


There’s Nothing Like Freshly Picked Sweet Corn 


CAULIFLOWER 
Packets, ounces, 1% pounds and pounds, 
postpaid 
One ounce of seed will produce 1500 plants 
Cuxture. Sow seed in hotbeds or win- 
dow-boxes in February or March and trans- 
plant im coldframes. When hard frosts are 
over, plant outdoors. For second crop, sow 
in April and set out in May. For late crop, 
sow in June and set out im July. Plants 
should be set 2 feet apart in the row. About 
90 days. Soil A. 
By Weather or Danish Giant. The great 
rought-resisting variety. The heads are 
large, snow-white and protected with a 
liberal growth of foliage. The ideal vae 
riety to plant for summer use. 
M.-S. EARLY SNOWBALL. Extremely 
early dwarf variety, producing magnifi- 
cent white heads of fine quality. Well 
adapted to hotbed culture. 
CAULIFLOWER PLANTS. See page 23. 
Cardoon 
Grown for its stalks which make a delicious 
vegetable. Supply doubtful. 
Celtuce (Burpee’s) 
A Chinese vegetable, easy to grow and very 
palatable. Grow like lettuce. The young 
leaves may be eaten like a salad and the raw 
stalks like celery or carrots. The cooked 
stalks have a pleasing taste. Soil A. 

M.-S. Early Snowball Cauliflower 
CAULIFLOWER 
M.-S. Early Snowball 
Dry Weather (Danish Giant) 
CARDOON 
CELTUCE 
CORN, SUGAR or SWEET 
No. 1—Golden Bantam 
No. 2—Whipple’s Early White 
No. 3—M.-S. Snow-White Evergreen 
No.4—Country Gentleman (Shoe-Peg) 
No.5—Stowell’s Evergreen 
Golden Giant 
The Vanguard 
Black Mexican 
Howling Mob 
Stowell’s Hybrid 
Country Gentleman Hybrid 
Golden Cross Bantam 
Spancross 
Bolearly..... 
Ecteat boris tadashi a ie ork. 
Early Adams 
Trucker’s Favorite 

SWEET or SUGAR CORN 

Golden Cross 
Bantam Corn 
One quart of seed will plant 200 hills; 8 quarts in hills to acre 
Sugar Corn varies in weight according to 
variety. We have decided to list 44 pounds 
as a bushel, except Adams, Trucker’s Favor- 
ite, and Red Cob 90-Day, which weigh 56 
pounds to bushel. 
Curtrure. The Sweet or Sugar varieties, 
being liable to rot in cold or wet ground, 
should not be planted before May, or until 
the ground has become warm. For a suc- 
cession, continue planting every two weeks, 
until the middle of July, mm rich, well-ma- 
nured ground, in hills, covering about 44 inch 
and thin out to 3 plants to a hill. Extra-early 
varieties can be planted 114 feet apart in the 
row. The field varieties should be planted 
4 feet apart each way, leaving 3 plants to a 
hill. From 65 to 90 days. Soil B. 
NOTICE 
For the convenience of our customers, 
we have marked 5 of the best varieties, 
as they mature in succession. No. 1 is 
the earliest and No. 5 the latest. 

No.1. Golden Bantam. An _ extremely 
early true Sugar Corn. The grain when 
ripe is a bright golden yellow; flavor is ex- 
ceptionally rich and sugary. Produces 
2 or 3 good ears to the stalk. 
No. 2. Whipple’s Early White. Matures 
in 65 days. Large ears with wedge-shaped 
grains of pearly whiteness and high sugar 
content. 
Pkt. hoz. Oz. 
_...25c. and $0 50 $1 75 $3 00 
25c. and SOM a Deo eOO 
50 
40z. 
$0 30 
_ Qt. Yapk. 
prices on request 
00 $3 75 
00 
25 
00 
00 
00 
00 
Voz. Oz. 
$0 50 $0 90 
Peck 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
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1-3-5 E. Lombard St., Baltimore 2, Md. 

No. 3. M.-S. SNOW-WHITE EVER- 
GREEN. The large, uniform ears are well 
filled to the tip with beautiful white ker- 
nels. Splendid sort for market and home- 
garden, being 10 to 12 days earlier than 
Stowell’s Evergreen. Keeps well after being 
cut. 
No. 4. Country Gentleman or Shoe-Peg. 
A short-stalked, productive sort. Ears 
large for so small a stalk; grain narrow, 
very deep, of excellent quality. 
No. 5. Stowell’s Evergreen. The ears are 
large. Grains are deep and sugary. 
Howling Mob. An early Sugar Corn with 
fine, large ears. Excellent for truckers or 
the home gardener. 
The Vanguard. Large-eared white Sweet 
Corn of excellent table quality. Matures 
in 65 to 70 days. 
Golden Giant. A cross between Golden 
Bantam and Howling Mob. Ears 61% 
inches long. 
Black Mexican. 
tender and sweet. 
Extra-Early Adams. Stalks 3 to 4 feet 
high with ears set within 6 inches of 
ground. Not a Sugar Corn but a decided 
acquisition so early in the season. 
Early Adams. Similar to Extra-Early 
Adams, larger, but not so early. 
An old favorite. Very 
Bolearly. This is the earliest of all Adams 
Corn. 
Trucker’s Favorite. A late variety of 
Adams type. Suitable for table or stock. 
Ears very large, handsome, 14- or 16- 
rowed. 
Stowell’s Hybrid. Deep narrow kernels on 
ears 71% inches long. Very sweet. 
Country Gentleman Hybrid. Ears 8 
inches long, on a 7-foot plant. Very pro- 
ductive. 
Golden Cross Bantam. A cross of two 
inbred Bantams. It is 4 to 8 days later 
than Golden Bantam. Has 8-inch ears 
with 10 to 14 rows of delicious golden yel- 
low kernels. The sturdy stalks grow 6 to 
614 feet high and are resistant to Stewart’s 
wilt disease. The yield is about twice that 
of regular strains of Golden Bantam. Ma- 
tures in 80 days. 
Spancross. Extra early. Ears 6 to 7 inches 
long with 12 rows of bright yellow kernels. 
Stalks 4 to 5 feet, stocky, ears set low, wilt- 
resistant. Matures in 66 days. 
Prices on bus. lots of Sugar Corn on request 
POSTAGE ON SUGAR CORN EXTRA 
Vegetable Seeds 11 
