GS -UENING FOR HOME AND . MARKET. The Wide Range of a Garden's Pos sibilitiesThe Housewife Must Know How to Grow, to Save, and to Sell. .......... -. Messrs. Editors: In selecting a. garden choose a dark, soft soil with full access of sunshine anaV good drainage. Lay it off sensiblv and prepare the ground thoroughly. Make your rows straight, and dont plant too soon. Use papers or brush to protect young plants. Keep the soil soft and free from grass or weeds. .- - Haul water in barrels if you can do no better during drouths, and al ways keep an even moisture. Keep the plants all well trained and you will be amply repaid. How to Grow Tomatoes. I always have my tomato blants box-grown, and ready to set out very early. Somewhat of a tomato fa natic, I take especial pride in their culture. I stake each plant and tie up firmly to strips nailed across: But the most important thing is to plant far apart, give lotsof room for growth and for the sun to shine in. For one plant with proper treatment is worth six crowded and untrained. Tomatoes, if fine as they should be, will sell for twenty cents - per dozen at first if you can keep from eating them. I 'always can for my own use and make catsupt sauce, pickle, and preserves, out of my tomatoes. I raise white okra to Can with toma toes for soups in winter. The yel low tomatoes make beautiful pre serves, and the peach or acme are best to can. The very large varie ties are best for immediate table use, and i usually have five or six varie ties for different purposes. Nothing we raise can compare with . the to mato. . - Cabbage, Turnips, and. Onions. Cabbage plants should also be ready early, and when planted in good ground will bear crowding. I like. the high pointed heads better than the flat or round kinds. Be sure to sow some purple top turnip seed for early greens, as they come in fine, when we have nothing else. Put put Onions in the fall, and have them crisp and delicious in March. Have an asparagus bed if you own your home; you will enjoy the fine tender shoots long before other gar den goods are in sight, and once tasted one never gets enough aspa ragus. Strawberries, Celery, and Other Veg etables. Give, generous space to strawber ries, as that is what we work 'the home garden for: to serve delectable dainties every day in the year; and strawberries can be preserved and pickled or canned, or even dried, if you have more: than you can use otherwise. Have a few rows of celery finely bleached for winter use, or fancy sale. Sow English peas for eating and cannings Also plenty of snap and Lima beans. I usually have about six different plantings of beans in a season, so as to have tender ones all the time. - ly. I prefer the plain white-head lettuce, as its leaves are fine even oerore it heads. Irish potatoes snoum never, be planted in hard, red soil, as they will not repay seed. soil, plant very early. I like the Early Rose best. I have . raised a second crop of po tatoes mat were even finer than the nrst and easier kept for winter- Leave good space to earlv nnm but depend on the late corn for can ning or drying. Hints From the Old-Time Garden. In the. old-time gardens we had parsley and sage and every sweet nerD" ior seasoning and medicinal properties. I knew one man to rpII $25 worth of parsley to a hotel in one year. I never did know what they did with all that narslev. In the old-fashioned garden we naa roses and hollyhocks, lilies and violets, and also lavender and balm to make perfume. But our modern greed for money has shut out many or tne sweetest luxuries of life. We have no room for anything unless mere is money in it. On Saving or Selling the Surplus. v Now after the family has . been supplied with new or canned harden produce every day ' in the year, if you nave a surplus of fresh vege tables, it is no trouble to sell them if they are cleanly and tastily mar- Ketea, and to get a f ancv nrir.e for home canned goods is the -easiest thing I ever tried, the demand is always double the supply. But a farmer's wife must know how to can anything, and to pickle and preserve, and dry, and make jelly, or sauce, or something: to save everything eatable. Is there any numan that must necessarily know as much as a farmer's wife? But again, is there any one else who. en- Joys life more or is more useful, or dearer to the hearts of those who love all our brave working: women? Hurrah for the home garden, for the woman who makes it, and for the good things she produces in it! - V SINCERE. Clarke Co., Ga. . WHERE TO BUY SEEDS. CULPEPPER COTTON GREAT LINT PRODUfFR S?8 on eartb, $6.75; 10 bushels, 112.50. ; Prices bushel, Ji 50; 5 bushels, J. E. CULPEPPER. LuthAravlIfA n- - I SEND YOUR ORDER FOR s ""gTV s P p H (MBmf$) DIQQS & BEADLES, SEED MERCHANTS, I Richmond, - Virginia. WK ABE HEADQUARTERS FOB HIGH QUALITY SEEDS AT BEASOKABLE PRICES. Garden and Flower Seeds, Grass and Clover seeas, onion Sets, Seed Potatoes, Poultry Kuppues, and everything carried ;by an up-to-date Seed House. Write us for prices.! CATALOGUE MAILED FREE. 6,000 BusDels Cotton Seed. ALL OF THE iEADINQ IMPROVED VARIETIES. AlSO Complete Rtnrtlr nf ftorrion Vial rt Flower Seeds. Send for catalogue. MARK W. JOHNSON SEED j C0.,'j Oldest Seed House South. ATLANTA GA Improved Cotton Seed. Representative Pou, of North Car olina, Introduced in Congress last week a bill appropriating $100,000 ior tne erection of an eauestrian statue of General Robert E. Lee in a prominent place in Washington. Mr Pou said he had discussed with Re publican members of Congress the advisability of the Government erect ing a monument to Lee, and that he had not encountered a single mem ber who opposed the plan. It nftVS In nun rvnltr tYta -xrarxr Vioa and proved to be good at our Experiment statl ns These as e the leaders: 11 TVw-klA'o L.ni:i: fire fn rai 8 inni Cook's Improved, first In 1903-1905; King's Early and Green's Early, tne standard; ear y varletle-, and Tatum's New Improved Big E Oil Prolific. SI. 00 hll.hfl. 1ft Kiicholo anA nvor- 90 cents. i - Culpepper's Improved, nst in Georgia, 1899. 