23 
E. MILLER RICHARDSON & CO., Baltimore, Maryland 
RicfuiAdix>ti^i. dei-ted 
Ue^taMe dteedd^ 
6o-titinued 
TOMATOES 
Beefsteak, or Crimson Cushion. 
Quality is splendid. Grown for 
family use. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 40 cts.; Vi lb. $1.50; lb. $5. 
Bonnie Best. Early, smooth, bright 
red Tomato of medium size. Post¬ 
paid: Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 35 cts.; 
Vi lb. 90 cts.; lb. $3. 
Rutgers Tomato 
PLEASE NOTE 
PARCEL POST RATES 
From Baltimore 
First Lb. 
Each 
Addit'nl 
or 
Lb. or 
Fraction 
Fraction 
1st Zone—50 miles 
7c 
Ic 
2nd Zone—50-150 
miles 
7c 
Ic 
3rd Zone—150-300 
miles 
8c 
2c 
4th Zone—300-600 
miles 
8c 
4c 
5th Zone—600-1000 
miles 
9c 
6c 
E. Miller Richardson & Co. exercise 
the greatest possible care in the se¬ 
lection and testing of all seeds and 
merchandise to guard against mis¬ 
takes and insure reliability. We sell 
all our goods subject to the disclaimer 
adopted by the American Seed Trade 
Association, and all orders sent us 
will be filled under these conditions 
only. We give no warranty, expressed 
or implied, as to description, purity, 
productiveness, or any other matter 
of any seeds, bulbs, plants, we send 
out, and will not in any way be re¬ 
sponsible for the crop. 
SWEET, MEDICINAL and POT 
HERBS 
Brown’s Special Tomato. A canning 
variety resembling Greater Balti¬ 
more and used in some sections 
of the Eastern Shore of Maryland 
where it originated. Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 40 cts.; Vi lb. 90 cts.; lb. $3. 
Break o' Day. Resembles Marglobe 
in shape, size, color, and solidity. 
It is blight-resistant and a heavy 
yielder. Fruit ripens along with 
the earliest varieties. Oz. 40 cts.; 
Vi lb. $1; lb. $3.50. 
Greater Baltimore. A canning To¬ 
mato upon which dependence can 
be placed under most adverse condi¬ 
tions to produce large, smooth, and 
solid fruit. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts; oz. 30 
cts.; V4 lb. 90 cts.; lb. $3. 
Grothen's Red Globe. The fruits are globe- 
shaped, as large or larger than Break 
o' Day and are of deeper scarlet color 
and free from objectionable yellow color 
about the stem end. Matures about the 
same time as Break o' Day. Pkt. 15 cts.; 
oz. 40 cts.; Vi lb. $1; lb. $3.50. 
John Baer. One of the best early Toma¬ 
toes. A heavy cropper. Fruit bright red 
or scarlet, of good quality. Postpaid: 
Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 40 cts.; Vi lb. $1; lb. $3. 
Marglobe. Uniform, large, smooth, bright, 
red fruits. Heavy bearer and matures 
second early. Blight resistant and has 
proved valuable where Tomato diseases 
are troublesome. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 30 cts.; Vi lb. 90 cts.; lb. $3. 
Marglobe Certified. Pkt. 15 cts.; V 2 oz. 25 
cts.; oz. 40 cts.; 4 ozs. $1.15; V 2 lb. $1.90; 
lb. $3.50. 
Master Marglobe, Stokes. Pkt. 25 cts.; oz. 
50 cts.; Vi lb. $1.50; lb. $5. 
Market Champion. A fine large red To¬ 
mato that lives up to its name of being 
a Market Champion. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 
35 cts.; Vi lb. $1; lb. $3.50. 
New Stone. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 30 
cts.; Vi lb. 85 cts.; lb. $2.75. 
Ponderosa. It is undoubtedly the largest, 
meatiest, and finest flavored Tomato in 
'■ultivatiori. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 '’Is.; oz. .50 
.•ts.; '.4 lb. $1.50; lb. $5. 
