. Wm. Eber & Son's catalogue of high class seeds, bulbs, garden implements, etc. Nursery stock Illinois Quincy Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. 7. SWEET CORN. (Fifteen cents per quart extra if sent by mail.) Cui/TURK. — Plant i n hills three feet apart each way and five or six kernels in a hill. Hoe often and draw soil up to the stem; break off side shoots. Make the grouud rich with well rotted manure. Sown i n drills, a greater yield from a given surface will be obtained. By sowi


. Wm. Eber & Son's catalogue of high class seeds, bulbs, garden implements, etc. Nursery stock Illinois Quincy Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. 7. SWEET CORN. (Fifteen cents per quart extra if sent by mail.) Cui/TURK. — Plant i n hills three feet apart each way and five or six kernels in a hill. Hoe often and draw soil up to the stem; break off side shoots. Make the grouud rich with well rotted manure. Sown i n drills, a greater yield from a given surface will be obtained. By sowing successive lots and properly selected varieties, the supply of Sweet Corn can be kept up until hard frosts kill the plants. Ready for market in Metropolitan-Large, hand- some ears, of fine quality, qt. pk. Thorburn's Melrose-(See page 4) Extra Early Cory. Early Main Early Minnesota Old Colony Perry's Hybrid Improved Evergreen. Large Egyptian Country of all Extra Early Adams—This is no true Sweet Corn, but it is the earliest of all corn 50 60 days. .20c # 60 " . .20c 55 " . .15c .85 60 " . .15c .85 65 " . .15c .85 65 " . .15c .85 70 " . .15c .85 70 " . .15c .85 70 " . .15c .85 85 " . .15c .85 85 " . .15c .85 t 85 " . .20c 15c .85 (grbfeu. (Fifteen cents per quart extra if sent by mail.) Light, dry soil, not over rich, suits the pea. Plant as early as the ground can be worked and again every two weeks in succes- sion throughout the season. Plant in single or double rows, from four to six feet apart, according to height, about an inch apart in the row, and four inches deep. In the summer plant four to five inches deep, hoe often; tall sorts can be made to bear more freely by pinch- ing Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1902