SWEET CORN — Continued 
Potter’s Excelsior. — Considered the best main crop corn grown. The .0ars are medium in size, and 
well filled with white, juicy kernels. It is a twelve-rowed sort, and very productive. 
Price, .10 per pkt. ; .15 per pt.; .25 per qt. ; 1.50 per pk. 
Country Gentleman. — Of all the late varieties this is the richest flavoured, has the deepest grain and the 
smallest cob. The kernels are exceptionally large, tender, and milky, and lie in irregular rows on 
the cob. 
Price, .10 per pkt. ; .20 per pt. ; .35 per qt. ; 2.00 per pk. 
Stowell’s Evergreen. — A very handsome, tender, and sugary sort, recognized as the standard late 
variety, with very large ears of twelve to sixteen rows which remain fit for use longer than any other 
corn known. 
Price, .10 per pkt.; .15 per pt.; .25 per qt.; 1.50 per pk. 
Late Mammoth Sugar. — Produces mammoth ears, which are very thick through, with rows of large, 
broad grains of excellent texture. It follows Stowell’s Evergreen into maturity. 
Price, .10 per pkt.; .15 per pt.; .25 per qt.; 1.50 per pk. 
FIELD CORN 
Prices on all the leading varieties of Field and Fodder Corns will be forwarded at once upon appli- 
cation. For field varieties plant eight to ten quarts to the acre, for fodder and ensilage corns one to 
one and a half bushels in drills. When planting corn for soiling purposes plant at the rate of three to 
four bushels broadcast. 
KOHL RABI, 
Carter’s Earliest White, 
Carter’s Earliest Purple. 
Price, .10 per pkt. ; 
.35 peroz.; 3.50 per lb. 
Description. — A useful vege- 
table, not nearly so much culti- 
vated in this country in gardens 
as it would be were its merits 
known. 
Use. — As a substitute for 
Turnips, especially in hot, dry 
seasons. The bulb grows en- 
tirely out of the ground. 
Carter’s Earliest Purple Kohl Rabi 
[ 44 ] 
or KNOL KHOL 
Varieties. — There are two 
varieties in general cultivation, 
the white and the purple. 
Cultivation. — Prepare a 
breadth of good well-manured 
soil. Drill the seeds in rows 
about 15 inches apart in May 
or June, and thin out to about 
9 inches apart. They are ready 
for use when they attain the 
size of a small Turnip. One 
ounce of Kohl Rabi Seed will 
sow 150 feet of drill. 
