. The Southern planter. nconnection witli tlie campaign againstchild labor, Jack Londons vivid study,The Apostate, amply deserves theplace of honor that it occupies in theSeptember number of the WomansHome Companion. Other good sum-mer reading in this magazine includesanother of William MacLeod Rainesdashing cowboy stories, Pete Sander-son Intervenes, and The Price ofVictory, a thrilling little sketch byRobert Aitken. In connection withits work in arousing sentiment againstchild labor, the Womans Home Com-panion has taken a step unusual in amagazine of its character by enlistingthe services of


. The Southern planter. nconnection witli tlie campaign againstchild labor, Jack Londons vivid study,The Apostate, amply deserves theplace of honor that it occupies in theSeptember number of the WomansHome Companion. Other good sum-mer reading in this magazine includesanother of William MacLeod Rainesdashing cowboy stories, Pete Sander-son Intervenes, and The Price ofVictory, a thrilling little sketch byRobert Aitken. In connection withits work in arousing sentiment againstchild labor, the Womans Home Com-panion has taken a step unusual in amagazine of its character by enlistingthe services of the cartoonist, and twofull-page drawings by Homer Daven-port entitled An Industrial Success,serve to bring home to everyone thetruth as to a national evil. Amongthe household topics treated are,Some Appetizing Pickles and Condi-ments, Rug-Making as a Home In-dustry, Free Alcohol: What ItMeans to the Household, PracticalFashions, and Bags of Beauty andUsefulness. The turning point from a poor to a rich harvest is where. POTASH is used. All grains demand?^ Potash; therefore the farmer who, nses sufficient Potash reaps alarge crop of full-headed, plumpgrain, and strong straw that doesntlodge. If your soil has grown re-peated grain crops, the necessity ofusing Potash is all the more obvious. ^ - .? _?- Our books on famine are free. They are a help ? ^^t— to tliose who want better and larger yields. GERMAN KALI WORKS, New York—93 Nassau Slretl, or Atlanta. Oa.—22< So. Broad Street. ALWAYS IN Southern Planter: Borrowing or anticipating trouble,is, without doubt, the principal causeof indigestion, and yet many of us arebuilt that way. Last April, 1906, webegan work on the little 50 acre farmor home, which we had selected, inPrincess Anne county, Va., betweenNorfolk and the sea. It was a portionor subdivision of a larger farm of 240acres. It was a 240 acre farm, which tenyears ago, went begging for a buyer at$10 per acre; but at the present timeIs worth $50 pe


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear