Occasional Dusting With Slug Shot Destroys Cabbage Worms 
Cabbage 
Always be sure that your Cabbage seed is grown from well-formed, selected heads. The ground should be a 
heavy, moist, rich loam, highly manured, deeply dug or plowed and thoroughly worked. For early plants sow in 
mid-September, and protect in coldframes through the Winter. The more common way is to sow in hotbeds in 
February or March, and prick out into coldframes, to be transplanted, when danger of frost is past. Early va¬ 
rieties should set 18 inches by 2 feet. Fall and Winter sorts 28 inches apart each way. The late Autumn and Win¬ 
ter varieties may be sown in a seed bed, from the middle to close of Spring, and 
transplanted when about 6 inches high. Shade and water in dry weather. See that 
the plants stand thinly in the seed bed; if they come up thick, prick them out into beds 
4 to 6 inches apart. They can then be moved with earth attached, on a moist day, 
. , without damage. Transplant just at evening, giving each plant water at the root. 
Makes Seeds Healthy Hoe every week more deeply as they advance, drawing up a little more earth each 
time, until they begin to head, when they should be fairly dug between and hilled up. 
One ounce of seed will produce about 3,000 
plants. 
Golden Acre Cabbage (Original Strain). Con¬ 
sidered the earliest round-headed Cabbage, aver¬ 
aging 4 pounds, with few outer leaves, permitting 
close planting. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 40 cts., 34 lb. $1.25, 
lb. $3.75. 
Chinese Cabbage (Pe-Tsai). This is a 
vegetable from the Far East. It is similar to Cos 
Lettuce in appearance and tenderness, and has the 
crispness of Celery while tasting like a Cabbage, 
without its offensive odor. Sow the seed after July 
1. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., 34 lb. 80 cts, lb. $2.00. 
Copenhagen Market. As early as the Char¬ 
leston Wakefield. Perfectly ball-shaped, uniform 
in size, and as large, or larger than the Danish 
Ballhead. Very solid and of fine quality. The 
plant is short-stemmed; leaves tightly folded. 
Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., ) 4 lb. 90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
Early Jersey Wakefield. The standard, very 
early variety of medium size; pyramidal in shape, 
having a rounded peak. Its small, outside foliage 
permits of close planting; a good variety to winter 
in cold frames. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., 34 lb- 
90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
The Charleston, or Early Large Jersey 
Wakefield. Of the same form and type as the 
Early Jersey Wakefield, but fully a half larger, 
while it is less than a week later. Pkt. 10 cts., 
oz. 35 cts., 34 lb. 90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
All Seasons. One of the very best sorts for general 
cultivation, either for early Fall or for Winter use. 
Heads very large, usually somewhat flattened and 
solid. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., 34 lb. 90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
Perfection Drumhead Savoy Cabbage 
Excelsior Large Flat Dutch. The king of late 
Cabbages. Improved by selection from the late Flat 
Dutch; unquestionably the best strain. Its remarkable 
uniformity, size, short stump, few outside leaves and 
solid weight make it the most profitable late sort. 
Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., 34 lb. 90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
Danish Ballhead. Plants rather long-stemmed, 
but compact; leaves very smooth but thick; head of 
medium size, round and very solid, being the hardest- 
heading Cabbage we know, and of the very best 
quality. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., 34 lb. 90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
Danish Roundhead. A short-stemmed type of 
the Danish Ballhead, maturing earlier than that va¬ 
riety. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts., M lb. 90 cts., lb. $3.00. 
Penn State Ball Head. Plants short-stem with 
solid heads extremely hard heavy yielder per 
acre and a good keeper. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 40 
cts., 34 lb. $1.25, lb. $4.00. 
Perfection Drumhead Savoy. Large 
heads of finely curled leaves, particularly 
adapted for private use. Grown in the Fall 
and allowed to be touched by frost, it is one 
of the most delicious of all vegetables. Pkt. 
10 cts., oz. 40 cts., 34 lb. $1.00, lb. $3.25. 
Red Drumhead. Excellent for pickling 
or eating raw. For solidity, deep red color, 
certainty of heading and dwarf habit of 
growth, this has no equal. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 
40 cts., 34 lb. $1.00, lb. $3.25. 
Slug Shot will kill Cabbage worms. 
See page 48. 
Cardoon 
Sow seeds in open ground in early spring 
where the crop is to mature. Have rows 3 
to 4 ft. apart. Plants 1 to 2 ft. apart in the rows. Full 
grown leaves are tied together wrapped in straw and 
banked up with earth. Cooked and served in the same 
way as Asparagus. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 40 cts., 34 lb. 
$1.00, lb. $3.50. 
Early Jersey Wakefield Cabbage 
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