. Annual catalogue. Vegetables Seeds Catalog. Fruit Seeds Catalog. Agricultural Equipment and Supplies Catalogs. Cottonseed Okra. Sow in rich soil, after danger of frost is over, in drills three feet apart; thin out to 12 inches One ounce seed will plant 100 hills. Genuine White Velvet—Long, delicate, smooth pods, Not prickly to touch. Best and most prolific kind ever offered. Ounce, io cents- i-i cound 25 cents; pound, 60 cents. ' Dwarf Green Prolific—Very popular kind. Papers, 2 for 5 cents- ounce, 10 cents; 1-4 pound, 20 cents; pound, 60 cents! ' Improved Long Green—A favorite in


. Annual catalogue. Vegetables Seeds Catalog. Fruit Seeds Catalog. Agricultural Equipment and Supplies Catalogs. Cottonseed Okra. Sow in rich soil, after danger of frost is over, in drills three feet apart; thin out to 12 inches One ounce seed will plant 100 hills. Genuine White Velvet—Long, delicate, smooth pods, Not prickly to touch. Best and most prolific kind ever offered. Ounce, io cents- i-i cound 25 cents; pound, 60 cents. ' Dwarf Green Prolific—Very popular kind. Papers, 2 for 5 cents- ounce, 10 cents; 1-4 pound, 20 cents; pound, 60 cents! ' Improved Long Green—A favorite in the South. Papers, 2 for 5 cents- ounce, 10 cents; 1-4 pound, 20 cents; pound, 60 cents. ' Perkins Mammoth Green Pod—The most prolific Okra yet known pods come out from the stalk within two or three inches of the ground and cover the plant to the extreme height. Pods are of the richest green color measuring from 8 to 9 inches and do not get hard quickly as other Okras' Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 10 cents; 1-4 pound, 25 cents; pound, 75 cent*. WHITE VELVET OKRA. Mr. O. B. Golden, Co., G»., July 30th, 1902, says: "Gentlemen—Hav- ing used your Seed, I know what they are, having bought them, therefore I will always buy the Alexander Seed C».'s ;. Onion Seed. Ognon (Fr.), Zwiebel (Ger.), Cebolla (Sp.) We give the most critical attention to the quality of Onion Seed sold by us., ihose buying from us will not have disappointment either as to germination or definite variety. Soil for Onions should be a deep, rich loam. Rich sandy soil is also good. Large Onions can be made the first year from seed, by sowing the Span- ish and Italian varieties in hot beds in January and February, setting out when the open season comes on, in rows twelve to eighteen inches apart, four to six inches in drill One ounce seed will sow 100-feet drill, five to six pounds to acre. To make sets, forty to fifty pounds to acre. American Varieties Onions. Wethersfield Bed—Very pr


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1903