Plant Good Seeds or Pay the Penalty 
1 “Ye Reap What Ye Sow” 


WATERMELONS 
CULTURE—A hill of watermelons spreads over a large 
space and should be planted in hills from eight to ten 
feet each way in order to give them plenty of room. 
Mix thoroughly with the soil for each hill a forkful of 
well rotted manure and put about one inch fresh earth 
over the manured soil. The seed should not be planted 
until the ground becomes warm and dry. Put 10 to 12 
seeds to the hill. After plants are good and strong, thin 
out to 3 or 4 to the hill. Cultivate often, keep weeds 
down. 

DIXIE QUEEN—An enormous yielder. Vines of vigorous 
growth. Melons in form round to oval. Skin striped 
light and dark green. Good size. Flesh, bright red. 
Crisp and splendid quality. Good shipper. Seeds very 
small white, and very few in each melon. One pound of 
Dixie Queen seed will plant twice as much ground as 
most other large type seed, medium early. Pkt. 10c; 
oz 15¢e3; %4 Ib. 40e; Ib. $1.25. 


EARLY KANSAS—Largest of all early melons. Matures 10 
aks ice OMiniX te CANA sae days earlier than Tom Watson. Flesh, bright red, very 
sweet flavor, melts in your mouth, solid to the rind which 
is about % inch thick nearly round light green with broad 
wavy stripes. Melons weight 30 to 60 pounds, occasionally 
80 pounds. Very few seeds, red when green, buff color 
when dry. A good shipper. Pkt. 10c; oz 15¢; %4 Ih. 35c3 
Ib. $1.00. 
HALL’S WONDER MELON OR 
IMPROVED KLECKLEY SWEET 
This improved strain has the same red flesh, delicious sweet- 
ness and all the other splendid qualities that made 
Kleckley’s Sweet such a favorite. The improvement has 
been along the line of size and shipping qualities. It is 
not at all unusual to have them weigh 75 pounds, yet the 
rind is thin, but so tough that Improved Kleckley’s 
Sweet qualifies for long-distance shipping. Pkt. 10¢3 oz. 
15e; 14 Ib. 35e;3 Ib, $1.00; 5 Ibs. $4.50. 
STONE MOUNTAIN—Fruits very large, oval round; medium 
green. rind thin but fairly tough. Flesh rich scarlet and 
» very sweet. Pkt. 10c; oz. 15¢e; 4% Ib. 35e; Ib. $1.00; 5 Ibs. 
$4.50. 
KLECKLEY SWEET—For home use and nearby market this 
popular variety is unquestionably the leader and favorite. 
The melons are medium to large, oblong, tapering slightly 
toward the stem end, dark green, very attractive. Flesh © 
bright rich red; extra sweet, ripening right up to the 
stand shipping, the fruit bursting open if subjected to 
even a Slight jar. Pkt, 10ce; oz. 15¢e; 14 Ib. 35e; Ib. $1.00; 
© Ibs. $4.50. 


HALL’S WONDERMELON, OR IMPROVED WATERMELON 
KLECKLEY’S SWEET WILT RESISTANT 
LEESBURG OR WILT-RESISTANT KLECKLEY’S 
SWEET—In every way fully equal to our standard 
strain of Kleckley’s Sweet in quality and size, with the 
distinct advantage of being wilt resistant. It marks 
a conspicuous advance in the development of this uni- 
versally popular melon for growing on wilt-sick soils. 
Pkt. 10e; oz 15¢; \% Ib. 35e; Ib. $1.00. 
STONE MOUNTAIN No. 5—HEarlier and smaller than the 
original strain; does not ship so well. Pkt. 10¢; oz. 15¢; 
% Ib. 35e3 Ib, $1.00. 
KLECKULEY SWEET No. 6—Of the same type as the orig- 
ina] and with as high a sugar content. Pkt. 10c; oz. 
15¢e; %4 Ib. 35e;3 th. $1.00. ‘ 
HAWKESBURY—Of the Irish gray type; long and of 
light gray with fine veining of green. Flesh dark pink 
of good quality. Pkt. 10c; oz. 15e; 1%4 Ib. 35e;3 Ib. $1.00. 
*’ 
KLONDIKE, R-7—Vines vigorous and prolific, fruits 
oblong, thin tough rind. Flesh bright deep red, of fine 
quality. Pkt. 10¢; oz. 15¢e; 1%4 Ib. 35e;3 Ib. $1.00. 




thin rind which is so little and tender that it will not a: 

