SEEDS WHICH SUCCEED 



One Ounce of Seed to 100 

 Yards of Row. 



Broccoli 



THESE PRICES 

 INCLUDE POSTAGE 



A plant much resembling the Cauliflower, and like it derived from the wild Cabbage. Broccoli requires 

 a longer season to develop than Cauliflower. It has more numerous and stiffer leaves, and the heads are 

 smaller. The seed is best sown in Midsummer and Autumn, and the plants carried over Winter for planting 

 out in Spring. 



Large Early White, 150 days. — Large white head, resembling Cauliflower. We Lb. H Lb. o z . Pkt. 

 offer an especially fine strain of Early White Broccoli, and strongly recommend 



its more general culture $7.00 2.00 .70 5 



Brussels Sprouts 



One Ounce of Seed to 100 

 Yards of Row. 



A variety of the Cabbage family, possessing the peculiarity of bearing upon its stem or stalk from 

 50 to 100 buds resembling miniature Cabbage heads. The leaves composing these heads resemble Savoy 

 Cabbage in their crumpled texture and also in their color. The heads or buds, from 1 to 2 inches in diameter, 

 form one of the most delicious garden vegetables, only equaled by the Cauliflower. 



Lb. M Lb. Oz. Pkt. 



Dalkeith. — A fine variety, producing large cream-white buttons. Choice $4.00 1.15 43 5 



Half Dwarf Paris. — A choice strain, each plant very productive of hundreds of 

 buttons size of a pigeon's egg. Delicious in flavor and exceedingly tender. 



Hardier than cabbage 4.00 1.15 40 5 



mmmm 



Three Ounces of Seed 

 to 100 Yards of Row 



Cabbage to produce Seed on Bloomsdale 



Cabbage 



No selections of Cabbage are better than those offered by us 

 Gardeners can rely upon LANDRETHS' CABBAGE SEED 



Don't have the soil in the seed-bed as rich as the field to which the Cabbage is transplanted, or the 

 plants will be starved after transplantation. 



Don't seed too thickly or force the growth too rapidly, or the plants will grow too tall, slim and tender 

 and the growth be more seriously checked by adverse conditions. 



Root deeply to resist drought. When setting out, plant up to the first leaf-stems. 



supply plenty of moisture and manure. 



Don't sow the seed for a whole crop at one time, for plants of different ages are differently affected by 

 adverse circumstances, and by division a planter will have a better chance to profit, at least from a part of 

 his crop. 



For Express charges paid by customer, or small seeds Postage paid by us, see page B. 



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