18 
ROBSON QUALITY SEED, HALL, NEW YORK 

EGG PLANT 
Vitamins b c g 
Pkt. should produce 100 plants 
1 oz. should produce 1,500 plants 
Sow seed inside about March Ist. When nights are 
warm, transplant out-of-doors 20 to 24 inches apart in 
3 ft. rows. Cold nights stunt egg plant. 
New Hampshire Hybrid is smaller than Kille’s 
Select but being definitely earlier is much better 
adapted to the Northern States. 
Flea beetles sometimes practically ruin newly set 
egg plant. It is always best to dust the plants with 
Rotenone as soon as they are set. 
*200 NEW HAMPSHIRE HYBRID: 65 days. This 
variety was developed at the New Hampshire Ex- 
periment Station by Dr. J. R. Hepler to meet the 
need for a large fruited egg plant for the North. An 
early variety, plants are upright in growth and very 
productive. Fruits are good market size, medium 
dark purple in color and of very firm texture. Lower 
fruits touch the ground. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 40c; 
oz. 85c; 4% |b. $2.65; lb. $8.00. 
201 KILLE’S SELECT (Jet Black Strain): 81 days. 
A new selection very similar to the old Kille’s Select 
but much blacker in color, which it retains through- 
out the whole season. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 40c; oz. 
85c; 4% Ib. $2.65; Ib. $8.00. 
DANDELION 
Vitamins Ab C g 
Packet will sow 10 ft. row 
1 oz. will sow 100 ft. row 
The wild dandelion has for centuries been popular 
as an early spring potherb. The Chinese called it 
“Earth Nail” and “Golden Hair’. In the middle ages 
it was also bleached and used for salads. “The domesti- 
cated dandelion is much larger, more upright and 
thicker leaved than its ancestor, the wild variety. 
Seed should be sown in spring or early summer and 
the leaves will be ready to eat the following spring. 
*690 LARGE THICK-LEAVED: The most popular 
variety of our cultivated dandelion. The plants are 
vigorous, upright, and produce good hearts. Pkt. 
15c; % oz. 60c; oz. $1.00; % lb. $2.50; Ib. $7.50. 
DILL 
Packet will sow 12 foot row 
1 oz. will sow 50 foot row 
Dill is so easy to grow that it should be produced in 
the garden rather than purchased in the market. Be- 
sides using the plant for making dill pickles, a little 
may be used to flavor soups and salads. Sow ¥% inch 
deep in rows 20 inches apart. 
*691 LONG ISLAND MAMMOTH: 70 days. Larg- 
er and much better than the common dill. Pkt. 10c; 
oz. 30c; 1% Ib. 40c; Ib. $1.20; 10 lbs. $11.00. 
* 
‘““We have been using your seeds for some time and have 
wonderful success with them. We sell all our produce at our 
roadside stand and our customers are very high in their praise 
of our vegetables and especially sweet corn; we raise them all 
from your seeds.”’ 
January 19, 1947 R. G. Hendrie 
Star Route 
Glens Falls, N. Y. 

Northern gardeners have for a long time needed a good, early 
egg plant; one that would produce a worthwhile crop in our com- 
paratively short summer. New Hampshire Hybrid is the answer. 
It is early, productive and of the finest quality. 
ENDIVE 
Vitamins A C g 
Pkt. will sow 12 ft. row 
1 oz. will sow 100 ft. row 
Endive seed may be sown as soon as the ground can 
be worked in the spring but the best quality endive is 
produced in the fall from seed sown about July Ist in 
rows 20 to 30 inches apart. Plants should be thinned 
to 12 inches. 
Deep Heart Fringed has practically taken the place 
of the old curly varieties. The head is much deeper 
and bleaches better. 
*210 DEEP HEART FRINGED: 90 days. All- 
America Silver Medal Winner in 1940. Somewhat 
similar in appearance to Green Curled but is more 
upright in growth and has broader leaves and a 
deeper heart. Leaves are cut and curled at the 
edges; ribs are white, free from pinkish color, and 
the heart is white instead of cream. Outer leaves 
turn upward, making plants less susceptible to bot- 
tom rots than most endives. Before hard freezing 
weather cut your sweet corn stalks and cover endive. 
With this protection you will have Deep Heart 
Endive until nearly Christmas. Pkt. 15c; oz. 35c;3 
% |b. 70c; Ib. $2.10. 
211 FULL HEART BATAVIAN: 90 days. An im- 
proved strain of Broad Leaved Batavian. Plant 
medium large with very deep, full, compact, well 
blanched heart of infolded, broad leaves that are of 
thick, buttery texture. Pkt. 15c; oz. 35c; % lb. 
70c3- Ib. $2.10: 
* 
“T gave some Seneca Chief to my neighbors all over the Hill 
and they all say it is the sweetest corn they have ever grown. My 
customers said the same thing.”’ 
Stanley A. Chapman 
R. 1, Box 292 
San Bernardino, Calif. 
