C A R ROTS--Continued 
DANVER’S HALF-LONG 
DanTer’s Half Cong. A very heavy 
Ci'opper. and one of the very best table Carrots grown for 
main crop. Does well in all soils. Runs 1 'A to 2 Inches In 
diameter and 5 to 6 inches In length. Rich, dark-orange 
color, smooth finegrained. Every garden should contain 
this general favorite. Packet 5 cfents; ounce 20 cents; 
4 pound 60 cents; 1 pound $2.00. 
Cong Orange. A very heavy yielder. 
Needs deep, rich soil A splendid keeper. Desirable for 
table in Winter, but one of the very best for stock feeding. 
Highly colored, perfectly shaped, smooth and very long. 
Tender and of good flavor. Packet 5 cents; ounce 20 
cents; !4 pound 60 cents; 1 pound $2.00 
GARDEN OR TABLE BEETS 
Sow seed as early as the ground can be worked in the 
Spring and at least once a month thereafter until middle 
of July, when an extra large quantity should be sown for 
Winter. Sow in drills, thinly, rows afoot or more apart. 
Thin plants to 4 to 6 inches In rows. An ounce plants 50 
teet. 
Eat more .beets and save the meat for the boys “over 
there.” Storing root vegetables in the cellar, or In a pit 
out doors, is the only way we can have plenty of vege¬ 
tables for the Winter table. 
Crosby’s Egyptian. Always a good beet, 
and continually being improved. The largest of the very 
early sorts. Uniform in shape, of a vermilion color, sweet 
and tender. This variety should be your first planting on 
account of its extreme earliness. Packet 5 cents; ounce 
15 cents; '4 pound 50 cents; 1 pound $1.50. 
Early Blood Turnip. An old variety 
and a general favorite. Uniform shape, smooth and flesh 
a deep blood-color, tender and sweet. An excellent can 
ning variety, and should be sown late for the Winter, as it 
matures so quickly. Packet 5 cents; ounce 15 cents; 'A 
pound 50 cents; 1 pound $1.65. 
Edinaud’s Blood Turnip. A hand¬ 
some. smooth round beet of uniform shape and good 
size. Flesh red. tender of excellent flavor. Small tops. 
E’ine to follow extra early sorts and for late supply. Pac¬ 
ket 5 cents, ounce 17 cents, 'A pound 55 cents, 1 pound 
$1.05. 
(6) Extra Early Eclipse. Ready for table 
quickly. Sweet, tender and good quality. Does not grow 
very large. Packet 5 cents: ounce 17 cents; !4 pound 55 
cents; 1 pound $1.05. 
Early Bassano. A second early. Flesh 
whit© and rose-colored. Packet 5 cents; ounce 17 cents; 
M pound 55 cents; 1 pound $1.65. 
Crimson Globe Turnip. Flesh a deep 
purplish-crimson, slightly zoned. Packet 5 cents; ounce 
17 cents; M pound 65 cents; 1 pound $1.65. 
Eong Blood Red. An excellent late vari¬ 
ety. Deep blood-red color. A good keeper- Packet 5 
cents; ounce 17 cents; 4 pound 55 cents; 1 pound $1.65. 
Swiss Chard Beet. Grown for the leaves 
instead of root, and eaten like Spinach or Asparagus. 
Grows continuously from June until frost. Packet 5 cents; 
ounce 17 cents; M pound 55 cents; 1 pound $1.65. 
Beets and Mangel Wurzels For Stock 
feeding. Sow in May or June in rows 2 feet apart, and 
thin to 8 inches in rows, 6 pounds of seed to acre. A row 
In the home garden makes fine picking for the chickens 
in Winter, 
Mammoth Look Red. A favorite with dairymen. 
Ounce 10 cents; 'A pound 30 cents; 1 pound $1.00. 
Jforbtton fiiant. Another leading long red. Ounce 
10 cents; 'A pound 30 cents; 1 pound SI 00. 
doldcn Tankark. Productive, very rich in Sacch 
arine matter. Sheep prefer it. Ounce 10 cents; 'A pound 
30 cents; 1 pound $1.00. 
Vilmorin’s Improved Sugar Beet. 
Contains most sugar. Sugar Beet seeds very scarce this 
year. Ounce 12 cents; M pound 35 cents; 1 pound $1,30. 
Beet seed is scarce and high, but our prices are low 
compared with other responsible seedsmen. It Is partic 
ularly true this year that abnormally low prices are im 
possible when good, seed is furnished. 
B®”There is this to be remembered about our seeds: 
they are all tested apd we offer nothing that does not 
prove up to the required vitality. 
CIIICKORY, Earge-Rooted. Sow in 
Spring like Carrots, in rows 12 to 15 inches apart. Thin 
plants to 2 to 3 inches. To blanch leaves for salad in Win¬ 
ter, dig roots in Fall, cut leaves off just above roots, and 
place horizontally in layers alternating with layers of sand 
or loam, in a dark cellar, the tops of leaves all pointing 
outward. The roots can be roasted and ground to mix 
with, or as a substitute for, coffee. An ounce plants 100 
feet. Packet 5 cenfs; ounce 25 cents. 
SWISS CHARD BEET 
CHERVIE, Curled. Sow in Spring in 
drills a foot apart, like Parsley. Leaves are aromatic and 
U6ed for seasoning. Packet 5 cents; ounce 17 cents. 
