Third District. I. H. Kearney Franklinton - -Fourth District. R. W. Scott -.. Haw River Fifth District. A. T. McCALLtTM.. Red Springs Sixth District. J. P. McRae ...Laurinburg -..'. Seventh District. William Bledsoe Gale Eighth District. W. J. Shuford Hickory Ninth District. A. Cannon Horse Shoe Tenth District. OFFICERS AND STAFF. W. A. GRAHAM Commissioner. ELIAS CARR ...Secretary and Purchasing Agent. Miss B. W. Pescud - - ...Bookkeeper. D. G. Conn --. - Bulletin Clerk. B. VV. KILGORE -- ...State Chemist, Director Test Farms. J. M. PiCKEL. -. Assistant Chemist. W. G. Haywood .-. Fertilizer Chemist. G. M. MacNider - Feed Chemist and Microscopist. L. L. Brinkley Assistant Chemist. E. L. WoRTHEN - - Soil Investigations. •W. E. Hearn .-..Soil Survey. W. H. Strowd. Assistant Chemist. J. Q. Jackson Assistant Chemist. E. W. Thornton --- Assistant Chemist. J. K. Plummer Soil Chemist. S. O. Perkins - - Assistant Chemist. J. F. Hatch -.. Clerk. F. S. PucKETT ..Assistant to Director Test Farms. H. H. BRIMLEY Curator of Museum. T. W. Adickes Assistant Curator. FRANKLIN SHERMAN, Jr Entomologist. Z. P. Metcalf - Assistant Entomologist. S. C. Clapp Assistant Entomologist in Field Work. W. G. CHRISMAN ---- - Veterinarian. B. B. Flowe Second Assistant Veterinarian. W. H. EATON - -- Dairyman. L. A. HiGGlN'S ...Assistant Dairyman. R. W. Grabber Assistant Dairyman. W. N. HUTT. Horticulturist. S. B. Shaw ..Assistant Horticulturist. O. M. Clark Second Assistant Horticulturist. T. B. PARKER Demonstrator and Director of Farmers' Institutes. J. M. Gray Assistant Demonstrator. W. M. ALLEN --•- Pure Food Chemist. W. A. Smith Assistant Pure Food Chemist. C. E. Bell Assistant Pure Food Chemist. Miss O. I. TILLMAN -.. ....Botanist. Miss S. D. Allen Assistant to Botanist. J. L. BURGESS Agronomist. G. M. Garren.. .Assistant Agronomist. tE. G. MOSS Co-operative Assistant in Tobacco Investigations. tE. H. Mathewson Co-operative Assistant in Tobacco Investigations. C. R. Hudson Farm Demonstration Work. T. F. Parker . Assistant Boys' Corn Club Work. R. W. Scott, Jr., Assistant Director Edgecombe Test Farm, Rocky Mount, N. C. F. T. Meacham, Assistant Director Iredell Test Farm, Statesville, N. C. John H. Jefferies, Assistant Director Pender Test Farm, Willard, N. C. R. W. Collett, Assistant Director Transylvania and Buncombe Test Farms, Swannanoa, N. C. •Assigned by the Bureau of SoOs, United States Department of Agriculture. tAssigned by the Bureau of Plant Industry, United States Department of Agriculture. Raleigh, 'N. C, February 15, 1912. Sir: — I submit herewith analyses of fertilizers made in the labora- tory of samples collected during the past fall. These analyses show fertilizers to be about as heretofore, and to be, generally, what was claimed for them. I recommend that it be issued as the March Bulletin. Very respectfully, B. "W. KiLGORE, State Chemist. To Hon. William A. Graham, Commissioner of Agriculture. I. ANALYSES OF FERTILIZERS— FALL SEASON, 1911. Bx B. W. KILGORE, W. G. HAYWOOD, J. M. PICKEL, J. Q. JACKSON and W. H. STROWD. The analyses presented in this Bulletin are of samples collected by the fertilizer inspectors of the Department, under the direction of the Commissioner of Agriculture, during the fall months of 1911. They should receive the careful study of every farmer in the State vs^ho uses fertilizers, as by comparing the analyses in the Bulletin with the claims made for the fertilizers actually used, the farmer can know by or before the time fertilizers are put in the ground whether or not they . contain the fertilizing constituents in the amounts they were claimed to be present. ^ TERMS USED IN ANALYSES. Water-soluhle Phosphoric Acid. — Phosphate rock, as dug from the mines, mainly in South Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee, is the chief source of phosphoric acid in fertilizers. In its raw, or natural state, the phosphate has three parts of lime united to the phosphoric acid (called by chemists tri-calcium phosphate). This is very insoluble in water and is not in condition to be taken up readily by plants. In order to render it soluble in water and fit for plant food, the rock is finely ground and treated with sulphuric acid, which acts upon it in such a way as to take from the three-lime phos- phate two parts of its lime, thus leaving only one part of lime united to the phosphoric acid. This one-lime phosphate is what is known as water-soluble phosphoric acid. Reverted Phosphoric Acid. — On long standing some of this water- soluble phosphoric acid has a tendency to take lime from other sub- stances in contact with it, and to become somewhat less soluble. This latter is known as reverted or gone-back phosphoric acid. This is thought to contain two parts of lime in combination with the phos- phoric acid, and is thus an intermediate product between water-soluble and the original rock. Water-soluble phosphoric acid is considered somewhat more valuable than reverted, because it becomes better distributed in the soil as a con- sequence of its solubility in water. Available Phosphoric Acid is made up of the water-soluble and re- verted ; it is the sum of these two. Water-soliihle Ammonia. — The main materials furnishing ammonia in fertilizers are nitrate of soda, sulphate of ammonia, cotton-seed meal, dried blood, tankage, and fish scrap. The first two of these (nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia) are easily soluble in water and be- come well distributed in the soil where plant roots can get at them. 6 The Bulletin. They are, especially the nitrate of soda, ready to be taken up by plants, and are therefore quick-acting forms of ammonia. It is mainly the ammonia from nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia that will be designated under the heading of water-soluble ammonia. Organic Ammonia. — The ammonia in cotton-seed meal, dried blood, tankage, fish scrap, and so on, is included under this heading. These materials are insoluble in water, and before they can feed plants they must decay and have their ammonia changed, by the aid of the bacteria of the soil, to nitrates, similar to nitrate of soda. They are valuable then as plant food in proportion to their content of ammonia, and the rapidity with which they decay in the soil, or rather the rate of decay, will determine the quickness of their action as fertilizers. With short season, quick-growing crops, quickness of action is an important consideration, but with crops occupying the land during the greater portion, or all, of the growing season, it is better to have a fertilizer that will become available more slowly, so as to feed the plant till maturity. Cotton-seed meal and dried blood decompose fairly rapidly, but will last the greater portion, if not all, of the growing season in this State. While cotton seed and tankage will last longer than meal and blood, none of these act so quickly, or give out so soon, as nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia. Total Ammonia is made up of the water-soluble and organic ; it is the sum of these two. The farmer should suit, as far as possible, the kind of ammonia to his different crops, and a study of the forms of ammonia as given in the tables of analyses will help him to do this. VALUATIONS. To have a basis for comparing the values of different fertilizer mate- rials and fertilizers, it is necessary to assign prices to the three valuable constituents of fertilizers — ammonia, phosphoric acid, and potash. These figures, expressing relative value per ton, are not intended to rep- resent crop-producing power, or agricultural value, but are estimates of the commercial value of ammonia, phosphoric acid and potash in the materials supplying them. These values are only approximate (as the costs of fertilizing materials are liable to change, as other commercial products are), but they are believed to fairly represent the cost of mak- ing and putting fertilizers on the market. They are based on a careful examination of trade conditions, wholesale and retail, and upon quota- tions of manufacturers. Relative value per ton, or the figures showing this, represents the prices on board the cars at the factory, in retail lots of five tons or less, for cash. To make a complete fertilizer the factories have to mix together in proper proportions materials containing ammonia, phosphoric acid and potash. This costs something. For this reason it is thought well to The Bulletin. 7 have two sets of valuations — one for the raw or unmixed materials, such as acid phosphate, kainit, cotton-seed meal, etc., and one for mixed fertilizers. The values used last season were : VALUATIONS FOR 1911. In Unmixed or Raw Materials. For phosphoric acid in acid phosphate 4 cents per pound. For phosphoric acid in bone meal, basic slag, and Pe- ruvian guano 31/^ cents per pound. For nitrogen 19% cents per pound. For potash 5 cents per pound. In Mixed Fertilisers. For phosphoric acid 4i/^ cents per pound. For nitrogen 21 cents per pound. For potash 5i/^ cents per pound. HOW RELATIVE VALUE IS CALCULATED. In the calculation of relative value it is only necessary to remember that so many per cent means the same number of pounds per hundred, and that there are twenty hundred pounds in one ton (2,000 pounds). With an 8-2-1.65 goods, which means that the fertilizer contains avail- able phosphoric acid 8 per cent, potash 2 per cent, and nitrogen 1.65 per cent, the calculation is made as follows : 8 pounds available phosphoric acid at 4i^ cents. . . 0.36 X20= $ 7.20 2 pounds potash at 5^1 cents 0.11 X20= 2.20 1.65 pounds nitrogen at 21 cents 0.347x20= 6.94 Total value 0.817X20= $16.34 Freight and merchants' commission must be added to these prices. Freight rates from the seaboard and manufacturing centers to interior points are given in the following table. The Bulletin. Freight Rates from the Seaboard to Interior Points. — From the Published Rates of the Associated Railways of Virginia and the Carolinas. In car-loads, of not less than ten tons each, per ton of 2,000 pounds. Less than car-loads, add 20 per cent. Destination. From Wilmington, N. C. From Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va. From Charleston, S. C. From Richmond, Va. $3.20 2.70 3.20 4.00 2.95 2.65 2.48 3.85 1.60 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 1.70 2.00 2.80 3.60 2.10 1.60 1.80 2.85 3.12 2.10 1.80 2.96 2.00 3.00 3.20 3.00 2.88 3.00 2.10 1.90 1.90 2.72 2.95 1.60 3.05 3.00 2.60 1.80 3.44 3.36 2.55 3.20 2.30 1.25 3.68 3.04 2.77 2.60 2.40 2.56 3.00 2.10 2.20 3.28 3.28 3.05 3.25 2.10 2.10 2.90 2.60 2.20 3.50 2.95 2.30 2.90 2.30 3.00 3.05 1.50 2.65 2.95 2.00 3.00 $3.20 $3.40 3.80 3.60 4.00 3.90 2.85 3.63 3.40 3.20 3.80 4.00 3.40 3.20 3.20 3.20 3.20 3.60 3.20 2.40 3.00 3.80 3.12 2.10 3.20 3.40 3.60 3.55 3.20 3.40 2.68 3.40 3.50 3.80 3.80 3.80 3.80 3.70 3.85 3.40 3.20 2.70 4.00 3.40 2.50 3.80 3.40 3.95 3.20 3.55 3.00 4.10 2.20 3.40 3.40 3.80 3.40 3.40 3.60 3.05 3.20 3.40 3.20 3.90 3.80 3.20 3.60 3.80 3.00 3.40 2.50 3.40 4.10 3.20 2.25 3.85 3.20 3.40 $3.20 3.00 Asheboro _ _ 3.20 4.00 3.20 3.20 2.86 3.60 3.00 3.00 2.40 3.60 3.20 3.00 2.80 2.83 3.20 2.60 3.80 3.00 3.00 3.25 3.50 2.80 3.00 3.00 2.83 3.60 3.08 2.88 3.00 2.80 2.40 3.40 3.60 3.00 3.60 3.00 3.00 3.20 3.40 2.40 3.20 3.60 3.40 2.90 1.75 3.20 2.83 3.25 3.. 30 3.00 2.83 2.96 3.00 2.50 2.80 3.20 3.65 3.20 3.00 2.80 3.60 3.60 2.80 3.20 2.83 2.40 3.60 3.00 3.00 3.25 3.00 1.75 1.90 2.60 3.00 3.20 Asheville 4.00 Chapel Hill 3.20 Charlotte - 3.20 2.80 3.63 Clinton 3.00 Creedmoor . 3.00 Cunningham 2.40 Dallas - 3.60 Davidson College _ 3.20 3.00 Dunn 2.80 Durham __ 2.83 Elkin 3.20 Elm Citv - 2.60 Fair Bluff 3.80 Fayetteville _ 3.00 Forestville 3.06 Gastonia - -- -- 3.25 Gibson 3.50 Goldsboro ._ 2.80 3.00 Hamlet _ 3.00 2.83 Hickory 3.60 High Point- 3.08 Hillsboro 2.88 Kernersville - _ 3.00 Kinston 2.80 Laurel Hill 3.40 Laurinburg 3.40 Liberty Louisburg Lumberton Macon Madison Matthews Maxton Milton Mocksville ..- Morven . 3.60 3.00 3.60 3.00 3.00 3.20 3.40 2.40 3.20 3.60 Mount Airy Kash ville New Bern . 3.40 2.90 1.75 Norwood ».- Oxford Pineville Pittsboro . 2.23 2.83 3.20 3.30 Polkton --. Raleigh - Reidsville. Rockingham Rockv Mount.- Ruffin Rural Hall- 3.00 2.83 2.36 3.00 2.50 2.20 3.20 Rutherfordton Salisbury Sanford Selma Shelby 3.65 3.20 3.00 2.80 3.60 3.60 Smithfield 2.80 Statesville 3.20 Stem Tarboro Waco Wadesboro - - 2.83 2.40 3.60 3.00 Walnut Cove Warrenton --- Warsaw 3.00 3.25 3.00 1.50 Weldon WUson Winston-Salem.. 1.90 2.60 3.00 The Bulletin. XioiaBj ^■B nox -lad r- 1 o. m I 02 o O o K ££■ '>^ I-- -< 8 •qsB^oj[ P^ox •■Braoratny o^ inaiB-imbg; IB^ox § a o o f •uaSoj^ifj; otwbS'iq •naSojijf^ ajqnjos -ja^BAi §3 Ph •ppV oijoqdsoqj ajq'BiT'BAY -a "5. S s 2 oi P9 s 3 si •a n s fa Q fa •aaqtnnj^ Aj0:(BJ0qB'J CO o <* CO •^ ■«J< ei (M CO -ri en '^ 66 OO •^ !>. CO CM ■* n lO ■^ in CO CO r^ to i>- CO 00 b^ CO r* ^ o o o o ?3 <0 s o o ■^ § CO o 3 co s rt4 CO CO § 00 CM C^ «o CO CO CM T ■* CM c^ C^ T— " CS CM 04 M s s Oi 1^ en o § g § '* - O s CO CO o o - ^~ *"" *" ^^ ""^ "" ^^ CM ^ CJ N ^' 3 3 ' = >> c: s. 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CJ s O u 9 U lO CO OS O 14 The Bulletin. •Xjo^ob^ ^■B uox J9d eniBA. 9A;;'B[a')j C5 1—1 o < xfi < S3 H Pi fa 1-1 < I— I o o fa o fa PH < o o 0) p. si u o a o o. a o O a •qsB?o o in r- O) OS -H OS C3 •-* r- (M CI 1— CI *-< ^ CO CO T— CM «» o o CO ^ t* 1^ o CO CO § s 00 • o ■* rt o 03 eo o o> c CO ■ T- "^ -H CM cs T- CM *~ f ■<*< CD C4 t^ r^ 1 lO o CO o 00 oo ■O CM c- t^ in f-H eo t^ ■* o CO lO r« r- c 05 01 CO -1 10 ea e< CI CO OS 1-H 1 ^^ 1-1 "^ '"' CM " '"' o ■^ or o •«f o O eo a M< •^ 00 S ■* o ■* a U5 a 00 o t-- CO 1^ o: o o- a> o- o o> o a C) CO CO CM CI ^ a JO \ 1 la ! s. \ > 2 p CI ^ u* 1 3 . ' > 8 I o c 1 c F! .a GO ■a a a 3 -0 1 g3 i .d .c ' c 9 o A O C 1 s w O S : H 1 ■2 ; 3 a a 5 5 m 1 ^ CQ w 1 s 09 [3 a s d o u it o 3 : ^a &; S5 CO d ^ s ;3 CT Ed "3 3 S tn ' 'x.^ ; Ml, . 3 ' a 1 Hi 73 1 i i So ; sa a a ■pa a a < 09 Ph Q < m pa 1 u J & oi ; d 5? T) ;2 ; !S d s d a" U 2 £ i 12; i ^ ^ i a O a 2 "a fl d la -m' 1 05 1 15 n d TO 2 a 1 i 2 3 a e E 09 •o c a c c 1 1 a u •a c 6 s s B C 1 1 to .2 c 1 *« •0 c i 3 .0 'a 01 c E « ■0 c Baugh & Sons Co. and claiming •< . 03 . a> a>^ 00 m CO 00 CQ 00 CO oo .-< rsi CO CO T-» OS ^ CO C4 r^ s s r: m re 1-1 o C3 o —I 05 oa OS »— 1 The Bulletin. 15 S »-i (M i-H C^ F-t -^ ^ O ^ *-H 1-H c-i ^ ^- 4.00 4.20 3.12 3.76 2.60 3.84 3.79 3.91 4.26 3.93 2.91 4.13 3.90 3.66 3.99 2.00 1.81 2.08 1.92 1.96 .99 2.14 2.16 2.33 S ^ i : i i i i ; : i ; i i : : i i : : : ; i i i ; «j M • 1 ] I ; ] ; ; ; j j ; j ; j ; j ; ; ; ; ; ; 1 S ° i i i ; ; ; i i i i ; i i : i ; i ; i i i ; i i *^ "^ ' ' ' I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I ! I I 1 1 ! I I 1 , I 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 ( 1 1 1 I 1 1 ) t 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' o ' • ' ' : ! 1 ! : ; ! ! I ; I ! ! ! ; I ! ! ! ; • CO I s (M 00 (M E; .—1 o CO CO 03 00 00 o oo 00 CO oo oo o o CO o o o t I a o a o « "3 S a < -a at 3 to 3 m t2 S t. o d O en a o CO =3 j3 bO 3 m 13 3 O ^ O o K <) ^ C tf <=i a CQ I a o o o ;! g o a bO 3 ■a o o O 3 o Ph a C3 01 a o o O s .a o ptl o s. o J3 O « o ■*^ bt O 03 bO O O a c3 -*^ ■*^ O o m o 03 m 6 O a O :5 S a Q a o PQ c3 _m ^ O O (k CM fe 03 3 " o bO 02 o j3 o3 ® O _ ■>-o-9 ro c3 o3 ^ .2 I i 3 _« 'C b« <-6 d o aj OJ OJ o o O bO d d « •a a d o PQ -a ID > 03 d o P9 d oJ o o a o u o 2 O 03 u o d 03 d '3 O bCJ d -;ii o °- "2 d x.!" d O-w^ d c3 • O .d^fe-^ E— a) > OT, =s 2 Qo -.J tn SCO. 2 o > o d o bO d I d U o d 3 o 03 03 > 6 O o d 03 3 o 01 o 03 > 13 a o a .d u d O o d 03 3 o T3 o 03 > O 12; d O o d c3 3 O a "3 I d o o O o a C3 3 o 13 o a o O a o O % g a o a .a 5 CO d o 03 o .■=* o .^ o d rf i^ fin p:: rt & > (-1 lO t^ •rti o> CO ■^ en IM ^ OS o o Oi C3 o -§ "5 O CQ .a o PM 73 d 03 \ »— c^ '" c^ N ^ CQ "Biuounnv o^ iaajBAmbg •naSoj^H^ mox naSoj'jif^ oiubSJo •naSojiif^ aiqnios -■la^BM ■ppv ouoqdsoqj eiqB|iBAV V P. a 03 a> •a a N hH 1-1 i fe 3 a 03 s O s «! a 03 a •jaqmn^ Xao^'BJoq'B'j o o M •»»i s M o t~ r> OS o a ic ■<* 1^ t-- ■^ OS CC v-l r- (M OS ^ -* IC c t-- s o OS c O N o os C OS OS o c o c c c ^ 'H a a £ _« c _a , 1 1 > u .A o B > a c 1 1 c o c 1 a 1 a (3 Siler City Tobannovi c 1^ S a < i X. { Siler City Indian Tr X "■ J. d. L S) ^ c (S •c ,fi ft ^ -c IB .2 B a i £ 13 IX t: X ^J5 en OC rt ri E 1 , a •5 c c £ C 2 o Ph & c £ 3 5 41 B C K 1 > 1 > i I 1 "c 1 1 c cS fl. c ci a c c E cc £ PC en "a -5 ddison McGa h Mixture, rtilizer Co. 'a jr c o <~ C 1 Potash, hemical Co.'s d Grass Grow hemical Co.'s Potash. 1 t 1 2 a pi •a [vift's Fiel Grade Ph nion Bonf B +J E ■u cial Potas urham Fe Wheat Gr urham Fe Potash, nrfolk n.nr Bone and Southern C Wheat an Southern C Bone and 12 1-3 p: K t pL, ,* r - ^ ■ >2 " o: c^ E T3 B ■1 c ■ C ■ .1 ■c £ ^ :z PC S - ja 1 c c E s 1 ■ a c c c ■ a _ . o: c a 1 . 1 u 4. c . C c c C cc c: < cr 1 ■ t c c T c c C c B u 1 s c 1 1 J3 1 < a £ c c c 1- a. t 2 E C o C c r r c c 1 e 1 00 a - > 'ff % ir > 1 ..- 1 •r -c Tr t: •r T3 (S (S ^ <^ i B B > 1 c a l> cc cc c*- .— (T OC cc r^ c^ .^ cc ir. t^ OC c c cc t^ C^ c< t^ o c- c CO ^ o in C^J 00 _, CO ■^ _, o t^ oo ^~' ^ ^• o H o O Eh s O a ^ ° P^ . ^-^ ' . tn C3 o ^ ft "S*^ o O 1^ t, o o o o a c3 3 a a o 'a c3 > -a o d O J3 o o ^ J o m a a d 3 O CO a OJ o CJ •s >> 5i d &: g: a 03 d o n a a o M 03 ^ o XI <1 ffl O N 03 fQ d O O !5 .s; a ,d g o :73 3 o IS aa ; o Of -a d 03 .a e3 a en O =3 a o IB 13 03 tot:fH 2-d M . 03 oj oj PQ 03 O O d a o a a o CO sc 3 c3 W o PL, -a a C3 a> a o « a 03 >> PQ d 03 I TO ;ij d >. pq o Ph -a d 03 a) d o PQ 0. 03 c3 t, ^-1 d C3 ^ o d O (U .3 .-a -s t: mO d 03" C3 o o en a ^ 03 .S C8 PL, '3 < X X IS 03 ^ a 0) p to - 08 O 3 M 3 O ^ o ;2; .0) __ ja o '3) o O 03 K a 3 o & o -d 03 a 6 2 o n d ;z; 3 - o o O d o O o PL, -a bH t J3 O w :^ H a o CQ O J3 O O C3 o o 03 03 tS o o o -73 to O) -^^ CO Cvl oo o ^H en o o cs 03 o of a o Pm T) ^ a \^ (Tl T d o o T— 1 P3 JO -rl O 4) ( ) > O 0> ^ .a ••3 s s o o T3 d 03 03 > T3 S U d o bO a J 2 a c3 PP d .a o O o d c3 3 O 5 S S S o O o d C8 3 o c3 .a o o "l' o o a d Oi 03 d 'd 01 o 3 o o o Pl, 3 O 03 > a o r tf o O M a n -ii5 M £ m S 13 1^ ^ o CO c^a ■^ 01 •— I aa <-) Ci o o o O o a 03 3 O o ■« a 2 '> 3 o ai a" o 03 -d Q d" o o a o O § 3 d o CQ O PL, -a d 03 O d o a c« 3 o (V AS o a o u o PL, X3 CQ s O a c3 o a o PQ OS 03 > T3 a o p:S d O o a 03 3 a •73 a o a M o s 18 The Bulletin. o w. < m < I cs: o (4 1=] o o o ■ yCjCnOBjf y^ nox -lad aniBjY aAi^Biajj •qseTOj c mox c (-1 •Biuouiuiv «M b ,? •ppv ouoqdsoqtj ) 9iqB|iBAV T3 i V 1 a S 03 1 OS ID J5 ^ •d 1 a 2 pq «M o 01 z 1 IS h 1 3 o 03 3 ^ «M O QQ ■3 T3 «5 73 d C3 « !z; laquinM; XjCKJBJOqBI ' ? b- ■^ M 1^ r^ r^ CJ o CO o ir> <:0 ;i K tr> o CD ^ r»5 ■^ CO ^ T CM c^ CO iC ^ lO •» CO »c ^ IT) in €A^ o r^ CO CO a> - CO CO CO CO in CO o o ^ R CO C5 s 8 o 05 rr n CO CO '*! CO CO CO CO IfJ CO ^^ ^ lO ^ CO in o o o N IH c 3 O s o PM T3 a 03 V a o m it o d O o a 113 3 O fo n 4j ■S >> o O PL, .CI H O >. "-3 .2 a * 2 CO »S m T3 e3 o M 2 si s- o o s 03- •^ ao QQ n ^ V, O c3 &Ph 3 «> u 3 X a '3 O 03 3 O -a 3 03 d o pq 3 O '3 ■g 3 P o 03 O O 2 ^ > O a 3. < m it 03 m 3 2 d O O o ^ .H d C3 (1) t. U P. .a ffl o <1> ;k c .3 ^ g OS 3 u 1^ 2 o S £ 03 o a o o fi 3 a d CQ H & > (S o B OS 2 3 g S ■^^ .1^ O ggco O 3 00 §o9 -»; 3 3 O o ^ I a a o m o O 3 "3 a 3 o in • - . ja o 2 OS t- o oPh k< C3 OSS 0) o 'P3 2 Qo M a > > S > o r~ O Oi o o OS ■D C OS o a H P9 d O a 3 a o (3 o I? d O o a 03 3 o o o o O o a cj 3 o a o 'a -a a o a ja o d O "s u a o O o a o O J3 _3 "o CO O P^ -o 03 P3 03 , "a * .9 a o ■a •6 a o a o O P3 Q 03 The Bulletin. 19 o O o o O ,_, CO o CM «3- to ■<*' •^ »-» OJ ^ (O la »o CO CO «3 b- ^• h- in o evj O o ^ o 03 o fj O CM O ■c CO o l£) I- lO «3- in lO ^ CO lO g OS CM s § oo o rt* CO CM o o o ^ C^l CM CO CI -M - CM ^ > •i > ' ! > ■^ f- c <: ^ < ; < c c c c ; a X ' C ^ c 3 c ' c c c c ' o K 1 c IS c s : S J. c ! n 1 i ! o p. ' -e. i ■*i ; "i 1 \ i X p i 6 i 1 ^ 1 ^ s 1 w c ' \ ^ K p= 1 "3 c 1 c 1 a C P- a C c ; PC 1 tr a : 6^\ £ J ash. as c .11 i.P-i ^ : % te 1 > n1 ci T3 > > ! > i IS \ ^ a 13 c c 1 o s ! -C a i ; a a 1 M ' M "3 : a s tf ; tf PC : .S: ' - , o I P5 c'^ i a O 1 n oj 1 "3 o ; u a o « a 3 a ! a o c "i 3 O fiUjUl O 3 ming. r. Che t . 1 .3 C t-l •o § o a J3 a ■s Q •a (2 "2 cj ;g 1 t^ ' u 03 m o l:^ CO (>) CO CN CS t~. « CO o a 1-H a c c a c o *-H 1 o 03 9.60 9.48 11.11 10.40 11.44 11.38 10.55 10.35 11.20 11.98 11 F,n 1-H 12.00 11.85 13.89 13.00 13.69 14.30 14.23 13.19 12.94 14.55 14.00 14.97 14.37 14.54 1 J. 1 a- ■< Iron Station Hillsboro C c cc C c K & a Asheville Rougemont c 1 '3 1 S 1 o C ; S £ ■ ai X \ 1 1 2 o i 1 j Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Phosphoric Acid. Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Royster's Acid Phosphate. Peruvian Acid Phosohate a c c . w ■a > 1 S -4-3 m > Allison & Addison's I. X. L. Acid Phosphate. Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Double Bone Phosphate. Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Bone and Phosphate. Va.-Car. Chemical Co.'s 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical Co.'s Baker's Dis- solved Phosphate. Zell's Dissolved Bone I 1 i o J3 Pi S <; o ■a C3 O bl 1 a •s m 1 '> (0 < 6 O S IS 1 a) Va.-Car. Chemical Co., Richmond, Va Brands claiming Peruvian Guano Corporation, Charleston, S. C. Rovster. F. S.. Guano Co.. Norfolk. Va Va.-Car. Chemical Co., Richmond, Va ....do. ....do _ • oi > a o £ o s 6 s 'b o Brands claiming _ American Agricultural Chemical Co., Balti- more, Md. ....do a 6 bO a 3 d a -J! 9985 10059 o 9902 9927 10060 oo s o 10040 10057 CO CM Oi CD 20 The Bulletijst, o < 02 ?B aox aad Percentage Composition or Parts per 100. ■qsB^joj IB^ox ■einouiuiy o^ iuaiBAinbg lB>6x •naSoniNj OIUBSJO •U33oj')I^ aiqnfos -jajBAi •pioy oiaoqdsoqj aiqeiiBAy $ 11.20 10.91 11.20 11.21 11.83 11.25 11.43 11.78 41.70 12.18 11.61 11.59 11.30 12.80 13.67 13.49 13.20 oa5oot-0(Mr^oo ^■PO-*-^-r'^^j«-i<-^»0'5*'^-rcdt-.rcoo S2§ •jaqoinj^ Xao^EjoqB'j _) W3 00 o Ci t^ !>. oo .- Oi O o g O 5 2 b. O a 3 r; 13 s o o ^ jj p< hS -a o J3 60 O O C3 < « O o -♦-a g "a O E -a 2 '5 < a O o r Pi C3 -a a. o J3 — -d o O o g aO ;= o jr O 2 CI d <» ^ Ph H -n o o <; o Jifl X M 11 ■a > o 2; d O < :3 ;2 -a a o s J3 O o be a C3 o O ■*-> CI >. o O C3 3 '^ o bl a o O 3 o C3 a ^ 3 "-J f^ S 5 a O (1, O 2 •^ S 2; o o CS O »-^ , lB'»ox , I « ^ 5f ^ UJ lO s 1 1 y O Ci ' c3 •■Braoraury o% O 00 1 ina^BAinbg f^ OS ' P-i - O O ' O a •U330J5l{<[ O CO ' ^ to 1 1 1 • ■m a a ■uaSw^ijSi 7-1 r-i o WJ 1 tH 1 ■uaSoJiiN o aiqnios g -je^BM CO 1 *^ Ph •ppv K oijoqdsoqj 02 a^qeiTBAV 2 < 1 t-3 ■s "a S ! bfl 1 o> 1 1 > > ;3 ■ M M ly eg <5 t? 1 : .a 1 ' 3 ; i o ; S l-H ^ i 3 ! J-J- s ; ►S 1—4 1 1 J ►J 1 1 ; ; H fq ; 0^ 1 1 "TS I ; '; P=< T3 o 1 ! ; ' g » ; oQ ; •^ \ iJ >^ ; "o ; 'a \ <1 is i 1 '' '3 ; a '' -g i "S tf a) s p 1 *^ ' <^ 1 o : S a § : 5 : Ph 1 Ph o o o ^ : > ' J • 1 '^ 1 -a (3 i i ^ 3 03 O 2 1 i i s 1 _« o o ; c O 1 -»A (2 S '; 1 DO I ^ 6 6 : m £ 1 ^ O O ; « ■o 1 o t3 ; ^ g ; s < a g 1 : .a f 2 .1 .1 ^ i 'a " d 1 i ^ .1 1 6 1 ■a i ^ " 6 f « ; - s c ; c3 5 c3 I 9 -s a 1 1 1 ^ 1 ^ 1 o £ a m CO . S S~ " ^ •laqaitiN [ s g § s j^jo^Bioqun [ *-l The BuLLETiisr. 23 o O m < m < m H H o o O 02 >-( <3 •jfjCHOBj[ CO 'T m ■V oo oo CO O CO R s Jo CM O en C4 CO a --0 CO m s i» 0) (A Ph o a o O « Ph •■Btuotauiy CK> iuaceAinbg CO •uaSoj^t^ •naSoj^iii^ a'lqnjos •ppv oiioqdsoqj mox* g (U J3 T3 12; "3 c cj -a -a c £ CO CO ■jaqtanj^ Xjo^BJoqBT; O 00 O CO o CO o CO o in CO o o lo t^ m o m 50 U) CO 00 in in r» t- ^ O C^J CI CJ ,_ I- 1-H CVJ CM CM C) CJ C4 cv !» 1 1 a 3 O < ; s : a s 1 a 1 o P. . 03 ; ^ > > > -*j 1 ■s CO 1 J3 >< M o a D. s ■3 PS O 1^ I ID t J3 ^ ^ 1 s n. « o ' a. C < ^ i t CI 03 e C C a o i ^ ■ 11 J3 cm 3 c p: c : -^ 03 3 (S ' 2 1 E- ; H P5 H > i ^ 1 § O a c« : c . -6 . 1 1 ; 2 ; £ 1 _c 1 "r 1 a i ^ 1 o ;g' £ o a > 5 c- > " 1 £ i 1 C ■ c ■ c i 1 « 1 a> C o : ^ o a t i t 1 (-• a en ^^ s t .2 I « c 0; i> = ! ? 1 g » ^ g n ^^ c ^ 1 i c ce S o E ^ E O « ^ P. O " c a 1- 1 1 X 1 CS £ < J3 , _ Cj 00 DO a OD 00 o » ^ o a E-t c C3 cr « c en c c c OJ o a c '' . 1-1 li. BRANDS REGISTERED, SEASON 1911-12. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. The Atlantic Chemical Corporation, Norfolk, Va.~ Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Atlantic High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Phos- phate Atlantic 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Atlantic Dissolved Bone Atlantic Acid Phosphate Atlantic 10 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Atlantic 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Atlantic Bone and Potash for Grain Atlantic Bone and Potash Mixture Atlantic Meal Compound Atlantic Cotton Grower Corona Cotton Compound Atlantic Special Guano Atlantic Grain Guano Atlantic Special Truck Guano Oriental High Grade Guano Paloma Tobacco Guano Boon's Special Guano Atlantic High Grade Tobacco Guano Atlantic High Grade Cotton Guano Atlantic Tobacco Grower Atlantic Tobacco Compound Atlantic Special Wheat Fertilizer Atlantic Soluble Guano Apex Peanut Grower Atlantic 8 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Atlantic 8 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . . Atlantic 7 Per Cent Truck Guano Atlantic Potato Guano Perfection Peanut Grower Atlantic Side Dresser Atlantic Special Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Atlantic Top Dresser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Geo. L. Arps d Co., Norfolk, Va. — Arps' H. G. 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Arps' 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . . . Arps' 10 and 2 Bone and Potash Mixture. . . . Arps' "Go-a-Head" Guano for Trucks, Cotton and Tobacco Arps' Quick Growth for All Crops Arps' Premium Guano for Cotton, Tobacco and All Spring Crops Geo. L. Arps & Co.'s Big Yield Guano Arps' Standard Truck Guano Arps' Potato Guano Arps' Scuppernong Guano for Trucks Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. 21.50 16.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 4.00 4.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 3.71 2.27 2.06 1.65 1.65 .82 3.30 3.30 3.30 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.02 4.12 8.22 6.18 15.22 7.42 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 1.00 3.00 1.00 3.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 5.00 4.00 7.00 5.00 5.00 4.00 2..50 3.00 48.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 . • . • .... 14.00 . . . > 10.00 • < > • 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 12.00 The Bulletin. 25 Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Atlantic Fertiliser Company, Atlanta, Oa.; Wil- mington, N. C; Chester, 8. C. — Atlantic "N" High Grade Acid Phosphate 16.00 Atlantic "O" High Grade Acid Phosphate 14.00 Atlantic "P" Standard Grade Acid Phosphate. 13.00 Atlantic "A" High Grade Guano 10.00 Atlantic "G" High Grade Guano 10.00 Atlantic "K" High Grade Phosphate and Pot- ash 10.00 Atlantic "M" Standard Grade Phosphate and Potash 10.00 Atlantic "D" High Grade Guano 9.00 Atlantic "F" Cotton-seed Meal Comp. H. G. . . 9.00 Atlantic "B" High Grade Guano S.OO Atlantic "C" High Grade Guano 8.00 Atlantic "E" Cotton-seed Meal Comp. H. G... 8.00 . Atlantic "H" Standard Grade Guano 8.00 Atlantic "I" Standard Grade Guano 8.00 Atlantic "L" Standard Grade Phosphate and Potash 8.00 Atlantic Nitrate of Soda . . • . Atlantic Muriate of Potash Atlantic Sulphate of Potash Atlantic Gerruan Kainit Acme Manufacturing Co., Wilmington, N. C — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Acme High Grade Acid Phosphate 14.00 Acme Acid Phosphate 13.00 Acme Bone and Potash 12.00 Acme Bone and Potash 12.00 Acme Bone and Potash 12.00 Acme Bone and Potash 12.00 Acme Bone and Potash 12.00 Acme Bone and Potash 11.00 Acme Bone and Potash 11.00 Acme Bone and Potash 11.00 Acme Bone and Potash 11.00 Acme Bone and Potash 11.00 Acme Bone and Potash 10.00 Acme Melon Grower 10.00 Acme Bone and Potash 10.00 Acme Bone and Potash 10.00 Acme Bone and Potash 10.00 Acme Bone and Potash 10.00 Acme Cotton Grower 9.00 Acme Special Fertilizer for Cotton 8.00 Acme Plumb Good Fertilizer 8.00 Acme "OK" Fertilizer 8.00 Acme "OK" Fertilizer for Tobacco 8.00 Quickstep Fertilizer 8.00 Quickstep Fertilizer for Tobacco 8.00 Acme Crop Grower 8.00 Currie's High Grade Fertilizer S.OO Acme Crop Grower for Tobacco S.OO Best's Fish Scrap Guano for Tobacco 8.00 Best's Fish Scrap Guano 8.00 Pee Dee Special Fertilizer 8.00 Pee Dee Special for Tobacco 8.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.47 3.00 1.65 2.00 4.00 2.00 1.6a 3.00 1.65 3.00 3.2C 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 . 2.00 .82 : 4.00 4.00 4.85 > • • ■ ■ 50.00 49.00 12.00 6.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 6.00 5.00 ■ • > 4.00 3.00 2.00 6.00 3.3( ) 5.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.2' r 2.00 4.1! 2 7.00 3.3( ) 6.00 3.3( ) 4.00 3.3( ) 4.00 3.3( ) 4.00 3..8( 3 4.00 2.4 7 4.00 2.4' 7 4.00 2.4 7 4.00 2.4 7 3.00 2.4' 7 3.00 2.4' 7 3.00 2.4 7 3.00 26 The Bulletin, Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Acme 8-3-3 C. S. M. Guano Acme 8-3-3 C. S. M. Guano for Tobacco . . Acme Plant Food Acme Fertilizer for Tobacco Acme Fertilizer Tiptop Crop Grower Tiptop Tobacco Grower Acme Standard Guano Lattimer's Complete Fertilizer Best's Complete Fertilizer Cotton-seed Meal Guano Grem Fertilizer Cotton-seed Meal Guano for Tobacco.... Gem Fertilizer for Tobacco Acme Special Grain Fertilizer Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Root Crop Guano Acme Standard Truck Guano Acme High Grade Guano Acme Truck Grower Acme Corn Guano Dried Fish Scrap Acme Special 4-10-4 Guano Clark's Corn Guano Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Acme Top Di'esser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash High Grade German Kainit 16 Per Cent. Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 4.50 4.00 1.00 Nifi rogen. Potash. 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 2.06 2.06 2.06 1.05 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 4.12 4.12 4.95 3.30 2.47 8.02 8.25 6.58 20.56 14.81 7.40 3.00 3.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 G.OO 5.00 4.00 7.00 5.00 8.00 8.00 3.00 4.00 10.00 3.00 48.00 48.00 16.00 12.00 AsTiepoo Fertilizer Co., Charleston, S. G. — High Grade Ashepoo Dissolved Phosphate... 16.00 High Grade Ashepoo Acid Phosphate 14.00 High Grade Ashepoo XXXX Acid Phosphate. 14.00 High Grade Eutaw Acid Phosphate 14.00 Standard Ashepoo XXX Acid Phosphate. . . . 13.00 Standard Eutaw XXX Acid Phosphate 13.00 Standard Carolina Acid Phosphate 13.00 Standard Circle Bone 13.00 H. G. Ashepoo Bone and Potash 12.00 Standard Ashepoo Acid Phosphate and Potash. 12.00 Standard Eutaw Acid Phosphate and Potash. 12.00 Standard Eutaw XX Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Coomassie Acid PhospTiate 12.00 ^ Standard Ashepoo XX Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Ashepoo Potash and Acid Phosphate. 11.00 Standard Eutaw Potash Acid Phosphate 11.00 Standard Palmetto Potash Acid Phosphate. . . 11.00 High Grade Ashepoo Watermelon Guano 10.00 H. G. Ashepoo Cantaloupe Guano 10.00 H. G. Ashepoo Fruit Fertilizer 10.00 H. G. Ashepoo Golden Fertilizer 10.00 H. G. Eutaw Superpotash Acid Phosphate... 10.00 High Grade Ashepoo Superpotash Acid Phos- phate 10.00 20 46 6 65 2.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 5.00 10.00 6.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 I The Bulletin. 27 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Standard Asbepoo Potash Compound Standai-d Enoree Acid Phosphate and Potash . Standard Ashepoo Wheat and Oats Specific. Standard Ashepoo Fertilizer Standard Eutaw Fertilizer Standard Ashepoo Harrow Brand Raw Bone Superphosphate Standard Eutaw XXX Guano Standard Ashepoo Guano Standard Eutaw XX Guano Standard Ashepoo XX Guano High Grade Ashepoo Fruit Grower High Grade Ashepoo Perfection Guano High Grade Ashepoo Guano H. G. Ashepoo Special C. S. M. Guano High Grade Eutaw Special Cotton-seed Meal Guano High Grade Eutaw X Golden Fertilizer High Grade Ashepoo Bird and Fish Guano. . . High Grade Ashepoo Meal Mixture High Grade Ashepoo X Tobacco Fertilizer... High Grade Ashepoo Golden Tobacco Pro- ducer High Grade Carolina XXX Guano High Grade Ashepoo Ammoniated Superphos- phate High Grade Ashepoo Farmers' Special Standard Eutaw Circle Guano Standard Ashepoo Circle Guano Standard Coomassie Circle Fertilizer Standard Carolina Guano Standard P. D. Fertilizer Standard Ashepoo XXX Guano Standard Ashepoo Special Fertilizer Standard Bronwood Acid Phosphate High Grade Ashepoo Truck Guano High Grade Ashepoo Vegetable Guano High Grade Ashepoo Nitrogenous Top Dress- ing Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash German Kainit The Armour Fertilizer Works, Atlanta, Chicago and Wilmington— Bone Meal Total Armour's Raw Bone Meal Total 17 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 10 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 1.5 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Star Phosphate 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 12 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Sampson Corn Mixture Fertilizer, No. 1044 Fertilizer, No. 102.5 Fertilizer, No. 1023 Ammoniated Dissolved Bone and Potash Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 • • ■ ■ 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.50 1.65 1.00 9.00 1.85 1.00 9.00 1.85 1.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.50 2.06 1.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.91 2.75 8.00 3.29 6.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.46 2.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 2.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 • • • . 4.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 5.00 4.12 5.00 3.00 7.00 2.00 14.81 . . . > .... ■ • > • 45.00 45.00 • ■ ■ • • • • ■ 12.00 24.00 22.00 17.00 16.00 15.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 11.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 2.47 3.70 3.30 1.65 1.65 1.65 5.00 4.00 5.00 3.00 2.00 28 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. "State Farm" Phosphate and B. Potash Phosphoric Acid and Potash STii)erphosphate and Potash M. H. White & Co.'s Special Corn Mixture. . . Phosphate and Potash, No. 1 Armour's Tobacco Champion African Cotton Grower Johnson's High Grade Armour's Bright Tobacco Grower Bone and Dissolved Bone with Potash Fertilizer, No. 913 Standard Cotton Grower Bone, Blood and Potash Van Lindley's Special Fertilizer, No. 846 Fertilizer, No. 844 Special Trucker Sunrise Fertilizer. No. 844 All Soluble Truck and Berry Special Underwood's Special Fertilizer. No. 830 Fertilizer, No. 834 Fertilizer. No. 833 Sunrise Fertilizer. No. 833 Johnson's Favorite Underwood's Favorite Cotton Special Tobacco Special Carolina Cotton Grower Berry King Sunrise Cotton Grower Gold Medal for Tobacco Sweet Potato Special Champion King Cotton High Grade Potato Fruit and Root Crop Special Carolina Cotton Special Sunrise Tobacco Grower Sunrise Standard Slaughter House for Tobacco Armour's Slaughter House Fertilizer General Fertilizer, No. 813 Phosphate and Potash, No. 2 Phosphate and Potash, No. 3 7 Per Cent Trucker 5 Per Cent Trucker Manure Substitute 10 Per Cent Trucker Top Dresser Special Formula for Tobacco Harvey's Special 10 Per Cent Tankage Nitrate of Soda Dried Blood Armour's Top Dresser Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 7.