8 
BURBANK'S 1921 NEW CREATIONS IN SEEDS 
A New Early Sweet Corn— The "Burbank" 
We have for three seasons 
distributed a new "Bantam" 
Sweet Corn after sixteen years of careful selection, which produces twelve-rowed 
ears instead of the old eight-rowed, small-ear variety. My customers claim that this 
wholly distinct new variety should have a distinctive name. It will hereafter be 
called "Burbank." No other sweet corn in the world produces such uniformly 
fat, deep, sweet kernels as this on the smallest of cobs. It is so unusually and 
uniformly early that it can be grown successfully where other sweet corn can not 
be produced. No other sweet corn can compare with the "Burbank" for home 
use. It is greatly prized by the best hotels and packing houses. 
Packet, 20c; ounce, 40c; pound, $2.50. 
UPPER "GOLDEN BANTAM." LOWER THE "BURBANK." 
Cincinnati, O., Feb. 21, 1920. — Your "Bantam" Corn last year was delicious. 
A. R. C. 
Tacoma, Wash., Nov. 9, 1919. — Your very kind letter of November 4 leaves us under obligations 
to you and would thank you to ship us what you can spare of each variety of Bantam Corn, as 
therein mentioned. This year we had to buy some Bantam Corn from other seedsmen, and it was 
frightfully poor, and we have never had much luck with anything but your seed. N. P. Co. 
Tacoma, Wash. — Your new Improved Golden Bantam seed corn gave us excellent results this year. 
N. P. Co. 
Long Island, New York. — ^A larger ear than the ordinary and consequently a third more valuable. 
It will sooner or later replace the old variety. J. L. C. 
Early Bantam Sweet Corn This, like several other varieties of yellow sweet 
corn, has a strong tendency to "glaze" like the 
field corns, yet it is a very popular early sweet corn. 
Packet, 10c; ounce, 15c; pound, 75c; ten pounds by express, $3. 
Rainbow Corn The leaves of this most beautiful corn are variegated with 
bright crimson, yellow, white, green, rose, and bronze stripes. 
A really wonderful decorative plant, as easily grown as any common corn and is 
fully equal in beauty to the most expensive greenhouse dracsenas. 
Packet, 10c; ounce, 30c; pound, $1. 
EsPERANCE, Australia, April 14, 1919. — I was much pleased with your Rainbow Corn and have 
noticed many small cobs well filled with what we call maize. Every one who saw it growing 
and cut admired it. F. J. D. 
Lentil (Lens Esculenta) most nutritious and oldest of cultivated 
plants, mostly in the Eastern Hemisphere. Superior 
for soups. Seed very much like peas, but flat. Hardy and easily grown anywhere; 
culture same as common peas. Packet, 15c; ounce, 25c; pound, $1. 
Spinage Dock The giant, perennial, cultivated variety for earliest Spring 
greens. Packet, 10c; ounce, 50c. 
