Club With Your Neighbors and Take Advantage of the 
Quantity Prices on Large Lots 
POP CORN 
Very short crop and seed supply limited—order early. 
Plant 4 to 6 pounds per acre 
Japanese HulLess or Australian Hulless growing jKvy 
yielding variety; the ears are thick in proportion to their length. 
The kernels resemble the best White Rice and pop larger and without 
hull. The flavor is excellent. The market calls for this variety at 
much higher prices than old varieties of pop corn. This is a very 
good sort to plant. 
(Pitt., lOc) (»/s lb., 25c) (lb., 45c) (5 lbs., $2.00) prepaid. 
^nufVi American a1so kno ' vn as Dynamite, T. N. T. 
JUUU1 niucritdll ^1'ieW) and Mushroom. Produces yellow 
kernels much larger than other varieties. Pops to enormous size, 
flavor excellent. We recommend the use of this instead of Queens 
Golden and other similar sorts. Bars are long and slender, 14 
rowed. 
(Pkt., 10c) (% lb., 25c) (lb., 45c) (5 lbs., $2.00) prepaid. 
CrJrlpn Hnllese Much like Japanese Hulless but with golden 
ViUlueil nuucss colored kernels that give it a buttered appear¬ 
ance when popped. 
(Pkt., 10c) (Vs lb., 25c) (lb., 45c) (5 lbs., $2.00) prepaid. 
EGG PLANT 
The Egg Plant should be 
more generally grown, for 
when well grown and prop¬ 
erly cooked is a most deli¬ 
cious vegetable. The seeds 
germinate slowly and should 
be started in a strong, uni¬ 
form heat, and kept con¬ 
stantly growing, because the 
young plants seldom recover 
if checked in their growth. 
Sow seeds in hot beds or 
warm greenhouse in March 
or early April; if no hot bed 
is at hand they may be 
grown in any light room 
where the temperature will 
average 75 degrees. When 
plants have formed two rough 
leaves, transplant them in 
beds 3 or 4 inches apart. Keep 
the bed closed and very 
warm, shading from the di¬ 
rect rays of the sun, giving 
an abundance of water until 
the ground is warm and all 
danger from frosts and cold 
nights is past, then harden 
the plants by gradual expo¬ 
sure to the sun and air. then 
increase the supply of water; 
transplant to the open ground 
late in May or June into 
Egg Plant. Black Beauty warm, rich soil, 2 or 3 feet 
apart each way, according to 
the richness of the soil. When about a foot high draw the earth 
up to the stems. One ounce for 2,000 plants; 4 ounces for one acre. 
(Days given are from setting of plants to marketable fruits.) 
RlarL Rp^aiifv 81 days. An early sort used by home gardeners 
DCttUiy and truckers. Plants bear 4 to 5 large egg shaped 
fruits. Skin is smooth, very dark purple, holds up well after picked. 
(Pkt., 10c) (oz., 35c) (% lb., $1.00) (lb., $3.50) (5 lbs., $15.40) 
prepaid. 
Florida High Bush 
85 days. A popular shipping variety. 
fruits well above the ground. Fruits elongated, cylindrical, purple; 
slightly larger than New York Improved. Resistant to drought and 
blight. 
(Pkt., 10c) (oz, 35c) (% lb., $1.00) (lb., $3.50) (5 lbs., $15.40) 
prepaid. 
New York Improved Purple Spineless iLfTno^n 
home and market sort. Plants large and productive, commonly bear¬ 
ing 4 to 6 dark purple, cylindrical egg shaped fruits. 
(Pkt,, 10c) (o*., 35c) (!4 lb., $1.00) (lb., $3.50) (5 lbs., $15.40) 
prepaid. 
30 D.V. Burrell Seed Growers Co., Rocky Ford, Colorado 