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 . . . 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 10.00 . . . 2.00 9.00 2.4' 3.00 9.00 2.4' 3.00 9.00 2.05 5.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.11 7.00 8.00 4.11 2.00 8.00 3.80 6.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.88 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.4' r 10.00 8.00 2.47 6.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.4' I 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.4' r 3.00 8.00 2.4' r 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 2.05 4.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 2.50 8.00 2.05 2.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 > > 5.00 8.00 • • • 4.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 6.00 3.30 4.00 5.00 8.24 3.00 5.00 8.24 2.00 4.00 3.30 5.00 4.00 3.30 4.00 2.00 8.24 14.81 13.16 7.83 4.00 The Bulletin. 29 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Kainit American Fertiliser Co., Norfolk, Va. — Bone Meal Total American High Grade Acid Phosphate High Grade Acid Phosphate Eagle Brand Acid Phosphate Double Extra Bone and Potash Acid Phosphate American Standard Cotton Grower American Formula for Wheat and Corn Double Dissolved Bone and Potash Dissolved Bone and Potash for Corn and Wheat Strawberry and Asparagus Guano Special Formula Guano for Yellow Leaf To- bacco American Bone Mixture Bone and Peiiivian Guano Blood and Bone Compound Peruvian Mixture Peruvian Mixture Guano Especially Prepared for Sweet Potatoes N. C. and S. C. Cotton Grower American Eagle Guano J. G. Miller & Co.'s Yellow Leaf Fertilizer. . . American No. 1 Fertilizer Bob White Fertilizer for Tobacco A. L. Hanna's Special Formula Bone and Peruvian Guano American No. 2 Fertilizer American Special Potash Mixture for Whear. 10 Per Cent Ammoniated Guano American 7-7-7 for Irish Potatoes Standard 7 Per Cent Ammonia Guano Special Potato Guano Kale, Spinach and Cabbage Guano American Irish Potato Grower American Fish Scrap Guano Stable Manure Substitute Special Potato Manure Nitrate of Soda Ground Fish Scrap Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 50.00 50.00 12.00 22.50 3.71 • • . • 16.00 .... • . * • 14.00 ■ • . > > . . • 13.00 .... .... 12.00 .... 5.00 12.00 .... . . * • 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .... 5.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.88 5.00 9.00 2.88 5.00 9.00 .83 2.00 8.88 1.65 2.00 8.50 2.06 1.00 8.50 1.65 1.50 8.00 3.29 5.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.00 2.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 8.24 2.50 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 5.76 5.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 4.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 3.29 4.00 7.00 2.47 4.00 6.00 4.12 14.83 8.24 7.00 49.66 48.00 12.00 American Agricultural Chemical Co., Baltimore and New York — A. A. C. Co.'s 16 Per Cent Superphosphate .... A. A. C. Co.'s Gaston Special A. A. C. Co.'s Crowd Cotton Food A. A. C. Co.'s Champion Cotton Fertilizer. . . . A. A. C. Co.'s Tip Top Special A. A. C. Co.'s White Oak Cotton Fertilizer. . . A. A. C. Co.'s H. G. C. S. M. Compound 16.00 . • . > . • . • 10.50 2.47 2.00 10.00 3.29 2.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.47 7.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 30 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. A. A. C. Co.'s Harvest Queen A. A. C. Co.'s E.xcelsior Comioound foi' Tobacco A. A. C. Co.'s Gold Wrapper Fertilizer A. A. C. Co.'s Rex Cotton Compound A. A. C. Co.'s Fish Guano A. A. C. Co.'s Purity Guano A. A. C. Co.'s Fidelity Grain Grower A. A. C. Co.'s Regal Crop Grower A. A. C. Co.'s Palmetto Alkaline Phosphate. . . A. A. C. Co.'s Blood, Bone and Fish Comp A. A. C. Co.'s Fancy Wrapper Fertilizer A. A. C. Co.'s Baltimore Top Dresser A. A. C. Co.'s Nitrate of Soda A. A. C. Co.'s Muriate of Potash A. A. C. Co.'s H. G. Sulphate of Potash A. A. C. Co.'s Geuuiue German Kainit Bartholomew's Bright Leaf Bartholomew's Fish Guano Bartholomew's Blood, Bone and Fish Com.. . . Bartholomew's Fancy Top Dre.sser Canton Chemical 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Star Guano Canton Chemical Champion Cotton Fertilizer. Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Animal Bone Fertilizer. .... Canton Chemical Victor Compound for Cotton. Canton Chemical Victor Compound for Cotton. Canton Chemical Colgate Standard Mixture.. Canton Chemical Challenge C. S. M. Com- pound Canton Chemical Bone Cotton Compound.... Canton Chemical Bone Tobacco Fertilizer. . . . Canton Chemical Honest Protector Canton Chemical H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer. . . . Canton Chemical Gladiator Cotton Fertilizer. Canton Chemical Superior High Grade Fer- tilizer Canton Chemical Baker's Tobacco Fertilizer. Canton Chemical CCC Special Compound.... Canton Chemical Bacher's Standard for To- bacco Canton Chemical Resurgone Soluble Guano.. Canton Chemical Baker's Fish Guano Canton Chemical Game Guano Canton Three Sevens Special Potato Manure. Canton Chemical Excelsior Trucker Canton Truckers' Special 7 Per Cent Canton Royal Trucker Avail. Phos. Acid. 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 4.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 8.00 8.00 7.00 IG.OO 14.00 13.00 12.00 12.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 1.65 2.47 2.47 2.06 1.65 1.65 .82 .82 3.29 3.29 7.41 15.00 2.47 1.05 3.29 7.41 3.29 2.00 2.00 5.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 3.00 49.66 48.00 12.00 7.00 3.00 5.00 3.00 5.00 3.00 4.00 3.00 4.00 3.00 0.00 • • • > 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 6.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 im 2.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 S.OO 6.00 4.11 7.00 I The Bulletin. 31 Xame aud Address of Manufactui'er and Name of Brand. Canton Truckers' Special 10 Per Cent. Detrlck Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detriclv Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick plinte Detrick Detrick Deftrick Detrick Detrick Detrick Detrick's 36 Per Cent Acid Pbospbate XXtra Acid Phosphate 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate H. G. Bone and Potash H. G. Bone and Potash White Star Fertilizer Old Colony Comp. for Cotton H. G. Bone and Potash s H. G. Bone and Potash Bone and Potash Superior Animal Bone Fertilizer. . . Victory Crop Grower Gold Basis Standard Gold Basis C. S. M. Mixture Kangaroo Komplete Konipound Quick-Step Tobacco Fertilizer Gold Eagle Cotton Comp H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer Victory Cotton Fertilizer Special Tobacco Fertilizer Vegetator Ammoniated Superphos- Globe Complete Manure Royal Crop Grower Fish Mixture Special Trucker Advance Truck Guano Climax Truckers' Compound Truck Fertilizer Lazaretto 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Lazaretto 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Lazaretto 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto Triumph Cotton Fertilizer Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto Alkaline Bone Lazaretto Retriever Animal Bone Fertilizer.. Lazaretto O. K. Complete Manure Lazaretto Defiance Standard Manure Lazaretto Top Notch C. S. M. Compound Lazaretto Carolina Cotton Food Lazaretto Coronet Tobacco Fertilizer Lazaretto King of the Harvest Lazaretto Quality and Quantity Tobacco Fer- tilizer Lazaretto Special Tobacco and Potato Fer- tilizer Lazaretto New Rival Cotton Fertilizer Lazaretto Challenge Fertilizer Lazaretto Carolina Tobacco Fertilizer Lazaretto Climax Plant Food . . Lazaretto C. & G. Complete Manure Lazaretto Crop Grower Lazaretto Sure Crop Compound Lazaretto Early Trucker Lazaretto Truckers' Favorite Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 5.00 8.23 3.00 16.00 .... . • « • 14.00 . • • ( 13.00 . • . ■ 12.00 .... 5.00 12.00 3.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 ... * 4.00 10.00 .... 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 16.00 .... 14.00 .... .... 13.00 • ■ • . 12.00 .... 5.66 12.00 • ■ > • 3.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 • . . • 4.00 10.00 .... 3.00 10.00 . • • . 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.41 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 32 The Bulletiis^. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Lazaretto Empire Trucker Lazaretto 10 Per Cent Guano Zell's 16 Per Cent Acid Pliospbate Zell's 14 Per Cent Acid Pliospbate Zell's 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Zell's H. G. Bone and Potash Zell's H. G. Bone and Potash Zell's Big Giant Zell's H. G. Bone and Potash Zell's Bone and Potash Zell's Bone and Potash Zell's Royal High Grade Fertilizer Zell's Victoria Animal Bone Compound Zell's Empire Cotton Compound Zell's Boss Cotton S. M. Mixture Zell's Big Crop Standard Fertilizer Zell's Economizer Cotton Food Zell's Special Compoiind for Potatoes and Veg- etables Zell's Tobacco Fertilizer Zell's Cardinal Comp. for Cotton Zell's Bright Tobacco Grower Zell's Reliance High Grade Manure Zell's Popular Tobacco Manure Zell's "Square Deal" for Tobacco Zell's Excelsior Cotton Fertilizer Zell's Special Compound for Tobacco Zell's Calvert Guano Zell's Fish Guano Zell's Truck Grower Zell's 7 Pel- Cent Potato and Vegetable Ma- nure Zell's Challenge Truckers' Manure . Zell's 10 Per Cent Trucker Productive Cotton and Peanut Grower Dawson's Crop Grower Gold Dust Guano : Slinglufif's British Mixture Triumph Soluble Holmes & Dawson's Dawson's Crop Maker. . . Reece Pacific Guano A. D. Adair d- McCarty Bros.. Atlanta, Ga. — Adair's High Grade Dissolved Bone, No. 16. . . A. and M. 15-4 A. and M. 13-4 Mccarty's Potash Formula, No. 5 McCarty's Potash Formula, No. 4 McCarty's Potash Formula Adair's Dissolved Bone David Harum Extra High Grade Blood Guano. Adair's H. G. Blood and Bone Guano Special Wheat Compound Special Corn Compound Special Vegetable Compound Special Potato Compound Special Cotton Compound Special Tomato Compound Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 6.00 4.11 7.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 16.00 • > • > .... 14.00 > < • ■ 13.00 > > > • 12.00 5.00 12.00 .... 3.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 • • > ■ 4.00 10.00 • • • • 3.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 0.00 2.06 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 2.06 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.29 4.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 2.06 2.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 s.oo 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 16.00 15.00 ■ ■ > ■ 4.00 13.00 > * • • 4.00 12.00 • < • • 5.00 12.00 > • > ■ 4.00 12.00 2.00 12.00 • • • • .... 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 The Bulletin, 33 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Adair's Soluble Pacific Guano McCarty's High Grade Cotton Grower McCarty's High Grade Corn Grower Old Time Fish Scrap Guano McCarty's Wheat Special McCarty's Corn Special McCarty's Cotton Special Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 8 H. G. Potash Compound, No. 8 H. G. Potash Compound, No. 6 Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower. No. 6 Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 5 H. G. Potash ComiX)und, No. 5 High Grade Potash Compound Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower Adair's Formula Dixie High Grade Soil Food Adair's Blood, Bone and Tankage Guano Special Corn Grower Special Wheat Grower Special Potato Grower Special Vegetable Grower Standard Corn Grower Planter's Soluble Fertilizer Adair's Ammoniated Dissolved Bone Golden Grain Compound Adair's Special Potash Mixture, No. 6 Adair's Special Potash Mixture, No. 5 Adair's Special Potash Mixture Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 8.00 10.00 , 8.00 10.00 , 6.00 10.00 , 6.00 10.00 , 5.00 10.00 , 5.00 10.00 , 4.00 10.00 , 4.00 10.00 , 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 , 6.00 8.00 , 5.00 8.00 4.00 15.00 50.00 Asheville Packing Co., Asheville, N. C. — Asheville Packing Co.'s Pure Bone Meal, Total Asheville Packing Co.'s H. G. Phosphoric Acid. Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Phosphoric Acid Asheville Packing Co.'s Extra H. G. Potash Mixture Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Phosphoric Acid Asheville Packing Co.'s Celebrated Tankage, Total Asheville Packing Co.'s Extra H. G. Fertilizer. Asheville Packing Co.'s Blood and Bone Asheville Packing Co.'s Extra H. G. Cotton Special Asheville Packing Co.'s High Grade Biltmore Wheat Grower Asheville Packing Co.'s H. G. Wheat, Corn and Oat Special Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Bone and Potash Asheville Packing Co.'s Superior Potato and Wheat Fertilizer Asheville Packing Co.'s Special Potash Mix- ture Asheville Packing Co.'s XXX Wheat Grower. 3 18.00 16.00 2.30 .... 14.00 .... 13.00 .... 4.00 12.00 .... .... 10.00 10.00 10.00 4.12 3.30 2.47 4.00 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 3.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 10.00 .... 4.00 2.00 34 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Asbeville Packing Co.'s Standard Potato Fer- tilizer Asbeville Packing Co.'s H. G. Vegetable Spe- cial Asbeville Packing Co.'s Corn and Vegetable Special Asbeville Packing Co.'s Special Tobacco and Vegetable Fertilizer Asbeville Packing Co.'s Fruit Special Asbeville Packing Co.'s Potato Special Asbeville Packing Co.'s Cbampion Potato Fer- tilizer Asbeville Packing Co.'s Complete Fertilizer.. Asbeville Packing Co.'s Standard Corn and Wbeat Asbeville Packing Co.'s Special Bone and Potasb Asbeville Packing Co.'s H. G. Muriate of Pot- asb Baiigh d Sons Co., Phila., Pa., and Norfolk, Va. — Baugh's Raw Bone Meal, Warranted Pure, Total Baugb's 10 Per Cent Acid Pbospbate Baugb's Pure Bone and Muriate of Potasb Mixture Total Baugb's Higb Grade Acid Pbospbate Baugb's Rire Dissolved Animal Bones Baugb's 12 and 5 Pbospbate and Potash Baugb's Higb Grade Cotton and Truck Guano. Baugb's 10 and 8 Pbospbate and Potasb Baugb's Higb Grade Potasb Mixture Baugb's Soluble Alkaline Superpbospbate . . . . Baugb's H. G. Potato Grower Baugh's Fish, Bone and Potasb Baugb's Fruit and Berry Guano Baugb's Special Tobacco Guano Baugb's Grand Rapids Higb Grade Guano. . . . Baugb's Sweet Potato Guano for Sweet Pota- toes. Peas and Melons Baugh's High Grade Tobacco Guano Baugh's Complete Animal Base Fertilizer. . . . Baugh's Fish Mixture Baugb's Animal Base and Potash Compound for All Crops Baugh's Wbeat Fertilizer for Wbeat and Grass Baugb's Southern States Excelsior Guano .... Glover's Special Potato Guano Baugb's Southern States Guano for Bright Tobacco Baugb's Potato and Truck Special Baugh's Strawberry Mixture Baugh's Fine Ground Fish Gilliam's Special Potato Guano Baugh's 7 Per Cent Potato Guano Baugh's Peruvian Guano Substitute for Pota- toes and All Vegetables Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 4.12 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 2.47 1.05 1.65 3.00 6.00 6.00 8.00 8.00 1.65 1.65 4.00 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 4.00 50.00 21.50 3.70 • • • • 16.00 15.00 2.47 5.00 14.00 • • • • • > • • 13.00 2.06 • • • ■ 12.00 • • • * 5.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .... 8.00 30.00 ■ • • • 4.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 8.00 3.30 10.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 s.oo 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 3.00 7.00 3.30 8.00 7.00 2.88 7.00 7.00 2.88 7.00 7.00 2.47 5.00 6.87 8.23 • • • > 6.00 5.76 6.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.12 .00 I The Bulletin, 35 Namo and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Baiigh's Farnier.s' Friend Guano Baugb's New Process 10 Per Cent Guano. . . . Baugh's Special Potato Manure Baugh'.s Wrapper Leaf Brand for Seed Leaf Tobacco Sulpbate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Fine Ground Blood Baugb's Soluble Top Dresser for AH Crops. . . Baugb's Fine Ground Tankage Muriate of Potasb Higb Grade Sulpbate of Potasb Genuine German Kainit S. T. Beveridge cC- Co., Richmond, Va. — Beveridge's Raw Ground Bone Meal Beveridge's Tbomas or Basic Slag Total Beta Fertilizer Company, Beta, N. C. — Beta Corn Grower E. W. Braicley, Mooresville, N. C. — Rock Pbospbate Total Rock and Potasb Total 16 Per Cent Acid Pbospbate. . . . .' Red Leo Nitrate of Soda Dried Blood Muriate of Potasb German Kainit -/. .4. Benton, Rnffin, N. C— Benton's Nortb Carolina Brigbt Fertilizer... Baltimore Fertiliser Co., Baltimore, Md- — Honest Acid Pbospbate Honest Acid Pbospbate Honest Bone and Potasb Honest Sweet Potato Grower Honest Cotton Grower Mayo's 8-2i/,-3 Honest Ammoniated Bone Maj^o's 7-7-7 Mayo's 7-5-5 . Honest Dixie Trucker Honest Trucker Bertie Cotton Oil Co., Avlander, N. C. — Bertie's Higb Grade Guano Bertie's Meal Mixture Bertie's Tobacco Grower Bertie's Ideal Cotton Grower Bertie's Special Compound Bertie's Corn Mixture Peanut Grower Bertie's Peanut Special Phos Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 6.00 4.12 5.00 5.00 8.23 2.50 5.00 1.65 10.00 3.50 3.30 5.00 • • • 20.57 . . . . 14.81 .... 13.00 .... 8.23 3.00 7.40 48.66 48.00 12.00 20.00 3.70 16.00 8.00 9.00 2.00 1.65 2.00 28.00 .... 20.00 < > • • 3.00 16.00 > * . * . . . . 10.00 2.47 1.50 8.00. 2.47 15.88 13.17 3.00 48.00 • * • • ■ ■ • • 12.00 2.00 16.00 14.00 • • • > . . . . 10.00 ■ • • • 2.00 8.00 2.40 4.00 8.00 2.40 3.00 8.00 2.00 3.00 8.00 1.60 2.00 7.00 5.60 7.00 7.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 4.00 7.00 6.00 4.00 5.00 8.00 4.13 5.00 8.00 3..30 4.00 S.OO 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 1.65 2.00 7.00 2.47 2.00 7.00 1.65 5.00 7.00 .82 4.00 36 The Bulletix. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Tar Heel Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid Nitrogen. Potash. 2.00 8.25 15.00 5.00 52.00 50.00 12.00 Bmclcer Fertilizer Co., Baltimore, McL, and Boston. Mass. — 16 Per Cent Dissolved Boue Phosphate Bowker's Soluble Phosphate Golden Harvest Fertilizer Bowker's H. G. Special Imperial Alkaline Phosphate Superphosphate with Potash for Grain and Grass Bowker's Ammoniated Bone Sure Crop Phosphate Bowker's Blood, Bone and Fish Bowker's H. G. Fertilizer Bowker's Red Oak Tobacco Feitilizer Bowker's White Star Compound Tobacco Fertilizer Eureka Cotton Compound Bowker's Fish Guano Empire Standard Corn and Grain Grower Baker's Bone and Potash Three Sevens Truck Fertilizer Bowker's Southern Special Compound Fancy Truck Bowker's Potato Special Bowker's Top Dresser Bowker's Tobacco Special H. G. Top Dresser Blackstone Guano Co., Inc., BlacJcstove, Va. — Blackstone Raw Bone Total Clover Leaf IG Per Cent Phosphat(> Bone and Phosphate Half and Half B. G. Co. Acid Phosphate Clover Leaf Grain Fertilizer Dissolved Bone B. G. Co., Inc.. Bone and Potash B. G. Co. Bone and Potash Blackstone Special for Tobacco Old Bellefonte Clover Leaf for Tobacco Tobacco Special Wrapper Brand Jim Crow for Tobacco Bellefonte Hard Cash for Tobacco Carolina Special for Tobacco Standard Guano Red Letter for Tobacco Alliance for Tobacco Leader for Tobacco Peanut Special Material for Special Order 16.00 .... .... 14.00 .... .... 12,00 .... 5.00 10.00 3.29 5.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 7.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 s.oo . • • > 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 3.29 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 6.00 4.11 5.00 4.00 6.15 2.50 4.00 3.29 6.00 7.41 3.00 18.00 4.11 16.00 .... 15.00 1.65 14.00 .... 13.00 1.03 1.00 10.00 1.03 1.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 3.30 2.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.0O 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.03 4.95 6.00 I The Bulletin. 37 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. AvaU. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. C. J. Burton Guano Co., Baltimore, Aid. — Acid Phosphate 14.00 Burton's Alkaline 10.00 Burton's Potash Mixture 10.00 High Grade Tobacco 8.00 Burton's Best 8.00 Tobacco Queen 8.00 Burton's High Grade 8.00 Burton's Butcher Bone 8.00 Bradley Fertilizer Co., Charleston, S. C. — High Grade Bradley's Dissolved Phosphate. . 16.00 High Grade Bradley's Acid Phosphate 14.00 Standard Bradley's XXX Acid Phosphate... 13.00 Standard Bradley's Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Bradley's Palmetto Acid Phosphate. 12.00 H. G. Bradley's Selected Guano 10.00 High Grade Bradley's Potash Acid Phosphate. 10.00 Standard Bradley's Wheat Grower 10.00 Standard Bradley's Bone and Potash 10.00 Standard Bradley's Ammoniated Dissolved Bone 9.00 Standard Bradley's Patent Superphosphate.. 9.00 Standard B. D. Sea Fowl Guano 9.00 Standard Eagle Ammoniated Bone Superphos- phate 9.00 High Grade Bradley's Circle Guano 8.00 High Grade Bradley's Guano 8.00 Standard Bradley's Cereal Guano 8.00 Standard Bradley's X Guano 8.00 Nitrate of Soda .' Muriate of Potash .... German Kainit .... The Bryant Fertilizer Co., Alexandria, Ya. — Bryant's Bone Meal Total 22.50 Bryant's Acid Phosphate 17.00 Bryant's Acid Phosphate 16.00 Bryant's S. C. Dissolved Bone 14.00 Bryant's H. G. Wheat Mixture 12.00 Parrish-Godwin's Dissolved Bone with Potash. 12.00 Bryant's Bone and Potash 10.00 Bryant's Bone and Potash Mixture 10.00 Bryant's "Challenge" Highest Grade Tobacco Mixture ., 9.00 Bryant's Special Cotton-seed Meal Fertilizer. 9.00 Bryant's Bone Mixture for Tobacco 9.00 Farmers' Mixture 8.75 Bryant's H. G. Meal Fertilizer 8.00 Bryant's H. G. Guano 8.00 Bryant's C. S. M. Guano 8.00 Bryant's H. G. Fertilizer 8.00 Bryant's "Victor" Tobacco Fertilizer 8.00 Bryant's Choice C. S. M. 3 Per Cent Mixture. 8.00 Bryant's Tobacco Fertilizer 8.00 Bryant's "Otter" Special Tobacco Fertilizer.. 8.00 Bi-yant's Cotton and Corn Fertilizer S.OO Bryant's Special Fertilizer for Tobacco 8.00 . . . . 4.00 • • * • 2.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.06 3.00 3.65 2.00 3.71 1.65 4.00 • > • < 4.00 .... 2.00 .... 2.00 1.85 1.00 1.85 1.00 1.85 3.00 1.85 1.00 3.29 4.00 2.46 3.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 14.81 • . t ■ 45.00 ■ > • • 12.00 . . . . 6.00 . . . . 4.00 . . . . 4.00 2.00 2.47 3.00 2.26 2.00 2.06 2.00 1.85 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 2.00 2.06 3.00 2.06 3.00 2.06 2.00 2.06 2.00 38 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Bryant's Cotton Grower Bryant's Special Fertilii^er Bryant's Cotton-seed Meal Guano Bryant's "Potomac" Bone Special for Tobacco. Bryant's Special Formula for Grain and Grass Bryant's Wheat Mixture Bryant's Ti'uck Grower Bryant's Fish Scrap Guano Bryant's Carolina Top Dresser Bryant's High Grade Top Dresser Bryant's Top Dresser Bryant's Special Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Blood Fish Scrap Bryant's Carolina Si:>ecial Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Bryant's German Kainit The Berkley Chemical Co., Norfolk, Va. — Pure Ground Bone Total Resolute Acid Phosphate Berkley Acid Phosphate Berkley 12-5 Bone and Potash Berkley Bone and Potash Mixture Berkley Plant Food r>aurel Potash Mixture Monitor Animal Bone Fertilizer Select Crop Grower Victory Special Crop Grower Berkley Tobacco Guano Advance Crop Grower Brandon Superphosphate LonsT Leaf Tobacco Grower Berkley Peanut and Grain Grower Superior Boaie and Potash Mascot Truck Guano Royal Truck Grower The Leader of the World Berkley Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Dry Ground Fish Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Ivainit Bragaw Fertilizer Co., Washington, N. C. — 10 Per Cent Acid Palmetto Acid Phosphate Long Acre Bone Phosphate Farmers' Union Meal Mixture Beaufort County Guano Havana Tobacco Guano Tuckahoe Tobacco Guano Old Reliable Premium Guano Tar Heel Guano Pamlico Trucker Avail. Phos. Acid. 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 6.00 4.00 4.00 2.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 1.65 1.05 1.65 1.65 .82 5.76 3.29 5.76 8.23 6.17 5.76 14.82 13.15 8.24 7.41 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 7.00 4.00 5.00 4.00 2.50 2.50 3.00 48.00 48.00 12.00 20.00 3.70 .... 16.00 . . • ■ 14.00 • • . • . . > . 12.00 5.00 11.00 .... 2.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 8.50 2.06 2.50 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 ■ • • • 4.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 5.00 3.29 5.00 4.00 8.23 2.00 . • . • 15.00 . . • • .... 8.23 50.00 49.00 12.00 16.00 .... > . . ■ 14.00 .... 14.00 > . • • 9.00 2.26 2.00 S.OO 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 The Bulletin. 39 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. 7-5-5 Truck Guano Riverview Potato Grower Chocowinity Special Tobacco Guano Sunrise Tobacco Guano Genuine German Kainit Conestec Chemical Co., Wilmington, N. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Conestee High Grade Acid Phosphate Conestee Acid Phosphate Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash • Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Cotton Grower Conestee Special Fertilizer fcr Cotton Conestee Melon Grower Conestee O. K. Fertilizer for Tobacco Conestee P. D. Q. Fertilizer Conestee "O. K." Fertilizer Conestee P. D. Q. Fertilizer foi' Tobacco Conestee Plumb Good Fertilizer Conestee Crop Grower for Tobacco Conestee Fish Scrap Guano for Tobacco Conestee 8-3-3 C. S. M. Guano Conestee 8-8-3 C. S. M. Guano for Tobacco. . . Conestee Fish Scrap Guano Conestee Special Fertilizer Conestee Special Tobacco Fertilizer... Conestee Fertilizer for Tobacco Conestee Fertilizer Conestee Crop Grower. Conestee Tobacco Grower Conestee Complete Fertilizer Conestee Special Grain Fertilizer Conestee Standard Guano for Tobacco Conestee Standard Guano Cotton-seed Meal Guano for Tobacco Cotton-seed Meal Guano Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Root Crop Guano Conestee Standard Truck Guano Conestee High Grade Guano Conestee Truck Grower Conestee Corn Guano Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 5.76 ► 5.00 5.00 3.2£ ► 6.00 4.00 2.4'i 5.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 • • • ■ ■ • • 13.00 . . . .... 12.00 • • * 6.00 12.00 5.00 12.00 4.00 12.00 • • • 3.00 12.00 . . . 2.00 11.00 • • • 6.00 11.00 • • • 5.00 11.00 . . . 4.00 11.00 3.00 11.00 . . . 2.00 10.00 ■ ■ > 6.00 10.00 • • > 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 • > . 3.00 10.00 • • • 2.00 9.00 2.2- r 2.00 8.00 4.1: 2 7.00 8.00 4.12 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.4 7 4.00 8.00 2.4 7 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 ■ • • 6.00 8.00 5.00 8.00 . . . 4.00 7.00 4.1 2 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 4.95 8.00 6.00 3.30 8.00 6.00 2.47 3.00 40 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Dried Fish Scrap Conestee Special Top Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia. Nitrate of Soda Conestee Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash H. G. German Kainit 16 Per Cent Genuine German Kainit Coltimtia Guano Co., Noi-folk. Va. — Raw Bone Meal Total Columbia High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Phos- phate Columbia 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Columbia Dissolved Bone Columbia Acid Phosphate Columbia 11 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. Columbia 10 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. Cohunbia 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. Columbia Bone and Potash for Grain Columbia Bone and Potash Mixture Columbia C. S. M. Special Roanoke Ammoniated Guano Carolina Soluble Guano Columbia Grain Guano Pelican Ammoniated Guano Columbia Special Truck Guano Trojan Tobacco Guano Columbia Special 4-8-3 Olympia Cotton Guano ' Hyco Tobacco Guano Our Best Meal Guano Royal Tobacco Fertilizer Columbia Special Tobacco Guano Columbia Guano Soluble for Tobacco Columbia Special Wheat Fertilizer Columbia Soluble Guano Spinola Peanut Grower Columbia 8 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Columbia Special 7 Per Cent Truck Guano. . . Columbia Potato Guano Crown Brand Peanut Guano Columbia Side Dresser Columbia Special Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Columbia Top Dresser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. 4.50 4.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 21.50 16.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 11.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 4.00 4.00 8.02 8.25 20.56 14.81 7.40 3.71 2.27 1.65 1.65 .82 .",..30 3..30 3.30 3..30 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.02 5.77 4.12 8.22 6.18 15.22 7.42 4.00 3.00 48.00 48.00 16.00 12.00 5.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 3.00 1.00 3.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 7.00 5.00 5.00 4.00 2.50 3.00 48.00 48.00 12.00 Cumberland Bone and Phosphate Co., Portland, Me., and Charleston, S. C. — Standard Cumberland Bone and Superphos- phate of Lime 9.00 1.85 1.00 The Bulletin. 41 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. The Coe-Mortimer Co., Charleston, 8. C. — Gen. Key — Tree Brand Thomas Phosphate, Total Gen. Key — Tree Brand Thomas Phosphate, Total High Grade Tanl^age Imported Ground Fish High Grade Tanljage Imported Fish Guano Imported Fish Guano Total Imported Fish Guano Nitrate of Soda H. G. Dried Blood H. G. Dried Blood Nitrate of Potash Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Muriate Mixture Genuine German Kainit Cooper Guano Co., Wilmington, N. C. — Cooper's 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Cooper's 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Cooper's Grain Producer Cooper's Grain Grower Cooper's Recorder Cooper's Kite Cooper's Helmar Cooper's Horto Cooper's Chadbourn Trucker Cooper's Lenox Cooper's Sunset C. S. M Cooper's Clifford Cooper's Swamp Fox Cooper's Bunker Hill Cooi>er's Crusoe Cooper's Potato Cooi^er's Bald Head Island Cooper's Reward Cooper's Waccamaw Cooper's Sterling Complete Cooper's Peanut Bouncer Cooper's Finis Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Kainit Craven Chemical Co., Neic Bern, ISf. C. — Panama 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Jewel Acid Phosphate Trent Bone and Potash Halifax Guano Prolix 9-2-3 Special Guano Hanover Standard Guano Duplin Tobacco Guano Gaston High Grade Fertilizer C. E. Foy High Grade Guano Avail. Phos. Acid. 18.00 17.50 6.80 6.80 6.80 5.00 4.48 4.40 Nitrogen. Potash. 9.68 8.24 7.62 10.91 5.78 5.88 14.83 14.00 13.59 12.36 44.00 49.00 49.00 20.00 12.00 16.00 .... • . . • 14.00 > . . > . • > ■ 10.00 4.00 10.00 ■ • . « 2.00 8.85 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.11 7.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.0G 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 7.00 4.11 14.85 5.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 .... ■ > . • 14.00 .... .... 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 42 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Marvel Great Crop Grower Elite Cotton Guano Pantego Potato Guano Neuse Truck Grower . Craven Chemical Co.'s Truck Guano, 5-10-2% . Genuine German Kaiuit William H. Camp, Petershurg, Va. — Bone Meal Total Camp's Acid Phosphate Camp's Acid Phosphate Camp's Shepherd Brand Bone and Potash .... Camp's Bone and Potash Camp's Lion and Monkey for Tobacco Camp's Red Head Chemicals Camp's Lion and Monkey Cat and Rat Peanut Grower Victory Corn Grower Camp's Shepherd Brand Bone and Potash. . . . Camp's Green Head Chemicals Camp's Above All Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash German Kainit Clayton Oil Mill, Clayton, N. C— C. O. M. ir, Per Cent Acid Phosphate C. O. M. High Grade Bone and Potash C. O. M. Bone and Potash C. O. M. Wheat Compound • "Way Side Special C. W. H. Special Clayton Guano Clayton Special Tobacco Grower Planters' Favorite Cotton Queen Summer Queen C. O. M. Top Dresser H. and W. D. Climax Top Dresser Perfection Top Dresser C. O. M. German Kainit Catawba Fertilizer Company, Lancaster, S. C. — Catawba High Grade Acid Phosphate Catawba High Grade Acid Phosphate Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Special Catawba Climax Catawba Preference Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Farmers' Union Catawba Old Hickory Catawba Economizer Catawba Electric Catawba Reliable Catawba Red Rose Catawba Peerless Catawba Acid and Potash Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 4.94 G.OO 5.00 8.24 2.50 .... .... 12.00 22.50 3.80 16.00 • * . > 14.00 . . . ■ > . . • 10.00 . . . • 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 2.4G 3.00 8.00 2.25 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 1.00 2.00 8.00 ■ * • . 5.00 7.00 6.15 10.00 6.00 5.75 14.75 5.00 48.66 12.00 16.00 12.00 * < . • 5.00 10.00 .... 5.00 10.00 2.05 4.50 9.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 4.10 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 2.00 6.56 12.70 1.50 * • • • 9.85 4.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 .... 12.00 . ■ . • 5.00 12.00 4.00 -10.00 3.20 4.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 4.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 8.00 3.29 6.00 8.85 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.47 3.00 8.00 • • < • 4.00 The BuLLETiJsr. 43 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Coicell, Swan & McCotter Co., Bayboro, N. C. — Bone Phosphate Standard Cotton Grower Champion Guano Cowell's Great Tobacco Grower Quick Grower Guano Rust Proof Cotton Guano Crop Guano Great Cabbage and Potato Guano Oriental Trucker Aurora Trucker High Grade Truck Guano Potato Favorite Guano Cabbage Guano Gernjan Kainit Carolina Union Fertiliser Co., Norfolk, Va. — Carolina Union 16 Per Cent Carolina Union 14 Per Cent Carolina Union 1.3 Per Cent Carolina Union 12 Per Cent Carolina Union 10-5 : Carolina Union 10-4 Carolina Union 10-2 Carolina Union 8-7-5 Carolina Union 8-4-4 Carolina Union 8-3--3 Carolina Union 8-2.5-2 Carolina Union 8-2-2 Carolina Union 8-2-3 Carolina Union 8-4 Carolina Union 7-4-5 Nitrate of Soda Blood Fish Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 14.00 8.00 8.30 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.77 7.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 3.30 7.00 5.00 8.25 2.50 12.00 16.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 O.I t 3.30 2.47 2.06 1.65 .65 3.30 14.85 13.20 9.04 5.00 4.00 2.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 CMclcamavga Fertilizer Works, Atlanta, Ga. — Chickamauga High Grade Dissolved Bone, No. 16 Chickamauga High Grade Dissolved Bone. . . . Chickamauga 13-4 Chickamauga Potash Special, No,. 4 Chickamauga Potash Special Chickamauga Dissolved Bone Chickamauga Very Best Extra H. G. Guano. . Ben Hur H. G. Blood and Bone Guano Special Potato Compound Special Wheat Compound Special Vegetable Compound Special Corn Compound Chickamauga High Grade Fertilizer Chickamauga High Grade Plant Food Chickamauga Fish Scrap Guano Chickamauga Wheat Special Chickamauga Corn Special 16.00 • • ■ > 14.00 • • • > 13.00 4.00 12.00 4.00 12.00 2.00 12.00 ■ . < • 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 .'',.00 10.00 .82 3.00 44 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Chickamauga Cotton Special Old Glory Mixture Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 8. Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 6. Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 5. Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower Chickamauga Bone and Potash Chickamauga Blood, Bone and Tankage Guano Special Potato Grower Special Wheat Grower Special Vegetable Grower Special Corn Grower Chickamauga Complete Fertilizer Chickamauga Standard Corn Grower Chickamauga Standard Wheat Grower Georgia Home Guano No. 3 Bone, Tankage and Potash Mixture. . . . Chickamauga Alkaline Bone, No. 6 Chickamauga Alkaline Bone. No. 5 Chickamauga Alkaline Bone Nitrate of Soda .V . Muriate of Potash Canton Fertilizer Co., Canton, Ga. — Dissolved Bone Dissolved Bone Ten Two Four R. T. Jones Extra H. G Elberta Special North Georgia High Grade Southern King High Grade Fish High Grade Orange High Grade Jomco High Grade Quickstep Wheat and Graiu Grower Special Potash Mixture Eight Two Four Fish Standard Jomco Standard Grade Dissolved Bone and Potash Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash The Chesapeake Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. — C. C. Co.'s Dissolved Phosphate C. C. Co.'s Reliable Phosphate C. C. Co.'s Celebrated Mixture C. C. Co.'s Rapid Trucker C. C. Co.'s High Grade Guano C. C. Co.'s Excelsior Fertilizer C. C. Co.'s Fish Guano C. C. Co.'s Ammoniated Phosphate C. C. Co.'s National Crop Grower C. C. Co.'s Keystone Phosphate C. C. Co.'s Potato Compound C. C. Co.'s Prolific Top Dresser C. C. Co.'s German Kainit Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 8.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 . . ■ • 6.00 8.00 > > > > 5.00 8.00 • . . . 4.00 15.00 15.00 50.00 16.00 • • > • .... 14.00 • . . . 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 2.06 7.00 10.00 2.00 3.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 • • • • 4.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .... 4.00 48.00 14.00 .... .... 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 3.28 7.00 8.00 3.28 4.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 1.64 3.00 8.00 1.64 2.00 7.00 3.28 5.00 6.00 4.10 5.00 .... 7.51 3.50 12.00 The Bulletix. 45 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. CaraleiciU Phosphate and Fertilizer Worlcs, Raleigh, N. C— Raw Bone Meal Total IG Per Cent Acid Phosphate Climax Dissolved Bone Sterling Acid Phosphate Staple Acid Pho.sphate Home & Son's High Grade Bone and Potash. Special Bone and Potash Mixture Morris & Scarboi'o's Special Bone and Potash. Electric Bone and Potash Mixture Pacific Tobacco and Cotton Grower Rhamkatte Special Tobacco Guano Special 8-4-4 Home's Best Eclipse Ammoniated Guano Planter's Pride Caraleigh Special Tobacco Guano Eli Ammoniated Fertilizer Crown Ammoniated Guano Comet Guano Buncombe Corn Grower Buncombe Wheat Grower Caraleigh Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Kanona Tankage Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash ■ Genuine German Kainit Central Phosphate Co., Mottnt Pleasant, Tenn. — Tennessee Phosphate Total Cheraw Fertilizer Company, Cheraic, S. C. — Cheraw Perfection Acid Phosphate Cheraw High Grade Acid Phosphate Cheraw Standard Acid Phosphate Cheraw Perfection Cheraw Special Cheraw High Grade Cheraw Excelsior Cheraw Fish Mixture Cheraw Complete Farmers' Pride Cheraw Top Dressing Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash German Kainit Combahee Fertilizer Company, Charleston, S. C. — Combahee Fertilizer Co. Dissolved Bone Combahee Fertilizer Co. Dissolved Bone Combahee Fertilizer Co. Dissolved Bone Combahee Fertilizer Co. Melon Combahee Fertilizer Co. Cantaloupe Combahee Fertilizer Co. K. M. S Combahee Fertilizer Co. H. G. Cotton Fer- tilizer Special Mixture Avail. Phos. Acid. 25.00 16.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 11.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 3.00 28.00 2.2(5 3.30 3..30 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 .82 8.22 15.62 9.46 Nitrogen. Potash. 3.70 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 6.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 50.00 50.00 12.00 16.00 • • > ■ • * . . 14.00 • • • > < • • > 13.00 . * . • 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 7.00 3.29 3.00 7.00 2.47 4.00 6.00 2.47 2.50 3.00 7.41 14.80 3.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 . . • ■ .... 14.00 > • > • 13.00 .... ... * 10.00 3.30 5.00 10.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.50 46 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Combahee Fertilizer Co. Cotton and Corn Com- pound Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Kainit Contcntnea Guano Co., Wilson, N. C. — High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Contentnea 14 Per Cent Acid "Corn Club" Special Bone and Potash Mixture, No. 3 Bone and Potash Mixture, No. 2 Bone and Potash Mixture. No. 1 Contentnea Cotton Formula 8-41/0-7 for Tobacco 8-4i/[,-7 for Cotton Climax High Grade High Grade Tobacco Grower Government Formula, No. 1 Government Formula. No. 2 Victor Fertilizer for Tobacco Farmers' Favorite Formula Pick Leaf Tobacco Fertilizer. . Top Notch Fertilizer Matchless Cotton Grower Contentnea Cotton Grower Contentnea Tobacco Special Brag Cotton Grower Blood and Bone Cotton Compound Bragg Corn Grower Special Formula for Truck Contentnea Corn Special High Grade Top Dresser Special Top Dresser Contentnea Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Manure Salts H. G. 16 Per Cent German Kainit German Kainit J. W. Carter, Maxton, N. C— Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit C. P. Dey, Beaufoi-t, N. C. — Ground Fish Scrap Dixie Guano Co., Savannah, Ga. — Phosplioric Acid Phosphoric Acid Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash American AgricnUural Chemical Co.. Dixie Guano Branch, SpartanTyurg, 8. C. Dixie Acid Phosphate Dixie Acid Phosphate Avail. Phos. Acid. S.OO Nitrogen. Potash. 16.00 14.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 7.00 16.00 14.00 11.00 10.00 16.00 14.00 1.05 14.84 .82 2.25 3.70 3.70 3.30 2.90 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.05 2.05 1.65 .82 4.06 1.65 8.25 6.60 8.25 14.82 8.23 2.00 48.00 12.00 5.00 5.00 4.00 2.00 2.00 7.00 7.00 4.00 5.00 10.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.50 3.00 3.00 2.00 5.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 4.00 5.00 50.60 50.00 20.00 16.00 12.00 48.00 12.00 2.00 4.00 The Bulletin. 47 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Dixie Bone and Potash Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Blood, Bone and Potash Fertilizer Dixie Cotton Grower Fertilizer Dixie Bone and Potash Dixie Blood and Bone Fertilizer Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Corn Grower Fertilizer Dixie Special Corn Mixture Fertilizer Dixie Fertilizer Dixie Bone and Potash Dixie Guano Co., Durham, N. C. — Dixie 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Dixie 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Dixie Champion for Wheat and Corn Jeff Davis Special Dixie Star Ammoniated Dixie Com Fertilizer Radium Brand Guano Dixie Tobacco Fertilizer Caroiina Special Ammoniated Sulky Plow Brand Guano Battle's Blood and Bone Fertilizer Niagara Soluble Bone Dixie Cotton Fertilizer Old Plantation Superphosphate TJie Dunn Oil Mill Company, Dunn. X. C. — Uncle Zeb Bull of the Field Dunn Hustler Planters Special Sampson Cotton Grower Dixie Guano Company, Inc.. Suffolk, Va. — Dixie Acid Phosphate Dixie Acid Phosphate Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash Dixie Monticello Brand Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash Dixie's Be.st Dixie High Grade Dixie Standard Guano Dixie Jumbo Peanut Grower Dixie ]0 Per Cent Top Dresser Dixie 7 Per Cent American Agricultural Chemical Co., Eagle Fer- tilizer Branch, {Spartanburg, S. C. — Eagle Acid Phosphate Eagle Acid Phosphate Eagle Bone and Potash Eagle Fertilizer Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 13.00 6.00 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 2.47 2.00 10.00 1.65 3.00 10.00 ■ • • • • 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.00 16.00 14.00 > • • ■ • • > ■ 10.50 .... 1.50 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.00 3.28 5.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 2.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 9.50 2. To 5.00 8.00 . 3.00 4.00 8.00 3.00 3.00 8.00 3.00 3.00 8.00 2.00 2.00 16.00 14.00 11.00 • • > • 2.00 10.00 1.00 2.00 10.00 > ■ > ■ 4.00 8.00 4.11 7.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 5.00 5.66 4.00 16.00 14.00 13.00 10.00 3.30 6.00 4.0D 48 The Bulletijn^. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Cotton Grower Eagle Bone and Potash Eagle Blood and Bone Fertilizer Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Corn Grower Eagle Special Corn Mixture Eagle Fertilizer Eagle Bone and PotasL Etiican Fertiliser Co., Charleston, S. C. — Etiwan IG Per Cent Acid PhospLate Etiwan High Grade Acid Phosphate Etiwan Dissolved Bone Diamond Soluble Bone Etiwan Acid Phosphate with Potash Plow Brand Acid Phosphate with Potash Etiwan Potash Bone Etiwan Soluble Bone with Potash Diamond Soluble Bone with Potash XX Acid Phosphate with Potash Etiwan Blood and Bone Guano Plow Brand Raw Bone Superphosphate Etiwan 9-2-3 Per Cent Ammoniated Fertilizer. Plow Brand Ammoniated Dissolved Bone. . . . Etiwan Superior Cotton Fertilizer Etiwan SiJecial Cotton Fertilizer Plow Brand Special Tobacco Fertilizer Etiwan Cotton Compound Etiwan. High Grade Cotton Fertilizer Etiwan Ammoniated Fertilizer Plow Brand Ammoniated Fertilizer Etiwan Special Potash Mixture Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Genuine G}«rman Kainit Eastern Cotton Oil Co., Hertford, N. C. — Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate "Ten-One-Four for Peanuts" Currituck Special for Yellow Sweets Mat White Special Farmers Sensation for Tobacco It Grows Currituck Yellows Rain-proof Cotton Grower Fish and Blood Mixture Perquimans Favorite . . . . : Early Bird Hertford Truck Grower Tankage and Fish Substitute, Peruvian Guano for Track Nun-Such Potato Grower Nitrate of Soda Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 2.47 2.00 10.00 1.65 3.00 10.00 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 ■ 4.00 IG.OO 14.00 . . . . 13.00 . . . . 13.00 . 11.00 1.00 11.00 1.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 ", 3.00 10.00 2.00 10.00 , 2.00 9.00 2.06 1.00 9.00 2.06 1.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.30 6.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 1-.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 . 4.00 14.82 , 48.00 .... , 12.00 16.00 . • ■ ■ .... 14.00 • • ■ > 10.00 .83 4.00 8.00 3.29 6.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 5.77 5.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 4.12 15.67 7.00 The Bulletin. 49 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Dried Fish Fish Scrap Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit. EWa Manufacturing Co., Maxton, N. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Elba Melon Grower Elba Superior Fertilizer Elba High Grade Fertilizer Elba Eclipse John's Cotton Grower Elba Gold Seal Fertilizer Champion Uncle Tom Standard Hornets' Nest of Potash Elba Elba Elba Elba Muriate Kainit The Eureka Fertiliser Co., Perryville, Md. — High Grade Titicker Potato and Vegetable White Potato Special American Agricultural Chemical Co., Farmers Fer- tilizer Works, 8partanT)urg, 8. C. — Red Rooster Acid Phosphate Red Rooster Acid Phosphate Red Rooster Bone and Potash Red Rooster Fertilizer Red Rooster Fertilizer Red Rooster Blood, Bone and Potash Fer- tilizer Red Rooster Money Maker Fertilizer Red Rooster Cotton Grower Fertilizer Red Rooster Bone and Potash Retl Rooster Bone and Potash Red Rooster Blood and Bone Fertilizer Red Rooster Beats All Fertilizer Red Rooster Fertilizer Red Rooster Fertilizer Red Rooster Farmers' Favorite Fertilizer. . . . Red Rooster Corn Grower Red Rooster Special Corn Mixture Red Rooster Fertilizer Red Rooster Bone and Potash Farmers Guano Co., Raleigh, N. C. — Raw Bone Meal Total 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate ■ 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Farmers Acid Phosphate Special H. G. Bone and Potash Farmers Grain Grower Special Bone and Potash Mixture 4 Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. 9.00 8.07 Potash. 49.00 • • > • 48.00 .... 12.00 16.00 14.00 • • • ■ .... 8.00 4.12 7.00 8.00 3.80 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 6.00 5.75 5.00 48.00 12.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 16.00 . > • . 14.00 . ■ . > .... 13.00 • • • • 6.00 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 2.47 2.00 10.00 1.85 2.85 10.00 1.65 3.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.00 25.00 3.70 16.00 .... 14.00 .... .... 13.00 .... . . . • 11.00 .... 5.00 10.00 1.03 2.00 10.00 • • . • 4.00 50 The Bulletin, Xame and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Century Bone and Potash Mixture Farmers Blood and Bone Big Crop Guano, Money Point Guano Golden Grade Guano Toco Tobacco Guano State Standard Guano Special Bone and PotasL Farmers 7 Per Cent Trucker Farmers Challenge Farmers Formula Farmers G-7-o Trucker Farmers Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda I Kanona Tankage Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Foreig7i Products Company, Inc., Baltimoi-e, Md. — Ground Basic Slag Total Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate Nitrate of Soda Ground Fish Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Kainit FariiiviUe Oil and Fertilizer Co., Farmville, 'S. C. — XXX High Grade Acid Phosphate XX High Grade Acid Phosphate High Grade Acid Phosphate FFF Bone and Potash Farmville High Grade (C. S. M. ) Davis's Corn Grower Pitt County Corn Grower Farmville's Favorite Fertilizer Greene County Special (for tobacco) Scientific Cotton Grower Specific Cotton Grower East Carolina Cotton Grower Davis's Special Guano Carolina Chief Lang's Favorite Farmville Special \ Turnage's Fish Scrap Mixture Harris Bright Leaf Tobacco Grower Uncle Sam's Tobacco Grower Sterling for Tobacco Big Leaf (Tobacco Grower) Lewis's 8-3-7 Tobacco Special Pollard's Special Formula Lewis's 8-3-5 Tobacco Special Obelisk Pride of Pitt Harriss's Special Tobacco Grower Turnage's Fish Scrap Mixture Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 * * • < 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.88 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 • • • • 4.00 7.00 5.77 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 2.47 3.25 r,.oo 5.77 5.00 3.00 8.28 4.00 • • • • 15.62 • • • • .... 9.46 50.66 50.00 12.00 17.00 • • • • • ■ ■ » 16.00 ■ • . . 14.00 15.66 8.22 50.66 48.60 12.00 38.00 16.00 • • • ■ • • ■ ■ 14.00 • ■ • ■ > • < • 12.00 • • • • 4.00 10.00 2.47 4.00 10.00 .82 5.00 10.00 .82 4.00 9.00 2.90 5.00 9.00 2.67 5.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.00 3.70 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.29 3.00 8.00 2.67 5.00 8.00 2.47 7.00 8.00 2.47 7.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 The Bulletin. 51 Xamc and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Congo Davis's High Grade Tobacco Manure Marlboro Tobacco Grower Golden Crown Marlboro Cotton Grower Pitt County Cotton Grower Chaniblee & Sons' Special Cotton King Perfect Tobacco Guano Contentnea Special Davis's Cotton Grower Carolina Standard Farmville Standard (C. S. M.) Farmville's Bone Mixture Lewis's Special for Cotton Lang's High Grade Tobacco Manure Evergreen Top Dresser Second Application Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit FJoradora Guann Co., Laiirinburg, N. C. — Humus Rocky Ford North Robeson Special Florena Floradora Oceola Rob Roy Red Raven Bcstick's High Grade Scotland Special Fremont Oil Mills, Fremont, 'N. C— 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Fremont High Grade Bone and Potash Carolina C. S. M. Compound Fremont High Grade Guano Fremont Oil Mill Co.'s Special Tobacco Fremont Standard Fertilizer Nahunta Special Square Deal Up-to-date F. O. M. Co. Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda ^luriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Kainit Farmers Cotton Oil Co., Wilson, N. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Bonum Acid Phosphate Contentnea Acid Phosphate Washington's Corn Mixture Guano Xtra Good Bone and Potash AvaiL Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.25 4.50 8.00 2.25 2.00 8.00 2.05 4.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 2.67 4.50 6.00 2.88 6.00 4.00 8.24 4.00 4.00 4.10 20.50 15.58 G.OO 50.6o 50.00 12.00 10.00 3.29 5.00 30.00 2.47 7.00 9.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 1.65 3.00 7.00 3.29 5.00 6.40 2.13 3.00 16.00 14.00 • • ■ • > > • • 30.00 • • • • 4.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.05 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 3.00 7.40 14.85 5.00 48.66 48.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 ■ • • • < • > ■ 33.00 * • • ■ • • • • 10.00 .82 5.00 10.00 • • • * 2.00 52 The Bulletin, Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Whitley's Special Guauo Dean's Si)ecial Guano Regal Tobacco Guauo Newsome's Tobacco Special J. D. Farrier's Special Guano . . . Graves' Cotton Grower Guano.. Golden Gem Guano Wilson High Grade Guano Planters' Friend Guano Carolina Choice Tobacco Guano. Crop King Guano Farmers' Si>ecial Guano Rogers' Truck Grower Wilson Top Dresser Perfect Top Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash German Kainit Franklin Cotton Oil and Fertilizer Co., Inc., Franlclin, Va. — Pretlow & Co.'s H. G. Acid Phosphate & Co.'s H. G. Truck Fertilizer & Co.'s Cotton-seed Meal Mixture. Pretlow & Co.'s Champion Guano Pretlow & Co.'s Peanut Grower Pretlow & Co.'s Genuine German Kainit. . Pi'etlow Pi'etlow Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 9.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.70 7.00 8.00 2.88 5.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.27 2.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 2.00 9.05 4.00 2.00 8.23 5.00 20.57 • . . • 15.03 .... .... 50.00 50.00 12.00 16.00 • ■ • • 8.00 4.12 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 12.00 Georgia Cliemical Works, Avgusta, Oa. — High Grade Dissohed Bone Phosphate Extra Dissolved Bone Phosphate Dissolved Bone Phosphate 12 Per Cent Dissolved Bone Phosphate High Grade XX Acid Phosphate with Potash. Bone and Potash Mascot Blood and Bone Guano Good as Gold Guano Gem Crop Grower Cardinal High Grade Intensive Formula Three Oaks High Grade Guano Georgia Formula XXX Meal Mixture Acid Phosphate with 4 Per Cent Potash Kainit 16.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 2.47 1.65 1.65 3.29 2.47 2.47 1.65 1.65 4.00 2.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 12.00 German Kali Works, Baltimore, Mel. Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Manure Salts Kainit 50.00 48.00 20.00 12.00 Griffith cf- Boyd Company, Baltimore, Md. — High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. 16.00 The Bulletin. 53 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Neto York City, N. Y — HolUngslwrst & Co Bone Meal Bone Meal Thomas Phos. Powder (Basic Slag) Thomas Phos. Powder (Basic Slag) Thomas Phos. Powder (Basic Slag) Thomas Phos. Powder (Basic Slag) Thomas Phos. Powder (Basic Slag) Thomas Phos. Powder (Basic Slag) .Total . Total .Total .Total .Total .Total .Total .Total Home Fertilizer and Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md — Champion Dissolved Phosphate Home High Grade Acid Phosphate Home Dissolved Animal Bone Gilt Edge Crop Grower Eclipse Blood, Beef and Bone Home Bone and Potash Home Alkaline Bone Home Ammoniated Bone Home B. G. Ammoniated Compound Everybody's Fertilizer Home Standard Guano Champion Dissolved Bone and Phosphate. . . . Riosa Tobacco Compound Special C. & C. Compound Yancey's Formula for Yellow Leaf Tobacco. . Phoenix Crop Grower * Home Potato Special Matchless Guano Home Cereal Fertilizer Ammoniated Bone Manure Farmers' Choice Truckers' Special Compound Home Vegetable Fertilizer Eclipse Ammoniated Compound Home Potato Grower. .: Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Cerealite Top Dresser Home Fertilizer Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash German Kainit ....'. Hadletj, Harris d Co., Wilson, N. C. — Hadley's Special 8-41/^-7 Hadley's Special 8-3-5 Golden Weed Tobacco Grower Hadley Boss Daisy Fish Mixture Top Dressing Nitrate of Soda German Kainit Hampton Guano Co., Norfolk, Va. — Pure Ground Bone Total Supreme Acid Phosphate Hampton Acid Phosphate Avail. Phos. Acid. 22.88 22.80 21.00 20.00 18.00 17.00 16.00 14.00 16.00 14.00 12.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 2.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.46 2.47 1.6.5 1.65 1.23 1.65 .82 .82 3.30 2.48 2.48 2.48 2.48 2.48 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 .82 5.77 4.12 3.30 3.30 20.62 14.85 7.43 5.77 20.00 16.00 14.00 3.70 2.47 2.47 2.26 1.65 8.23 15.60 3.70 4.00 3.00 5.00 2.00 3.00 5.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 10.00 4.00 2.00 5.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 10.00 4.00 3.00 7.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 7.00 5.00 3.00 2.50 2.00 5.00 12.66 54 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Hampton 12-5 Bone and Potash Mixture Hampton Bone and Potash Mixture Hampton Crop Grower Dauntless Potash Mixture Arlington Animal Bone Fertilizer Alpha Crop Grower Little's Favorite Crop Grower Hampton Tobacco Guano P. P. P. (Princess Prolific Producer) Extra Tobacco Guano Shirlej' Superphosphate Hampton Special Grain and Peanut Fertilizer. Excelsior Bone and Potash Reliance Truck Guano Virginia Truck Grower Hampton 10 Per Cent Truck Grower Hampton Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Dry Ground Fish Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit S. B. Harrell rf Co., Inc., Norfolk, Va.-~ Harrell's Acid Phosphate Harrell's Eclipse , Harrell's Champion Cotton and Peanut Grower Ilarroll's Truck Guano HartsviJle Fertilizer Company, Hartsville, S. C. — Hartsville Best Acid Phosphate Hartsville High Grade 14 Per Cent Acid Phos- phate Hartsville XXX Acid Phosphate ■ Coker's Special for Cotton Hartsville B. P. Mixture Hartsville B. P. Mixture Farmers' Pride Light Land Leader Renown Cotton (Juano Monarch Tobacco Guano Hartsville Cotton Grower Griffin's Meal Mixture Coker's Cotton Compound Eagle Tobacco Guano Cinco Cotton Compound Hartsville B. P. Mixture Calhoun Pride Pedigree Top Dresser Williamson's Corn Mixture Coker's Special for Corn Nitrate of Soda The Best Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 12.00 • • > • 5.00 11.00 • • . . 2.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 • . . . 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 8.50 2.06 2.50 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 ■ ■ . • 4.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 G.OO 5.76 5.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 4.00 8.23 15.00 8.23 2.00 50.00 49.00 12.00 14.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 G.OO 5.76 5.00 16.00 14.00 .... • • > ■ 13.00 10.00 4.00 3.00 10.00 • . . . 4.00 10.00 > > . > 2.00 8.90 2.00 2.00 8.00 7.00 5.00 8.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 4.00 4.00 8.00 4.00 4.00 B.00 3.00 4.00 8.00 3.00 3.00 8.00 3.00 3.00 8.00 2.50 1.00 8.00 • ■ ■ > 4.00 5.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 7.50 2.50 3.75 4.00 5.00 2.00 7.00 18.00 7.00 .... 9.00 3.00 48.00 .... • • • • 12.00 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. M. P. HuManl & Co., Baltimore, Md. — Hubbard's Havana Special for Cotton and Corn Hubbard's Celebrated Phosphate Hubbard's Maryland Special Grower Hubbard's Special Potato and Tomato Hubbard's 7 Per Cent Bermuda Guano The Hu'bhard Fertilizer Co., Baltimore, Md. — Hubbard's 14 Per Cent Phosphate 14.00 Hubbard's .Special Mixture 10 and 4 10.00 Hubbard's B. and P. 10 and 2 10.00 Hubbard's Noxall 8.00 Hubbard's Royal Ensign 8.00 Hubbard's Yellow Wrapper 8.00 Hubbard's Fish Compound 8.00 Hubbard's Exchange Guano 8.00 Hubbard's Southern Leader 7.00 Hubbard's 5 Per Cent Royal Seal 6.00 Hubbard's Heavy Long Leaf 4.00 Hubbard's New Process Top Dresser Pure German Kainit Interstate Chemical Co., Charleston, S. C. — Acid Phosphate 16.00 Acid Phosphate 14.00 Acid Phosphate 1.3.00 Acid Phosphate with Potash 10.00 Acid Phosphate with Potash 10.00 Special H. G. Guano 9.00 Favorite Crop Grower 9.00 Special H. G. Truck Guano 8.00 H. G. Ammoniated Fertilizer 8.00 Planter's Preference Guano 8.00 Challenge Brand Guano 8.00 Complete Fertilizer 8.00 Grain and Hay Producer 8.00 Acid Phosphate with Potash 8.00 H. G. Top Dresser 4.00 Nitrate of Soda .... Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash German Kainit .... The Imperial Co., Norfolk, Va. — Imperial Pure Ground Bone Total 20.00 Imperial H. G. Tennessee Acid Phosphate. . . . 16.00 Imperial High Grade Acid Phosphate 14.00 Imperial Catawba Wheat Grower 10.00 Imperial Carolina Wheat Mixture 10.00 Imperial Virginia Grain Mixture 10.00 Imperial Bone and Potash 10.00 Imperial Martin County Special Crop Grower. 9.00 Imperial Crop Grower 9.00 Imperial Snowflake Cotton Grower 8.00 Imperial Tobacco Grower 8.00 Imperial X. L. O. Cotton Guano 8.00 Imperial Tobacco Guano 8.00 55 T Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 8.00 2.48 3.00 8.00 l.i65 2.00 7.00 4.14 5.00 7.00 1.65 5.00 6.00 5.78 5.00 * • . • 4.00 .... 2.00 3.28 4.00 2.46 4.00 2.46 3.00 1.64 3.00 1.64 2.00 3.28 5.00 4.10 5.00 3.28 6.00 7.51 3.50 12.40 . . . . 4.00 • * . . 2.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 2.00 3.29 6.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.06 2.00 2.06 1.00 .82 4.00 .... 4.00 6.17 2.50 L4.81 .... > . . • 48.00 ■ . . • 48.00 • • • • 12.00 3.70 2.26 1.65 3.29 3.29 2.47 2.47 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 56 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Imperial Yellow Bark Sweet Potato Guano. . . Imperial F. and B. Cotton Guano Imperial Bright Tobacco Guano Imperial Tennessee Tobacco Guano Imperial Peanut Guano Imperial Cotton Grower Imperial Peanut and Corn Guano Imperial Champion Guano Imi)erial Cisco Soluble Guano Imperial Standard Premium Guano Imperial Ammoniated Guano Imperial Fish and Bone Grain Grower Imperial Yadkin Wheat Grower Imperial 7-7-7 Potato Guano Imperial High Grade Irish Potato Guano.... Imperial Dawson's Cotton Grower Imperial Roanoke Crop Grower Imperial Asparagus Mixture Imperial 5-G-7 Potato Guano Imperial Williams' Special Potato Guano.... Imperial Fish and Bone Imperial Sweet Potato Guano Imperial 30 Per Cent Guano Imperial Ammoniated Top Dressing for Spinach Imperial Special 7 Per Cent for Potatoes.... Imperial Eastern Shore Sweet Potato Special. Imperial Special Tobacco Guano Imperial Laughinghouse Special Tobacco Guano Imperial Conetoe Cotton Grower Imperial Cubanola Tobacco Guano Imperial Top Dresser for Cotton Imperial Nitrate of Soda Imperial Ground Fish Scrap Imperial Animal Tankage Imperial Sulphate of Potash Imperial Muriate of Potash Imperial Genuine German Kainit Imperial Cotton Oil Co., Statesville, N. C. — Imperial 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Imperial High Grade Acid Phosphate 10-4 Bone and Potash Imperial Bone and Potash King Cotton Imperial Corn Grower "Grasoil" Imperial Cotton Grower IV. B. Josey Guano Co., Tarhoro, N. C — Josey's 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Josey's Bone and Potash Josey's Prolific Cotton Grower Josey's Truck Guano Josey's 8-4-4 C. S. Meal and Fish Scrap Guano. Josey's Tip Top O. S. Meal and Fish Scrap Tobacco Guano Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 8.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 • • • • 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 4.11 S.OO 7.00 2.67 2.75 7.00 2.47 2.00 6.00 4.94 7.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 6.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 3.29 4.00 6.00 1.65 6.00 5.00 8.23 2.50 5.00 8.23 5.00 5.76 5.00 5.00 3.29 9.00 5.00 3.29 9.00 4.00 3.29 6.00 4.00 3.29 4.00 4.00 2.47 5.00 2.00 8.23 15.00 8.23 5.76 50.66 49.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 • > • ■ • . . . 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 1.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 16.00 10.00 • • • • 4.00 9.00 2.27 2.00 8.00 4.10 5.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 The Bulletin. 57 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Josey's Home Builder C. S. M. and F. Guano. Josey's Favorite C. S. Meal and Fish Scrap Guano Josey's C. S. Meal Guano Josey's Potato Guano Josey's Peanut Guano Josey's Elite Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Josey's Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Manure Salts Genuine German Kainit Jennette Bros. Company, Elizabeth City, N. C. — Jeunette's Acid Phosphate Jennette's Acid Phosphate Jennette's Kainit A. 8. Lee rf- Sons Co.. Richmond, Va. — Thomas Basic Slag Total Lee's Corn Fertilizer Lee's Wheat Fertilizer Lee's Bone and Potash Lee's 8-3-3 Fertilizer Lee's Natural Tobacco Grower Lee's Prepared Agricultural Lime Lister's Agricultural Chemical Works, IHewarlc, N. J. Lister's 4%-45 Bone Meal Total Lister's High Grade Acid Phosphate Lister's Phosphoric Acid and Potash Lister's Dissolved Phosphate and Potash Lister's Standard Pure Bone Superphosphate of Lime Lister's Complete Manure Lister's Ammoniated Dissolved Bone Phos- phate Lister's Success Fertilizer Nitrate of Soda John F. ]\IcNair, Laiirinhnrg, N. C. — Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit E. E. c6 J. A. Meadows Co., New Bern, N. C— Diamond Acid Phosphate Meadows' Diamond Acid Phosphate Meadows' Dissolved Bone and Potash Com- pound Meadows' Dissolved Bone and Potash Com- pound Thompson's Fish Mixture Meadows' Lobos Guano Meadows' Ideal Tobacco Guano Brooks' Special Tobacco Grower Parker's Special Tobacco Guano Dixon's High Grade Tobacco Guano Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.05 2.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.77 7.00 5.50 1.23 5.50 3.00 7.42 15.50 4.00 .... 7.42 4.00 48.00 20.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 • ■ . • • • . . 14.81 12.00 17.00 .... 10.00 • > < > 2.00 10.00 ■ ■ • • 2.00 9.00 • • • • 4.00 8.00 3.00 8.00 8.00 2.00 2.00 • • • • ■ ■ • • 2.00 20.50 16.00 10.00 10.00 3.70 4.66 2.00 9.00 8.00 1.65 2.47 2.00 3.00 8.00 8.00 2.06 1.65 15.00 2.00 2.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 • • • • • • • • 14.00 .... • • • • 10.00 .... 5.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.88 7.50 8.00 4.11 5.00 8.00 3.20 4.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 58 The Bulletin. Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Meadows' Gold Leaf Tobacco Guano 8.00 Meado^ys' Roanoke Guano 8.00 Meadows' All Crop Guano 8.00 Meadows' Cottoii Guano 8.00 Hookerton Cotton Guano 8.00 Meadows' Great Cabbage Guano 7.00 Meadows' Great Potato Guano 7.00 Meadows' 30 Per Cent Guano 6.00 Meadows' German Kainit .... The Miller Fertilizer Co., Baltimore, Md. — ^Miller's l(i Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Miller's 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14.00 Corn and Peanut Grower 10.50 Corn and Wheat Grower 10.50 The Miller Fertilizer Co.'s 10 and 4 Per Cent. 10.00 Clinch 10.00 Trucker 8.00 No. 1 Potato and Vegetable Grower 8.00 Miller's Irish Potato 8.00 4 Per Cent Tobacco 8.00 Standard Phosphate 8.00 . Tobacco King S.OO Miller's High Grade 8.00 Special Tobacco Grower 8.00 Potato and Vegetable Guano 8.00 Animoniated Dissolved Bone 8.00 Farmers' Profit 8.00 High Grade Potato 6.00 Nitrate of Soda .... jNfuriate of Potash .... Sulphate of Potash Kainit .... The Mapes Formula and Pertivian Guano Co., IJ/S Liberty Street, Neto York — Mapes' Complete Manure, "A" Brand 10.00 Mapes' Corn Manure S.OO Mapes' Vegetable or Complete Manure for Light Soils 6.00 Mapes' Economical Potato Manure 4.00 T. W. Meicborn d Co., Einston, N. C— H. G. Acid Phosphate 16.00 Genuine German Kainit D. B. Martin Co., Richmond, Va. — Martin's Pure Groui;id Bone Total 22.00 Martin's Raw Bone Meal Total 21.00 Martin's Animal Bone Potash Compound 16.00 Martin's Acid Phosphate 16.00 Martin's Acid Phosphate 14.00 Martin's Acid Phosphate 1.3.00 Martin's Pure Dissolved Animal Bone 12.00 Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone 12.00 Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone 12.00 Martin's Acid Phosphate 12.00 Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone 10.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.47 2.05 2.05 1.64 1.64 5.76 4.11 8.23 2.47 2.47 4.94 3.29 2.46 3.70 1.65 1.05 3.00 3.00 2.50 2.00 2.00 7.00 8.00 2.50 12.00 '...io > > . . 2.25 > > ■ • 4.00 > ■ • • 2.00 4.12 5.00 3.71 7.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.00 3.00 1.65 4.00 1.65 4.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 4.12 7.00 15.05 • . • • • . • • 50.00 • < • • 48.00 .... 12.00 2..50 6.00 6.00 8.00 12.00 2.50 5.00 3.00 6.66 The Bulletin. 59 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone Martin's Tobacco Special Martin's Tobacco Compound Martin's Special Fertilizer Martin's Dissolved Organic Compound Martin's Corn and Cereal Special Martin's High Grade Guano Special Fertilizer Martin's Blood. Bone and Potash Martin's Red Star Brand Fertilizer Martin's Cotton and Tobacco Guano Martin's Cotton Guano Martin's Red Star Brand Martin's Blue Ribbon Brand Fertilizer Martin's Bull Head Fertilizer Martin's Cotton and Tobacco Guano Privott's Favorite Martin's Bull Head Martin's Tobacco Special Martin's Special Fertilizer Special Fertilizer Martin's Cotton Guano Privott's Special for Potatoes and Peanuts... Martin's Cotton and Tobacco Guano Martin's Cotton and Tobacco Guano Martin's Animal Organic Compound Martin's Slaughter House Special Martin's Wheat Special Martin's Carolina Special for Tobacco Martin's Carolina Cotton Martin's Corn and Cereal Special Martin's Old Virginia Favorite One Eight Four Peanut Grower Mai-tin's Special Potato Manure Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone Martin's Potash and Soluble Bone Martin's Top Dresser Martin's Red Star Brand Fertilizer Glover's Special Martin's Gilt Edge Potato Manure Martin's Claremont Vegetable Grower Martin's 7 Per Cent Guano Martin's Animal Bone Potash Guano Martin's Early Truck and Vegetable Grower. . Knowles' Special Martin's Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit /. C. Harsh <£• Co., Marshville, N. C. — Basic Slag Total Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 • ■ • • 5.C0 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 8.00 10.00 . . . • 2.00 9.00 2.46 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.05 3.00 9.00 1.00 3.00 9.00 1.00 2.00 8.75 1.65 2.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 4.10 7.00 8.00 4.10 5.00 8.00 3.28 6.00 8.00 3.28 4.00 8.00 3.28 4.00 8.00 3.28 2.00 8.00 2.46 8.00 8.00 2.46 5.00 8.00 2.46 ■ 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.26 3.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 1.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.03 4.00 8.00 1.03 4.00 8.00 1.00 5.00 8.00 • • . • 20.