32 
Kendall and Whitneys 
MELON—Musk—Continued. 
Pkt. Oz. lb. 
Nutmeg. Named from its shape; green flesh, sweet; 
good for main crop. .05 .10 .25 
Large Round Yellow Cantaloupe. Flesh red¬ 
dish orange, sweet and of good flavor; and early and 
productive variety.... 05 .10 .25 
Pineapple. Dark green, oval, netted, flesh thick, 
sweet and juicy. .05 .10 .25 
Surprise. Very early, medium size; salmon colored; 
flesh of snperior flavor. .05 .10 .25 
Large Yellow Musk. A very large variety, deeply 
ribbed, and thickly netted ; flesh salmon yellow, thick 
and sweet. Used in the green state for ‘‘Mangoes”.. .05 .10 .20 
Lb. 
.75 
.75 
.75 
.75 
.75 
MELON—Water. 
Plant in hills eight feet apart, and cultivate same as Musk Melon. One 
ounce for thirty hills; four to jive pounds for an acre. 
Pkt. Oz. i/4lb. 
Mountain Sweet. An old and reliable sort; red flesh. .05 .10 
Black Spanish* Fruit of large size, almost round, 
skin dark green; flesh red..05 .10 
Pliinney’s Early. Productive, early and finely 
flavored; red flesh.05 .10 
Scaly Bark. The flesh is light crimson in color, very 
tender and fine flavor... .05 .10 
Citron. The standard variety for preserves. 
.05 .10 
.25 
.25 
.25 
.25 
.25 
Lb. 
.75 
.75 
.75 
.75 
.75 
MUSTARD. 
A pungent salad used with Cress. The seed is used for flavoring pickles, 
etc. Sow in May thickly in rows and cut when two to three inches high. 
One ounce to forty feet of drill. 
Oz. i/4 lb. Lb. 
White London. Best for salad..05 .10 .20 
Brown or Black .05 .10 .20 
OKRA. 
Sow late in the spring, after the ground has become warm, in drills three 
feet apart, where the plants are to remain. Thin out from nine to twelve 
inches. They should be well manured. They may also be raised in pots, or 
a hot-bed, and transplanted. 
t ^ Pkt. Oz. 1/4 lb. Lb. 
Improved Dwarf Green. Small, green and round 
smooth pods...05 .10 .20 .50 
ONION. 
No vegetable is more extensively known and cultivated than the Onion. A 
good crop is impossible unless the soil is very rich and kept clean. Use well 
rotted manure freely, and get the crop in as soon as possible in spring, no 
matter if the weather is cold and unpleasant. Sow in drills one foot apart, 
and cover about one third of an inch, treading or rolling after sowing, so that 
the hot, dry atmosphere may not dry up and destroy the sprouting seed. 
One ounce to one hundred feet of drill; jive pounds to the acre. 
