12 Reliable Garden Seed 
The STORRS & HARRISON CO 
The White “Icicle” Radish. 
PPffC All varieties, by mail, postpaid: 
f IUI/E. Pkt> 10c . oz . 15c . % ib. 25c; lb. 65c. 
Early Scarlet Globe. 
Brightest Long Scarlet or Cardinal. (25 days). 
Earliest of the long red varieties. Excellent alike for forcing, home and market. 
Roots 4 to 4 V 2 inches long; vivid scarlet, white tip. 
Crimson Giant. (35 days). Suitable for forcing or early planting out-of-doors. 
Larger than the other round red Radishes, and solid longer. 
Barly Bound Scarlet. (25 days). Small, round, red, turnip-shaped, with a small 
top; of very quick growth, crisp and tender. 
Barly Long Scarlet. (28 days). Grows 6 to 7 inches long, half out of the ground; 
is brittle and crisp; color bright scarlet, small top. 
Improved Barly Scarlet Globe. (20 days). Best for forcing and market garden¬ 
ing. Large roundish oval; brilliant red ; flesh white, solid, crisp and mild. 
French Breakfast. (25 days). A splendid half-long variety of medium size, crisp 
and tender, scarlet with white tip. Best texture when small. 
Hailctnnp The Quickest maturing White Radish on record. It is ready for the 
nailSXOne ^ a b] e in 15 to 25 days. The roots are perfectly round, an inch in 
diameter, with snowy white skin and flesh. The flesh is crisp and solid. 
Icicle. (25 days). (Long White). Attains best quality at about 4 inches, although 
crisp and sprightly longer than any other Radish. Delightful flavor and trans¬ 
parent whiteness. 
Bound White Tip Scarlet. (21 days). A showy early round variety of medium 
size and excellent flavor ; scarlet in the tip. Fine quality. 
Winter Radishes 
Besides their fall excellence, these kinds may be dug late and perfectly 1 preserved 
for all-winter use as desired, by storing in boxes of dry sand in the cool frost-proof 
cellar. A favorite usage is to pare, slice, and serve in a weak brine, or in vinegar— 
like Cucumbers. 
Long Black Spanish. (72 days). Firm, oblong, black, large sizte. 
Bound Black Spanish. (72 days). Large, round or turnip-shaped. 
California Mammoth White. (65 days). Pure white. 
French Breakfast Radish. 
Round White Tip Scarlet. 
PUMPKINS 
CULTTJBE. Plant in good soil when 
the ground has become warm, in hills 8 to 
10 feet apart each way; or with corn, in 
about every fourth hill. Three pounds per 
acre alone or about 1 pound with Corn. 
Sugar or Pie Pumpkin. 
A New Type for Baking. 
FBICB OF PUMPKINS: Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; V4 lb. 35c; lb. 85c. 
Green Striped Cushaw. (75 days). A long crooked neck, terminating in a round 
or oblong end enclosing a very small seed cavity ; flesh surrounding seed cavity 
very thick. Neck is absolutely solid, rivalling finest Sweet Potatoes for baking; 
or sliced and fried like eggplant, when young; or as a pie sort, it has no equal. 
Xing of Mammoths (Jumbo). (90 days). Largest of all the Pumpkins, often 
reaching 24 inches in diameter, weighing 100 or more pounds. Make nutritious 
stock feed, yet the quality is excellent for pies. When ripe, the skin is a rich 
orange color, flesh thick, sweet and yellow. 
Large Yellow Field. (90 days). For field culture, usually with Corn. 
Sugar. (65 days). A prolific variety of small size; the skin a deep orange-yellow. 
It is fine grained, sweet, of a handy 2-pie size, ideal for ready marketing. 
RADISHES 
CULTUBE. One ounce will sow 100 feet of drill, 
10 pounds required for one acre. For the first crop sow 
as early in the spring as the ground can be worked, 
and every two weeks throughout the season for a suc¬ 
cession. A warm, sandy loam, free from lumps and 
pebbles, made rich and light by some good strong 
manure, will be most likely to afford them brittle and 
free from worms. Sow in drills 10 to 12 inches apart. 
The winter varieties should be sown in July and Au¬ 
gust, no use earlier. Quick, uninterrupted growth is 
essential for best quality; if they come tough, blame 
the weather, not the seed. 