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 8.22 2.50 7.00 4.10 5.00 7.00 3.28 8.00 7.00 2.46 10.00 7.00 2.46 5.00 6.00 5.74 5.00 6.00 4.10 7.00 6.00 3.28 8.00 6.00 3.28 6.00 5.00 8.22 2.50 . • • • 15.23 • • • • • • . • 50.00 48.00 12.00 15.76 60 The Bulletin, Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Marietta Fertilizer Co., Atlanta, Ga. — Bone Meal Total Raw Bone Meal Total Marietta XXXX High Gi'acle Acid Phosphate. Marietta High Grade Acid Phosphate Marietta 13-4 Marietta Phosphate and Potash Marietta Wheat and Clover Grower Marietta Truck Guano Marietta Ammoniated Bone Langford's Special Cooper's High Grade Guano Fish Compound Royal Seal Guano Tonawando Guano Marietta Special Guano Marietta Potash Special Dissolved Bone Potash Marietta Cotton Grower Marietta Boll Producer Marietta Beef. Blood and Bone ^Marietta Fertilizer, No. 844 Marietta Fertilizer, No.* 836 Marietta Tobacco Special IMariotta Fertilizer. No. 8-33 Marietta Best for Tobacco Marietta Sweet Potato Special Marietta Special Potato Marietta Fruit and Root Special Marietta Fertilizer. No. 823 Marietta Guano Marietta Solid South Marietta Golden Grain Grower Marietta Manure Substitute Tankage Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash German Kainit Marsh-Lee & Co., Marshville, N. C. — Marsh's Acid Marsh's Acid Marsh's Special High Grade Marsh's Cotton Fertilizer Marsh's Guano for Corn Tlie MacMnrpJnj Co., Cliarleston, S. C. — High Grade Acid Phosphate. 14 Per Cent. . . . Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate and Potash Acid Phosphate and Potash Acid Phosphate and Potash Acid Phosphate and Potash Acid Phosphate and Potash. Wilcox & Gibbs Co.'s Manipulated Guano Special Cotton and Corn 8.75-2-2 Special 8-4-6 Guano Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potasli. 24.00 2.47 22.00 3.70 16.00 • • • • 14.00 .... . > • . 13.00 4.00 12.00 .... 4.00 12.00 2.00 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 30.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 • • • • 4.00 30.00 • • • ■ 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 6.00 8.00 2.47 8.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .... 4.00 6.00 3..30 4.00 2.00 8.24 14.81 50.00 50.00 .... .... 12.00 16.00 14.00 . • . • • • • • 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 14.00 13.00 .... 12.00 1.00 11.00 .... 1.00 10.00 .... 5.00 10.00 . . . • 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.75 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 6.00 The Bulletin. 61 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Special 8-4-4 Cotton Guano Special 8-4-4 Tobacco Guano Special 8-3-3 Cotton and Corn Special 8-3-3 Tobacco Guano Standard 8-2i/,-l Guano Special 8-2-2 Guano Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potasli Sulphate of Potash Marlboro Fertiliser Co., Bennettsville, 8. C. — Marlboro Perfection Acid Phosphate 16.00 Nitrate of Soda 14.80 Marlboro High Grade Acid Phosphate 14.00 Marlboro Standard Acid Phosphate 18.00 Marlboro Perfection 8.00 Marlboro Special • 8.00 Farmers Mixture 8.00 Marlboro High Grade 8.00 Marlboro Excelsior 8.00 Marlboro Complete Fertilizer 7.00 Farmers Special Mixture 6.00 Marlboro Top Dresser 4.00 Muriate of Potash Marlboro German Kainit .... Maj-tin d White Co., TSiorfolk, Richmond and Baltimore — Acid Phosphate 16.00 Acid Phosphate 34.00 Potash and Soluble Bone 32.00 Potash and Soluble Bone 12.00 Potash and Soluble Bone 10.00 Potash and Soluble Bone 10.00 Potash and Soluble Bone 10.00 H. G. Cotton and Tobacco Guano 8.00 Manure Substitute 8.00 Horse Shoe Brand 8.00 Organic Cotton Grower 8.00 Fish Guano 8.00 Fruit Special 8.00 Big Crop Grower 8.00 Special Peanut Grower 8.00 Royal Crop Grower 8.00 Special Peanut Grower 8.00 Royal Crop Grower 8.00 Blood, Bone and Potash 7.00 Special 7 Per Cent Trucker 6.00 Special Potato Grower 6.00 Virginia Trucker 6.00 Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash .... Kainit .... ISIorth Carolina Cotton Oil Co., Wilmington, N. C. — High Grade Acid Phosphate 16.00 Wilmington Bone and Potash 10.00 Pate's High Grade 9.00 Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 8.00 3.29 4.00 S.OO 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 14.81 2.00 48.00 • • • • • • ■ • 48.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 12.00 2.47 2.50 8.22 3.00 . . . . 48.00 . • . . 12.00 3.28 3.28 2.46 2.46 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.03 1.03 1.00 1.00 4.10 5.74 4.10 3.38 15.23 2.47 5.00 3.00 5.00 4.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 8.00 5.00 7.00 4.00 50.00 12.00 4.00 3.00 62 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Cockrell & Williams' Cotton Grower Wilmington Mortgage Lifter Wilmington's Pride Wilmington's Truck Grower Bullock's High Grade Wilmington Full Value Wilmington Fruit Grower Best Tobacco Grower John's Special Bullock's Cotton Grower Wilmington Farmer Boy The Stone Company Special Clute's Cotton Grower Wilmington Leader Wilmington High Grade L. P. B. Special Lewis' Special Carter's Litter Wilmington Standard Pate's Siiecial Currie's Crop Grower Wilmington Tobacco Grower Wilmington Banner Clark's Special Maulfsby's Cotton Grower Wilmington Cotton Grower Wilmington Special Wilmington Headlight Wilmington High Grade Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Wilmington Special Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sxilphate of Potash Xorth Carolina Cotton Oil Co., Raleigh, N. C— Raleigh Standard Guano 8.00 Xorth Carolina Cotton Oil Co., Charlotte, N. C— Dixie Standard 8.00 Majestic 8.00 North Carolina Cotton Oil Co., Henderson, N. C. — Henderson Tobacco Fertilizer 9.00 Franklin Tobacco Fertilizer 9.00 Pride of Vance Tobacco Fertilizer 9.00 Uneedit Tobacco Fertilizer 9.00 Two in One 8.00 McKinne Mixture 8.00 Brewer's Special 8.00 Henderson Cotton Grower 8.00 Franklin Cotton Grower 8.00 Uneedit Cotton Grower 8.00 Vance Cotton Grower 8.00 Nitrate Agencies Co., Neic Yark, Baltimore, Savan- nah, Chfxrleston and Norfolk — Acid Phosphate 16.00 Acid Phosphate 14.00 Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 9.00 2.27 2.00 9.00 2.27 2.00 8.00 4.12 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 7.50 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 2.06 4.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 G.OO 3.30 8.00 4.50 7.40 3.00 > > • > 14.80 .... 7.40 3.00 50.00 48.00 2.26 2.00 2.48 3.00 1.65 2.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 3.29 4.00 2.26 3.25 2.26 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 The Bulletin. 63 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Kainit ISiew Bern Cotton OU ami Fertilizer Mills, Neio Bern, N. C— Thomas Phosphate Total Bone Meal Total 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Special Corn and Peanut Grower High Grade Bone and Potash Carteret Bone and Potash Greene County Tobacco Fertilizer Oriole Tobacco Grower Harvey's Special Meal and Fish Guano Special C. S. M. Mixture Foy's High Grade Fertilizer Lenoir Bright Leaf Tobacco Grower Pitt's Prolific Golden Tobacco Guano Favorite Cotton Grower Onslow's Farmers' Reliance Guano Jones County Premium Crop Grower Craven Cotton Guano Greene County Standard Fertilizer Dunn's Standard Truck Grower . , Ives' Irish Potato Guano Eureka Tobacco Fertilizer Pamlico Electric Top Dresser Wooten's Special Tobacco Guano Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Ground Blood Ground Tankage Eureka Top Dresser High Grade Fish Scrap Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit. 'Norfolk Fertilizer Co., Norfolk, Va. — Pure Ground Bone Total Oriana 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Whitney High Grade Acid Phosphate Oriana 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Oriana Wheat Grower Shenandoah Wheat Mixture Young's Grain Grower Oriana Bone and Potash Oriana C. S. M. Special Oriana Complete Fertilizer Oriana First Step Tobacco Guano Oriana Tobacco Guano Oriana for Cotton Oriana Bright Leaf Guano Oriana Cotton Guano Oriana Crop Grower Mayodan Valley Wheat Grower Avail. Phos Acid Nitrogen. 15.00 18.00 16.00 16.00 14.00 11.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 6.00 5.00 4.00 2.41 2.47 3.30 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.27 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 5.77 4.12 3.30 8.25 3.30 20.62 15.67 11.59 9.90 8.25 8.25 Potash. 50.00 48.00 12.00 2.00 4.00 2.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 2.50 6.00 3.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 20.00 3.70 16.00 , . 16.00 .... 14.00 . . • • ■ . 10.00 4.00 10.00 , , 3.00 10.00 2.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.2f ) 2.00 8.00 3.2f ) 4.00 8.00 3.2< ) 4.00 8.00 2.4' 3.00 8.00 2.4' 3.00 8.00 2.0f ) 3.00 8.00 1.6r ) 2.00 8.00 1.6£ ) 2.00 8.00 , , 4.00 64 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Oriana Special Mixture Oriaua Truck Guano Pine Top Special Crop Grower Oriana H. G. Tobacco Guano Nitrate of Soda Mixture for Top Dressing Cotton Nitrate of Soda Ground Fish Scrap Animal Tankage Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kaiuit Navassa Guano Co., Wilmington, N. C. — Pure Raw Bone Total Navassa 17 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Navassa 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Navassa Acid Phosphate Navassa Dissolved Bone Navassa Special Wheat Mixture Navassa Gray Land Mixture Navassa Acid Phosphate Maxim Guano Corona Guano Navassa Wheat and Grass Grower Navassa Wheat Mixture Navassa Dissolved Bone with Potash Navassa Fish Guano Navassa Manipulated Guano Osceola Guano Harvest Queen Fertilizer Navassa Complete Fertilizer Long's Wheat and Grain Guano Farmers' Mixture Navassa Universal Fertilizer Navassa Special Meal Fertilizer Coree Tobacco Guano Navassa High Grade Fertilizer Navassa Special Truck Guano Navassa Carib Guano Navassa Blood and Meal Mixture Orton Guano Navassa High Grade Guano Clarendon Tobacco Guano Navassa Standard Meal Guano Navassa Cotton-seed Meal Special 3 Per Cent Guano Navassa Strawberry Top Dressing Mogul Guano Navassa Guano for Tobacco Ammoniated Soluble Navassa Guano Brooks' Ammoniated Guano Navassa Fruit Grower Fertilizer Harvest King Guano Clark's Special Cotton-seed Meal Guano Navassa Big Stick Top Dresser Maultsby's Meal Mixture Navassa Grain Fertilizer Navassa Cotton-seed Meal Guano Avail. Phos. Acid. G.OO 5.00 5.00 4.00 2.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 4.11 5.76 1.65 3.29 8.23 15.00 8.23 5.76 5.00 5.00 6.00 6.00 50.00 49.00 12.00 22.50 3.71 17.00 16.00 14.00 t • • • > > * 13.00 > • • > 12.00 . . . 4.00 12.00 • . . 4.00 12.00 10.00 2.47 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 • • • 2.25 10.00 . . . 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.75 1.85 4.00 8.50 2.06 1.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.20 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 2.06 4.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 2.06 1.50 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 . • . • 7.41 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 I I The Bulletin, 65 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Navassa Cotton Fertilizer Occoneechee Tobacco Guano Navassa Dissolved Bone with Potash Navassa Lettuce Grower Fertilizer Navassa Root Crop Fertilizer Navassa Creole Guano Navassa H. G. Top Dresser Navassa Top Dresser Navassa Quick Results Top Dresser Navassa Special Top Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Blood Fish Scrap Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit G. Oher d Sons Co., Baltimore, Md. — Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Ober's High Grade Acid Phosphate Ober's Dissolved Bone Phosphate Ober's Standard Potash Compound Oiler's Dissolved Animal Bone Ober's Dissolved Bone, Phosphate and Potash. Ober's Si>ecial Ammoniated Dissolved Bone.. Ober's Farmers' Mixture Ober's H. G. Fertilizer Ober's Special Compound for Tobacco Ober's Standard Tobacco Fertilizer Ober's Special Cotton Compound Ober's Soluble Ammoniated Superphosphate of Lime ^ Ober's Stag Guano Ober's Acid Phosphate with Potash Ober's Complete Fertilizer Ober's Special Tobacco Bed Fertilizer. 10 Per Cent Nitrate of Soda ^Muriate of Potash Kainit Ocean Fisheries Co., Wilmington, X. C. — Monticello Animal Bone Fertilizer Cinco Tobacc-o Guano Pocomoke Superphosphate Electric Crop Grower Garrett's Grape Grower Faultless Ammoniated Superphosphate Pocomoke Sweet Potato Grower Harvey's High Grade Monarch ^Monarch Tobacco Grower C. C. C. (Crescent Complete Compound) Pamlico Superphosphate Pocomoke Wheat, Corn and Peanut Manure. . Pocomoke Defiance Bone and Potash Standard Truck Guano Freeman's 7 Per Cent Irish Potato Grower . . . 5 Avail. Phos. Acid. 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 G.OO 4.00 4.00 4.00 2.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 1.65 1.65 5.76 4.12 4.12 7.82 6.17 4.94 5.76 20.59 14.82 13.15 8.24 2.00 2.00 4.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 4.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 48.00 48.00 12.00 21.00 .3.71 . • . ■ 16.00 • > • • 14.00 < • ■ ■ .... 12.00 > • < * 5.00 10.00 2.47 • . • . 10.00 ■ > < > 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 8.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 .... 4.00 6.00 4.12 6.00 4.00 8.25 3.00 .... 15.50 48.00 12.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 8.50 2.06 2..50 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 10.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 • ■ • • 4.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 66 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Seaboard Popular Trucker Dried Fish Scrap Coast Line Truck Guano Pocomoke Top Dresser Smith's Special Formula Nitrate of Soda Ground Fish Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kaluit The Pocomoke Guano Co., Norfolk, Va. — Pure Ground Bone Total Superb Acid Phosphate Peerless Acid Phosphate Pocomoke 12-5 Bone and Potash Alkaline Bone Pocomoke Bone and Potash Mixture 10-2 Potash Mixture Pocomoke Truck Grower 5 Per Cent Peruvian Guano Corporation, Charleston, 8. C— Peruvian Guano Ex. S. S. Caithness-shire. . . . Thomas Phosphate (Basic Slag) Total Pemvian H. G. Acid Phosphate H. G. Genuine Peruvian Guano Ex. S. S. Chipana H. G. Genuine Peruvian Guano Ex. S. S. Con- dor ; Peruvian Acid Phosphate H. G. Genuine Peruvian Guano Ex. S. S. Capac Total "Chincha Island" High Grade Peruvian Mix- ture "Penguin" Peruvian Compound "Albatross" Peruvian Formula r. . H. G. Peruvian Mixture Sea Island Peruvian Mixture Laranago Peruvian Formula Peruvian Top Dresser Total Bellestas H. G. Peruvian Mixture Cormorant H. G. Peruvian Mixture Lobos Peruvian Mixture Pignero Peruvian Compound Alcatroz Peruvian Corn Grower Standard Peruvian Mixture Peruvian Acid Potash Mixture Nitrate of Soda Dried Blood Fish Scrap Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Pamlico Chemical Co., Washington, N. C. — Pamlico 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Pamlico Bone Phosphate Avail. Phos. Acid. G.OO 5.58 5.00 4.00 4.00 13.00 Nitrogen. 5.7G 9.20 8.23 8.23 3.29 15.00 8.23 4.93 Potash. 5.00 3.00 2.00 6.00 50.00 49.00 12.00 20.00 3.70 .... 16.00 14.00 .... ... * 12.00 5.00 11.00 . • . • 2.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 18.00 3.08 2.40 18.00 .... 16.00 . . . . 14.00 3.21 2.00 14.00 2.46 2.00 14.00 ■ • • • • ■ . . 2.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 2.46 3.00 10.00 1.64 4.00 10.00 1.64 2.00 9.00 2.46 3.00 9.00 1.64 2.00 8.00 6.99 3.50 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 2.00 8.00 1.64 3.00 8.00 1.64 2.00 8.00 14.80 13.10 8.20 4.00 49.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 .... • • . • The Bulletin. 67 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Martin County Peanut Guano Pamlico Peanut Guano Dissolved Bone and Potash Pitt County High Grade Tobacco Guano Blount's Special Cotton Grower Prosperity Cotton Grower Bissett's Special Cotton Grower Amnion iated Peanut Guano United States High Grade Tobacco Guana... Pamlico S-5-10 Guano Cowell's Great Potato Grower Pamlico 8-4-4 Guano Bull's Eye Tobacco Grower Early Sweet Potato Pamlico High Grade Tobacco Grower Success Guano Total Blount's Special Tobacco Grower Tobacco Growers' Friend Fountain's Special Guano Farmers' Best Guano Pamlico Bone and Fish Pamlico Cotton Guano Pamlico 7-7-7 Pamlico 7-5-8 Guano Pamlico Special Irish Potato Guano Pamlico Special Sweet Potato Guano Pamlico Favorite Potato Guano Blount's H. G. Potato Grower Faulkland H. G. Tobacco Guano Cowell's Great Cabbage Grower 4-3-5 Guano Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Pamlico Ground Fish Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash German Kainit Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 1.23 4.00 10.00 • • • • 4.00 10.00 • ■ > • 2.00 9.00 2.88 10.00 9.00 2.27 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.06 4.00 8.70 8.25 2.00 8.00 4.12 10.00 8.00 4.12 10.00 8.00 4.12 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.26 4.50 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.77 7.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 2.47 6.00 5.00 8.25 2.50 4.00 2.47 20.62 5.00 .... 14.85 • > > • .... 8.25 • • < > .... 55.00 48.00 12.00 Planters Fertilize^- and Phospliatc Co., Charleston, S. C— 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Planters' High Grade Acid Phosphate Excelsior H. G. Acid Phosphate Planters' Soluble Bone Planters' Bone and Potash Planters' Special Meal Mixture Planters' Grain Grower Special INIixture Planters' Acid and Potash Planters' Bone and Potash Planters' Blood and Fish Guano Planters' Special Mixture Planters' Special Mixture Planters' Special Cotton Fertilizer Planters" Bright Tobacco Fertilizer Special Mixture Planters' Cotton and Corn Fertilizer Planters' H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer 16.00 .... .... 14.00 • • • . .... 14.00 .... .... 13.00 • • > • . • . . 12.00 . * > . 1.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 • . > ■ 4.00 10.00 • ■ . • 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.00 4.12 5.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.50 3.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 68 The Bulletix. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Planters' Soluble Guano Planters' Fertilizer Planters' Standard Fertilizer Planters' Bone and Potash Special Mixture Special Mixture Special Mixture Planters' H. G. Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Planters' Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Planters' German Kainit Pearsall d Co., Wilmington, y. C. — PearsalTs H. G. Acid Phosphate Pearsall's H. G. Acid Phosphate Pearsall's Bone and Potash Pearsall's Fish and Potash Compound Davis' Special Pearsall's Bone Meal and Fish Total Pearsall's Berry Guano Pearsall's Fernside Tobacco Guano Pearsall's Useme Guano " Pearsall's High Grade Tobacco Pearsall's F. F. F. G Currie's Cotton and Corn Guano Pearsall's Corn Guano Pearsall's Eagle Pearsall's Potato and Truck Guann Pearsall's Complete Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Ground Fish Pearsall's Top Dresser Pacific Guano Co., Charleston, S. C. — Standard Pacific Acid Phosphate Standard Soluble Pacific Guano High Grade Pacific Fertilizer Pow?iatan Chemical Co., Richmond, Va. — Pure Animal Bone Total Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Magic Dissolved Bone Phosphate High Grade Acid Phosphate Powhatan Acid Phosphate Magic Corn Special Magic Wheat Special High Grade Bone and Potash Mixture Virginia Dissolved Bone , Magic Corn Grower Magic Crop Grower Magic Bone and Potash Mixture Bone and Potash Mixture Guilford Special Tobacco Fertilizer Railing's Special Fertilizer Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 ,2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 • ■ • • 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 4.11 7.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 4.00 6.18 2.50 14.83 48.00 • • • • ■ • > • 48.00 12.00 16.00 .... * > . • 14.00 .... . • . ■ 10.00 . • > ■ 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 7.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 3.00 7.43 14.85 8.47 3.00 7.42 3.00 12.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 25.00 2.47 22.50 3.70 . . . • 16.00 ■ • > ■ . . . • 14.00 .... .... 13.00 .... 12.00 1.00 2.00 12.00 1.00 2.00 12.00 • ■ • • 5.00 12.00 . . . > • > . ■ 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 6.00 9.00 2.47 2.00 The Bulletin. 69 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Economic Cottou Growei' Johnson's Best Fertilizer Holt's Magic Fertilizer Union Magic Fertilizer , North Carolina Favorite Powhatan Special Fertilizer Magic Mixture Magic Wheat Grower King Trucker Tomlinsou's Best Fertilizer Copeland's Magic Fertilizer North State Special Tomlinson's Favorite Fertilizer Tomlinson's Special Fertilizer Magic Fertilizer Johnson's Special Fertilizer P. C. Co.'s Hustler King Brand Fertilizer White Leaf Tobacco Fertilizer Powhatan Peanut Fertilizer Magic Cotton Grower Magic Special Fertilizer Magic Tobacco Grower Magic Peanut Special Magic Grain Special Magic Peanut Grower Magic Grain and Grass Grower Powhatan Bone and Potash Mixture Powhatan Trucker Copeland's Special Feitilizer Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Pure German Kainit Pine Level Oil Mill Co., Pine Level, N. C— Pine Tvevel 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Pine Level 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Bone and Potash Mixture Sutton's Potato Guano Xantho Tobacco Guano Oliver's Truck Grower Guano ' Hale's Special Fertilizer for To,bacco Pine Level High Grade Fertilizer Cotton Grower Fertilizer for All Crops H. G. Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Patapsco Guano Co., Baltimore, Md. — Patapsco Pure Raw Bone Total Florida Soluble Phosphate Patapsco Pure Dissolved S. C. Phosphate.... Patapsco High Grade Phosphate and Potash. Baltimore Soluble Phosphate Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.06 5.00 9.00 2.06 5.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 4.11 5.00 8.00 3.70 7.00 8.00 3.29 8.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.88 5.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 • ■ • . 4.00 8.00 • . . • 4.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 4.94 5.00 6.00 3.29 19.75 15.63 7.00 . • • • ■ • ■ ■ 50.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 34.00 • • > > . . . < 10.00 > • • • 4.00 9.00 2.88 5.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 S.OO 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 3.00 6.03 14.88 6.00 48.6o • • ■ ■ • • ■ • 48.00 12.00 21.51 3.70 16.00 • • * > ■ * • • 14.00 • • • • . • . . 11.00 • • • • 5.00 11.00 • ■ « • 2.00 70 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Mauufactnrer and Name of Brand. Patapsco 10 and 4 Potash Mixture Patapsco Soluble Plicsphate and Potash Patapsco Guano for Tobacco Patapsco Guano Tankage Total Patapsco Tobacco Fertilizer Patapsco Cotton and Corn Special Coon Brand Guano Patxapsco Cotton and Tobacco Special Patapsco Plant Food for Tobacco, Potatoes and Truck Choctaw Guano Patapsco Special Tobacco Mixture Unicorn Guano Swanson's Gold Leaf Special Planters' Favorite Sea Gull Anunoniated Guano Grange Mixture Patapsco 7-7-7 Truck Guano Patapsco Trucker for Early Vegetabl(>s Money Maker Guano Ground Fish Total Patapsco Potato Guano Patapsco Crop Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kaiuit Pocahontas Guano Co., Lynchburg, Va. — Fine Ground P>one Meal Total Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Carrington's S. C. Phosphate. Waukesha Brand. Imperial Dissolved S. C. Phosphate Indian Special Grain and Grass Guano Wabash Wheat Mixture Carrington's Superior Grain Compound Pocahontas Special Tobacco Fertilizer High Grr.de 4 Per Cent Tobacco Compound, Mohawk King Yellow Tobacco Special Standard Tobacco Guano. Old Chief Brand.. Planters' Special Indian Tobacco Grower Farmers' Favorite Apex Bi-and Special Truck Grower, Eagle Mount Brand.. Spot Cash Tobacco Compound Carrington's Banner Brand Guano A. A. Complete Champion Brand Cherokee Grain Special Planters Cotton Sccfl Oil Co., Rocky Mount, N. C— Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate J. P. D. Special Gorham H. G Tar River Special Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 4.00 10.00 . . < ■ 2.00 9.25 2.06 2.00 9.25 2.06 2.00 9.15 7.41 .... 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.0G 5.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 S.OO 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 S.OO 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 S.OO 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.76 7.G0 7.00 4.11 5.00 7.00 3.70 6.00 6.00 8.23 • . . . 6.00 4.11 7.00 4.00 3.29 20.16 15.00 4.00 49.c6 48.00 12.00 23.00 2.47 22.00 3.71 . . . • 10.00 .... 14.00 > < • • .... 12.00 • • > • 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 ■ • • ■ 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.0O 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 6.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 S.OO 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 3.00 8.00 .... 4.00 IG.OO 14.00 .... S.OO 3.29 5.C0 S.OO 3.29 4.0O 8.00 2.47 3.00 The Bulletin. 71 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Planters' C. S. Oil Co.'s Tobacco Guano. Planters' C. S. Oil Co.'s Cotton Guano. . . Eagle Guano Planters' Peanut Mixture Planters' Special Potato Guano E. L. D. Special Braswell's Special for Tobacco Planters' Top Dresser Ground Fish Scrap. Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Piedtnont-Mt. Airy Guano Co., Baltimore, Md. — ■ Piedmont Bone Meal Total Piedmont 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Piedmont 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Piedmont Special Potash Mixture Levering's Potashed Bo,ne Piedmont Farmers' Bone and Potash Piedmont Farmers' Standard Piedmont Essential Tobacco Compound Levering's Ammoniated Bone Piedmont Special Farmers' Tobacco Guano . . . Piedmont Unexcelled Guano Piedmont High Grade Ammoniated Bone and Potash Levering's Reliable Tobacco Guano Piedmont Guano for Tobacco Piedmont Guano for All Crops Levering's Standard Piedmont Bone and Peruvian Mixture Piedmont Special for Cotton, Corn and Pea- nuts Piedmont Cultivator Brand Piedmont Red Leaf Tobacco Guano Piedmont Farmers' Favorite Piedmont Star Bone and Potash Piedmont 7-7-7 Truck Guano Piedmont 5-7-5 Guano Piedmont Special Truck Fertilizer Piedmont Special Potato Guano Piedmont Early Vegetable Manure Piedmont Early Trucker Piedmont Vegetable Compound Piedmont Potato Producer. . . .• Nitrate of Soda Boykin's Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash German Kainit The Quinnepiac Co., Charleston, S. C. — Standard Quinnepiac Acid Phosphate Standard Quinnepiac Pine Island Ammoniated Superphosphate Avail. Phos. Acid. 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 3.50 Nitrogen. Potash. 21.00 16.00 14.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 8.40 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 5.00 2.47 1.65 1.65 1.21 4.12 2.47 2.26 7.82 8.23 3.29 1.65 1.65 .82 2.47 3.29 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 .82 5.76 4.12 5.76 4.94 4.12 4.12 3.29 2.47 15.23 7.41 3.00 2.00 2.00 5.00 5.00 3.00 3.50 3.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 13.00 9.00 1.85 5.00 4.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 5.00 7.00 5.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 5.00 8.00 6.00 3.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 1.00 72 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Tlie Rohertson FertUizer Co., 'Norfolk, Yd. — Kobertson's Raw Bone Meal Total High Peak Acid Phosphate Scepter Brand Acid Phosphate P. M. C. Acid Phosphate J. W. S. Special Bone and Potash Mixture. . . . J. W. S. Alkaline Bone Skyscraper Bone and Potash Compound Level Run Dissolved Bone and Potash Dodson's Choice H. G. Complete Manure • J. W. S. Complete Guano Beaver Brand Soluble Guano Robertson's Blood and Bone Mixture P. M. C. High Grade Soluble Guano Wood's Winner H. G. Guano Robertson's Soluble H. G. Guano Old Kentucky High Grade Tol»acco ^Nfanure. . Robertson's Special Formula for Tobacco.... Big Cropper High Grade Guano Robertson's X-(T Ray) Tobacco Grower Double Dollar Soluble Guano Ten Strike Soluble Crop Producer M. C. Special Bone and Potash Mixture Robertson's 5-6-7 Robertson's 7 Per Cent for Truck Robertson's 10 Per Cent Truck Guano Nitrate of Soda Blood Fish Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit F. 8. Royster Guano Co., Noi-folk, Ya. — Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Royster's H. G. 17 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Royster's H. G. 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Royster's 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Royster's Dissolved Bone Royster's XX Acid Phosphate Royster's 11 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. Royster's Soluble Guano Royster's 10 and 6 Bone and Potash Mixture. Royster's 10 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. Royster's 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. Royster's Bone and Potash for Grain Royster's Bone and Potash Mixture. . .• M. P. F. Mixture Royster's 4-9-5 Special Tomlinson's Special Royster's Meal Mixture Royster's Cotton Grower Viking Ammoniated Guano Special Compound Royster's Grain Guano Royster's Special 1-9-2 Guano H. B. & Co.'s Special Royster's Supreme Tobacco Guano Avail. PilOS. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 21.00 3.71 16.00 • • • • 14.00 • • < • .... 13.00 .... .... 12.00 5.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.06 5.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.00 2.00 8.00 4.12 .7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 .... 4.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 5.00 5.77 5.00 2.00 8.25 14.85 13.20 9.04 2.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 21.50 3.71 17.00 . ■ • > > * ■ ■ 16.00 .... .... 14.00 .... 13.00 .... 12.00 . > . ■ .... 11.00 5.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .... 6.00 10.00 .... 5.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 3.00 10.00 2.00 9.50 3.30 5.00 9.00 3.30 5.00 9.00 2.47 5.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 3.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 4.69 10.00 8.00 3.71 7.00 The Bulletijst. 73 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Royster's Best Guano Cobb's High Grade for Tobacco Trucker's Delight Jupiter High Grade Guano Royster's H. G. Special Tobacco Guano Milo Tobacco Guano Royster's Special 4-8-3 Gorham's Special Eagle's Special Tobacco Guano Marlboro High Grade Cotton Grower Bonanza Tobacco Guano Royster's Special Sweet Potato Guano Orinoco Tobacco Guano Special Tobacco Compound Royster's Special Wheat Fertilizer Royster's Complete Guano Farmers' Bone Fertilizer Webb's Korn King Farmers' Bone Fertilizer for Tobacco Jumbo Peanut Grower Royster's 8 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. Battle's Favorite Royster's Special 7 Per Cent Truck Guano.. Royster's Early Truck Guano Royal Special Potato Guano Royal Potato Guano Royster's Special 13 Per Cent Plant Food Royster's Peanut Special Arrow Potato Guano Royster's Irish Potato Guano Royster's Special 5-<3-5 Pasquotank Potato Guano Oakley's Special Tobacco Guano Royster's 2-6.5 Special Royster's Special 21 Per Cent Plant Food... Wiggins' Special Royster's Special 10 Per Cent Truck Guano.. Royster's Cabbage Guano Harvey's Cabbage Guano Royster's Potato Guano Royster's Special 20 Per Cent Plant Food Phillips' Special Royster's Special Formula A Presto Top Dresser Royster's Special Top Dresser Royster's 4-6-4 Special Ground Fish Scrap Nitrate of Soda Magic Top Dresser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Manure Salts Genuine German Kainit ^ RoherRonville Guann Co., Robersonville, N. C. — Roberson's H. G. Acid Phosphate Boberson's H. G. Tobacco Grower Roberson's H. G. Meal and Fish Guano Robinson's H. G. Cotton Grower Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potasli. 8.00 3.71 7.00 8.00 3.30 5.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 3.00 8.00 3..30 2.50 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.02 4.00 8.00 • . . . 4.00 7.25 3.91 5.25 7.00 5.77 7.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 2.47 3.00 7.00 • ■ • < 5.00 G.OO 5.77 5.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 3..30 8.00 6.00 3.30 4.00 6.00 1.65 5.00 5.50 4.52 10.00 5..50 3..30 3.00 5.00 8.24 3.00 5.00 8.24 2..50 5.00 6.59 3.00 5.00 4.94 7.00 5.00 4.10 10.00 5.00 1.65 6.00 4.45 3.08 4.22 4.00 8.22 4.00 4.00 6.18 2.50 4.00 4.94 4.00 3.00 8.24 15.22 .... 7.42 3.00 48.00 48.00 20.00 12.00 16.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 74 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Roberson's Special 7-7-7 Potato Grower Roberson's H. G. Truck Guano Roberson's 7 Per Cent Potato Guano Robersonville H. G. Top Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Dried Blood Fish Scrap Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Roberson's Genuine German Kainit Roheson Manufacturing Company, Ltimberton, N. C- Acid Phosphate Eureka Standby Gold Dollar Silver Dollar Cottonade Honierun Genuine German Kainit Richmond Guano Co., Richmond, Va. — Pure Animal Bone Total Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Rex Dissolved Bone Phosphate Hish Grade Acid Phosphate Hiich Grade Wheat and Grass Fertilizer Premium Bone and Potash Mixture Premium Dissolved Bone Hunter & Dunn's Dissolved Bone Premium Corn Special Premium Wheat Special H. G. Bone and Potash Old Homestead Dissolved Bono Dissolved S. C. Phosphate Premium Corn Grower Bone Mixture Johnson's Best Bone and Potash Rex Bone and Potash Mixture Bone and Potash Mixture Sanders' Special Formula for Bright Tobacco Hunter & Dunn's Special Ammoniated Fer- tilizer Collins' Special Fertilizer Carolina Cotton Grower Burton's Special Tobacco Fertilizer C. eecial Fertilizer Cracker Jack Fertilizer Bone Mixture n Premium Cotton Growei- Premium Wheat Grower Southern Trucker Perfection Special Carolina Bright Tobacco Fertilizer Gilt Edge Fertilizer Avail. Phos. Acid. 7.00 7.00 6.00 4.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 4.12 5.77 8.23 20.50 15.60 13.62 8.00 7.00 5.00 5.00 3.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 .... .... 10.00 3.30 5.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 4.00 6.58 4.00 .... 12.00 25.00 2.47 22.50 ■ 3.70 > • . . 16.00 ■ ■ ■ ■ .... 14.00 ■ * . • > • . > 14.00 .... .... 13.00 ■ . . ■ 3.00 13.00 ■ * . • • • > ■ 13.00 ■ . • • 12.00 1.00 2.00 12.00 1.00 2.00 12.00 .... 5.00 12.00 .... .... 12.00 • ■ . . 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 * . . > 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 . • • ■ 2.00 9.00 2.88 5.00 9.00 2.47 2.25 9.00 2.47 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.06 3.00 9.00 2.00 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 3.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 4.11 5.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 The Bulletin. i o Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Gilt Edge Tobacco Fertilizer Carolina Bright Special Tobacco Fertilizer.. Tip Top Tobacco Fertilizer Tip Top Fertilizer Carolina Bright for Cotton Special Premium Brand for Tobacco Special Premium Brand for Plants Beeson's Favorite Fertilizer Beeson's Special Fertilizer Rex Tobacco Fertilizer Premium Cotton Fertilizer. . .'