. Seeds, bulbs and plants. Nursery stock Massachusetts Boston Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. ScMege! ^ Fattier COo's CHOICE VEGETABLE SEEDS. For over fifty years our seeds have maintained their superiority for purity and general excellence, and we number among our customers the best and tnost prominent gardeners and many of the largest buyers in New England. Inducements to Cash Buyers. On all orders for seeds inpackets, accompanied by the money, purchasers may select twenty-Gve


. Seeds, bulbs and plants. Nursery stock Massachusetts Boston Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Agricultural implements Catalogs. ScMege! ^ Fattier COo's CHOICE VEGETABLE SEEDS. For over fifty years our seeds have maintained their superiority for purity and general excellence, and we number among our customers the best and tnost prominent gardeners and many of the largest buyers in New England. Inducements to Cash Buyers. On all orders for seeds inpackets, accompanied by the money, purchasers may select twenty-Gve cents' Worth extra for each dollar sent. Thus^ any one seiiding us one dollar may select seeds in packets amounting to one dollar and twenty-Ave cents. For two dollars seeds in packets ainounting to two dollars and fifty cents, and so on. These extra packets must be selected at the time of ordering. This offer does not include seeds by weight or measure, bulbs or plants. When seeds are ordered to be sent by mail, customers will please remit eight cents per pound or fifteen cents per quart, to cover cost of postage, except for packets and quantities less than one quarter pound, which we mail free cf postage. Our special list for market gardeners and others who buy in large quantities, can be had upon appli- cation. * t ARTICHOKE. ^Irtifcftofe. The seed should be sown in April, in a good soil, in drills ten to twelve inches apart, and about one inch deep. Protect the plants during the next winter with a light covering of litter, and the following spring separate the plants, and transplant into rows three feet apart, setting the plants two feet apart in the rows. The suckers, or offshoots, from established plants, maj be used for propagating instead of sowing seed. The plant is a hardy perennial, growing three to four feet high, with numerous branches. Just before the flower is ready to open, the head is in condition to boil. The edible portion is the under side of the head, the l


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1902