Vegetable Novelties 45 
Tomato, Scarlet Dawn 
Which We Especially Recommend 
It is the new and special varieties that help to make your garden of more interest, more pleasure 
and more profit. 
Vegetables for Your Own Table 
There is no more satisfactory way of obtaining good fresh vegetables of the best quality for your 
own use than to grow them in your own garden, and gather them just as you need them. 
Vegetables begin to lose their tenderness and good flavor very soon after they have been 
gathered, and when they have lain in the market for a day or even several hours they have lost 
much of their best qualities. Consider also the convenience of being able to step into your 
garden and select a nice fresh lot of several varieties just when you are ready to prepare your 
dinner. 
Templin-Bradley*s Vegetable Seeds 
One of the essentials of a good vegetable garden is good seed. In our selection of varieties and 
strains within varieties we are looking through the eyes of the planters of vegetable seeds, the 
home gardeners and commercial growers. Every possible care is taken to provide you gardeners 
with the finest vegetable seed obtainable. 
Muskmelon Imperial 
All A Have You Been Beading In The Magazines About 
/All-/\mer ICQ The All-America Flower & Vegetable Selections? 
For the past four years, the All-America Selections Committee of the American Seed 
Trade Association, have conducted trials of new introductions in ten widely scattered 
locations in the United States for the purpose of determining the usefulness of all new 
varieties of seeds offered in this country. Gold Medals, Awards of Merit and Honorable 
Mention have been distributed on the basis of merit by unbiased judges. All new 
varieties so honored in the past four years appear in this catalog with the indication 
of the exact award in the description. This will guide you in keeping vour garden up to 
date on the really worthwhile new things. The purpose of this All-America Selection 
is to prove the worthiness of a new variety before offering it to you and is therefore 
directly in your interest. 
The New Pea 
Radish, Glowing Ball 
3166 Cucumber, Straight 8 
All-America 1935 Gold Medal. The 
most outstanding variety of Cucumber 
developed during the past decade. Ideal in 
size, 8 inches long; shape, uniformly cylin¬ 
drical; color, the desirable deep dark green. 
Extremely productive, attractive, superior 
quality. Pkt. 15c. 
3516 p ann TonJaenKoan All-America Gold Medal 1933. Long 
Dean- I enaergreen round, tender, meaty, light green snap 
bean of finest flavor. Matures early and the vines are exceptionallygtrong and 
vigorous, a delicious Bean. Pkt. 5c; 14 lb. 15c; lb. 40e; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3578 D_ I J :* All-America Award of Merit 
Deet-rerrected Uetroit 1934. Considered the best strain 
of blood beet yet created. Early, round, dark red, no white rings. Produced by 
inbreeding and reselection over a period of 8 years. Pkt. lOc; oz. 35c; % lb. 
BOc; lb. $1.50. 
3620 I...1 D- Li All-America Special Mention 
V_aDDage-JUSt l\ignt 1935. A first early Cabbage with flat¬ 
fish round heads and short stems. Pkt. lOc; 14 oz. 35c; oz. 40c; *4 lb. $1.35. 
3631 Cabbage-Penn State Ballhead # , i£Sf t rl i» 84 al a 
short stem dark bluish green Ballhead type, 12 inches high. Heads are extremely 
hard, heavy, uniformly globe-shaped and with small cores. Pkt. 10c; J4 oz. 35c; 
oz. 45c; !4 lb. $1.35. 
3673 Cnv Mftrcfl'c P„ n .L; n . All-America Gold Medal 
v-OrrOt Morse S Duncning 1934. Roots almost cylin¬ 
drical with rounded shoulders and well stumped, 2 inches in diameter and 9 inches 
long. Color deep red-orange, roots free from wrinkles. A fine bunching Cavrot. Pkt. 
8c; oz. 15c; lb. 40c; lb. $1.35. 
3715 _ IJI _ 1 All-America 1936 Award of 
V^Orn-VJOiaen colonel Merit. See Corn in natural color, 
page 51. A yellow companion to the ever popular Country Gentleman. Iden¬ 
tically the same in height, 8 feet, length of ear, 7 to 9 inches, diameter of ear, 
3 to 3^ inches, cylindrical shape of ear, zig-zag, shoe-peg kernel. Golden Colonel 
was produced by crossing Golden Bantam with Country Gentleman. The results 
are the delicious flavor and golden color of Golden Bantam and the wonderful 
shape, size and quality of Country Gentleman. One of the greatest developments in 
vegetables in recent years. Pkt. 19c; *4 lb. 35c; lb. 75c; 3 lbs. $2.00. 
