V 
tH e .o£ s ?Nobd 
1 a. , "°V\tli 1®^? ’ \ei\^ eSl 
lV.e« w tonn^2 e '* ft* 
e QUalh 
re • and 
SPINACH 
*• OF SUPERIOR FLAVOR 
EARLY — HARDY — SLOW 
PLANT SOME SPINACH 
AND QUALITY 
TO GO TO SEED- 
FOR HEALTH. 
RICH GREEN LEAVES 
PRINCESS, 
JULIANA] 
EXTRA 
.LARGE] 
OF 
SUPERIOR 
FLAVOR 
'i Uotio » 
Jl| Uan” °, e «s 9oknl 
r. 1 «*na n A« « r K 7 -i 
I-™ «°8& spaaES 
at I s F nth er S ° - 
rlety -n»a» ot ” 
Stan»»» s * tly 
A | r Str^ n ° f - 
An U* c ‘* 
A Tb»* 
TENDER 
AND 
DELICIOUS 
salzer’s triumph spinach 
Withstands hot weather longer than most 
other sorts, hence highly desirable for 
making successive sowings. Does not run 
to seed easily. The numerous, short 
stemmed leaves are heavily crumpled, thick warted and 
are fine and tender when cooked. Succeeds in all sections 
of the country. 107 1—I’kg., 5c; oz., 12c; Yt lb., 27c; 
Yz lb., 38c; lb., 55c; 2 lbs., $1.00; 5 lbs., $1.95, postpaid. 
r^orous*? bly 
S3 &% *%&**&* 
£°n$. a r nd U 
sette with c ° m Pact V r in 
attract a 8 «y a r °- 
fi s °\ s beau a t f f P u ^n Ce d 
Suc^other f^ er 'or 
ei 
Mrs! 
W1J b| pf” know 
, 2 > °74-tp? S Jd w • tj yOU 
12 c: V. ,b 9e; o£ 
.ved 
ot SP*g& 
oi-‘ nt , . 
ov e d_f r> otVv-l ea ' 
10 W 
SALZER! 
GIANT 
NOBEL 
'< S ° « fS^'^SL ** 
*$f V ^ oi the s ^ e 0 c °om- 
t^' w - , 8 , w «» 
postpa'd. nl BV 
'runt nenW 
ot 
PLANT A 
CARDEN 
[THIS YEAR 
Kl M G - - cents 
It is slow to so to uty d weeks C a , fter U otlier sorts 
and hold its fine aHality ^vee ber of years we have 
bining these quamies A pa rites, -Grew plants 
ofyoui' King «8 Denmark Spinach we.gh.ng 1% lbs. 
were tender and crisp.” „ my. e tender leaves are 
It forms large, low, compa.ct tufts. The busliy> slightly 
large, broad and rounded. Exceeaing^y^^ Ready for use 
crumpled and of a flossy S j.^| ns its condition about two 
as early as any spinach and ret ^ days . Yie i ds abundantly, 
weeks longer. Matures in a 35 c; lb>> 50c . 
1065—Pkg., 9c; oz., 12ci % Ih- -**o, /- 
2 lbs., 90c; 5 lbs., $1.75, postpaid 
WITHSTANDS 
HOT WEATHER 
KING 
°x 
DENMARK! 
s^ 2 so§S 
^OOI^^c^^WINTER PRICKLY SPINACH 
e ,TA;v& 
10 * 
fhVVV> c ^vc^^\a^.es. 
SLO 
TO GO 
TO SEED 
LARCE 
AND 
TENDER 
NEW 
ZEALAND 
Not related to 
the regular 
.Spinaches. but 
this should be 
more widely 
grown, as it 
stands all s u m - 
mer and produces 
a continuous sup¬ 
ply of good dual¬ 
ity leaves. Forms 
large, spreading 
plants, five to eight 
feet across, during 
summer and early fall, 
from seeds sown in 
spring. I 068 — Pkg.. 
10c; oz., 15c: 14 lb., 
38c: lb., $1.00, ppd. 
CHINESE 
CHOP SUEY 
CREEM 
SHUNGIKU— 
Valued highly 
by the Chinese 
for its extraor¬ 
dinary chrysan¬ 
themum like, 
aromatic flavor 
a n d as one of 
the greatest 
health giving 
greens. It is 
served in the 
same manner as 
spinach or Swiss 
chard. Indis¬ 
pensable for 
making chop 
suey. 1063 — 
Pkg., 12c; oz.. 
55c; 14 lb., 90c. 
A splendid fall and 
winter variety, but 
is also well adapted 
for spring use. 
Produces hardy, 
large plants of vigorous 
growth with thick and 
dark green leaves. Heavy 
yielder. 1073 — Pkg., 5c; 
oz., 10c; Yi lb., 25c; Ys lb., 
,33c; lb., 45c; 2 lbs., SOc; 
lbs., $1.05, postpaid. 
SUNFLOWER 
SALZER’S JUMBO—Bears 
heads, frequently 12 to 20 
in diameter and sometimes 
64 
My husband and I think there are no seeds that are as reliable as Salzer’s.— 
Mrs. Chris. Guler, Box 25, Valleyford, Washington. 
large 
inches m --- - ~- 
yielding 1,000 pounds of seed per acie. 
Makes splendid feed for chickens and 
parrots. Sunflowers also produce -0 
to 30 tons palatable silage per acre 
and can be successfully grown where 
spring is late and frosts are early. 
The seed is eagerly eaten by fowls, 
and they fatten thereon and lay more 
eggs than on any other food. It is rel¬ 
ished by horses, cattle, sheep, swine, 
etc., which thrive and fat¬ 
ten thereon. The oil burns 
well, and 20 barrels can 
be made per acre. 
4703 — Oz., 10c; *4 lb., 
15c; lb., 29c; 2 lbs., 45c; 5 
lbs., 98c, postpaid. Not 
prepaid, 10 lbs. or more, 
at 12c per lb. Sunflower 
JOHN A.SALZER SEED CO 
LACROSSE. WISCONSIN 
