Sonderegger Nurseries and Seed House, Beatrice , Nebraska 
51 
Plant In hills 8 to 10 seeds 
per hill, plant the hills 4 to 6 
feet apart for the early vari¬ 
eties, for the late, 8 to 12 feet 
apart. 1 oz. will plant 25 hills, 
8 to 4 lbs. per acre. The use 
of “Germaco Hotkaps” will 
improve greatly the yield, will 
keep the young plants protect- 
ed from frost, insects and will Table Queen 
keep them mulched. Descriptive literature on Hotkaps 
free on request. 
F604 — Banana (60 days). About 2 feet long, keeps as 
well as the Hubbard, but more prolific and earlier, 
quality is very good. You will like this squash, try it. 
Seed of this kind is rather scarce. Pkt., 5c; oz., 15c; 
!4 lb., 40c; lb., $1.25, postpaid. 
F603 — Sonderegger’s Table Queen. The best baking 
squash you can get. Also fine for pies. 6 to 8 inches 
long, and 4 to 6 inches thick; dark green, hard and 
smooth. Good keeper. Vines produce large numbers 
of squash of fine quality. Pkt., 8c; oz., 15c; !/i lb., 35c; 
lb.. $1.25. postpaid. 
F606—Giant Summer 
Crookneck (45 days). 
Heavily warted, meat 
deep golden color, 
good quality. Uniform 
size and good bearer. 
Pkt., 7c; oz., 12c; / a 
lb., 30c; lb., $1.10, post¬ 
paid. 
F610—Cushaw Squash. Often called a pumpkin, but it 
really is just as much a squash as a pumpkin. Large 
size, mottled green and white. Long, crooked necks, 
which are solid and heavy. Fine grained, sweet. Ex¬ 
ceptionally good quality. Pkt., 5c; oz., 15c; lb., 35c; 
lb., $1.15, postpaid. Also listed under pumpkins. 
F614—Warty Hubbard (65 days). Very dark green, 
shell very hard and warty, meat dry, sweet, fine 
flavor. A good winter variety. Pkt., 5c; oz., 15c; V& 
lb., 35c; lb., $1.20, postpaid. 
Cushaw or Crookneck 
TOMATOES 
One oz. of seed for 2,000 plants. Sow seed early 1 b 
hotbeds, pots or boxes. When 2 inches high, trans¬ 
plant 4 inches apart, and finally transplant into the 
open 3 feet apart. For early planting use “Germaco 
Hotkaps,” they will keep the soil mulched, and keep 
the plants free from Insects and frost. Hotkaps offered 
on the last pages of this catalogue. Hotkaps have been 
a grand success in small and large plantings. 
Three Great Tomatoes 
F624—Beebe’s Early 
Prolific. Early, very 
productive, finest qual¬ 
ity, dark red, medium 
to large tomatoes. This 
is unquestionably one 
of the best tomatoes 
that can be grown. 
You will be well 
pleased with Beebe’s 
Early Prolific in every 
respect. Pkt., 10c; oz.. 
40c, postpaid. 
F625—Albino or White 
Beauty (100 days). A 
white tomato of real value. Ivory white, no trace of 
red. Flesh solid and white, without any acid. Many 
people cannot eat red tomatoes on account of their 
acid content; they will find in Albino just the right 
plant. Try it this year. Pkt., 10c; oz., 40c, postpaid. 
F629 — New Marglobe. Developed by the Department 
of Agriculture. Second early on the market. Plants 
are vigorous growers. Continue to bear until late fall. 
Tomatoes large, round, smooth and purplish red. 
About two weeks later than Beebe’s Early Prolific. 
Pkt., 8c; oz., 40c, postpaid. 
Beebe’s Early Prolific 
New Marglobe 
F616—Golden Hubbard (65 days). A little smaller than 
the other Hubbard squash, orange red. Flesh deep 
color, good quality. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15c; '/j. lb., 35c; lb., 
$1.10, postpaid. 
F605—Mammoth White Bush. 8 to 10 inches across, 
flattened and scalloped, beautiful white color. Bears 
well and ready for use in 50 to 60 days. Oz., 15c; 1 /a 
lb., 30c; lb., $1.10, postpaid. 
Sonderegger’s “Big Three” 
Squash Collection 
F607—Sonderegger's “Big Three” Squash Collection. 
I pkt. of Banana, 1 pkt. of Cushaw and 1 pkt. of Table 
Queen, all three for only 18c, postpaid. 
Why worry about late frosts— 
Use HOTKAPS 
Our Germaco Hotkaps are miniature hot¬ 
houses, they will enable you to plant your To¬ 
matoes very early, will protect your plants 
from late frosts and insects. Your Tomato 
plants will bear extra early, for market garden¬ 
ers this means premium prices for Tomatoes; 
in the home garden you can have ripe Tfpmatoes 
right along from the first of July until frost. 
Use Hotkaps on your Tomatoes, Cucumbers, 
Melons and Peppers, you will have results as 
you have never had before. Just one trial the 
coming season will convince you. 
F626— Pritchard or Scarlet Topper Tomato. Resulting 
from crossing Marglobe and Cooper’s Special, it inher¬ 
ited fine qualities from each parent. Fruits are of 
good size, smooth, globular, extremely solid and heavy 
with thick walls and of deep scarlet color. It is most 
uniformly fruited, exceedingly productive and borne in 
clusters. Outstanding for home and market garden 
use and for long distance shipping. Pkt., 15c; Vz oz., 
30c; oz., 50c. 
F627— Early Bell (85 days). Large, bell shaped fruits 
in great abundance, smooth, bright red, almost seed¬ 
less, flesh thick, firm and almost seedless. The plant 
is a vigorous grower. Pkt., 5c; oz., 40c, postpaid. 
F628— Spark’s Earllana (96 days). Large, bright red. 
Solid, fine quality. Grows compact, stoutly branched. 
Very productive. Pkt., 5c; oz., 35c, postpaid. 
Pritchard or Scarlet Topper 
