. Illustrated catalogue : field, farm and garden seeds, spring 1902. Nursery stock Indiana Lebanon Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. 30 Curry-Arrington Company, Borne, Ga. FIELD PEAS AND BEANS. The value of these for hay, fertilizers, stock and human food is too well known in the South and West for extended remarks. We deal very largely in varieties named and make special prices on application. Please state quantity wanted. Soja Beans.—All those who have them are most enthusiastic in their praise, and we feel


. Illustrated catalogue : field, farm and garden seeds, spring 1902. Nursery stock Indiana Lebanon Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. 30 Curry-Arrington Company, Borne, Ga. FIELD PEAS AND BEANS. The value of these for hay, fertilizers, stock and human food is too well known in the South and West for extended remarks. We deal very largely in varieties named and make special prices on application. Please state quantity wanted. Soja Beans.—All those who have them are most enthusiastic in their praise, and we feel that we cannot impress too forcibly the importance of this crop. The great nutritive value of these beans, combined with the enormous yield, make it a most valuable and economical crop to grow for stock feeding purposes. It is also strongly recommended for green fodder and en- silage, and will easily yield, on suitable soil, from 8 to 10 tons per acre. Price, quart, 30c, postpaid ; peck, 75c. Black Pea.—This is in high esteem with many planters, as it re-seeds itself better than any other variety. Large Black-Eye White Pea.—This is a prolific variety and always brings a good price. Clay Pea.—This is an old standard sort and largely used by sugar planters of Louisiana for soiling and forage crops. White Navy Beans.—An old standard sort, largely grown as a shell beanjjfor market. Cultivate early and often, as they grow rapidly, but do not plow or work deep after they are 8 or 4 inches high, or you will ruin them. Neither should they be worked when the dew is on them, nor disturbed in any way after they begin to blossom. Carefully grown, they prove a most profitable and satisfac- tory crop. Quart, 30c, postpaid; peck, 75c. Wonderful or Unknown Pea.—We have never seen any pea equal to it for any pur- pose ; whether sown for soiling, forage crop or yielding an abundance of seed, it stands at the head of the list. By mail, any variety, pound, 15c; 8 pounds, $, postpai


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1902