Herbs 
Feet of row per ounce shown below 
Basil, ‘Sweet. (150 ft.) | Branching 1-foot 
hardy annual for flavoring. 
Dill, Mammoth. (100 ft.) Hardy, 2}-foot 
annual. Sow thickly in very early spring, 
pull by roots and bunch im June. The foot- 
high greens relished by Jewish people. 
Also planted to be ready with dill pickles. 
Fennel, Florence. (75 ft.) Bulb-like base, 
with numerous branching leaf-stalks and 
dense, feathery, aromatic foliage. Blanch 
bulbs with soil. An Italian delicacy. 
Marjoram, Sweet. (150 ft.) Leaves and 
stems used for flavoring. Ht, 2 ft. 
Sage, Broad-Leaf. (100 ft.) Gray-leaved, 
114-foot plant for seasoning. 
Savory, Summer. (150 ft.) Slender, branch- 
ing, 10-inch plant for flavoring. 
Thyme, Broad-Leaf. (100 ft.) An aromatic, 
10-inch plant for seasoning. 
Kale 
One ounce sows 200 feet; 4 pounds sows an acre 
Blue Curled Dwarf Scotch. More hardy and 
dwarfer than Green Curled Dwarf Scotch 
and has a distinctive bluish green color, It 
is very short-stemmed, of spreading habit 
with finely curled leaves. 
Green Curled Dwarf Scotch. Winters 
over where temperature does not go 
below zero. Low-growing, rarely 
higher than 114 feet, with finely 
curled, spreading, bright green, long 
abundant leaves which keep well. 
Siberian. Very vigorous, hardy, of dwarf 
spreading habit, with bluish green flat- 
centered lJeaves, coarsely curled and 
crumpled at the edges. Will stand longer 
in the spring than any other before bolting. 
Kohlrabi 
One ounce will sow 200 feet; 4 pounds will sow an acre 
White Vienna, Short Leaf. Very early, having few leaves. 
Mild-flavored, smooth white bulbs of medium size an 
well. 

eke 
White Vie 
AS ae! 
nna Kohlrabi 
fine quality, ready 75 days after sowing. A fine forcing 
sort and can be planted closely. The bulbs are best 
when about 2 inches in diameter. 
Leek 
One ounce will sow 100 feet; 4 pounds will sow an acre 
American Flag. A very fine, early, productive variety, 
being a strong, quick grower. Stems are 2 inches m 
diameter and blanch 10 inches from the root. Some- 
what sensitive to cold and best used for late summer. 
Elephant. Huge, 12-inch pearl white stalks, 24 inches 
thick; tender and mild. Best for winter crop; trenches 
Giant Italian or Musselburgh. Very hardy, long keeper, 
good for winter or fall crop. Stem 6 to 8 inches long, 
and often 3 inches thick. The Ieaves are dark green. 
Keeps very well when trenched. 
Romaine Lettuce 
Dark Green Cos. Self-folding, firm, 9-inch upright heads. 
Trianon Cos. Compact, upright 12-inch heads, 
blunt at the top and solid. The long, spoon- 
shaped light green leaves are crimped, broad 
ribbed and crisp, the mner Ieaves blanched. 
Fennel) Florence? 5G ase uate 
Marjoram, Sweet......... 
Sage, Broad-Leaf 
Savory, Summer... 
Thyme, Broad-Leaf . sa 
KALE. Blue Curled Dwarf Scotch 
Green Curled Dwarf Scotc 
piveriansis sn 
KOHLRABI. White Vienna. Short leaf.. 
LEEK. American Flag.g2... 60 .0e.00000% 
Elephant. Nears 
Giant Italian or Musselburgh. ote: 
Vegetable Seeds 
Pkt. oz. Oz. lb. Lb. 

10 Ibs. 
Fr 
Ww 
70 
0 
WDM bB KKH WVONUN— 
FORBES SEEDS 

Head Lettuce 
One ounce for 2500 plants; 3 pounds per acre 
Great Lakes. With large leaves and 
heavy midribs, the firm heads, 5 days 
Jater than No. 44, are larger than 
No. 456. Withstands heat and sun, is 
slow to go to seed, very resistant to 
tip-burn. Also fine for cool weather. 
Great Lakes yields better on upland &gp 
soil than on heavy, deep muck soil. 
New York No. 55. Earliest New York 
with deep, round medium green, 
crisp heads, closely formed at the base 
and free from large, base leaf-ribs. 
Heads are one-fifth smaller than Imperi- 
al No. 847. Highly tip-burn-resistant. 
Particularly well suited to the East. 
Imperial No. 44. For use on muck soils. Some report better results on heavy land 
than on light soils. The compact medium-sized plants, in 80 to 85 days, form 
very firm, medium-large uniform heads. Does not resist tip-burn. 
Imperial No. 456. With heavily serrated, mid-green leaves, this forms heads of 
same size as Imperial No. 847 firm and hard during hot weather and resistant to 
tip-burn. It is excellent for both early and main crop. 
Imperial No. 847. The large-framed plants have large, rounded, medium-green 
heads with abundant wrapper leaves. Shows high resistance to brown blight. 
Specially recommended for field-drilled summer and fall production, as well as 
spring transplanted crop. Later than New York No. 12 but stands longer. 
White Boston N. J. Special. A high-class pale green-leaved Big Boston type with- 
out the red-tinged leaf-edge. Dependable for growing in coldframes, for first field- 
planting in the early spring, and for fall. Comparatively free from tip-burn, 

Imperial Lettuce No. 847 
Loose-Leaf Lettuce 
Black-Seeded Simpson. Early, large, broad, Oak Leaf. A semi-heading new type with 
frilled, light green, crisp, smooth leaves. small Jeaves somewhat resembling an 
Grand Rapids. Very hardy, upright plants of oak leaf. It stands hot weather very well, 
loose, bright green leaves, savoyed and is never bitter and always ‘“‘buttery” and 
crimped at edges. Early; stands extremes. sweet. A nice home-garden variety. 
Grand Rapids Greenhouse Strain. (Tip- Slo Bolt. A new strain of Grand Rapids 
Burn Resistant.) Forms upright com- and, as its name implies, it is very 
pact clusters of light green leaves with slow to bolt to seed. The upright 
heavy frilled edges. Notably uniform, clusters of light green leaves are 
for critical greenhouse trade. heavily frilled and attractive. 
LETTUCE, HEAD. All, pkt. 10c. : . lb. Lb. 5lbs. 10 lbs. 
Great Lakes 00 $24 50 $47 50 
Imperial No. 44 50 32 00 
Imperial Nos 450 ft. cc ce nenee ee 45 00 
Imperial INoWS4 7m octenie s cae creators 29 50 
News Yiorkg Nos Soar akrsntheotnn soa 32 50 
White Boston New Jersey Special 20 00 
17 50 
22 50 
17 50 
LOOSE-LEAF Grand Rapids.......... 
Grand Rapids Greenhouse Strain... .. 
Oak Leaf 
ROMAINE. Trianon Cos 
Dark Green Cos 
20 00 
20 00 
RNY KR KKH KHWWhW 
487 Washington St., Newark 2, N. J. Vegetable Seeds 
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