CELERY, Continued 
Golden Self Blanching, Dwarf—Com- 
pact plants, yellowish green foliage. 
Broad solid stalks, nutty flavor. Blanches 
readily. 120 days. 
Wonderful or Golden Plume—Early, 
medium plant with compact, full heart. 
Blanches easily to golden yellow. 112 
to 115 days. 
CHICORY 
Witloof (French Endive) — Compact, 
blanched head. Crisp, broad leaves 
having pleasant sharp flavor. Must be 
reset in cold frame or greenhouse in 
north. 140 to 160 days. 
ma: COLLARD 
Sow seed heavily and transplant when 
4” high; or sow in rows in permanent 
beds and thin to 16” to 18” apart 
when plants are well started 
Southern or Georgia— An _ excellent 
cooked green. Long stemmed plant, 
with clustered leaves. Withstands heat 
and bad soil. 24 to 36 days 

IOANA CORN 
SWEET CORN 
Do not plant until all danger of frost 
is past. Be sure soil is well worked 
and dry—then drop 6 kernels of corn 
in a shallow hole made with the cor- 
ner of the hoe. Cover each “hill” 
with about 1” of fine soil pressed 
down firmly. When 6” high, thin to 
three or four plants in each hill. 
Hybrids 
We offer Hybrid Sweet Corn varieties 

known and grown the country over— 
the finest that can be procured any- 
where. We list here only a few of these 
choice kinds. Whatever your needs or 
your preference, be sure we can supply 
you with the kind of corn you want. 
Talk it over with us. 
Golden Cross Bantam (fr)—Extremely 
uniform. Ears 10 to 14 rows, slightly 
lighter yellow than Golden Bantam. 
Highly resistant to Stewart's disease. 
85 days. 
Ioana (fr)—1940 All-America. Ears 72 
to 8-in., well filled with 12 or 14 rows 
of deep, medium narrow, light yellow 
kernels. Highly resistant to drought 
and bacteria wilt. 87 days. 
Marcross (frM—An early wilt-resistant 
yellow hybrid, producing deep golden 
yellow kernels 7 days earlier than 
Golden Bantam. Ears 6 to 7-in. long, 
with 12-14 rows of large sweet kernels. 
73 days. 
Stowell’s Hybrid Evergreen — White. 
Large ears about 8-in. long; big kernels, 
very sweet. One of the best late va- 
rieties. 95 days. 
Open-Pollinated 
Bantam Evergreen—A cross of Golden 
Bantam on Stowell's Evergreen. 14 to 
18 rows. Deep, rich golden kernels, 
tender, sweet. 90 days. 
Black Mexican—Pure white corn with 
purplish-black seed. Ears are 7 to 8 in. 
long, 8 rows. Cylindrical straight rowed. 
88 days. 
Country Gentleman or Shoe Peg (fr)— 
Prolific late variety. Favored by can- 
ners. Irregular kernels, very deep, 
sweet. 93 days. 
Golden Bantam (fr)—The best and most 
favorably known of all the yellow va- 
rieties. Stalks often have 2 ears. Ears 
8 rowed, kernels broad, with tender 
hull. 
Stowell’s Evergreen—White. Large ears 
about 8-in. long; big kernels, very 
sweet. Good late variety. 93 days. 

The Old Gardener talks of SWEET CORN 
Most sweet corn is really sweet only 
if it's home-grown. It must be cooked 
within an hour of the time it's picked 
if you want the true sugar flavor. As 
soon as it's picked, the sugar begins 
to turn to starch, and six hours after 
its picked, most of the sweetness is 
gone. So if you really want sweet, 
sweet corn, grow 
your own. 
Even those who used 
to have failures with 
the old open polle- 
nated varieties be- 
cause of plant disease 
can grow the new 
hybrid varieties with 
their big juicy ears. 
But if you do grow 
the hybrid kinds, be 
C2 pe CR eR ST TL LS TLS EE TE 
12 

sure to plant more than one variety be- 
cause they set better ears when the pol- 
len from more than one variety is flying 
at a time. And for best pullenation, don't 
plant a long single row: instead plant 
several short rows side by side so the 
pollen can blow through them. All 
corn is wind-pollenated and wind mus! 
hit all the stalks in the 
field if they are to 
Set acOOdmcars samo: 
directions for grow- 
ing better sweet corn, 
see Vegetable Seed 
Culture. 
The sweet corns illus- 
trated here are: l]— 
Golden Bantam; 2— 
Golden Cross Bantam; 
3—Country Gentleman. 

POP CORN 
South American or Yellow Dynamite— 
Rich, creamy, yellow, smooth and round 
kernels, which pop double size of 
others. Ears 8 to 9-in. long. Vigorous 
grower. 115 days. 
White Hulless (Japanese)—Chunky ears 
without row formation. White pointed 
kernels, narrow. Pop snowy white. 85 
days. 
New! Hybrid Pop Corn 
You will be delighted with the new 
hybrid pop corn. 
rific; 
Yields are ter- 
every plant produces corn 
with satisfying uniformity of big 
ears, with uniform popping ability. 
ASK. *US “ABOUT “THESE RENEW, 
HYBRIDS! 


EARLY FORTUNE CUCUMBER 
CUCUMBER 
Select soil fully exposed to sun and 
enrich thoroughly with fertilizer. Seeds 
should be planted not over 1” deep 
in hills from 3’ to 5’ apart each way. 
Sow 15 to 20 seeds to a hill. When 
plants crowd thin to 3 plants per hill. 
Frequent shallow cultivation necessary 
until runners appear. 
A and C or Colorado—A long dark 
green cucumber which merits a trial. 
Uniform, nearly cylindrical, well rounded 
at ends. 
Cubit—Won Bronze Medal Award in 
1944 All-American Selections. Dark 
green, white spine, cylindrical with 
blunt ends. Firm flesh and uniform col- 
oring. New and worthwhile. 
Early Fortune—Rich, dark green fruits 
with firm, crisp, pure white flesh. 
Grows to 9 by 2¥2-in. Ships well, and 
is highly resistant to disease. 66 days. 
Long Green Improved—Black spined, 
good pickling. Grows 10 to 15 in. long, 
70 days. 
Marketer—Fine new variety, very pro- 
lific. Attractive rich, dark green color, 
carried right down to blossom end. 
Crisp, icy-white flesh. 7%-in. long, 2%- 
in. diameter. 
I0¢ PER PACKET 
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED 
In bulk at money-saving prices.. 
Special quotations to market gardeners. 
Prices subject to change without notice. 

