WM. HENRY MAULE, Inc., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 



Vegetable Specialties — 7 



DRY WEATHER CAULIFLOWER. 



165 



Dry Weather Cauliflower 



Reaches Perfection When Ordinary Sorts Fail. 



This grand strain originated in Denmark, but has been fully 

 tested in America Avith the most favorable results. It pro- 

 duces a large, solid, pure white head, maturing a little later 

 than Maule's Prize Earliest. It is in all respects a first-class 

 cauliflower, but is especially and peculiarly adapted to dry 

 situations and to resisting the effects of droughts. It will also 

 do well in moist or wet seasons, making heads equal to any. 

 Packet, 15 cents; quarter ounce, 75 cents; onnce, $2.75; 

 quarter pound, $7.50; pound, $27.50, postpaid. 



MAULE'S AMERICAN YELLOW CELERY. 



I enclose a postal photo (actual photograph above) oi a bunch of celery grown 

 by me this year from your American Yellow Celery seed. If contains twelve stalks 

 only and iveighs 30 pounds. It was not transplanted from the seed bed until July 3rd. 

 Roy C. Bennett, Oak Grove Celery Farm, Arkport, N. Y. 



Maulers American Yellow Celery 



189 



Maule's American Yellow Celery is au early, self-blanching sort, verj' similar in many ways to XX French Grown 

 Golden Self-Blanching, except that it grows a larger stalk, with the additional advantage that it fills a standard celery crate 

 more evenly, growing a little taller stalk than XX Golden Self-Blanchiug. In the last 4 years we have sold hundreds 

 of pounds of Maule's American Yellow Celery to both amateur and market gardeners, and they all praise it in the 

 very highest terms. The demand for this variety shows a large increase each year and we feel very confident you 

 will be entirely satisfied with results from the seed. 



Packet, 10 cents; quarter ounce, 25 cents; half ounce, 49 cents; onnce, 75 cents; quarter pound, $2.75; pound, $10.50, postpaid. 



145 



Maulers 



Golden Rod 



Carrot 



This grand carrot is an intensified Dan- 

 vers, suited to both table and stock. It is 

 a half long, stump-rooted carrot, somewhat 

 deeper in color than Danveis and a heavier 

 cropper. The root is smooth, uniform and 

 handsome, entirely free from core, with 

 sweet and tender flesh. It never becomes 

 string-y nor shows rings. Highly recom- 

 mended both for table use and stock feeding 

 and especially desirable for market gar- 

 deners and amateurs who wish to grow 

 something choice in quality. With ordinary 

 good treatment Golden Eod will yield close 

 to 40 tons to the acre. Thousands of testi- 

 monials in favor of Golden Rod have 

 already reached us, and we are sure it is 

 worthy of universal trial. 



Packet, 10 cents; ounce, 20 cents; 

 quarter pound, 60 cents; pound, $2.00, postpaid. 



