. Annual descriptive catalogue : seeds & Nursery stock, Massachusetts, Boston, Catalogs; Flowers, Seeds, Catalogs; Vegetables, Seeds, Catalogs; Grasses, Seeds, Catalogs; Agricultural implements, Catalogs; Fruit, Catalogs. MILLET, Japanese Barnyard Grass {Panicum Cms Galli). Distinct from other varieties, enormous cropper, grows six to eight feet high, excellent either green or cured as hay. It prefers a moderately moist soil and may be sown in an average season from the middle of May until the first of July. Broadcast, at the rate of 25 lbs. per acre, or in drills eighteen inches apart,


. Annual descriptive catalogue : seeds & Nursery stock, Massachusetts, Boston, Catalogs; Flowers, Seeds, Catalogs; Vegetables, Seeds, Catalogs; Grasses, Seeds, Catalogs; Agricultural implements, Catalogs; Fruit, Catalogs. MILLET, Japanese Barnyard Grass {Panicum Cms Galli). Distinct from other varieties, enormous cropper, grows six to eight feet high, excellent either green or cured as hay. It prefers a moderately moist soil and may be sown in an average season from the middle of May until the first of July. Broadcast, at the rate of 25 lbs. per acre, or in drills eighteen inches apart, 15 lbs. to the acre. Price, per lb., 15 cts.; 25 lbs. for $ —Brack's Japanese {Panicum Miliaceum var. Jap07iica). In growth and appearance somewhat like the best Southern grown Golden Millet, but of superior quality and immensely more pro- ductive. Everything considered, we believe it is the best Millet yet introduced. Peck, 50 cts.; bushel, $ " You should get up a great reputation from Breck's Premier Sweet Corn, judging by our experience ot it last year. Never ate a better ; HERBERT COOLIDGE. "All the seeds you furnished me were satis- factory. Gradus Pea is a ; E. KAKAS, W. Medford, Mass. ''Although the past season has been a poor one for some crops, your seeds have given me the best ; C. L. HARTSHORN, Worcester, Mass. Panicum Crus Galli. GREGORY'S SURPRISE PEA. The earliest of all wrinkled Peas, compared with the earh- hard sorts it will be found to be decidedly earlier than many of them, in- cluding the well-known Alpha and Maude S., while it is as early as the very earliest of them. Vines two feet high and need no bush- ing ; pods well filled, containing six or seven peas, not as large as the American "Wonder, but it is a far better cropper and ready for the table days before it. The Rural New Yorker says: "The seeds were planted April 18, and*, we picked the first mess June 7; picked sec-fL ond mess June


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890