Descriptive Catalogue of Garden and Flower Seeds. 
7 
Stabler’s Early. 
SWEET CORN— CONTINUED. 
Remarkable for sweetness and earliness ; large ears for such an early Corn. 
Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 cts., /4pk. 50 cts., pk. 75 cts., 
bus. $2.50. 
Potter’s Excelsior, or Squantum. Ripensearly ; 
has large, fine ears. Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 cts., J4pk. 
50 cts., pk. 75 cts., bus. $2.50. 
Gold Corn. Remarkably sweet, if not the sweetest 
of all. Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 cts., } 4 pk. 50 cts., pk. 
75 cts., bus.. $2.50. 
Stowell’s Evergreen. More largely grown than 
all others. Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 cts., >£pk. 50 cts., 
pk. 75 cts., bus. $2.50. 
Early Mammoth. Large well-filled ears ; much 
earlier than Late Mammoth. Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 
cts., j£pk. 50 cts., pk. 75 cts., bus. $2.50. 
Late Mammoth. Large ears ; rich and sweet. 
Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 cts., '/ipk. 50 cts., pk. 75 cts., 
bus. $2.50. 
I Egyptian. Late; ears very fine. Pt. 10 cts., qt. 
15 cts., >£pk. 5° Cts., pk. 75 cts., bus. $2.50. 
Country Gentleman. Very large and sweet- 
grained; in irregular lows. Pt. 10 cts., qt. 15 
cts., '/ipk. 5° cts., pk. 75 cts., bus. $2.50. 
FIELD CORN. 
This Corn was grown especially for seed in the 
extreme north, and may be depended upon as a first- 
class article, while the price is quoted much lower 
SWEET COHN. 
(Dent.) Very handsome 
than usual. 
Golden Beauty 
fine yielder 
Pride of the North. (Dent.) Planted as late as July, it has matured by October 
ears 8 to to inches long, and 14 to 16 rows to cob 
Learning. (Dent.) Large, deep grains ; bright yellow 
Mastodon. (Dent.) The largest-eared early Dent Corn ; large grains 
Minnesota King. . . 
Hickory King. (Dent.) Large white grain, small cob 
New Keystone ilammoth Pride 
Blunt’s Prolific. A valuable fodder Corn 
ti 25 
25 
25 
25 
25 
25 
00 
25 
POP-CORN. 
Rice. For parching (on ears). Lb. 10 cts. 
BROOM CORN. 
Improved Evergreen 
Qt. Pk. Bus. 
$0 20 $0 75 $2 75 
CRESS, OR PEPPER GRASS. 
German, greffe. French, Cresson. i oz. to 50 ft. of drill. 
A popular, pungent salad, which should be sown early in the spring— very thickly in 
shallow drills— and at short intervals for succession, as it soon ruDS p° seed 0z Lb 
Extra-Curled. The finest variety grown fo 05 $0 10 Jo 15 Jo 40 
WATER-CRESS. 
German, SSrunnetugreffe. French, Cresson de Fontaine 
This universally esteemed and exceedingly wholesome salad may be grown in any moist 
’ ’ The seed may be sown in 
situation, but more successfully by the edge of a running brook. - 
on the ground where it is intended to be grown, and the thinnings transplanted.^ 
May, 
Water-Cress. The ordinary variety 
Oz. 
Jo 50 
