WHAT AND HOW TO PLANT 
In selecting vegetables to plant include the ones your family 
should eat as well as the kinds they like. A well balanced diet 
is most important and should include green vegetables, yellow 
vegetables, leafy vegetables, root vegetables, and tomatoes. 
Leafy or green vegetables for crisp salads. These are rich in 
vitamins and minerals. 
Root vegetables, beets, carrots, turnips and onions, all rich 
in health-giving vitamins. 
Vine vegetables—peas, beans, cucumbers, on the fence or 
trellis, The heavy-fruited types, like vine squash, and pump- 
kin, should be grown on the ground as always, among the 
corn to save. space. 
Flowers to compliment the vegetables. Morale does not stop 
with the stomach. Flowers for the house, fresh from the 
garden, are essential. Plant them, as shown, on the plan to 
make the view from the house attractive and colorful. 
SOW SEEDS AT RIGHT TIME 
Sow seeds at the proper season and avoid waste. We have 
the highest quality seeds available. 
Work down the top soil with a rake until it is level, fine 
and in perfect physical condition, before attempting to plant 
seed. 
Seed should be sown thinty in shallow rills, made with a 
stick as shown in the sketch. To make the rows straight, 
follow a line of string stretched between stakes placed at 
either end of the row. The depth of this rill depends on the 
variety sown. Check with the depth of planting chart on 
page 21 before sowing seed. 
Seed may be sown directly from the packet, or by rubbing 
a pinch of seed between the thumb and the first two fingers. 
This latter method gives a thinner distribution of the seed. 
Small seeds should not be thicker than 10 to the inch. Sow one 
row at a time and after each row, cover the seed lightly, 
touching the loose soil with a rake. Place the board used for 
walking between the rows on top of the sown seed and walk 
across it to firm the soil for better germination. 
Treatment of the seed with “‘Cuprocide”’ will eliminate a 
great deal of damping off, and rotting of the seed after sowing, 
especially if sown during the wet weather. 
If the soil is moist, but not wet, at the time of sowing, 
watering will not be necessary before the seedlings are up. 
If it dries out, however, sprinkle carefully so as not to wash 
out the small seedlings. 
USE PLENTY OF GOOD FERTILIZER 
Fertilizers are very important. The food value of garden 
vegetables for human consumption depends greatly on their 
mineral content, derived from the soil. The vitamin content 
depends on the vigor of growth and the abundance of sun- 
light. Therefore. the fertilizing of the soil is important to 
insure vigorous growth and healthy mineral and vitamin-rich 
vegetables. A good practice is to spade commercial fertilizer, 
balanced to supply the necessary proportions of nitrogen, 
phosphorus and potash. Later in the season, applications of 
fertilizers in small doses, as side dressings, keep vegetables in 
active growth. Ask us for special fertilizer formulas for 
vegetable gardens. 
WATERING IS IMPORTANT 
Watering will be necessary during the growing season. It 
should be done early enough in the day to evaporate drops of 
water from the leaves before nightfall. Water generously, 
soaking the soil deeply each time, rather than by quick 
“sprinkles’’ with the hose. In this way, the roots will grow 
deep, feed better and be protected from drouth, in case water- 
ing is missed during a hot dry spell. Once every week or ten 
days should be ample for most soils. No rules can be formu- 
lated to determine the necessity of watering. Observation of 
the soil, and testing with a shovel, will best determine when 
to water. 
CULTIVATE OFTEN 
To conserve moisture and promote growth of plants, give a 
complete cultivation of the surface soil the day following each 
rain or watering. Be careful not to go deep in the soil, else 
the roots will be injured. Most plants benefit by frequent and 
regular cultivation. Beans and peas, however, need only a 
light cultivation until they begin to set flowers, when further 
cultivation may cause the buds to drop and reduce the crop. 
SPADING THE SOIL -— This operation 
may be done as soon as the 
ground: is workable in spri 
or fall and allowed to lie idle Ay, 
until spring. Turn over soil, 
break elodst remove sticks, 
stones, and perennial weed 
roots. 
Push fork use a heavy siee! 
arstrai htdown ‘tyne rake. Tear 
: : own lumps to 
Aeon ePin makeasmooth 
surface 










Manure 
rere 
° RAKING SOIL 





Walk ona 
board when 
sowing seed, 
Make a V- 
shaped qroove i 
J methods 
of <coi seed (1) 
ee 
tapping packet (2) 
seed between Fingers. 


° Pointed rubbing a pinch of 
Stick —— 

Plants are safer and easier to use 
for tomato (sketch), pepper,cauli Flower, 
eqqplant, celery and cabbage. Select 
Vviqoreus plants properly hardened 
fo aly cool weather: Frotect with 
“Hot ka ps” wher 
8 ae ae sone 
weather ts un- 
settled. 



\7 How Te Sux Prants 




SPRAY AND DUST FOR PESTS 
Insects and diseases may infest the vegetable garden but 
may never become a serious problem if one watches for evi- 
dence of damage and takes prompt action. Sprays and dusts 
are available in convenient packages to combat every garden 
pest. When spraying cover all parts of the plant and both 
sides of the leaves. Do a thorough job promptly and avoid a 
serious infestation. 
SPACE SAVING IN THE VEGETABLE GARDEN 
Simple expedients that save space in the garden and make 
better vegetables are always helpful to the home gardener. 
The average plan will call for the easier kinds: beets, carrots, 
swiss chard, leaf lettuce, onions and corn, all of which can be 
grown in small gardens. A few others, requiring a larger 
space, can be grown by training on poles, trellises, or fences, 
thus utilizing a minimum of soil space. 
Other quick maturing kinds can be grown between rows of 
the slower growing, and longer maturing kinds, or even 
between the plants in the row. The ground then does double 
duty, and it is therefore quite essential to fertilize the soil in 
order to support these extra crops and to watch the watering 
more carefully for the demands of the garden will be greater. 
Try a few of these methods—save the extra effort of a 
larger garden by intensively working a smaller area. 

38 BRAEGER’S OREGON SEED STORE, 
140 S.W. YAMHILL, PORTLAND 4, ORE. PHONE AT 9393 

