
Squash Table Queen or Des Moines. 
Summer varieties 

Squash 
Dwarf Bash Green 53 days. (Also known as Green Tint or 
Bennings.) An excellent sort, popular 
in the west because the young fruits hold their greenish color wel} 
on the market. Vines are of bush type; in size some larger than 
Early White Bush Scallop and hardly as uniform. Color greenish 
white when young and light cream when matured. 
(Pkt., 5c) (oz., 10c) (14 Ib., 30c) Cb., $1.00) (5 Ibs., $4.40) prepaid 
Dwarf Summer Crookneck 5° days. Southern planters 
will find our stock of this 
highly desirable because of its uniform size and color. Fruits are 
attractively warted, become 10 inches long and 3% inches through 
the bowl at maturity. Neck curved: skin bright orange-yellow. 
Good for home and market garden use; very prolific. 
(Pkt., 5c) (oz., 15c) (4 Ib., 40c) Cib., $1.50) © Ibs., $6.60) prepaid 
Early Prolific Straight Neck °° days. We have grown 
squash seed for forty years: 
producing during this time thousands of acres and have never pro- 
duced a better summer variety. The fruits are straight, smooth 
and of delicate creamy color. Can be used when 4 to 5 inches long 
and until 12 or 14 inches long under good growing conditions. 
Plant is bush in type. A prolific yielder and a money maker for 
shippers, “All America” Selection Winner. 
(Pkt., 5e) (oz., 15¢) (1% Ib., 40c) Cib., $1.50) (5 Ibs. $6.60) prepaid 
— 
FROM DURANGO, COLORADO—Will say the seeds I got of you last sea- 
son yielded exceptionally good. The Seneca Golden Hybrid Sweet Corn was 
the best I ever had and no rain scarcely all summer. Our land is all dry. 
Also I took the Blue Ribbon on Watermelons at the Durango seed show. 
CS, 
FROM ULMERS, S. C.—I am enclosing check for nine dollars and ninety 
cents for which please ship me five pounds of your Dixie Queen Watermelon 
Stock seed. Planted some of these seeds last vear and wish I had planted 
my entire crop of them. Please send right away. 

See page 90 for Special Prices to Market Growers 73 
