PAINESVILLE, OHIO 
Reliable Garden Seed 13 
SQUASH 
PRICE: Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; *4 lb. 30c; lb. 85c. 
Summer Varieties i ° z * t° 25 hills. Hills 4 feet apart. 
" ■ - — Sow in warm April. 
Giant Summer Crookneck. (65 days). Bright yellow. 
Giant Summer Straig-htneck. (65 days). The same deli¬ 
cious quality; its straight neck permitting easier packing. 
Mammoth Yellow Bush. (55 days). An early yellow bush 
scallop, quite prolific ; average size 14 by 4 inches. 
Mammoth White Bush. (50 days). Fruits round, white, 
deeply scalloped, lobes being in pairs ; tender and delicious. 
Winter Varieties 1 oz. to 10 hills. Hills 8-10 feet 
• ■ . . . . — apart. Sow seed in late June. 
Delicious. (75 days). Medium size, dark green, with very 
thick flesh which cooks dry, of superior winter flavor. 
Table Queen (Acorn). (80 days). 7 by 5 inches. Smooth, 
dark green with a red blotch at the pointed end; choice 
quality. Cut in two, bake and serve in the half-shell. 
Hubbard. (110 days). Skin deep olive-green, flesh orange- 
yellow. Sweet, keeps through winter; boils or bakes dry. 
Blue Hubbard. Resembling the warted Hubbard, but excels 
it in flavor and dryness. Very large; blue gray. 
Golden Hubbard. (110 days). Deep orange, tipped green at 
each end; flesh golden yellow, of excellent flavor. 
Warted Hubbard. The heavily warted, dark green surface 
ensures a harder shell, and consequent longer keeping. 
TOBACCO 
Sow the seed thinly in well prepared soil, do not cover; 
merely press them in with a light roller or smooth board. 
PRICE: Pkt. 10c; *4 oz. 20c; 14 oz. 35c. 
Connecticut Seed Leaf. A popular cigar variety, also 
largely used for pipe smoking by those who prefer a home 
cured, natural leaf. Makes a large, broad leaf and is exten¬ 
sively grown in northern states. 
Improved White Burley. The wide-leaved Ky. favorite. 
Purple Top White Globe Turnip 
TURNIPS 
CULTURE. Turnips 
do best in a highly en¬ 
riched, sandy, gravelly or 
light loamy soil, in drills 
12 to 15 inches apart, thin 
out early to 6 or 8 inches 
in rows. Commence sow¬ 
ing the earliest varieties 
in April, with 2-week in¬ 
tervals until June. Sow¬ 
ing for fall and main 
crop throughout August. 
One ounce sows 100 feet 
of drill; 2 lbs. per acre in 
drills, 12 to 15 inches a- 
part; 1 lb. 2 feet apart; 
3 lbs. broadcast. 
PRICE: All Turnips, by 
mail, postpaid, pkt. 10 c; 
oz. 15c; lb. 25c; lb. 
65c. 
Purple Top White Globe. (70 days). The most popular 
Turnip grown either for table or stock ; an excellent keeper. 
Early Purple Top, Strap Leaved. (55 days). Similar to 
Flat Dutch, but purple on top. Of excellent market quality. 
Orange Jelly or Golden Ball. (70 days). A distinct, round 
yellow variety ; one of the finest for family use. Flesh yellow, 
fine grained, sweet and tender; ideal for winter use. 
Improved Purple Top Yellow Rutabaga. (95 days). 
Hardy and productive; flesh yellow, sweet and well flavored; 
shape slightly oblong terminating abruptly; color purple 
above and yellow under the ground ; rich in flavor. 
A OneOunce of Seed 
A JL for3000 Plants 
CULTURE. Sow in hot¬ 
beds during March. When the 
plants have 4 leaves, trans¬ 
plant 4 to 5 inches apart, in 
shallow boxes, and give plenty 
of air. 
PINK SKIN 
PRICE 
ALL TOMATOES: 
Except as Noted. 
Pkt. 10c; y z oz. 25c; 
oz. 35c; Vi lb. $1.00; 
lb. $3.00. 
Acme. (100 days). Of spreading growth; producing abun¬ 
dant medium sized fruits of irregular shape, in clusters of 
three to five. Flesh dark red, fine in texture, slightly acid. 
Cleveland Market. A satisfactory midseason market type. 
Early Detroit. (90 days). Nearly round; very large size. 
(90 days). A splendid new pink Tomato produced 
uiovei jointly by U. S. Dept, of Agriculture and Florida 
Agricultural Experiment Station. This hybrid repeats the 
distinctive attributes of the French “Marvel”;—vigorous 
vine, abundant and continuous fruit-setting habit, long- 
bearing period, and resistance to fusarium wilt and nail- 
head rust. It also happily absorbs from “Globe”,—a popular 
marketing pink skin (“pale scarlet-red”) ; and large, thick- 
walled, firm, globular fruits notably free from cracks; of 
sweet flavor, mildly sub-acid. 
Pkt. 15c; y 2 oz. 35c; oz. 60c; % lb. $2.25. 
M i- (95 days). A choice new kind adopted in three con- 
IViamiO tinents. Round fruits dark rosy pink from skin to 
center, very attractive on the markets. Flesh solid and 
tasty; plant healthy, vigorous, immensely productive. 
Pkt. 10c; V 2 oz. 30c; oz. 50c; %= lb. $1.50. 
New Colossal. (110 days). One of the largest, heaviest and 
best Tomatoes, averaging 2 to 3 pounds. Close celled, firm 
flesh with few seeds. Flavor sweet, cool and sprightly. 
r kyhaart ( 120 days). Like a big ox-heart; of best quality, 
uxneari smooth, pink skin, few seeds. Its supreme quali¬ 
fication is the broken cell structure, and the 1 to 2 inches 
of solid flesh before a seed is reached. A heavy yielder. 
Pkt. 10c ; y 2 oz. 25c; oz. 50c; % lb. $2.00. 
Ponderosa. (110 days). Known and planted by every gar¬ 
dener ; immense fruits; very solid, with few seeds. 
__ , . _ .. (loo days). Flattened, smooth- 
Truckers Favorite g kj nne d fruits 3 y 2 by 4 inches 
thick, attractive for the market. The flesh is meaty, very 
anlirl nf pxeellent duality: good for all uses. 
The Popular Truckers’ Favorite 
