| 1. INTRODUCTION |
| "A word about the author, his practical experience, and qualifications suggest reliability of the text." |
| 2. CITY vs. COUNTRY LIFE |
| Advantages and disadvantages |
| City vicissitudes |
| "Dependence upon "income" to supply "outgo" |
| "Country stability, productivity" |
| "Dependence upon "outgo" to supply "income" |
| Self-supporting |
| "Occupancy of home in country vs. tenancy of "flat" in city " |
| "Health, welath, happiness in country home" |
| 3. TRIED AND TRUE WAYS TO FAIL |
| "Too little, capital, unfavorable location, uncongenial soil, too large area, inefficient soil preparation and tillage, lack of feding, big-headedness, inexperience, city hours, laziness, too many pets and guests" |
| 4. WHO IS LIKELY TO SUCCEED? |
| Thinker and worker |
| Owner on the Spot |
| Absentee direction |
| Book farming |
| Observation as a teacher |
| Hired help |
| 5. FIGURES DON'T LIE |
| Striking figures from U.S. Census and Department of Agriculture reports |
| Supply and demand |
| Relation to and contrast with individual owner's problems on productive land |
| 6. THE FARM TO CHOOSE |
| Soil survey maps |
| Character of soil |
| Nature of plant growth already on the land |
| "Depth, drainage, slope, freedom from stones, previous crops and yields, neighborhood crops and yields" |
| 7. WHERE TO LOCATE |
| Good roads |
| Their up-keep |
| Snow removal |
| Site with respect to roadside sales |
| Distance from market |
| "Schools, churches, electric current, buses, stores, doctors, etc." |
| 8. LAY AND LAY-OUT OF LAND |
| Elevation |
| Aspect |
| Frostiness |
| "Impediments such as fences, boulders, stone walls" |
| Fields-sizes and shapes |
| "Roadways, lanes and paths" |
| Arrangement of buildings |
| 9. "WIND-BREAKS, PRO AND CON" |
| Importance |
| Types |
| Influence on crops |
| Animals and residence |
| Workability in their shelter |
| Good and bad kinds |
| Saving of fuel |
| Production of fuel |
| 10. ESSENTIAL FACTORS OF PRODUCTION |
| Good seed |
| Good breed of animal |
| Variety |
| "Strain" |
| Abundant water and available plant food in the soil |
| Rational tillage |
| Ample space between plants and for animals |
| 11. RENTING vs. BUYING |
| Advantages and disadvantages of each |
| Various ways to manage depend upon each |
| Renting with option of b |
| Buying a small place but working large rented area |
| 12. CAPITAL |
| Investment and working money |
| Cost of land |
| Rent of property |
| Insurance |
| Equipment |
| Nursery stock and other plants |
| Animals |
| Labor |
| Time needed to get returns |
| 13. FARM FINANCE |
| Importance of credit |
| Origin of capital |
| How secured |
| Borrowing for production |
| Usury |
| Fundamental rules for borrowing |
| Character of borrower and business ability |
| Annual inventory and budget |
| Bank cashier as advisor and confidant |
| Safety deposit boxes |
| 14. FARM ACCOUNTS |
| Planning for production |
| "Knowledge of market, and the truth about one's business" |
| Record of crops and animals individually and of the farm as a whole |
| Account books |
| 15. WATER SUPPLY |
| Rain water and cisterns |
| Filter cisterns |
| Cistern capacities |
| Cistern cleaning and purification |
| Springs gravity piping |
| Pneumatic pressure systems |
| Hydraulic rams |
| 16 SEWAGE DISPOSAL |
| Primitive methods |
| Cess pools |
| Septic tanks |
| Tank construction |
| Personal experience |
| 17. FUNCTIONS OF WATER |
| Necessity in plant and animal growth |
| Quantity needed by plants |
| Types of water in soil |
| Conservation by tillage and mulching |
| 18. DRAINAGE |
| Importance |
| Methods |
| Instances to prove their value |
| 19. IRRIGATION |
| Methods |
| Types of apparatus |
| Assurance of adequate water |
| Success in spite of drought |
| Use to supply fertilizer and certain kinds of spraying |
| 20. FROST DAMAGE PREVENTION |
| What frost is |
| How it affects plants |
| Plant resistance to damage |
| Hardy and tender plants |
| Preventing fall of temperature to or below danger point |
| Forecasting local frosts |
| Methods available |
| 21. LIVE STOCK |
| "Advantages and disadvantages of keeping cow, pig, poultry, rabbits, bees" |
| Desirable and undesirable kinds to have |
| 22. POULTRY |
| Chicken for eggs and meat |
| "Duck, geese, turkeys, pigeons" |
| Scrubs vs. breeds and strains |
| "Housing, feeding, yarding, range, management " |
| Hatching vs. buying day-old c |
| Brooding |
| Sanitation |
| Etc. |
| 23. BEES |
| Honey the principal interest |
| Importance in fruit production |
| Management easy but imperative |
| 24. GREENHOUSES |
