CARROTS ....... for Table Use 
Pkt., 10c; % Ounce, 25c; Ounce, 40c; 14 Pound, $1.25. 
: - Any garden soil will grow carrots. For earl 
Planting Instructions crops sow as early in the spring as posible, 
and in rows 18 Inches to 2 feet apart. Cover not more than Yo-inch deep. 
When the plants are about 3 to 4 inches high thin out to 2 inches apart 
for the small early varieties and 4 inches apart for the late ones. Give 
them. plenty of room. Keep them thoroughly hoed. . 
Days to 
Maturity 
72. IMPERATOR 
All American Selection 1933. Seven to 8 inches long, deep orange 
colored throughout, brittle, tender, and sweet, has practically no 
core, and is an abundant cropper. 
70. .*CHANTENAY or MODEL 
A Guerande of considerably longer size. It is delicate in flavor, 
juicy and sweet. Largely planted as a medium early variety. 
75..DANVER’S HALF LONG 
Fine for table use and best of all for the stock breeder, since it 
is a wonderful producer, It is a slender half-long root, very well 
colored, and has a blunt end. 
80.. IMPROVED LONG ORANGE 
For stock feeding and table use. Fed to milk cows and gives to 
the butter a fine flavor and a beautiful golden color, Root is pale 
orange on the underground portion, and green above ground, It is 
a good keeper. 
72..OXHEART or GUERANDE 
One of the best carrots for the table. It is remarkable for its 
great size and quickness of growth. The flesh is very tender and 
delicate, and a beautiful orange red, paler at the center, 
68..*RED CORE CHANTENAY 
A fine early half-long, stump-rooted carrot. Color deep orange 
red, core of deeper color. Roots 5 to 6 inches long, 2 to 2% inches 
thick at the crown. 
70..NANTES HALF 
LONG, STUMP 
ROOTED 
One of the best table 
carrots, very tender 
and delicious. The 
flesh is orange red, 
fine grained and free 
from hard fibre OF joe 
core. Roots growfrom ~~ 
6 to 7 inches long, 
holding their thick- 
ness throughout the 
entire length of the 
root and end abruptly 
into a thin, small tail. IMPERATOR 
CARROTS for STOCK FEEDING 
No home garden would be complete without a goodly supply of carrots planted for a succession, which can be achieved both 
by planting at different dates and by a choice of varieties. : . 
Although light, sandy loam soils produce the smoothest and straightest carrots, all deep loam soils (except the heaviest 
clays) will produce satisfactory crops. Enormous yields are produced on muck soils. The home gardener is interested in grow- 
ing the tender and, so far as possible, the coreless varieties. 
Carrots are remarkably free from insects and 
plant diseases. CAU LI FLOWE R 
Pkt., 10c; 4 Oz., 15c; 1 Oz., 25c; Planti : 
? 4 2 ting Instructions gs 
A Lb., 80c. Clean and thorough culti- . 
LARGE WHITE or BELGIAN. Grows one-third | Vation Is absolutely es- 
out of the ground. Roots pure white, green reaps eh to fas Ewath 
above the ground. Flesh rather coarse and bet ard Hesttie y efi 
used exclusively for stock feeding purposes. frequent cul ay tion, that 
LARGE YELLOW BELGIAN. Practically the | creates a dust mulch, wi 
game as above only the flesh is yellow. This Sea eines eae ahaa 
is also a very good keeper. Hoel right iclose aioithe 
plants, giving shallow 
cultivation as they ex- 
pand. The ‘‘heads’’ to be 
kept white and tender, 
must be protected from 
the sun soon after they begin to form by tying the leaves together over 
them. The seed Is sown in April for an early crop and in July for a fall crop. 
55..*EARLY SNOWBALL No. 16 
Very early. Produces a very large compact head which is snowy 
white, which forms quickly and will not discolor easily. Finest 
on the market. Pkt., 40c; 4 oz., $1.45; > oz., $2.50; 1 oz., $4.00. 
58..*BARTELDES MOUNTAIN SNOWBALL 
This variety is considered one of the very best for outdoor cul- 
ture. It will withstand weather conditions that are utterly ruin- 
ous to the Erfurt strains. Pkt., 40c; 14 oz., $1.45; Yo oz., $2.50; 
1 oz., $4.00. 

DANVER’S 4 LONG 




EARLY DANISH SNOWBALL 
Page Eleven 
