132 Teuck Geowing in the South. 



stand. If the Lookout Mountain Irish potatoes which are 

 a strictly fall potato are planted and treated strictly ac- 

 cording to these directions there is no trouble in making 

 from two hundred to three hundred bushels' of potatoes af- 

 ter wheat or oat crop on good ordinary land and they will 

 harvest in plenty time to put another grain crop on the 

 same land. The late planting will never be bothered with 

 potatoe bugs. You can afford to fertilize both crops extra 

 heavy because the fertilizer that is not available for one 

 crop is there mixed with the soil and will be utilized by 

 the other and nothing will be lost. I have practiced this 

 method and it has improved both crops every year for ten 

 yeairs. Nothing will pay better on an average farm than 

 Appier oats and Lookout Mountain Fall Irish potatoes. 

 You can easily get $1.00 per bushel in the fall for all of 

 the Appier seed oats a man can raise, and seventy-five to 

 one hundred bushels can be expected per acre. The Irish 

 jiotatoes will always sell at $2.00 to $2.50 per bushel per 

 bushel by keeping them until June or July. This will en- 

 able you to have a crop to sell each six months off of the 

 same land. I har^'ested two hundred and fifty bushels 

 on one acre, which I have sold at $2.00 and $2.50 per 

 bushel, and I made one hundred and four bushels of oats 

 on the same acre, which I sold at $1.00 per bushel, making 

 at least $600' altogether on one acre of good North Georgia 

 land the past fall. Two years ago I harvested over fifteen 

 hundred bushels of these potatoes, and the year before that 

 I harvested about one thousand bushels. I have never yet 

 seen the time when I could supply my demand for seed. 

 Give them a thorough trial and nothing will pay the 



