12 
Joseph Bkeck & Sons’ 
BELLE. 
This variety was first offered to the public some two years ago, and the satisfaction it has given 
all who have tried it, warrants us in calling the attention of our customers to it this season. It is a 
stout, vigorous grower of good quality and of handsome appearance, the vines nearly covering 
the ground and sheltering the hills from the sun. It is an enormous yielder, with but few 
small potatoes. It would be well for all those who grow Potatoes to try this variety. 
wall’s or a no k. 
WALL’S ORANGE. 
This new Potato originated in the season of 1S79, with Mr. Lyman Wall, one of the most care¬ 
ful and progressive farmers of Monroe County, New York, from a seed ball of the Whipple Seed¬ 
ling, a Potato which attained considerable local celebrity on account of its exceptional table quali¬ 
ties and great yielding properties. It is undoubtedly one of the best Potatoes introduced for a long 
time. 
BROWNELL’S BEST. 
The tubers grow compactly in the hill, uniform in size, shape oblong, somewhat flattened, flesh 
white, fine-grained and drv; skin white, shading to russet; ripens second early, and is a large 
yielder. 
BROWNELL’S BEST. 
PEARL OF SAVOY. 
(See illustration on page S Novelties.) 
This new variety is the result of a hybridization of the two favorite sorts, Clark’s No. 1 and 
Extra Early Vermont, it retains the good qualities of both, and is a great improvement over either 
sort, the tubers of which are oblong, fair and of large size, the flesh is of a most beautiful pearl 
white, and very mealy, its hardy vigorous habit exempts it from disease, when many old varieties 
succumb; it is from fifteen to twenty days earlier than the Early Rose, and is very productive 
yielding from 450 to 500 bushels per acre. 
We have but a limited quantity of this superior new sort, and would advise an early order from 
all planting Potatoes. 
