RADISH CHERRY BELLE 
CABBAGE CHIEFTAIN SAVOY 
egetables 
present this year, in place of the usual vegetable awards, a list of 12 of the 
best previous vegetable winners. An ALL AMERICA award is your guarantee 
of a choice variety. Varieties honored with this award had to show up well 
in trials all over the United States to gain this recognition. 
Cucumber SURECROP HYBRID All America Winner 1951 
Fruits slender and blunt ended, 8 to 9 inches long by 2¥2 inches di- 
ameter. Holds dark green color well after picking. Very uniform 
fruit with white, crisp, tender flesh of good flavor. Resistant to mosaic 
and downy mildew. Unusually vigorous. Yields high 58 days. Pkt. 25c 
Lettuce GREAT LAKES All America Winner 1944 
A crisp head variety. Its ability to form large, hard heads in warm 
weather, resistance to tip burn and freedom from early seed stalk de- 
velopment makes this a very popular lettuce. Pkt. 15c 
Radish CHERRY BELL All America Winner 1951 
Almost round, crisp, tangy and uniform. Color is bright scarlet. Flesh 
tender, juicy and mild. Does not become pithy. Small short tops. 25 
days. Pkt. 15c 
Spinach AMERICA All America Winner 1952 
Believed to be the longest standing and darkest green bloomsdale type 
in existence and the heaviest cropping. It grows 6 to 8 inches high, 
spreading 10 to 12 inches and is longer standing before bolting than 
other spinach varieties. Pkt. 15c 
Squash EARLY PROLIFIC STRAIGHTNECK—All American Winner ‘38 
The peak of perfection in a summer squash. Fruits straight and 
smooth, of creamy yellow color. Vines produce abundantly. Good 
freezer. 50 days. Pkt. 10c 
Tomato PRITCHARD (Scarlet Topper) All America Winner 1933 
A wilt resistant variety. Fruits are large, globular, with thick walls, 
and well braced by heavy cross sections. Color is scarlet, well colored 
at stem end. Flesh is firm and of good quality. 100 days. Pkt. 15c 2 ' i 
A 
SPINACH AMERICA 
CARROT 
IMPERATOR 
4 
PRITCHARD 
TOMATO 