. Premium Tobacco Fertilizer Premium Brand Fertilizer Hunter «S: Dunn's Ammoniated Fertilizer .... Parker & Hunt's Special Tobacco Fertilizer.. Edgecombe Cotton Grower Premium Grain Special Premium Peanut Special Parker & Hunt's Corn Fertilizer Premium Peanut Grower Tip Top Bone and Potash Mixture Winter Grain and Grass Grower Clark's Special Formula Special High Grade for Truck 30 Per Cent Cabbage Guano Smith's 7 Per Cent Special Edwards' Prolific Cotton Grower Carter's Special for Tobacco Smith's Special Fertilizer Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Special Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Pure German Kainit Red Cross Guano Co.. Lynclihurg, Ta. — Pure Raw Bone Meal Total Red Cross Bone Meal Total Red Cross H. G. Phosphati^. Red Cross Standard Phosphate Red Cross Grain Grower Red Cross Bone and Potash Red Cross High Grade for Tobacco Red Cross for Tobacco and Truck Red Cross for Bright Tobacco Red Cross Special for Tobacco Red Cross Tobacco Guano Red Cress Crop Grower Red Cross Grain and Grass Special Rasin-Moniimental Co., Baltimore, Md. — Rasin IG Per Cent Acid Phosphate Rasin 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Rasin 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphat" Rasin's 10-4 Bone and Potash Rasin Bone and Potash Rasin Special Bone ar^d Potash Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.26 2.50 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.50 8.00 1.85 2.25 8.00 1.85 2.25 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 > • > ■ 4.00 8.00 • > • • 4.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 4.94 6.00 7.00 4.94 5.00 n.oo 8.23 2.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 3.29 4.00 4.00 2.47 6.00 4.00 1.65 19.75 15.63 7.00 .... 7.30 3.00 • 50.00 48.00 12.00 22.00 3.71 22.00 3.00 .... 16.00 ■ > • • .... 14.00 > • • • .... 10.00 < • • • 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 3.00 16.00 14.00 .... 13.00 * > > ■ .... 10.00 > • • • 4.00 10.00 2.00 10.00 .... 5.00 76 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Rasin Dixie Guano Baltimore Special Mixture Rasiu H. G. Guano Rasin's Indian Brand for Tobacco Rasin Gold Standard Rasin Complete Fertilizer Rasin Special Fertilizer Rasin's General Tobacco Grower Rasin Empire Guano Rasin's Empire Truck Fertilizer Read Phosphate Co., Charleston. S. C. — Read's H. G. Dissolved Bone Read's H. G. Acid Phosphate Read's Bone and Potash Read's Alkaline Bone Read's Manipulated Guano Read's Ammoniated Dissolved Bone Read's H. G. Guano Read's H. G. Tobacco Leaf Read's H. G. Cotton Grower Read's Soluble Fish Guano Read's Blood and Bone Fertilizer, No. 1 Read's Special Potash Mixture . Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash . German Kainit ReidsviUe Fertiliser Co., Reidsrille, y. C. — Reidsville Acid Harvest King Acid and Potash Bone and Potash Bone and Potash Acid and Potash Lion Brand Fertilizer Reidsville Hustler Farmers Tobacco Fertilizer Royal Fertilizer Climax Fertilizer Broad Leaf Tobacco Guano Banner Fertilizer Champion Guano J. H. Burton's Si^ecial Bone and Potash Acid and Potash Reidsville Top Dresser Sicift Fertilizer Worlcs. Atlanta. Go.. ^Villninf/ton, N. C, and Chester, 8. C— Swift's Raw Bone Meal Total Swift's Pure Bone Meal Total Swift's Special Swift's Cultivator Swift's Harrow Swift's Special Swift's Atlanta Swift's Chattahoochee Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 .82 2.00 s.oo 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 16.00 14.00 • • * • .... 10.<«l .... 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.( 10 1.65 3.00 8.00 3.30 6.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 S.no 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 S.OO 1.62 2.00 S.OO 19.66 4.00 48.66 12.00 16.00 ■ • ■ • • • . > 10.00 .82 4.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 • • . . 2.0O 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 6.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.(X) 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.85 2.50 S.OO 1.65 2.00 S.OO 1.65 2.00 S.OO .82 3.00 S.OO .... 4.00 s.no .... 4.00 5.00 4.94 1.75 23.00 23.00 16.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 2.4-; 6.00 4.00 The Bulletin. 77 Xame and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Swift's Fanners' Siiecial Swift's Corn and Cotton Grower Swift's Eagle Swift's Planters' Special Swift's Plow Boy Swift's Atlanta Swift's Farmer's Home Swift's Field and Farm Swift's Wheat Grower Swift's Special Swift's Blood. Bone and Potash Swift's Cotton King .' Swift's Special Cotton Guano Swift's Gold Medal Swift's Farmers' Favorite Swift's Cotton Plant Swift's Cai>e Fear Swift's Monarch Swift's Majestic Swift's Strawberry Grower Swift's Carolina Tobacco Grower Swift's Ruralist Swift's Plow Boy Swift's Special Blood Guano Swift Braswell's Formula Swift's Pioneer Tobacco Grower Swift Clark's Special Cotton Grower Swift's Red Steer Swift's Golden Harvest Swift's Thompson's Special Swift's Special Peanut Grower Swift's Plantation Swift's Carolina 7 Per Cent Special Trucker. Swift's Special Irish Potato Grower Swift's Early Trucker Swift's Special Tnicker Swift's Favorite Truck Guano Swift's Special Potato Grower Swift's Special Tobacco Grower Swift's Special 10 Per Cent Blood and Bone Trucker Swift's No. 1 Ground Tankage Swift's Excelsior Top Dresser Swift's Pure Nitrate of Soda Swift's Ground Dried Blood Swift's Muriate of Potash Swift's Sulphate of Potash Swift's Pure German Kainit Southern Chemical Co., Inc.. Roanoke, Va. — Pride of Virginia Valley Queen Farmers' Joy Our Favorite Spartanhnrg Fertilizer Co.. Spartanhurrf, S. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acidulated Phosphate 13-3 Potash Add Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 • > ■ • 5.00 10.00 . . . • 4.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 10.00 ■ • • • 2.00 9.50 4.12 3.00 9.50 3.29 7.00 9.00 2.47 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 8.00 4.12 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.50 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 5.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.0O 4.12 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.94 6.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 3.29 6.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 4.50 8.24 .... 4.00 6.18 14.82 13.18 2.00 50.00 49.00 12.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 16.00 14.00 ■ ■ • • . . > ■ 13.00 • • ■ • 3.00 78 The Bulletin. Avail. Xame and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. 12-6 12.00 Nitro Blood 11.50 Gosuell's Plant Food 10.50 N. C. Special 10.50 Corn Formula 10.50 10-4 10.00 Dana's Best 10.00 Melrose 10.00 Boll Buster 9.00 Cotton Compound 8.88 Glencoe 8.00 Potato Guano 7.00 Nitrate of Soda .... Muriate of Potash .... Scotland Neck Guano Co., Scotland Neck, N. C. — Our 10 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Our Bone and Potash Mixture 10.00 Our Best Peanut Guano 5.50 Bisgs' H. G. Truck Guano 8.00 Noah Biggs C. S. M. and Fish Scrap Guano. . 8.00 State Farm C. S. M. and Fish Scrap Guano. . 8.00 Carolina C. S. M. and Fish Scrap Guano 8.00 Farmers' C. S. M. and Fish Scrap Guano 8.00 Our Special C. S. M. Guano 8.00 Johnson's Special Potato Guano 7.00. K. Elite Top Dressing 3.00 Nitrate of Soda Our Genuine German Kainit .... The Southern Exchange Co.. Maxtoii. N. C. — S. E. C. Acid Phosphate 16.00 S. E. C. Acid Phosphate 14.00 S. E. C. Bone and Potash Mixture 10.00 S. E. C. Bone and Potash Mixture 10.00 Juicy Fruit Fertilizer D.OO The Walnut Fertilizer 8.50 Melon . Grower 8.00 McKimmon's Special Truck Formula 8.00 Two Fours Guano 8.00 Southern Exchange Co.'s Bright Tobacco For- mula 8.00 That Big Stick Guano 8.00 Bull of the Woods Fertilizer 8.00 Jack's Best Fertilizer 8.00 Correct Cotton Compound 8.00 R. M. C. Special Crop Grower 8.00 Southern Exchange Co.'s Special Tobacco Fer- tilizer 8.00 Currie Crop Lifter 8.00 The Racer Guano 8.00 The Coon Guano 8.00 Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash .... Genuine German Kainit .... H. T. Shannonhouse, Hertford, N. C- — Acid Phosphate 16.06 Full Value 8.00 Nitrogen. Potasli. • • . • 6.00 1.65 2.50 2.46 2.00 1.65 8.00 1.65 5.00 • • . • 4.00 .... 4.00 ■ . • • 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 2.46 3.00 2.46 7.00 14.81 . . . . 48.00 • > > * 4.00 1.23 5.50 4.12 5.00 3.30 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.00 2.50 1.65 2.00 5.77 7.00 7.40 3.50 15.50 12.00 .... 4.00 • • • . 2.00 1.85 4.00 2.06 2.50 4.11 7.00 4.11 7.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 4.00 2.47 4.00 2.47 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 2.00 15.00 .... . ■ • • 49.00 • • ■ ■ 12.00 3.29 4.00 The Bulletin, Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Southern Pride 8.00 Carolina's Choice 8.00 Square Deal 8.00 Farmers' Money Malcer 8.00 High Grade 6.00 Genuine German Kainit .... Nitrogen. Potasli. 2.47 2.47 1.65 1.65 4.11 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 5.00 12.00 The 8out7icrn Cotton Oil Co., Charlotte District, Concord, Charlotte, Davidson, Shclhy. dh- son, Monroe and Wadeshoro — Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Gold Seal Acid Phosphate 14.00 Silver King Acid Phosphate l.'J.OO Conqueror Bone and Potash 10.00 Magnolia Bone and Potash 10.00 Uncle Sam 9.00 2.4 Home Made 9.00 2.05 Razem 9.00 1.65 , King Bee 8.88 1.65 Choice 8.00 3.30 Conqueror 8.00 3.30 Canto 8.00 3.29 Melonite 8.00 3.29 Peacock 8.00 2.47 Moon 8.00 2.47 Landsake 8.00 2.47 Red Bull 8.00 2.06 All-to-Good 8.00 2.05 Gloria 8.00 1.65 Double Two 8.00 1.65 Dandy Top Dresser 4.00 9.07 Peerless Top Dresser 4.00 6.17 Nitrate of Soda 15.00 Nitrate of Soda 13.20 Labi 8.99 Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit The Southern Cotton Oil Co., Augusta, Ga., and Spartanhurg, 8. C. — Sunrise High Grade 8.00 4.11 4.00 2.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 6.00 4.00 6.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 2.50 2.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.50 2.50 17.00 48.00 48.00 12.00 7.00 Southern Cotton OH Co., Goldshoro, Fayetteville, Rocky Mount and Wilson — Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate . ' Best & Thompson's Special Cotton Grower... Goldsboro Cotton Grower Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s Special for Tobacco. Goldsboro Oil Mill Si^cial Mixture Fayetteville Oil Mill Special Mixture "Wilson Oil Mill Special Mixture Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s Special Mixture... Rocky Mount Oil Mill Special Mixture 16.00 14.00 • > . < .... 9.00 2.27 2.00 9.00 2.27 2.00 8.00 3.71 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.00 4.00 80 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s Melon Grower.... Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s Special Cotton Grower Best & Thompson's High Grade Goldsboro Oil Mill Special Cotton Grower... Fayetteville Oil Mill Special Cotton Grower. Wilson Oil Mill Special Cotton Grower Rocky Mount Oil Mill Special Cotton Grower. B. G. Thompson's Special Cotton and Tobacco Guano Egerton's Old Reliable Morning Glory Goldsboro Oil Mill High Grade Fayetteville Oil Mill High Grade Wilson Oil Mill High Grade The Southern Cotton Oil Co. High Grade Southern Cotton Oil Co.'s Peanut Grower Goldsboro Oil Mill Standard Fayetteville Oil Mill Standard Wilson Oil Mill Standard Rocky Mount Oil Mill Standard The Southern Cotton Oil Co. Standard Southern Cotton (^il Co.'s Truck Grower Southern Cotton Oil Co. Top Dresser Rocky Mount Top Dresser Tideu-ater Ouano Co., Norfolk, Va. — Tidewater Raw Bone Meal Total Top Rail Acid Phosphate Buster Brown Acid Phosphate .T. W. S. Acid Phosphate Tidewater Bone and Potash Diana Brand Bone and Potash Comix)und... Bully Boy Dissolved Bone and Potash Diana Brand Soluble Guano. High Tide Soluble Guano Sho Nuf Guano High Grade Complete Manure. Hawk Eye Soluble Guano Soil King Special Guano Double Action Soluble Guano "Good Money" Complete Guann Tidewater Truck Guano Tidewater 4-6-4 Guano Nitrate of Soda Blood Fish Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Tnscarora Fertilizer Co., Atlanta, Ga.. and Wil- mington, 2\'. C. — Bone Meal Total Raw Bone Meal Total Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate Acid Phosphate Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.27 2.50 8.00 2.27 2.50 8.00 2.27 2.50 8.00 2.27 2.50 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 4.00 8.25 4.00 7.43 4.00 21.00 16.00 14.00 13.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 6.00 24.00 22.00 17.00 16.00 14.00 13.00 3.71 3.30 3.30 2.47 2.07 1.85 1.65 1.00 4.12 3.30 14.85 13.20 9.04 2.47 3.70 5.00 4.00 2.00 6.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 4.00 2.00 4.00 5.00 4.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 The Bulletin. 81 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Tuscarora Phosphate and Potash Tnscarora Alkaline Bone Tuscarora Acid and Potash Tuscarora Bone and Potash Tuscarora Chief Fertilizer, No. 913 Tuscarora Trucker Fertilizer, No. S44 Boon's Special Tobacco Special Cotton Special Fertilizer, No. 833 Tuscarora Blood and Bone Berry King Tuscarora Tobacco Fertilizer Tuscarora Champion Tuscarora Champion Tobacco Grower King Cotton Tuscarora Fruit and Potato Tuscarora I'ertilizer, No. 8-2-5 Fertilizer. No. 823 Tuscarora Standard Tuscarora Standard Tobacco Grower Fertilizer, No. 813. Tuscarora Bone and Potash Tuscarora Bone and Potash Big Four (4) Fertilizer Manure Substitute Tankage Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Kainit Union Guano Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. — Pure Raw Animal Bone Meal Total Raw Animal Bone Meal Total Union 10 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Union Pligh Grade Acid Phosphate Union Dissolved Bone Union 12-6 Bone and Potash Union 12-5 Bone and Potash Union 12-4 Bone and Potash Union 12-3 Bone and Potash Union 12-2 Bone and Potash Union 12 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Liberty Bell Crop Grower Union Prolific Cotton Compound Union Special Formula for Cotton Union Mule Brand Guano Grain Chemicals Union 10-6 Bone and Potash Union 10-5 Bone and Potash ; . Union 10-4 Bone and Potash Quakers Grain Mixture ' Giant Phosphate and Potash Finch & Harris's Special Bone and Potash . . . Union Bone and Potash 6 Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 6.00 10.00 , , 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.00 4.11 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.4' 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.4' 3.00 8.00 2.05 4.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 2.50 8.00 2.05 2.50 8.00 2.05 2.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 , , 5.00 8.00 , , 4.00 7.00 1.65 4.00 6.00 3.30 4.00 2.00 8.24 14.81 50.00 .... 50.00 .... 12.00 22.50 3.71 22.50 2.4' ' 16.00 , , .... 14.00 , , • • > • 13.00 , , .... 12.00 . , 6.00 12.00 , , 5.00 12.00 , , 4.00 12.00 , , 3.00 12.00 2.00 12.00 10.50 1.50 10.00 3.2i ) 4.00 laoo 2.4' 3.00 10.00 1.6f ) 2.00 10.00 l.Oi } 6.00 10.00 , . 6.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 , , 4.00 10.00 , , 4.00 10.00 , ^ 3.00 10.00 3.00 10.00 , -J 2.00 82 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Union Renown Guano Union Perfect Cotton Grower Union Complete Cotton Mixture Farmers' Blood and Bone Guano Dixie Cotton Grower Q. and Q. (Quality and Quantity) Guano.... Union Approved Crop Grower Union Guano for Cotton and Tobacco Union Premium Guano Union Homestead Guano Victoria High Grade ToIukco Fertilizer Union Water Fowl Guano Union Standard Tobacco Grower Union Potato IMIxture Christian's Siwcial Tol)acco Grower Old Honesty Guano Fish Brand AnnnoniatiHl Guano for Tobacco.. Old Honesty Tobacco Guano Fish Brand Annnoniated Guano Union Superlative Guano Sunrise Ainmoniated Guano Union S H Bono and Potash Union Wheat Mixture Union Vesetable Compound Union Truck Guano Complete Mixture for Top Dressing Sjiecial 10 Per Cent Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Union Top Dresser INIuriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kaiuit United States Fertiliser- Co., Baltimore, Md. — Raw Bone xMeal Total Farm Bell Acid Phosphate Farm Bell Acid Phosphate Farm Bell Phospho. Potasso Farm feell Potash and Acid Farm Bell 10-5 Mixture Farm Bell Special Mixture Farm Bell Alkaline Mixture Farm Bell Big Yield Farm Bell Buckeye Guano Farm Bell Blood, Bone and Potash Farm Bell Excelsior Guano Farm Bell Majestic Guano Farm Bell Cotton Special Farm Bell Tobacco Special Farm Bell Tobacco Fertilizer Farm Bell Tomato Special Farm Bell Crop Grower Farm Bell Fruit and Potato Animal Ammoniated Farm Bell Standard Guano Farm Bell Wheat, Oat and Corn Special Farm Bell Pennant Winner Farm Bell Phosphate and Potash Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.05 1.00 8.88 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 6.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 ,82 4.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 > ■ • • 5.00 8.00 .... 4,00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.00 3.29 5.00 4.00 GAS 4.00 2.00 8.24 14.8S 2.50 » .... 7.42 3.00 48.00 48,00 12.00 22.50 3.69 10.00 ■ • • .... 14.00 .... 12.00 5.00 10.00 . * . 6.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 . • • 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.4' 1 4.00 9.00 .8! 2 2.00 8.00 4.1- I 7.00 8.00 3.2J ? 7.00 8.00 3.2) ? 4.00 8.00 2.4 7 3.00 8.00 2.4' 7 3.00 8.00 2.4( 3 4.00 8.00 2.0 3 3.00 8.00 2.0 5 3.00 8.00 1.6 5 10.00 8.00 1.6 5 5,00 8.00 1.6 5 2.00 8.00 .8 2 6.00 8.00 .8 2 4.00 8.00 . . . 5.00 The Bulletin. 83 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Farm Bell Wheat and Grass Grower Farm Bell Truckers' Ideal Farm Bell Potato and Tobacco Guano Farm Bell Klimax Kompound Farm Bell 7 Per Cent Trucker Farm Bell Trucker's Favorite Farm Bell Top Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Kainit Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 > • . . 4.00 7.00 4.11 8.00 7.00 2.47 10.00 7.00 .82 4.00 G.OO 5.75 5.00 G.OO 3.28 8.00 4.00 6.56 2.00 • • . • 20.50 15.50 50.00 48.00 12.00 Union Abattoir Co.. Baltimore, Mil., and Rich- mond, Va. — Red Star Acid Phosphate Red Star Acid Phosphate Red Star Potash and Soluble Bone Red Star Potash and Soluble Bone Red Star Potash and Soluble Bone Red Star Potash and Soluble Bone Red Star Potash and Soluble Bone Red Star Potash and Soluble Bone Red Star Brand Tobacco Compound Red Star Brand Cotton Guano Red Star Early Truck and Tobacco Guano. . . Red Star Grain and Grass Special Gilt Edge Mixture Red Star Cotton and Tobacco Guano Red Star Tobacco Fertilizer Red Star Cotton Guano Red Star Standard Red Star • . . . . 14.00 • • • • . . . . 12.00 • ■ ■ • 5.00 12.00 ■ • • • 3.00 10.00 • • • • 5.00 10.00 • • < > 4.00 10.00 • • < • 3.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 3.28 2.00 8.00 3.28 4.00 8.00 3.28 4.00 8.00 3.28 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.05 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 7.00 2.46 10.00 7.00 2.46 5.00 6.00 5.75 5.00 6.00 4.10 15.23 7.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 > < . * • ■ > ■ 14.00 > • > • . * . ■ 10.00 «... 4.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 7.00 4.11 8.00 7.00 4.11 6.00 84 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Upshur's 7 Per Cent Special Potato Guano. . . Upshur's 6-4-4 Guano Upshur's Norfolk Special 10 Per Cent Upshur's 5 Per Cent Guano Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit VenaMe Fertiliser Co., Richmond, Va. — Pure Animal Bone Total Pure Raw Bone Total Venahle Best Acid Phosphate H. G. Acid Phosphate Venable's Dissolved Bone Veuable's Standard Acid Phosphate Venable's Corn, Wheat and Grass Fertilizer. . High Grade Bone and Potash Mixture Bone and Potash Mixture Venable's Carolina Favorite Roanoke Mixture Roanoke Meal ^Mixture Venable's B. B. P. Manure Venable's 5 Per Cent Trucker Venable's 4 Per Cent Trucker Venable's H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer Ballard's Choice Fertilizer Venable's Alliance Tobacco Manure. No. 1 . . . Venable's Cotton Grower Venable's Roanoke Special Venable's Ideal Manure Our Union Tobacco Fertilizer Venable's Meal Mixture Venable's Alliance Tobacco Manure, No. 2. . . . Our Union Special Fertilizer Planters' Bone Fertilizer Venable's Peanut Special Venable's Alliance Bone and Potash Mixture. Venable's Peanut Grower Venable's 10 Per Cent Trucker Venable's 6-6-6 Manure Nitrate of Soda Special Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Pure German Kainit Vance Guano Co., Henderson, N. C. — Best Grade Acid Phosphate Vance High Grade Acid Phosphate Vance Corn and Grain Grower Bone and Potash Compound Farmers' Union High Grade Brodie's Best B. B Fish Brand Tobacco Manure Sterling Cotton Grower Hot Stuff Vance Top Dresser Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potasli. Acid. .5.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 3.29 4.00 5.00 8.23 2.00 7.00 4.11 14.80 5.00 49.00 48.00 12.00 M 25.00 2.47 22.50 3.70 .... 10.00 • > • < 14.00 .... 13.00 12.00 .... . . • . 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 • * . * 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 6.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.20 2.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 8.00 4.11 5.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.0() . > • . 4.00 8.00 .... 4.00 6.00 8.23 2.00 6.00 4.94 15.63 6.00 .... 7.30 3.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 16.00 .... 14.00 . • . ■ .... 10.00 .82 3.50 10.00 ■ . . ■ 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 3.00 8.23 5.00 The Bulletin. 85 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co., Richmond, Ya. — V.-C. C. Co.'s Floats Total V.-C. 0. Co.'s Concentrated Acid Phosphate. . V.-C. C. Co.'s Pure Raw Bone Total V.-C. C. Co.'s Concentrated Bone and Potash. V.-C. C. Co.'s 17 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. . , . V.-C. C. Co.'s Concentrated Ammoniated V.-C. C. Co.'s Climax Potash Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate V.-C. C. Co.'s Sludg:e Acid Phosphate V.-C. C. Co.'s 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. . . V.-C. C. Co.'s Dissolved Animal Bone V.-C. C. Co.'s 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate V.-C. C. Co.'s Special High Grade Potash Mix- ture V.-C. C. Co.'s H. G. Potash Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s Goodman's Special Potash Mix- ture V.-C. C. Co.'s 12-4 Grain Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Wythe County Potash Mixture. V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Crop Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Battle's Crop Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Acid Phosphate V.-C. C. Co.'s Home Comfort Acid Phosphate. V.-C. C. Co.'s Virginia 11-5 Bone and Potash. V.-C. C. Co.'s Electric H. G. Special V.-C. C. Co.'s Ideal Crop Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Grain Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s Sovereign Crop Producer V.-C. C. Co.'s Ford's Wheat and Corn Guano. . V.-C. C. Co.'s Grain Special V.-C. C. Co.'s Standard Bone and Potash V.-C. C. Co.'s Crescent Potash Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Potash Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s Dissolved Bone and Potash. . . . V.-C. C. Co.'s Best H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer. . V.-C. C. Co.'s Great Texas Cotton Grower Sol- uble Guano V -C. C. Co.'s 3-9-3 Tobacco Fertilizer V.-C. O. Co.'s Jeffrey's High Grade Guano V.-C. C. Co.'s N. and R.'s Best A^-C. C. Co.'s Southern Cotton Grower C. S. M. V.-C. C. Co.'s Powell's Special H. G. C. S. M.. . V.-C. C. Co.'s Vececo Cotton Grower C. S. M.. . V.-C. C. Co.'s Cotton Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Best's Special Cotton Grower. . . V.-C. C. Co.'s Prolific Cotton Grower C. S. M. . V.-C. C. Co.'s White Stem C. S. M V.-C. C. Co.'s Standard Cotton Grower C. S. M. V.-C. C. Co.'s Bumper Crop Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Soluble Guano High Grade Ani- mal Bone V.-C. C. Co.'s Cuban Special Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s No. 923 Guano V.-C. C. Co.'s Reliable Cotton Brand Fertilizer. V.-C. C. Co.'s North State Guano C. S. M V.-C. C. Co.'s Grain Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s Bigelow's Crop Guano Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 27.00 24.00 .... 22.50 3.71 • • • • 20.00 • • • • 4.00 17.00 . • . . ■ ■ ■ ■ 16.00 3.29 4.00 16.00 • • • • 2.00 16.00 • • ■ • 14.00 • • • • 14.00 • • • • • • • • 13.00 2.06 ■ ■ • • 13.00 12.00 6.00 12.00 5.00 12.00 5.00 12.00 > ■ > • 4.00 12.00 ■ ■ • > 3.00 12.00 • • . . 3.00 12.00 . • . . 3.00 12.00 ■ ■ • • • • • • 12.00 • • . . • • > • 11.00 • • • > 5.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 5.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 2.50 10.00 • • • • G.OO 10.00 • • . • 5.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 . • . . 2.00 9.00 2.47 7.00 9.00 2.47 4.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.29 2.00 9.00 2.26 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.06 5.00 9.00 1.86 3.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 1.03 2.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8G The Bulletin, Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. y -C. C. Co.'s Tiger Brand ^ • • • 0.00 1.00 3.00 V.-C. C. Co.'s Burnhardt's Grain and Crop ^ ^^ ^^ ^^^ Guano ,' A ' ' • ' V.-C. C. Co.'s Mccormick's Wheat and Gram ^^^ ^^ ^^^ Guano ; ' A' ' V ' ^' ' " V.-C. C. Co.'s Myatt's Special High Grade Fei- tilizer Special •••• °-^^ V -C C Co.'s Powhatan Crop Mixture • fe-oU V-C C Go's Pelican Peruvian Guano (Peli- 'can Track Grower and Top Dresser) 8.00 V -C. C. Co.'s Muse's Special »-^ V -C C. Co.'s Long Leaf Tobacco Grower S-UO V -c' C. Co.'s Fish and Meal Mixture «W V -C. C. Co.'s Carr's Crop Grower ^-W V -C C Co.'s Farmers' Choice ^-^ v'.-C. C. Co.'s John F. Croom & Bro. Fish and Meal Mixture ^^ V.-C. C. Co.'s Special .• • • °XX V-C C. Co.'s Nowell & Richardson's Special. 8.0U V -C. C. Co.'s Groom's Crop Grower »-00 v'-C. C. Co.'s High Grade Tobacco Fertilizer. . b.OO v'-C C Co.'s Excelsior H. G. Special »-W v'.-C. C. Co.'s Lion's High Grade Tobacco Fer- , ... o.UU tilizer Qf^ V.-C. C. Co.'s Farmers' Success • • • • • • • • ^-^ V-C C Co.'s Groom's Special Cotton Fertilizer. S.OO V-C C. Co.'s Menhaden Fish and Meal Mix- ■ ^ o.OO V.-c! C. Co.'s Best'sH. G. Cotton and Tobacco . ^^ .... o.UO Guano • • o nn V -C C. Co.'s Diamond C. S. M ^-^^ V-C C Co.'s Jumbo Peruvian Guano, Jumbo Crop Grower • • • ■■■ «-^ V -C C Co.'s Oldham's Special Compound for Tobacco. High Grade ^JJJ V.-C. C. Co.'s Blake's Best ■■■■■■■■ ■■■ ^"^ V-C C Co.'s Royal High Grade Fertilizer... 8.00 v".-C. C. Co.'s Si>ecial High Grade Tobacco Fer- .... o.UU tilizer oan V.-C. C. Co.'s Adams' Special ■ »-^ V-C C. Co.'s Peruvian H. G. Tobacco Guano. 8.00 v"-c' C Co.'s Red Cliffe H. G. Cotton Grower. 8.00 v!-C. C. Co.'s Zeno Special Compound for To- bacco H. G • • Qf^^. V -C C. Co.'s Gold Medal H. G. Tobacco Guano. 8.00 V -C C Co.'s 3-8-3 Tobacco Fertilizer 8.UU v!-C. C. Co.'s Farmers' Friend Favorite Fer- , ... o.UU tilizer ■; ■ Q nn V.-C. C. Co.'s Atlas Guano C. S. M »u^ V.-C. C. Co.'s Admiral C. S. M 8.00 V.-C. C. Co.'s Good Luck C. S. M 8-W V.-C. C. Co.'s Split Silk C. S. M. . . ■■-■■- - ^-^ V.-C. C. Co.'s 3 Per Cent Special C. S. M. ^ -v-„ O .... O.UU Guano, >*o. 3 „ „^ 8.00 8.00 V.-C. C. Co.'s Orange Grove Guano V-C C. Co.'s Delta C. S. M. v'.-C. C. Co.'s Royal Crown. V-C. C. Co.'s Superlative C. S. M. Guano. ... 8.00 v'.-C. C. Co.'s Blue Star C. S. M. .••••••.•■•••• ^^^ V -C C Co.'s Potato and Cabbage Special .... 8.0U 1.65 2.09 1.G5 1.50 4.12 5.00 3.70 7.00 3.29 5.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 10.00 2.47 5.00 2.47 4.00 2.47 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.09 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.09 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 2.50 2.47 2..50 2.47 2.50 2.47 2.50 2.47 2.00 2.2G 2.50 2.26 2.50 2.26 2.00 2.06 3.00 2.06 3.00 1.65 lO.OO The Bulletin. 87 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. V.-C. C. Co.'s Smith's Irish Potato Guano V.-C. C. Co.'s Pace's 5 Per Cent Special Po- tato Guano Y.-C. C. Co.'s Boon's Favorite V.-C. C. Co.'s Monarch Brand V.-C. C. Co.'s Virginia Bone Special V.-C. C. Co.'s Valley Pride V.-C. C. Co.'s Corn and Peanut Special V.-C. C. Co.'s Winston Special for Cotton V.-C. C. Co.'s Diamond Dust C. S'. M V.-C. C. Co.'s Plant Food C. S. M V.-C. C. Co.'s Wilson's Standard C. S. M V.-C. C. Co.'s Ajax C. S. M. Guano V.-C. C. Co.'s Farmers' Favorite Fertilizer C. S. M V.-C. C. Co.'s Monarch Wheat and Grass Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Peanut Gi'ower V.-C. C. Co.'s Electric Grain and Grass Grower. V.-C. C. Co.'s Peerless Corn, Wheat and Grass Grower V.-C. C. Co.'s Peanut Grower A^-C. C. Co.'s The Harvester V.-C. C. Co.'s Pinnacle Grain Grower A'.-C. C. Co.'s 8-5 Potash Mixture V.-C. C. Co.'s Potash Mixture for Peanuts V.-C. C. Co.'s Jones' Grain Special V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Wheat Compound V.-C. C. Co.'s Truck Crop Fertilizer V.-C. C. Co.'s Konqueror H. G. Truck Fer- tilizer V.-C. C. Co.'s Pasquotank Trucker V.-C. C. Co.'s Potash Potato Producer V.-C. C. Co.'s Formula 44 for Bright Wrappers and Smokers V.-C. C. Co.'s Plant Bed and High Grade V.-C. C. Co.'s Invincible High Grade Fertilizer. V.-C. C. Co.'s Kitty Hawk Truck Fertilizer. . . V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Truck Guano V.-C. C. Co.'s Money Maker for Cabbage and Potatoes , V.-C. C. Co.'s 10 Per Cent Top Dresser Extra H. G V.-C. C. Co.'s Dewberry Special V.-C. C. Co.'s Dewberry Special Extra H. G.. . V.-C. C. Co.'s High Grade Top Dresser V.-C. C. Co.'s Sulphate of Ammonia V.-C. C. Co.'s Nitrate of Soda V.-C. C. Co.'s Blood V.-C. C. Co.'s Fish Scrap V.-C. C. Co.'s Special Top Dresser V.-C. C. Co.'s Muriate of Potash V.-C. C. Co.'s Sulphate of Potash V.-C. C. Co.'s Manure Salts V.-C. C. Co.'s Kainit Allison & Addison's Fulton Acid Phosphate. . Allison & Addison's I. X. L. Acid Phosphate. . Allison & Addison's Standard Acid Phosphate. Allison & Addison's Rocketts Acid Phosphate. Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash, Acid. 8.00 1.65 10.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 7.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 5.00 8.00 4.00 8.00 4.00 8.00 4.00 7.00 4.i: 2 7.00 7.( 30 4.12 5.00 7.( 30 3.29 8.00 7.00 3.29 8.00 7.( 30 2.55 3.20 7.00 2.26 6.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 4.1! 2 7.00 6.00 1.65 10.00 4.00 8.24 4.00 4.00 6.59 4.00 6.50 4.00 4.00 6.17 2.50 , , 20.59 14.82 13.18 8.24 7.40 3.00 48.00 • ... 48.00 . 20.00 12.00 14.( )0 .... 1.3.( )0 12.( 10 .... 1 2.( K) • • • •■ 88 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Allison & Addison's McGavock's Special Pot- ash Mixture Allison & Addison's B. P. Potash Mixture. . . . Allison & Addison's Star Special Tobacco Ma- nure Allison & Addison's Star Brand Special H. G. Allison «& Addison's Star Brand Guano Allison & Addison's Little Giant Grain and Grass Grower Allison & Addison's Anchor Brand Tobacco Fertil izer Allison «& Addison's Star Brand Vegetable Guano Allison & Addison's A. A. Guano Allison & Addison's Anchor Brand Fertilizer. Allison & Addison's Old Hickory Guano Allison & Addison's Peanut Grower Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Eureka Acid Phosphate Atlantic and Virginia .Fertilizer Co.'s Valley of Virginia Phosphate Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Cren- shaw Acid Phosphate Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Our Acid Phosphate Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Eureka Bone and Potash Compound Atlantic and Virginia I'ertilizer Co.'s Eureka Amnioniated Bone Special for Tobacco Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Orient Complete Manure Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Virginia Truckers Atlantic and Vix'giuia Fertilizer Co.'s Eureka Animoniated Bone Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Orient Special for Tobacco Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Peanut Grower Atlantic and Virginia Fertilizer Co.'s Carolina Truckers Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s 15 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Charlotte Oil iand Fertilizer Co.'s Catawba Bone Phosphate Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Acid Phos- phate Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Dayvault's Special Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Dissolved Bone Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Oliver's Per- fect Wheat Grower Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s 10-2 Bone and Potash Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s High Grade Special Tobacco Fertilizer Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Queen of the Haiwest C. S. M Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 10.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 • 2.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 2.26 2.06 1.65 2.00 5.00 1.00 9.00 1.00 2.00 8.50 2.26 2.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 3.70 2.47 1.65 1.65 1.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 16.00 14.00 .... .... 13.00 .... .... 12.00 .... 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.06 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.12 5.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 15.00 .... .... 14.00 .... 13.00 .... .... 12.00 .... 6.00 12.00 .... .... 11.00 2.47 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.06 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 The Bulletin. 89 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s MeCrary's Diamond Bone and Potash Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Groom's Special Tobacco Fertilizer Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Catawba Guano B. G Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Special 3 Per Cent Guano C. S. M Chai-Iotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s Ammoniated Guano B. G Charlotte Oil and B^'ertilizer Co.'s Ammoniated Guano C. S. M Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s The Leader B. G Charlotte Oil and Fertilizer Co.'s King Cotton Grower Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand High Grade Acid Phosphate Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand High Grade Dissolved Bone Davie & ^^aiittle's Owl Brand Acid Phosphate. Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand Dissolved Bone. Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand Acid Phosphate with Potash Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand High Grade 3 Per Cent Soluble Guano "T Davie & Whittle's Owl Bx-and Special Tobacco Guano Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand Truck Guano.. Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand Guanb for To- bacco Davie & Whittle's Vinco Guano Davie & Whittle's Owl Brand Guano Davie & Whittle's Peanut Grower Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Durham Best Acid Phosphate Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Standard High Grade Acid Phosphate Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Excelsior Dissolved Bone Phosphate Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Blacksburg Dissolved Bone Durham Fertilizer Co.'s N. C. Farmers' Alli- ance OfBcial Acid Phosphate Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Double Bone Phos- phate Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Acid Phosphate Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Great Wheat and Corn Grower Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Diamond Wheat Mix- ture Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Standard Wheat and Corn Grower Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Blue Ridge Wheat Grower Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Standard Wheat Grower Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Durham Bone and Potash Mixture Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. ' Potash. 9.00 .... 3.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 2.06 1.50 8.00 2.06 1.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 16.00 .... .... 14.00 13.00 12.00 .... 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.06 3.00 9.00 8.00 2.06 4.94 2.00 5.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 2.47 1.65 1.65 1.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 4.00 16.00 .... .... 14.00 .... .... 14.00 .... .... 13.00 .... .... 13.00 .... .... 13.00 12.00 • • • • • > • • 10.50 .... 1.50 10.00 .... 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 10.00 .... 2.00 10.00 .... 2.00 10.00 2.00 90 The Bulletin. Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Durham Fertilizer Co.'s L. & M. Special 9.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Standard Guano.... 9.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Ammouiated Fer- tilizer 9.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Special Plant and Truck Fertilizer 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Durham High Grade. 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Gold Medal Brand Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Yellow Leaf Tobacco Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s N. C. Farmers' Alli- ance Official Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Pride of Durham To- bacco Grower 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Raw Bone Superphos- phate for Tobacco 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Raw Bone Superphos- phate 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Genuine Bone and Pe- ruvian Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Genuine Bone and Peruvian Tobacco Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Blaclcsburg Soluble Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Progressive Farmer Guano 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Peanut Grower 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Carr's Special Wheat Grower 8.00 Durham Fertilizer Co.'s Best Potato Manure. 7.00 Lvnchburg Guano Co.'s Ironside Acid Phos- phate 16.00 Lvnchburg Guano Co.'s Lynchburg High Grade "Acid Phosphate 14.00 Lvnchburg Guano Co.'s Arvonia Acid Phos- ■phate 13.00 Lvnchburg Guano Co.'s Spartan Acid Phos- phate 12.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s Alpine Mixture 10.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s S. W. Special Bone and Potash Mixture 10.00 Lvnchburg Guano Co.'s Dissolved Bone and ■potash 10.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s Independent Standard. 8.50 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s Bright Belt Guano... 8.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s Solid Gold Tobacco.. 8.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s New Era 8.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s Lynchburg Soluble. . 8.00 Lynchburg Guano Co.'s Lynchburg Soluble for Tobacco 8.00 Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Norfolk Reliable Acid Phosphate 14.00 Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Norfolk Best Acid Phosphate 13.00 Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Norfolk Soluble Bone 12.00 Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Norfolk Bone and Potash 10.00 Nitrogen. Potaeh. 2.47 1.65 1.65 4.12 3.29 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.00 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.00 5.76 1.65 2.47 2.26 1.65 1.65 1.65 2.00 2.00 1.00 3.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 1.50 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 2.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 The Bulletin. 91 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Norfolk aud Carolina Chemical Co.'s Norfolk Trucker and Tomato Grower Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Amazon High Grade Manure Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Bright Leaf Tobacco Grower Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Amazon H. G. Special Tobacco Guano Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Cooper's Bright Tobacco Fertilizer Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Genuine Slaughter House Bone Made Especially for Tobacco Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Crescent Brand Ammoniated Fertilizer Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Genuine Slaughter House Bone Guano Norfolk and Carolina Chemical Co.'s Peanut Grower Old Dominion Guano Co.'s High Grade Acid Phosphate Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Bone Phosphate. . . Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Royster's Acid Phosphate Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Obelisk Brand Bone and Potash Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Planter's Bone and Potash Mixture Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion Al- kaline Bone and Potash Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Home's Cotton Fer- tilizer Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Standard Raw Bone Soluble Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Farmers' Friend High Grade Fertilizer Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Farmers' Soluble Bone High Grade Special Tobacco Manure. Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Farmers' Friend Special Tobacco Fertilizer Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Osceola Tobacco Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Farmers' Friend Fertilizer Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion Spe- cial Wheat Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion Sol- uble Tobacco Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Bullock's Cotton Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Soluble Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Peanut Grower...' Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Miller's Special Wheat Mixture Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion 7-7-7 Truck Guano Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion Po- tato Manure Old Dominion Guano Co.'s 7 Per Cent Truck Fertilizer Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 8.00 4.12 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 4.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 .... 10.00 4.00 10.00 .... 3.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.06 3.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 1.65 1.65 1.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 6.00 5.76 6.00 92 The Bulletin. Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion 6-7-5 Truck Guano 6.00 Old Dominion Guano Co.'s Old Dominion Spe- cial Sweet Potato Guano 6.00 Old Dominion Guano Co.'s 10 Per Cent Truck Fertilizer 5.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Almont High Grade Acid Phosphate 14.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Fulp's Acid Phosphate. 1.3.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Cotton Brand Best Acid Phosphate 13.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Almont Acid Phosphate. 12.00 Powers. Gibbs & Co.'s Cptton Brand Acid Phosphate 12.00 Powers. Gibbs & Co.'s Acid Phosphate and Potash 10.50 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Almont Wheat Mixture. 10.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Dissolved Bone and Potash 10.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Cotton-seed Meal Stand- ard Guano 9.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Truck Farmers' Special Aramoniated Guano 8.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Cotton Brand Ammoni- ated Dissolved Bone 8.00 Powers. Gibbs & Co.'s Old Kentucky High Grade Manure 8.00 Powers. Gibbs & Co.'s Cotton Belt Ammoniated Guano 8.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Carolina Golden Belt Ammoniated Guano for Tobacco 8.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Powei's' Ammoniated Guano 8.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Gibbs' Ammoniated Guano 8.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Almont Soluble Am- moniated Guano 8.00 Powers, Gibbs »& Co.'s Cotton-seed Meal Solu- ble Ammoniated Guano : 8.00 Powers, Gibbs & Co.'s Eagle Island Ammoni- ated 8.00 Powers. Gibbs & Co.'s Peanut Grower 8.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Comet 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Chick's 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Red Cross 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Victor Acid Phos- phate 13.00 Southei'n Chemical Co.'s Chatham Acid Phos- phate 13.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Reaper Grain Appli- cation 12.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Tar Heel Acid Phos- phate 12.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Horseshoe Acid Phos- phate 12.00 Southern Chemical Co.'s Quickstep Bone and Potash 11.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 5.76 5.00 1.65 6.00 8.24 2.50 2.47 3.29 3.29 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.00 1.50 3.00 2.00 2.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 2.00 1.50 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 3.00 5.00 The Bulletin. 93 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Southern Chemical Co.'s Solid South Southern Chemical Co.'s Winner Grain Mix- ture Southern Chemical Co.'s Farmers' Pride Bone and Potash Southern Chemical Co.'s Winston Bone and Potash Southern Chemical Co.'s Mammoth Corn Grower Southern Chemical Co.'s Mammoth Wheat and Grass Grower Southern Chemical Co.'s Sun Brand Guano.. Southern Chemical Co.'s George Washington Plant Bed Fertilizer for Tobacco Southern Chemical Co.'s Pilot Ammoniated Guano Special for Tobacco Southern Chemical Co.'s Electric Tobacco Guano Southern Chemical Co.'s Electric Standard Guano Southern Chemical Co.'s Yadkin Complete Fer- tilizer Southern Chemical Co.'s Chick's Special Wheat Compound J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Powhatan Acid Phos- phate J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s TinsLey's Dissolved S. C. Bone J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Stonewall Brand Acid Phosphate J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's Bone and Pot- ash Mixture J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Powhatan Tobacpo Fer- tilizer J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's Tobacco Fer- tilizer J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Richmond Brand Guano. J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Peruvian H. G. Tobacco Guano J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Killickinick Tobacco Mix- ture J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Appomattox Standard Tobacco Grower J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Lee Brand Guano J. G. Tin.sley & Co.'s Stonewall Brand Guano. J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Stonewall Tobacco Guano J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Peanut Grower J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's Special Irish Potato Guano J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's 7 Per Cent Am- moniated Guano for Beans, Peas, Cabbage, Strawberries J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's Irish Potato Guano J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's Strawberry Grower J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's Top Dresser. . . 6.00 Avail. Plios. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 10.00 6.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 10.00 .... 2.00 lO.OO 9.00 '2.06 2.00 5.00 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.00 14.00 .... . . . . 13.00 .... 12.00 .... 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 8.00 3.29 2.47 2.50 3.00 8.00 2.47 8.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 1.65 1.65 1.65 2.00 2.00 2.00 8.00 8.00 1.65 1.00 2.00 4.00 5.76 6.00 6.00 5.76 6.00 6.00 4.94 6.00 6.00 3.29 4.00 5.00 9.06 • • > • 94 The Bulletin. Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Avail. J. G. Tinsley & Co.'s Tinsley's 10 Per Cent Truck Guauo 5.00 R. W. Travers «& Co.'s Champion Acid Phos- phate 16.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Ti-avers' Dissolved Acid Phosphate 14.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Standard Dissolved S. C. Rone 13.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Capital Dissolved Bone. 12.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Capital Bone and Pot- ash Compound 10.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s National Tobacco Fer- tilizer s.r.o S. W. Travers & Co.'s Capital Truck Fer- tilizer 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Capital Tobacco Fer- tilizer 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Big Leaf Tobacco Grower 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Capital Cotton Fer- tilizer 8.00 g. W. Travers & Co.'s National Fertilizer 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s National Special To- bacco Fertilizer 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Beef, Blood and Bone Fertilizer 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Peanut Grower . 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Travers' Special Wheat Compound 8.00 S. W. Travers & Co.'s Travers' 7 Per Cent Truck Fertilizer 0.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Bull Run Acid Phnsphate 10.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Gilt Edge Brand Acid Phosphate 14.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Clipper Brand Acid Phosphate 13.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Lurich Acid Phosphate 12.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Alps Brand Acid Phosphate 12.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Mountain Top Bone and Potash 10.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s XX Potash Mix- ture , 10.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Dissolved Bone and Potash 10.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Number One Soluble Bone f 900 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Highland King. 9.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Gamecock Spe- cial for Tobacco 8.50 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Virginia State High Grade Tobacco Guano 8.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Bull Dog Solu- ble Guano 8.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Dunnington's Special Formula for Tobacco 8.00 Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Peerless To- bacco Guano 8.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 8.24 2.50 2.00 l.So 2.25 3.29 3.00 3.29 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.00 1.05 2.00 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.05 1.00 2.00 4.00 . . . . 4.00 5.70 5.00 5.00 4.00 2.00 1.05 1.05 2.00 1.00 1.05 2.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 The Bulletin. 95 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Buffalo Guano. Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Austrian To- bacco Grower Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Gilt Edge Spe- cial Tobacco Guano Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Battle Axe To- bacco Guano Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Virginia State Guano Virginia State Fertilizer Co.'s Gilt Edge Brand Dissolved Bone and Potash Johnston's Best .*. Baltimore Special Mixture Indian Brand for Tobacco Tl\omas Wakefield, Friendship, N. C- Pure Bone Meal Acid. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 8.00 2.0G 3.00 8.00 2.0G 2.00 8.00 2.0G 2.00 S.OO 1.G5 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.00 20.00 4.94 G.OO 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 . Total 21.00 4.10 WiUiams & Clark Fertilizer Co., Charleston, .S'. C— Standard Americus Ammoniated Bone Super- phosphate Winbwne-Broivn Guano Co., Norfolk, Va. — High Grade Acid Phosphate. . Standard Acid Phosphate. . . . Soluble Bone and Potash . . . . Big Triumph Guano Farmers Select Guano King Tammany Guano Winborne's Tobacco Guano.. Champion Crop Grower Winborne's Excelsior Guano. Standard Eureka Guano Climax Peanut Guano Premium Top Di-esser Big Crop 7 Per Cent Guano. Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit T. W. Wood d- a9o».9, Richmond, Vq.— Wood's Pure Animal Bone Meal Total Stanrlard H. G. Acid Phosphate Standard High Grade Acid Phosphate Standard Bone and Potash Mixture Standard Corn Fertilizer Standard Wheat Fertilizer. ... Stanrlard High Grade Trucker Fertilizer Standard Market Grower Fertilizer Standard Vegetable Fertilizer Standard Potato Fertilizer Standard Grain and Grass Fertilizer Standard Crop Grower Fertilizer Special 5-G-7 Guano Wood's Lawn Enricher Winbourn's Top Dresser. Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Kainit 9.00 23.00 IG.OO 14.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 S.OO 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 6.00 6.00 1.85 .GO 1.23 1.23 4.93 3.29 2.47 1.65 1.65 1.03 4.10 2.47 7.40 15.63 1.00 16.00 . .... • • . ■ 14.00 .... 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 6.00 7.40 3.00 5.00 5.75 15.00 5.00 50.00 12.00 2.00 1.00 d.oo 6.00 4.00 3.00 5.00 2.00 2.00 7.00 3.00 3.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 96 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Wessell, Duval d Co., N. Y. and Wilmington — Nitrate of Soda Wilsoti Chemical Company, Wilson, X. C. — IG Per Cent Acid Pbospliate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Bone and Potash Mixture No. 3 Bone and Potash Mixture No. 2 Bone and Potash Mixture No. 1 8-4.50-8 for Tobacco 8-4.50-7 for Cotton Wilson Chemical Co.'s T3old Medal Cotton Fertilizer Wilson Chemical Co.'s Gold Medal Tobacco Fertilizer Planters Formula No. 1 for Fine Tobacco. . . . Planlers Formula No. 2 for Fine Tobacco. . . . Wilson Chemical Co.'s Gilt Edge Tobacco Grower East Carolina Cotton Grower East Carolina Tobacco Grower Cotton States Standard Nitrate of Soda ISIuriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit The J. R. Young Fertiliser Co.. 'Norfolk, Va. — High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Special Bone and Potash Compound Bone and Potash Mixture J. R. Young's 2% -0-2 Guano J. R. Young's 4-8-4 Crop Grower J. R. Young's 3-8-3 Guano for Cotton J. R. Young's New Process 3-8-3 Guano for Tobacco J. R. Young's New Process 2-8-2 Guano for Cotton, Corn and Peanuts Pasquotank 5-6-7 Potato Grower J. R. Young's Special Guano for Potatoes. . . J. R. Young's Improved Fish and Bone Ma- nure '. J. R. Young's 3-6-6 Special Guano for S. P. . . . J. R. Young's New Process Guano for Truck. J. R. Young's 4-4-6 Special for Tobacco Nitrate of Soda J. R. Young's German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 14.85 16.00 .... 14.00 . ■ • . 10.00 • • . . 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 3.70 7 00 8.00 3.70 7.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 . 4.00 8.00 2.47 t 10.00 8.00 2.47 i 7.00 8.00 2.47 1 5.00 8.00 3.00 8.00 2.47 P 3.00 8.00 1.65 ' 2.00 > • • > 14.00 ^ ' • • • • .... .... 50.00 50.00 1^.00 16.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 6.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 3.29 4.00 6.00 2.47 6.00 5.00 5.67 3.50 4.00 3.29 14.85 6.00 12.00 LEAF TOBACCO SALES FOR FEBRUARY, 1912. Pounds sold for producers, first hand 8,177,721 Pounds sold for dealers 348,617 Pounds resold for warehouses 9'42,143 Total 9,468,481 o THE BULLETIN OF THE NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, fJHr RALEIGH. Vol. 33, No. 4. APRIL, 1912. . hole No. 166. I. ANALYSES OF FERTILIZERS— SPRING SEASON, 1912. IL REGISTRATION OF FERTILIZERS. PUBLISHED MONTHLY AND SENT FREE TO CITIZENS ON APPLICATION. Entered at the Post-oflBce at Raleigh, N. C, as second-class matter, February 7, 1901, under Act of June 6, 1900. STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. VV. A. Graham, Commissioner, ei officio Chairman, Raleigh. H. C. Carter ..Fairfield First District. K. W. Barnes Lucama --- .Second District. R. L. Woodard Pamlico ..-. Third District. I. H. Kearney Franklinton .._ Fourth District. R. W. Scott.. _ Haw River. Fifth District. A. T. McCallum Red Springs Sixth District. J. P. McRae Laurinburg Seventh District. William Bledsoe Gale .-. Eighth District. W. J. Shuford Hickory Ninth District. A. Cannon Horse Shoe Tenth District. OFFICERS AND STAFF. W. A. GRAHAM Commissioner. ELIAS CARR. Secretary and Purchasing Agent. Miss B. W. Pescud -. --- - Bookkeeper. D. G. Conn.. - --- - Bulletin Clerk. B. W. KILGORE. State Chemist, Director Test Farms. J. M PiCKEL. - . .Assistant Chemist. W. G. Haywood ...Fertilizer Chemist. G. M. MacNider Feed Chemist and Microscopist. L. L. Brinkley --'- - - ...Assistant Chemist. E. L. WoRTHEN Soil Investigations. *\V. E. Hearn -Soil Survey. W. H. Strowd - Assistant Chemist. J. Q. J.A.CKSON - Assistant Chemist. E. W. Thornton Assistant Chemist. J. K. Plummer --- --- Soil Chemist. S. O. Perkins -- Assistant Chemist. J. F. Hatch... - - Clerk. F. S. PucKETT --- Assistant to Director Test Farms. H. H. BRIMLEY - ..Curator of Museum. T. \V. Adickes Assistant Curator. FRANKLIN SHERMAN, Jr. Entomologist. Z. P. Metcalf - Assistant Entomologist. S. C. Clapp Assistant Entomologist in Field Work. W. G. CHRISMAN Veterinarian. B. B . Flowe --- Second Assistant Veterinarian. W. H. EATON - Dairyman. R. W. Grabber - ...Assistant Dairyman. A. M. Flanery Assistant Dairyman. W.N. HUTT Horticulturist. S. B. Shaw Assistant Horticulturist. O. M. Clark Second Assistant Horticulturist. T. B. PARKER - ...Director of Farmers' Institutes. J. M. Gray Assistant Director. W. M. ALLEN Pure Food Chemist. W. A. Smith - Assistant Pure Food Chemist. C. E. Bell. Assistant Pure Food Chemist. Miss O. I. TILLMAN Botanist. Miss S. D. Allen Assistant to Botanist. J. L. BURGESS .Agronomist. G. M. Garren Assistant Agronomist. tE. G. MOSS Co-operative Assistant in Tobacco Investigations. tE. H. M.^thewson Co-operative Assistant in Tobacco Investigations. C. R. Hudson Farm Demonstration Work. T. F. Parker Assistant Boys' Corn Club Work. R. W. Scott, Jr., Assistant Director Ed?ecomb8 Test Farm, Rocky Mount, N. C. F. T. Meacham, Assistant Director Iredell Test Farm, Statesville, N. C. John H. Jefferies, Assistant Director Pender Test Farm, Willard, N. C. R. W. CoLLETT, Assistant Director Transylvania and Buncombe Test Farms, Swannanoa, N. C. •Assigned by the Bureau of Soils, United States Department of Agriculture. tAssigned by the Bureau of Plant Industry, United States Department of Agriculture. Raleigh, N". C, April 15, 1912. Sir : — I submit herewith analyses of fertilizers made in the labora- tory of samples collected during the spring. These analyses show fer- tilizers to be about as heretofore, and to be, generally, what was claimed for them. I recommend that it be issued as the April Bulletin. Very respectfully, B. W. KiLGORE, State Chemist. To Hon. William A. Graham, Commissioner of Agriculture. I. ANALYSES OF FERTILIZERS— SPRING SEASON, 1912. By B. W. KILGORE, W. G. HAYWOOD, J. M. PICKEL, J. Q. JACKSON and W. H. STROWD. The analyses presented in this Bulletin are of samples collected by the fertilizer inspectors of the Department, under the direction of the Commissioner of Agriculture, during the spring months of 4912. They should receive the careful study of every farmer in the State who uses fertilizers, as by comparing the analyses in the Bulletin with the claims made for the fertilizers actually used, the farmer can know by or before the time fertilizers are put in the ground whether or not they contain the fertilizing constituents in the amounts they were claimed to be present. TERMS USED IN ANALYSES. Water-soluhle Phosphoric Acid. — Phosphate rock, as dug from the mines, mainly in South Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee, is the chief source of phosphoric acid in fertilizers. In its raw, or natural state, the phosphate has three parts of lime united to the phosphoric acid (called by chemists tri-calcium phos- phate). This is very insoluble in water and is not in condition to be taken up readily by plants. In order to render it soluble in water and fit for plant food, the rock is finely ground and treated with sulphuric acid, which acts upon it in such a way as to take from the three-lime phosphate two parts of its lime, thus leaving only one part of lime united to the phosphoric acid. This one-lime phosphate is what is known as water-soluble phosphoric acid. Reverted Phosphoric Acid. — On long standing some of this water- soluble phosphoric acid has a tendency to take lime from other sub- stances in contact with it, and to become somewhat less soluble. This latter is known as reverted or gone-back phosphoric acid. This is thought to contain two parts of lime in combination with the phos- phoric acid, and is thus an intermediate product between water-soluble and the original rock. Water-soluble phosphoric acid is considered somewhat more valuable than reverted, because it becomes better distributed in the soil as a con- sequence of its solubility in water. Available PhosphoHc Acid is made up of the water-soluble and re- verted ; it is the sum of these two. Water-soluhle Ammonia. — The main materials furnishing ammonia in fertilizers are nitrate of soda, sulphate of ammonia, cotton-seed meal, dried blood, tankage, and fish scrap. Thfe first two of these (nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia) are easily soluble in water and be- come well distributed in the soil where plant roots can get at them. 6 The Bulletin. They are, especially the nitrate of soda, ready to be taken up by plants, and are therefore quick-acting forms of ammonia. It is mainly the ammonia from nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia that will be designated under the heading of water-soluble ammonia. Organic Ammonia. — The ammonia in cotton-seed meal, dried blood, tankage, fish scrap, and so on, is included under this heading. These materials are insoluble in water, and before they can feed plants they must decay and have their ammonia changed, by the aid of the bacteria of the soil, to nitrates, similar to nitrate of soda. They are valuable then as plant food in proportion to their content of ammonia, and the rapidity with which they decay in the soil, or rather the rate of decay, will determine the quickness of their action as fertilizers. With short season, quick-growing crops, quickness of action is an important consideration, but with crops occupying the land during the greater portion or all of the growing season, it is better to have a fertilizer that will become available more slowly, so as to feed the plant till maturity. Cotton-seed meal and dried blood decompose fairly rapidly, but will last the greater portion, if not all, of the growing season in this State. While cotton seed and tankage will last longer than meal and blood, none of these act so quickly, or give out so soon, as nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia. Total Ammonia is made up of the water-soluble and organic; it is the sum of these two. The farmer should suit, as far as possible, the kind of ammonia to his different crops, and a study of the forms of ammonia as given in the tables of analyses will help him to do this. VALUATIONS. To have a basis for comparing the values of different fertilizer mate- rials and fertilizers, it is necessary to assign prices to the three valuable constituents of fertilizers — ammonia, phosphoric acid, and potash. These figures, expressing relative value per ton, are not intended to rep- resent crop-producing power, or agricultural value, but are estimates of the commercial value of ammonia, phosphoric acid, and potash in the materials supplying them. These values are only approximate (as the costs of fertilizing materials are liable to change, as other commercial products are), but they are believed to fairly represent the cost of mak- ing and putting fertilizers on the market. They are based on a careful examination of trade conditions, wholesale and retail, and upon quota- tions of manufacturers. Relative value per ton, or the figures showing this, represents the prices on board the cars at the factory, in retail lots of five tons or less, for cash. To make a complete fertilizer the factories have to mix together in proper proportions materials containing ammonia, phosphoric acid, and potash. This costs something. For this reason it is thought well to The Bulletin. 7 r have two sets of valuations — one for the raw or unmixed materials, such as acid phosphate, kainit, cotton-seed meal, etc., and one for mixed fertilizers. The values used last season were : VALUATIONS FOR 1911. 1)1 Unmixed or Raw Materials. For phosphoric acid in acid phosphate 4 cents per pound. For phosphoric acid iu bone meal, basic slag, and Pe- ruvian guano .314 cents per pound. For nitrogen I9V2 cents per pound. For potash 5 cents per pound. In Mixed Fertilizers. For phosphoric acid 4i/^ cents per pound. For nitrogen 21 cents per pound. For potash 51/2 cents per pound. VALUATIONS FOR 1912. In Unmixed or Raw Materials. For phosphoric acid in acid phosphate 4 cents per pound. For phosphoric acid in bone meal, basic slag, and Pe- ruvian guano 31/2 cents per pound. For nitrogen ]0i/^ cents per pound. For potash 4 cents per pound. In Mixed Fertilizers. For phosphoric acid 4^2 cents per pound. For nitrogen 21 cents per pound. For potash 5 cents per pound. HOW RELATIVE VALUE IS CALCULATED. In the calculation of relative value it is only necessary to remember that so many per cent means the same number of pounds per hundred, and that there are twenty hundred pounds in one ton (2,000 pounds). With an 8-2-1.65 goods, which means that the fertilizer contains avail- able phosphoric acid 8 per cent, potash 2 per cent, and nitrogen 1.65 per cent, the calculation is made as follows : Percentarp or Lbs in 100 Ths ^'"'"^ ^^'' ^"^"^ ^^'" ^^"• ruceniage o) 1.0s. %n wo LOs. ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ 8 pounds available phosphoric acid at 4^2 cents... 0.36 X20= $ 7.20 2 pounds potash at 5 cents 0.10 X20= 2.00 1.65 pounds nitrogen at 21 cents 0..347x20= 6.94 Total value 0.817x20= $16.14 Freight and merchant's commission must be added to these prices. Freight rates from the seaboard and manufacturing centers to interior points are given in the folloAving table : 8 The Bulletin, Freight Rates from the Seaboard to Interior Points. — From the Published Rates of the Associated Railways of Virginia and the Carolinas. In car-loads, of not less than ten tons each, per ton of 2,000 pounds. Less than car-loads, add 20 per cent. Destination. From Wilmington, N. C. From Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va. From Charleston, S. C. From Richmond, Va. S 3.20 2.70 3.20 4.00 2.95 2.65 2.48 3.85 1.60 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 1.70 2.00 2.80 3.60 2.10 1.60 1.80 2.85 0.12 2.10 1.80 2.96 2.00 3.00 3.20 3.00 2.88 3.00 2.10 1.90 1.90 2.72 2.95 1.60 3.05 3.00 2.60 1.80 3.44 3.36 2.55 3.20 2.30 1.25 3.68 3.04 2.77 2.60 2.40 2.56 3.00 2.10 2.20 3.28 3.28 3.05 3.25 2.10 2.10 2.90 2.60 2.20 3.50 2.95 2.30 2.90 2.30 3.00 3.05 1.50 2.65 2.95 2.00 3.00 $ 3.20 $ 3.40 3.80 3.60 4.00 3.90 2.85 3.63 3.40 3.20 3.80 4.00 3.40 3.20 3.20 3.20 3.20 3.60 3.20 2.40 3.00 3.80 3.12 2.10 3.20 3.40 3.60 3.55 3.20 3.40 2.68 3.40 3.50 3.80 3.80 3.80 3.80 3.70 3.85 3.40 3.20 2.70 4.00 3.40 2.50 3.80 3.40 3.95 3.20 3.55 3.00 4.10 2.20 3.40 3.40 3.80 3.40 3.40 3.60 3.05 3.20 3.40 3.20 3.90 3.80 3.20 3.60 3.80 3.00 3.40 2.50 3.40 4.10 3.20 2.25 3.85 3.20 3.40 $ 3.20 3.00 Asheboro .. 3.20 4.00 3.20 3.20 2.86 3.60 3.00 3.00 2.40 3.60 3.20 3.00 2.80 2.83 3.20 2.60 3.80 3.00 3.00 3.25 3.50 2.80 3.00 3.00 2.83 3.60 3.08 2.88 3.00 2.80 2.40 3.40 3.60 3.00 3.60 3.00 3.00 3.20 3.40 2.40 3.20 3.60 3.40 2.90 1.75 3.20 2.83 3.25 3.30 3.00 2.83 2.96 3.00 2.50 2.80 3.20 3.65 3.20 3.00 2.80 3.60 3.60 2.80 3.20 2.83 2.40 3.60 3.00 3.00 3.25 3.00 1.75 1.90 2.60 3.00 3.20 4.00 Chapel Hill 3.20 Charlotte 3.20 Clayton 2.80 Cherry ville . 3.63 Clinton 3.00 Creed moor 3.00 2.40 Dallas 3.60 3.20 Dudley Dunn.. Durham Elkin 3.00 2.80 2.83 3.20 Elm City 2.60 Fair Bluff 3.80 3.00 3.06 Gaatonia Gibson 3.25 3.50 Goldsboro Greensboro Hamlet _. Henderson Hickory High Point 2.80 3.00 3.00 2.83 3.60 3.08 Hillsboro 2.88 Kerners ville 3.00 2.80 Laurel Hill 3.40 Laurinburg . . 3.40 Libert y 3.60 3.00 Lumberton 3.60 Macon 3.00 Madison . 3.00 Matthews 3.20 Maxton . 3.40 2.40 Mocksville 3.20 Morven _ 3.60 Mount Airy 3.40 2.90 New Bern 1.75 2.23 Oxford 2.83 3.20 Pittsboro - 3.30 Polkton . . . 3.00 Raleigh... Reidsville Rockingham Rocky Mount . 2.83 2.36 3.00 2.50 Ruffin. Rural Hall.. 2.20 3.20 Rutherfordton Salisbury Sanford Selma Shelbv Siler Citv . 3.65 3.20 3.00 2.80 3.60 3.60 Smithfield 2.80 Statesville Stem Tarboro Waco.- Wadesboro •Walnut Cove.. . . 3.20 2.83 2.40 3.60 3.00 3.00 'Warrenton . 3.25 3.00 1.50 Weldon 1.90 Wilson 2.60 3.00 The Bulletin. 03 o a o O ■■BTUOUIUiy o^ iuajBAinbg; aiqnfos •ptoy OTJOtjdsoqj ajqujiBAy CO o o CO CO CD § t^ CO I— 1 t- b- i-H CO 00 1^ g CO CO «a- »o tn t^ CO 1^ t^ I-^ CO GO «o Ci l^ CO CO CI t^ s s s § s »>• to ^ ■* CM T— § CCI CM CM to g ^ 1-. r-l CO (N c3 a o a o n d O o a c3 3 o a a o I c o u -a si o o M ^ E c o (^ PL, S f^ 0,^T3 DO 03 > O d O o c3 O O o o .01 o O ci _g O -a o o is o a i o — I? cj 2; w & o O. o tn so a 02 O a C3 D o J 03 W ^ 03 .3 p « Q O 03 -«^ 03 OS O d O J3 o d O ^ i:; 3 C4 > O d O ai 3 O OQ =3 J3 3 03 « o a 03 d o ■a f^ .2 & C3 bO oj u « 03 O 6 O o a 03 3 O 03 a 3 O O o a c3 3 O a 3 o U O a o C3 tn 03 : O a o ■+^ o tf. d a o a 03 3 O o U 3 03 o oo' -3 O o & o (2; o 3 03 3 o 3 -T3 O " ft a a ft a 03 > O 6 O oo t^ ^H ^H ■6 n-c ti a Farm N. Impe 03 a fe l^ 10 The Bulletin. ^B uox -lad enjB^ SAiiBja'jj OX O < m O J O o o u o <5 CM o c B o O IB^OJ, •■Binouiniv o* ijua|BAjnba •naSoaiijs^ •naSoji;i>j oiubSJo ■UOSOJltNJ aiqujos •ppv ouoqdsotjj aiqB|iBAy C3 a 2 o i 03 Id N fa Q 3 a t3 < a 03 B 03 •jaquin^ XjoiBJoqBq CO Ci O ^H >o 00 to 00 to iC to r^ CT2 cc »o to T— CO CI CO M CO t^ CM -* CM M< CO t^ r^ GC -.0 r^ C3 CO I^ t^ CO t^ X t^ t^ t» o *-H M CO 00 (M 00 Ci to o CO o Cv| o> to 00 CO C_ 1^ ■* a> CJ CSI cq (N ^ IM l !M c-l (M - t^ ci CO 00 ci Oi t^ 00 00 CO CM 00 - GO ; o ■^ ■* CI 00 CO •^ T« ^ ■»i* CI CI -# CI iO 00 :;3 to 00 (M c■^ c;^ 00 ^ r-- r^ 1 i *— 1 '"^ '"' '^ '"' '"' : o o c^ to 00 -^ c-^ CI '"' '"' "^ ^^ '^ —I '"' o o ^^ ira t^ CO 10 •0 ■* cr> l-O 00 10 OS o (M •^ CO 00 C3 (5 d :3 "3 a -a 3 C3 3 (§ .8 1 c3 a 3 a 1 w i 2 c3 > "3 S -0 iedmont Special for lanters' Standard Fc 1 ft t^ ft 3 s CTl is 2 3 .4^ '5) 03 3 S pa E _3 s 3 P5 's. '3 S S < ■0 3 PQ 1^ < S5 *c (U Pu PL, p. (^ Ph is PL, U^ fa i ; 1 \ ] i J (h t ' ' 1 • C3 ' ' d d ' J ■3 a 6 -*^ s X ^ ci i ; s 6 > ■6 S 2 1 "3 c ..J M 3 1 i t B « 6 c eg d 3 a 1 d s" 2 pq s 3 -3 3 E .3 s 6 > S (5 z 6 d z 3" 2 CQ c 1 o o a 03 3 o S d U Q c '3 6 U N i c g C3 d a 1 E u "s C3 s 1 mont-Mount Airy d. do iters Fertilizer and n, S. C. imoke Guano Co., 1 1 C3 6 6 3 a 3 6 fa 2 6 3 c! 3 3 1 g > 01 r- SS J2§ 3 s S I? , (C ft. Ah PlH ftl Pi 5 P5 U) OQ ^H ,_, ,^ ^H CO t^ e-3 t^ ?