Best Standard Early Cabbage 
21 
Grow your own Cabbage 
plants. It costs you but a 
trifle, and what a pleasure to 
have them ready to set out 
right after a nice shower. 
EXTRA EARLY 
WINNINGSTADT 
One of the Best for General Use "** 
A very fine header and will grow 
a hard head under circumstances 
where most sorts would fail. Plant 
very compact, with short, thick leaves. 
Heads regular, conical and very hard. 
Packet, 3 cents; ounce, 12 cents; Yn 
pound, 40 cents; y 2 pound, 75 cents; 
pound, $1.35. 
EXTRA EARLY 
EXPRESS 
Good sized pointed or oval heads fre- 
HENDERSON'S EARLY SUMMER 
EARLY JERSEY WAKE- 
FIELD 
THE BEST FIRST- EARLY OBLONG- 
HEADED CABBAGE 
The heads are uniformly hard and solid. 
They are pyramidal in form, generally 
pointed at the end, with but few outside 
leaves. The. outer leaves are unusually 
thick and heavy, and jt is thereby enabled 
to stand more cold weather without injury with the market gardeners. It 
when carried through the winter either forms large, solid, round, flattened 
in the open ground in the South or in compact heads of excellent quality, 
quently weighing 10 pounds. Extra cold-frames in the North. Packet, 4 cents; The heads average more than dou- 
early, compact, solid, and of fine fla- ounce, 15 cents; % pound, 50 cents; y 2 ble the size of the Jersey Wake 
HENDERSON'S 
EARLY SUMMER 
Standard Mid-Summer 
Variety 
This variety is deservedly popular 
vor. Packet, 3 cents; ounce, 10 cents; pound, 90 cents; pound, $1.75. 
Yt pound, 35 cents; y% pound, 60 cents; 
pound, $1.10. 
ALL HEAD EARLY 
Often Coming in Before Early Summer 
It is at least one-third larger than this 
popular variety, and therefore much 
more profitable to the market gardener, 
who has in this variety a Cabbage larger 
and at the same time earlier — is also 
valuable for late Winter Cabbage. Seed 
of All-Head sown in July and plants set 
out about the middle of August will 
bring heads large and solid, which are 
sure to stand the Winter well. Packet, 
4 cents; ounce, 15 cents; Vn pound, 50 
cents; Y 2 pound, 90 cents; pound, $1.75. 
ALL-HEAD EARLY 
GLORY OF 
ENKHUIZEN 
This is a Holland product, 
and has made good in this 
country wherever it has been 
planted. Produces a very 
heavy crop, is quite early, 
large and round: always ex- 
tremely solid and fine-ribbed 
excelling in flavor almost all 
other varieties. It is exceed- 
ingly tender, and has more 
of the flavor of the "Savoy" 
Cabbages than most other 
sorts; quite dwarf and com- 
pact, allowing close planting. 
Heads ball-shaped and with 
few outside leaves. Color is a 
lightish green. Packet, 5 
cents; ounce, 25 cents; K 
pound, 75 cents; Vi pound, 
$1.40; pound, $2.50. 
GREGORY'S ALL SEASONS 
field, while it matures only ten to 
twelve days later. Packet, 3 cents; 
ounce, 12 cents; Y4 pound, 40 cents; 
y 2 pound, 75 cents; pound, $1.35. 
CHARLESTON 
WAKEFIELD 
The Charleston Wakefield is an im- 
proved and larger form of Jersey 
Wakefield. It requires rather more time 
to reach maturity, but it yields fully 
twice the crop of the original Wakefield 
Cabbage. It is about a week or 10 days 
later than its parent, and comes along 
in a close succession to the earliest cab- 
bage crop. It is a strain which cannot 
be profitably overlooked by any garden- 
er, whether it is intended for a private 
garden or to be sent to market. Packet, 
4 cents; ounce, 12 cents; Yi pound, 45 
cents; y 2 pound, 85 cents; pound, $1.60. 
GREGORY'S ALL 
SEASONS 
An excellent second early 
cabbage, producing large, 
solid heads of uniform shape, 
flattened on top as shown in 
the illustration. Fully de- 
veloped heads frequently 
measure 10 to 12 inches 
across, and weigh 12 to 15 
pounds each. It is also fine 
grained and of dainty flavor. 
It succeeds everywhere. Some 
of the largest Cabbage 
raisers in this country, who 
grow especially for kraut 
factories, use our special 
strain of All Sea.sons, and 
claim it far superior to all 
other varieties for kraut pur- 
poses. Packet, 4 cents; ounce, 
12 cents; !4 pound, 45 cents; 
y 2 pound, 85 cents;., pound, 
$1.60. 
