PRIZETAKER ONION 
PRIZETAKER ONIONS are Praised 
from the Atlantic to the Pacific, 
THE GRANDEST VARIETY GROWN 
FOR THE AMERICAN CLIMATE 
from the Lakes to the Gulf 
A l.Jrjlj,3 IN VIGOR 
IN KEEPING OEALITY 
**The Prizetaker Onion. Seed I got from you was fine. J grew some 
weighing 2^ Ihs. each. Everybody praised them.’* 
EDW. GIRARD, Dclchamps, Ala. 
“/ raised your Prizetaker Onion Inst season and they were very 
fine and large. The smallest measured ]3J inches round and many of 
them viere 15 to 18 inches around.” 
Its Mildness of Flavor and Tenderness are 
Unequalled even by the Bermuda Varieties 
CALVIN RANDALL, Orono, Me. 
"Prizetaker Onion is the greatest and best Onion that was ever 
raised. 1 had one last year that measured 14 inches in circumference.” 
J, M, GREGORY, Eunderland, Vt. 
Attains the Enormous Size of 
the Famous Spanish Onion 
"^XTIL the introduction of Prizetaker, we were dependent on the 
^ imported stock from Spain to satisfy the demand for large 
onions of good quality. The popularity of Prizetaker was there¬ 
fore assured when it was first introduced and has remained in 
constant favor. It attains its phenomenal size under exactly the 
same conditions necessary to the cultivation of other sorts. It yields 
supply of young plants for early use in salads, etc., 
and may be used continuously throughout the season. When matured 
in the fall,_ the outer skin is of a pale brownish-yellow color, the 
bulb is solid and heavy, almost round and without neck. The flesh 
IS crisp, white and of excellent quality. 
. crop grown under ordinary conditions will produce bulbs 14 
inches round. ^ A^'e have frequently seen them attain a circumference 
of IG and 18 inches. In consequence of its size, the yield per acre 
IS sometimes prodigious; we have known crops that produced 1,200 
and l,d00 bushels per acre. 
A good wa)'’ to secure very large onions is to sow early in a shel¬ 
tered spot, and transplant the young plants when frost is gone. 
{oee cut.) 
pkt., 25c. oz., 75c. J lb., $2.60 lb., 6 lbs. and upward, 
^^.40 lb. 
"The Prizetaker Onions have done well; many grew nearly as 
large as Ponderosa Tomatoes, I am very much pleased with them.” 
JOHN A. RROIVN, Middletown, N. Y. 
“/ want all v'ho are interested in Onions to iniderstand thal 
your Prizetaker stands without a peer. / have been frrming them for 
four years — on the same ground and getting 1,200 bushels to the acre; 
practically all the Onions were perfect specimens {no scallions) and iheif 
size immense. J express you four of them today: they measure JO to IS 
inches in circumference and weigh to li Ihs. each. 1 raised many larger 
and heainer specimens, but I want you to see the average of my crop. My 
Prizetaker Onions took the first premium at the Inter-Mountain Fair at 
Boise this year, and last year formed a part of the Idaho Exhibit at Si. 
Louis, attracting widespread attention. 
“ / have given up growing any other Onion hut your matchless 
Prizetaker.” 
JAMES TORRANCE, Oreana, Idaho. 
“ I have grown your Prizetaker Onions for two years and think them 
the best onions that grow.” 
TIIOS. IIA YES, Hood sport, iras/t. 
"Prizetaker Onions proved a great success, the finest onions I ever 
grew; large yield, large, even size; mild and desirable, flavor.” 
JOSEPH A TKINSON, Hawley, Pa. 
^ your Prizetaker Onion last year and never saw any 
thing like it. Some of them weiahed as much as lbs., and then they art 
so mild that a baby can eat them.” 
Mrs. E. A . DELL, Belles Store, La. 
Prixetaker Onions, grown from our seed, received 
an award of merit from the 
Ttoyal Horticultural Society of England 
Our new Leaflet, “ How to Grow Onions for Home and Market,” Free to Customers if asked for. 
