PRICE’S VECETA6LE SEEDS 
Mangel-Wurzel Stock Beets 
The value of Mangels for stock-feeding is clearly seen 
in the improved health and condition of the animals, 
the increased flow and quality of milk from cows, and 
the saving in fodder. They yield enormously and can be 
grown at trifling cost. About one-fourth of the daily 
rations should be of roots. They are also excellent feed 
for poultry being a valuable egg-producer. 
Golden Tankard 
Heavy cropper; easily harvested. Roots large, thick 
oval, nearly cylindrical; light gray above, deep orange 
below ground; flesh yellow with white zones. Pkt. 5 
cts., 1 oz. 10 cts., x / 4 lb. 20 cts., 1 lb. 60 cts. 
Mammoth Long Red 
Roots very large; long, straight and thick; grow ^ 
to V 2 out of ground; light red; flesh white tinged with 
rose. Pkt. 5 cts., 1 oz. 10 cts., x / 4 lb. 20 cts., 1 lb. 60 cts. 
Giant Half Sugar Rose Top 
Roots long oval, tapered; grayish-white with rose- 
colored shoulder; flesh white, rich in sugar. Pkt. 5 cts., 
1 oz. 10 cts., lb. 20 cts., 1 lb. 60 cts. 
Swiss Chard or Spinach Beet 
1 oz. Seed will sow 50 ft. 
Swiss Chard is a beet grown mostly for its leaves. 
The mid-rib when boiled makes delicious greens. Leaves 
may be boiled and served as spinach. Sown in the spring 
the leaves are soon ready to eat and if cut will con¬ 
tinue to grow and produce tender young leaves all sum¬ 
mer and fall. If given a little protection it will survive 
the winter and make excellent greens early in the 
spring. 
Fordhook Giant (The Best Variety) 
The leaves are dark green, very large, much curled or 
“Savoyed,” thick of texture and quite tender. The stems 
are pure white, broad and thick and make an excellent 
Fordhook Giant Swiss Chard 
vegetable when cooked separately. The leaves make ex¬ 
cellent boiling greens. Pkt. 5 cts., 1 oz. 15 cts., l / 4 lb. 
30 cts., 1 lb. 90 cts. 
Lucullus 
60 days. Stalks pure white and thick as Rhubarb. 
Foliage yellowish green and crumpled like Bloomsdale 
Spinach or Savoy Cabbage. Very choice. Growing in 
popularity every day. The tops cook like Spinach and 
the stems like Celery. Pkt. 5 cts., 1 oz., 15 cts., y 4 lb. 
30 cts., 1 lb. 85 cts. 
CABBAGE 
One ounce will produce about 3,000 plants; 4 oz. will produce enough for an acre. 
Our strains are the very best to be had, selected from specimen heads in well rogued fields. Sow seeds of the early varieties in February in 
hotbeds and transplant the latter part of April or early in May to open ground, or an early sowing in open ground can be made as soon as 
weather will permit. Set the plants in rows 3 feet apart and 12 to 18 inches apart in the row. The second early varieties sow in April and 
transplant in May; late varieties, sow in May and transplant in July, setting plants in rows 3 feet apart and 2 feet in rows. Never plant 
cabbage in the same location two years in succession. 
FOR LARGER QUANTITIES SEE OUR WHOLESALE LIST. 
All pkts. 10 cts. 
EARLY VARIETIES 
Golden Acre 
62 to 64 days. The earliest round headed cabbage; 
especially valuable for early market and shipping. Simi¬ 
lar to Copenhagen Market but several days earlier, and 
the heads are smaller. Oz. 50 cts., x / 4 lb. $1.25. 
Copenhagen Market 
66 days. This well-known home garden cabbage hard¬ 
ly needs an introduction. The heads are uniformly round 
with crisp white interiors. The plants can be set closely 
in the garden. Almost as early as Early Jersey Wake¬ 
field. Oz. 35 cts., x / 4 lb. 90 cts. 
Glory of Enkhuixen 
73 to 80 days. A good selection for the main crop of 
cabbage in your home garden. Heads large, round, and 
firm. Fine for kraut. 1 oz. 40 cts., x / 4 lb. 90 cts. 
Marion Market 
75 to 80 days. (Yellows Resistant.) A yellows resistant 
strain of Copenhagen Market. Larger and coarser in 
plant, and not so early nor so uniform as the original 
strain, but with the round head and crisp tenderness of 
the parent cabbage. Will produce a normal crop on yel¬ 
lows infected soils where non-resistant strains fail com¬ 
pletely. Oz. 40 cts., x / 4 lb. $1.10. 
Succession 
A well-known, desirable variety, of medium late sea¬ 
son. Heads large, flat, and thick; 7 V 2 inches deep, short 
stem; a dependable cropper of good quality. Oz. 30 cts., 
x / 4 lb. 90 cts. 
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