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Painesville, Ohio 
Yellows-Resistant Cabbage Seed— (Cont.) 
Wisconsin Hollander. A _ yellows-resistant strain of Danish 
Ballhead. It will produce fine yields even on infested land. 
Extra good for yield, keeping quality, for kraut, storage 
and shipping. 
Golden Acre. 64 days. The earliest of the round-headed 
yellows-resistant cabbages. Heads are medium sized, 5 to 
6 in. in diameter, and weigh 4 to 5 Ibs. each. Plants are 
short stemmed, erect, with few outer leaves. A remarkably 
uniform and refined strain of exceptional quality and fair 
keeping ability. Nine days earlier maturing than Marion 
Market, and as plants are smaller, they may be set closer. 
For “yellows” infested land only. 
Wisconsin All Seasons. 84 days. Bred from All Seasons and 
has inherited all the good qualities of that excellent cab- 
bage. It is the hardiest of all flat-head varieties and is 
much in demand for making kraut. Heads are hard and 
solid. Stands hot weather unusually well. For ‘‘yellows’’ 
infested land. 
Improved Allhead Select. 72 days. Firm, solid, well-rounded, 
flattened heads carried on short, stout stems. The core is 
decidedly small. It is the earliest of the yellows-resistant 
large flat-headed cabbages. Stands long without bursting. 
Recommended only where the standard strain cannot be 
successfully grown. 
Price of Yellows-Resistant Cabbage Seed: 
Pkt. 10c; 2 oz. 35c; oz. 65c¢; 4 Ib. $2.00. 
NEW CELERY CABBAGE 
Improved Pekin (or Chihli). 70 days. A wonderful new salad 
plant; resembling both Celery and Cos lettuce, but with a 
delicious flavor all its own. May be boiled like cabbage, or 
cooked as greens, or served as a crisp, tasty salad. Best 
in cool weather but not hardy to frost. Pkt. 10c; 14 oz. 
35¢; oz. 65¢; 4 Ib. $2.00. 
CAULIFLOWER 
CULTURE. Cauliflower are partial to a rich fibrous loam 
well charged with humus. An occasional light dressing of 
nitrate of soda and potash is beneficial. Make the soil as 
fine as possible for every transplanting, and do not allow 
the young plants to become checked at any time for want 
of water. For spring and early summer use, sow in January 
or February in hotbed, and transplant to cold frames 2 or 3 
inches apart, when sufficiently large; and to the garden 24 
to 30 inches each way, as soon as the ground is warm 
enough. For late autumn crops sow in the early part of June, 
and transplant in July. When the heads are formed, tie the 
leaves up over them to blanch. 
Price, Postpaid, All Cauliflower: 
Pkt., 15¢; 4 oz., $1.00; 12 oz., $1.85; 1 oz., $3.50. 
Dwarf Erfurt. Suitable for either forcing or open ground. It 
produces a solid, pure white, medium-size head. 
Early Snowball. 60 days. Seed sown March Ist will produce 
large-sized heads early in June. Its dwarf habit of growth 
renders it one of the best for forcing under glass. Valuable 
for late planting also. 
Super Snowball. 60 days. A newer early main-crop variety, 
. superior to the Snowball type because of more uniform 
development and more perfect heads. A distinct advantage 
is the curled formation of its leaves which, like a parasol, 
protects the tender head from the sun. Plant dwarf, com- 
pact, upright and robust. Heads 6 to 8 inches across; deep, 
solid, snow-white; delicious flavor. 

Super Snowball Cauliflower 
RELIABLE GARDEN SEEDS 

CHINESE 
CABBAGE 
CULTURE. For early use sow 
in hotbed in February or March. 
When 4 inches high transplant, 
if the weather is suitable, 1 foot 
apart in 214-foot rows. For late 
or main crops, sow in August or 
early September. 
Pe Tsai. While not a cabbage, 
it is closely related, both be- 
longing to the Brassica fam- 
ily. When well grown, makes a 
head 15 inches long and 4 to 
5 inches in diameter, blanch- 
ing to a beautiful white. May 
be eaten as a salad or is de- 
licious when cooked like cab- 
bage. 
Pkt., 10¢; 14 oz., 25c¢; oz. 45¢; 
VY Ib. $1.50 
CELERY 
3000 to 5000 plants from 
1 ounce of seed 
CULTURE. Sow in open ground 
as soon, as the soil can be per- 
fectly worked; roll or firm the 
lightly covering soil to retain 
moisture, as the seed is slow to 
germinate. Sowing in rows 10 to 
12 inches apart is preferable to 
broadcasting; this means allow- 
ing cultivation to be kept up. 
Transplant in July to a previ- 
ously prepared bed made consid- 
erably richer than seed bed, 6 to 
8 inches apart in the row. Single 
rows should be 4 feet apart, but 
twin-rows 10 inches apart (dou- 
bling returns with the same 
labor). — Pkt, 10¢; 1/2 oz. 35¢; oz. 60c; 1/4 Ib. $1.85. 
Golden Self-Blanching. 110 days. Rarely, if ever, pithy; and of a 
rich golden yellow color, self-blanching. This is American 
grown seed produced from the Dwarf French grown stock. It 
exhibits all the excellent qualities of the original, and is sown 
extensively by home gardeners as well as by market growers. 
Giant Pascal. 135 days. For second early and midwinter use. The 
stalks are large, thick, solid, crisp, of rich nutty flavor, free 
from bitterness. 
Golden Plume. 110 days. Large heavy stalks with a full, solid 
Golden Seif Blanching Celery 
heart; always crisp, brittle, of finest flavor, and _ enticing 
appearance. Blanches easily; and is markedly resistant to 
celery blight. 
Celeriac, Giant Prague. 125 days. The root is turnip-shaped, 
sweet and tender, and may be cooked like turnips or eaten 
like radishes; used largely for seasoning. 
Celeriac, Large Smooth Prague. Very large roots (3-4 inch diam- 
eter), globular, fairly smooth; the stalks hollow, dark green. 
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