52 
The Illustrated Guide for Amateur Gardeners 
Main Crop and Late Varieties (White) {continued). 
DANIELS’ UNIVERSAL. 
EVIDENCE OF 
QUALITY. 
“I like the Universal very 
much, as they are a Dice size and 
goody ielders.” Mr.FUTTER, 
Tuttington. 
“ Universal is a good Potato 
and all that can he desired.” — 
Mr. A. STANNARD, The 
Gardens, Coxford Abbey. 
‘‘I must say the Universal 
are all that con he desired, when 
cooked they are of n beautiful 
white floury nature.”— Mr. A. 
BOOTY. Bottishaui. 
EVIDENCE OF 
QUALITY. 
“ I find Daniels’ Universal 
Potatoes yield well, and have 
stood the disease better than any 
other sort 1 have previously grown, 
and I also find the Table King 
a good early Potato, and well 
worth cultivating.”- Mr. WM. 
BARNES, Hindringham. 
“The Universal Potato is a 
good cropper, and of excellent 
cooking quality.” — Mr. W. 
SELF, Gnnton Hall. 
DANIELS’ UNIVERSAL. New seedling Potato (1888). A round white variety, of the size and 
shape of a cricket ball; eyes few and shallow, skin slightly netted, flesh white and floury when 
cooked. A first-rate cropping variety, and an excellent keeper. We sent this variety out 
in 1888 for the first time, and the steadily increasing demand shows that it is giving general 
satisfaction to our customers. Price, 14 lb. 2s. 6d., 56 lb. 8s. 6d., cwt. 15s. 
DANIELS’ DREADNOUGHT. New disease-resisting main crop variety. This magnificent 
Potato somewhat resembles the Magnum Bonum, but far excels that variety in vigour of 
constitution and enormous productiveness; grown side by side with Magnum Bonum it 
produced one third more tubers, of handsome shape and fine table quality. 
Price, 14 lb. 3s. 6d., 56 lb. 12s. 6d., cwt. 21s. 
FUTURE FAME. A grand Seedling of the Magnum Bonum type, and, like that variety, a 
great disease-resister, but is at least a fortnight earlier, and a heavy cropper, and when cooked 
is white, dry, and mealy, and of faultless flavour. (As this variety is likely to prove one of 
the great food producers of the future, we recommend all growers to at once possess themselves 
of the stock.) Price, 14 lb. 2s. 6d., 56 lb. 8s. 6d., cwt. 15s. 
EVIDENCE OF QUALITY. 
“ Your Dreadnought is a grand cropper, free from disease. I 
planted it side by side with other varieties, which were all more or less ; 
diseased, but there is not a sign of it in Dreadnought.”— Mr. W. SHAW, I 
The Gardens, Heachani Hall. 
“ The Future Fame Potatoes are the best that grow. Cook well 
all the year round.”— Mr. J. TURNER, Bourton. 
“ From 7 lbs. of your Future Fame Potatoes I obtained a 
splendid sample of over 170 lbs.”— Mr. A. REBBIE, Chipstead. 
“ I beg to inform you that the Dreadnought Potatoes T had from 
you yielded well; fine tubers and sound.”— J. T. KITCHING-, Esq,, 
Bexhill. 
“I have grown your Daniels and Future Fame Potatoes, 
both of which 1 consider first-class varieties.”- Mr. T. LINDLEY, 
Epworth. 
“The Future Fame Potatoes purchased from you last season 
have turned out well.” Mr. S. MILLS, Newport., Mon. 
l’mperator. This is a most excellent variety, and is far superior to the Champion 
Magnum Bonum. A well-known first-class main crop variety 
Satisfaction. In shape it is almost round, or rather pebble-shaped, eyes upon the surface; a very heavy 
cropper, and of fine cooking quality 
Schoolmaster. A well-known variety, tubers uniformly round and handsome. First Class Certificate, 
Royal Horticultural Society. Fine for exhibition 
Snowdrop. Handsome Kidney, clear skin, eyes few and shallow; white and mealy when cooked. 
Fi rst Class Certificate, Royal Horticultural Society 
The Bruce. A new Scotch variety; late Kidney, robust grower, of good quality, and very prolific 
The Village Blacksmith (see Royal Norfolk Russ9t) 
per 141b. 
s. d. 
per 56 lb. 
8. d. 
per cwt. 
s. d. 
2 
0 
7 
0 
14 
0 
2 
0 
7 
0 
14 
0 
3 
0 
10 
6 
20 
0 
2 
0 
8 
6 
15 
0 
2 
6 
8 
6 
15 
0 
2 
0 
7 
G 
14 
0 
4 
0 
