yix : : : .5! , 315. (4) THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER TPiinSV i : Started ?H-yy4. 5 i . ...vw, iw.bca- you wtil - pf opably -;have .the; dis- :'v?v-i--- i 1 'jloiv plaSofptosh,rtfio abounding in nsoluble ' potash t Have,a sJ. hfeffect - checkHii. : 5efi : 5 p feVore Jiarm Jhan .good; Shat m t0-gh&&y tffc ; earliest toma- ' -''v -and that an eaual mixture of cotton- .ii iic-Ei;: pkL yftAterested in tomatoes-. as :.a youngster , to; L nave evpr rlA: kt-l . - a $1 !' .:' "seed- Tmeal-and-acid-'phosphate ? ; crop fibmeaUhyvin '! table for canning had not been begun, aha" 'prettier coldfed to t - E t Kendall th'e ftoitaaVoeSt'grownwerc ; mafco.; JohniBaerI was" 'sent out i eithe5-,the bigrougEortsthe lit-: or, t two . . - - . -1 t 1 111 11 m 1 r 1 . 1 1111 win u 1 villi 11 j 1 1 1 1 .tn- . a . , t wn. ww . . wm. . mjv 1 iir ruac l I - T'6 - - Z 'li weU rooted-plants . inland, ixiteytyten'MW' " two seasons and l:No."l is known in Ilhnois as Red u ;,1tL(f ,1. ki-'a smooth- and solid tomatoes. Of today will droo ;it -foV Brtni v Raw ; had 4iot beerj i jprodtided; Thellargest full:two weeicsrte-and in farV M -V ' hlc .est : for - farmers to fe.-pne y atiatime: .v: - - Its large, and-sohdto While l , vV ' " ''!..r: '- V.'''iv -fX ls- a'goodmboth solid tomato llfeMs&Ge: foutfd :that JnvthSouth ouhf f ;vil6icrsowtt;lait:A rr, ; ".-if' 1 . .virerinia Orav lurt -oats or-tne Ap- ;fc ooiivi i; -Tiv 1 r : . .pler,.an jmprpygment piii tbe rTexa? build up Jland?:'-. 'r:l I v ": StillT its : perfect smoptHns ' made it . " v - - . ; -X ";- -r v.LBP 4imc.-. mari IfUot? piaster , :it. - is t popular, jMia ior, a .nme ; u. ;uccaiuc ic I -f Sundry Queries l' "... : .. . , . - . "1 : - I MARCH JOBS FOR BUSY FARMERS Iff- 1 if- 'HI mi mm rikl Southern oats are; far better for sow-;: Wish': to tnnlffrpsc'with A&hnty im- Q:v'lt-:1'-, r : .spring- pats. I -would, sow ttther the VreftisearieaKRoarioke? " .it Vis What 'fflat'o! bit it had verv.bie Kollow" sted Viu; W.firSj . J.'i.,? . te w i . a . . . - W . iT. . , i . 1 . v - V W . L w X J X V. 1L - i J An I f I I 1 1 I I V T r CAf rirA AAinffac i 'ws e f o r rrrm hPltlC .QDIIn. . "if.i -;i - ' ?ne pianis m tneopen grouna. I sow. inj a box of ?soil;about two "and a half inches deep in my little greenhouse1. It takes ' a very" smair b6x: to start a good many plants, for as soon as they are large enough to handle I trans plant them 1 inches apart in an other box, setting them a little deep er. Then for the earliest I transplant to other-boxes over two inches apart, and from these to a cold frame under glass sashes. As my sashes are double-glazed, I can ; put them in the frame earlier than where only cot ton cloth is used. I set them lour inches apart,, and expose them to the air : as much as the weather will ailow o as , to get . ready to stand abetter- wKenl setout; By; the time theyare'to ;gopiitr want: the sterns- I tdlool purpjisir v rather 1 than green, - shihgthirdiness. i "But fewhayeX'a' greenhouse to start .in, JandWhe"r6; thisis 'the case "use a ; bbx-''inv:asuhn':wlnWw;Qr-a- warm room. . A cigar .pox will start enougn 1 lirHAT is the best and most ten- 1 " der and stringless buncn bean ? What is the name'of a field corn that will produce more than any other? What is the best summer tomato that will hot rot?" . .:. I know of no better snap' bean tha Burpee's Green pod StringlessV;' The Cocke's Prolific, Marlboro Prolific and " Mosby Prolific are all heavy yielding , corns. , ..There is no. tomato ; grown ; that will lipt" rounder some ; conditions, 1 grow Success, ed Rock and Mississippi GirKf6r, the main ym -u summer