6 Reliable Garden Seed 
The STORRS & HARRISON CO. 
POPCORN 
Winter nights before the hearth fire or 
around the kitchen range, are incomplete 
without the scent and cheery music of 
popping corn. 
CULTURE. Sow in rows 3 feet apart 
soon as beans can be planted, using more 
than one row, to insure pollenization, cov¬ 
ering 2 to 3 inches deep with fine soil. 
Thin plants to stand 10 to 12 inches apart. 
Australian Hulless or Japanese. Also 
known as “Tom Thumb” of “Bumble 
Bee” Popcorn. Distinguished by an ab¬ 
sence of hull or shell when popped. 
Dwarf growing but a heavy yielder of 
short, chunky ears. The kernels are 
pearly white, unusually long and slim, 
of splendid popping quality and appealing flavor. 
Queen’s Golden. Stalk 5 to 6 feet; 2 or 3 large ears each. 
Kernels rich yellow but pop out pure white, over an inch 
in diameter. 
Dynamite or “T.N.T.” ^ new type which “pops” fast and 
merrily ; distinctly emphatic in all its traits. The tallest 
stalks, 6 to 8 feet; the longest orange colored ears, 9 inches 
or more and three to a stalk ; the biggest, roughest, fluffiest 
popped kernels, creamy yellow in color, with a delicious 
new flavor. 
CUCUMBER 
Cucumbers succeed best in rich loamy soil. As soon as the 
weather becomes warm and settled, plant in hills 4 to 6 feet 
apart each way, with 10 to 12 seeds in a hill; cover one-half 
inch deep. Air slaked lime, “Slug Shot” or “Stop Vermin” 
sprinkled on the plants every few days as soon as they are up, 
will protect them from most bugs and worms. “Arsenate of 
Lead” gets the most dangerous enemy, the striped beetle. 
When all danger from insects is past, thin out plants, leav¬ 
ing 3 or 4 of the strongest to each hill. The fruit should be 
picked when large enough, whether needed or not, to save 
productiveness. One ounce to 50 hills ; 2 to 3 lbs. per acre. 
PRICE: 
Postpaid 
Pkt. .. .$0.10 
^ lb» .. .20 
1 lb. . . .30 
2 lbs. . .50 
5 lbs. . 1.00 
10 lbs. . 1.75 
Express or 
freight (not 
prepaid): 50 
lbs. or more 
@ 12c per lb. 
Boston Pickling 
(50 days). Distinct, very prolific and 
exceedingly popular variety, largely 
planted for medium size pickles. The fruits are short, 
smooth, bright green ; of excellent quality. 
Davie days). A first-class variety for forcing 
waves reneci under glass ; also for outdoor culture and 
shipping; being very adaptable to both slicing and pickling. 
The color is a dark glossy green ; smooth; desirable shape, 
9 to 11 inches long by 2% inches thick, tapering at both 
ends; almost seedless ; very prolific. 
(52 days). A good all-around Cucumber, 
driy ruriune The r j c jj dar k green fruits when at the 
slicing stage, average 7% to 8 inches in length. The flesh .is 
firm, with a small seed cavity, making it a good shipping 
and market as well as pickling sort, producing an enormous 
quantity. 
Improved Chicagfo Pickling 1 . (68 days). Very popular with 
the market gardeners. Fruit is of medium length, pointed 
at each end with large and prominent spines, color deep 
green ; extremely prolific. 
improved Long Green 
green, firm and crisp; extra long, tapering at the stem end, 
12 inches in length. 
Iflonarch or Heinz’s Pickle. (55 days). Very prolific and 
one of the most popular kinds for pickles. The young fruit 
is short, straight, square ended and deep green in color. 
National Pickling’. (50 days). Early, high-yielding variety 
especially bred for pickling in the small sizes. Fruits 
straight, symmetrical, and blunt-ended, but not chunky. 
Pack without waste space r Color deep green. Makes firm 
crisp pickles. 
(5? days). A heavy yielder of uniform hand- 
green some fruits 7 to 8 inches long that are a beau¬ 
tiful dark green color frorti end to end; earliness, produc¬ 
tiveness, fine color and uniform shape are its strong points 
of excellence. 
ETSorhi- (New). This Cucumber received the 
3rtr«ngn 5. E»igilli 1935 All-America Gold Medal award as 
being one of the most outstanding vegetables of the year. 
The cylindrical fruit is 8 inches long by 1% inches in diam¬ 
eter, well rounded at the ends. When ready for use, it is 
an attractive deep green color. Very desirable for both 
home and market use. 
PRICE — POSTPAID (Except as Noted): 
Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; *4 lb. 40c; lb. $1.25. 
Arline-ton White C n ine < 55 da y s >- Rich green in col- 
Arimgion wmie apme or and very product ive. One 
of the best varieties for forcing, equally good for outdoor 
planting. Often sown mixed with Long Green for pickles. 
Pkt. 10c; oz. 20c ; % lb. 60c ; lb. $2.00. 
The New Longfellow £, k s e h ° Thf‘ d SS Suit* av°”r? 
ages 12 to 14 inches in straight length by about 2% inches 
in diameter and is borne early and in real abundance 
despite its great length. One of the very few Cucumbers 
which, when grown outdoors, resembles the hothouse type; 
holding its dark green color until the last. 
■ 1 
A Popular Cucumber—The New Longfellow 
