24 EW. BOLGIANO &1COy 
SQUASH 
FARR’S BENNINGS WHITE BUSH SQUASH. The earliest and best 
Squash ever introduced. Full description page tr. 
EARLY WHITE BUSH SCALLOPED OR PATTY PAN. Early White 
Bush Scalloped or Patty Pan Squash is the earliest and grown almost ex- 
clusively for the first crop. The rind is of hard texture, which makes it 
suitable for shipping, and it is exclusively grown at the South for that pur- 
pose. Packets, 5 and 10 cents; % pound, 15 cents; pound, 35 cents. 
EARLY PROLIFIC ORANGE MARROW. A comparatively new fall 
or winter variety. It is shaped somewhat like the Boston Marrow, but it is 
a decided improvement on it, being much earlier and more productive. 
These characteristics will commend this variety to market gardeners, while 
its brilliant orange red color and fine keeping and cooking qualities make 
it popular with the customer. The rind is very hard, but thin, and the flesh 
deep, fine grained, and of delicate quality. Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 10 cents; 
14 pound, 25 cents; % pound, 30 cents; pound, 50 cents. 
Early White Bush Squash 
HUBBARD SQUASH. A superior variety and one of the best winter keepers, flesh bright orange-yellow, fine grained, 
very dry, sweet and rich flavored. Bakes very dry, equally as dry as the Sweet Potato. Our stock is the very best and 
we don’t hesitate to recommend it to the most critical planter. Packets, 5 and 10 cents; % pound 15 cents; pound, 5oc. 
BOSTON MARROW. A splendid winter squash of 
good keeping qualities. Flesh bright orange, fine grain, 
and unsurpassed. It is oval-shaped and thin skin of 
bright orange color. For pies it is equal to the best 
pumpkins. Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 10 cents; %4 pound, 15 
cents; % pound, 25 cents; pound, 4o cents. 
EARLY YELLOW SUMMER CROOKNECK. A de- 
sirable table sort, very early and productive, fruits when 
matured, small, yellow crooknecked, and covered with 
warty excrescences. Packets, 5 and 10 cents; %4 pound, 15 
cents; % pound, 25 cents; pound, 4o cents. 
WINTER CROOKNECK. Flesh red, fine flavor, 
2 largely grown for winter use. Packets, 5 and 10 cents; 4 Winter 
Boston Marrow Squash pound, 15 cents; ¥% pound, 25 cents; pound, 40 cents. Crookneck Squash 
SPINACH 
One ounce for too feet of drill. 10 to 15 pounds for an acre. 
This is an important market gardener’s crop, of easy culture. For spring and summer use, sow either broadcast or in 
drills, one foot apart and one inch deep, as early as the ground can be worked, and every two weeks for a succession. 
For winter and early spring use, sow in September, in well-manured ground; cover with straw on the approach of severe 
cold weather. The ground cannot be too rich; the stronger the ground the more delicate and succulent will be the leaves. 
LONG SEASON SPINACH SEED. Positively the best for spring and summer planting. Very curled, in fact it is 
a beauty. Price, packets, 5 and ro cents; 4% pound, 15 cents; % pound, 20 cents; pound, 30 cents; Io pounds, $2.50. See 
full description, page 2 ‘ 
5 TRUE BLOOMSDALE CURLED SAVOY SPINACH. 
Fifteen pounds to the acre. Many thousands of acres find 
profitable employment in growing spinach, and no crop 
pays better. Our stock Curled Savoy Spinach was the 
truest and most beautiful in the market. Its growth is 
rapid, the leaf is properly curled, which gives it a very 
attractive appearance, and causes it to measure better than 
other sorts, and makes it the favorite with the largest 
growers. Packet, 5 cents; 4 pound, 10 cents; pound, 15 
cents. 
NEW SPRING SPINACH. ‘The most valuable for 
spring sowing. Its long-standing quality makes it abso- 
lutely the best for that purpose. The foliage is a very at- 
tractive, heavy dark green, curled leaves, of the true Savoy 
appearance, and of the finest quality. It will stand from 
two to three weeks after all other varieties of Spinach have 
shot to seed. It can be planted all spring and summer 
with surety of making a crop. Last spring the demand far 
exceeded our supply. Packet, 5 cents; % pound, Io cents; 
pound, 15 cents; 5 pounds, 75 cents. 
NEW IMPROVED CURLED LONG-STANDING SPINACH. The foliage is heavy, the broad, dark green leaves are 
of the finest quality. It is in prime condition from two weeks to three weeks after other varieties of spinach have run to 
seed. Packet, 5 cents; 4 pound, Io cents; pound, I5 cents. 
LONG-STANDING (THICK-LEAVED.) The leaves are large, thick, fleshy, and crumpled, fully equal in quality to 
the Savoy-leaved. Packet, 5 cents; 4 pound, Io cents; pound, 15 cents. 
