ft********^*****^****#********************^^***************; 
EARLY 
6-WEEKS POTATO. 
AcW 
43 D from 
Planting 
*40 Eyes 
BY 
ONE OF OUR 
CUSTOMERS. 
Illustration of a Crop 43 Days from Planting. 
I send you to-day by freight the product of forty hills of Six-Weeks Potatoes. They were dug last night and this 
morning, and grew in forty-three days. They were grown from one-eyed seed. I have just begun farming on my 
own land, and am not fixed yet for pushing a crop of early potatoes. They were covered with a breaking plow and 
given very ordinary treatment. Think I can beat it next season. Several people who saw them were astonished. I 
expect to exhibit at our county fair. JOHN L. SAUM, Paulding Co., O. 
I bought of you last spring two barrels of your 
Early 8ix-Weeks Potatoes. Planted them about the 
last of March ; about the time we finished planting 
we had about six inches of snow. Three of my 
neighbors planted the same day, Early Rose and 
Early Ohio. My Six-Weeks came in from ten days to 
two weeks earlier than any. 
J. M. ENSLOW, Cabel Co., W. Ya. 
The Early Six-Weeks Potatoes are all you claim for 
them. They are very early and good yielders. 
Planted them the 19th of April, and tne last of June 
(six weeks) they were ready to dig, and good size, 
too; no marbles. A. FENTON, Monroe Co., N. Y. 
Those Six-Weeks Potatoes were true to your state¬ 
ment. In just six weeks from planting dug good- 
sized potatoes. 
E. W. ANTHONY, Houghton Co., Mich. 
Our County Fair has just closed, and I must tell 
you what they done with the Six-Weeks Potato. I 
took all the premiums (two) in competition with 
many of the leading new kinds, and all fine at that. 
They were popular at our fair. 
J. W. BAKER, Bureau Co./Hl. 
Out of seventeen kinds of potatoes planted, your 
Early Six-Weeks were superior to all in quality, size, 
and earliness. I really think they are the best potato 
on earth. C. CARROLL, Pipestone Co., Minn. 
We have got it this time — I mean the best early and 
the earliest potato in existence. We had the early 
Six-Weeks Potato large enough for the table in six 
weeks from planting. They outvielded all our other 
varieties. AUGUST BROENKNER (Gardener), 
Allegan Co., Mich. 
I would give hundreds of dollars to control the 
growing of the Early Six-Weeks .Potato for this 
market, as they can be*put on the market two weeks 
ahead of any other sort, which means hundreds of 
dollars profit to a large grower. 
W. HENRY MORRIS, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio. 
’Tis now six weeks and five days since I planted 
the Six-Weeks Potatoes. They did not sprout very 
quick, but they have nice, large tubers on them. 
Are tne earliest potato I ever saw. I thank you a 
thousand times. C. L. £ICEL, Armstrong Co., Pa. 
The early Six-Weeks are grand. We had fine pota¬ 
toes in six weeks from planting; dry and mealy as 
old potatoes. Early Ohio came three weeks later. 
L. S. JOHNSON, Clearfield Co., Pa. 
Ten dollars per bushel would not buy my' Early 
Six-Weeks Potatoes if 1 could not replace them for 
less. They are the earliest of all, and a neavy yielder. 
I predict they will be universally grown by market 
gardeners for earlv. 
JACOB B. STILLSON, Onondaga Co., N. Y. 
Cfois Potato will Produce a Fine (Krop where Others Tail. 
To prove this claim I have only to present to the reader my own experience with the Early Six-Weeks. 
In one of our fields we planted several varieties, including the Early Six-Weeks. These potatoes were 
planted the same day, and on the same kind of soil. After the potatoes were up and got nicely to growing, 
the tops nearly covering the ground, we had one of the-hardest and most destructive hail storms that ever 
swept over this part of the country. The potato tops were all cut to pieces, and laid so flat on the ground 
that the whole field had the appearance of being run over by a heavy land roller. 
After a while the tops started to grow again when they’were struck with the blight, and it seemed that 
now the work of destruction was complete. My first thought was, not to bother to dig any of this field, but 
as potatoes were a failure in this section and bringing 70 cents per bushel, I concluded it would more than 
pay for the work in digging. 
My men dug over the field an<J carefully measured the yield of the common varieties (which were the 
size of hens eggs), and found they averaged just 27 bushels to the acre. 
The Early Six-Weeks were on one side of the field and came last. Imagine our surprise when we com¬ 
menced digging these potatoes to find that they were nearly full grown, great nice large tubers. We thought 
under the circumstances the quality could not’be very good and tested some on the table, and now we w r ere 
surprised again to find that they were the best potatoes we had used this season. How this potato could 
possibly make such a growth, and produce such aline yield of tubers of excellent quality, under such un¬ 
favorable conditions—which nearly ruined all the other varieties— was a wonder to all who saw them 
harvested. My experience with this great potato proves that it is the quickest grower, and the greatest 
wonder of any potato that I have ever grown. 
When Grover Cleveland was president 1 furnished him with a supply of seed potatoes for his private 
garden, and during the month of March, 1903, I received from both President Roosevelt and John I). 
Rockefeller, an order for a supply of the Early Six-Weeks potatoes, to be sent to Oyster Bay and Pocantico 
Hills, N. Y. If my Six-Weeks are good enough for the President of the United States and Mr. Rockefeller 
who is the richest man in America, it seems to me they ought to please the most critical. 
