SEEDS AND POULTRY SUPPLIES 



CARROTS 



CHICORY 



1 ounce to 150 feet drill. 2y2 pounds to acre. 



CULTURE. — Follow directions given for Beets and 

 Parsnips, as there is no difference in the method of 

 cultivating these roots. 



EARLY SCARLET HORN.— Small, but 

 early. Best for forcing. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 

 15c. V4= Pound, 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



DANVERS HALF-LONG STUMP 

 ROOTED. — A new variety of decided 

 merit; rich in color and of handsome 

 shape. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c. i/4 Pound, 

 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



DANVERS HALF-LONG POINTED 

 ROOT. — E<arly and very beautifully 

 shaped; very rich in color and best for 

 main crop. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c. i/4 

 Pound, 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



CHANTENAY, HALF-LONG.— Resem- 

 bles the Nantes, with larger shoulders, 

 medium early and heavy cropper; one of 

 the best for market. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 

 15c. 14 Pound, 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



IMPROVED LONG ORANGE.— Deep 

 Danvers Half orange color, long, smooth, popular for 

 Long Point general crop. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c, 

 Root Carrot ^/4 Pound, 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



ST. VALLERY, OR NEW INTERMEDIATE CAR- 

 ROT. — One of the best main crop carrots. It is noted 

 for its smoothness of shape, its tenderness of flesh, 

 and beauty of color. Pac 

 Pound, 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



CORN SALAD— ACKERSALAT 



One Ounce Will Sow About Eighteen Square Feet 

 and Six Pounds Will Sow An Acre. 



BROAD LEAVED (Large Seeded). — A delicious 

 salad, used during the winter and spring months as a 

 substitute for lettuce, and is also cooked and used 

 like spinach. Sow in spring in drills one foot apart. 

 It will mature in six weeks. For early spring use 

 sow in September and winter over like spinach. 

 Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c. V4, Pound, 40c. Pound, $1.25. 



COLLAR DS. — A tall, loose-leaved cabage-like or 

 kale-like plant grown throughout the South and 

 known in different sections as "Cole," "Colewort," 

 or simply "Greens." It is extensively used for the 

 table and for stock in the South, where it continues 

 in growth and is usable throughout the entire win- 

 ter. Collards usually succeed in locations where cab- 

 bage cannot be grown to perfection. 



GEORGIA, SOUTHERN, OR CREOLE.— This is 



the white or green-stemmed variety, growing two to 

 three feet high and form-ing a large loose, open head 

 or cluster of leaves with a rather long stem. A 

 frost, if not too severe, will improve rather than 

 injure the quality of the leaves. Sow thickly in 

 drills, in rich ground, transplanting when four inches 

 high; or sow in drills where the plants are to re- 

 main, and when well started thin to two or three 

 feet apart in the row. In the South, seed may be 

 sown from January to May and from August to 

 October. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c. % Pound, 40c. 

 Pound, $1.25. 



Sow early in spring, in good, mellow soils, in drills 

 half an inch deep and 12 inches apart. 



LARGE-ROOTED MAGDEBURG.— The leaves 

 when blanched make an excellent salad. Packet, 

 5c. Ounce, 15c. V^ Pound, 45c. Pound, $1.50. 



W I TLOOF.— Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c. % Pound, 

 50c. Pound, $1.75. 



DANDELION 



An early spring salad. Sow early in spring in drills 

 12 inches apart, and thin out 6 inches in the rows. 



IMPROVED FRENCH.- 



% Pound, $1.00. 



-Packet, 10c. Ounce, 25c. 



CRESS OR PEPPER GRASS 



EXTRA CURLED. — The most popular variety for 

 market; excellent flavor. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 15c. 

 14 Pound, 30c. Pound, 75c. 



WATERCRESS. — Cultivated by sowing the seed 

 by running water or near a spring which is not se- 

 verely frozen through the winter. Packet, 10c. 

 Ounce, 50c. V4, Pound, $1.50. 



BRUSSELS SPROUTS 



A class of plants 

 allied to the Cab- 

 bage family, pro- 

 ducing a great 

 number of small 

 heads or sprouts 

 on the main stem 

 of the plant, which 

 are used and pre- 

 pared as greens. 

 Plant in rich soil 

 in hills 2 ft. apart 

 each way. Pack- 

 ets, 5c. Ounce, 

 30c. 1/4 Pound, 75c. 

 Pound, $3.00. 



Amager Market Sprouts. 



