Hart & Vick’s Vegetable Seeds 
are tested by a famous Agricultural Experiment Station and the results of this test appear 
on every package of Vegetable Seeds we send out 
The varieties of vegetables listed in this Catalogue are those which have proved to be the best for use in the gardens of 
our customers and in our trial-grounds. We show in CAPITAL letters those kinds that we especially recommend to you. 
You get the same high-quality seed in these garden-size packages as we furnish to the market-gardener and florist, whose 
living depends on the quality of seed he sows. 
Artichoke 
One package of seed will produce 
100 plants; 1 ounce will sow 100 feet; 
5 pounds, an acre 
A perennial producing flower- 
buds, used for food, the second 
year after sowing. Protect in 
winter in the North. Sow seeds 
early in spring. If sown in hotbeds 
in February can be grown to bud 
the first year. 
LARGE GREEN GLOBE. Stan¬ 
dard sort. Large pkg. 10c; oz. 
45c; 34 lb. $1.50. _ 
All gardeners are invited to visit 
our display grounds at Fairport. 
Hundreds of Tulips, Narcissus, Iris, 
Phlox, and a great collection of 
annuals make the gardens glow 
with color. From the days when 
Snowdrops push through the thaw¬ 
ing soil the gardens are full of inter¬ 
est to expert and amateur alike. Large Green Globe Artichokes 
Turn to pages 4 to 8 for the many new Flowers 
you should have this year. 
Broccoli 
One ounce of seed will produce about 1500 plants 
A vegetable very similar to cauliflower but 
less delicate in flavor. Hardy, thrives best in 
cool weather and should be hoed and watered 
frequently. Sow the seed inside or in cold- 
frames in January or February and set out 
plants when ground is warm. Cultivate the 
same as cauliflower. 
Italian Green Sprouting Calabrese. A 
favorite vegetable with the Italians and 
now becoming very popular in our Ameri¬ 
can gardens. The plant forms good- 
sized heads, and after these are cut, other 
heads form, providing fresh vegetables for 
a long season. Sow early in coldframes for 
spring; outdoors in June and July for a 
fall crop. Pkg. 10c; 34 oz. 35c; oz. 55c; 
34 lb. $1.85. 
Mary Washington Asparagus 
Asparagus Roots 
A leaflet on the “Planting and Care of 
Asparagus” sent with every order 
The popularity of Asparagus in the home- 
garden is growing rapidly, as people learn 
how easily it may be raised, and how much 
better the flavor is when cooked immediately 
after cutting. Asparagus begins to lose flavor 
20 minutes after being taken from the ground. 
A small bed 12 feet wide and 25 feet long will 
hold 100 plants and yield sufficient Asparagus 
for the family of ordinary size. 
Mary Washington. This new variety is the 
very finest for the home-garden or to grow 
for market. At last we have not only a 
rustproof variety but an Asparagus that is 
very fast-growing, exceedingly tender, of 
excellent flavor, and that produces heavy 
stalks 1 to 2 inches in diameter. It is 
larger and earlier than Pedigreed Washing¬ 
ton, and the stalks are slightly oval in form. 
STRONG LARGE ROOTS. Large-crowned, 
healthy, the most satisfactory for planting 
either in the home-garden or for market. 
Doz. 50c; 50 for $1.75; 100 for $2.25, post¬ 
paid. Not postpaid, 100 for $2; 1000 for 
$ 10 . 
Asparagus Seed 
One ounce of seed will produce 200 plants; 
5 pounds will sow an acre 
Soak the seed in warm water for 24 hours, 
then sow an inch deep in rows a foot apart. 
The following spring set the best of the 
plants in the permanent bed. 
MARY WASHINGTON. The best home-gar¬ 
den kind. Pkg. 10c; oz. 20c; 34 lb. 50c. 
Italian Green Sprouting Calabrese Broccoli 
Brussels Sprouts 
One package of seed will produce 200 plants; 1 
ounce will sow 200 feet and produce 3000 plants 
The small heads, resembling cabbage, are 
formed along the stalk. Prepare like cabbage 
or in cream, like cauliflower. Sow seed in 
spring; transplant and cultivate same as 
cabbage, except leaves should be broken 
down in fall, giving heads more room to 
grow. Freezing improves the quality of the 
sprouts. They may be left in 
the ground, here in the North, 
until December. 
Paris Market. Half dwarf. Very 
fine, good-sized heads. Pkg. 
15c; oz. 55c; 34 It). $1.85. 
Long Island Improved. (Special 
Strain.) A very fine strain 
grown extensively for the New 
York market. The plants pro¬ 
duce a large crop of very solid 
heads of sweet and delicious 
flavor. Pkg. 10c; oz. 50c; 34 lb. 
$1.50; lb. $5. Long Island Improved Brussels Sprouts 
Kitchen Garden Collection 
1 pkg. each of 
Beans, Pencil-Pod Lettuce, Prizehead 
Beans, Bountiful 
Beet, Detroit 
Carrot, Nantes 
Cucumber, Fortune 
Cabbage, Chinese 
Parsley, Moss Curled 
Peas, Little Marvel 
Peas, Laxtonian 
Radish, Scarlet Globe 
Turnip, White Globe 
12 Splendid Varieties for 85c. 
