728 (4) What Farmers Want to Know By W. F. MASSEY TL Foil on1 Winter Hafilen Get both make a better second crP than The hall and Winter baraen. uei Irish Cobbler Any of them wiU. t . Ready lor It now be ready- to - plant- sooner- if- cut - in - curled kale for- fall use. ..There is no, greens equal to spinach, and the kale is also good after fro'st strikes it. If you have grown the plants, now is the time to set Brussels sprouts, These little cabbage heads come in at their best after frost has cleaned up the tender stuff. . " . - l never leave room vacant.foL.any . , . IioIvm rlipn Hiicr - oi tne late crops, ior mere are ai ALREADY the quer.es are coming halves when dug. ways early crops coming off and the I in mr for methods of Krowing My South Carolina correspondent .u.. .. " 0 - . - wnir ii lisru 1 1 1 1 i M r ii I r li iiija. . idi ... t , iL.il 1 1.1, .!.. .4.,,, -w x .. ly in. August too we make , the first sowing of lettuce to make plants to set for heading in the open ground, and a month later I sow again to make plants to set in the 'frames for heading at Christmas and New Year. A garden without frames and sashes is rather deficient in facilities for making a good garden. You can grow lettuce and some other things under cotton cloth, but much inferior THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER damacre to - th .-- mm . . --. . .-. Aor roots arid tnK v lU!)ers he work ol the ieaves! anVSM leaves would soon perish Th, take in carbon dioxide irom t !al' - "411. j ... VJIU ntlfl ThP . erf pen n i i. . .. sivvu uidiLfr n i has the power to break up thi, ?" bination and take the carbon n turn the. oxyeren to th r- tl. "eswith.thehydrogen;S- late cabbaze and late Irish potatoes, says that he keeps the early potatoes Hence it is desirable to take up in de- easily by spreading them out six or tail the fall garden. Few farmers eight inches deep on any floor where realize the amount of food a good they will not be exposed to the sun garden will furnish in the fall and all light. Doubtless in a cool and per winter through. Dug, planted and fectly dark, place the early potatoes cultivated solely by my two hands, can be kept till fall, but I have never gardening gives me in winter fresh seen them keep through the winter from the soil parsnips, salsify leeks, unless put in cold storage. The late lettuce, parsley, spinach, kale, Brus- crop is best for winter use and spring sels sprouts, cabbage, Chinese, cab- seed. bage, carrots, beets, and during the My practice, when I grew the sec- to those grown under glass. As I summer me Mirpiub i uuucu ond crop was tQ cut thfi potatoes in have said eisewhere, the growing of dried, and we add to fresh vegetables halyes afte ,etting them get per- kte cabbage is very largely a matter the canned ones and the dry beans fectly mature then spread them out of feed and i should have said that it and . black-eye peas, and in tact ai- in any convenient piace and cover is important to fight the green cater most live out of the garden summer whh p.fte straw kept rather moist p.Uars .. deVour th(j The and winter. Then plant in deep furrows as they late Peter Henderson once said that A few days ago I was strolling sprout, but cover lightly till they get C while poisons and other things would among the flowers in the front of my above the ground. I find that by get- destroy the caterpillars, he' found garden when a man from Virginia ting the potatoes that have been kept that pushing the plants fast with ;aia, i nave Deen reao- from iist fan crop ,n THE BUSINESS FARMER'S CALENDAR: FIVE THINGS TO DO THIS WEEK AND NEXT PLANT the stubble land to a second crop just as quickly now as you can. Failure to do so means that your land is giving you only about one-half the returns' it should. 2. See that all doors and windows are well screened and prevent as far as possible the breeding of flies and mosquitoes. Remember, these pests carry disease and death. 3. Keep on planting sweet potatoes, cowpeas for table use, hay and grazing, and crops in the garden. 4. Rush cultivation, killing grass and weeds and saving moisture, at the same time injuring the roots of the growing crops as little as possible. 5. Make plans to observe June 28 as National War Savings Day. Every man, woman and child in the country should be the owner of Thrift Stamps and Baby Bonds. came up. He said, I have been read- from last fall crop in cold storage, heaw fertilization was as'erood as ing about this garden for ten years, exposing them to the light a few anything and that he could, get the ana oeing in your city, i came out 10 see it." I told him that my garden is not a show garden, and since two old hands have to do all the work in it there are some things that are not as neat as they should be, for the walks are more grassy than I have evef had them. The garden is SO by 200 feet, and , there are hundreds of square yards of lawn to be cared for. In fact, being on one end of a street only half finished and having put down the concrete sidewalks at my , own expense, I have extended my lawn across the street, which at, this point is little used, as I am right on the outskirts of the city. To keep the street from growing up in weeds I run the lawn . mower across it and it is now s neat as any part of the lawn. The garden proper is enclosed by a woven wire fence on steel posts set in concrete. This fence enables me days, I can get them to sprout quick- finest' of heads and get them faster to grow many things without the ly and get a more uciiform and earlier than the caterpillars could eat them, fence taking appreciable space in the stand, than by growing the crop from There is a good deal of truth in this, garden. Lima beans, late tall peas seed of the present crop, especially and one of the most valuable1 helps and other things needing support are where the Irish Cobbler is used, for after heavy manuring late cabbage is grown on the fence. Hence there are this variety isslow to sprout. to push them with nitrate of soda, no unsightly bean poles in my gar- xhe best time here to plant the late den. I have told much about the ear- crop is the mjddie Qf juiy while with From the middle of June to early ly garden work, and now in early the crop of this season it win be wdl July the plants of leeks grown in a June we are preparing for the fall into August before they sprout. There seed bed will be transplanted to open anu winter crops wnne eaung tne is a snpc;al reason this summer for turrows in soil that has been marie planting