OF ONE ACHE. 
125 
PUMPKINS. 
These take up so much room that they properly 
belong in the com field, or in a patch of their own, 
in one of the cultivated fields. If there is no place 
for them outside the kitchen garden, and they can be 
kept far enough away from the squashes and canta¬ 
loupes, they can be planted about every twenty feet, 
in every fourth row of potatoes or sweet corn. They 
should not be planted until the corn or potatoes 
SMALL SUGAR PUMPKIN. NEW GOLDEN MARROW PUMPKIN. 
have grown three or four inches high, or they will be 
in the way of cultivating these crops. If one row of 
the corn were left out, and a row of pumpkins 
planted, it would probably be the most satisfactory 
way to grow them, as the tall growing corn, of which 
there'should be at least five rows between them and 
any other vines, would prevent the pollen from mix¬ 
ing, and as the hills need only be four or five feet 
apart, a great many could be raised in a row. The 
