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E.I. du Pont de Nemours Company - Farming with Dynamite

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Farming With Dynamite SAVES MONEY TIME LABOR REMOVES STUMPS BOULDERS - photo 1

Farming With Dynamite
SAVES
MONEY
TIME
LABOR
REMOVES
STUMPS
BOULDERS
HARD-PAN
ENSURES
NEW, RICH SOIL
INCREASED ACREAGE
EASY PLOWING
BIGGER YIELDS
DU PONT
E. I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Co.
ESTABLISHED 1802 WILMINGTON, DEL.
COPYRIGHTED
1910
BY
E. I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Co.
Wilmington, Del.
PRINTED BY
The Lord Baltimore Press
Baltimore, Md.

DU PONT
What Is Dynamite?
Some farmers have a wrong idea about dynamite.
They know it is a powerful explosive, and believe it is dangerous to handle.
Dynamite is very powerful, much more so than gunpowder, but is actually safer to handle.
After more than a hundred years' experience in making and using explosives, we can truthfully state that by following simple directions with ordinary care, anyone can use our "Red Cross" Dynamite without harm.
The purpose of this booklet is to tell you the wonderful value of the use of "Red Cross" Dynamite on the farm.
If it interests you, as it surely will, and if you are progressive and ambitious, write for a copy of our "Handbook of Explosives for Farmers, Planters and Ranchers," which will be sent free of charge and which tells just how to use "Red Cross" Dynamite safely and easily, and make it the greatest aid to profitable farming.
We will be glad to correspond with you about any special requirements of your farm, or give you any information you want. Write our nearest office (see last page) and your letter will receive prompt, personal attention.
Chief Uses of Dynamite on the Farm.
As farmers all over the country begin to understand the value of "Red Cross" Dynamite in their work, they are constantly reporting new uses for this powerful assistant.
The chief uses are mentioned below and are explained in detail further on. Complete instructions are furnished in the "Handbook of Explosives for Farmers, Planters and Ranchers."
  • Clearing Land of Stumps, Trees and Boulders,
  • Breaking up Hard-Pan, Shale, or Clay Subsoils,
  • Plowing,
  • Planting and Cultivating Orchards,
  • Digging Ditches, Post Holes, Wells and Reservoirs,
  • Road-Making and Grading,
  • Excavating Cellars and Foundation Trenches,
  • Regenerating Old, Worn-out Farms.
Clearing Land of Stumps, Boulders and Trees.
It is needless to tell you the advantages of clearing land.
The stump covered site of a former piece of woods, is, as you know, new, rich soil that needs no fertilizer.
You also know that pulling stumps with a machine is the hardest kind of workliable to injure seriously your horses, and certain to require a lot of work to get rid of the stump after pulling.
Then too, it leaves the field full of holes, that must be filled; and plowing the hard packed soil around old roots is no joke.
If instead of pulling the stumps, you burn them out, the intense heat required destroys the chief fertile elements of the soil all around the fire. After all your hard work you will leave a burned field instead of new, fertile soil.
You can dynamite all those stumps for about one-third the cost of pulling and chopping them up.
The blast splits up the stump into firewood, removes all the dirt, breaks all the main roots, and loosens the soil for yards around.
You can blast fifty stumps in the time it would take to pull and chop up one or two.
One man can do all the work, if necessary.
After the stumps are all blasted out, you will have a new, rich field, and easy to cultivate, requiring no fertilizer to yield bumper crops.
If you want to remove a whole tree, "Red Cross" Dynamite will lift it bodily out of the ground, and it will usually fall with the wind. When this is done, there is no stump left to remove.
Boulders, which you are now obliged to plow around, can be broken up into easily handled blocks by a single blast.
What it Costs to Blast Out Stumps.
At the latest "Farming with Dynamite" demonstration, held under the auspices of the Norfolk and Western Railroad, at Ivor, Va., on August 11, 1910, one and one-half acres, containing forty-six stumps were cleared in one day, at an expense of $18.00, including labor, or an average of 39 cents per stump.
Records kept by the Long Island Railroad, covering operations on their Experimental Farm, showed that, including the wages of the men who did the work, the cost of blasting out stumps averaged about 16 cents per stump.
Records kept of the cost of this work in different sections of the country show as follows:
Locality and Kind of Stump.Average
Diameter.
Average Cost
Per Stump.
Southern
Pine Stumps29 inches$0.30
Pennsylvania
Apple, Ash and Chestnut34- inches$0 .56
Michigan
White Pine, Maple and Birch32 inches$0 .47
Minnesota
Birch, Ash, Spruce and Pine20 inches$0 .16
Illinois
Oak, Walnut and Gum30 inches$0 .53
Western
Fir, Pine and Cedar50 inches$ 1.13
Redwood8 feet and over$ 2.00 and over
Records kept by Prof. A. J. McGuire, Superintendent Experimental Farm of the University of Minnesota, show even lower costs.
Breaking Up Hard-Pan, Shale or Clay Soils.
This is probably the most important use of "Red Cross" Dynamite.
It is possible, although difficult and expensive, to clear land of stumps and boulders in other ways, but it is not possible to break up hard-pan, or clay subsoils, without the use of "Red Cross" Dynamite.
Land that has a waterproof subsoil is practically worthless, as it holds the surface water in such quantities on level ground, that the roots of trees and plants are rotted away; on hilly ground, it allows the surface water to run off, thus preventing the storage of moisture, with the result that vegetation dies quickly in hot weather. Such land can be rendered fertile at once by blasting with "Red Cross" Dynamite. The subsoil is completely broken up and the dry, dead top soil converted into a rich loam for less than the amount of the taxes for a year or two.
The following extract from the Topeka, Kansas, "Mail and Breeze" proves the wonderful results of this use of dynamite:
"A few years ago M. T. Williams bought a quarter section of land near Medicine Lodge in Barber County, and, conceiving the same idea that Ex-Governor Crawford and others have, used dynamite in dealing with a hard subsoil. The land was overgrown with sunflowers and cockleburs and would have been considered dear at $10 per acre. It was underlaid with a hard subsoil that was almost impervious to water. Mr. Williams' idea was to loosen this subsoil with dynamite. He bored holes in the earth some 3 feet deep and about 40 feet apart, and in each hole placed a part of a stick of dynamite. The explosion of the dynamite loosened the hard subsoil, and made a reservoir for the rains, which had formerly run off the land nearly as fast as they fell. On this quarter there is now 100 acres of, perhaps, as fine alfalfa as can be found in the state. Mr. Williams has refused $15,000 for the quarter and gathers a net income from his alfalfa of from $30 to $35 per acre every year.
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