SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS, BULBS AND PLANTS FOR 1898. 
91 
ennett's White Spin© —(Private Stock.) Our seeii of 
this is saved from oneof the finest stocks on Long Island, 
and Long Island leads tho world on choice garden vegc 
tables Those Cucumbers grow seven to ten inches long, 
uniformly plump and full to the very ends, a glossy dark 
green in color. A superior quality in every respect, 
pkt., 10c.; or.., "Oc.; lb., $1.00. 
arly Creen Cluster A prolific variety, with crisp, brittle 
A fine nickling variety. Pkt., 5c.; oz„ 10c„ It'., 80c. 
Childs’ Ivory Monarch The king of all Cucumbers, grow¬ 
ing nearly two feet in length and weighing five or six 
pounds. Six times larger than any other sort. It ie 
really a monster, and when half grown exceedingly 
fine in quality. Its enormous size, great beauty ana 
odditv make it one of the finest vegetables for exhibiting 
at fairs, and it never fails to capture first prize. Its 
flesh is thick and solid, with a very small seed cavity, 
and notwithstanding its size, it has fewer seeds than 
any other Cucumber we ever saw. Pkt., 15c.; 3 pkts., 5Uc # 
Improved Early Russian— One of the most valuable, es¬ 
pecially in the South. It is so very dwarf,fliills need bo 
only three feet apart, yet it is one of tho most prolific 
varieties of all, hearing its short, ‘plump fruits in clus¬ 
ters and if not allowed to ripen seed will bear from June 
until October, and that in hot, dry weather that crisps 
almost everv other variety, root and branch. It needs 
deep, rich hills to do this, but is certain then to succeed. 
We believe there is no variety superior to tins. 1 Kt., oc.; 
oz., 20c.; lb., $1.00. 
