. Steckler's seeds : 1905 . per lOU; a&( per of Strawberry Plants Re-quired TO Plant an ,000 to acre, 4 ft. rows11,500 to acre, 3Hft. rows The Silver l/oving Cup was Captured by U8 at the Horticultural Kxbibit. GARDEN MANUAL FOR THl. SOITIHI^HN STATtS. ITl 14,000 to acre, 3 ft. rows12 in. apart in row. 12,000 to acre is the average number inthis vicinity. Where 11,000 plants are put on an acrethey are more easily cultivated with aliorse, and the fruit is likely to be larger. BLACKBERRIES. — Early Harvest.—Large and very sweet. Ripens fully twoweeks before the ea


. Steckler's seeds : 1905 . per lOU; a&( per of Strawberry Plants Re-quired TO Plant an ,000 to acre, 4 ft. rows11,500 to acre, 3Hft. rows The Silver l/oving Cup was Captured by U8 at the Horticultural Kxbibit. GARDEN MANUAL FOR THl. SOITIHI^HN STATtS. ITl 14,000 to acre, 3 ft. rows12 in. apart in row. 12,000 to acre is the average number inthis vicinity. Where 11,000 plants are put on an acrethey are more easily cultivated with aliorse, and the fruit is likely to be larger. BLACKBERRIES. — Early Harvest.—Large and very sweet. Ripens fully twoweeks before the earliest of the old field Those who contemplate planting mustbe sure they are planting the right agents have been selling whatthey represent to be extra fine varieties,which after years of waiting prove to beworthless, being mostly wild seedlings dugup in the woods and swamps. In thesecases an irreparable loss of time was theresult, to say nothing of the cost of thetrees up to the time of WEIGHT OF PECANS OR 32 PECANS PER POUND n ^7 11 «/^ ,» n CLEAN MEAT. ^E>^ berries. Is not a Dewberry, but a regularbush. Strong one year old plants, 15c.^ach; $ per dozen. RASPBERRIES. Thrive best in a deep,moist well drained soil; the lighter loamsare best for the red and the heavy loams forblackcaps. To make a success of Raspber-ries, the land should be able to withstanddrought well. 15c. each, $ per dozen. OLIVES. PiCHOLiNE.—A variety muchesteemed in California for its rapid growthand early bearing. 15 to 18 inches high,7SC. each; 24 to 30 inches, bushy, $; 4 for $10, $35-00 per 100. PECANS. It is now an established fact,admitted by all that have given any atten-tion to the subject that Pecan trees are byfar the most profitable of all fruit trees toplant. As a proof of this we call to youraotice the fact that we usually paid $183for the crop of one tree. Those who plant-ed some of our budded trees 10 to 12 yearsago are now ge


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