FARM, GARDEN AND SEED ANNUAL 
11 
Swiss Chard Lucullus Improved. 
BcctS— Continued. 
Half Long Blood. Late variety and finest quality for winter 
use; smooth skin; flesh dark red, sweet and exceptionally tender. 
Per oz., 15c.; per %-\b., 30c.; per lb., $1.00. 
Swiss Chard or Spinach Beet. 
Cultivated for its leaves. The mid-rib is boiled and served 
like asparagus, and the other portions of the leaves are used 
as spinach. When wanted, cut close down to the ground 
without injury to the crown, and new leaves will grow con¬ 
tinuously from early summer until frost. 
Giant Lucullus Improved. The rib and stem are very wide, 
pearly white and tender. A great improvement over the old 
sort. Large dark green, crumbled leaf. Price per pkt., 10c.; 
per oz., 15c.; per %-\b., 30c.; per lb., $1.00. 
Swiss Chard or Silver. This is the old standard, smooth-leaved 
variety. Per pkt., 10c.; per oz., 15c.; per %-lb., 30c.; per lb., $1.00. 
Beets--Mangel Wurtzel. 
For Feeding Stock. 
Red Globe. A large, round, red-skinned variety. Price per oz., 
10 c.; per J4-Ib., 20c.; per lb., 60c. 
Mammoth Long Red. Grows to an enormous size, producing 
30 to 40 tons per acre of valuable food for stock; roots grow 
well above ground, therefore easy to harvest. Per oz., 10c.; 
per %-\b., 20c.; lb., 60c.; 10 lbs., $5.25. 
Giant Sludstrup. An orange yellow sort, ovoid in shape, not the largest 
in bulk yield, but excels in amount of dry matter per acre yield. Price 
per oz., 10c.; per %-\b., 20 c.; per lb., 60c. 
Golden Tankard. Half long nearly uniform diameter from top to bottom. 
Price per oz., 10c.; per %-\b., 20c.; per lb., 60c. 
Sugar Beets. 
Lane’s Imperial Sugar.. (White French). A white-fleshed, very productive 
variety for stock feeding; skin below ground rose-colored, above ground 
gray. Price per oz., 10c.; per J4-Ib., 20c.; per lb., 60c. 
Klein Wauzleben Sugar. Long, medium size; color, rosy orange; very 
sweet, used for sugar making and stock feed. Price per oz., 10c.; per *4-lb., 
20 c.; per lb., 60c. 
Broccoli. 
Spargel Kohl — Broculi — Broccoli. 
Broccoli is closely allied to cauliflower; succeeds only under cool, damp 
conditions. Sow thinly in seed beds about the middle of spring, transplant 
and cultivate according to directions for winter cabbage. 
Early White Cape. The heads when full grown 
are large, white and compact, like cauliflower. 
Broccoli requires a long, cool season such as in 
our Northwest. Price per pkt., 10c.; per oz., 55c.; 
per %-\b., $1.75. 
Early Green Calabrese. Entirely distinct from 
the above sorts. Cultivated for its green bud 
clusters and tender terminal leaves. The main 
stalk cluster when cut encourages many side 
sprouts with smaller clusters. Price per pkt., 10c.; 
per oz., 50c.; /4-lb., $1.50; per lb., $5.00. 
Broccoli Calabrese. 
Brussels Sprouts. Mamm °mange°l NG Red 
Rosenkohl—Berza de Brussels—Brocoli di Cavolo. 
The plants grow two or three feet high and produce, from the sides of the 
stalk, numerous little sprouts one or two inches in diameter, resembling 
cabbages. The leaves look like the Savoy, and should be broken’ down in the 
fall, to give the little cabbages more room to grow. 
Long Island Improved. Dwarf, compact, producing large sprouts. Price 
per pkt., 10c.; per oz., 20c.; per %-lb., 55 c.; per lb., $1.75. 
