



Golden West (68 to 70 days): Ears 61% 
to 7 inches long, 10 to 12 rows of fairly 
broad yellow kernels. 
Early Sunshine (72 to 76 days): Ears 61% 
to 7 inches long with 10 to 12 rows of 
kernels. Good early market variety. 
YELLOW HYBRID. Packet, 10c; 4 
pound, 25c; pound, 45c. 
Golden Cross Bantam (83 to 85 days): 
Ears 71% to 8 inches long with 10 to 14 
rows of kernels, medium in width and 
depth. Rich yellow color. 
Bancross (68 to 70 days): Ears 7 to 9 
inches long. 8 to 12 rows of deep yellow 
kernels. Excellent quality for garden or 
market. 
Lincoln (82 days): Ears 8 inches, 14 to 
16 rows of medium narrow kernels. 
Produces large, early ears. Market 
gardener variety. 
Spancross (66 days): Medium size ears 
6 to 7 inches long. 12 rows of uniform, 
yellow kernels. Extra early and wilt 
resistant. 
WHITE VARIETIES. Packet, 10c; 4 
pound, 20c; pound, 35c. 
Stowell’s Evergreen (95 to 100 days): 
Ears 8 to 9 inches, 16 rows of deep, 
white kernels. High yielding variety 
excellent for canning. 
Oregon Evergreen (80 to 85 days): Ears 
7% to 8 inches, uniform medium to large 
ears with 12 to 15 rows. Good freezing 
variety. 
CRESS 
Sometimes known as pepper-grass. A 
quick-germinating, quick-growing plant 
with finely curled bright green leaves, 
daintier in appearance than mustard and 
a little sharper in its pleasantly pungent 
flavor, which is not nearly so robust as 
that of water cress. Sow two or three 
feet at a time in the open row at the first 
working of your garden and repeat 
weekly. 
Packet, 10c; 1/4 ounce, 15c, ounce, 25c. 
9 
CHIVES 
The famous Schnittlauch. . . highly prized 
for flavor. Best to start seed indoors, 
transplanting to the open garden after 
spring frosts have passed. Sow seed 
thickly so as to form a clump of young 
plants. Plant entire clump as one plant. 
Packet of seed ample for the average 
Family needs. Packet, 10c; 1/4 ounce, 60c. 
SWISS CHARD 
Chard would be better known and more 
highly appreciated if it were more fre- 
quently on sale, but it is essentially a 
vegetable for the home garden, as it is 
ill-adapted to shipping, in addition to the 
Fact that the leaves are gathered singly, 
and not the whole plant. The plants are 
cultivated like beets, except they should 
be thinned to eight to ten inches apart. 
There are several green varieties, the best 
being Lucullus with crumpled yellowish 
green leaves and Broadtail green chard. 
Packet, 10c; 1/4 ounce, 15c; ounce, 25c. 
Rhubarb Chard a new variety that looks 
like rhubarb. The leaf stocks are a bright 
delicate translucent crimson. This rich 
color extends through the veins into the 
dark green leaves. It has a delicious 
flavor and is easily grown in most all types 
of soil and climatic conditions. 
Packet, 10c, 1% ounce, 25c; ounce, 40c. 
HEY, GARDENERS! 
Jf THIS Is HOW TO 
i] 
Ae, (> meetin 



Just place a few 
piles of META 
Slug Bait through 
your garden. 
You'll be amazed 
at the number of 
dead ones you'll 
find the next day. 
3 Ibs., 75c 
META Kills Slugs 
