14 Reliable Garden Seed 
The STORRS & HARRISON CO. 
Hubbard Squash Type 
SUMMER SQUASH: 
Mammoth Bush 
Giant Crookneck 
SQUASH 
PRICE: Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; % lb. 30c; lb. 90c. 
TOBACCO 
Sow the seed thinly in well prepared soil, do not cover; 
mei’ely press them in with a light roller or smooth board. 
PRICE: Pkt. 10c; *4 oz. 20c; y 2 oz. 35c. 
Connecticut Seed I»eaf. A popular cigar variety, also 
largely used for pipe smoking in northern states. 
Improved White Burley. The wide-leaved Ky. favorite. 
Livingston’s 
Globe 
Summer Varieties 1 oz * to 25 hills. Hills 4 feet apart. 
• Sow in warm April. 
Early Prolific Straightneck. (All-America Award for ’37.) 
(65 days.) Bushy plants, thus conserving much valuable 
garden space. A prolific bearer, its straight, smooth, pale 
cream-colored fruits may be used when only 5 inches long; 
or safely deferred to the maturity of 14 inches, without loss 
of its characteristic delightful quality. 
Giant Summer Crookneck. (65 days.) Bright yellow. 
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. 
Zucchini. (60 days.) A new sort of the popular Italian 
Marrow group; fruits nearly cylindrical, straight, medium 
green with pale green stripes and cream-gray mottling. 
Plants are bush type; fruits weigh 3 to 4 pounds; flesh firm. 
Winter Varieties 1 oz * to 10 hills. Hills 8-10 
. - -- — ■ — apart. Sow seed in late June. 
Delicious. (75 days.) Medium size, dark green, with 
thick greenish flesh which cooks dry, of superior 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. 
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. 
• PRICE: All Turnips, by 
mail, postpaid, pkt. 10c; 
oz. 15c; lb. 25c; lb. 
65c; 5 lbs. @ 55c; 10 
Purple Top White Globe Turnip lbs. @ 50c. Not pre¬ 
paid: 25 lbs. @ 35c. 
Purple Top White Globe. (60 days.) The most popular 
Turnip grown either for table or stock ; an excellent keeper. 
Orange Jelly or Golden Ball. (65 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. (90 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. 
% 
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 
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 (Livingston Beauty). A satisfactory 
midseason market type. Fruits ripen evenly in season and 
size, are smooth and seldom crack. 
Early Detroit. (90 days.) Nearly round; very large size. 
(90 days.) A splendid new pink Tomato'produced 
1 jointly by U. S. Dept, of Agriculture and Florida 
Agricultural Experiment Station. Vigorous vine, abundant 
and continuous fruit-setting habit, long-bearing period, and 
resistance to fusarium wilt and nail-head rust. Large, thick- 
walled, firm, globular pink fruits notably free from cracks; 
of sweet flavor, mildly sub-acid. 
Livingston’s Globe. (95 days.) Large globe shape, always 
smooth, firm fleshed. With few seeds and ripens evenly. 
The color is a fine glossy rose, tinged with purple. One of 
the best forcing varieties, and one of the first to be shipped 
north from southern growers. 
PRICE 
ALL TOMATOES 
(except Oxheart) : 
Pkt. 10c; y 2 oz. 25c; 
oz. 35c; V4 lb. $1.00; 
lb. §3.00. 
TOMATOES 
One Ounce of Seed 
for 3000 Plants 
