MISS MARY E, MARTIN, FLORAL PARK, NEW YORK. 



51 



trcrCTADT "C CCUr^Q /Packets of Peas, Beans and\ 

 YHulli AdLEi Jll£.l/J» i^Corn, contain 2 oz. ot Seed^ 



These prices are postpaid. Pkt. Oz. 



Radish— Early Scarlet Turnip; plane first 5c. 10c. 



Frencli Breakfast 6 10 



Chinese Rose; summer, very fine 6 10 



Lettuce— Tennis ball; best early 5 10 



California Cream Hutter 5 10 



Beets— Early Blood Turnip 6 10 



Eclipsi; excellent 5 10 



Edmnni; medium and late; fine 5 10 



Cabbage-Wakefield; earliest 5 15 



Vandergiw; best medium 5 15 



Surehead; excellent late 5 15 



Caallf lower— Snowball; best for early 10 



Algiers; best for late 5 



Carrot — Scarlet Horn; tender for soup 6 10 



Danvers; main crop; excellent 6 10 



Loner Oranere; long and tender 5 10 



Celery— White Plume; self-blanching, early 5 20 



Golden; self-blanching 5 30 



Pint. 



Peas— Alaska; earliest; deep green seeds 8 20 



Dexter; best, very early 8 20 



Nott's Excelsior; best main crop 8 20 



Beans— Early Mohawk; plant first 8 20 



Early v^alentine; best second early 8 20 



Com— Cory; very earliest 8 20 



Perry's Hybrid; excellent second 8 20 



Potter's Excelsior; delicious qualitv 8 20 



Central Park 



No seed ever sown can 

 surpass this well-tried 



Lawh Grass Seed, °i^ture. The seed is 



»^^%j^,„ w* !*.»» wrc^«?M. selected and mixed to 



fet the quickest, greenest, and thickest sod possible, 

 put plenty of perennial grasses in this to stand for 

 years and through the longest droughts A deep 

 velvety green is soon obtained bv sowing this seed. 



Price of "Central Park " Mixture-Quart, 25c.; 2 

 quarts, 40c.; 4 quarts, 75c.; ^ bustiel, $1.15; busfiel 

 (15 lbs.), $3.00. A qua t will sow 300 square feet. 

 The price for quarts and pints is postpaid. J^ bushel 

 and bushel price buyer pays express charges. 



Ornamental Grasses, Mixed. 



These Grasses, if cut before they are entirely ripe, 

 will be found useful in the formation of winter bou.- 

 quets, in connection with the Everlastings. Mere than 

 ten of the very finest sorts are included in this mix- 

 ture. Large packet, 5c. 



Everlasting or Eternal Flowers. 



Indispensable for winter and Christmas decorations. 

 Cut before entirely ripe, and hang heads downward 

 in a cool, dark place. This collection contains Acro- 

 clinium, Ammobium, Gomphrena, Helichrysum, Rho- 

 danthe and Xeranthemum, all the finest varieties, 

 mixed. Large packet, 6c. 



Golden Bantam Sweet Corn. 



Far and above the best of all early varieties. Extremely hardy 

 and can be planted earlier than any sweet corn — and said to be 



ready for the table sooner than any other sort. It is very rich, and sweet in flavor, and far ahead of Cory and all 



older sorts in this respect. Packet, 2 oz., lOc; % pt., 15c.; pt., 30c. 



Swiss Chard. 



Cos Lettuce Trianon. 



I have grown Cos Lettuce for many 

 years, and each year as I gather the 

 immense heads (sometimes i foot high 

 and weighing 3 or 4 lbs.), blanched to 

 a crystal whiteness and so tender and 

 sweet you cannot refrain from eating 

 them, I wonder why it is they are so 

 little known. They are better than any 

 other Lettuce. We always use them in 

 preference to any other sort. Tie 

 together six days before using. 



Trianon Self Folding Cos. 



Very early, very white, tender and 

 sweet. Packet, 5c.; oz., 15c. 



White Paris Cos. Used by the 



French more largely than any other, 

 rather later than Trianon; produces 

 heads weighing 6 lbs. Pkt., 5c.; oz., 15c. 

 Broad-leaved Batavia. The Escarolle the French use so largely 

 for salads; leaves used for greens, and in France the most popular 

 •of all salad for fall and winter. Very sweet and very pleasant. Pkt,, 5c.; oz., 15c. 



Can be used all sum- 

 mer and repeated 

 cuttings can be made from same plant. 

 Called "Cut and Come Again Spinach." If 

 you have room for but one vegetable in 

 your garden, this is it. Far superior to the 

 common beet for greens and equal to spin- 

 ach. Sown early in the spring, in rows 16 

 in. apart, thin out to 6 in. Is fit for use 

 for greens sooner than any other variety. 

 For summer use it is superior to spinach, 

 because it can be cut throughout the entire 

 summer and fall. 



Packet, 5c.; 



Endive 



O2.,10c.; J<lb.,20c.; lb., 60c. 



KohURabi 



White Goliath 



Growing as large as a cro 

 quet ball. The flesh is sweet 

 tender and delicious; equa 

 to Cauliflower and far supe 

 rior to Turnips. Plant early 

 and begin to use when size 

 of medium orange. Cook like 

 Turnips, mashed or cut in 

 cubes and creamed. 

 Packet, 5c.; oz., 15c. 



Cf . A Celerv 



eleriaC. producing 

 a root like a turnip. An ex- 

 cellent vegetable, highly fla- 

 vored, sweet and pleasant. 

 Equal to Celery and ready 

 much earlier, and a good 

 easy-keeping winter vege- 

 table. Packet, 5c.; oz.,15q 



