SUCCESSFUL GARDENS 



45 



eighteen inches wide by seven feet long, at the back 

 of the enclosed porch, was given to the old-fashioned 

 pole beans, as was a strip eighteen inches by nine 

 feet at the front of the coal shed and another 

 eighteen inches wide by ten feet long at the end 

 of the shed. 



I 



TOMATOES - Seven Piants 



& O • « 



Bush iwaxiBeahs 



WALH 



I 

 I 



Bush tWAxt Beans 

 <3m.ss Phot 



SwBBT Peas 



eeera 



Of/tons 



Smi/£wAr 



OgtOEii Bantam 

 BweetCori* 



fEASLYt 



SrOtm& CVERGREEH 



SiveetCodm 

 tbasT PiAarmat 



Sji^ell's EimOPEEN. 



Sweet CORti 

 tSecona Piaiaiuat 



Ash 

 Bins 

 izc 



This business man's garden which cost a dollar and produced tour- 

 teen. Business methods pay In gardening, too 



"Outside the driveway was a plot nine feet in 

 width, running the full depth of the yard. This was 

 divided into three 15-foot spaces, in which sweet 

 corn was planted. In the 'V' of the rear walk, a 

 bed for head lettuce was made, French radishes 

 being sowed between the rows of lettuce. At the 

 end of the shed, between the space given up to 

 beans and the driveway, was a plot ten feet long 



