. Twenty-seventh annual seed catalogue. Nursery stock Prices Georgia Augusta; Seeds Prices; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs; Agriculture Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Cottonseed Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Georgia Augusta Catalogs. SMALL ORDERS receive the same careful, prompt attention as larger ones do. Whether in want of a single packet of Seed or a large quantity, send us your order. Extra Early Bart Oxts—This variety is more planted in the Spring than any other. This Oats will stand the long droughts in Spring, bear heavier and brighter oats than all others. Orde


. Twenty-seventh annual seed catalogue. Nursery stock Prices Georgia Augusta; Seeds Prices; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs; Agriculture Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Cottonseed Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Georgia Augusta Catalogs. SMALL ORDERS receive the same careful, prompt attention as larger ones do. Whether in want of a single packet of Seed or a large quantity, send us your order. Extra Early Bart Oxts—This variety is more planted in the Spring than any other. This Oats will stand the long droughts in Spring, bear heavier and brighter oats than all others. Order early, as there is always a big demand for this high quality of oats from us. Price on application. TJie New Velvet Bean— For Forage. Our attention was called to this Bean by a Florida patron. From our own experiments with it, we were well pleased, and think, as a forage crop, it will be of value. A Florida Station Re- port says of it, they having planted a quarter of an acre on very poor soil: "The soil was prepared as for corn. Planted in rows three feet apart, one foot in row. No special cultivation was given. It proved to be a rampant grower; ground covered with close mass of vegetation; vines began to bloom in August, producing long clusters of large, purple flowers: these were followed by plump pods of rich, dark green, covered with a close, down-like velvet. Before frost a square rod of vines and pods gave ninety-three pounds green forage, or 16,680 pounds to the acre. It would have dried two to three tons to the acre. All stock readily ate the green forage, including the pods with the beans. Vines grow ten to twenty feet in length. Should be fed in conjunction with some coarse fodder, such as corn fodder, as the plant is especially rich in ; A writer says: "My method is to plant at first plowing, and to drop the seed every fourth or fifth furrow, from three to five seed in a place, one foot apart, and cover with following ; It i


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