TESTED VEGETABLE SEEDS - - Continued 










Easy Blanching Celery 
Cabbage—Continued 
Perfection Drumhead Savoy. This is 
the hardest heading and best all- 
around Savoy. Postpaid: Pkt. 10c; 
oz. 55c; 1% Ib. $1.90; lb. $6.75. 
Premium Late Flat Dutch. Large, 
flat, uniform, solid heads of finest 
quality. For winter use. Postpaid: 
Pkt. 10c; oz. 55c; %4 oz. $1.90; Ib. 
$6.75. 
Chinese Cabbage (Pe-Tsai). Grown 
for cole-slaw and salad. Delicate 
and tender. Postpaid: Pkt. 10c; oz. 
40c; \% lb. $1.50. 
Yellows Resistant Cabbage Seed 
Growers who have suffered loss 
from disease in their cabbage fields 
will appreciate the following 
varieties: 
Marion Market (Resistant Copen- 
hagen). Postpaid: Oz. 60c; % Ib. 
$1.90; lb. $6.75. 
Wisconsin All Season. Postpaid: Oz. 
60c; 1% Ib. $1.90; lb. $6.75. 
Wisconsin Hollander. (120 days.) 
Selected from the famous Danish 
Ballhead, requires about the same 
time to come to maturity. Heads 
large, round, flattened on top but 
quite deep; 5 to 7 lbs. Pkt. 10c; 
oz. 60c; % Ib. $2.00; lb. $7.00. 
CELERY 
Celery is generally grown as a 
second crop, following early cabbage, 
onions, peas, etc. Sow early in April, 
transplanting about the first of June. 
Set in rows about 3 feet apart. 4% 
oz. of seed will produce about 1,000 
plants. 
Easy Blanching. The longest 
keeping Celery grown, excel- 
ling in this respect every other 
sort. It is the easiest and 
quickest to blanch, stocky in 
growth, and of medium height. 
The stalks are tender, brittle, 
and attractive in appearance, 
of excellent quality and rich 
nutty flavor. Postpaid: Pkt. 
10c; oz. 40c; % Ib. $1.50; Ib. 
$5.00. 
Golden Self-blanching. The best 
of all early self-blanching 
varieties. It is of dwarf com- 
pact growth, with thick, solid, 
heavily ribbed stalks which 
blanch easily to a clear waxen 
yellow. Postpaid: Pkt. 10c; 
oz. 50c; % Ib. $1.75; 1b. $6.00. 
Giant Pascal. It makes large, thick, 
solid stalks, with beautiful creamy 
yellow heart; blanches easily and 
quickly; very crisp. Postpaid: PEt. 
10c; oz. 40c; % lb. $1.50; 1b. $5.00. 
Improved White Plume. A magnificent 
Celery for early use, and being 
self-blanching, requires but little 
working. Postpaid: Pkt. 10c; oz. 
40c; %4 lb. $1.50; 1b. $5.00. 
Winter Queen. Postpaid: Pkt. 10c; 
oz. 50c; %4 lb. $1.50; lb. $5.00. 
Celeriac or Turnip-Rooted Celery 
Giant Prague. Postpaid: PEt. 10c; oz. 
50c; %4 Ib. $1.75; 1b. $6.00. 
CAULIFLOWER 
Cauliflowers delight in arich, moist 
soil, and in dry seasons should be 
abundantly watered, especially when 
heading. Sow the seed early in the 
hotbed and transplant the plants 2 
to 8 inches apart in boxes or in 
another hotbed until such time as 
they are safe to be planted in the 
open ground, which in this latitude 
is usually the 10th of April. Set the 
plants in the field 15x24 inches apart. 
One-fourth ounce produces about 
500 plants. Three ounces will make 
enough plants to set 1 acre. 
Extra-Early Dwarf Erfurt. Small 
plants with short outer leaves and 
medium heads of uniform quality. 
A good late variety. Postpaid: Pkt. 
25c; % oz. $2.25; oz. $4.00. 
Snowball. Early, very hardy, and pro- 
duces snow-white heads of good 
size. Our strain of this variety is 
unexcelled. Postpaid: Pkt. 25c; % 
oz. $2.25; oz. $4.00. 

Rithabdien 5 
Griffith & Sips 4 
Wigenanebouns : 
CELTUCE 
Make first sowing of seed as 
soon as ground can be worked 
in the spring. Succession sow- 
ing at intervals of a week .or 
ten days will give a continuous 
supply. Grow Celtuce —it is 
new, it is good, it is interest- 
ing and it is healthful. Pkt. 
15c; % oz. 35c; % oz. 65c; oz. 
$1.25. 
CARROTS 
CULTURE—Sow seed about % in. 
deep as soon as the soil can be dug, 
placing rows about 18 inches apart. 
One ounce will sow 100 feet of drill, 
3 to 4 pounds for an acre. 
Chantenay. Suited to either garden 
or field culture. Medium-sized top, 
small neck, tapered roots, and thick 
shoulder. Orange color. Postpaid: 
Pkt. 10c; oz. 25c; % Ib. 90c; Ib. 
$3.00. 
Danvers Half-Long Orange. Orange- 
red; smooth and handsome; sweet, 
crisp, and tender. Postpaid: Pkt. 
10c; oz. 25c; %4 lb. 90c; lb. $3.00. 
Improved Long Orange. The roots 
grow uniform and smooth, 8 to 10 
inches long, of large size and deep, 
rich orange color. Postpaid: Pkt. 
10c; oz. 25c; % lb. 90c; lb. $3.00. 
Oxheart, or Guerande. Particularly 
desirable for heavy soils. It tapers 
slightly; very stump-rooted. Post- 
paid: Pkt. 10c; oz. 30c; 14 lb. $1.00; 
lb. $3.50. 
Imperator. The roots are smooth, 
taper slightly from a rounded 
shoulder down to the semi-blunt 
tip. The flesh is a rich orange with 
practically no core. Postpaid: Pkt. 
10c; oz. 30c; 44 lb. $1.00; lb. $3.50. 
COLLARDS 
CULTURE—Same as Kale. 
Georgia Southern, or Creole. Post- 
paid: Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; %4 lb. 30c; 
lb. $1.00. 
Cabbage Collards. As white and crisp 
as Cabbage. Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; 4 
lb. 30c; lb. $1.00. 
E. MILLER RICHARDSON & CO., 108 Light St.—PLaza 8684-8685 ia 
