
‘DEPENDABLE SEEDS AND BULBS” Since 1907 3] 

Campbell's Selected Vegetable Seeds 
for 1949 Gardens 

All Vegetable Packets 10c, Except Where Noted. 
Quantity Prices Quoted on Request. 
ARTICHOKE, Green Globe. Edible, buds, large, green and broad 
at base, attractive thistle-like foliage. Sow September to 
April, 1 inch deep. Save least spiny seedlings; set 4 feet apart. 
Will bear in 2 or 3 years. 
ASPARAGUS, Mary Washington. Excellent, rust resistant vari- 
ety, producing early crops of heavy green shoots. Sow March 
to May; transplant in February; use second year. 
PARADISE. A new and superior variety, producing a crop 1 
year earlier than most varieties, and yielding more heavily. 
BEANS. Sow April to July. 
BUSH. Bountiful, early wax; very prolific; stringless. 
Stringless Greenpod. The favorite; meaty; stringless. 
Canadian Wonder. Excellent late variety. 
POLE. Kentucky Wonder. Fine flavor, rust resistant. 
Kentucky Wonder White Seeded. Excellent, 10 days earlier. 
Kentucky Wonder Wax. Very prolific, delicious. 
Potomac. Green, tender, round pod, fine quality. 
BEANS—LIMA. 
BUSH (Fordhook). Fine quality, large, plump. 
Henderson’s Bush. Baby Lima. Heavy bearer, beans small, 
delicious. 
POLE, Challenger. 10 to 15 feet vines, long pods of splendid 
quality; beans which stay green. 
Pkisei5e% 
BEETS, Table. Sow January to December, all year in mild cli- 
mates. Greens fine vitamin source. 
Detroit Dark Red. One of the finest beets for home gardens, 
symmetrical deep blood red. 
Early Egyptian. For home and market garden, deep crimson, 
zoned, roots flattened globe-shaped, small fine tops. 
BROCCOLI, Italian Green Sprouting. Early strain, large compact 
heads should be cut before flowers appear. Sow August to 
January. 
BRUSSELLS SPROUTS, Long Island Improved. Dwarf plants 
producing quantities of small cabbage-like heads successively; 
fine flavor. 
CHINESE CABBAGE. Chihili. Head 18 inches tall, very firm, 
well blanched, crisp, tender, sweet. Very early and sure head- 
ing. 
Wong Bok. Head 8-10 inches tall, broad, firm, tender, well 
blanched. 
Sow Cabbage July to March. 
CAULIFLOWER—Early Snowball. Dependable variety with early 
heads, good quality. Sow August to January. Pkt. 25c. 
Winter Cauliflower. Firm-heading Broccoli-Cauliflower type, 
fine large white heads. Sow in Summer. Pkt. 25c. 
CABBAGE—Copenhagen Market. Early, round, solid, sweet, white. 
Golden Acre. Second early, solid, round heads. 
Savoy. Sweet, curled, dark olive green, late. . 
Danish Ball Head. Large, flattened globe heads, firm, splendid 
keeper, late. 
New Large Red. Crisp, fine quality, late. 

PLANT VEGETABLES FOR A CONTINUOUS 
SUPPLY 
It is often desirable and practical to extend the harvest period of 
certain quick maturing vegetables by making a succession of 
sowings. Thus, after the first sowing, a second one is made a 
week or two later and possibly a third or fourth so that as the 
first crop is harvested and gone the second will be ready to 
harvest. Most of this planning is guess work without some 
pwede of the duration or time a crop is in condition for 
picking. 
The following table is intended only as a guide in planning suc- 
cession plantings, since exposure and weather conditions and the 
family needs of a crop make it at best an approximation. 
Variety Harvest Lasts Variety Harvest Lasts 
Beans 4 weeks Onions (sets) 4 weeks 
Beets 6 weeks Peas 2 weeks 
Carrots 8 weeks Radish 3 weeks 
Cucumbers 4 weeks Spinach 2 weeks 
Endive 6 weeks Sweet Corn 10 days 
Kohlrabi 3 weeks Turnips 2 weeks 
Lettuce 6 weeks 
Care should be taken to observe the planting seasons in the chart 
at the left so that sowings are not made “out of season.” 