3712 Corn-Kinscrost Bantam i'^l n TA MLM! 
among four inbred strains. Early and uniform, 4)4 to 5 feet tall, yellow grained 
ears 7 Yi inches long. 10 to 12 rows each. More uniform and better quality than 
Golden Bantam. Pkt. 5c. >4 lb. 15c; lb. IOc; 3 lbs. $ 1.90. 
3876 -»l All-America Award of Merit 1935. 
MUSkmelOn-lmperiai A luscious new melon, orange flesh, ex¬ 
cellent flavor. Seepage 55. Pkt. IOc; oz. 25c; lb- 7©c; lb. $2. OO. 
Giant 
Early Cropper 
Corn, Kingcrest Bantam 
4052 Spinach-Viking 
All-America Award of Merit 
1935. A meritorious variety, medium 
to dark green, longstanding, giant 
leaved. The leaves are smooth in sum¬ 
mer but inclined to crinkle in cool 
weather. Pkt. 5c; Oz. IOc; \4 lb. 
25c; lb. 6oc. 
3854 Lettuce, Creamy Hearts 
One of the easiest to head and best quahty to eat 
of all the head lettuce. The heads are medium large, 
the leaves are thick and buttery yet crisp. Really 
a splendid home garden variety. Pkt. 5c; Oz. 15c. 
3940 Parsley, Paramount iU‘s«TiSi 
of Merit. Unusually rich dark green, triple curled and 
the uniformity of plant is most striking. 12 inches high 
with 20 inch spread. Triangular frond, 4 to 5 inches at 
base. Pkt. 10c; Oz. 29c; *4 lb. 5©c. 
3972 p eaS/ Giant Early Cropper 
An extra early, very heavy cropping new variety of 
much merit. The pods are large, dark green, 4 inches 
long and contain usually 7 large, sweet, fight-green 
peas. Earfiness, heavy bearing and fine table quality 
make this a most desirable variety both as a home 
garden variety and for market growing. See illustration 
above. Pkt. 5c; >4 lb. 13c; lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1 I O. 
4019 D J- L C _. 1 . All-America 1936 
Kadisn, hornet Award of Merit. This 
wonderful new Radish is perfectly ball shaped, bright 
scarlet and with thin tap-roots. If left in the ground, 
Comet grows a larger size than other strains and still 
remains solid and crisp when other Radishes become 
pithy. Pkt. IOc; Oz. 20c. 
40,0 Radish-Glowing Ball 
Medal 1934. Bright fiery scarlet with a suffusion of 
orange. Perfectly round, small top and a thread-like 
tap-root. Recommended by the Royal Horticultural 
Society. Pkt. 8c; oz. 15c; *4 lb. 35c. 
Lettuce, Creamy Hearts 
4072 Squash, Buttercup winter Squash. 
Buttercup is just the right size for the average family, 
fruits weigh 3 to 5 pounds. Outside color is dark green, 
the flesh is a rich orange, untinged with green. The 
texture of the flesh is smootij, the flavor mild like a 
sweet potato, cooks dry and mealy, without strings. 
Shape similar to small sugar pumpkin. Pkt. 8c; 
Oz. 2©c. 
4101 Tomato, Rutger’s ant? a An i.?pr S 'vt 
ment over Marglobe. It was brought out by the New 
Jersey Experimental Station, where it was the heaviest 
yielding variety in that territory. Almost round in 
shape, ripens from the inside out, is bright red and of 
wonderful quality. You will like it. Pkt. IOc; Vi oz. 
40c; Oz. 75c. 
4094 Tomato-Scarlet Dawn™ K4l G<Sd 
Medal 1935. Wilt-Resistant, Rust-Resistant. 
Wonderful new Tomato of deep Marglobe red color, 
globe-shaped. Ranked second in the All-America trials. 
Pkt. IOc; 'A oz. 65c; oz. $1.25. 
Cucumber, Straight 
41 30 Novelty Collection 
1 8 Vegetables 
for Si.25 
All-America 
and Novelties 
1 Pkt. Each of All Kinds 
On This Page Total Value $1.54 
All-America Selections 
And Other 1936 
Vegetable Novelties 
Plant Your Vegetable Garden with Templin-Bradley Novelties 
