16 
MARSHALL’S VBCIETABLE SEEDS-. 
SWEET CORN 
One quart will plant 200 hills. 
Golden Bantam Sweet Corn. 
Plant in hills three feet apart each way, dropping five or six kernels in each hill, or in 
rows three to four feet apart, and the plants thinned out to eight or nine inches in the row. 
Prom May until the middle of .July a succession planting can be made every two or three 
weeks, and a continued supi)ly can be had until frost kills the plants. 
Country Gentleman Corn. 
EXTRA-EARLY. 
Extra Early Red Cory. Of great value for its 
earliness . 
Early Minnesota. One of the earliest varieties 
grown; dwarf; ears small . 
Golden Bantam. Extra-early; yellow; very sweet 
and tender . 
Kendel’s Giant. Large variety, and line quality. . 
Mannnotli White Cory. Ears double the size of 
the old Cory . 
Peep O’Day. One of the earliest; very sweet.... 
White Cory. Resembles the ordinary Cory, but 
with white cob . 
SECOND EARLY. 
Crosby’s Early. One of the standard early sorts. . 
Early Champion. Large; white cob; very sweet. . 
Early Evergreen. Ripens about ten days earlier 
• than Stowell’s Evergreen . 
Early Mammoth. Ten days earlier than Mammoth. 
Metropolitan. Large, handsome ears of fine quality. 
Moore’s Concord. A standard variety for family 
use; cars large . 
Perry Hybrid. A large variety; sweet and tender.. 
Squantum, or Potter’s Excelsior. Good-sized cars.. 
GENERAL AND LATE. 
Black Mexican. The sweetest and most delicious 
variety grown . 
Country Gentleman. Ripens about the same time 
as Stowell’s Evergreen. Ears medium size, 
deep grains in irregular rows on cob, and de¬ 
liciously sweet . 
Late Mammoth, ’the largest late variety grown. . 
Stowell’s Evergreen. The most popular variety 
grown; late; ears large and very sweet. 
Per Pt. 
Qt. 
Pk. 
$0.15 
$0.25. 
$1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
..30 
2.00 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 . 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
.15 
.25 
1.50 
15 
.25 
/ 1.50 
15 
.25 
1.50 
15 
.25 
1.25 
POP-COHN. 
White Rice, White Pearl, Golden Queen, per lb., 15 cts. 
Ihxdvets of all varieties of corn, 10 cts. each, post free. 
I^ostagc, 2 )or pint, 5 cts.; per quart, 10 cts. extra. 
CRESS OR PEPPERGRASS. 
One ounce will sow 150 feet of drill. 
A popular salad which should be sown early in the Spring very thickljr in shallow drills, and 
at short intervals for succession, as it soon runs to seed. Pkt. Oz. 14 Lb. 
Extra Curled. The best variety grown; leaves are beautifully cut and curled; 
highly prized for garnishing.$0.05 $0.10 $0.20 
Upland, or Broad-Leaved Winter. A garden substitute for Water Cress. 
Ci’isp, tender and perfectly hardy.05 .10 .25 
True Water Cress. Water Cress requires a stream of running water, ditch or 
pond, in which it will grow without care, except at first keeiiing weeds 
from interfering with it.05 .40 1.25 