crop, and Langdon iiarliana 7 ; ; I J ; lYnnnv.'RV-fnf tliV mVIcV v'.' Apply nitrate of soda to small grain when leaf blades are dry. Break land for summer crops. Do not plow land too wet ' Plant the following vegetable seed in the .open gardens-lettuce, spinach, beets, onion seeds and sets, salsify, turnips, radishes Transplant cabbage from cold frames to open ground. The latter part of the month plant garden corn, snap beans, kale, parsnips. - , ' . If troubled with root knot or wilt in tomato or cabbage, set plants where they have not been grown before. . ' , ' " - ; i -.f-! . " yi : ' r y.'i - 'i :i -'V' A 'r'-' i' 'r -r :: riant corn in marcn 10 escape losses rrom diu Dug ana Dua worm. Spray peath trees with.arsenate of lead when buds have swelled to control "fjruitwx?rms; . r. r-v ' :'7 ''"'' y.-V '.'"V .;" .Telegraph or. write state-veterinariah'ij :'your hogs have cholera..' - ' . '.: ; Keep little chickens away from laying heiis. -hlson College Bulletin, i ft v .Potatoes for Seed I : E HAVE about 15 Mshels" 6Mr -iSh potatoes' grown la'st spring; - which ' I thought of planting,- but ani told the wilt not bear; ; Catf you tell -me II it win pay to plant tnemr iney y.mmw"-' -m wvwv . . ;uB.iuisuiuw:.'hM - t- -nnirli n lianrllp w :A-i e:. . -.- have found that- olaster does- have the Acme. Th s. is a solid: sort but ?s large enpugn to nanaie. 0 win- juuiiu auu oui uuiing. - - - - : . - . . . - " T 4 ' li.' 1 .. . aft in (T If .you- hav; succeeded in carrying $onie effect 'on:clover in, the -release has beensuper'seded- :J)etter:.vane- l' ?Jways .take some risk in .setting the crop of- last spring through-' in 'a po.tasn. ; 1 ne. nme mari wiu. aisq : ucs divine - same coior. - -aome. mar- -r .nd- iinchrivAipi -mnriit,w; t ti a ve some sucn ettect. m tne. im- Kets -sun rpreier" tne- pinfc varieties. ci wusn.ui.vv .vv. rr . chairof lime,: On land like vours imorbved - character ' nhrrl- ?d f?r the, average garden it y? trans uiAi-: :vfiiKii-fVKi :T rfir.f Vvii,i VTn .fJUiJUir .Plant; them ?to. larger, boxes as soon can.-seevno .reason fMMWj&Q not do velL -Ii i :3; ? - I -If lit; shriveled thev . T wnnlrl not- iica tVim - TTIi a lAcf ca'a1 water on limestone rock. '-can be used came 'when the Trophy was introduc- vpbtatois: are, those 'grown-late in . the- profitably :in; curing the acidity pf. the. ef ;Col.;-Waring, then lri. Rhode Is ' . r fall . -from -. cold; , storage y seed, and 5oil if it . can ; be , had at a. reasonable, landr introduced this as - being the old whichv areperfectly - plump and.iun price, : But it; will take twice as ; much ChihUahjua tomato - gotten into" a sprouted. Last, spring I planted home- of-.it per, acre as: of slaked burnt lime smpoth skin, and he asked, $5; fjbr. 20 grown seed from this late fall crop0 have a .similar effect Hence it is a seed and I. paid it". T planted them , t. grown, on the Eastern Shore of Vir- matter of cost mainly. :::::p-:.:L, u early- in January in -my .greenhouse, ' ' ginia; and .made the finest crop . of I once used slaked lime as a top- and got 17 plants. I grew these in , ' Cobblers I have ever grown. You can dressing on clover in the early spring, pots I and made ; cuttings of them as plants over asrainst the ridge cover them ith soil, They are then very v easily, released ..af ter . the cold passes. I set the plants in rows three feef apart arid 'two feet apart in rows Ser a stake:by each plant six feet high and train thY plants to single stems, tying . this to a stake and keep ing the ; suckers pinched out get seed' of this character in Louis- getting it in as well as possible with :fast as the growth would allow. and As. a fertilization, my whole gar ... . , t." T UA fAnlaJ -t V. V''-J. " JI-. J . rl aen is coverea ixm1 j Y" ' -H.: .if. rii liJ: fihehonef ville, Ky., for they are lareelv erown smoothing, harrows. ltv had :a very , rooted the cuttings, so that by? plant- : den is covered thicjclywitn for seed around there.