20 
KENDALL AND WHITNEY S 
FOTTLER’S IMPROVED BRUNSWICK CABBAGE. 
CABBAGE. 
The Cabbage is one of the most important vegetables, and some of its varieties are universally 
cultivated. The ground must be highly manured, deeply dug or plowed, and thoroughly worked, to 
insure good, full sized heads. A heavy, moist and fresh loam is the most suitable. The earlv sorts 
should be sown very early in the spring, in hot beds, or later in the open ground. Eighteen inches 
by three feet apart is the common distance. 
One ounce will produce about 3,000 plants. 
Early Wyman. One of the best and most profitable early varieties in culti 
vation. 05 
Early Jersey Wakefield. A standard early variety for home use or market. 
Henderson’s Early Summer. The earliest of large cabbages, coming in 
but a few days later than the Wakefield. Heads of large size, very solid 
and compact. 05 
Early Winningstadt. An excellent sort; heads of large size. 
All Seasons. Larger than Henderson’s Early Summer, nearly as early; very 
solid and sure-heading...’.05 
Fottler’s Improved Brunswick. An excellent early drumhead variety, 
produces a firm and solid head..’ 05 
Premium Flat Dutch. A standard late variety.05 
Stone-Mason Drumhead. One of the very best for a main crop.05 
Stone-Mason Drumhead. Cape Elizabeth grown. An improved strain.. . 
Henderson’s Succession. An excellent second-early or late sort.05 
Marblehead Mammoth Drumhead. The largest variety of drumhead. 
Danish Winter. A valuable, perfectly round, solid, winter variety. Is a 
long keeper, and profitable for shipping, keeping long after other sorts 
have gone. Highly prized by our Cape farmers.05 
Red Dutch. Used almost exclusively for pickling.05 
Improved American Savoy. Very sweet and tender; good sized, firm 
heads; very reliable and much esteemed for family use..05 
CABBOT. 
Carrots require a very finely pulverized soil, to grow them to perfection. _ _ vvvl 
well enriched sandy loam is the best for this crop. For field culture, sow in drills three to three 
and one-half feet apart, so as to cultivate by horse. Market gardeners sow in drills about eighteen 
inches apart and cultivate by hand. For early crops, cover one-half an inch deep, and thin to six 
inches apart, m the rows; for late, cover three-fourths of an inch deep, and thin to four inches 
One ounce to one hundred feet of drill; three to four pounds to the acre. 
Pkt. 
Oz. 
i lb. 
Lb. 
.05 
.25 
.70 ! 
$2.50 
.05 
.25 
.70 
2.50 
.05 
.25 
.75 
2.50 
.05 
.15 
.50 
1.50 
.05 
.20 
.65 
2.50 
.05 
.20 
.60 
2.25 
.20 
.50 
1.75 
.05 
.20 
.60 
2.00 
.05 
.30 
1.00 
3.50 
.05 
.20 
.65 
2.50 
.05 
.20 
.60 
2.00 
.20 
.65 
2.50 
.05 
.20 
.60 
1.75 
.05 
.20 
.60 
2.00 
A good light, 
and 
