16 



P. MANN & CO., WASHINGTON, D. C. 



^MMimA^l 



PUMPKIN Grosse-Kurbis, Ger. 



One pound will plant 200 to 300 hills 



Culture. — The common practice is to drop two or three 

 seeds into every third or fourth hill in the cornfield; may be 

 sown in hills, eight feet apart, each way, four plants to each 



hill. 



Cashaw, or Crookneck. — Large, light cream 

 color, solid and sweet, very fine grained, splendid 

 for table or feeding stock. Packet, 5c. Ounce, 

 IOC. 14 pound, 15c. Pound, 50c. 



Large Cheese. — A good cooking variety, cheese 

 shape, creamy yellow color, flesh fine grained, and 

 one of the best for pies. Price, per packet, 5c. Per 

 ounce, IOC. j^^. pound, 15c. Pound, 50c. 



Japanese Pie, — Crooked-neck variety; extreme-* 

 ly small seed cavity; nearly all solid meat; quality 



LARGE CHEESE PUMPKIN 



extra fine. Packet, 5c 

 20C. Pound, 75c. 



Ounce, IOC. 



/4 



pound. 



Large Connecticut Field. — Hardiest of all Pumpkins, good for pies and stock feeding. 14 pound, 

 IOC. Pound, 30C. Quart, 25c. 



Small Sugar. — Early prolific and very sweet; orange color; fine keeper. Ounce, loc. ^^ pound, 

 20c. Pound. 50c. 



King of Mammoths. — This giant variety grows to enormous size. Deep yellow, glossy color. 

 Splendid to grow for stock and exhibition purposes. ^ pound, 25c. Pound 75c. 



GARDEN PEAS 



WE DO NOT PAY 

 POSTAGE ON PEAS 



Our Seed Peas are of the best quality obtainable, being all grown far North, thoroughly cleaned 

 and carefully hand-picked. They are raised from the finest selected strains, and the growing 

 crops are rogued to remove all runners and improper types of growth. 



Three Quarts of Seed to 100 Yards of Row. One and a Half to Two Bushels to the Acre. 



Culture. — Sow as early as the ground 

 can be worked, and again every ten days 

 or two weeks for succession. They can 

 be sown as late as the 20th of August for 

 the last sowing, using Extra Earlies. Sow 

 in rows about 4 feet apart and i inch 

 apart in the row, and 3 to 4 inches deep. 



Extra Early Alaska. — The earliest blue 

 pea. The dark green color of the pods 

 makes it extremely desirable, as it can 

 be carried long distances without losing 

 color, which quality, combined w:th its 

 earliness and uniformity of ripening, 

 makes it a most desirable pea for market 

 gardeners. Height two feet. Quart, 30c. 

 Peck, $1.75. Bushel, $6.00. 



Nott's Excelsior. — One of the best 

 early Dwarf Peas. It combines the good 

 qualities of the American Wonder and 

 Premium Gem Peas. The vines are larg- 

 er and more productive than American 

 \¥onder and earlier than Premium Gem. 

 The peas in sweetness and quality unsur- 

 possed. Quart, 30cr Peck, $2.00. Bushel, 

 $7.50. 



American Wonder. — This is a dwarf variety, 

 and leads all others in point of earlmess, grow- 

 ing about ten inches high, and produces a pro- 

 fusion of good-sized, well filled pods, with fin- 

 est flavored peas. Quart, 30c. Peck, $2.00. 

 Bushel, $7.50. 



EXTRA EARLY ALASKA 

 Bountiful, or Ameer — (New). — Extra Early 

 pea. One of the best early peas for the garden. 

 Highly recommended. Quart, 35c. Peck, $2.00. 

 Bushel, $7.50. 