Potato-leaf (Wuyahead). A week earlier 
than Earliana. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 
40 cts.; Vi lb. $1.25; lb. $4. 
Prichard (Early Red). It is a cross between 
Marglobe and Cooper s Special Color, 
intense scarlet. A most important fea¬ 
ture of this new variety is its early 
maturity. Oz. 35 cts.; Vi lb. $1; lb. $3.50. 
Dill. Pkt. 5 cts.; oz. 10 cts.; Vi lb. 20 cts.; 
lb. 60 cts.; 10 lbs. $5.50. 
Marjoram, Sweet. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 20 cts.; 
Vi lb. 60 cts.; lb. $2. 
Sage. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 40 cts.; Vi lb. $1.25. 
Rutgers. New sort that makes a big, vig¬ 
orous plant on which large, globular, 
deep red fruits are borne in quantity. 
Resistant to disease. Pkt. 15 cts.; oz. 
30 cts.; Vi lb. 90 cts.; lb. $3. 
Rutgers Certified. Pkt. 15 cts.; V 2 oz. 25 
cts.; oz. 40 cts.; Vt lb. $1.15; lb. $3.50. 
Thyme, Broad-leaved English. Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 50 cts.; Vi lb. $1.75. 
Spark's Earliana. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 30 cts.; Vi lb. 90 cts.; lb. $3. 
SQUASH 
Bush Varieties 
White Bush (Green tint). Very similar to 
White Bush except the fruit has an at¬ 
tractive green tint. Very popular with 
market gardeners. Oz. 15 cts.; Vi lb. 
25 cts.; lb. 75 cts. 
Giant Summer Crookneck. Double the size- 
of the ordinary Crookneck and very 
warty. Postpaid: Oz. 15 cts.; 14 Ih. 35 
cts.; lb. $1. 
Golden Summer Crookneck. Early, best 
and richest summer Squash. Very pro¬ 
ductive. A foot long, with crooked neck, 
densely warty. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; 
oz. 15 cts.; Vi lb. 35 cts.; lb. $1. 
Running Varieties 
Boston Marrow. In form and size similar 
to Hubbard. Shell bright orange; flesh 
yellow and firm. The best for canning or 
pies. Postpaid: Oz. 10 cts.; Vi lb. 20 cts.; 
lb. 60 cts. 
True Hubbard. Fruits large, olive shaped, 
with dark green skin and very rich 
flesh. An excellent keeper and of splen¬ 
did quality. Postpaid: Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 15 
cts.; Vi lb. 35 cts.; lb. $1. 
TURNIPS and RUTABAGA 
Early Purple-top Strapleaf. Flat, white with 
purple top; fine grained and tender. 
Used for early market and table. Oz. 10 
cts.; Vi lb. 15 cts.; lb. 50 cts. 
Improved American Purple-top Rutabaga. 
The finest yellow-fleshed Rutabaga 
grown. Hardy, sweet, and is a good 
keeper. Oz. 10 cts.; Vi lb. 15 cts.; lb. 
50 cts.; 5 lbs., 45 cts. per lb. 
Large Yellow, or Amber Globe. Large, 
globe-shaped; solid yellow flesh; green 
top. Fine for table and stock. Keeps firm 
and sweet throughout the winter. Oz. 10 
cts.; Vi lb. 15 cts.; lb. 50 cts.; 5 lb., 
45 cts. per lb. 
Purple-top White Globe. The most pop¬ 
ular Turnip for market and table use. 
Makes large, globe-shaped roots, pure 
white, with purple top. Oz. 10 cts.; Vi lb. 
15 cts.; lb. 50 cts.; 5 lbs., 45 cts. per lb. 
Seven-top. The old standard popular salad 
variety, grown exclusively for this pur¬ 
pose. Oz. 10 cts.; Vi lb. 15 cts.; lb. 50 
cts.; 5 lbs., 45 cts. per lb. 
Marglobe Tomato 
