6 LAKEVIEYV SEED FARM, ROCHESTER, N. V. 
Golden Yellow Self-Blanching Celery 
GOLDEN' YELLOW SELF BLANCHING CELERY. 
The Golden Yellow Self- 
Blancliing is grown more 
than all others combined as an 
early celery for fall or early 
winter use. It is easily 
blanched, and is a very fine 
celery. It is well understood 
that imported seed will pro- 
duce a better Self-Blanching 
Celery than American-grown 
seed. 
J^~A11 the Self-Blanching 
seed I offer this year is Im- 
ported seed, and proven seed ; 
that is, I grew samples from it 
last season to test its quality 
and found it all right. The 
celery grown from the seed was 
of strong growth, solid and 
firm. There is no better 
seed. 
Mr. H. Glass: The sample of S:lf-Blanching Celery Seed you sent me marked No. 1, 
is the best Celery seed I ever had. The celery is the truest and most solid, not one soft 
head in the lot. Some heads weighed 4 and 5 pounds. Am much pleased with it. 
D. A. Laming. 
I wish to say that your Golden Self Blanching Celery was the be3t I ever raised, being 
free from the green celery so often found in that variety.— V. V. Vant, Market Gardener. 
Price— Pkt. 10 j. , oz. 30c, i lb. 80c, lb. $3.00. 
Prizetaker Onion. 
A large, mild-flavored, onion, resembling 
the imported Spanish onion. It yields 
large crops of large-sized onions, with 
practically no small ones. With us, last 
year, the yield was more than double that 
of the Danvers, and finer onions and more / 
salable. It is a profitable onion to grow. (ii 
From one pound of your Prizetaker (J 
Onion Seed I grew 200 bushels of extra I' 
line onions, and there was not two bushels ' 
of small onions among them, 
John Deyakny. 
I grew 104 bushels from one-half pound 
of your Prizetaker Onion Seed last year— 
1897. H. Camping. 
Price— Pkt. 10c, oz. 20c, J lb. 50c, 
lb. $1.?.-,. 
PRIZETAKER ONION, 
