Helena, Montana. 
VEGETABLE SEEDS— (Continued.) 79 
FOR PRICES ON ALL VEGETABLE 
SEEDS— SEE RED INSERT— PAGE 80 
CARROT 
Ger. — Moetare. 
Scand. — G-ulrod. 
(One ounce to 100 feet in drill; 3 to 4 pounds to an acre.) 
Good sandy loam Is best adapted for Carrots of all varieties. 
The shorter varieties, however, can be sown in heavier lands 
with good results. 
rrencli Forcingf — This Carrot is one of 
such quicl< growth that a good name 
for it is tlie Radish Carrot, for it cer- 
tainly matures as quicl<ly as a radisli. 
It has a very fine necli and a rather 
hollow crown. We highly recommend 
it to all our customers who desire a 
small, eaiiy, delicious Carrot that 
will mature early, hut must be sown 
in very rich soil. 
Early Scarlet or Short Som — Earliest 
and best standard table variety; short 
top; sweet and tender. 
Carrot — Prench Forcing'. 
Oxheart or Onerande 
— Medium early, 
bright orange color, 
fine grained and 
sweet, one of the 
best table varieties. 
Can be pulled by 
hand; well suited to 
heavy soils, but will 
thrive equally well 
in other situations. 
Early Cliantenay — A 
French variety, well 
adapted to family 
or marlcet garden- 
er's use, as it is 
tender, fine grained 
and sweet. 
Carrot — Ozbeart or Onerande. 
Danvers Half long — A standard variety and one of the heaviest 
croppers. Color dark orange, very thick shoulder, of a most 
excellent quality. Length 8 to 10 Inches. 
Half lions' Scarlet Stump Rootel — A variety about as large as 
Danvers, but not so thick. It is of uniform thickness from 
shoulder to root and very stump-rooted. 
Improved Iion^ Orange — Kxcellent variety for garden or field 
culture. Good quality for dairy cows; attains large size. 
CARROTS FOR STOCK 
Mastodon — A vast improvement on the White and Yellow Belgian 
sort. The roots arc short and very heavy at the shoulder, and 
frequently measure 15 to 20 inches, yielding from 20 to 25 tons 
to the acre. 
■White Belgian — Grown extensively for stock feeding. Very heavy 
cropper. 
Victoria — Our records prove this to bo the most popular Red 
Stoclr Carrot in the list, no doubt on account of its sweetness 
and heavy yield. 
CAULIFLOWER 
(One ounce for 3,000 plants.) 
Vioz. to 100 feet of drill. Two oz., to the acre. 
Early Sncvrball. 
Culture — Cauliflower is a gross feeder, and well repays heavy 
manuring and high culture. It succeeds best on well drained 
soil. For spring crop, plant the seed in protected beds early in 
b'ebruary and the plant will be ready to transplant probably 
early in April. The young plants should be tliinned, since they 
become very spindly if allowed to grow too thick in seed bed. 
Plant in rows two feet apart — eighteen inches in tlie row. 
Early Snowball — Is the best all-round Cauliflower on the market 
— early or late — for the family or the market garden. It heads 
wliere others fail. Us close and compact habit of growth per- 
mits one-tliird more to be planted on the same quantity of 
ground than can be done with otlier varieties. 
Early Dwarf Erfurt — An extra early variety; scarcely a plant 
fails to produce a head. 
Dry 'Weather or Danish Giant — Is more resistant to unfavorable 
seasons tlian other sorts, particularly in dry weather. 
Early Paris — A compact, short-stemmed variety of exceptional 
merit, especially adapted to the family garden. 
Autumn Giant — A splendid late variety, as its name indicates. 
Very large, very white and a sure header under almost all 
conditions. 
Celeriac — Giant Smooth Frague, 
CELERIAC 
Ger. — KnoUer Sellerie. 
Scand. — Knopselleri. 
Giant Smootli Praafue — Turnip rooted celery. Excellent for soups, 
will keep all winter; roots large, smooth, good flavor. 