| Standardized styles preferable to home built |
| Advantages |
| Sizes desirable |
| Avoidance of mistakes |
| Types of houses |
| Ventilation |
| Heating |
| Greenhouse builders' contracts and propostions |
| 25. COLDFRAMES AND HOTBEDS |
| Invaluable to start seedlings |
| Limitations of each |
| Types of each |
| How and where to make them |
| Hardening-off plants |
| Electric heating and regulation most desirable |
| 26. SOILS AND THEIR CARE |
| Nature's soils injured by man |
| Reclamation |
| Types of soils and how to handle them |
| Humus |
| How to judge soil values |
| Soil erosion and its prevention |
| 27. MANURES |
| Stable manure best |
| Why |
| Scarcity and cost |
| Fresh vs. rotted |
| Dried and pulverized |
| Amounts to apply |
| Functons in the soil |
| Experiences and experiments |
| 28. COMMERCIAL FERTILIZERS |
| Supplements to manures |
| Organic and inorganic |
| Value of each |
| Cautions in using |
| Compositon |
| Most important unmixed ones |
| Functions of each |
| "Mixed goods" |
|   |
| Importance of competent advice before attempting such work |
| Many trees not worth reclamation |
| How to determine useful ones |
| Tree surgery not desirable from income basis |
| Personal appraisal methods |
| Renovation methods |
| 37. FRUIT TREE PRUNING |
| Principles |
| Applications |
| Methods good and bad |
| Times to prune |
| Tree architecture |
| Building strong trees |
| Vine and Bush training and pruning |
| Knowledge of flower bud formation and position essential |
| 38. GRAFTING FRUIT TREES |
| Simple methods |
| Trees not to graft |
| Best ones and best branches to use |
| How to get and keep scions |
| Time to graft |
| Grafting waxes |
| Paraffin |
| Repair or bridge grafting to save girdled trees. |
| 39. HOW TO AVOID NURSERY STOCK LOSSES |
| "Buyers, not nurserymen, most often responsible for death of s |
| Right and wrong handling |
| Loose planting |
| Bearing age trees unsatisfactory |
| Young stock best to order |
| Pruning after planting |
| Treatment of Y-crotch trees |
| Staking |
| Label removal |
| 40. VEGETABLE CROPS TO AVOID AND TO CHOOSE |
| "Quick and slow maturing kinds, staple and fancy kinds high and low quality varieties, good vs. poor keepers, kinds saleable in several ways" |
| 41. SEEDS AND SEEDING |
| Types of seeds |
| Effect of weight on sprouting and the crop |
| Seed testing |
| Age of seed |
| Seedsman's reputation |
| "Special stock" seed" |
| Seedsmen's trial grounds |
| "Seed growing, selection" |
| Sowing times |
| Temperature |
| Depth |
| Etc. |
| 42. TRANSPLANTING |
| Stages of development |
| Pre-watering |
| Preparation of soils and flats |
| "Lifting, pricking-out, spotting board and dibble" |
| "Depth, watering, hardening" |
| Planting in the open |
| After-care |
| 43. PLANTS FOR SALE |
| Often highly profitable near town of amateur gardeners |
| General and special stocks and sales methods |
| Advertising |
| 44. SOMETHING TO SELL EVERY DAY |
| Crops in demand |
| "Crops that "work over well" |
| "Pickles, jams, jellies, juices, syrups, preserves, "canned goods" |
| Eggs |
| Chickens |
| Ducks |
| Honey |
| Plants |
| Flowers |
| 45. STRAWBERRIES |
| Regular season and everbearing kinds |
| Culture systems of training |
| "After fruiting, what? " |
| Companion and succession crops |
| Quickest fruit to bear |
| Often highly profitable |
| Every farm should have them |
| 46. GRAPES |
| Planting |
| Pruning |
| Training |
| Precocious and annual fruiting |
| Long season of fruiting by successional ripening of varieties and storage |
| 47. BUSH AND CANE FRUITS |
| "Raspberry, blackberry, currant, gooseberry, dewberry, blueberry" |
| Varieties |
| Culture |
| 48. SMALL FARM FRUIT GARDENS |
| Does the ordinary farm orchard pay? |
| Investigational experiment |
| Improved methods of cultivation |
| Varieties for home use |
| Sequence of rippening |
| Lay-out of orchard and small fruits |
| 49. SELECTION OF TREE FRUITS |
| Varieties to c |
| Type of trade to work for |
| "General market, roadside sales, personal trade" |
| Successional ripening to hold trade |
| Filler trees and other fruits |
| Inter-tilled crops to help pay costs of development |
| 50. STORAGE OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES |
| "Methods, good and bad for various types of crops" |
| "Root cellars, pits, storage houses, lofts" |
| Arrangement |
| Ventilation |
| Cooling |
| Heating |
| Sanitation |
| Fumigation |
| 51. ESSENTIALS OF SPRAYING AND DUSTING |
| "Spraying, dusting and other methods effective when properly used" |
| Fruit and vegetable insect enemies |
| APPENDICES |
| INDEX |