. Price list and descriptive catalogue : choice seeds for home and market gardens. Nursery stock Colorado Rocky Ford Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs. Champion Moss Curled. Parsley succeeds best in rich, mellow soil. As the seed germinates very slowly, it should be sown early in the spring, previously soaking the seed for a few hours in tepid water. Sow thickly in rows a foot apart and y% inch deep. For winter use protect in a frame or light cellar, or a few plants may be placed m pots or boxes, an the house. (If by mail, for y2 lb. or more add postage at 8c per lb.)


. Price list and descriptive catalogue : choice seeds for home and market gardens. Nursery stock Colorado Rocky Ford Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs. Champion Moss Curled. Parsley succeeds best in rich, mellow soil. As the seed germinates very slowly, it should be sown early in the spring, previously soaking the seed for a few hours in tepid water. Sow thickly in rows a foot apart and y% inch deep. For winter use protect in a frame or light cellar, or a few plants may be placed m pots or boxes, an the house. (If by mail, for y2 lb. or more add postage at 8c per lb.) Prices as follows except where otherwise noted: Pkt., 5c; oz., 10c; % lb., ^oc; d kept in lb., 75c. CHAMPION MOSS CURLED. Is a prize winning English variety, in appearance like a tuft of finely curled moss, and of a rich, deep green color. It is slow to run to seed, and very hardy; of easiest growth a few seed sown in onion rows use no space, grows in window boxes. Extra fine or garnishing and culinary purposes. FINE DOUBLE CURLED. A standard variety; plants bear an abundance of finely curled leaves; very ornamental. EMERALD DWARF, EXTRA CURLED. -distinct in appearance from any of the other varieties, being of a lighter and more brilliant shade of green. ONION SEED One ounce for 100 feet of drill; 5 or 6 lbs. in drills for an acre. For^sets, from 50 to 60 lbs. should be sown to the acre,according to the richness of the soil. The Onion thrives best in a rather deep, rich, loamy soil, and, unlike most vegetables, succeeds well when cultivated on the same ground for successive yeacs. The best culture requires that the ground should be deeply plowed and manured the previous autumn. As early in the spring as Ihe ground is in work- ing order, commence operations by leveling the ground with a harrow; sow thinly in drills about x/4 of an inch deep, and one foot apart; cover with fine soil and press down with a light roller, unless the soil would be inclined to bake, when a smoothly ha


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