Capital Journal Building Section, Friday, March 10, 1950 13 How to Win in Garden Gamble With Jack Frost Temperature is the most im-1 Soil can be improved, water can portant limiting factor in all be supplied artifically. But outdoor horticultural activities.! planters are at the mercy of the gAFTO JUNE 1 T . This U. S. Department of Agriculture map shows dates on -which the chances of damage from frost are only one to ten. temperature. A key-day in the spring, which governs all operations, is the date when in your locality it be comes relatively safe to set out tender plants. In other words, the frost-proof date. This does not mark the beginning of gar dening, because seeds of hardy vegetables can be sown as soon as the ground has thawed out and become dry enough to work. This is usually 30 days before the front-proof date. The term frost-proof, more over, is hardly correct. The weather is too uncertain for that. There is always the chance that in an exceptional year, a frost will occur long after the aver age time and many tender things will be nipped. But some risk must always be accepted in gar dening. On the basis of long experi ence, the weather bureau has prepared a map which divides the country into zones, and es tablished for each zone a date on 'which the chances are 10 to 1 against a killing frost oc curring in the spring. The map accompanies this discussion. Look up your location and talk to your gardening neighbors about their practice, and you will find it easy to decide on the date to accept as safe from frost in your garden. Of course some years you may win with a long-shot and get a crop from an early planting of a tender crop because of an excep tionally warm spring. If you want to figure the odds against this kind of chance taking, you may estimate that the risk of los ing tender plants is exactly dou bled, when they are set out two weeks before the frost-proof date. There is nothing to be gained, moreover, by taking this risk with plants which have been started indoors, since they may be seriously injured by a hard frost which does not kill them, and always do best when they continue growing without a check. PROTECT LINOLEUM WITH LM-0-B0NE Smart, Practical SOLID MAPLE BEDROOM FURNITURE i ?..-, , 'l-M L AM r-JSI maple is built by Kling, who are nationally V ' V y SI TfiP'teS- famous for fine furniture. This is not just another J "Z&t? maple bedroom suite. It has beautiful lines CyRfc- and incorporates the finest materials and work- 535BW,1,', " manship. And best of all it is priced to fit SMSt SijTr i even a modest budget. jir- j " j let us show you this outstanding group by Kling. iZ" ,'fai'S 1 1 i It is open stock, of course, and there is a wide ff 5 - -iTB 'sTSw- 5 Ssf S y j variety of pieces to choose from. 4 ,! '"r'' RUNG MEANS Dirt-proof, grease-proof and water-proof coating for lin oleum. Dries bone-hard in one hour. Non-sliD. Pints 87c Quarts 1.53 For Wallpaper, Kalsomine and Plaster Walls, It's KOVERITE Perfect one-coot oil type finish, light or deep tones. miyiRiTf Varnish-Stain Enamel - Rez Now at R. D. Woodrow! for UNPAINTED FURNITURE Big Sayings! - SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION Chests Chairs Beds Bookcases Tables Corner Cupboards Vanities Wardrobes Desks Stools FOR RENT Floor Sanders Floor Polishers Paint Spray Guns r, v. woomweo. GIL WARD, PROP. 450 Cmoi Stmt Sum. Onf