6 
BUBBANK'S 1919 NEW CBEAT10NS IN SEEDS 
Longmont, Colorado, Nov. 7th. I thought you might be interested to learn how 
your new tomato came out in this section of the country. "We planted the seed 
you sent us and grew just as many plants as we could from it. We planted that 
seed exactly the same day we planted seed from Chalk's Early Jewell, and we put 
them in the same field, in exactly the same kind of soil. 
We picked the first ripe tomatoes from your vines on the 19th day of August; 
from Chalk's Early Jewell on the 26th day of August. After that we picked toma- 
toes from each kind — your vines and the C. E. J. — every time the same date. 
On August 31st we had picked from your vines 7,663 lbs. 
From the C. E. J. vines 2,756 lbs. 
On September 12th we had picked from your vines 13,072 lbs. 
From the C. E. J. vines 7,478 lbs. 
We finished picking your vines September 30th and had a total for the 
season of 20,234 lbs. 
On the same date from C. E. J. vines we had total 13,122 lbs. 
There were exactly the same number of vines in each patch. 
.Your tomato is certainly the tomato for this section, where we have early frost. 
The color is good and the quality is good. We have saved seed from the earliest 
and choicest ones for next year and will plant a number of acres next year where 
we can test them more fully. I shall not be surprised to get even better results, as 
I have found that seeds produced in Colorado almost invariably give better results 
than those grown outside the State. J. H. E. 
Oneida, N. Y., Dec. 11, 1918. We hope you will make every effort to give us the 
full thirty-five pounds of your "Burbank" Early Tomato seed. We are sufficiently 
enthusiastic over its possibilities to feel that we can adopt it exclusively for 1920 
growing and are very anxious to plant at least the acreage from the thirty-five 
pounds this coming season. B. C. 0. (Mgr. B. O. Canning Co.) 
New Tomato — "Santa Rosa" 
Enormous thick, smooth, deep rose colored fruits of superior quality. Most 
productive general crop tomato, and especially valuable for canners' and home use. 
Packet, 25c; ounce, $1. 
Tomato — "Matchless" 
The fine old Standard Canning tomato. Uniform, large, rich, cardinal red, pro- 
ductive; select stock. Packet, 10c; ounce, 30c. 
New Tomato — "Golden West" 
A large, smooth, productive golden yellow tomato of superior quality. 
Packet, 10c; ounce, 80c. 
A New Pepper — The "Burbank" 
From Mexico some nine years ago, I received from my collector a pepper of 
great size and fine flavor. From this I have developed the largest pepper ever 
grown; fruits nine inches long and four inches through with a thick sweet meat 
have been grown, and when placed upon exhibition people could not believe they 
were peppers. At the great Panama-Pacific Exposition or at the recent Land Show 
no peppers one-half as large were exhibited. The plants are early, very productive, 
and as easily grown as any other. 
Packet, 25c; ounce, $2. 
Vineland, N. J., Oct. 28, 1918. Your "Burbank" Peppers are great in size, shape 
and bountiful production. M. R. 
Ottumwa, Iowa, Jan. 13, 1919. Your sweet peppers were very productive and 
I think that four plants must have produced about twelve dozen peppers. A. T. G. 
