. The Southern planter. t sny other grain if they can get have more life and energy than theyever had and loolc sleek and glossy. I have used it and am (till using it at myfarm, for mv milk will say wlth-hesitatlcn that It beats anything I eversaw for producing milk. Yours very truly,SODTH SiDK Wood Yard, C. £. CLAY Manager. COUPON FOR SAMPLE. You may send me 20 lbs. MuellersMolasses Grains Free—delivered to my depot. S. T. BEVERIDGE& CO., GRAIN, HAY AND SEED DEALERS. 1217 E. CARY ST. DISTRIBUTORS, RICHHOND, VA. Fancy Berkshire Pigs ^ ^^ from dirfctly imported sows and boars


. The Southern planter. t sny other grain if they can get have more life and energy than theyever had and loolc sleek and glossy. I have used it and am (till using it at myfarm, for mv milk will say wlth-hesitatlcn that It beats anything I eversaw for producing milk. Yours very truly,SODTH SiDK Wood Yard, C. £. CLAY Manager. COUPON FOR SAMPLE. You may send me 20 lbs. MuellersMolasses Grains Free—delivered to my depot. S. T. BEVERIDGE& CO., GRAIN, HAY AND SEED DEALERS. 1217 E. CARY ST. DISTRIBUTORS, RICHHOND, VA. Fancy Berkshire Pigs ^ ^^ from dirfctly imported sows and boars,practically imported blood (or yon atone-third usual price for such breeoicg;half imported and half American breed-ing at pocket-change prices—jubt a littlemoney order - no bank account neededfor these extra fine open and bred gilts PEKIN DUCKS and EGGS for sale. S. C. Brown Leghorn Sir John Bull. eggs cheap. Barred Plymouth Rock eggs cheap. Absolutely pure-all of them, jhomas S. White, ?urVFfr, Lexington, 266 THE SOUTHERN PLANTER [March. staves, shingles, paper pulp, railroadties, and mine props, yearly, 30,628, cubic feet. The forests fromwhich this supply must be drawn arerapidly decreasing. Mr. Gifford Pinchot. chief of the for-est bureau of the United States, says:At the present rate of cutting, theforest land of the United States cannotmeet the enormous demand made up-on it By far the greater part of thepine has been cut, and vast inroadshave been made into the supply ofother valuable timbers. The bureaustatistics place the amount of timberbeing cut at the rate of cubic feet a j-ear, and says thatif the same average is continued thesupply will not last more than sixtyyears. It requires over 23 billion cubic feetof wood to supply the people of theUnited States with fuel, in addition tothe coal consumed. Let our wood-lots become exhausted, there is notmuch doubt that the coal baronswould take advantage of the situationand advance the cost


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear