Pumpkin 
One ounce will plant 25 hills; 4 pounds per acre. 
Plant in hills 8 x 8 fl. apart; thin to 2 or 3 plants per hill. 
Do not plant seed until ground is sufficiently warm. 
Connecticut Field or Big Tom—115 Days. A 
large, rich, somewhat ribbed, orange yellow, slight 
oval or cylindrical fruit, flat on end. Very produc- 
tive. Used extensively for canning. Popular for 
pies. Average weight about 20 pounds. 
Kentucky Field—110 Days. Prolific variety. 
Fruit from nearly round to flattened. Pale green 
. to cream, turning to orange yellow. The flesh of 
Kentucky Field is deep yellow. 
King of Mammoths (Potiron)—i20 Days. 
This is the largest Pumpkin on the market and 
in reality is a monster. For many years fruits 
of this sort have been awarded every prize in 
State and County Fairs for the largest Pumpkins. 
It is not only an exhibition sort but is a very 
profitable variety for raising for stock feeding. 
Bright lemon in color, mottled with orange. Round 
with a trace of ribbing. 
Yellow Monster, King 
of the Mammoth or 
Potiron, weighs from 60 
to 100 pounds. 
LANDRETHS’ LARGE 
CHEESE — 108 Days. 
An excellent kitchen 
variety. Shape flat like a 
Cheese box, from which 
it derived its name, al- 
though it is slightly 
ribbed on edges. Outside 
color lemon, no stripes. 
Fine quality and keeper. 
Often 15 inches across 
the top and 6 to 7 inches 
thick. Top and bottom 
indented. Average weight 
is 17 pounds. 

Smal! Sugar (New England Pie)—115 Days. 
This is a very fine, small, sweet, fine grained 
productive sort for pies. Good keeping qualities. 
Fruit oval, or globular, flattened at both poles, 8 to 
10 inches in diameter, slightly ribbed. Flesh a deep 
rich yellow or orange. Weight 6 to 8 lbs. 
Striped Cushaw—115 Days. Fruit large, bottle 
shaped, early, with very slight crookneck. Color 
creamy white, with irregular stripes of green. 
Flesh light yellow and thick. Average weight 
about 12 pounds. 
Tennessee Sweet Potato—110 Days. Smooth, 
pear shaped with a slightly crooked neck, white 
skin slightly mottled with green. 
41 lbs. 
Weight about 
Yellow (Golden) 
Cushaw — 115 Days. 
Our stock of this can- 
not be excelled. It is 
a mammoth, © prolific 
Pumpkin, frequently 
weighing 30 pounds, 
with a very large, full, 
meaty, curved neck, 
with the best colored 
meat to make fine pies. 
Both outside and inside 
color very rich cream 
yellow. No stripes of 
any kind. 
ASK FOR 
THE LANDRETH 
VICTORY GARDEN 
FREE CIRCULAR 
Landreth Large Cheese 
Rape or Colewort 
Sow 6-8 Ibs. per acre broadcast; 3-4 Ibs. in drills 18-24 inches apart in the row. Cheap quick pasturage for 
poultry and all livestock. Ready in 6 weeks. - 
DWARF ESSEX—42 Days. One of the very best plants for pasturing cattle, sheep and swine. Under 
very favorable conditions the pastures will be ready within six weeks, but in any event, in eight or nine 
weeks. As rape thrives best in cool weather, plant early in the Spring or late in the Autumn. 
Chubare or Pie Plant 
One ounce will plant 75 ft. of row. Sow the’seed early in the Spring in rows 18 *nches apart; thin the seedlings 
to 7-12 inches apart in the row. The following Spring transplant to a permanent location, spacing them 2-4 ft. 
apart. Cover with 4 inches of soil. It is very easy to grow your own rhubarb roots from seed. Healthy, 
strong, excellent roots can be grown in one year. The second and succeeding years they will produce an 
abundance of rhubarb equal to any grown from roots._ Roots grown from our seed have never been known 
to be diseased. Always hardy, and of strong growth. Landreth offers the Linnaeus and Victoria varieties. 
D bpnduth Seed Ce. 37 
