s 
CARROT—Continued 
White Belgian, Long 90 days 
Top—18 to 22 inches tall. 
Root—10 to 12 inches in length, heavy 
shoulder tapering to tip, pure white 
flesh, exposed crown light green in 
color. 
Used exclusively for stock feeding. 
Yellow Belgian 
Top—18 to 22 inches tall. 
Root—12 to 14 inches in length, thick 
shouldered and tapering, pale lemon- 
yellow rough exterior. 
Used chiefly for stock feed. It is the giant 
among carrots, immensely productive 
and nutritious. 
90 days 
CAULIFLOWER 
Cauliflower seed, formerly produced exclusively in Europe, is now also satisfactorily 
grown in this country. The seed is in every way comparable to foreign grown stocks. We 
offer both early maturing and main crop strains of excellent quality. 
The number of days shown indicates the time required to develop marketable heads 
from the setting of plants to open field. 
Snowball No. 16 (Domestic) 65 days 
Plant—dwarf and compact in growth with 
long upright leaves. 
Head—6% inches in diameter, average 
weight 2 pounds, large, flattened pure 
white curds free from leaflets. 
Most satisfactory strain for main crop 
fall harvest. Widely accepted for home 
and market garden. 
Snowdrift (Domestic) 65 days 
Plant—more vigorous strain of Snowball 
with tall, erect medium green outer 
leaves. 
Head—7 inches in diameter, about 2 
pounds in weight, large, deep, snowy- 
white curds. 
Very similar to Snowball No. 16, except 
matures more evenly. Popular for both 
home and market garden. 
Super Snowball (Imported) 52 days 
Plant—dwarfer and earlier than Snow- 
ball. Leaves medium large and adapted 
to tying. 
Head—about 6% inches in diameter, 
weight about 1%4 pounds, compact and 
very white. A flatter, thinner curd 
than Snowball No. 16. 
Desirable for home, market gardening 
and freezing where earliness is first 
consideration. 
St. Valentine (Broccoli type) 70 days 
Plant—32 inches tall, bluish-green, erect 
and leafy. 
Head—=3 to 5 inches in diameter, compact, 
curved and white. 
Widely grown on the West Coast as a 
winter crop, but not adapted to the 
short hot summers of the East and 
Middle West. 
Cauliflower, Snowball No. 16 
PAGE 24 
