).00 i 25 i ).00 5.10 8.35 F : SONABLE| to]. S. le, Pa., | Prices tation. RD . PENN’A. Ohio TON RE Y 20 5.45 JALE KETOFFIC : PILLS BRAND Rey, Supe S ay | H £ . 0 \» vith Blu * JeT ins fon twenty five ‘ways Reliable, UGGISTS 2 WORTH TESTED pe Cough. ind instant orious cond’ y weakening, egat, N. J. ney and Tar nt lagrippe thausted me stopped the rywhere. . inspired oy a government a scientific farmer ‘for prizes ed to the Buys’ Corn club. ‘Sam works hard cleaning up and ferti- lizing the wornout farm Miles Fagan rid- feules scientific farming, but lets ‘his boy join the corn club While blowing out stumps Sam saves Joe Watson's life. Sam plans his contest acre of corp and other crops and the stocking of his farm “with cattle. He prunes and sprays the old trees of the orchard, improving them greatly, and his successful farm astonishes Miles Fagan and other slow going neighbors .S8am’s careful study of scientific agri culture and ‘his up to date methods. ot seed sl odt ig; are rewarded by splendid erops. CHAPTER Vi. AM'S well tertlized, well cult vated acre of Irish potatoes sur prised the neighbors with the amount it produced.’ Two hun: dred bushels were what he harvested from the patch, and, selling them at 60 cents per bushel, he had $120 to show for the first crop. It was only the 1st ‘of June, so he immediately pre- pared the ‘land and planted the acre again in June corn. After that the work came thick and fast The cane was ready to be cut He moved it, let it cure’ god stacked gwar two two tos of ge say in the barn another crop a but the umpkin yams must be planted. .So he prepared and bedded the ground. and one cloudy day just before a rain he pulled the potato slips from the bed where he had grown them and planted this acre also with a second crop. The cotton then had to be plowed. and when that was finished the four acre cornfield, in which he was aiso growing a flourishing crop of pump- s, was calling for him. "The peach and plum crops were very ort this year, owing to a late frost, t the Powell orchard never suffered in this respect The old trees had a per crop. Prices being good, after rs. Powell had preserved what she wanted, Sam sold $40 worth of plums and $110 worth of peaches, making a 3 1 of $150 income from the fruit, ot to mention the preservings for fam- use. y in the winter, before the fam- moved, Sam had made arrange- ts with a breeder of a fine strain Plymouth Rock chickens to ten gs of eggs. For these he was ty pay $1.50 a sitting. Mrs. Powell y owned a mixed breed flock of ts but Sam’s oe with Which gg hea e * beartly with NJ hon . The first of these sittings were hatched while it was yet cold and before summer came on, with its excessive heat and insect pests, the whole ten bad been brought off and more than 100 thrifty young Plymouth Rocks were running about the farm. The ample range and shade and the rye sown in the orchard made the in- come from poultry almost clear profit. Chickens require little feed when they can get green stuff and insects. Be- sides the Plymouth Rocks Mrs. Powell raised six dozen common breed fryers, which she sold at $3 per dozen, or $18. From the thoroughbred flock, after se- decting seventy pullets and five roost- érs to keep, she sold the culls for $15. roosters at $1 and-pullets at 50 cents. The egg market was very low during the summer months, but even at a few cents a dozen $20 worth were sold this year and the family had all they could eonsume at home. Finally, in the fall, the old flock of common chickens was sold, bringing 25 cents each or $12.60 in all. Surplus milk and butter from the two cows brought $50 for the year. But this wasn’t all. The acre of watermelons, cantaloupes and vegeta- bles contributed its share. Sam’s wa- termelons were a long white variety, with black seed and blood red meat, sweet as sugar. These melons always brought something above the regular market price. In all the young farmer sold $40 worth of melons and vegeta- bles. The June corn made a fair crop. Sam sold the roasting ears at one cent each. These brought him $30. Then be cut and cured the stalks for feed. The ground being once more cleared, he plowed, barrowed and planted it turnips. Sam found that a little farm of fif* teen acres can keep two or three people very busy, especially when the farm is made to hump itself, growing one crop right after another. Hardly a day passed that he or his sister didn’t have to drive to town to sell something. Whenever it could be arranged Sam al- ways let Florence go, for then he could be hurrying the heavy work forward. September came and Florence enter- ed the high school. but Sam, badly as be wanted to begin, found it impossi- place th 2 pit] ble to do so until after Christmas. However. he began studying at night, all the hard work he did he and for »d to keep pretty close up with the fall ‘he B8weet potatoes, vines anad feedi dug the acre of ping off the and 1 “punk, He