-and the finest nne ettect on tne ciovpr on iana wnere-ingime i naa plants and sold 18 manure in the tan, ana tnw-" iV J' " : ; rmne T tiiifn' : T rAas licl been turned under and some of . them ; for . half a dollar parh .sn nnAr in nrinoc and "some a uuj i naiL tiLcu in I ii n yirrfi mill . v v w ; . - w-. . . .. - v " .- w w - ... wi.n - - 4 j folk truck; section were from Ken- organic matter; restored to the soil, that the $5 proved a ' profitable in- meal oracid phosphate w wore - tucky seed. Seed potatoes from Probably this result may to some ex- vestment. :: . i into" the 'soil along the- rows wnen , ."r? .:.- . V.t . k..n VI. a 4-n 4-Vi a ratal c a nf Turn lrairo lits. T ltn1 CA AAA'"'ktL i iL. 'Jv.'i ,T7fr the ejrijT jviaine are so aut to Drinc aisease: 'ui.uac,wwi-uMv vvdv,v .n ioui i iwu w,vw uiams uidMiit: uic li.v.- "V., 4( ' that there is a tendency to avoid potash, but mainly to; rendering the v of the Trophy set in the field from crop I sow - Langdon Earhana an t fhem. ' soil sweeter for the clover. If: the seed; started early, and had the first . Bonny Best. Then when these nav ; ' ' " ' v ' ' lime marl is finely pulverized and can tomatoes on 'the market -the- third been set in the open ground I so Pnt in Qwiwrf pAaAflC be had cheap enough it can profitably week -in June, though the Tro-' seed in the frame of Red Rock, i noim oweei roiaioes be used in making conditions favora- phy would not now be classed as an cess, Mississippi Girl and Globe w nTE ARE troubled very much with " ble to the clover. The ony possible early tomato. ; That crop paid re- have plants ' coming in at their M ".a rot in sweet potatoes, call- effect of plaster would be in the re-, markably well. Since the introduc- when the earliest ones are get" . ed dry rot, which seems to be car- lease of. potash, for it does not cure tion of the Trophy tomato we have inferior. Then I sow; m6re seed ried over from year to year in our acidity in the soil as; lime carbonate had. a regular deluge of tomato va- these in the. open border about soils. The general practice of the . does. " . .1 ; rieties, and there has-, every "vear first of Tune to make plants that J farmers here is to use the same seed ' : -' y " r x beenlan effort to improve the earli-' give :me their -best fruit just beto Dea year after year. I would like wi;p.''r';iri?r miiM: ;ness.:0t'thet yaneties.; give me tneir oest -iruu ; ax frost, arid will have plenty 01 - : when trosv to know if an application of sulphur . - . . - The earliest tomato I tested amon or crrown orAAn tomatoes' when v-;V(1j ,:i, vi, "m ' ii. . . wire-r-Now, Jonn, my sister Bene and ner ... . 0 0.. 0... -.-nAf al miXeCl With thft SOll in tllA fiAArt hAn 'l V .11 o VlA -AQrlv . Ane lmnU rw - rn a ..o T iirron in PaPCl would destroy the disease in the bed L-PfiMaule's: Earliest.1 Then came Spark's pack awav in a cool place and bnns vf.t- , - . . Earhana. which . havA .. alwavs nut n fAw to rihArt in the house Or could we use some, strong dip to-'itt. -r-chicaeo News. iviauie;s,; . tor it. have;, nad the i plants .; slicing till N e w - x ear. r ;,,;.,..-.... ; and not interfere with: the sprouting. Or could we use some strone dip to Actm-u- f riA vvAm lu- iHr iob8tef ' trimmed' me on a cestroythe germs on the potatoes.?" Leave lt to me.!-r-chicajo