POTATO CULTURE. 19 



put in a part of his potato crop one year thoroughly well, 

 and a part of it, for lack of help, not quite as well, and he 

 says he can see now, after digging, that, if he had paid $5.00 

 or even $10.00 a day for help to put in all his crop as well as 

 he did a part of it, he would have been the gainer. This 

 statement, coming from a farmer who raised 650 bushels of 

 potatoes from 9 bushels of seed, is worth remembering. 

 Large p lying crops rarely come without a good deal of work. 



DUNHAM'S STESL LAND-ROLLER NO. 2. 



The price of the above implement is $30.00. All correspondence 

 should be addressed to J. W. Dunham & Son, Berea, Ohio. 



My friend could have got all the help he wanted, no doubt, 

 for $1.50 a day, and the difference between that sum and 

 $5.00 or $10.00 represents the profit he would have made by 

 doing the best he knew how. The extra labor required, if prop- 

 erly managed, does not eat up the extra crop, by any means. 



