50 
H. G. Hastings Co., Seedsmen, Atlanta, Georgia. 
HASTINGS’ BIG 7 
TURNIP COLLECTION 25c 
The most popular of all Turnip collections. Hastings’ “Big 7” gives every family in the South a full supply of early, 
medium and late turnips. No other seed house offers you such a bargain in good turnip seed as this. For 25 cents we 
will send you, postpaid, one ounce each of Extra Early White Egg, Purple or Red Top Strap Leaf, Early White Flat 
Dutch, Purple or Red Top Globe, Yellow or Amber Globe, Improved American Rutabaga and Seven Top Turnip. Seven 
ounces of Turnips, all different, of the very best grade seed, for 25 cents, delivered at your postoffice. No other varie¬ 
ties will be sold at this price and no changes will be allowed in this collection. If you do not want to plant all this seed 
this fall, what you hold over is perfectly good for next spring’s sowings. This superb turnip collection is now a stand¬ 
ard for fall turnip planting in every Southern State. This collection will give all the turnips any ordinary family can 
use and more. 
7 Ounces, 7 Varieties, 25 Cents, Postpaid 
Hastings' Improved 
American Rutabaga 
THE FINEST RUTABAGA IN 
THE WORLD (No. 468) 
Our special strain of Improved American 
leaves nothing to be desired. It is the best and 
heaviest cropper of all rutabagas for the South. 
This variety has been grown and improved for 
years to meet the wants and trade of the most 
critical gardeners. It is of fine form, with a 
rich purple top and yellow flesh of very pleas¬ 
ing appearance. Flesh is tender and sweet and 
exceptionally free from stringy, hard flesh. It 
has a comparatively small top, small and fine 
roots, and is a sure and heavy cropper. If you 
grow rutabagas you need Hastings’ “Improved 
American.” 
Ounce, 5 cents; 1-4 pound, 15 cents; pound, 
50c; postpaid. 10 pounds, not prepaid, $4.00. 
Why Don’t Your Cotton 
Dollars Stick To You? 
We might ask also as to the orange and 
peach and vegetable dollars. In a few 
months it will be “settling up” time in the 
Cotton Belt. The cotton crop is being 
turned into dollars, but how many of them 
stick in the growers’ hands? Isn’t it a 
fact that most of them are spent paying 
up the supply merchants for meat and 
grain, etc., that you could just as well 
grow at home and at one-third to one-half 
the cost you paid Mr. Merchant? This fall 
is a good time to take another step toward 
financial freedom, towards keeping the 
cotton, fruit and vegetable growers’ dol¬ 
lars at home. Oats, rye, wheat, barley, 
etc., sown this fall will help keep those 
dollars at home either in your> pocket or 
to your credit in your nearest bank. 
