For Good Crops It is Essential to Plant Pure Seeds. Kilgore’s Bred-Rite Seeds Are Pure 
CARROT 
Plant 4 pounds df seed per acre 
Culture. Sow in good rich soil, deeply worked in drills 1 *4 
feet apart, and cover seed *4-inch deep. When 2 inches high, 
thin out to 4 inches apart. Carrots can be planted in Florida 
from August to March. 
Prices quoted are postpaid. Write for prices on larger quantities. 
Kilgore’s Improved Red Cored Chantenay. 
■ A U» (New.) (75 days.) This new improved type 
nnrH — . —. — of Chantenay is fast becoming the most pop- 
OKtU'KI I t ular carrot on the market. The roots are 
tapered, stump rooted, and slightly longer 
TRADE MARK than the old Chantenay, averaging about 6 
inches. The interior is solid orange colored without the usual 
lemon color in the core. The flesh is very tender and sweet, 
which with the excellent outside color and shape combines to 
make this variety exceptionally valuable for the market. Pkt. 
Sc; Vi lb. 40c; lb. $1.25. 
Kilgore’s Bred-Rite Chantenay. l! 0 5 ck d of 8 chant U e- 
nay runs uni¬ 
formly smooth and true to type. Our stock 
is of medium length, thick, and very stump- 
rooted. The roots average 6*4 inches long; 
2 to 2 % inches thick at the crown and taper¬ 
ing to 1 to 1 *4 inches at the bottom. The 
Pkt. 5c; Vi lb. 
*» ■ 
BRED-RITE 
mm 
TRADE MARK _ 
color is a very attractive bright orange-scarlet. 
30c; lb. $1.00. 
pv_l_f_l£ I (90 days.) Our stock of this 
L»anver S nair Long, variety is half stump or semi- 
—-—^ — “ pointed, from 7 to 7 % inches 
in length. The shoulder is from 2 to 2 % inches thick, and tapers 
uniformly to a thickness of about % -inch just where the root 
begins to taper to the tip. Pkt. 5c; Vi lb. 30c; lb. $1.00. 
Kilgore’s Bred-Rite Imperator 
Developed to meet the demand for a better market type. 
Improved Long Orange. the true thick-shouldered 
^^strain of Long Orange, 1 % 
to 2 inches thick at the shoulders, 10 to 12 inches long, and 
pointed or rather tapering in a straight line to the tip. Pkt. 
5c; Vi lb. 30c; lb. $1.00. 
_ 1 ___ (90 days.) We have the true type, 
Uoreless or INenteS. which is long and cylindrical, 
^““■““ about 6 *4 to 7 inches long and 1 
to 1 % inches thick, very stump-rooted with a small rat tail. 
The color is clear orange-red and the core is rather undefined. 
Pkt. 5c: Vi lb. 40c; lb. $1.25. 
Kilgore’s Bred-Rite Imperator. 
carrot we are in- 
troducing has been especially bred and de- 
veloped to meet the increasing demand on 
unt U"l\ I I C, the market for a longer carrot with a broad 
shoulder. The roots are smooth, uniformly 
mark tapered to a semi-blunt end, deep rich orange 
color, both exterior and interior with comparatively inconspicu¬ 
ous core. From the standpoint of shipping quality, attractiveness 
and popularity in the market, Kilgore’s Imperator is superior to 
other long-rooted varieties. Pkt. 5c; Vi lb. 40c; lb. $1.25. 
COLLARDS 
Sow 14 pound of seed in seed-bed to plant an acre, or plant y 2 pound of seed per acre in field 
This is a tall, loose-leaved, kale-like plant, and an old-time standard for winter “greens” all over the South. Largely grown 
in home gardens and by truckers for markets as “Cabbage Bunch.” 
Culture. About the same as for cabbage. May be started in seed-beds or planted direct in field, spacing the plants 2 to 3 feet 
each way. Can be planted every month in the year in Florida. This vegetable should be in every family garden as it is very hardy 
and will furnish an abundance of “greens” when other vegetables are gone. Collards will also make fine green feed for chickens 
and cows. 
Prices quoted are postpaid 
True Georgia Whitehead. f ( a \V?t a e ys stands n a°i d 'so™s 
“ of adverse conditions and 
will make a good crop when other vegetables would fail. Pkt. 
5c; Vi lb. 15c; lb. 50c. 
Cnllarrl 160 d^ 3 -) This collard is claimed 
c-dpoage vxjiiara. t0 be a cross between Ge0 rgia coi- 
lard and Charleston Wakefield cab- 
bage. The heads are not as firm as cabbage, but are very ten- 
der and of ideal flavor. Pkt. 5c; Vi lb. 20c; lb. 60c. 
CRESS 
Splendid for salads, garnishing or as addition to lettuce. 
Plant 1 ounce of seed per 100 feet of row 
Water Cress. A delicious, tasty green for salads, 
— with a slightly pungent flavor. Eas¬ 
ily grown when sown shallow on the muddy banks of 
a stream of running water, or pond, or in a moist 
shady situation if well watered. When once started 
it will increase rapidly by self-sown seed, and by root 
extension. Shoots should be cut often for best growth. 
Pkt. 5c; oz. 50c; %lb. $1.50; lb. $5.00. 
Upland Cress. Used in salads and for garnishing. 
^Has the pungent flavor of water 
cress. Sow thickly in rows twelve inches apart in 
any good moist soil. Sow every two or three weeks 
for succession, as it soon runs to seed. Pkt. 5c; oz. 
15c; }41b. 40c; lb. $1.25. 
FOR BEST RESULTS PLANT KILGORE’S “BRED-RITE” SEEDS 
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