° "5 ■* Ci t^ 0; »o »o CO cq 1— < N CO 1—1 (M •^ *^ The Bulletin. 11 b- ^ r-^ co CO CO t^ CO o CO ci OJ CI o s C-l CI CI CI cj CI CO CI CI CI CI C4 CI ci CI C3 c» o CM* CO o o 1—1 a> s ^ t-H CO § CO CO C ID H > o O o O O > C3 D, E 13 o IB d 3 i UO fa o C3 6 O o a c! 3 O J4 O -O cj « H « o a cS 3 O bC O o s ziid 03 3 t-i o a^ !-•< . o. o fa wO C S ■ t. 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CI r- 1 C T— I o JO < 02 C I— I J N K < O « ;^ o o o «5 ^B uox Jad i en kl o la .2 1 a 1 1 •qsBioj •Biuouirav o% i(na]i3Ainb3 •noSoiiTjj ■naSoJiifj 01UB3JO * •naSoj^if^ aiqni'os -aa^BM •ppv otjoqdsoqj 'aiqB[tBAv Where Sampled. Name of Brand. 2 3 3 o •S < C3 (U s I? ■jaquinj.^ | .^JOJBJOqB'J ' H U N a ■o c s 00 ?i CC O cc M re cc 1^ CO cc S3 CO cc a cc ^ s Cl s s cc g if: cc g g M g to g cc tr> »c ^ »o r. I>- 00 00 1^ 00 T Tj" '* in ■ra h- t^ s t^ - g - g o g g oo CI 5 g o o g CC m o o KO m »c lO tC r- '■^ «3- -* -^ r~ '^ m lO o o CO CC CC m ■o ^ -**< o g to CO Ci >.-5 o o g 05 g oo o oc o . CO CO o a 0) s a 3 a o -a <§ o o 3 a c3 d o B c3 3 C O ■4J 03 ■*^ O PL, ■^ O C! > g o ■a s 3 O 0^ o iz; 6 O o si 3 o 1 i ^ s d Q o a c3 > a o o O O .2 o PL( w fo O C3 U I 03 > C o a o a C3 3 a S ca o PL, C. CO c3 PL, bO o O O o o £ bC S 03 5: s PL, O c o -*^ be c p3 6 •i ^ .2 5 •a g c 3 ti a 03 PL, z c o bH 03 d S ID O o B S 03 B O P9 ■o B c3 •d > d E _ a o o 03 O O >. ■S B H 03 a o I o O J3 .2 fl U o =3 ^ d .-era .2 ;^ u c3 PLh > « O c3 U I .1 09 ■a c a k D9 B 03 D3 o fl 03 3 o B e3 '> 3 o P^ J3 U 3 03 PQ 03 > O is d O B O aj J3 bC 3 e3 M The Bulletin. 15 o in OS CO o to c; CO '— ' o ^ c^ CO CO oo T -^ CO CO 1 O (^ o r* '-' tr? CT CD r^ CM cc o lO Cf) CO "^ o ■^ o o o 1^3 »o o o r^ Jt^ " "Sii a (§ o a 03 a O o Pu o pi 03 > o 6 O o a 03 3 o w 00 ci o o o •ci o o ici a 03 o bl) 03 C3 U o o o c" o bi) a ^ ^ o Al U O 03 'a O o o O c O o E 03 o a Lri F u ft l'^ t^ Fi LL, « l-H OS M M w El < P5 t— I +3 O -4^ III ^ h-t u S •a Iz; a P » u « o o P^ ^ -«! .s Pi a m ft «J 9.60 10.08 10.40 11.. 35 11.20 11.27 11.68 11.30 11.16 11.77 11.35 11.25 11.39 12.37 12.18 13.70 11.60 11.83 12.00 12.60 13.00 14.19 14.00 14.09 14.60 14.20 13.95 14.71 14.19 14.06 14.24 15.46 15.23 17.13 14.50 14.79 ; c a. '> £ o; C c 5 a 31 -a 03 4- 1 XI b c B a a a a ■V Wadesboro Wadesboro c i SJ 03 s c: c > a o % c a o « 0) > 1 Q a o "a Bryant's High Grade Dissolved Bone. . Extra Dissolved Bone Phosnhate _ a "c C •3 '3 > 03 O 03 m 3 hi ■< CO 1 "3 s 2 O .s 8 o ■6 a o a .a o d O pa Q a" Meadows, E. H. & J. A., Co., New Bern, N. C. Norfolk Fertilizing Co.» Norfolk, Va _.. Piedmont-Mount Airy Guano Co., Baltimore, Md. Pocomoke Guano Co., Norfolk, Va Read Phosphate Co., Charleston, S. C Swift Fertilizer Works, Atlanta, Ga 03 > a o e d O s 03 X < a .2 'a t3 d a" o d d a ,g ^ a o E A i s a c 1 o C3 o 1 CO CO CO CO oo oo CM CO CO 1 a r^ CO 'BioqT3'3 s CO CI o s to s CO CO CO CI GO S CO s O o -* '- ;i; C^l CM cr> c^ cr> ro CM CO (M CO ro CI CO ro CO «» o J3 ■a C3 d o ■«-> a ri © ^ O go rf " o 03 (S'P 3 IS > > ■6 a o B J3 •a c 2 GO O O u Id U I f2 (§ •a o o o s O d a IS O a o bO _a 'E a CO a 2 a a •73 W bC a CO o 03 C3 ja o. CO O J3 c3 .a a U U o •a .2 Q o o a O a a ai O -d 03 J3 a m O ja Pl, ^ 13 2 ^ '^ O L. U -goo < ja .jfl J, MOM 03 ^^"^ rT oi.H a.2 .£fa:s ell's ^ -^ K < < o 3 ,o e o J3 bO 3 03 m 03 ja a CO O ja a [3 O Z o o O O .s .s 3 d c3 S o s 3 O a J3 o o o a si d g •a 03 O bD d O S J2 03 6 U J3 a o ■a < < J3 Pk d o to =a ja bO 3 <^ pq d m o O 'd « d o O o H d O o a 03 3 o pa S .!z; >o - S . >> ra O a 2 S 3 a CD O ja PLl O 03 a O -a PM S ^ a 3 d O bO a 'a a O •a a 03 O a 2 Or-) » o ^ 1-1 S •d o 8 *-3 "3 PQ d O The Bulletin. 17 <© QO 03 OS r^ CO CO o t^ ''J* »o -«s< b* t- CO oo (M (M t*« CO IM •**< o 00 o eo lO CO CO CO Oi oo oo CO t^ w oo 00 en oo \a CD Ci o oo CO ■"J* CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO (M - CO CO CO r- t^ CO CO CO CO CO CO o o CM O ii ry o ^ ..^ ^^ -H L- y^ a» .2 o .- .^ xi IS J3 3 > ^ 03 O QQ U (U a o -a o -a 33 o o o o O O is o o £? o « 3 ^ J3 O. 73 O Xi 03 C C3 p. s < PL, < < a -v o cS C J ^ 03 n O Si PL, 03 a en O J3 03 J3 O, m O PL, O 03 a o PL, -a 03 J3 O. m O ja PL, O C3 -a p, CO O J3 PL, "^ 73 o 3 m T3 2 K O O W Pu < ^ "=> — s ^ -„ 03 ." - +^ ^ en .^ 03 O 03 Pl, 03 a OQ o <0 a 3 03 oi ! .£1 o ?• ■s ^ ja w PL, "^ a> J3 a Pi o PQ -a o '0 < > -^ n P a S > o o O m ©CQ.-S 2; z 03 > O d o 03 ,- o o a" o a tn T1 ^. a O O O § 03 3 O >, 03 a a o PQ a =8 u n 3 >, u PQ o ■a d O o a 03 3 O o a" o a o O =3 03 o d O 03 > S ■a a o S o s o o o a 3 a. ^ 03 t; © O N a — 03 t A o £03O +j rt a 03 a 0. PM j2o a o S J3 a o o PL, PL, PL, pj pj 03 > "o O d O o a (S 3 O O PS a' o C3 pq pi a o bC a .2 03 > a o d a o O a" 2 o O o a 3 03 a a 2 "a ;2 •w a o S ja C3 s d O o o o T3 ja a 3 »-> 3 0) 01 O > W O w ^- CO CO c^ 18 The Bulletin. 1— t C5 o m < H « s: H K < O O o O m B < •Xjo^obj li; aoj, J8d Percentage Composition or Parts per 100. ■qsB^oj l«?ox •■Binoxntnv ax iuaiBAinba •ua3oj'»ifsi moi •uaSoJiifj oniBSJo •naSoJii{>i oiqni'os -jaiBM 1 •piov ouoqdsoqj "aiqBiiBAy Where Sampled. Name of Brand. o CO CM CO o — § § CI QO CO o o o o CO o> o o ^ o o o CTi c> CT) o o 00 CO •^ o CO CO tf* s CD o g CD s CO CO CO CO CO oo o 3 cq o o s CD 05 c^ 5 > a C8 •n :* w o o S o 12; c ■5 o o c O a '3 c3 O 01 '3 o -a 93 d cS a o o a. a O o •jaqnin^ XjojBjoq'B']; E ■« CO c 09 k CO 2 a t4 CJ ■w ^ W -»^ t, ^ -3 n ft ft 75 !» o z c (-1 Ed C a 3 3 3 3 o o 3 3 o o a" o 3 S S ^"5 3 Id O O 3 -a o 3 "S o cj M 6 O o U o 3 03 3 o 03 u O (S 6 O o rl 3 M d 3 g » ti a *t a 3 3 ^1 3 3 O a o o O 3 o pq ^ S «* ^ 03 d a A o P4 cS o O o 3 c^ 3 o o C3 ■a 3 o a — 2 <; 3 (-1 I -I ■s ^ 3 a; O fa .2'* S Pk 03 o O a -3 o o o PL, o 3 3 c3 3 O 1-5 E ^. -s •- i3 c3 S Z •o c cs GO 3 O 3 A 3 O Ph CM O ft Si m 03 O Pk o O 3" o o O o O f=4 O 3 o .»j so 3 _a o O 3 ■a o 3 O ^ c^ cq Tp w f-i C o TT C^l IM r* ,_, __, _, CO o ,__, '^ in in o in «D CO o s CO CO o s CO o CO CO o s CO o o CO o r- as C3 CO ex en o 00 Ci 05 crs s ?3 05 CO C5 s s CO oo CO § 05 to CD QO CO ^ O ^O ^ »o »o lO in »0 in •o -0 o c o -D o M 0) a ■B © o cj Ti % IS W o a ^ 6 > •a C3 O o T3 ci o 02 OS o 02 O O o zn C3 J3 o 6 O a o 6 O j3 o 6 O pi o u o C3 3 o c3 [» 03 > Cj :8 > -d o S J3 O s o xi O o cj ;2 o 6 O c bO F <; o 2 ■a c 2; u o O e o -^ o O II. BRANDS REGISTERED, SEASON 1911-12. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. The Atlantic Chemical Corporation, 'Norfolk, Va. — Pure Raw Boue Meal Total Atlantic High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Phos- phate Atlantic 14 Pei* Cent Acid Phosphate Atlantic Dissolved Bone Atlantic Acid Phosphate Atlantic 10 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Atlantic 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Atlantic Bone and Potash for Grain Atlantic Bone and Potash Mixture Atlantic Meal Compound Atlantic Cotton Grower Corona Cotton Compound Atlantic Special Guano Atlantic Grain Guano Atlantic Special Truck Guano Oriental High Grade Guano Paloma Tobacco Guano Boon's Special Guano Atlantic High Grade Tobacco Guano Atlantic High Grade Cotton Guano Atlantic Tobacco Grower Atlantic Tobacco Compound Atlantic Special Wheat Fertilizer Atlantic Soluble Guano Atlantic Soluble Guano for Tobacco Apex Peanut Grower Atlantic S and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Atlantic S and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . . Atlantic 7 Per Cent Truck Guano Atlantic Potato Guano Perfection Peanut Grower Atlantic Side Dresser Atlantic Special Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Atlantic Top Dresser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit , • • Geo. L. Arps d Co.. Norfolk, Va. — Arps' H. G. 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Arps' 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture Arps' 10 and 2 Bone and Potash Mixture. . . . Arps' "Go-a-Head" Guano for Trucks. Cotton and Tobacco Arps' Quick Growth for All Crops Arps' Premium Guano for Cotton, Tobacco and All Spring Crops Geo. L. Arps & Co.'s Big Yield Guano Arps' Standard Truck Guano Arps' Potato Guano Arps' Scuppernong Guano for Trucks Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 21.50 3.7] .... 16.00 .... 14.00 . . . .... 13.00 12.00 > . . .... 10.00 • ■ * 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 > < ■ 3.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.2- 2.00 9.00 2.06 1.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.00 3..30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.00 4.00 8.00 2.4- 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.4' 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.02 4.00 8.00 5.00 8.00 4.00 7.00 5.7' 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 8.22 4.00 4.00 6.18 2.50 15.22 .... 7.42 3.00 • • • • • ■ ■ 48.00 .... > • 48.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 10.00 > > < 4.00 10.00 2.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.4' 7 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.12 6.00 6.00 5.7( 3 5.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 • • < ■ ■ ■ < 12.00 The Bulletin. 21 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Atlantic Fertilizer Company, Atlanta, Ga.; Wil- inington, N. C; Chester, 8. C. — Atlantic "N" High Grade Acid Phosphate Atlantic "O" High Grade Acid Phosphate Atlantic "P" Standard Grade Acid Phosphate. Atlantic "A" High Grade Guano Atlantic "G" High Grade Guano. Atlantic "K" High Grade Phosphate and Pot- ash Atlantic "M" Standard Grade Phosphate and Potash Atlantic "D" High Grade Guano Atlantic "F" Cotton-seed Meal Comp. H. G. . . Atlantic "B" High Grade Guano Atlantic "C" High Grade Guano Atlantic "E" Cotton-seed Meal Comp. H. G... Atlantic "H" Standard Grade Guano Atlantic "I" Standard Grade Guano Atlantic "L" Standard Grade Phosphate and Potash Atlantic Nitrate of Soda Atlantic Muriate of Potash Atlantic Sulphate of Potash Atlantic German Kainit Acme Manufacturing Co., Wilmington, TSI. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Acme High Grade Acid Phosphate Acme Acid Phosphate Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash. .' Acme Bone and Potash Acme Melon Grower Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash Acme Cotton Grower Acme Special Fertilizer for Cotton Acme Plumb Good Fertilizer Acme "OK" Fertilizer Acme "OK" Fertilizer for Tobacco Quickstep Fertilizer Quickstep Fertilizer for Tobacco Acme Crop Grower Currie's High Grade Fertilizer Acme Crop Grower for Tobacco Best's Fish Scrap Guano for Tobacco Best's Fish Scrap Guano Pee Dee Special Fertilizer Pee Dee Special for Tobacco Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 16.00 14.00 • . • • .... 13.00 • • • • 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 S.OO 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 14.82 4.00 50.6o 49.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 • ■ • ■ • • • • 13.00 • • • ■ • . ■ • 12.00 . . > ■ 6.00 12.00 • • > • 5.00 12.00 .... 4.00 12.00 • • > • 3.00 12.00 . . • • 2.00 11.00 • • . ■ 6.00 11.00 • * • • 5.00 11.00 ■ ■ • • 4.00 11.00 . > • • 3.00 11.00 2.00 10.00 3.30 5.00 10.00 • • • • 6.00 10.00 • • • • 5.00 10.00 > > * * 4.00 10.00 • • . . 3.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 9.00 2.27 2.00 8.00 4.12 7.00 8.00 3.30 6.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3..30 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 22 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Guano . Guano for Tobacco. Tobacco . Acme 8-3-3 C. S. M. Acme 8-3-3 C. S. M. Acme Plant Food . Acme Fertilizer for Acme Fertilizer Tiptop Crop Grower Tiptop Tobacco Grower Acme Standard Guano Lattinier's Complete Fertilizer Best's Complete Fertilizer Cotton-seed Meal Guano Gem Fertilizer Cotton-seed Meal Guano for Tobacco.... Gem Fertilizer for Tobacco Acme Special Grain Fertilizer Acme Bone and Potasb Acme Bone and Potash Acme Bone and Potash ^Acme Root Crop Guano Acme vStandard Truck Guano Acme High Grade Guano Acme Truck Grower Acme Corn Guano Dried Fish Scrap Acme Special 4-1U-4 Guano Clark's Corn Guano Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Acme Top Dressei- Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash High Grade German Kainit IG Per Cent. Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 6.00 G.OO 6.00 4.50 4.00 1.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.06 2.06 2.06 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 4.12 4.12 4.96 3.30 2.47 8.02 8.25 6.58 20.56 14.81 7.50 3.00 3.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 6.00 5.00 4.00 7.00 5.00 8.00 8.00 4.0( I 10.00 3.00 48.00 48.00 16.00 12.00 Ashepoo Fertilizer Co., Charleston, S. C. — High Grade Ashepoo Dissolved Phosphate... 16.00 High Grade Ashepoo .\ci(l Phosphate 14.00 High Grade Ashepoo XXXX Acid PhospbatP. 14.00 High Grade Eutaw Acid Phosphate 14.00 Standard Ashepoo XXX Acid Phosphate 13.00 Standard Eutaw XXX Acid Phosphate 13.00 Standard Carolina Acid Phosphate 13.00 Standard Circle Bone 13.00 H. G. Ashepoo Bone and Potash 12.00 Standard Ashepoo Acid Phosphate and Potash. 12.00 Standard Eutaw Acid Phosphate and Potash. 12.00 Standard Eutaw XX Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Coomassie Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Ashepoo XX Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Ashepoo Potash and Acid Phosphate. 11.00 Standard Eutaw Potash Acid Phosphate 11.00 Standard Palmetto Potasb Acid Phosphate... 11.00 High Grade Ashepoo Watermelon Guano.... 10.00 H. G. Ashepoo Cantaloupe Guano 10.00 H. G. Ashepoo Fruit Fertilizer 10.00 H. G. Ashepoo Golden Fertilizer 10.00 H. G. Eutaw Superpotasb Acid Phosphate... 10.00 High Grade Ashepoo Superpotasb Acid Phos- phate 10.00 29 46 65 65 2.00 1.00 1.00 l.CO 1.00 1.00 5.00 10.00 6.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 i The Bulletin. 23 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Standard Ashepoo Potash Compound Standard Enoree Acid Phosphate and I'otash. Standard Ashepoo Wheat and Oats Specific. . ' Standard Ashepoo-Fertilizer Standard Eutaw Fertilizer Standard Ashepoo Harrow Brand Raw Bone Superpliosphate Standard Eutaw XXX Guano Standard Ashepoo Guano Standard Eutaw XX Guano Standard Ashepoo XX Guano High Grade Ashepoo Fruit Grower High Grade Ashepoo Perfection Guano High Grade Ashepoo Guano High Grade Ashepoo Cotton Fertilizer High Grade Ashepoo XX Ammouiated Super- phosphate H. G. Ashepoo Special C. S. M. Guano High Grade Eutaw Special Cotton-seed Meal Guano High Grade Eutaw X Golden Fertilizer High Grade Ashepoo Bird and Fish Guano.. High Grade Ashepoo Meal Mixture High Grade Ashepoo X Tobacco Fertilizer... High Grade Ashepoo Golden Tobacco Pro- ducer High Grade Carolina XXX Guano High Grade Ashepoo Ammoniated Superphos- phate High Grade Ashepoo Farmers' Special Standard Eutaw Circle Guano Standard Ashepoo Circle Guano Standard Coomassie Circle Fertilizer Standard Carolina Guano Standard P. D. Fertilizer Standard Ashepoo XXX Guano Standard Ashepoo XXX Meal Guano Standard Ashepoo Special Fertilizer Standard Bronwood Acid Phosphate High Grade Ashepoo Truck Guano High Grade Ashepoo Vegetable Guano High Grade Ashepoo Nitrogenous Top Dress- ing Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash German Kainit The Annonr Fertilizer Works, Atlanta, Chicago, and Wilmington — Bone Meal Total Armour's Raw Bone Meal Total 17 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 15 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Star Phosphate 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 12 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Sampson Corn Mixture Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 > < • ■ 3.00 10.00 • t > • 2.00 9.50 1.65 1.00 9.00 1.85 1.00 9.00 1.85 1.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.50 2.06 1.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.50 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.91 2.75 8.00 3.29 6.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 2.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 2.46 4.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 3.00 8.00 2.46 2.00 8.00 ' 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 ■ • . . 4.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 5.00 4.12 5.00 3.00 7.00 14.81 2.00 .... • • ■ ■ 45.00 • > > • • • . > 45.00 • • • ■ • • • • 12.00 24.00 22.00 17.00 16.00 15.00 14.00 13.00 12.00 11.00 2.47 70 5.00 24 The Bulletin. Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Fertilizer, No. 1044 10.00 Shield Fertilizer. No. 1044 10.00 Fertilizer, No. 1033 10.00 Fertilizer, No. 1025 10.00 Fertilizer, No. 1023 10.00 Ammouiated Dissolved Bone and Potash 10.00 "State Farm" 10.00 Phosphate and B. Potash 10.00 Phosphoric Acid and Potash 10.00 Superphosphate and Potash 10.00 M. H. White & Co.'s Special Corn Mixture. . . 10.00 Phosphate and Potash, No. 1 10.00 Armour's Tobacco Champion 9.00 African Cotton Grower 9.00 Johnson's Hish Grade 9.00 Armour's Bright Tobacco Grower 9.00 Bone and Dissolved Bone with Potash 9.00 Fertilizer, No. 913 9.00 Standard Cotton Grower 8.50 Bone, Blood and Potash 8.00 Van Lindley's Special 8.00 Fertilizer, No. 846 8.00 Fertilizer. No. 844 8.00 Special Trucker 8.00 Sunrise Fertilizer. No. 844 8.00 All Soluble 8.00 Truck and Berry Special 8.00 Underwood's Special 8.00 Shield Armour's 8-3-6 for Tobacco 8.00 Fertilizer, No. 836 8.00 Fertilizer. No. 834 8.00 Fertilizer. No. 833 8.00 Sunrise Fertilizer, No. 833 8.00 Johnson's Favorite 8.00 Underwood's Favorite 8.00 Cotton Special 8.00 Tobacco Special 8.00 Carolina Cotton Grower 8.00 Berry King 8.00 Sunrise Cotton Grower 8.00 Gold Medal for Tobacco 8.00 S-weet Potato Special 8.00 Champion 8.00 King Cotton ! 8.00 High Grade Potato 8.00 Fruit and Root Crop Special 8.00 Carolina Cotton Special 8.00 Sunrise Tobacco Grower 8.00 Sunrise Standard 8.00 Slaughter House for Tobacco 8.00 Armour's Slaughter House Fertilizer 8.00 General " 8.00 Fertilizer. No. 813 8.00 Phosphate and Potash, No. 2 8.00 Phosphate and Potash, No. 8 8.00 7 Per Cent Trucker 6.00 5 Per Cent Trucker 6.00 Manure Substitute 6.00 10 Per Cent Trucker 5.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 3.30 4.00 3.30 4.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 5.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 2.00 . . . . 7.00 . . . . 6.00 ■ • . . 5.00 4.00 . . . . 2.00 * • • • 2.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.05 5.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 3.00 .82 3.00 1.65 2.00 4.11 7.00 4.11 2.00 3.30 6.00 3.30 4.00 3.30 4.00 3.30. 4.00 2.88 4.00 2.47 10.00 2.47 10.00 2.47 6.00 2.47 6.00 2.47 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 2.00 2.05 4.00 2.05 3.00 2.05 3.00 2.05 3.00 2.05 2.50 2.05 2.00 1.65 10.00 1.65 5.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 .82 3.00 > • • • 5.00 4.00 5.76 5.00 4.11 7.00 3.30 4.00 8.24 3.00 The Bulletin. 25 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Top Dresser Armour's Top Dresser Special Formula for Tobacco. Harvey's Special 10 Per Cent Tankage Armour's Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Dried Blood Armour's Top Dresser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Kainit American Fertilizer Co., Norfolk, Va. — Bone Meal Total American High Grade Acid Phosphate High Grade Acid Phosphate Eagle Brand Acid Phosphate Double Extra Bone and Potash Acid Phosphate American Standard Cotton Grower American Formula for Wheat and Corn Double Dissolved Bone and Potash Dissolved Bone and Potash for Corn and Wheat Strawberry and Asparagus Guano Special Formula Guano for Yellow Leaf To- bacco American Bone Mixture Bone and Peruvian Guano Blood and Bone Compound Peruvian Mixture Peruvian Mixture Guano Especially Prepared for Sweet Potatoes N. C. and S. C. Cotton Grower American Eagle Guano J. G. Miller & Co.'s Yellow Leaf Fertilizer. . . American No. 1 Fertilizer Bob White Fertilizer for Tobacco A. L. Hanna's Special Formula Bone and Peruvian Guano Cotton Compound No. 2. Fertilizer Special Potash Mixture for Wheat. Ammoniated Guano for Irish Potatoes American American American 10 Per Cent American Standard 7 Per Cent Ammonia Guano. Special Potato Guano Kale, Spinach and Cabbage Guano.... American Irish Potato Grower Scrap Guano Substitute Manure American Standard Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Ground Fish Scrap American H. G. Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit American Fish Stable Manure Special Potato Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 5.00 8.24 2.00 4.00 6.18 2.50 4.00 3.30 5.00 4.00 3.30 4.00 2.00 8.24 . > . > .... 7.40 3.00 14.81 > ■ • • 13.16 7.83 4.00 50.00 50.00 12.00 ( 22.50 3.71 IG.OO .... .... 14.00 .... 13.00 . . . • 12.00 . • . . 5.00 12.00 . < . > .... 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 . • . • 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.88 5.00 9.00 2.88 5.00 9.00 .83 2.00 8.88 1.65 2.00 8.50 2.06 1.00 8.50 1.65 1.50 8.00 3.29 5.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 ... * 4.00 7.00 8.24 2..50 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 5.76 5.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 4.00 7.00 4.12 5.§0 7.00 3.29 4.00 7.00 2.47 4.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 4.00 8.24 14.83 8.24 4.00 • • . . 7.41 3.00 49.00 48.00 • • • • 12.00 26 'The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. American Agricultural Chemical Co., Baltimore and Netv York — A. A. C. Co.'s If) Per Cent Superphosphate . . . A. A. C. Co.'s Gaston Special A. A. C. Co.'s Crowd Cotton Food A. A. C. Co.'s Champion Cotton Fertilizer. . . . A. A. C. Co.'s Tip Top Special A. A. C. Co.'s Special Tobacco Fertilizer A. A. C. Co.'s White Oak Cotton Fertilizer... A. A. C. Co.'s H. G. C. S. M. Compound A. A. C. Co.'s Harvest Queen A. A. C. Co.'s Crawford's Special for Tobacco. A. A. C. Co.'s Excelsior Compound for Tobacco A. A. C. Co.'s Gold Wrapper Fertilizer A. A. C. Co.'s Eureka Cotton-seed Meal Com- pound A. A. C. Co."s liex Cotton Compound A. A. C. Co.'s Fish Guano A. A. C. Co.'s Purity Guano A. A. C. Co.'s Fidelity Grain Grower A. A. C. Co.'s Itoffal Crop Grower A. A. C. Co.'s Palmetto Alkaline Phosphate... A. A. C. Co.'s Blood, Bone and Fish Guano. . . A. A. C. Co.'s Fancy Wrapper Fertilizer A. A. C. Co.'s Baltimore Top Dresser A. A. C. Co.'s Bowker's High Grade Top Dresser A. A, C. Co.'s Nitrate of Soda A. A. C. Co.'s :\ruriate of Potash A. A. C. Co.'s H. G. Sulphate of Potash A. A. C. Co.'s Genuine German Kalnlt Bartholomew's Bright Leaf Bartholomew's Fish Guano Bartholomew's Blood. Bone and Fish Com... Bartholomew's Fancy Top Dresser Canton Chemical 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate. Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Star Guano Canton Chemical Champion Cotton Fertilizer. Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Soluble Phosphate and Pot- ash Canton Chemical Animal Bone Fertilizer.... Canton Chemical Victor Compound for Cotton. Canton Chemical Victor Compound for Cotton. Canton Chemical Colgate Standard Mixture. . Canton Chemical Challenge C. S. M. Com- pound Canton Chemical Bone Cotton Compound.... Canton Chemical Bone Tobacco Fertilizer. . . . Canton Chemical Honest Protector Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 16.00 10.50 2.47 2.00 10.00 3.29 2.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.47 7.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 3.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 ^8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 3.29 5.00 4.00 3.29 6.00 7.41 3.00 7.41 3.00 15.00 49.66 48.00 12.00 8.00 2.47 7.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 7.00 3.29 5.00 > ■ * ■ 7.41 3.00 16.00 > ■ • • • • . • 14.00 • ■ ■ • . > . . 13.00 .... 12.00 .... 5.00 32.00 3.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 2.00 3.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 .... 3.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 The Bulletin. 27 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Canton Chemical H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer... Canton Chemical Gladiator Cotton Fertilizer. Canton Chemical Superior High Grade Fer- tilizer Canton Chemical Baker's Tobacco Fertilizer. Canton Chemical CCC Special Compound Canton Chemical Bacher's Standard for To- bacco Canton Chemical Resurgone Soluble Guano.. Canton Chemical Baker's Fish Guano Canton Chemical Game Guano. . .'. Canton Three Sevens Special Potato Manure. Canton Chemical Excelsior Trucker Canton Truckers' Special 7 Per Cent Canton Royal Trucker Canton Truckers' Special 10 Per Cent Detrick's 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Detrick's XXtra Acid Phosphate Detrick's 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Detrick's H. G. Bone and Potash Detrick's H. G. Bone and Potash Detrick's White Star Fertilizer Detrick's Old Colony Comp. for Cotton Detrick's H. G. Bone and Potash Detrick's H. G. Bone and Potash Detrick's Bone and Potash Detrick's Superior Animal Bone Fertilizer . . . Detrick's Victory Crop Grower Detrick's Gold Basis Standard Detrick's Gold Basis C. S. M. Mixture Detrick's Kangaroo Komplete Kompound Detrick's Quick-Step Tobacco Fertilizer Detrick's Gold Eagle Cotton Comp Detrick's H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer Detrick's Victory Cotton Fertilizer Detrick's Special Tobacco Fertilizer Detrick's Vegetator Ammoniated Superphos- phate Detrick's Globe Complete Manure Detrick's Royal Crop Grower Detrick's Fish Mixture Detrick's Special Trucker Detrick's Advance Truck Guano Detrick's Climax Truckers' Compound Detrick's Truck Fertilizer Lazaretto 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Lazaretto 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Lazaretto 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto Triumph Cotton Fertilizer Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto H. G. Alkaline Bone Lazaretto Alkaline Bone Lazaretto Retriever Animal Bone Fertilizer. . Lazaretto O. K. Complete Manure Lazaretto Defiance Standard Manure Lazai'etto Top Notch C. S. M. .Compound Lazaretto Carolina Cotton Food Lazaretto Coronet Tobacco Fertilizer Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 6.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 5.0O 8.23 3.00 16.00 14.00 .... 13.00 .... 12.00 • • * > 5.00 12.00 .... 3.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 ■ • > • 4.00 10.00 .... ^ 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 0.00 1.85 4.00 0.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 16.00 • . • • 34.00 • ■ • • 13.00 ...» • • • * 12.00 • • • • 5.00 12.00 • • . . 3.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 • ■ • • 4.00 10.00 3.00 10.00 > • > ■ 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 28 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Lazaretto King of the Harvest Lazaretto Quality and Quantity Tobacco Fer- tilizer Lazaretto Special Tobacco and Potato Fer- tilizer Lazaretto New Rival Cotton Fertilizer Lazaretto Challenge Fertilizer Lazaretto Carolina Tobacco Fertilizer Lazaretto Climax Plant Food Lazaretto C. & G. Complete Manure Lazaretto Crop Grower Lazai-etto Peanut Grower Lazaretto Sure Crop Compound Lazaretto Early Trucker Lazaretto Truckers' Favorite Lazaretto Empire Trucker Lazaretto 10 Per Cent Guano Zell's IG Per Cent Acid Phosphate Zell's 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Zell's 13 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Zell's H. G. Bone and Potash Zell's H. G. Bone and Potash Zell's Big Giant Zell's H. G. Bone and Potash Zell's Bone and Potash Zell's Bone and Potash Zell's Royal High Grade Fertilizer Zell's Victoria Animal Bone Compound Zell's Empire Cotton Compound Zell's Boss Cotton S. M. ■Mixture Zell's Big Crop Standard Fertilizer Zell's Economizer Cotton Food Zell's Special Compound for Potatoes and Veg- etables Zell's Tobacco Fertilizer Zell's Cardinal Comp. for Cotton Zell's Bright Tobacco Grower Zell's Reliance High Grade Manure Zell's Popular Tobacco jNIanure Zell's "Square Deal" for Tobacco 2^irs Excelsior Cotton Fertilizer Zell's Special Compound for Tobacco Zell's Calvert Guano Zell's Fish Guano Zell's Truck Grower Zell's 7 Per Cent Potato and Vegetable Ma- nure Zell's Challenge Truckers' Manure Zell's 10 Per Cent Trucker Productive Cotton and Peanut Grower Dawson's Crop Grower Gold Dust Guano Reese's Pacific Guano for Tobacco Slingluff's British Mixture Triumph Soluble Holmes & Dawson's Dawson's Crop Maker. . . Reese's Pacific Guano, Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 • 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 G.OO 4.11 7.00 5.00 S.23 3.00 16.00 . . . > 14.00 • • • • 13.00 . . < ■ .... 12.00 5.00 12.00 • • • • 3.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 > • > • 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.06 2.00 0.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.90 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.29 4.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.00 8.00 1.65. 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 5.00 8.23 3.00 9.00 2.26 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 9.00 1.65 2.00 8.50 2.47 2..50 8.00 2.06 2.50 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 The Bulletin. 29 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. A. D. Adair & McCarty Bros., Atlanta, Ga. — Adair's High Grade Dissolved Bone, No. 16.. A. and M. 15-4 A. and M. 13-4 McCarty's Potasli Formula, No. 5 McCarty's J'otasb Formula, No. 4 McCarty's "Potash Formula Adair's Dissolved Bone David Harum Extra High Grade Blood Guano. Adair's H. G. Blood and Bone Guano Special Wheat Compound Special Corn Compound Special Vegetable Compound Special Potato Compound Special Cotton Compound Special Tomato Compound Adair's Soluble Pacific Guano McCarty's High Grade Cotton Grower McCarty's High Grade Corn Grower Old Time Fish Scrap Guano McCarty's Wheat Special McCarty's Corn Special McCarty's Cotton Special Adair's H. G. Potash Comp., No. 10 Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 8 H. G. Potash Compound, No. 8 H. G. Potash Compound. No. 6 Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower, No. (i Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 5 H. G. Potash Compound. No. 5 High Grade Potash Compound Adair's Wheat and Corn Grower Adair's Formula Dixie High Grade Soil Food Adair's Blood, Bone and Tankage Guano Special Corn Grower Special Wheat Grower Special Potato Grower Special Vegetable Grower Standard Corn Grower Planter's Soluble Fertilizer Adair's Ammoniated Dissolved Bone Golden Grain Compound Adair's Special Potash Mixture, No. fi Adair's Special Potash Mixture, No. 5 Adair's Special Potash Mixture Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Avail. Phos. Nitrogc m. Potash. Acid. 16.00 15.00 , , 4.00 13.00 , , 4.00 12.00 . . 5.00 12.00 , , 4.00 12.00 , , 2.00 12.00 , , > > • • 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 , , 10.00 10.00 , , 8.00 10.00 8.00 10.00 , , 6.00 10.00 , , 6.00 10.00 , , 5.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 1.6f ) 3.00 9.00 .8! I 2.00 8.00 1.6r ) 6.00 8.00 1.6.' ) 6.00 8.00 1.6r 5 6.00 8.00 l.Gl ) 6.00 8.00 1.6? 5 2.00 8.00 1.6? 5 2.00 8.00 1.6.- ) 2.00 8.00 .8i J 3.00 8.00 6.00 8.00 , , 5.00 8.00 , , 4.00 15.00 50.00 Asheville Packing Co., AsheviUe, N. C. — Asheville Packing Co.'s Pure Bone Meal, Total 18.00 Asheville Packing Co.'s H. G. Phosphoric Acid. 16.00 Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Phosphoric Acid 14.00 Asheville Packing Co.'s Extra H. G. Potash Mixture 13.00 Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Phosphoric Acid 12.00 2.30 4.00 30 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Asheville Packing Co.'s Celebrated Tankage, Total Asheville Packing Co.'s Extra H. G. Fertilizer. Asheville Packing Co.'s Blood and Bone Asheville Packing Co.'s Extra H. G. Cotton Special Asheville Packing Co.'s High Grade Biltmore Wheat Grower Asheville Packing Co.'s H. G. Wheat, Corn and Oat Special Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Bone and Potash Asheville Packing Co.'s Superior Potato and Wheat Fertilizer Asheville Packing Co.'s Special Potash INIix- ture Asheville Packing Co.'s XXX Wheat Grower. Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Potato Fer- tilizer Asheville Packing Co.'s H. G. Vegetable Spe- cial Asheville Packing Co.'s Corn and Vegetable Special Asheville Packing Co.'s Special Tobacco and Vegetable Fertilizer Asheville Packing Co.'s Fi'uit Special Asheville Packing Co.'s Potato Special Asheville Packing Co.'s Champion Potato Fer- tilizer Asheville Packing Co.'s Complete Fertilizer. . Asheville Packing Co.'s Standard Corn and Wheat Asheville Packing Co.'s Special Bone and Potash Asheville Packing Co.'s H. G. Muriate of Pot- ash Bauf/h d- Sons Co.. Phila., Pa., and ?\^orfoUc, Va. — Bangh's Raw Bone Meal, Warranted Pure, Total Baugh's Ifi Per Cent Acid Phosphate Bangh's Pure Bone and Muriate of Potash Mixture Total Baugh's High Grade Acid Phosphate Baugh's Pure Dissolved Animal Bones Baugh's 12 and 5 Phosphate and Potash Baugh's High Grade Cotton and Truck Guano. Baugh's 10 and 8 Phosphate and Potash Baugh's High Grade Potash Mixture Baugh's Soluble Alkaline Siiperphosphate. . . . Baugh's H. G. Potato Grower Baugh's Fish, Bone and Potash Baugh's Fruit and Berry Guano Baugh's Special Tobacco Guano Baugh's Grand Rapids High Grade Guano... Baugh's Sweet Potato Guano for Sweet Po- tatoes, Peas and Melons Baugh's High Grade Tobacco Guano Baugh's Complete Animal Base Fertilizer. . . . Avail. Phios. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. 10.00 10.00 10.00 4.12 3.30 2.47 4.66 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 3.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 .... 6.00 10.00 10.00 .... 4.00 2.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 4.12 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 2.47 1.65 1.65 3.00 6.00 6.00 8.00 8.00 1.65 1.65 4.00 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 4.00 50.00 21.50 3.70 .... 16.00 .... 15.00 2.47 5.00 14.00 .... .... 13.00 2.06 .... 12.00 . > ■ • 5.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 . • * . 8.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 8.00 3.30 10.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 5.00 The Bulletin. 