SEED GROWERS 
BY APPOINTMENT 
TO HIS LATE MAJESTY 
KING EDWARD VII. 
& TO HIS MAJESTY 
KING GEORGE V. 
To our Customers 
We have much pleasure in sending you for the coming season a copy of our 
ILLUSTRATED GUIDE FOR AMATEUR GARDENERS ', and at the same time we 
beg to thank you for your very kind patronage during the past year . We hope we may 
continue to receive your valued orders, which we shall at all times endeavour to execute 
to your entire satisfaction. We should much appreciate your recommendation of our firm 
to your gardening friends, and we shall always be pleased to send catalogues gratis and 
post free, on receipt of addresses of intending purchasers. 
THE SEED HARVEST. We regret to state that the long continued wet and cold 
experienced during the Summer and Autumn of 1910 was very disastrous to the growth 
and harvesting of many of our seed crops, and a scarcity of many kinds of garden seeds, 
especially Peas, Carrots, and Onions, has thereby been caused, such as has been unknown 
in the trade for many years past. Of most vegetable seeds, however, although short 
crops have been the rule, we have secured a sufficient supply, which our tests show to 
be of good quality and germinating power. 
SEED POTATOES are a good average crop, and our list contains a selection of 
the finest varieties of recent introduction, together with many splendid sorts of our own 
raising. Growers of Potatoes should not forget that a change of stock is of the utmost 
importance, and that a change of soil also is an essential to their successful cultivation. 
FLOWER SEEDS. Our unrivalled strains continue to give the greatest satisfaction, 
and in addition to old favourites, we are able to introduce several striking novelties, 
especially in Sweet Peas. 
In our NURSERIES we have a grand stock of Fruit Trees, Roses, Clematises, 
and other Hardy Climbers, Ornamental Shrubs , Forest Trees, Fencing Plants, etc., 
besides a fine collection of Hardy Herbaceous Plants, Florists’ Flowers, &c. All 
these are dealt with in the latter part of this catalogue in more detail than previously. 
We have made every possible preparation for the prompt execution of orders, but as 
we are invariably very much pressed at the height of the sowing season, we venture to 
ask our regular customers to favour us with their orders as early as possible in the 
New Year, whatever may be the conditions of the weather. Seeds, if kept in a dry 
place, will not deteriorate, and as there is just the possibility of our running 
short of some of our special stocks towards the end of the season, those who order 
early will have the additional advantage of getting the best. 
January 2nd, 1911. 
_S= 
Daniels Bros., L td. 
