Ioproved eeclhies 1933 fo 1950 
VEGETABLES 
° ; l a4 7 : mee 
PHLOX, Drummondi Gigantea. A new 
strain having flowers the size of a half 
dollar, erect and uniform growth; 9 to 
12° in, 
Art Shades (S.M., 1935). Soft shades— 
Salmon, soft rose, light blue, pale violet 
and light mauve with white or creamy 
QVES . ss pw cater a tnarsteretueth ete ue oitarses Pkt. 25c 
Mellow Moon (New 1950). Soft pastel 
yellow: Lig florets]... os 0. - Pkt. 25c 
Rosy Morn (B.M., 1941). Deep rose-pink 
with white eye; early.......... Pkt. 25c¢ 
Red Glory (H.M., 1942). Brilliant red, 
large creamy white eye..... eK toc 
Salmon Glory (S.M., 1939). Crisp sal- 
mon-pink, creamy white eye....Pkt. 25c 
Collection 1 each, 5 Pkts. $1.00 
SCABIOSA, Peace (H.M., 1941). Dwarf 
WHLLEC Beer rete ote ote eter tiotay ois fe exe vee Pkt. 25c 
SWEET PEAS, Spring Flowering (S.M., 
1940). A new strain of heat resisting 
Peas that bloom sooner than the Sum- 
mer Flowering; have long cutting stems. 
See page 29 for varieties. 
VERBENA, Beauty of Oxford Hybrids 
(S.M.; 91933): Rose-pink to rose-red@ 
shades. 
VERBENA, Lavender Glory (S.M., 1933). 
Large lavender, creamy white eye. 
VERBENA, Cerise Queen (B.M., 1934). 
Lively tone, soft salmon-cerise. 
VERBENA, Spectrum Red (B.M., 1934). 
Intense bright red, no eye; dazzling. 
VERBENA, Floradale Beauty (B.M., 37). 
Huge flowers, rose and red shades. 
Pkt. each 25c; Collection (5) $1.00 
ZINNIA, Black Ruby (B.M., 1941). Deep 
velvety maroon, almost black Lilliput 
(aye Wloyeaheoyes MAbohoheei SAAAu bn OGoo IEG iQ BGO 
ZINNIA, Royal Purple (H.M., 1942). 
New color; rich reddish purple without 
traces of blue; 4 in. Dahlia Fld. Pkt. 15c 
ZINNIA, Fantasy Mixed (S.M., 1935). 
New type informal shaggy flowers 2% 
in. to 3 in. across; graceful; cutflower. 
1edies., AlsKe 
ZINNIA, Fantasy Stardust (S.M., 1937). 
Rich deep golden yellow. ...... PKti5e 
ZINNIA, Gaillardia (Navajo) (H.M., 
1938). Flowers resemble a Double Picta 
Gaillardia in form and colors; bicolors, 
mellow tones; cutting; 2 ft. ....PkKt. 15c 

Petunia Silver Medal 
23-25 Warren Street 

NOs Ce ese iN 

Non-Pithy 
RADISH 
“CHERRY BELLE” H.M. 
Crisp and firm at all stages; 
tasty and tangy, brightest 
red color; Roundest little 
globes; need we say more? 
Well, it stands heat too; 
never pithy. 
Pts ibe; 10z7, -50c 




Like Squash? Then Sow— 
Caserta Squash 
(Gold Medal) Summer bush cocozelle 
type. Earlier and more productive light 
yellow fruits, irregularly striped green 
almost picked daily; delicious. Pkt. 15c 

Uconn. (G.M., A.A.S. 1950). Bush form 
of Table Queen or Acorn. Heavy pro- 
ducer, early fruits are used in Summer, 
late fruits stored for Winter use. For 
small sardens too. ..PKt. 25c3 oz. $1.00 
VICTORY FREEZER PEA (B.M., A.A.S., 
1948) Being wilt, cold and heat resis- 
tant, Victory Freezer can be planted (1) 
earlier without fear of damage from 
late Spring frosts (2) later without fear 
of damage from heat and wilt. This is 
good news for the home gardeners who 
have experienced failures with peas. 3 
to 3% in. blunt pods produced in pairs; 
peas tender all the way thru, almost ap- 
pear skinless; skin does not peal in 
canning or freezing; delicious flavor and 
quality; 28 in. vines; 64 days to picking. 
Pkt. 250; 14 1b; 40e% Ib. 7bc; 5 Ibs. $3.50 

100% Heading 
CAULIFLOWER 
“IDEAL SNOWBALL” 
H.M. Easy-to-head because 
it stands both hot and 
freezing weather. Makes 
beautiful big heads or curds 
without ricing; larger than 
Early Erfurt, litle later; 
has larger wrapper leaves. 
Reports of success under 
adverse weather conditions 
received from California to 
Georgia, Minnesota to Can- 
20d, kts DUC rand 31.00 



BURNETT-SEEDSMEN Z. 
AE 
# 
® 4) 
PennLake (Iceberg Type) Lettuce 



**“EASY-TO-HEAD” 
SENSATIONAL NEW LETTUCES 
They Head in Hot Weather 
Pennlake. (B.M., A.A.S., °49). A 
smaller heading, more refined 
Great Lakes, without the promi- 
nent mid-ribs; remarkably resis- 
tant to heat and tip-burn. The 
ideal family sized head. 
Pkt. 25c; % oz. 60c; oz. $1.00 
Premier Great Takes. (B.M., 
A.A.S., ’49). Earlier, larger, solid 
headed Great Lakes, that is more 
resistant to tip burn; attractive 
foliage. 
Pkt. 25¢: 1% oz. .60c: oz. $1:00 
Great Lakes (B.M., A.A.S., 1944). 
Imperial type. The best Summer 
lettuce to date, being remarkably 
resistant to heat drought and tip- 
burn. Being slow-in-going-to-seed, 
it insures heads, even in hot 
weather and by the amateur, too. 
Its crispy, thick leaves fold well 
over solid heads, which when un- 
ravelled make desirable salad 
pieces: most delicious. 
Pkt. 25c; % oz. 50c; oz. 90c 



TOPCROP Bush BEAN. Gold Medal 1950 
The biggest yielder, double that of 
Tendergreen which outyields all others; 
of highest quality for table, canning, 
freezing. Disease resistant; stringless, 
fiberless and remain edible much longer; 
round podded= Pkt» 25c:" 46 “ibs boc; 
Ips 9c we lbste $1.80 
WATERMELONS IN 90 DAYS 
from CONGO WATERMELON (B.M., 
A.A.S. 1950) planted in South. In Massa- 
chusetts it matured ahead of all others; 
finer eating quality than Dixie Queen, 
Cannonball ete., good keeper, Ses 
ket. 2G 
Flagship Hybrid Corn 
(H.M.) Provides bigger ears on stronger 
stalks even under adverse cold or hot 
weather; resistant to ear-worms; 12 to 
16 rows golden yellow Kernels, tender 
and sweet delicious flavor. 
Pkt. 20c; % lb. 40c; Ib. 75ce 

New York 7, N. Y. 
Lo) 



