7 
Descriptive Catalogue of Garden and Flower Seeds. 
SWEET CORN— continued. 
> 
r’s Early. Remarkable for sweetness and earliness ; large ears for such an early Corn. 
Pt. iocts., qt. 15 cts., }ipU. 40 cts., 
pk. 60 cts., bus. $2. 
Potter’s Excelsior, or Squantum. 
Ripens early ; has large, fine ears. 
Pt. iocts., qt. 15 cts., J^pk. 40 cts., 
pk. 60 cts., bus. $2. 
Gold Corn. Remarkably sweet, if 
not the sweetest of all. Pt. 10 cts., 
qt. 15 cts., pk. 40 cts., pk. 60 cts., 
bus. $2. 
Stow ell’s Evergreen. 
Early Mammoth. Large well-filled ears ; much earlier 
than Late Mammoth 
Large Late Mammoth. Large ears; rich and sweet. 
Egyptian. Late; ears very fine 
Country Gentleman. Very large and sweet grains, in 
Pt. 
Qt. 
J 4 pk. 
Pk. 
Bus. 
0 10 
Jo 15 
Jo 4° 
$0 60 
$ 2 OO 
10 
15 
40 
60 
2 OO 
10 
15 
40 
60 
2 OO 
10 
15 
40 
60 
2 OO 
10 
15 
40 
60 
2 OO 
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 than usual. 
Golden Beauty. (Dent.) Very handsome ; fine yielder Si >5 
Pride of the North. (Dent.) Planted as late as July, it has matured by October; 
ears 8 to 10 inches long, and 14 to 16 rows to cob 1 : 5 
Learning. (Dent.) Large, deep grains; bright yellow 1 *5 
Mastodon. (Dent.) The largest-eared early Dent Corn ; large grains 1 15 
Minnesota King 1 T 5 
Hickory King. (Dent.) Large white grain, small cob 1 *5 
Blunt’s Prolific. A valuable fodder Corn 1 r 5 
> 
POP-CORN. 
Rice. For parching. (On ears.) Always plant a few rows of this. Lb. 10 cts. 
Improved Evergreen 
BROOM CORN. 
Qt. Pk Bus. 
Jo 20 So 75 $2 75 
CRESS, or PEPPER GRASS. 
German, $reffe. 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 runs to seed. 
Pkt. Oz. Klb. Lb. 
Extra-Curled. The finest variety grown Jo 05 Jo 10 Jo 15 Jo 40 
WATER-CRESS. 
German, SBrunneipfireffe. French, Cresson 
de Fontaine. 
This universally esteemed and exceedingly 
wholesome salad may be grown in any moist sit- 
uation, but more successfully by the edge of a 
running brook. The seed may be sown in May, 
on the ground where i|t is intended to be grown, 
and the thinnings transplanted. 
Pkt. Oz. 
Water-Cress. The ordinary va- 
riety $0 10 Jo 50 
Water-Cress. 