1 fifsi n Alabama. 1905; Texas Burr, second 1888 1897! Sih1av thft i at nuoi aoa .t , . cnrolo Christopher Improved, the standard: big boll; Russell's Green Seed and Mortgage Lifter, each 85 cts. bushel, 10 bushels lots and over 75 cts. nra le Proline. Tatntn'n Phnii. TTpnrv ftrodu and Shaw's Mammoth lmmwred.f i wi bushel, 60 cents peck i I " Terms cash with order. 1 R. D. TATUM, AJR VIEW FA R M , .... j H PALMETTO, GEORGIA.1 fpfrftfpn3 Oar catalog Is rlrh with miu'nh information for the C Iftt IC.I( nWance of farmers U II II la la and gardeners. It has " . t been a great help to thousandshas been tho means of turning many a failure into success. Tne great variety of vegetable and flower eeas include the best of the old standard and such new kinds as have proved ml nine oy actual lest. J. J. H. GREGORY 4 SON, Marblehead, Mass. t D have stood the test for r and are still in the lenrl Ucir ti,.L certainty of growth their uncommonly large yields of delicious vegetables and ocaumui nowers, make them the most iciiaDic ana the most popular everv- cum uv an oca ere ian Seed Annual free on request". D. M. FERRY & CO., Detroit, Mich. Every Planter Write to' B. W. Hawkins, Nona, Ga. for history and descrip tive circular of his Extra Proline Ootton and price of seed. It's free; costs you nothing to get it and 1U be worth hundreds of dol- lars to you. Quick maturing and win make threo rmi per acre. low Increases In salary for postal em ployes are Included in the $209,416.- 802 Postal Appropriation bill re ported to the House. Representative Tawney's amend ment to the Agricultural Appropria tion bill prohibiting the payment of compensation to State or municipal officials who render assistance in con nection with the enforcement of the Pure Food act, seems to be intended to delay and obstruct the enforce ment of that act. Local co-operation is much Heeded to secure pure food for the people, and it will be cheaper for the Federal Government to util ize, when convenient, locaL experts for local inspections and analyses, than to maintain a sufficiently large army of Federal inspectors and chem ists. - Pickles and Seasoning. Plant a good pickling variety of cucumbers and gherkins and have mucu picKies. itaise Deets, I r -., A . . tors; -?dishfs.ani parsmp enough Pure Florailora Cotton Seed ! j nmici use ur saie. Plant five or six different .varieties f Pepper, for pickling or seasoning, sauce-making and to stuff or dry for sale. ; - ? :-,' ;-; lettuce should be sown quite ear-1 J. B. PACE, I have a limited quantity for sale. Isold this cotton In Charleston for 19c. p-r pout. d. Yielded 10"6 pounds lint cotton on two acres with nnlv firtn nniinHa fuTtO ior .ia T.a bet cotton you can plant for 1907. - Price $1.25 Maxton, 5. C. Wood's Seeds. Irish Cobbler Seed Potatoes have proved by r long odds the tato in cultivation. Head tho let ters from - truckers, in our New iescnptive catalogue for 1907, j We are the larcst A&fdtn-a in cseea jroiatoes in tne South; Maine-grown Second Croo x Northern-grown all. high-grade stocks selected aiid grown especially for seed purposes. Write for nrices and WOOO'S 1907 SEED BOOK, tlmo-o W. all seeds for the Farm and Garden. Mailed free on request; I T. 17. WOOD s sons! deeasmen, Hictimqnd,; Va. i PUFJTEXCELSIOR COTTON - and GET nOM:! FrUltS Closer And faotOf than anr v . other cotton on earth. See our , circular "How to Grow Three i Bales per Acre." Price, Id bu. $ 10. WK ABB THE ORIGINATORS OF MARLBORO PROLIFIC 60RN i Will yield 60 per cent more than any other variety. We guarantee . our seed pure and true to name, j Price of Corn, 2.50 bushel. Excelsior Seed Farm, Cheraw, S. C. BRANCH'S GENUINE RATTLESNAKE WATERMELON SEED Only Pure Strain Carefully selected.' Kept in United States Pur.e forty years. . No ot ber 1 M vat lety grown 01 planta tion of 1.500 acres. Pure se?d Impossible Where different kinds are err wn 1 iin 2 OZS. 25o . 4 ozs. 4ftn . ih n i ih 1 k i . o $4.50. 10 los. $8 50 delivered ttemli resist jred letter or monev- order. Se nual. Manual on melon culture with all orders. - M. I. Branch, Berzelia, Columbia Co., Georgia. French Coach Stallions Of Most Fashionable Breeding; Most Reasonable Prices; Most Attractive Terms. Best Lookers; Best Roadsters; r Best Workers. Write me or better 4 - stUl, come to see them. WM. Q. OWENS, ' Richmond, Va. Best of All Cotton. - - - - - . - I have several hundred bushel'i Cook's Improved rot on seed for sale at small price 1 of 80c per bushel whild they last, sacked and packed f . o b Knfie d, N. U. Nice large b lis, andmskes40 per cent, lint to each 100 lbs. seed cotton. Address or call on .. ' C. A. WILLIAHS, . Rlnwood, Halifax Co., N. C.