. High class seeds and implements. Nursery stock New Jersey Paterson Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. 10 MUZZY BROTHERS' CATALOGUE OF SEEDS. CORN-SWEET-Continued. rioore's Early Concord, ears large and well filled, from 12 to 20 rows; second early Early Adams, not a Sugar Corn; second early Early Mammoth, large and not very late ; general crop Egyptian, or Washington flarlcet, new, one of the best of the large sorts, ears from 12 to 15 rows ; a superior quality for canning; late Triumph, excellent medium earl


. High class seeds and implements. Nursery stock New Jersey Paterson Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. 10 MUZZY BROTHERS' CATALOGUE OF SEEDS. CORN-SWEET-Continued. rioore's Early Concord, ears large and well filled, from 12 to 20 rows; second early Early Adams, not a Sugar Corn; second early Early Mammoth, large and not very late ; general crop Egyptian, or Washington flarlcet, new, one of the best of the large sorts, ears from 12 to 15 rows ; a superior quality for canning; late Triumph, excellent medium early, large size, rich, sweet; good for market; general crop Hickox Improved, a new variety of superior excellence, ears 12-rowed, straight and handsome; a superior market kind; general crop Stowell's Evergreen, a late variety of excellent quality, remaining longer in the green state than any other; general crop Asylum, late variety, 12-rowed, very sweet and delicious; general crop . . Mammoth Sugar, late variety; one of the largest; productive; late Black Sugar, black ears, said to be the sweetest of all kinds; late Moonachie, very sweet; well-filled ears and productive; general crop . . Sweet Fodder, for ensilage Per ear. Per qt. % pk. Per bush. $0 04 |0 20 $0 60 |3 50 U4: bU Q fin o UU 04 20 60 3 50 04 20 60 3 50 04 20 60 3 50 04 20 60 3 50 04 20 60 3 25 04 20 60 3 50 04 20 60 3 50 04 25 75 3 50 20 60 4 00 2 50 Sweet Corn may be either sown in rows, four and a half feet apart, and the seeds planted at about eight inches in the rows, or planted in hills, at distances of three or four feet each way, according to the variety grown, or the richness of the soil in which it is planted. The taller the variety or the richer the soil, the greater should be the distance apart. The first planting=i in this vicinity are made about the middle of May, and successive plantings every two or three weeks until the first week in July. In more southern latitudes planting is begun a month earlier a


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