WM. ELLIOTT & SONS, SEEDSMEN, NEW YORK. 
CARROTS— Continued. 
Danvers Half Long Orange. This variety is extensively culti¬ 
vated, both for market and family use. Per pkt., 5 cts.; 
oz., 10 cts.; i lb., 25 cts.; lb., 75 cts. (Cut I.) 
EARLY SNOWBALL CAULIFLOWER. • 
Guerande or Oxheart. (Stump Rooted.) An excellent new 
variety of fine quality and very productive. Per pkt., 
5 cts.; oz., 10 cts.; J lb., 25 cts.; lb., 75 cts. (Cut 6.) 
Long Orange Improved. Roots of large size, equally adapted for 
garden or farm culture. Per pkt., 5 cts.; oz., 10 cts. ; 
i lb., 25 cts ; lb., 75 cts. (Cut 2.) 
Aitringham. Large and fine flavored red Carrot; an excellent 
sort. Per pkt., 5 cts.; oz., 10 cts.; J lb. ,25 cts. ; lb., 
75 cts. , 
Carentan Half Long Scarlet. Excellent for forcing. Fine 
quality and perfect shape; skin smooth, flesh red, with¬ 
out any core or heart. Per pkt., 5 cts. ; oz., 10 cts. ; % 
lb., 25 cts. ; lb., 75 cts. 
Large White Belgian. A very productive kind, grown almost 
exclusively for stock. Per oz., 10 cts.; % lb., 20 cts.; 
lb., 50 cts. 
CAULIFLOWER. 
German, Blumen-Kohl. —French, Chou Fleur .— 
Spanish, Coiliflor. 
One ounce will sow a bed of JfO square feet, and produce about 1,000 
plants. 
Cauliflower delights in a rich, moist soil, and in dry 
eeasons should be abundantly watered. Sow the first week 
in May, and prick out on a rich piece of ground; transplant 
in July. For wintering under glass, sow in the second and 
last week in September; transplant thickly into a cold pit or 
frame; give plenty of air in mild weather, and cover up well 
in very severe. Again, sow in February on a hot-bed. and 
-transplant in April. For Cauliflower, the ground should bo 
well prepared by trenching, incorporating at the same time a 
good share of rotten manure. Select new ground, if possibly 
as Cauliflower rarely succeeds on ground wnich has been 
cropped year after year with other kinds of vegetables. Plant 
in rows, plants 20 inches asunder, and 2 feet between the 
rows. 
Carrara Rock. The earliest variety grown, producing per¬ 
fectly formed, compact, and almost snow-white heads of 
the finest quality. The surest to head. Per pkt., CO 
cts. ; oz., $2.00. 
Early Snowball. (True.) One of the very earliest and most 
reliable sorts. It is dwarf and compact. Heads large 
and of superior quality. Per pkt., 25 cts. ; % oz., 75 cts,; 
oz., $2.25. 
Early Dwarf Erfurt. An early market variety, producing large 
compact heads of fine qvality. Per pkt., 5 cts.; % oz., 
75 cts. ; oz., $2.00. m 
Half Early Paris. (Nonpariel.) One of the most popular vari¬ 
eties grown ; good for early or late crops. Per pkt., 10 
cts. ; oz., 60 cts. 
Lenormand’s Short-Stemmed. An excellent late variety, with 
large heads of superior quality. Per pkt., 10 cts.; oz., 
60 cts. 
Large Late Algiers. An excellent late sort, getting into gen¬ 
eral favor. Per pkt., 10 cts.; oz., 60 cts. 
Veitch’s Autumn Giant. A valuable late variety, particularly 
in the Southern States. Per pkt., 5 cts.; oz., 40. 
CELERY. 
German, Seleri —French, Celeri. —Spanish, Apis. 
One ounce will sow a bed of 9 square yards, ana produce about 
2,500 plants. 
Celery is generally grown as a second crop, following early 
cabbages, onions, peas, etc. The proper time to sow is early 
in April, transplanting about the first of June. Set in rows 3 
GOLDEN SELF-BLANCHING. 