an unusually large crop of Ylc by previous heavy manuring, late potatoes. The early crop will The rows are 16 inches apart and the Right now (June 3) I am setting hardly give the growers any profit, plants set three inches apart. These plants of the Savoy cabbage for fall The great crop grown in the North will take the place ot green onions use, and am sowing seed to produce last year and the difficulty of getting in the winter, being very hardy and plants ior the cabbage crop to store any market for them will act as a leIt to stand where they grow. Met and use in winter. Seed of parsnips discouragement to the Northern these stand and also the late beets, and salsify are now to be sowed and growers and there will probably be a salsify, carrots and parsnips and they before the. end of the month seed of reduction in area planted. This sea- are taken up for use as needed, late beets and carrots will be sowed, son's crop will supply the winter needs, and if-the early varieties are Later we will have a talk about Now too I am setting the late to- used they will make the most produc- other fall and winter things- at the rriato plants which will give us the tive seed for planting the spring crop, time when they should be planted, main 'canning supply, for we do not and the chances are that the early . sucn as celery, cauliflower, etc. dan the early ones. The early toma- crop of potatoes from the South in toes are getting bigger daily and we 1919 will be. more profitable than this will soon have the ripe ones, and the season. Still it is too early to predict succession will keep up till frost, for conditions, but this is how it looks the second planting is now getting of now. good size. 1 There is nothing more wholesome Early Irish potatoes are large in winter "than plenty of green stuff oxygen in the soil water taken un ! the roots. ThU f .u. Ken ?P by iviiua ii p fprhu drates of which "the first we canT tect in the plant is starch. Starch s" the foundation for all tissue-buildin m the plant. It is used by the active living matter in'the building 0f cell walls and is transformed into suear and oils and acids in the plant. Then the plant stores the surplus starch as stardh in seeds and the underground stems we call tubers and in true roots. The Irish potato and the artichoke are transformed stems with buds or eyes like the stems above ground The sweet potato is a true root swollen with starch and sugar and with buds at the base of the stem. These tubers and swollen roots are very largely made up of starch, and since the plants cannot form starch or make growth without healthy leaves, it is easy to see that you can not cut the tops and have a good crop of tubers develop. You cannot eat a cake and keep it for tomorrow. By far the greater part of the growth of all plants with green leaves comes from the air through the leaves and not from the soil or roots. If you keep the tops constantly cut off from a plant, all the roots and under ground part will soon die. The roots and tubers cannot grow without the leaves. earlier ones. Green Leaves Make Roots and 1 Tubers "IN MARCH I planted an acre of Jerusalem artichokes for my hogs to eat next winter. They are growing finely, with three to four stems three enough to eat according to the gen- and salad plants. If you have not .feet high from each root.' I have eral habit, but we prefer to let them planted any pimiento peppers you been told that lean cut the tops and get larger and more mature while the should buy some plants and set them feed them to my stock and they will old potatoes are good and cheap. A at once 1 start these witft the early make just as large a crop of tubers friend in South Carolina writes that tomatoes and they begin to bear in as if the tops were not cut." Is this he noticed that I said that cold stor- .June and keP bearing till frost. We true?" age potatoes are necessary for the Doil th ffeen Pds and eat them like The one who toM J th f planting of the late crop. I did not Srf?ns- Later some are stuffed with n0nsense knows very little about say that, but did say that they are cabbage and pickled for winter, and piant life For th ' th d nf f uesx, ana win maice tne petter crop c vcu the plant and th u: of thp tor seed. derground stems we call tubers it is - essential that the plant carry a full Later, in early August, we make the crop of healthy leaves. Anything first sowing of spinach and green that damages the tops and leaves is a than the seed of the present crop will. But you can grow the second crop from this summer's seed. .The Early Rose and the Triumph will Destroying Moles TpHIS is a perennial question. I doubt the possibility of ever permanently getting rid of the moles. Traps and poisons will to some extent check them, or rather the field mice that do the mischief, for the moles arc after insects and worms. But they are of course responsible for the runs that the mice use. Some find traps effec tive. I never have. And then it is not so much the mole we want to catch, though his hills are a nuisance. We want to catch the fellows that eat the roots and bulbs of plants. I have found carbon disulphide effec tive, but rather expensive. Last year I .found that the mice were devouring some tulip bulbs. I had a lot of wheat 'bran, molasses and Paris green mixed for cut worms. I opened the run right where the tulips were withering and stuffed in a lot of this. I did not lose another bulb. I believe this bran, mixed 50 parts bran and 1 part Paris green with 'water half molasses will kill the mice if well placed in the runs over a considerable area. A wri ter in a Northern farm paper says that the calcium carbide used for making acetylene gas if placed here - and there in ' the runs will generate gas and kill "all in the runs. Growing Bermuda Grass From Seed ."T HAVE-a corn patch which I wish' to get into Bermuda grass for pas ture. How many seed and how mucft fe'rtilizer should I use an acre? nn- . tend to sow when, corn is laid by. 'So'far as I have, observed, the seed of Berumda grass are 61' rather low ' germinating quality, and if I used tne 'seed I would sow 15 pounds an acie. That is a good bushel an acre. But i think that the best way to get ne land set in this grass is to plnt l" running stems in' April in shallow furrows two feet apart. The se sowed at corn laying-by time worn have a shorter season and may get strong enough to winter wen, the Bermuda is a hot. weather grab Not knowing the fertility of soil, I do not know whether feit"1 will be needed.