SEEDS WHICH SUCCEED 



TURNIP— Continued 

 FIVE VARIETIES GROWN FOR GREENS 



THESE PRICES 

 INCLUDE POSTAGE. 



V 



V" . 



Seven-Top— Notice the seven leaf buds spring out 

 of the crown at distinct points 



Lb. M Lb. Oz. 



Southern Prize. — Turnip greens of a choice form can be cut from this variety...... 70 20 10 



Dixie Land. — form of Turnip for Winter 

 Greens. No variety producing tops so 

 entirely proof against frost. The fohage 

 a hght blue-green. Earlier than Seven- 

 Top. 



Lb. t Lb. Oz. Pkt. 



60 20 10 5 



Seven -Top (for greens or 



salads). — ^This may be left standing in 

 the open ground during Winter as far 

 north as Philadelphia. In the Southern 

 States it yields in "the Spring abundant 

 foliage for boiling with cured meats, and 

 is in much demand. 

 Lb. iLb. • Oz. Pkt. 



60 20 10 6 



Pkt. 



^•;5 



Frost King.— Said to be very hardy, and for that reason in much repute 70 



Landreths' 14-Top. — Out of the Bloomsdale Seven- 

 Top the Landreths have selected, _ after several years of close atten- 

 tion, a strain far more productive in the 

 number of buds or clusters of leaf develop- 

 ment — so very productive as to warrant 

 the giving of a new name to the selection, 

 and accordingly was introduced the summer 

 of 1908 as the 14-Top. Its extraordinary 

 productiveness is illustrated by the pho- 

 tograph, which clearly shows the many 

 points of origin of leaf buds, sometimes as 

 many — quite twenty — as to form a crowded 

 mass of leaves sometimes not to be covered 

 by an inverted bushel basket. The root 

 is next to valueless, the top or leaves being 

 our- object of development; the so-called 

 "greens" being used same as Spinach. 

 Hardened by a zero temperature under 

 years of culture at Bloomsdale. 

 Lb. I Lb. Oz. Pkt. 



70 20 10 5 



20 10 



14-Top Turnip— Notice the mass of leaf buds 



To Cottage or Private Gardeners 



This Seed Catalogue is written in such clear language that anyone can understand the descriptions 

 of Garden Vegetables, Ornamental Flowers and everything else offered for sale, which descriptions are by 

 all odds more complete as to detail and accuracy than found in any other catalogue, because the descrip- 

 tions are not extracted from other books, but are from intense observations in the fields and trial grounds. 

 The order of arrangement of varieties is such that makes every item easily found and when found easily 

 understood, even by the most inexperienced gardener, who no doubt is completely "obfuscated" in 

 attempting to understand most seed catalogues with their unsystematic arrangement- and extravagant 

 descriptions so often misleading. Compare the orderly arrangement of this Catalogue with the hodge- 

 podge arrangement of many others. 



The Seeds offered are not surpassed in quahty by any, yet our quotations are often at lower prices 

 than found in other catalogues. , , . .„ , . n ■ ^ 



In the sale of Landreths' Seeds there is no guarantee that their use will produce definite crop results 

 because of varying conditions of soil, climate, time of planting, manner of cultivation, over all of which 

 Landreths have no control, and the Seed is sold with this distinct understanding. 



For Express chaxgea paid by customer, or small seeds Postage paid by us, see inside of cover. 



(75) 



