Vegetable Seeds 47 
Golden 
Bantam 
Golden Sensation 
Corn, Sweet 
Do you know why home grown Sweet Corn al¬ 
ways tastes best? Because within a few hours 
after the tender ears are pulled off the stalk they 
begin to lose their sugar and they rapidly de¬ 
teriorate in flavor. You can seldom buy absolutely 
fresh Sweet Corn, so unless you have grown your 
own, you probably do not realize how deliciously 
sweet it can be. 
Culture—A constant supply of Sweet Corn may 
be had from your garden by planting a succession 
of early, midseason and late varieties and by 
planting each of the kinds every week or ten days. 
Plant when danger of frost is past and the ground 
is warm, rows 2 to 3 feet apart and 8 to 10 inches 
apart in row. Corn likes frequent cultivation 
until the ears are formed. 1 lb. will plant about 
300 hills or 400 to 500 feet of row. 12 to 15 lbs. will 
plant an acre. 
3T13 BRADLEY’S GOLDEN EARLY MARKET. 
The earliest large true Sweet Corn of golden color. 
Ears good size, 12 rows, 7 to 8 inches long, well 
filled. Early, large and delicious. Pkt. 5c; ^ lb. 
15c; 1 lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3700 GOLDEN BANTAM. The good quality of 
Golden Bantam is too well known to need long 
description. Sales show it to be the most popular 
variety we list. Ears 6 inches long, with 8 rows of 
broad kernels as sweet as honey. Pkt. 5c; 54 Ib* 
lOc; Lb. 30c; 3 lbs. 80c. 
3708 GOLDEN GIANT. Introduced to combine 
size and earliness. Cross between Golden Bantam 
and Howling Mob, producing heavy stalks, 
two 12 to 14 rowed ears. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; 
Lb. 35c. 
3607 WONDER BANTAM. Large, more prolific 
type of Golden Bantam, 8 to 10 inches long. Pkt. 
5c; 54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3710 WHIPPLE’S EARLY YELLOW. Ears 8 to 
10 inches, 14 to 16 rows of deep, tender kernels of 
very fine eating quality. Ready to use only a few 
days later than Golden Bantam. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 
12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3710 GOLDEN EVERGREEN. A cross between 
Golden Bantam and Stowell’s Evergreen com¬ 
bines the good qualities of both, 8 inch ears, 12 to 
14 rows of rich golden-yellow kernels. Pkt. 5c; 
54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3605 GOLDEN SENSATION. Very early and 
productive well filled 10 inch ears of fine quality, 
earlier than Early Sunshine. Kernels rich golden- 
yellow, sweet and tasty. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; 
Lb. 35e; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3701 EARLY GOLDEN SUNSHINE. 12 rowed, 8 
inch ears, 10 days earlier than Golden Bantam. 
Developed at North Dakota Experiment Station, 
where earliness and hardiness are necessary. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3718 STOWELL’S EVERGREEN. Select Strain. 
Standard main crop variety, much used for the 
home garden, market and canning. Very tender 
and sugary, remaining in condition a long time. 
Our stock is the true, deep, broad kerneled strain. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3720 EARLY EVERGREEN. About one week 
earlier than Stowell’s Evergreen. Ears average 7 54 
to 8 inches long, with 14 to 16 rows of white 
kernels, deeper and slightly narrower than Sto¬ 
well’s. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. i 2 c;Lb. 35c;31bs. OOc. 
3716 COUNTRY GENTLEMAN or “Shoe Peg.’’ 
Par excellence when quality is desired. The kernels 
are so deep that there is little room left for cob. 
Market Gardeners who supply hotels and high 
class restaurants depend on this for their main 
crop. The ears are 6 to 7 inches long, small white 
cob. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
Cucumber Longfellow 
3700 BLACK MEXICAN CORN. By many con¬ 
sidered the tenderest and sweetest of all. Cooks 
pure white while young and tender, turning to 
bluish-black when ripe. Ripens medium early. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. OOc. 
3723 ALL SEASON SWEET CORN COLLEC¬ 
TION. Four varieties, all of highest merit, which 
if planted at the same time will give you a con¬ 
tinuous supply practically all summer. Early 
Golden Sweet, Templin-Bradley’s Hybrid Bantam, 
Asgrow Golden Colonel and Golden Evergreen. 
54 lb. of each for only 50c. 
3704 EARLY GOLDEN SWEET. See Page 43. 
New Hybrid Sweet Corn 
Increases yield 50% and produces vigorous sturdy 
and disease resistant plants and enables this kind 
of Corn to outyield the standard varieties under 
all sorts of conditions. Stalks are uniform and 
much larger proportion of marketable ears of 
even size and shape. Uniform maturity so the 
gardener can harvest the crop with a minimum 
of immature or over ripe ears. 
3699 GOLDEN CROSS BANTAM. A true hybrid 
produced by Purdue Experimental Station. Stalks 
sturdy, ears 8 inches long, 10 to 12 rowed, extreme¬ 
ly uniform. Highly resistant to Stewart’s disease. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 15c; 1 lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.10. 
3712 KINGSCROST GOLDEN BANTAM. Doiible 
cross among four inbred strains. Early, uniform, 
stalks 454 feet, ears golden-yellow, 7 inches, with 
10 and 12 rows. Very fine quality. Pkt. 5c; 54 Ib. 
15c; Lb. 40c; 3 lbs. $1.00. 
3714 TEMPLIN-BRADLEY’S HYBRID GOLD¬ 
EN BANTAM. A new Hybrid of outstanding 
qualities. 6 to 10 days earlier than other crosses, 
6 to 6 54 feet tall with uniform 7 54 inch ears of 12 
rows of rich golden deep kernels. Pkt. 8c; 54 lb. 
