SUMMER 
SQUASH 
Plant 8 to 10 seeds to hill as soon as ground 
is warm, thinning to three strongest plants. 
Hills 4 to 6 feet apart. 
Golden Summer Crookneck. 52 days. The stand- 
ard summer Squash known better and grown 
more than any other. Bushy plants, very pro- 
ductive. A few se ey supply aa sete 
Yellow with a crooked neck. esirable either 
STRATSHTNECK boiled or fried the same as oysters. Pkt., 7c; 
OZ LoCh 4/4 1b, 40C. 
Golden Summer Straightneck. The Straightneck is the same quality and similar 
in every way to Crookneck except in shape which is straight. Easier to pack 
or peel. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15c; Y% lb., 45e. 
Cocozelle. 65 days. Of the Italian Marrow type. Fruits grow to 20 inches long, 
weight 4 lbs. Cylindrical, straight, smooth, dark green with lighter green 
stripes. Flesh firm, greenish white. Very early and prolific. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15c; 
Vy |b., 45c. 
White Bush Scallop (Patty Pan). 52 days. Fruits pale green when young, be- 
coming white as they grow to 242 lbs. Shaped somewhat like a round pie or 
patty with scalloped edges. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15e; 1% Ib., 45c. 
WINTER SQUASH 
Sow about July Ist, thinning to 3 plants in a hill. When harvesting, 
be careful not to break or bruise the stems. 
Table Queen or Acorn. 58 days. This Squash is also known as Des Moines. 
It is similar to an acotn in shape and of a size sufficient for cutting in the 
middle and serving to two persons after it is baked. The quality is better than 
that of most winter squashes. It is a good winter keeper. Vines vigorous and 
so productive that an ordinary hill will produce 15 to 30 perfect fruits of a 
BUSH SCALLOP deep green color. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15e; V%4 lb., 45c. 
Banana. 105 days. Cylindrical and pointed at the blossom end, with thin 
slate-gray rind. Flesh thick, fine grained, yellowish orange and of fine 
flavor. Yields heavily and keeps well. Pkt., 7c: oz., 15c; 4 lb., 45c. 
Delicious. Green. 102 days. Top-shaped fruits weighing 7 to 8 lbs. Skin dark 
green with light green stripes. Flesh orange, dry and of good flavor. Keeps 
well, Pkt... 7¢:) oz., loc; 4ulb., 45c. 
Improved Green Hubbard. 105 days. Standard winter sort. Fruits 10 to 12 lbs., 
pointed at both ends, slightly warted, dark bronze-green in color. Rind hard 
peace flesh very thick, orange-yellow, dry and sweet. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15c; 
4 \b., 45c. 
Hard Shell Warty Hubbard. 110 days. A little larger than Improved Hubbard and 
more thickly covered with warts. Fruits about 14 lbs., dark green, hard shell. 
Flesh orange-yellow, dry and sweet. Pkt., 7c: oz., 15c; 1% lb., 45c. 
Buttercup. This turban-shaped Squash, developed at the North Dakota Experi- 
ment station, takes the place of Sweet Potatoes. It cooks dry and mealy with- 
out strings or fibers. Weight 3 to 5 lbs. Outside dark green, inside rich 
orange. Pkt., 8c; oz., 15c. 
Butternut. Fruits, bottle shaped 10-12 inches long. Smooth, buff colored skin. 
Hard shell. Flesh is orange, dry, sweet, fine textured and of excellent flavor 
either baked or boiled. Pkt., 7c; oz., 15c. 
BUTTERCUP 
HUBBARD BANANA 
Page 16 World Famous Flower and Vegetable Seeds 
