. Bolgiano's new century catalogue 1901 : tested seeds for the garden and farm. Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Vegetables Catalogs; Garden tools Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs; Seeds Catalogs. NEW GLASS ^Sjttgtf** SCARLET TURNIP WHITE TIP RADISH. New Glass Radish.—Quick growth, small top, bright color.— The best forcing radish. This biilliant uniform radish is not 60 large as the Long Scarlet Radish, but is similar in form, and holds its size without losing its nice proportions. It is slow to run to seed. Market gardeners find it satisfies the market demand, and
. Bolgiano's new century catalogue 1901 : tested seeds for the garden and farm. Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Vegetables Catalogs; Garden tools Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs; Seeds Catalogs. NEW GLASS ^Sjttgtf** SCARLET TURNIP WHITE TIP RADISH. New Glass Radish.—Quick growth, small top, bright color.— The best forcing radish. This biilliant uniform radish is not 60 large as the Long Scarlet Radish, but is similar in form, and holds its size without losing its nice proportions. It is slow to run to seed. Market gardeners find it satisfies the market demand, and sells better than other long radishes—Packet, 5c. Ounce 10c. £ Pound, 15c. | Pound, 25c. Pound, 40c. Plant at once and see what a good radish it is. For sale only in our own sealed packages. SCARLET TURNIP WHITE TIP RADISH. Nature almost exhausted itself in making this beautiful radish to ornament the private table and embellish the market stall. It has been brought to our market in two weeks after planting, and always is a very early crop for frames and for open ground culture. Some gardeners use it in 100-pound lots. It is annually grown more and more, and in demand every- where—Packet, 5c. Ounce, 10c. ii Pound, 15c. % Pound, 25c. 1 Pound, 40c. Culture of Radish.—Radishes thrive best in a light, rich, mellow soil, and to bring out their mild qualities they must make a quick and tender growth. Sow for very early use in hot-beds during the winter and early spring. or later on in sheltered borders, in well-manured, deeply dug and finely raked soil; if not well stimulated into a rapid g owth, they become fibrous and tough: sow in drills 10 inches apart, and thin to 2 inches in the rows. Sow at intervals of two or three weeks until September for a suc- cession. Sow winter varieties in July and August Like the turnip, they make the best growth in autumn, and must be taken out before severe frost, and stored away in a cool cellar in sand, or a jut. where they will keep t
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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1901