31 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Baugb's Fish Mixture Baugh's Animal Base and Potasli Compound for All Crops Baugh's Wheat Fertilizer for Wheat and Grass Baugh's Southern States Excelsior Guano... Glover's Special Potato Guano Baugh's Southern States Guano for Bright Tobacco Baugh's Potato and Truck Special Baugh's Strawberty Mixture Baugh's Fine Ground Fish Gilliam's Special Potato Guano Baugh's 7 Per Cent Potato Guano Baugh's Peruvian Guano Substitute for Pota- toes and All Vegetables Baugh's Farmers' Friend Guano Baugh's New Process 10 Per Cent Guano .... Baugh's Special Potato Manure Baugh's Wrapper Leaf Brand for Seed Leaf Tobacco Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Fine Ground Blood Baugh's Soluble Top Dresser for All Crops. . . Baugh's Fine Ground Tankage Muriate of Potash High Grade Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit 8. T. Beveridge & Co., Richmond, Va. — Beveridge's Raw Ground Bone Meal Beveridge's Thomas or Basic Slag Total Beta Fertilizer Company, Beta, N. C. — Beta Grass and Grain Beta Potato and Truck Beta Potato Grower Beta Cotton Grower Beta Corn Grower E. W. Brawtey, Mooresville, N. C. — Rock Phosphate Total Rock and Potash Total 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Red Leo Nitrate of Soda Dried Blood Muriate of Potash German Kainit J. A. Benton, Rvffln, N. C— Benton's North Carolina Bright Fertilizer. . . Baltimore Fertilizer Co.. Baltimore, Md. — Honest Acid Phosphate Honest Acid Phosphate Avai I. Phos Nitrogen. Potash. Acid 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.00 3.00 7.00 3.30 8.00 7.00 2.88 7.00 7.00 2.88 7.00 7.00 2.47 5.00 6.87 8.23 6.00 5.76 6.00 6.00 5.76 5.00 6.00 4.12 7.00 6.00 4.12 5.00 5.00 8.23 2.50 5.00 1.65 10.00 8.50 3.30 5.00 . . . 20.57 .... 14.81 .... 13.00 • • ■ • 8.23 3.00 7.40 48.66 48.00 12.00 20.0( ) 3.70 16.0C ) .... lO.OC 2.00 S.OC » 3..30 7.00 8.0C ) 3.30 2.00 8.0C > 2.50 3.00 8.0C > 1.65 2.00 28.0C 1 20.0C ► .... 3.00 16.00 .... lO.OC > 2.47 1.50 s.on 2.47 15.88 13.17 3.00 48.6o 12.00 9.00 16.00 14.00 1.6.^ 2.00 32 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Honest Bone and Potash Honest Sweet Potato Grower Honest Cotton Grower Mayo's 8-214-3 Honest Ammoniated Bone Mayo's 7-7-7 Mayo's 7-5-5 Honest Dixie Trucker Honest Trucker Bertie Cotion Oil Co., Aulander, N. C. — Bertie's High Grade Guano Bertie's Meal Mixture Bertie's Tobacco Grower Bertie's Ideal Cotton Grower Bertie's Special Compound Bertie's Corn Mixture Peanut Grower Bertie's Peanut Special Tar Heel Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Kainit Boicker Fertilizer Co., Baltimore, Md., and Boston, Mass. — IG Per Cent Dissolved Bone Phosphate Bowker's Soluble Phosphate Golden Harvest Fertilizer Bowker's H. G. Special Imperial Alkaline Phosphate Superphosphate with Potash for Grain and Grass Animal Bone Fertilizer Bowker's Ammoniated Bone Sure Crop Phosphate Bowker's Blood, Bone and Fish Bowker's H. G. Fertilizer Bowker's Red Oak Tobacco Fertilizer Bowker's White Star Compound Tobacco Fertilizer Eureka Cotton Compound Bowker's Fish Guano Empire Standard Corn and Grain Grower Baker's Bone and Potash Three Sevens Truck Fertilizer Bowker's Southern Special Compound Fancy Truck Bowker's Potato Special Bowker's Top Dresser Bowker's Tobacco Special H. G. Top Dresser Blackstone Gnano Co.. Inc.. Blackstone, Va. — Blackstone Raw Bone Total Clover Leaf 16 Per Cent Phosphate Bone and Phosphate Half and Half Avail. Phos. . Acid. 10.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 G.OO 6.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 2.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.40 2.40 2.00 l.GO 5.G0 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.13 3.30 2.47 2.47 1.65 2.47 1.65 .82 8.25 15.00 2.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 7.00 5.00 7.00 5.00 5.00 4.00 5.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 5.00 4.00 5.00 52.66 50.00 12.00 16.00 * • . . 14.00 • < • • < > > • 12.00 5.00 10.00 3.29 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 7.00 8.00 2.47 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 4.00 8.00 4.00 7.00 5.76 7.00 7.00 3.29 5.00 6.00 4.11 7.00 6.00 4.11 5.00 4.00 6.15 2.50 4.00 3.29 6.00 .... 7.41 3.00 18.00 4.11 16.00 ■ • • • • > ■ • 15.00 1.65 . • • • i The Bulletin. 33 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. B. G. Co. Acid Phosphate Clover Leaf Grain Fertilizer Dissolved Bone B. G. Co., Inc., Bone and Potash B. G. Co. Bone and Potash Blackstone Special for Tobacco Old Bellefonte Clover Leaf for Tobacco Tobacco Special Wrapper Brand Jim Crow for Tobacco Bellefonte Hard Cash for Tobacco Carolina Special for Tobacco Standard Guano Red Letter for Tobacco Alliance for Tobacco Leader for Tobacco Peanut Special Material for Special Order C. J. Burton Guano Co., Baltimore, Md. — Acid Phosphate 14.00 Burton's Alkaline 10.00 Burton's Potash Mixture 10.00 High Grade Tobacco 8.00 Burton's Best •. 8.00 Tobacco Queen ' 8.00 Burton's High Grade 8.00 Burton's Butcher Bone 8.00 Bradley Fertiliser Co., Charleston, S. C. — High Grade Bradley's Dissolved Phosphate.. 16.00 High Grade Bradley's Acid Phosphate 14.00 Standard Bradley's XXX Acid Phosphate... 13.00 Standard Bradley's Acid Phosphate 12.00 Standard Bradley's Palmetto Acid Phosphate. 12.00 H. G. Bradley's Selected Guano 10.00 High Grade Bradley's Potash Acid Phosphate. 10.00 Standard Bradley's Wheat Grower 10.00 Standard Bradley's Bone and Potash •. . 10.00 Standard Bradley's Ammoniated Dissolved Bone 9-00 Standard Bradley's Patent Superphosphate.. 9.00 Standard B. D. Sea Fowr Guano 9.00 Standard Eagle Ammoniated Bone Superphos- phate 9.00 High Grade Bradley's Circle Guano 8.00 High Grade Bradley's Guano 8.00 Standard Bradley's Cereal Guano...: 8.00 Standard Bradley's X Guano 8.00 Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash • • • • German Kainit TJie Bryant Fertilizer Co., Alexandria, Va. — Bryant's Bone Meal Total 22.50 Bryant's Acid Phosphate 17.00 3 Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 14.00 .... .... 13.00 1.03 1.00 10.00 1.03 1.00 10.00 . • > ■ 4.00 10.00 ■ > > • 2.00 9.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 3.30 2.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.03 4.95 6.00 ' 4.00 ■ « > • 2.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.06 3.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 4.00 • ■ • • 4.00 2.00 .... 2.00 1.85 1.00 1.85 1.00 1.85 1.00 1.85 1.00 3.29 4.00 2.46 3.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 14.81 • • • • .... 45.00 .... 12.00 3.71 34 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Bryant's Acid Phosphate Bryant's S. C. Dissolved Bone Bryant's H. G. Wheat Mixture Parrish-Godwin's Dissolved Bone with Potash. Bryant's Bone and Potash Bryant's Bone and Potash Mixture Bryant's "Challenge" Highest Grade Tobacco Mixture Bryant's Special Cotton-seed Meal Fertilizer. Bryant's Bone Mixture for Tobacco Farmers' Mixture H. G. Tobacco Fertilizer H. G. Meal Fertilizer H. G. Guano C. S. M. Guano H. G. Fertilizer Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's 'Victor" Special Cotton Special Tobacco Fertilizer Bryant's Choice C. S. M. 3 Per Cent Mixture. Bryant's Tobacco Fertilizer "Otter" Special Tobacco Fertilizer. . Cotton and Corn Fertilizer Fertilizer for Tobacco Grower Fertilizer Cotton-seed Meal Guano "Potomac" Bone Special for Tobacco. Bryant's Special Formula for Grain and Grass Bryant's Wheat Mixture Truck Grower Fish Scrap Guano Carolina Top Dresser High Grade Top Dresser Top Dresser Special Top Dresser Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant',s Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Bryant's Nitrate of Soda. Blood Fish Scrap Bryant's Carolina Special Top Drebser. Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Bryant's German Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. 16.00 14.00 12.00 12.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 9.00 9.00 8.75 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 S.OO 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 S.OO 8.00 8.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 G.OO 4.00 4.00 2.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 6.00 4.00 4.00 2.00 2.47 2.26 2.06 1.85 3.29 3.29 3.29 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.00 2.06 2.06 2.00 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 .82 5.76 3.29 5.76 8.23 6.17 5.76 14.82 13.15 8.24 7.41 3.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.O0 2.00 4.00 4.00 7.00 4.00 5.00 4.00 2.50 2.50 3.00 48.00 48.00 12.00 The Berkley Chemical Co., Norfolk, Va. — Pure Ground Bone Total 20.00 Resolute Acid Phosphate 16.00 Berkley Acid Phosphate 14.00 Berkley 12-5 Bone and Potash 12.00 Berkley Bone and Potash Mixture 11.00 Berkley Plant Food ' 10.00 Laurel Potash Mixture 10.00 ]\Ionitor Animal Bone Fertilizer 9.00 Select Crop Grower 8.50 Victory Special Crop Grower S.OO Berkley Tobacco Guano S.OO Advance Crop Grower S.OO Brandon Superphosphate 8.00 Long Leaf Tobacco Grower S.OO Berkley Peanut and Grain Grower S.OO Superior Bone and Potash 8.00 1.85 2.06 3.29 2.47 2.47 1.65 1.65 1.00 5.00 2.00 4.00 2.00 4.00 2..50 4.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 4.00 The Bulletin. 35 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Jsame of Brand. Mascot Truck Guano Royal Truck Grower The Leader of the World. Berkley Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Dry Ground Fish Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kaiuit.. Bragmv Fertilizer Co., Washington, N. C. — IP) Per Cent Acid Palmetto Acid Phosphate Long Acre Bone Phosphate Farmers' Union Meal Mixture Beaufort County Guano Havana Tobacco Guano Tuckahoe Tobacco Guano Old Reliable Premium Guano Tar Heel Guano Pamlico Trucker 7-5-5 Truck Guano Riverview Potato Grower Chocowinity Special Tobacco Guano... Sunrise Tobacco Guano Genuine German Ivainit Conestee Chemical Co., Wilmington, N. C. — IG Per Cent Acid Phosphate Conestee High Gi'ade Acid Phosphate Conestee Acid Phosphate Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Bone and Potash Conestee Cotton Grower Conestee Special Fertilizer for Cotton Conestee Melon Grower Conestee O. K. Fertilizer for Tobacco Conestee P. D. Q. Fertilizer Conestee "O. K." Fertilizer Conestee P. D. Q. Fertilizer for Tobacco... Conestee Plumb Good Fertilizer Conestee Crop Grower for Tobacco Conestee Fish Scrap Guano for Tobacco. . . . Conestee 8-.3-3 C. S. M. Guano Conestee 8-3-.3 C. S. M. Guano for Tobacco. Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 7.00 4.11 5.00 6.00 5.' ro 5.00 5.00 3.29 5.00 4.00 8.23 2.00 15.00 • • • • 8.23 .... , 50.00 ■ 49.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 , * • . • . 14.00 , • . ■ > • 9.00 2.26 2.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 5.' 16 5.00 5.00 3.29 6.00 4.00 2.47 5.00 .... • 12.00 16.00 14.00 > • • . • 13.00 12.00 G.OO 12.00 5.00 12.00 . - 4.00 12.00 3.00 12.00. 2.00 11.00 6.00 11.00 5.00 11.00 4.00 11.00 3.00 11.00 2.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 5.00 10.00 4.00 10.00 3.00 10.00 2.00 9.00 2.1 n 2.00 8.00 4.: 12 7.00 8.00 4.] L2 7.00 8.00 3.i 50 4.00 8.00 3.' 50 4.00 8.00 3.[ 50 4.00 8.00 3..- 50 4.00 8.00 2.^ t7 4.00 S.OO 2.- 17 4.00 8.00 2.^ 17 3.00 8.00 2.^ 17 3.00 8.00 2.^ 17 3.00 36 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Cotton-seed Meal Cotton-seed Meal Fish Scrap Guano Special Fertilizer Special Tobacco Fertilizer . . . Fertilizer for Tobacco Fertilizer Crop Grower Tobacco Grower Complete Fertilizer Special Grain Fertilizer Standard Guano for Tobacco. Standard Guano Guano for Tobacco . . Guano and Potash. . and Potash. . and Potash . . Crop Guano. Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Conestee Dried !< Conestee Special Top Dresser Sulphate of Ammonia Nitrate of Soda Conestee Top Dresser Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash H. G. German Kainit 10 Per Cent. Genuine German Kainit Bone Bone Bone Root Standard Truck Guano. High Grade Guano Truck Grower Corn Guano ish Scrap Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 . 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.47 2.50 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 ■ • • • 6.00 8.00 > • < • 5.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 6.00 4.95 8.00 6.00 3.30 8.00 6.00 2.47 3.00 4.50 8.02 .... 4.00 8.25 20.56 4.00 • • ■ 14.81 > • • > • > • 7.40 3.00 48.00 48.00 16.00 12.00 Colnmhia Guano Co.. Norfolk, Ya. — Raw Bone Meal Total Columbia High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid Phos- phate Columbia 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Columbia Dissolved Bone Columbia Acid Phosphate Columbia 11 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. Columbia 10i/4 and li-^ Bone and Potash Mix- ture Columbia 10 and 5 Bone and Potash Mixture. Columbia 10 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. Columbia Bone and Potash for Grain Columbia Bone and Potash Mixture Tobacco Special Columbia C. S. M. Special Parrish's Special Roanoke Ammoniated Guano Carolina Soluble Guano Columbia Grain Guano Pelican Ammoniated Guano Columbia Special Truck Guano Trojan Tobacco Guano Columbia Special 4-8-3 Olympia Cotton Guano Hyco Tobacco Guano Our Best Meal Guano Cozart's Tobacco Special 21.50 3.71 16.00 > ■ • • • • • • 14.00 .... .... 13.00 . . . . 12.00 11.00 .... 10.50 1.50 10.00 ■ . . > 5.00 10.00 ■ > . • 4.00 10.00 > * • • 3.00 10.00 .... 2.00 9.00 2.47 7.00 9.00 2.27 2.00 9.00 2.06 5.00 9.00 1.65 3.00 9.00 1.65 1.00 9.00 .82 3.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 3..30 4.00 8.00 3.30 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.29 6.00 The Bulletin. 37 -Nanif; and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Royal Tobacco Fertilizer Columbia Special Tobacco Guano Columbia Guauo Soluble for Tobacco Columbia Special Wheat Fertilizer Columbia Soluble Guano r. . Spinola Peanut Grower Columbia 8 and 4 Bone and Potash Mixture. . Columbia Special 7 Per Cent Truck Guauo . . . Columbia Potato Guano Crown Brand Peanut Guano Columbia Side Dresser Columbia Special Top Dresser Nitrate of Soda Columbia Top Dresser Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.02 4.00 8.00 ■ < • > 4.00 7.00 5.77 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 • ■ ■ < 5.00 4.00 8.22 4.00 4.00 6.18 15.22 2.50 .... 7.42 3.00 48.00 48.00 12.00 Cumberland Bone and Phosphate Co., Portland, Ale., and Charleston, 8. C. — Standard Cumberland Bone and Superphos- phate of Lime The Coe-Morthner Co., Charleston, S. C— Gen. Key — Tree Brand Thomas Phosphate. Total Gen. Key — Tree Brand Thomas Phosphate, Total High Grade Tankage Importetl Ground Fish High Grade Tankage Imported Fish Guano Imported Fish Guano Total Imported Fish Guano Standard Country Club, Golf and Lawn Ferti- lizer Brand A for Planting Greens Nitrate of Soda H. G. Dried Blood H. G. Dried Blood Nitrate of Potash Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Muriate Mixture Genuine German Kainit Cooper Criiano Co., Wilmington, N. C— Cooper's 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Cooper's 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Cooper's Grain Producer Cooper's Grain Grower Cooper's Recorder Cooper's Kite Cooper's Helmar Cooper's Horto Cooper's Chadbourn Trucker Cooper's Lenox Cooper's Sunset C. S. M Cooper's Clifford Cooper's Swamp Fox 9.00 18.00 1.85 1.00 17.50 6.80 9.68 6.80 8.24 6.80 7.62 5.00 10.91 4.48 5.78 4.40 5.88 2.00 5.75 3.00 . . . 14.83 • • . < 14.00 . . . 13.59 .... 12..36 44.00 49.00 49.00 20.00 . . . ■ ■ > > 12.0 16.00 > • ■ • . . . . 14.00 > > > ■ 10.00 .... 4.00 10.00 • • • > 2.00 8.85 1.65 2.00 8.00 4.11 7.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 S.OO 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 2.50 38 The Bulletin. Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Cooper's Bunker Hill 8.00 Cooper's Crusoe 8.00 Cooper's Potato 8.00 Cooper's Bald Head Island 8.00 Cooper's Reward 8.00 Cooper's Waccamaw 8.00 Cooper's Sterling Complete 8.00 Cooper's Peanut Bouncer 8.00 Cooper's Finis 7.00 Nitrate of Soda Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash .... Kainit .... Craven Chemical Co., Neio Bern, N. C. — Panama IG Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Jewel Acid Phosphate 14.00 Trent Bone and Potash 10.00 Halifax Guano 9.00 Prolix 9-2-;j Special Guano 9.00 Hanover Standard Guano 8.00 Currituciv SAveet Potato Guano 8.00 Craven Chemical Company's Standard Tobacco Guano 8.00 Duplin Tobacco Guano 8.00 Gaston High Grade Fertilizer 8.00 C. E. Foy High Grade Guano 8.00 Marvel Great Crop Grower 8.00 Elite Cotton Guano -. 8.00 Pantego Potato Guano 7.00 Xeuse Truck Grower 6.00 Craven Chemical Co.'s Truck Guano, 5-10-214. 5.00 Craven Chemical Company's Top Dresser A.. 4.00 Craven Chemical Company's Top Dresser B . . 4.00 Genuine German Kainit .... Craven Chemical Company's Top Dresser C . . .... William H. Camp, PetersMrg, Ya. — Bone Meal Total 22.50 Camp's Acid Phosphate 16.00 Camp's Acid Phosphate 14.00 Camp's Shepherd Brand Bone and Potash... 10.00 Camp's Bone and Potash 10.00 Camp's Lion and Monkey for Tobacco 8.00 Camp's Red Head Chemicals 8.00 Camp's Lion and Monkey 8.00 Cat and Rat Peanut Grower 8.00 Victory Corn Grower 8.00 Camp's Shepherd Brand Bone and Potash. . . . 8.00 Camp's Green Head Chemicals 7.00 Camp's Above All 6.00 Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash .... German Kainit .... Clayton Oil Mill, Clayton, N. C— C. O. M. 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 C. O. M. High Grade Bone and Potash 12.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.06 2.06 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 1.65 .82 4.11 14.85 5.80 3.00 2.00 10.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 4.00 5.00 50.00 48.00 12.00 • • • • 2.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 3.00 3.29 4.00 2.47 6.00 2.47 6.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 3.00 2.06 3.00 1.65 2.00 4.12 7.00 4.94 6.00 8.24 2.50 8.24 4.00 6.18 2.50 . . . . 12.00 7.41 3.00 .... 4.00 • • • ■ 2.00 2.46 3.00 2.25 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.00 4.00 1.00 2.00 • • • • 5.00 6.15 10.00 5.75 5.00 14.75 • • > ■ • • • • 48.00 • • ■ • 12.00 r 5.00 The Bulletin". 39 Name and Address of Mamifacturer and Name of Brand. C. O. M. Bone and Potash C. O. M. Wheat Compound Austin's Special Way Side Special C. W. H. Special Clayton Guano Clayton Special Tobacco Grower Planters' Favorite Cotton Queen Summer Queen C. O. M. Top Dresser H. and W. D. Climax Top Dresser Perfection Top Dresser C. O. M. German Kainit Catawba Fertiliser Company, Lancaster, 8. C. — Catawba High Grade Acid Phosphate Catawba High Grade Acid Phosphate Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Special Catawba Farmers' King Catawba Climax Catawba Preference Catawba Grain King Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Gold Medal Catawba Farmers' Special Catawba Farmers' Union Catawba Farmers' Union Catawba Economizer •. . . Catawba Dixie Catawba Economizer Catawba Old Hicli;ory Catawba Reliable Catawba Electric Catawba Reliable Catawba Farmers' Choice Catawba Red Rose Catawba Peerless Catawba Red Star Catawba Champion Catawba Standard Catawba Standard Formula Catawba Eclipse Catawba Acid and Potash Catawba Cotton Producer Catawba Superior Catawba Excelsior Catawba Top Dresser Coicell, Swan <& McCotter Co., Baijboro, N. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Bone Phosphate Standard Cotton Grower Champion Guano Cowell's Great Tobacco Grower Special Tobacco Guano Special Cotton Guano Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 10.00 • • • • 5.00 10.00 2.05 4.50 9.00 2.47 3.00 9.00 1.65 4.00 8.00 4.10 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 3.00 6.56 2.00 • ■ • • 12.70 ■ < > • > * . . 9.85 4.00 12.00 16.00 14.00 • • • • • ■ . . 12.00 . • . • 5.00 12.00 4.00 10.00 3.29 4.00 10.00 1.65 5.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 4.00 10.00 • • ■ ■ 4.00 9.00 2.47 7.00 9.00 2.47 2.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 9.00 1.85 4.00 8.8.5 1.65 2.00 8.85 1.65 2.00 8.85 1.65 2.00 8.00 3.29 6.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 5.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.05 3.00 8.00 2.05 2.00 8.00 2.05 1.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 • • • • 4.00 6.00 4.93 5.00 4.00 5.75 7.00 4.00 5.75 4.00 4.00 6.16 2.50 16.00 14.00 8.00 3.30 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2 47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 40 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Quick Grower Guano Rust Proof Cotton Guano Crop Guano Gi-eat Cabbage and Potato Guano Oriental Trucker Aurora Trucker High Grade Truck Guano Potato Favorite Guano Cabbage Guano German Kainit Carolina Union Fertilizer Co., Nwfolk, Va. — Tbonias Phosphate Total Carolina Union 16 Per Cent Carolina Union 14 Per Cent Carolina T'uion 13 Per Cent Carolina Union 12 Per Cent Carolina T^uion 10-5 Carolina Union 10-4 Carolina Union 10-2. ; Carolina I^nion 8-7-5 Carolina Union 8-4-4 Carolina ITnion 8-3-3 Carolina I^nion 8-2i/,-3 Carolina Union 8-2.-5-2 Carolina Union 8-2-2 Carolina T'nion 8-2-3 Carolina Union 8-4 Carolina Union 7-4-5 Nitrate of Soda Blowl Fish Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potash. Acid. 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 1.65 3.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 7.00 5.77 7.00 7.00 4.12 8.00 7.00 4.12 7.00 7.00 4.12 5.00 7.00 3.30 7.00 5.00 8.25 2.50 .... .... 12.00 16.00 16.00 14.00 .... 13.00 • • • • 12.00 .... 10.00 • . • • 5.00 10.00 • • . ■ 4.00 10.00 .... 2.00 8.00 5.77 .5.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 3.00 8.00 2.06 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .65 3.00 8.00 .... 4.00 7.00 3.30 5.00 > > < > 14.85 • • . ■ .... 13.20 9.04 50.00 48.00 12.00 CMckamauga Fertiliser Works, Atlanta, Ga. — Chickamauga High Grade Dissolved Bone, No. 16 Chickamauga High Grade Dissolved Bone... Chickamauga 13-4 . . .,. Chickamauga Potash Special. No. 4 Chickamauga Potash Special Chickamauga Dissolved Bone Chickamauga Very Best Extra H. G. Guano.. Ben Hur H. G. Blood and Bone Guano Special Potato Compound Special Wheat Compound Special Vegetable Compound Special Corn Compound Chickamauga High Grade Fertilizer Chickamauga High Grade Plant Food Chickamauga Scrap Guano Chickamauga Wheat Special Chickamauga Corn Special Chickamauga Cotton Special Old Glory Mixture Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 8. Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower. No. 6. 16.00 .... 14.00 • * ■ • 13.00 4.00 12.00 4.00 12.00 2.00 12.00 .... 10.00 3.30 4.00 10.00 2.47 3.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 4.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 1.65 2.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 3.00 10.00 .82 1.00 10.00 .... 8.00 10.00 • • • • 6.00 The Bulletin. 41 Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower, No. 5. Chickamauga Wheat and Corn Grower Chickamauga Bone and Potash Chickamauga Blood, Bone and Tankage Guano Special Potato Grower Special Wheat Grower Special Vegetable Grower Special Corn Grower Chickamauga Complete Fertilizer Chickamauga Standard Corn Grower Chickamauga Standard Wheat Grower Georgia Home Guano No. 3 Bone, Tankage and Potash Mixture. . . . Chickamauga Alkaline Bone, No. 6 Chickamauga Alkaline Bone, No. 5 Chickamauga Alkaline Bone Nitrate of Soda .... Muriate of Potash .... Canton Fertilizer Co., Canton, Ga. — Dissolved Bone 16.00 Dissolved Bone 14.00 R. T. Jones Extra H. G 10.00 Elberta Special 10.00 North Georgia High Grade 10.00 Ten Two Four 10.00 Southern King High Grade 10.00 Fish High Grade 10.00 Orange High Grade 10.00 Jomco High Grade 10.00 Quickstep Wheat and Grain Grower 10.00 Special Potash Mixture 10.00 Eight Two Four 8.00 Fish Standard 8.00 Jomco Standard Grade 8.00 Dissolved Bone and Potash 8.00 Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash .... The Chesapeake Chemical Co., Baltimore, Mel. — C. C. Co.'s Dissolved Phosphate 14.00 C. C. Co.'s Reliable Phosphate 10.00 C. C. Co.'s Celebrated Mixture 10.00 C. C. Co.'s Rapid Trucker 8.00 C. C. Co.'s High Grade Guano 8.00 C. C. Co.'s Excelsior Fertilizer 8.00 C. C. Co.'s Fish Guano 8.00 C. C. Co.'s Ammoniated Phosphate 8.00 C. C. Co.'s National Crop Grower 8.00 C. C. Co.'s Keystone Phosphate 7.00 C. C. Co.'s Potato Compound 6.00 C. C. Co.'s Prolific Top Dresser C. C. Co.'s German Kainit .... Caraleifih Phosphate and Fertilizer WorKs, Raleigh, N. C. — Raw Bone Meal Total 25.00 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 16.00 Avail. Phos. Nitrogen. Potasli. Acid. 10.00 • ■ < • 5.00 10.00 • ■ • ■ 4.00 10.00 • • • • 2.00 9.00 .82 2.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 6.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 1.65 2.00 8.00 .82 3.00 8.00 • ■ ■ • 6.00 8.00 > • > ■ 5.00 8.00 .... 4.00 15.00 15.00 50.00 2.47 3.00 2.06 7.00 2.06 3.00 1.65 4.00 1,65 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 .82 3.00 • • • • 4.00 1.65 4.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 4.00 48.00 • . . . 4.00 . . . . 2.00 3.28 7.00 3.28 4.00 2.46 4.00 2.46 3.00 1.64 3.00 1.64 2.00 3.28 5.00 4.10 5.00 7.51 3.50 • . . ■ 12.00 3.70 42 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Climax Dissolved Bone Sterling Acid Phosphate Staple Acid Phosphate Home & Son's High Grade Bone and Potash. Special Bone and Potash Mixture Morris & Scarboro's Special Bone and Potash. Electric Boue and Potash Mixture Pacific Tobacco and Cotton Grower Khamkatte Special Tobacco Guano Special 8-4-4 Home's Best Eclipse Ammoniated Guano Planter's Pride Caraleigh Special Tobacco Guano Eli Ammoniated Fertilizer Crown Ammoniated Guano Comet Guano Buncombe Corn Grower Buncombe Wheat Grower Caraleigh Top Dresser Nitrate of Scnla Kanona Tankage Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kaiuit Central Phosphate Co., Mount Pleasant, Tenn. — Tennessee Phosphate Total Cheraio Fertilizer Company, Cheratc, S. C. — Cheraw Perfection Acid Phosphate Choraw High Grade Acid Phosphate Cheraw Standard Acid Phosphate Cheraw Perfection Cheraw Special . . Cheraw High Grade Cheraw Excelsior Cheraw Fish Mixture Cheraw Complete Farmers' Pride Cheraw Top Dressing Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash German Kainit Combahee Fertilizer Company, Charleston, 8. C. — Combahee Fertilizer Co. Dissolved Bone Combahee Fertilizer Co. Dissolved Bone Combahee Fertilizer Co. Dissolved Bone Combahee Fertilizer Co. Melon Combahee Fertilizer Co. Cantaloupe Combahee Fertilizer Co. K. M. S Combahee Fertilizer Co. H. G. Cotton Fer- tilizer Special Mixture Combahee Fertilizer Co. Cotton and Corn Com- pound Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Kainit Avail. Phos. Acid. 14.00 13.00 12.00 11.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 9.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 8.00 3.00 28.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 5.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 6.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 2.20 3.30 3.30 2.47 2.47 2.0B 2.00 1.G5 1.G5 .82 8.22 15.02 9.46 50.00 50.00 12.00 16.00 . . . • . . . • 14.00 ■ > ■ • ■ • ■ • 13.00 . . < > . . • • 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 3.29 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 7.00 3.29 3.00 7.00 2.47 4.00 6.00 2.47 2.50 3.00 7.41 3.00 .... 14.80 48.66 ■ • > ■ • • • • 12.00 16.00 . . . • • ■ • • 14.00 ■ • * ■ .... 13.00 > ■ > ■ • • . . 10.00 3..30 5.00 10.00 2.47 10.00 8.00 3.30 4.00 8.00 2.47 3.00 8.00 2.06 1.50 8.00 1.65 14.84 2.00 48.66 12.00 i The Bulletin. 43 Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Phos. Acid. Contentnea Guano Co., Wilson, N. C. — High Grade 16 Per Cent Acid 16.00 Contentnea 14 Per Cent Acid 14.00 Bartliolomew's Cotton Special 10.00 "Corn Club" Special 10.00 Bone and Potash Mixture, No. 3 10.00 Bone and Potash Mixture, No. 2 10.00 Bone and Potash Mixture, No. 1 10.00 Cotton Special , 9.00 Contentnea Cotton Formula 9.00 Bartholomew's Cotton Grower 9.00 S-4%-7 for Tobacco 8.00 8-4%-7 for Cotton 8.00 Climax High Grade 8.00 Howard & Williams' Cotton Special 8.00 Bartholomew's Tobacco Special 8.00 Cotton Special 8.00 High Grade Tobacco Grower 8.00 Government Formula, No. 1 8.00 Government Formula. No. 2 8.00 Victor Fertilizer for Tobacco 8.00 Farmers' Favorite Formula 8.00 Pick Leaf Tobacco Fertilizer 8.00 Top Notch Fertilizer 8.00 Matchless Cotton Grower 8.00 Contentnea Cotton Grower 8.00 Contentnea Tobacco Special 8.00 Brag Cotton Grower 8.00 Blood and Bone Cotton Compound 8.00 Bragg Corn Grower 8.00 Special Formula for Truck 7.00 Contentnea Corn Special 5.00 High Grade Top Dresser 4.00 Special Top Dresser 4.00 Contentnea Top Dresser 3.00 Nitrate of Soda Muriate of Potash Sulphate of Potash Manure Salts Manure Salts H. G. 16 Per Cent German Kainit German Kainit J. W. Carter, Maxton, N. C— Muriate of Potash .... Genuine German Kainit Orotcn Fertilizer Co., Baltimore, Md. — Crown 2-8-2 8.00 Crown 3-8-3 8.00 Crown 4-8-4 8.00 C. P. Bey, Beaufort, N. C— Ground Fish Scrap 7.00 Dixie Guano Co., Savannah, Ga. — Phosphoric Acid 16.00 Phosphoric Acid 14.00 Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash 11.00 Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash 10.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 2.47 .82 3.30 2.25 1.85 3.70 3.70 3..30 2.88 2.47 2.05 2.90 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.47 2.05 2.05 1.65 .82 4.06 1.65 8.25 6.60 8.25 14.82 1.65 2.47 3.29 8.23 7.00 5.00 5.00 4.00 2.00 5.00 2.00 5.00 7.00 7.00 4.00 5.00 7.00 5.00 5.00 10.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2..50 3.00 3.00 2.00 5.00 7.00 5.00 4.00 4.00 5.00 50.66 50.00 20.00 20.00 16.00 12.00 48.00 12.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 2.00 4.00 44 The Bulletin, Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Avail. Phos. Acid. Nitrogen. Potash. American Agricultural Chemical Co., Dixie Guano Branch, Spartanburg, S. C. — Dixie Acid Phosphate 16.00 Dixie Acid Phosphate 14.00 Dixie Bone and Potash 13.00 Dixie Fertilizer 10.00 Dixie Fertilizer 10.00 Dixie Blood, Bone and Potash Fertilizer 10.00 Dixie Cotton Grower Fertilizer 10.00 Dixie Bone and Potash 10.00 Dixie Blood and Bone Fertilizer 9.00 Dixie Fertil Izer 9.00 Dixie Fertilizer 8.90 Dixie Fertilizer S.OO Dixie Fertilizer 8.00 "" Dixie Corn Grower Fertilizer. 8.00 Dixie Special Corn Mixture Fertilizer 8.00 Dixie Fertilizer 8.00 Dixie Bone and Potash 8.00 Dixie Guano Co., Durham, N. C. — Dixie 10 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 10.00 Dixie 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14.00 Dixie Champion for Wheat and Corn 10.50 Jeff Davis Special 9.00 Dixie Star Ammoniated 9.00 Dixie Corn Fertilizer 9.00 Radium Brand Guano 8.00 Dixie Tobacco Fertilizer 8.00 Carolina Special Ammoniated 8.00 Sulky Plow Brand Guano 8.00 Battle's Blood and Bone Fertilizer 8.00 Niasiara Soluble Bone S.OO Dixie Cotton Fertilizer 8.00 Old Plantation Superphosphate 8.00 The Dunn Oil Mill Company, Dunn, N. C. — T'ncle Zeb 9.50 Bull of the Field 8.00 Dunn Hustler 8.00 Planters Special 8.00 Sampson Cotton Grower S.OO Dixie Guano Company, Inc.. Suffolk, Ta. — Dixie Acid Phosphate 16.00 Dixie Acid Phosphate 14.00 Dixie Goodluck Brand 12.00 Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash 11.00 Dixie Montlcello Brand 10.00 Dixie Alkaline Bone and Potash 10.00 Dixie's Best 8.00 Dixie Maximum Brand 8.00 Dixie 8-4-4 Guano 8.00 Dixie 8-2-5 Guano 8.00 Dixie High Grade 8.00 Dixie Standard Guano 8.00 Dixie Jumbo Peanut Grower 8.00 Dixie 10 Per Cent Top Dresser 5.00 Dixie 7 Per Cent 5.00 • * • > 6.00 3.30 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 2.00 1.65 3.00 > . . . 4.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 3.30 4.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 5.00 1.65 4.00 1.65 2.00 4.00 . . • > 1.50 2.26 2.00 1.65 1.00 .82 3.00 3.28 5.00 2.46 3.00 2.46 3.00 2.46 2.00 2.05 3.00 2.05 2.00 1.65 2.00 1.65 2.00 2.75 5.00 3.00 4.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 1.00 €.00 ■ • • * 2.00 1.00 2.00 . . . . 4.00 4.11 7.00 2.47 4.00 >3.29 4.00 1.65 5.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 2.00 1.00 4.00 8.23 3.00 5.66 4.00 i The Bulletin. 45 Avail. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. PI19S. ACIQ. American Agricultural Chemical Co., Eagle Fer- tilizer Branch, Spartanhurg, S. C. — Eagle Acid Phosphate IG.OO Eagle Acid Phosphate 14.00 Eagle Bone and Potash. 13.00 Eagle Fertilizer 10.00 Eagle Fertilizer 10.00 Eagle Fertilizer 10.00 Eagle Cotton Grower ^10.00 Eagle Bone and Potash 10.00 Eagle Blood and Bone Fertilizer 9.00 Eagle Fertilizer 9-00 Eagle Fertilizer 8.90 Eagle Fertilizer 8-00 Eagle Fertilizer 8.00 Eagle Corn Grower 8.00 Eagle Special Corn Mixture 8.00 Eagle Fertilizer 8.00 Eagi^ Bone and Potash 8.00 ■Etiwan Fertilizer Co., Charleston, S. C. — Etiwan 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 1€.00 Etiwan High Grade Acid Phosphate 14.00 Etiwan Di.ssolved Bone 13.00 Diamond Soluble Bone 13.00 Etiwan Acid Phosphate with Potash 11.00 Plow Brand Acid Phosphate wath Potash 11.00 Etiwan Potash Bone 10.00 Etiwan Soluble Bone with Potash 10.00 Diamond Soluble Bone with Potash 10.00 XX Acid Phosphate with Potash 10.00 Etiwan Blood and Bone Guano 9.00 Plow Brand Raw Bone Superphosphate , 9.00 Etiwan 9-2-3 Per Cent Ammoniated Fertilizer. 9.00 Plow Brand Ammoniated Dissolved Bone.... 9.00 Etiwan Superior Cotton Fertilizer 8.00 Etiwan Special Cotton Fertilizer 8.00 Plow Brand Special Tobacco Fertilizer 8.00 Etiwan Cotton Compound 8.00 Etiwan High Grade Cotton Fertilizer 8.00 Etiwan Ammoniated Fertilizer 8.00 Plow Brand Ammoniated Fertilizer 8.00 Etiwan Special Potash Mixture 8.00 Nitrate of Soda .... Muriate of Potash .... Genuine German Kainit .... Elmore Gin and Fertiliser Co., Elmore, N. C. — Elmore Cantaloupe Special *s.00 Elmore Standard Cotton Fertilizer 8.00 Elmore 8-4-4 8.00 Elmore Standard Brand 8.00 Elmore X Fertilizer 6.50 Eastern Cotton Oil Co., Hertford, N. C. — Acid Phosphate 16.00 Acid Phosphate 14.00 "Ten-One-Four for Peanuts" 10.00 Nitrogen. Potash. 6.00 3.30 4.00 2.47 3.00 2.47 2.00 1.65 3.00 . . . . 4.00 1.65 3.00 1.65 . 2.00 1.65 . 2.00 3.3C » 4.00 2.47 3.00 1.65 5.00 1.65 i 4.00 1.65 2.00 4.00 . . . 1.66 1.00 4.00 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.0( J 1.00 2.0( 1.00 1.6: 5 3.00 1.6.' 5 2.00 3..S( ) 6.00 3.30 4.00 3.3( 3 4.00 2.4' r 3.00 2.4' r 2.00 1.6! 5 2.00 1.6. 5 2.00 • • • 4.00 14.8. 2 48.00 12.00 .3.2 9 7.00 2.4 7 3.00 3.2 9 4.00 3.2 9 4.00 2.4 7 2.50 4.00 46 The Bulletin. Name and Address of Manufacturer and Name of Brand. Bone Potash Currituck Special for Yellow Sweets Mat White Special Farmers Sensatiou for Tobacco It-grows Currituck Yellows Rain-proof Cotton Grower Magic Economy Fish and Blood Mixture Perquimans Favorite Early Bird Hertford Truck Grower. Tankage and Fish Substitute, Peruvian Guano for Truck Nun-Such Potato Grower Nitrate of Soda Dried Fish Fish Scrap Sulphate of Potash Muriate of Potash Genuine German Kainit Elba Manufacturing Co.. Maxton. N. C. — 16 Per Cent Acid Phosphate 14 Per Cent Acid Phosphate Elba Melon Grower Elba Superior Fertilizer Elba High Grade Fertilizer Elba Sunrise Fertilizer Elba Eclipse John's Cotton Grower Elba Gold Seal Fertilizer Elba Champion Elba Uncle Tom Elba Standard Elba Hornets' Nest Muriate of Potash Kainit The Eureka Fertilizer Co., Perryville, Md. — High Grade Trucker Potato and Vegetable White Potato Special American Agricultural Chemical Co., Farmers Fer- tilizer Works, Si)artanl)urg, S. C. — Red Rooster Acid Phosphate Red Rooster Acid Phosphate Red Rooster Bone and Potash Red Rooster Fertilizer Red Rooster Fertilize