D. V. Burrell Seed Growers Co., Rocky Ford, Colo. 
CELERY 
(Continued from page 17) 
Golden Plume or 
Wonderful f h ° s earnest 
maturing- variety, and one 
that resists blight. It is of 
the Golden Self Blanching 
type, but the plants are 
shorter and more compact. 
The stalks are brittle and 
blanch quickly to an at¬ 
tractive golden color, pos¬ 
sessing an even nut-like 
flavor. 
(Pkt., 10c) (i/4 oz., 20c) 
(oz.., 55c) (1/4 lb* $1.00) 
(lb., $5.50) (5 lbs., $24.20) 
prepaid. 
Giant Pascal ^? c t; e nch d 
ing to produce celery 
hearts, matures late, and is 
one of the best for winter 
use. Plants make vigorous, 
compact growth, stalks 
thick, broad and solid; 
blanches to an attractive 
yellowish white. 
(Pkt., 10 c) (oz., 25c) 
(% lb., 75c) (lb., $2.20) (5 
lbs., $0.70) prepaid. 
Golden Self Blanch- 
The orig¬ 
inal French 
strain, and still popular 
with market growers and 
shippers. Plants medium in 
height, stocky and com¬ 
pact, foliage yellowish green, stalks solid, broad and of delicate 
flavor, blanches readily to a golden yellow. 
(Pkt., 10c) (oz,, 40e) OA lb., $1.15) (lb., $4.00) (5 lbs., $17.60) 
prepaid. 
Whit#* Plum** An earl y market sort with green tinted white 
▼ v iiiic i luiiic foliage, stalk and foliage blanch readily to snowy- 
white. 
(Pkt., 10c) (oz., 2Gc) (% lb., 75e) (lb., $2.25) (5 lbs., $9.90) prepaid. 
ing Dwarf 
Golden Plume 
Your Home Garden 
Plant a good large garden if possible. Many plant too 
little and have only a few servings of such items as peas, snap 
beans, sweet corn, etc. 
Every farm should have an acre of garden located where 
it can be cultivated with the regular farm tools. The vegeta¬ 
bles will do better and much hand labor saved. 
Peas almost every day for six weeks and of the finest 
quality. I like a big dish of peas and often tw,o. Sweet corn 
at least two or three times, a week for six or eight weeks can 
be had from repeated plantings. Snap beans for three months. 
Creamed Lima Beans fresh from the garden for three months. 
Loose Leaf Lettuce early followed by Head Lettuce prac¬ 
tically every day from early mid-spring until fall. Plenty of 
Early Tomatoes, also some later variety like Norton or 
Indiana Baltimore for canning. Don’t forget the Yellow Plum 
Preserving- tomatoes. 
Cabbage Some extra early like D. V. B.—Copenhagen Mar- 
ket. Plant later of the same kinds for late cabbage if you wish. 
Beets—Plant plenty, better grow more than you use than 
not enough—the same applies to carrots, parsnips, turnips, etc. 
Feed the surplus to the cattle and horses 
The large garden will be the most profitable portion of the 
farm. Tend it W6ll don t lot the weeds cut down the yield or 
quality. * 
Keep acquainted with your garden and it will return vou 
full reward for the care you give it. ^ 
Don’t forget the flowers—and especially Zinnias. You know 
we are partial to Zinnias and we have grown hundreds of arrps 
of these for seed. No finer in the world. 
Go through this catalog from A to Z and make up vour 
order. We will appreciate it and send you of the best seeds 
Your success will mean our success. 
D. V. BURRELL. 
[ 18 ] 
