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in the Fall or for Winter storing, the later sowings are advisable. 
Our Strains of Carrots Are the Best Obtainable 
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CARROTS 
Sow seed early in the Spring in rows 12 to 30 inches apart. Cover seed with 4 to inch 
of soil and press gently. Thin plants to stand 2 to 3 inches apart. For a continuous supply 
sowings should be made every two weeks up to the early part of July. For nice, tender Carrots 
Use a packet of seed to 
25 feet of row, 14 oz. to 100 feet, 3 to 4 lbs. to the acre. 
Early Nantes (Coreless). (70 days.) For 
quality, flavor, attractive appearance, it 
is one of the best; 6 in. long and perfectly 
cylindrical, being from 1 to 1} in. thick, 
the whole length ending abruptly in a 
small, thin tail. There is no ‘‘core,” the 
beautifully pure, orange-scarlet flesh ex- 
tends right through; valuable for home 
use. Its color, form and size make it a 
ready seller on the market. Pkt. 10c., 
oz. 40c., 44 Ib. 90c., Ib. $3.00. 
Guerande, or Oxheart. Stump-rooted es- 
pecially adapted to shallow soil. Pkt. 10c., 
oz. 40c., 14 lb. 90c., Ib. $3.00. 
Danvers Half-Long. (Special.) Well- 
known favorite Carrot on account of its 
great productiveness and adaptability to 
all soils and sections. Commercial crops 
have yielded 25 to 30 tons per acre. Roots 
are half-long, almost cylindrical, and under 
ordinary culture grow 6 to 7 in. long and 
18% in. thick at shoulder, tapering gradu- 
ally towards the stump end. If grown in 
deeply prepared soil, roots will measure 
7 to 744 in. long and 2 to 2% in. at the 
shoulder. Skin is rich. deep orange-red; 
flesh is bright orange, fine-grained, sweet 
and tender. Much more easily harvested 
than the long types, and an excellent 
variety for home and market, shipping or 
storing for Winter use. Pkt. 10c., oz. 40c., 
YY |b. 90c., Ib. $3.00. 
CEL 
One ounce will produce 3,000 plants 
Sow seed early in April, in an open border, 
in good, rich soil, in drills 8 inches apart. 
Early in July transplant to trenches 3 feet 
apart and 6 inches apart in rows. The 
beds should be kept well weeded and an occa- 
sional soaking with water in dry weather will 
do the plants good. 
Golden Plume, 4162 
Supreme Half Long. Resembles a small 
refined Danvers with short tops. Pkt. 10c., 
oz. 40c.. 14 Ib. $1.00, Ib. $3.60. 
Imperator. (77 days.) A little longer than 
Danvers, but having the high table quality 
of the short rooted varieties. Color, deep 
solid orange all through. Pkt. 10c., oz. 40c., 
14 |b. $1.00, 1b. $3.60. 
Morse’s New Bunching. (72 days.) Gold 
Medal. Cylindrical, half-long Carrot, of 
ideal size and shape for bunching. Color is 
a fine deep orange throughout with a small, 
indistinct core. Tops are short, rather 
bushy and strong but not coarse at the 
neck. Quality is fine and flesh is tender and 
sweet. This was developed as a bunching 
Carrot for market and long distance ship- 
ping and makes a splendid appearance. It 
is equally as desirable in the home garden, 
just the right size and shape that appeals. 
Pkt. 10c., oz. 40c., 14 Ib. $1.00, Ib. $3.60. 
Red Cored Chantenay. (70 days.) The 
color is a rich orange, decidedly deeper 
than the ordinary Chantenay. The cores 
are small. The roots grow about 5% to 6 
in. long, and 2 to 2)4 in. in diameter, hav- 
ing a very small rat tail, and run very 
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1 
Morse’s Bunching Carrots 
CAULIFLOWER 
For early crop sow in hot-bed in January 
or February and transplant as soon as frost 
uniform in size and appearance. Pkt. 10c., 
oz. 40c., 14 Ib. 90c., Ib. $3.00. 
Long Orange Improved. A heavy cropper. 
