ILLUSTRATIONS xvii 



137. Strawberries Should be Grown in All Southern Gardens 274 



138. Sound Pruit Produced by Systematic Spra3ang 277 



139. Insect Breeding Cages 278 



140. Peach Tree Borers May be Dug from Trunk After Soil is 



Removed from Base 279 



141. A Method of Protecting Peach Trees from the Attacks of 



Borers 279 



142. Brown Rot Disease 281 



143. Rolls of Paper or Tin Cans Without Bottoms May be Left 



Around Plants When Transplanted 282 



144. Potato with Rot Disease 283 



145. A Type of Sprayer Called "Atomizer" 284 



146. A Bucket Sprayer, Suited to Work in Home Gardens 285 



147. Knapsack Sprayer 285 



148. An Inexpensive Spray Pump with Two Leads of Spray Hose 287 



149. Grain Smut Disease 288 



150. Potato Scab Disease 289 



151. Part of Her Crop Saved for Winter 294 



152. The Rural School is a Good Place for the Garden Fair 295 



153. This 91-pound Corn-club Boy Raised 91 Bushels of Com per 



Acre in Tennessee 296 



154. School Garden Exhibit, Kentville, Nova Scotia 299 



155. A Mountaineer's Family Having a Home Canning Demon- 



stration of their Own 304 



156. The Canning Club Work Leads to Home Canning of Fruits 



and Vegetables 308 



157. A Nature Study Lesson in the Garden 323 



158. This Rural Teacher Makes the School Garden the Basis for 



Much of the Other School Work 330 



159. Teachers in Suramer School Practice Gardening so They May 



Teach it Better 336 



160. Primary Pupils Planting Radish Seeds 337 



