_/MARKET GARDENERS’ BEST TRIPLE 
L 
29° F. W. BOLGLANO 
CURLED PARSLEY.~—Peteriilie. 
One ounce will sow 100 feet of drill. Six pounds to the acre. 
The best points yet obtained in Parsley have certainly been 
reached in this sort. The plant is of a very robust and free growth, 
and is greatly improved by severe cutting. The leaves are large and 
beautifully curled and ofa very dark green. Jt stands the heat, drought 
and cold better and will yield double that of any other sort. The 
whole appearance of the plant is very handsome and it certainly is 
“ the Parsley for either the market or family garden.” 
+ pound, 1dc. 
Culture.—Sow thinly in shallow drills at any time. 
beds with straw in winter and fresh Parsley can be had whenever 
Packets, 5c. and 10c. 
wanted. 
Wa 
Wt Wee 
ee oH. 
N\A 
pound, 15c. 
or over. 
The seed I bought of you last Spring gave perfect satisfaction. 
NovEMBER 23, 1897. 
Half pound, 25c. Pound, 40c. 
MUSHROOM SPAWN. 
Mushrooms may be grown in any dark room or cellar where the temperature 
can be kept at from 50 to 60 degrees. 
thoroughly mixit with fresh horse manure. 
successive layers of soil and spawn until the bed is filled. 
cover all with a slight layer of loam and manure, pressing it firm. 
weeks the mushrooms will appear and grow rapidly and continually for a month 
Price, 15c. per brick. Ten pounds, $1.25. 
Pound, 50c. 
Cover the 
4 pound, 25c. 
PARSLEY. 
PARSNIP. 
Paftinafe. 
ne ounce will sow 100 feet of drill. Hight pounds required to the acre: 
Hollow Crown Sugar Parsnip.—lIs the best bred and handsomest 
Parsnip; itis half long, wedge shaped, hollow crowned and very broad at 
the shoulders, easily taken out of the ground and producing more tons to 
the acre than the longer and slim varieties. : 
Packets, 5c.and 10c. Quarter pound, 15c. Half pound, 25c. Pound, 40c. 
Culture.—Deep, mellow soil is necessary for the full development of the 
Hollow Crown Parsnip. Sow as early in the Spring as the weather will 
permit, in drills fifteen inches apart, covering the seed; when well up thin 
out to five or six inches apart in the rows. Parsnips are improved by frost, 
and it is a usual custom to take up in the Fall a certain quantity for Winter 
use, leaving the rest in the ground until Spring, to be dug up as required. 
Aside from the value of the Parsnip as a table vegetable, it is also one of the 
best roots for farm purposes, furnishing a very nourishing food particularly 
adapted to and relished by dairy stock. 
GREEN OKRA. 
DOfra, oder Gumbo. 
TEN POUNDS TO THE ACRE. 
Dwart Green Prolific Okra or Gumbo.—This vegetable is too 
ittle grown; as its green pods impart a fine flavor and consistency to soups 
and stews, besides being very palatable when stewed and served as a dish of 
Asparagus. The pods can also be dried for Winter. It is universally used 
throughout the South and is as easily raised as a weed in the North. So deiic- 
ious is the flavor, that when once used it will be grown every year, in North- 
ern as well as Southern gardens. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 10c. Quarter pound, 
1ld5c. Halfpound, 25c. Pound. 40c. 
WHITE VELVET OKRA. 
This distinct and beautiful new Okra was 
originated in Georgia. The pods much longer 
than those of any other sort, perfectly smooth, 
never prickly round, not ridged or square as in 
other Okras. Packet, 5c. Ounce,10c. Quarter 
Procure soil from an oid pasture and 
Dig a bed a foot in depth and lay in 
In about ten days 
Within six 
DWARF GREEN OKRA. 
F. W. BABER, Florida. 
P ~S 
