


‘Painesville, Ohio 
RELIABLE VEGETABLE SEEDS | 

PEPPER 
1 Pkt. for 100 Plants. 1 Ounce for 1,500 Plants. 
CULTURE: Seed should be sown in a hot-bed or in a shal- 
low box in a warm place in the house, allowing 8 to 10 
weeks to produce plants large enough to-set outdoors 
when all danger of frost is past. They should be set 
in rows 2 to 3 feet apart, spaced 18 to 24 inches apart 
in the row. 
420 CALIFORNIA WONDER. 75 Days. All that you could 
ask for in a stuffing pepper—good size, blocky form, re- 
markably thick walls, -sweetness, tenderness, and good 
flavor. Because of the thickness of its flesh, it stands 
shipping well without bruising or breaking. Peppers are 
about 4 inches long and 3 to 3% inches in diameter, 
3 to 4 lobed, and are borne upright. The skin is very 
smooth, glossy green, turning to bright crimson when 
ripe. The best for baking. 
A-Pkt. 15 
421 HARRIS’ EARLY GIANT. 63 Days. Will mature 
in sections too cold to grow any of the other large 

425 Oakview Wonder Pepper 
peppers. It produces an abundcnce of large fruits : 
about 4 inches thick and from 4¥% to 5 inches 424 LONG RED CAYENNE. 70 Days. (Hot). A lead- 
long. They have very thick flesh of a delightful, ing sort for use in pickles, for canning and _ for 
mild flavor. The skin turns from a rich green to a drying. Plants large, very prolific. Fruits 5 inches 
beautiful bright red. 
A-Pkt. 15 
422 HUNGARIAN YELLOW WAX. 60 Days. (Hot). 
An early, very productive hot variety. Fruits 6 to 7 
inches long, about 1% inches at the crown, tapering 
to-a hooked point. Color, waxy pale-yellow, turning 
to orange and then to bright red at maturity. 
A-Pkt. 15c 
423 LARGE BELL or BULL NOSE. 55 Days. (Hot). This 
earliest pepper of the “bell” type is a combination 
of both Hot and Sweet. The ribs are quite pungent, 
while the rest of the fruit is mild. The medium 
_ sized square fruits are deep green when immature 
and scarlet when ripe. A-Pkt. 15c. 
SALSIFY 
OR OYSTER PLANT 
1 Pkt. for 20 feet; . 
1 Ounce for 100 feet. 
CULTURE: Grown largely for 
fall and winter use = and 
highly esteemed for the fine 
flavor of the roots, which is 
not unlike that of oysters. 
Sow the seed in early spring 
in rows 1/2 feet apart and 
cover with 1 inch of fine soil. 
Thin the seedlings to stand 
4 to 5 inches apart. They 
are hardy and may be left in 
ground over winter. 
450 MAMMOTH SANDWICH 
ISLAND. 120 Days. This va- 
riety is a great improvement 
over the ordinary type, pro- 
ducing long, smooth, thick 
roots of an even, straight 
growth, 8 inches or more in 
length, 1% inches in diame- 
ter at shoulder, slightly taper- 
ing, clean cut» and uniform. 
Flesh is almost. white. . 
A-Pkt. 15c; B-Pkt. (1 Oz.) 55¢ 

“YES INDEED, THEY'RE GUARANTEED” 

426 PIMIENTO. 
CULTURE: 
“ 430 LARGE YELLOW. 
431 SUGAR or NEW ENGLAND PIE. 
long, Vo inch through; tapered; deep green becoming 
bright red. Very pungent. 
A-Pkt. 15¢ 
425 OAKVIEW WONDER. 63 Days. An earlier 
and more productive strain of California Wonder. 
Fruits blocky, smooth, with thick, mild, sweet 
flesh. Plants shorter and stockier than California 
Wonder but fruits are set earlier and more abun- 
dantly. An outstanding strain unsurpassed for 
the home and market garden. 
A-Pkt. 20c¢ 
75 Days. Peppers are heart-shaped 
and when mature are 31/2 inches long and 21 inches 
in diameter at the top, smooth, dark green turning 
bright red when ripe. The flesh is about 14 inch 
thick—a heavy walled pepper which is mild at all 
stages and especially sweet after it has turned red. 
For use both green and red and for making canned 
pimientos. 
A-Pkt. 15¢ 
PUMPKIN 
1 Pkt. for 5 Hills; 1 Ounce for 25 Hills. 
When the soil has become thoroughly warm 
in the spring, plant 5 or 6 seeds in hills 6 to 8 feet 
apart or drop seeds in every fourth hill in the corn 
patch. After the seedlings are well started, thin out, 
leaving the best two plants. 
70 Days. Fruits grow 18 inches 
in diameter and weigh as much as 60 pounds. The 
flesh is thick, of a bright yellow color, sweet, solid 
and tender. The quality is good enough for table use 
but is usually grown for stock feeding. 
. A-Pkt. 10c; B-Pkt. (1 Oz.) 20c; C-Pkt. (14 Lb.) 75c¢ 
75 Days. The 
earliest and best variety for pies with slightly flat- 
tened, furrowed fruits having a diameter of 8 or 9 
inches. It is a highly attractive variety with smooth, 
reddish-orange skin and a hard rind. The ‘thick, 
rich orange-yellow flesh is of unexcelled quality. 
A-Pkt.. 10c; B-Pkt. (1 Oz.) wah. C-Pkt. (Y%4 Lb.) 75¢ 
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