Roots scarlet-orange; 10-12 in. long, 2 in. 
thick at shoulder; tapered, pointed. Pkt. 
10c., oz. 40c., 14 Ib. 90c., Ib. $3.00. 
Golden Plume 4162. An improved strain, 
taller, longer stemmed. Retains earliness 
danger is past. For late crop, sow in May or 
June. Set plants 18 inches apart and in rows 
2 feet apart. To control root-rot and yellows 
after plants are up, treat soil with solution of 
bichloride of mercury, 8 ounces to 50 gallons 
of water. 
One packet will produce about 100 plants 
Early Snmowbalf. This is an extra fancy 
Danish grown seed producing an early ma- 
turing strain of the short-leaved type. 
Adapted for forcing or for the garden. 
Pkt. 25c., 14 oz. 75c.. oz. $2.50. 
Snowdrift. A new, early variety which 
makes a larger head than Snowball. The 
and ease of blanching of original strain; 
more compact in form; heavy producer. 
24 to 26 in. tall with stems 7% to 8% in. 
long and hearts full. Pkt. 25c., 14 oz. 50c., 
oz. $1.50. 
Cornell No. 19. Developed and introduced 
by the New York State College of Agricul- 
ture. A cross between the green Celery 
Utah and the Golden Self Blanching. 
Early, easy blanching. Plants 24 in. tall. 
Edible stem 10% in. Rounded thick 
stems; fairly good heart. Quality good. 
Resistant to fusarium yellows. Pkt. 20c., 
1% oz. 50c., oz. $1.50. 
Cornell 619 (New). A superior Celery de- 
veloped by Cornell University and is a 
cross between the Cornell 6 and 19, and 
this new strain seems to have the excellent 
features of both parents. Resistant to 
yellows, easily blanched and suitable for 
both upland and muck soil. Excellent for 
home use and as a main crop for commercial 
growers. Pkt. 25c., 14 oz. 65c., oz. $1.75. 
Summer Pascal (Waltham Strain). (120 
days.) Unique, crisp, nutty sweet. Here 
is a beautiful Pascal Celery that can be 
bleached with paper or boards. It is full 
hearted, smooth, stringless, crisp, delicious 
and easy to bleach. Can be grown for early 
and late. Height medium with round, solid, 
dark green, smooth ribs. It outsells others 
and has brought a premium of 50 per cent 
or more than other Celery. Just the 
Celery you have been looking for. Pkt. 20c., 
Y% oz. 50c., oz. $1.50, 14 1b. $2.50, lb. $8.50. 
New Early Purple Head. 
head has unusual depth, is of fine texture, 
and blanches very easily. Pkt. 25c., 4 oz. 
75c., oz. $2.50. 
Super Snowball. The finest, earliest Cauli- 
flower grown. Given good soil, this strain 
will bear and be finished before any other 
variety is ready to use. The heads are large 
and leaves curl over the heads for sun pro- 
tection. Pkt. 25c., 14 oz. 75c., oz. $2.50. 
(73 days.) Has 
superior eating and freezing qualities. 
Deep purple head and becomes green when 
cooked. Fine nutty flavor. Pkt. 25c., 
lf oz. 75c., oz. $3.00. 
Emerson Pascal (New). Early, blight 
resistant, developed by Cornell University. 
Superb eating quality. Tender and unusu- 
ally brittle, including outer stalks. 14 oz. 
50c., 4% oz. 85c., oz. $1.50, 14 Ib. $5.00. 
Utah No. 15. An improved strain of Utah. 
Height 26 to 28 in. Leaves are dark green. 
Plants are erect, compact, full-hearted. 
Edible stems 8 to 10 in. long; crisp and 
fine quality. Pkt. 25c., 14 oz. 50c., oz. $1.50 
CELERIAC 
Or TURNIP-ROOTED CELERY 
Grown mostly for its bulbous roots, which 
may be stored like Beets for Winter use. 
Giant Prague. 
The finest variety. Very 
large roots which are almost round. Pkt. 
15c., oz. $1.00, 14 Ib. $3.00. 