15c; Lb. 50c; 3 lbs. $1.25. 
3715 ASGROW GOLDEN COLONEL. A golden- 
yellow Country Gentleman, the result of crossing 
Golden Bantam with Country Gentleman. Stalk 
and ear growth and maturity time the same as 
Country Gentleman but with the color and sweet 
eating quality of Golden Bantam. Pkt. 5c; 54 
lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. 90c. 
3722 HYBRID BLENDS. Page 43. 
Pop Corn 
Culture—Grown like Sweet Corn, but may be 
planted closer in the row, or hills 18 to 24 inches 
apart. Allow the ears to mature thoroughly be¬ 
fore cutting. One pound will plant 500 to 600 hills. 
3726 JAPANESE HULLESS, Australian Hulless 
or Tom Thumb. A dwarf, heavy yielder, pe- 
cuhar in form, being nearly as thick as long. 
Kernels similar to White Rice. Its crowning merit 
lies in its popping quality, fine flavor. Pkt. 5c; 
54 lb. lOc; Lb. 30c; 3 lbs. 75c. 
3732 SOUTH AMERICAN MUSHROOM. Also 
called T.N.T. or Dynamite. Vigorous growth, 
6 to 8 feet tall producing two and often three ears, 
8 to 9 inches long of deep orange kernels, smooth 
and round, which pop larger than any Corn known, 
and of rich creamy-vellow, deliciously tasty. 
Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. 12c; Lb. 35c; 3 lbs. 80c. 
3734 GOLDEN BABY BICE or Golden Hulless. 
Small-kerneled, pops entirely hulless, large and 
flaky. Of finest quality and flavor. Ears medium 
short and stocky. Pkt. 5c; 54 lb. lOc; Lb. 2t>c. 
Tempting Ears of 
Country Gentleman 
Corn 
Cucumber, Straight-8 
Cucumbers 
Culture—Light warm soil best for Cucumbers, 
although they do well in most any good well 
drained soil. After frost danger is past, sow seed 
in hills 4x4 or 4x6 ft. apart. Cover 54 inch deep, 
8 to 10 seeds in each hill. Later when danger of 
insects is over remove all but 3 or 4 of the strong¬ 
est plants. One ounce should plant about 500 
hills, 2 lbs. an acre. 
Slicing Cucumbers 
3756 IMPROVED WHITE SPINE. Universally 
satisfactory. More extensively grown than any 
other. 6 to 7 inches long, 2 54 inch diameter. Pkt. 
5c; Oz. 15c; 54 lb. 45c. 
3757 TEMPLIN-BRADLEY’S EVERGREEN. 
Uniform fruits 6 to 8 inches, smooth, attractive, 
rich dark green, which it holds well to full ma¬ 
turity. Solid, crisp, tender. Small seed cavity. 
Fine garden variety. Money maker for gardeners. 
Pkt. lOc; Oz. 25c. 
3762 LONG GREEN IMPROVED. A model in 
size, form and color. Uniformly long, smooth, 
deep green. Money maker for the market gardener 
and a universal favorite for home use. 12 to 15 
inches long, solid and crisp with few seeds. Pkt. 
8 c; Oz. 20c; 54 lb. 50c. 
3765 LONGFELLOW. Extra long sheer. Excellent 
new variety, long, slender dark green. 12 to 14 
inches by 2 3^ inches. Color holds well. Pkt. lOc; 
Oz. 30c; 54 Ib. 85c. 
^764 HYBRID WHITE SPINE. Ideal slicing 
Cucumber. Long, slender, uniform in shape and 
size. Very few seeds, firm flesh, good keeping 
quality. Dark green color is held until ripe. Not 
as long as Longfellow but more certain to do well 
under poor conditions, so for the home garden it 
is perhaps preferable to Longfellow. Pkt. 8c; 
Oz. 20c; 54 Ib. 50c. 
3766 STB.4IGHT-8. Most outstanding Cucumber 
developed in past decade. 8 inches long, uniformly 
cylindrical, deep dark green. Extremely pro¬ 
ductive, attractive, superior quality. Pkt. 8c; 
Oz. 15c; 54 Ib. 45c; Lb. $1.40. 
3761 EARLY FORTUNE. Good length, rich dark 
green, well shaped and with thick white flesh and 
small seed cavity. Improvement over White 
Spine. Retains its color long after pickling. Pkt. 
8 c; Oz. 15c; 54 Ib. 40c. 
Pickling Cucumbers 
3776 CHICAGO PICKLE. Meets the most exacting 
requirements of critical pickle makers. Right 
size, shape, color, and heavy yielder. Square ends. 
Pkt. 5c; Oz. 15c; 54 Ib. 50c. 
377.5 JEBSEY'PICKLE. Very prolific and exceed¬ 
ingly popular. Short, smooth, light green, excellent 
quality. A good sheer as well as pickier. Tapering 
ends. Pkt. 5c; Oz. 15c; 54 Ib. 50c. 
3774 EXPRESS PICKLER. Earliest picking 
Cucumber, bears heavily small uniform fruits. 
354 to 4 inches. Pkt. 8c; Oz. 20c; 54 lb. 60c. 
3780 NATIONAL PICKLING. A superior strain 
developed by Michigan .Agricultural College. 
Straight, symmetrical, 6 inches when mature. 
Pkt. 5c; Oz. 15c, 54 lb. 50c. 
See our Vegetable Color Plate Collection on Page 49 
