mm TT i 
From PETER HENDERSON @ CO., | NEW YORK 53 
ERIN ESTTALEA NAAT TT 
HENDERSON’S 
Bovee Potato 
A Marvel in Earliness! The Earliest of all 
A Marvel in Yield! Outyielding all of the Earlies 
A Marvel in Uniform Size and Perfect Shape 
Tt is not only early, but produces its crop in great abundance, 
and yields a very large percentage of perfectly formed tubers. 
The cultivator can be used to better advantage on a crop of 
} Bovee than any. other sort, owing to the short and compact 
es of the vines, and its habit of setting the entire crop close in 
the hill. 
Bovee, perhaps more than any other sort, delights in a rich soil, 
responding more generously to good treatment; given the proper soil 
conditions, frequent and thorough cultivation and fairly good climatic 
conditions, it will-yield an abundance of medium-sized potatoes of perfect 
} shape and remarkably good quality. (See engraving.) Price, $1.40 peck, 
}) $5.00 bushel, $10.00 sack of 165 pounds net weight. By express or freight 
| at purchaser’s expense. 
“ Hen- 
derson’s 
Bovee  Pota- 
toes I planted 
this spring 
yielded more pota- 
toes than any others 
raised around here. 
The Green Mountain 
Potatoes were also very 
good,” 
E. F. ‘HELBLING, 
Fort Smith, Ark. 
July 19, 1917. - 
“Having had such splen- 
did results from the last lot of 
your Early Bovee Potatoes, I 
have decided to plant them again 
§| this year.”” 
Mrs. AGNES PATTERSON, 
Forest Lodge, 
Northville, 
April 2, Conn. 
Irish Cobbler Potato 
A fine, early variety, producing large handsome tubers, uniform 
in shape and size. 
The flesh is white, and of excellent quality; the skin very light 
brown, with whitish netting. It is a heavy cropper. (See engraving.) 
Price, 1.25 pecx, $4.59 bushel, £9.00 sack of 165 pounds net weight. 
By express or freight at purchaser’s expense. 
“Tast year I wrote you about Potatoes, and you sent me Irish Cobbler. I 
am pleased to state that they were a great success. 
LUCILLA SHERWOOD, 
Haverstraw, N.Y. 
bs S = “W ised 18 barrels Potat b 7 0, Henderson’s Seed Potatoes. 
Early CrimsonGiant Radish, ee cc pe re ae cy aa ond 
quite smooth, and some 
of them measured 814 
inches lo ng 
and weighed 
2 pounds 54 
ounces each. 
We were more 
than pleased.’ 
GEORGE 
JUENGST 
& SONS, 
Croton 
Falls, 
Double the size of any of the early turnip-shaped._ type. |/m% 
This variety develops to 5 and often 6 inches in circum- |\@ 
\ ference, weighing up to 1 ounce per root, or about four 
times the weight of similar sorts; but notwithstanding its 
jimmense size, does not get hollow or pithy, but keeps in |® 
condition for a long time for such an early variety. The 
} flesh remains sparkling white, solid, crisp and juicy and it 
is of the mildest flavor. The root is almost globe-shaped, 
| and is very bright crimson in color. It is an excellent variety 
| for forcing, and is also much esteemed as an outdoor variety. 
| Price, toc. pkt., 20c. oz., 6cc. 14 Ib., $2.00 Ib. 
“The radishes grown from the seeds of Early Crimson Giant Radish 
purchased from you this season, are without exception the finest I ever 
‘| raised.” 
J. CALVIN MEYER, Bellefonte, Pa. 
| “We are highly pleased with your White-Tipped Scarlet Turnip 
| Radish. My gardener put some in at the same time as other radishes. 
To our surprise, last night he pulled some of them and found them 
perfectly formed, which we had not expected from the small tops we 
saw.” 
HARRY RAYMOND, — 
High Point, N. C. a = - = 
J —  — —— - 
| SEND YOUR SEED ORDERS IN JANUARY OR FEBRUARY ae 
the demand will be greater than ever. 
