VEGETABLE SEEDS 
EGGPLANT 
Vi oz. to 100 ft., 5 to 6 oz. per acre. 
Sow in mild heat, about the middle of March, and transplant 
on June 1, setting the plants 2 y 2 feet apart. Pkt. 5c; oz. 65c; 
Vi lb. $2.00. 
Black Beauty. The fruits of this variety are large and sym¬ 
metrical. Retains its glossy black-purple coloring for a long 
time. This lasting quality makes it distinctly popular. 
New York Improved. Best known variety for home and mar¬ 
ket garden. Plants spreading, spineless, bearing 4 to 8 glossy 
black-purple fruits which are broad, oval and very large. 
ENDIVE 
1 oz. to 100 ft., 4 to 5 lbs. per acre. 
Sow about the middle of April, in rows iy 2 feet apart, and 
thin out to about 9 inches apart. Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c; Vi lb. 50c. 
Broad-leaved (Escarolle). Leaves long, broad, and succulent. 
Pine for Winter salads and cooking. 
Green Curled. Standard variety for Fall and Winter crop. 
KALE, Borecole 
1 oz. to 100 ft., 4 to 5 lbs. per acre. 
The culture is practically the same as that of late Cabbage, 
but as the plants will withstand several degrees of frost they 
can grow late into the Fall. Many think Kale best after the 
first heavy frosts. Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c; Vi lb. 45c; 1 lb. $1.25. 
Dwarf Green Curled Scotch. Plants have wide-spreading, finely 
furled blue green plume-like leaves. Relished as a vegetable 
green and useful as an ornament. 
Tall Green Curled Scotch. Hardy plants with leaves deeply 
cut. Curled at the edges, light green in color; very tender and 
finely flavored after touched with frost. 
Jersey or Thousand Headed. Called Chicken or Cow Kale. 
Vigorous branching plants with enormous Cabbage-like leaves. 
Relished by poultry and livestock as Winter greens. Pkt. 5c; 
1 oz. 10c; Vi lb. 20c; 1 lb. 60c. 
KALE 
KOHL RABI 
Vi oz. to 100 ft., 4 to 5 lbs. per acre. 
The delicious flavor of this turnip-shaped bulb combines 
both Cabbage and Turnip. As early in Spring as possible, sow 
the seed in light rich soil in rows iy 2 feet apart. When plants 
are well established, thin to 6 inches apart in the row. Pkt. 5c; 
oz. 20c; Vi lb. 65c. 
Early Purple Vienna. Standard early sort. Plants small; leaves 
dark green with profuse purple staining. Bulbs flattened 
globe shape, best for use when 2 to 2% inches in diameter but 
become larger; exterior purple, but flesh white; mild, crisp, 
and tender. ' '• • 
Early White Vienna. For forcing. The best table sort if used 
when the bulbs are 2 inches in diameter. It matures very early 
and produces medium sized, light green bulbs with white flesh 
of excellent quality. 
BLACK BEAUTY EGGPLANT 
LETTUCE 
V2, oz. to 100 ft., 3 lbs. per acre. 
Sow the seed in hotbeds during February until the middle of 
March, afterward transplanting into flats or coldframes, leav¬ 
ing about 6 to 8 inches between the plants. As soon as weather 
becomes suitable, transfer to open ground and set out in rows 
1 foot apart, leaving 9 inches between the plants in the rows. 
Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c; % lb. 40c; 1 lb. $1.25. 
New York No. 12. A comparatively recent selection of the 
New York type; an early variety and does well in midsummer. 
It is lighter in color than the regular New York and is popular 
with shippers and large growers. 
New York No. 515 Improved. A development from Number 12, 
matures slightly earlier and should be grown where there is 
hot weather as it is resistant to tip-burn. 
Black Seeded Simpson. Early. Dependable in all parts of 
America and widely grown in home and market gardens. Plant 
large, attractive, compact; broad, frilled light green leaves 
that are of fine crisp texture and splendid quality. 
Grand Rapids. Very early. Hardy, disease resistant; the most 
widely used and best adapted variety for greenhouse forcing. 
Plants large, upright, compact, and handsome; bright solid 
light green; leaves large, broad; margin much frilled; very 
tender and sweet when grown under glass. 
Hanson. A very hardy Lettuce, excellent for a Summer crop 
as it withstands heat. Forms a large, light green head which 
is very hard. An excellent variety for the home gardener for 
it is very sweet, crisp and tender. 
Red Leaf Prize. An early non-heading sort, very desirable for 
home garden use. Plants of medium size, crisp and tender; 
color medium green with brownish-red edges on outer leaves. 
Chicken Lettuce. This is a non-heading Lettuce, quite differ¬ 
ent from those used for human food. The plants grow 4 ft. 
tall before they run to seed. It is ready for cutting in 45 days 
after sowing. Planted extensively for feeding poultry and 
rabbits. 
NEW YORK No. 12 
24 
PACKET, OUNCE, Vi LBS. ARE ALL POSTPAID — OTHERWISE ADD POSTAGE 
WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF PET FOODS AND REMEDIES 
