R& JFarquhar and Co'scatalogue, 1897 : reliable tested seeds plants, bulbs fertilizers tools, etc. . 10; lb., Half=Long. Best main crop variety; fine form and color; half-long with small tap-root; productive and keeps well. Pkt., .05; oz., .10; lb., $ -y Half = Long Scarlet. Fine-grained variety of medium size. Pkt., .05; oz.,.15; lb., $ Long Orange. Roots large and long; yields D.^.^?vERs HALi--LoNG carrot. enormously in deep soil. Pkt., .05; oz., .10; lb., .80. P].^ q^ l^White Belgian. Large, long-rooted variety; valuable for stock 05 .10 $ CHICORY. {Cicho
R& JFarquhar and Co'scatalogue, 1897 : reliable tested seeds plants, bulbs fertilizers tools, etc. . 10; lb., Half=Long. Best main crop variety; fine form and color; half-long with small tap-root; productive and keeps well. Pkt., .05; oz., .10; lb., $ -y Half = Long Scarlet. Fine-grained variety of medium size. Pkt., .05; oz.,.15; lb., $ Long Orange. Roots large and long; yields D.^.^?vERs HALi--LoNG carrot. enormously in deep soil. Pkt., .05; oz., .10; lb., .80. P].^ q^ l^White Belgian. Large, long-rooted variety; valuable for stock 05 .10 $ CHICORY. {Cichorien>) Cultivate same as carrot. One ounce of seed to one hundred and fifty feet of drill. Pkt. Oz. Lb. Large=Rooted. The young leaves, when blanched, are used for salads 05 .15 $ fIoUisto7i, Mass., Sept. Sirs,—At the ffihlistoti Grange Fair I roill exhibit seventy-four different 7arieties of vegetables, etc., raisedfrom your seed. I have used yonr seeds for fourteen years a fid, if f live, shall iisc them fourteen more. I/ave al-ways fotind them true and reliable. Jf _£ C—. J?. &^ /. FARQUHAR cS- CO:S SEED CATALOGUE. CABBAGE. - {Kopfkohi.) Culture. For very early use sow in January or February in hot-beds, prick out when the plants are strong enough into other hot-beds,or sow in cold frames in March. Transplant to the open ground when danger from kilhng frosts has passed, in rows two feet apart andeighteen inches from plant to plant. For succession, sow in the open ground the last of March or early in April. Plants which have beensown in the autumn and wintered over in cold frames are usually set out from the middle of March to the middle of April, in rows about twofeet apart and the plants eighteen inches apart. The autumn and winter varieties may be sown in April or early in May in shallow drillsthree or four inches apart; transplant early in July, making the rows about two-and-a-half feet apart, and setting the plants two feet apart inthe rows. Cabbage s
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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890