CABBAGE. 



MEDIUM, LATE and WINTER VARIETIES. 



■ TRUE AMERICAN GROWN. === 







BOLGIANO'S 



NEW WHITE WONDER CABBAGE. 



The Greatest 20th Century Flat Dutch 

 Cabbage. — Dollars have been rolling into the 

 truckers' pockets. They say White Wonder 

 Cabbage brings big money. Every plant makes 

 a head, large, solid and attractive. Every seed 

 is a storehouse ; it means one thrifty plant, one 

 compact, worm-proof, heavy head of delicious 

 flavored Cabbage. A good Cabbage crop costs 

 less to grow than a poor one. Experienced 

 farmers say you are sure of your crop when you 

 plant New White Wonder Cabbage Seed. 

 PKt. 10c, Oz. 25c, 1/4 Lb. 75c, lb. $2.50. 



& GREAT NOVELTY. 



| RED SAVOY CABBAGE, " Delicacy." 



g Extremely novel and attractive, its 

 jj deep red color will quickly attract at- 

 2 teution and gains unstinted admiration. 

 J In flavor it surpasses any cabbage 

 grown. In appearance it is most beauti- 

 ful. Adorns the market stall as well as 

 the most careful prepared dinner table. 

 To be up-to-date, your garden, whether 

 you grow for maket or home use, must 

 certainly contain this great novelty. 



PKt. 25c. 





Frostburg, Md., Feb. 5th, 1903. 

 Gentlemen: — The seed that we received 

 from you last year gave splendid satis- 

 faction. We raised White Wonder Cab- 

 bage that weighed 40 lbs. to a head. 



Yours truly, FREDERICK ROWE. 



BOLGIANO'S NEW WHITE WONDER CABBAGE. 



Bolgiano's Improved Perfection Drumhead Savou Cabbage. 



TRUE AMERICAN GROWN. 



There are many varieties of Savoy Cabbage, but there is one 

 variety, "Bolgiano's Perfection," that surpasses them all for uni- 

 formity of heads, beauty of curl, EXTRA LARGE SIZE and 

 superior keeping qualities. When truckers have failed with other 

 stocks from severe drouths and worms, Bolgiano's Perfection has 

 pulled through all right and come out supreme, making the 

 grower happy by bringing him good returns when Cabbages were 

 scarce If you try it. you will say more than we have. PKts, 5c. 

 and 10c, Oz. 15c, 2 Ozs. 25c, 1/4 Lb. 40c, 1/2 Lb. 65c, Lb. $1.25. 



CULTURE OF CABBAGE. 



One ounce will produce about 2500 plants ; quantity 

 to transplant for one acre, T /j pound. For very early 

 use sow in January or February in hot-beds ; put out 

 when the plants are strong enough into othei hot-beds; 

 or sow in cold frames in March ; transplant when dan- 

 ger from killing frosts is past to the open ground, in 

 rows 2 feet apart and 18 inches in the row. 



For a succession sow in the open ground the last of 

 March or early in April. Autumn and Winter varieties 

 sow in April or early in May. in shallow drills, 3 or 4 

 inches apart ; transplant early in July, in rows V/z feet 

 apart and 2 feet in the row. 



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^A«M'i^ 



SB****************************** 



^J Gentlemen '. — T c*rXr\\c\-s\Ae>(\<Te* t-^nAir^f r.T* rnur V 



^ ^aiuuuujc, ivj.il. ^ 



-I acknowledge receipt of your *.. 



favor of even date. Thank 3-ou for vourYair- jj 



ness. F. J. STRAYER, ' J? 



Cambridge, Md. " 



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No detail of our business is too small for us to 



study, neither can any order we receive be too 



small to receive the most careful attention. 



/ 



BRUSSELS SPROUTS. 



BOLGIANO'S MATCHLESS. 



.A species of the Cabbage family which produces miniature heads 

 from the sides of the stalk. These heads are a great delicacy, boiled in 

 the same way as Cauliflower. Seed should be sown about the middle of 

 May, in a seed bed, and the plants afterwards set in rows 2feet apart, and 

 cultivated like Cabbage. This vegetable does not require extremely high 

 cultivation, however. It is ready for use late in Autumn, after the early 

 frosts. PKts. 5c. and 10c, Oz. 20c, 1/4 Lb. 60c, Lb. $2.25. 



BOLGIANO'S IMPROVED PERFECTION DRUMHEAD SAVOY CABBAGE. 



/ COLLARDS. 



Georgia Southern, or Creole.— We offer the true white or green- 

 stemmed sort so extensively used in the South, where it furnishes an 

 abundance of food for man and beast. Forms a large, loose, open head, 

 or a mass of leaves on a tall stem. Freezing does not injure, but rather 

 improves their quality. Sow thick in drills, in rich ground, transplant- 

 ing when 4 inches high, or sow in drills where the plants are to remain, 

 and thin to 2 or 3 feet apart in therow, when of proper size. In the South 

 sow from January to May, and August to October. PKt. 5c, Oz. 10c, 

 2 Oz. 15, 1/4 Lb. 25c, Lb. 75c. 



