With suitable soil and care, you can raise Golden Yellow Self Blanching celery 



like this in your garden. 



CELERIAC 



Sow seed at the same season and give the same treatment as celery. 

 Transplant to moist, rich soil, in rows 2 feet apart and 6 inches apart in 

 row. Give thorough culture. It is not necessary to earth up or "handle" 

 the plants. After the roots are 2 inches in diameter, they are ready for use. 

 • LARGE SMOOTH PRAGUE Pkt. 10c; 1/2 oz. 30c 



CHERVIL 



Sow in early spring in rich, well prepared soil. The seed is slow to ger- 

 minate, sometimes remaining in the earth 2 or 3 weeks before the plants 

 appear. When the plants are about 2 inches high, transplant or thin to 

 about 1 foot apart. They are ready for use in 6 to 10 weeks from sowing. 



CURLED Pkt. 10c; oz. 30c 



It = 



Smart t. 



CHICORY 



•ASPARAGUS or CATALOGNE 



Pkt. 10c; oz. 50c 

 •SMALL ROOTED or RADICHETTA 



Pkt. 10c; oz. 30c 



• WITLOOF or FRENCH ENDIVE 



Pkt. 10c; oz. 35c 



CHINESE or CELERY 

 CABBAGE 



Easily raised as a succession crop, for the 

 plants can be set out in the rows which have been 

 occupied by earlier vegetables. Do not plant too 

 early. 



• CHIHILI WONG BOK 



Pkt. 10c; oz. 30c. Pkt. 10c; oz. 30c 



Witloof chicory will give 

 you an abundance of 

 crisp blanched leaves For ^j 

 salads. 



•ALLIUM Schoenoprasum Readily propagated from seeds; 

 leaves used in salads and for flavoring soups and stews; 

 flowering plant is decorative. Pkt. 1 0c ; 1/2 oz. 40c 



COLLARDS 



Generous rings of Chinese Cabbage and meaty slices of tomato form an 

 appetizing salad combination. 



This tall, loose leaved plant is grown in different sections of 

 the South as "Cole," "Colewort," or simply "Greens." It is much 

 used for the table as well as for stock feeding. 



Sow the seed thickly in rows in rich ground, transplanting 

 when about 4 inches in height; or sow where the plants are to re- 

 main, and when well started thin to 2 or 3 feet apart in the row. 

 In the South, seed may be sown from January to May and from 

 August to October. 



• CABBAGE or HEADING (Buncombe) Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c 



• GEORGIA, SOUTHERN or CREOLE Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c 



•Our choice. In FERRY'S RED and SILVER DISPLAYS 



U 



