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496 Condon’s Mammoth Silver King Onion 
496 Mammoth Silver King 1 Onion 
Plant 
The King of White Flat ’Onions 
For Mild Flavor and Tenderness It’s a Wonder 
The largest White Onion—grows to a re¬ 
markable size, average diameter is from five 
to seven and one-half inches. Single bulbs 
often attain weights of from two and one- 
half to four pounds each. The skin is of a 
beautiful silvery white, the flesh of a snowy 
white, and of a particularly mild and pleas¬ 
ant flavor. So sweet and tender is the flesh 
that it can be eaten like an apple. Packet, 
10 cts.; ounce 20 cts.; % lb., 60 cts.; y 2 lb., 
$1.10; lb., $2.00; 2 lbs., $3.85, postpaid 
495 Early 
White Welsh 
For Green Onions 
A very hardy 
perennial variety 
of Onion used 
only for bunch¬ 
ing or early green 
onions, is entirely 
free from woody 
stems, forms no 
bulbs, plants can 
be propaga ted 
from seed or divi¬ 
sions of roots — a 
great saving over 
top sets. Perfect¬ 
ly hardy and 
will remain in 
the ground for 
years. Packet, 
10 cts.; ounce, 
20 cts.; Vi lb., 
68 cts.; *4 lb., 
$1.25; lb., $2.40; 
2 lbs., $4.70, 
postpaid. 
495 Early White Welsh 
Peanuts 
1 lb. of seed will plant 
a row 60 ft. long. 
The peanut is worthy of 
more general cultivation. 
The peanut is a soil build¬ 
er and renovator. If in¬ 
cluded in the crop rotation 
and properly handled, pea¬ 
nuts are not exhaustive of 
soil fertility. The tops of 
the peanuts make fine hay, 
relished by all stock, while 
the roots furnish rich food 
for both man and stock. 
The best soil is one of a 
sandy, loamy nature, which 
has a red clay subsoil, as 
this indicates lime, which 
is essential for this plant. 
They yield 40 to 100 
bushels to the acre, accord¬ 
ing to how well the crop 
is managed. Peanuts 
should be shelled before 
planting, but can also be 
planted in the hull 16 to 
18 inches apart. They 
should be planted in April 
and they will ripen before 
September, even as far 
north as Canada. 
503 Early Spanish 
Smaller kernels but much 
sweeter and finer flavored 
than Mammoth Virginia. 
Very productive. Packet, 5 
cts.; Vs. lb., 13 cts.; Vss lb., 
20 cts.; lb., 33 cts.; 2 lbs., 
60 cts.; 5 lbs., $1.20; 10 lbs., 
$2!2?0, postpaid. 
A Typical Harvest of Mammoth Virginia Peanuts 
see Mammoth Virginia Bunch 
Universal and Standard Favorite 
This is the variety most generally grown for commercial use, and makes 
considerably larger nuts than the Spanish. The peanuts we offer are se¬ 
lected from the best and most productive crops grown, plant rather dwarf, 
stems upright, foliage rather light, pods clustered about the base of plant, 
usually two, sometimes three, seeds in a pod; pod bright and clean, color 
of peas light brown; pods adhere to plant in digging. It is the standard 
variety for roasting. They furnish excellent forage, and we recommend 
to all our customers, even if they do not plant for market, to plant at least 
a small patch of peanuts for home use or stock feeding. Hundreds of our 
young friends have written us that they have had a wonderful crop the 
past season. Choice Seeds. Packet, 5 cts.; Vt lb., 13 cts.; Vs lb., 20 cts.; 
lb., 33 cts.; 2 lbs., 60 cts.; 5 lbs., $1.20; 10 lbs., $2.30, postpaid. 
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