. Catalogue for 1892. Nurseries (Horticulture) Kansas Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs. LIST OF MISCELLANEOUS SEEDS. 25 SEED OATS. Change your Seed Oats every few years and the invest- ment will pay you well. For this purpose we have always in stock, Northern Grown Oats. White Russian.—Very prolific, and with ordinary cultivation will yield one hundred bushels per acre, they are ex tremely hardy. Northern grown, bu. 6(ic. Home grown, bu. 50c. Common White Home grown, market price. Common Black, Home grown, SORGHUM SEEDS. Sor


. Catalogue for 1892. Nurseries (Horticulture) Kansas Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs. LIST OF MISCELLANEOUS SEEDS. 25 SEED OATS. Change your Seed Oats every few years and the invest- ment will pay you well. For this purpose we have always in stock, Northern Grown Oats. White Russian.—Very prolific, and with ordinary cultivation will yield one hundred bushels per acre, they are ex tremely hardy. Northern grown, bu. 6(ic. Home grown, bu. 50c. Common White Home grown, market price. Common Black, Home grown, SORGHUM SEEDS. Sorghum or Cane is now also largely grown for stock reeding. It yields heavy and is sown extensively in dry sec- tions where tame grasses do not grow readily. It is relished by cattle, horses and sheep. For fodder sow one bushel per acre. Cane seed for sowing per bu. 76c. Early Amber.—Popular and well known. It is the earliest variety, rich in saccharine matters ; makes nice amber syrup and good sugar. Feck 40c, bu. (50 lbs.) $ Early Orange.—Ten to fifteen days later than the Early Am- ber, a strong grower, and produces more syrup ; an ex- cellent sugar plant. Peck 40c., bu. $ PEANUTS. Peanuts—The Peanut thrives and produces best on a light, sandy, to'erably fertile soil. They may be planted in the pocC or shelled, two in a hill; it is best to drop about four in a hill on the level ground, the rows being laid off 3 1-4 feet wide, and the hills two feet asunder ; cover them two or three inches. The white variety is gen- erally preferred. Lb. 15c. VETCHES. For Spring Sowing or Fall Sowing, Vetches are grown for a forage crop. They can be cheaply raised, fed green, cured or ensilaged. In Scotland and England they are grown largely for this purpose, and where land is not adapted to hay, or is expensive, or pas- turage is poor or costly, it will pay to grow vetches as a for- age crop. Peck $; bu. $ SUNFLOWER. The Sunflower is rapidly acquiring a reputation as


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890