■n: 
CASHMANS SEEDS OF QUALITY^ 
podded sorts are often called butter beans. One pound 
will plant sixty feet of drill ; eighty pounds to the acre. 
Yellow or Wax I’odded Varieties 
-Prepaid— 
Pkt. 
Collect 
3 oz. 
y 2 ib. 
1 lb. 
3 lbs. 
Brittle Wax . 
.08 
$ .17 $ 
.30 
$ .75 
Royal Purple Wax. 
.. .08 
.15 
.25 
.60 
Improved Golden Wax. 
.. .08 
.15 
.25 
.60 
Pencil Pod Black Wax. 
. .08 
.15 
.25 
.60 
Davis White Wax. 
.. .08 
.15 
.25 
.60 
Green Podded Dwarf or Bush Sorts 
Burpee’s Stringless . 
.. .08 
.15 
.25 
.60 
Improved White Navy. 
.. .05 
.12 
.20 
.40 
Great Northern White Navy. 
.. .05 
.12 
.20 
.40 
Bush Lima 
Beans 
Henderson’s Bush Lima. 
.. .08 
.20 
.35 
.85 
Burpee’s Bush Lima. 
.. .08 
.20 
.35 
.85 
Pole Lima 
Beans 
Large White Lima . 
. .08 
.20 
.35 
.85 
Pole or Runner 
Green 
Pod 
Kentucky Wonder or Old 
Homestead . 
.. .08 
.15 
.25 
.60 
Scarlet Runner .05 
BEETS 
One ounce sows fifty feet of drill—from four to six 
pounds to an acre. 
For early beets sow as soon as the ground can be 
worked. The main crop should be seeded from the 15th 
to the 20th of May in drills 15 inches apart and 1 V 2 
inches deep. As the plants grow, thin them to six inches 
apart in the drills. Young plants make excellent greens. 
Deep rich loam is the best for beets. 
- — —Prepaid- 
Pkt. 
Oz. 
14 lb. 
1 lb. 
Detroit Dark Red 
...$ .05 
$ .10 
$ .35 
$1.00 
Early Wonder Blood Turnip... 
... .05 
.10 
.35 
1.00 
Crosby’s Early Egyptian. 
... .05 
.10 
.30 
.90 
Swiss Chard . 
... .05 
.10 
.30 
.90 
Half Long Blood. 
... .05 
.10 
.30 
.90 
SUGAR BEETS 
One ounce sows one hundred feet of drills, five pounds 
to the acre in drills or fifteen to twenty pounds broadcast. 
Oz. !4 lb. 1 lb. 
White Kline Wanzelben.$ .05 if .15 $ .50 
STOCK BEETS OR MANGELS 
Sow same as Sugar Beets. 
A splendid winter feed for cattle and hogs, increases 
the flow of milk, yields larger crops than turnips and are 
higher in feeding value. They require the same soil and 
climate as sugar beets and are sown any time up to June 
15th. The roots must be taken up before severe freezing 
sets in. The leaves are trimmed off and the roots placed 
in piles and covered with layers of straw and soil. 
We believe you will like the Giant Sludstrup better than 
any other mangel. It not only is a heavy yielder but the 
roots are easy to harvest, not going so deep in the ground 
as the Mammoth Long Red. 
The Mammoth Long Red is undoubtedly the heaviest 
yielder and the largest of all mangels. The roots are 
often more than two feet in length and six inches in 
diameter, the skin is red and the flesh white. This 
variety has yielded as high as fifty tons per acre. 
• Not 
Pre¬ 
paid 
Mammoth Long Red 
Giant Sludstrup . 
Half Sugar . 
Prepaid- 5 lbs. 
Oz. !4 lb. 
$ .05 $ .15 
.05 .15 
.05 .15 
1 lb. per lb. 
$ .50 $ .40 
.50 .40 
.50 .40 
CABBAGE 
One ounce will produce about 2,000 plants. Set from 
S,000 to 10,000 plants to the acre of early sorts and 6,000 
of the large late kinds. 
No vegetable is of greater importance than cabbage and 
its place is almost assured in every garden. Therefore 
you should be most particular in buying your seed. In 
placing our contract for cabbage seed we consider only 
quality and we pride ourselves on having the highest 
grade of cabbage seed that is obtainable. I am sure that 
you will like our Imported strain of Danish Ballhead or 
Hollander. Cabbage requires a deep rich soil and thor¬ 
ough working to insure good solid full sized heads. Sow 
early sorts in hot-beds from 6 to 8 weeks before time to 
set out plants in field or garden. Transplant to rows 3 
feet apart. 
--—Prepaid- 
Pkt. 
Oz. 
% lb. 
1 lb. 
Early Jersey Wakefield . 
$ .05 
$ .20 
$ .60 
$2.00 
Early Dwarf Flat Dutch . 
.05 
.15 
.50 
1.85 
Danish Ballhead or Hollander, 
Imported Strain, Medium 
Stem . 
.05 
.25 
.70 
2.50 
Early Summer . 
.05 
.15 
.50 
1.85 
Cashman’s Special Strain Dan- 
ish Ballhead or Hollander. 
.10 
.35 
1.25 
4.25 
Premium Late Flat Dutch. 
.05 
.15 
.50 
1.85 
Red Dutch . 
.05 
.25 
.60 
1.90 
Petasi—Chinese . 
.10 
Golden Acre . 
.05 
.30 
1.00 
3.75 
Glory of Enkhuizen. 
.05 
.20 
.55 
2.00 
CARROTS FOR THE TABLE 
One ounce to 100 feet of drill. Three to four pounds to 
an acre. 
The carrot is one of the most nutritious and healthful 
roots and should be used more for the table as well as for 
stock feeding purposes. Sow in rows fifteen to eighteen 
inches apart as soon as the ground can be worked, cover¬ 
ing the seed about one-half inch. The plants should be 
thinned to about four inches. For field culture sow in 
drills eighteen to twenty-four inches apart. 
PLEASE TURN TO PAGE TEN 
